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* * * * *
THE DOCTOR LOOKS
AT LITERATURE
PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDIES
OF LIFE AND LETTERS
BY
JOSEPH COLLINS
AUTHOR OF “THE WAY WITH THE NERVES,”
“MY ITALIAN YEAR,” “IDLING IN ITALY,” ETC.
[Illustration]
NEW YORK
GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1923,
BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
THE DOCTOR LOOKS AT LITERATURE. I
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
_In Memoriam_
PEARCE BAILEY
DEVOTED COLLEAGUE
LOYAL COADJUTOR
INDULGENT FRIEND
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The author wishes to express his thanks to the editors of the
_North American Review_, the _New York Times_ and the
_Literary Digest International Book Review_ for permission
to elaborate material used by them into certain chapters of this
volume.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I PSYCHOLOGY AND FICTION 15
II IRELAND'S LATEST LITERARY ANTINOMIAN: JAMES JOYCE 35
III FEODOR DOSTOIEVSKY: TRAGEDIST, PROPHET, AND PSYCHOLOGIST 61
IV DOROTHY RICHARDSON AND HER CENSOR 96
V MARCEL PROUST: MASTER PSYCHOLOGIST AND PILOT OF
THE “VRAIE VIE” 116
VI TWO LITERARY LADIES OF LONDON: KATHERINE MANSFIELD
AND REBECCA WEST 151
VII TWO LESSER LITERARY LADIES OF LONDON: STELLA BENSON
AND VIRGINIA WOOLF 181
VIII THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DIARIST: W. N. T. BARBELLION 191
IX THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DIARIST: HENRI-FRÉDÉRIC AMIEL 219
X GEORGES DUHAMEL: POET, PACIFIST, AND PHYSICIAN 237
XI EVEN YET IT CAN'T BE TOLD--THE WHOLE TRUTH
ABOUT D. H. LAWRENCE 256
XII THE JOY OF LIVING AND WRITING ABOUT IT: JOHN ST.
LOE STRACHEY 289
XIII THE KING OF GATH UNTO HIS SERVANT: MAGAZINE INSANITY 307
ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
JAMES JOYCE 37
FEODOR DOSTOIEVSKY 63
MARCEL PROUST IN 1890 119
A PAGE OF CORRECTED PROOF SHOWING MARCEL PROUST'S METHOD
OF REVISION 127
KATHERINE MANSFIELD 153
REBECCA WEST 173
Photograph by _Yevonde, London_
STELLA BENSON 183
HENRI-FRÉDÉRIC AMIEL 221
GEORGES DUHAMEL 239
From a Drawing by _Ivan Opffer_ in _THE BOOKMAN_
D. H. LAWRENCE 259
D. H. LAWRENCE 267
From a drawing by _Jan Juta_
J. ST. LOE STRACHEY 291
From a Drawing by _W. Rothenstein_
THE DOCTOR LOOKS
AT LITERATURE
THE DOCTOR LOOKS
AT LITERATURE
CHAPTER I
PSYCHOLOGY AND FICTION
Few words attract us like the word psychology. It has the call of the
unknown, the lure of the mysterious. It is used and heard so frequently
that it has come to have a definite connotation, but the individual
who is asked to say what it is finds it difficult either to be exact
or exhaustive. Psychologists themselves experience similar difficulty.
Psychology means the science of the soul, but we have no clearer
conception of the soul today than Aristotle had when he wrote his
treatise on it.
Professor Palmer states that William James once said that psychology
was “a nasty little subject,” and that “all one cares to know lies
outside.” Doubtless many who have far less knowledge of it have often
felt the same way. The present fate of psychology, or the science of
mental life, is to be handled either as a department of metaphysics, or
as subsidiary to so-called intelligence testing. The few remaining true
psychologists are the physiological psychologists and a small group
of behaviourists. In this country Woodworth, who takes the ground of
utilising the best in the arsenal of both the intro-spectionists and
the behaviourists, and calls the result “dynamic psychology,” leads the
former; and Watson the latter.
Psychology has no interest in the nature of the soul, its origin or
destiny, or in the reality of ideas. Nor does it concern itself with
explanation of mental phenomena in terms of forces which can neither
be experienced nor inferred from experience. It is concerned with the
facts of mental life and with describing, analysing, and classifying
them. When it has done this it hands the results over to the logician
who occupies himself with them from a purposeful rather than a causal
point of view; and he makes what he may of them, or he puts them at the
disposal of fellow scientists who use them to support conjectures or to
give foundation to theories.
It is universally admitted that when we want to get a true picture of
human life: behaviour, manners, customs, aspirations, indulgences,
vices, virtues, it is to the novelist and historian that we turn, not
to the psychologist or the physiologist. The novelists gather materials
more abundantly than the psychologists, who for the most part have a
parsimonious outfit in anything but morbid psychology. Psychologists
are the most indolent of scientists in collecting and ordering
materials, James and Stanley Hall being outstanding exceptions.
Fiction writers should not attempt to carry over the results of
psychological inquiries as the warp and woof of their work. They
should study psychology to sharpen and discipline their wits, but
after that the sooner they forget it the better. The best thing that
fiction writers can do is to depict the problematic in life in all
its intensity and perplexity, and put it up to the psychologists as a
challenge.
In the fifty years that psychology has had its claims as a science
begrudgingly allowed, there have arisen many different schools, the
most important of which are: (1) Those that claim that psychology is
the science of mental states, mental processes, mental contents, mental
functions. They are the “Functionalists.” There is an alternative to
the consciousness psychology--the psychology of habit--touched on
its edges by Professor Dewey in “Habit and Conduct.” And (2) those
that claim the true subject matter of psychology is not mind or
consciousness, but behaviour. They refuse to occupy themselves with
“consciousness,” and for introspection they substitute experiment and
observation of behaviour. Their theoretical goal is the prediction and
control of behaviour. They are the “Behaviourists.” The literature
infused with interest in psychological problems--fiction, criticism,
and to a small extent social economics--has little connection with
the older psychology based on subjectivities, except as it takes over
the vagaries of technique and terminology of the psychoanalysts. The
literature of greatest merit seems to avail itself most profitably of
definite psychological materials when it turns to the behaviourist
type. Indeed, it is with this school that the novelist most closely
allies himself. Or it was, until the “New Psychology” seduced him.
This last school claims that consciousness and all it implies is
a barren field for the psychologist to till. If he is to gather a
crop that will be an earnest of his effort, he must turn to the
unconscious, which we have with us so conspicuously eight hours out
of every twenty-four that even the most benighted recognise it, and
which is inconspicuously with us always, looking out for our self- and
species-preservation, conditioning our ends, and shaping our destinies.
The New Psychology, which is by no means synonymous with the teachings
of Dr. Sigmund Freud of Vienna, regards the human mind as an intricate
and complex mechanism which has gradually evolved through the ages
to suit the needs of its possessor. The adaptation has, however, not
been perfect, and the imperfections reveal themselves in frequent,
startling, and embarrassing lapses from the kind of mind which would
best enable its possessor to adjust himself to the conditions and
demands of modern civilisation. It recognises that it deals with a
mind which sometimes insists upon behaving like a savage, but which is
nevertheless the main engine of the human machinery, human personality,
from which society expects and exacts behaviour consistent with the
ideals of advanced civilisation. The practical psychologist realises
that he has to cope with this wayward mind, and if he is to be of
service in effecting a reconciliation between it and the requirements
of civilisation, he cannot ignore it, spank it, or coerce it by calling
it bad names. He must understand it first; then he may train it. The
trouble with the New Psychology, whether it is “New Thought” or one of
the mutually antagonistic schools of psychoanalysis, is that it almost
inevitably runs off into what James terms “bitch-philosophy.”
Through this tangled web of vagaries there is a thin thread of
work that is not only fiction, but literature; and this is usually
characterised by obvious parade of psychological technique.
Just as civilised man's body has been evolved gradually from more
primitive species and has changed through the various stages of
evolution to meet the changing conditions of the environment and
necessities, so has his mind. In this advance and transformation
the body has not lost the fundamental functions necessary for the
preservation of the physical being. Neither has the mind. But both
the body and the mind, or the physical and psychical planes of the
individual, have been slowly developed by environment and life in such
a way that these fundamental functions and instincts have been brought
more and more into harmony with the changing demands of life. This
process, outwardly in man's circumstances and his acts, inwardly in his
ability to shape one and perform the other, constitutes civilisation.
It is doubtful if the instincts are quite as definite as some of our
professors, McDougall and his followers, claim, and they lack utility
when used as a basis for social interpretation either in essays or
fiction.
Dr. Loeb's forced movements as a basis for a structure of interests
is far more plausible. It is the interplay of interests, rather than
of instincts, which is the clay our practical activities are pottered
from, and should be the reliable source of materials for literature.
Whenever fiction cuts itself down to instincts it becomes ephemeral as
literature.
The two fundamental and primitive instincts of all living organisms,
civilised man included, are the nutritional urge and the creative urge,
or the instinct of self-preservation and that of the preservation
of the species. To these there is added, even in the most primitive
savages, the herd instinct, which leads men to form groups or tribes,
to fight and labour for the preservation of them, and to conform to
certain standards or symbols of identification with the tribe. The
Freudians do not recognise the herd instinct as anything but sublimated
bi-sexuality, attributing the tendency to regard the opinion of
one's associates to the psychic censor, instead of to an instinct.
These three instincts are recognised in their commonest and most
normal expression today as the tendency to provide for oneself and
one's family; the tendency to marry and rear children under the best
conditions known; and the tendency to regard the opinion of one's
associates and to be a consistent member of the social order to which
one acknowledges adherence.
It is small wonder, then, that the realist and the romanticist, whose
arsenal consists of observation and imagination, find in narration of
dominancy and display of these instincts and tendencies the way to
the goal for which they strive: viz., interest of others, possibly
edification. Certain novelists, Mr. D. H. Lawrence for instance, pursue
discussion of the fundamental ones with such assiduity and vehemence
that the unsophisticated reader might well suspect that life was made
up of the display and vagaries of these essences of all living beings.
But without cant or piety it may be said there is such a thing as
higher life, spiritual life, and readers of psychoanalytic novels must
keep in mind the fact that the Freudian psychology denies the reality
of any such higher life, accounting for the evidences of it which are
unescapable in terms of “subliminations,” such as “taboos.” Though
these three instincts form the basis upon which the whole of man's
mental activity is built, they by no means form its boundary. At some
prehistoric period it is possible that they did, but during countless
ages man's mind has been subject to experiences which called for other
mental activity than the direct and primitive expression of these
urges, and he has had to use his mental machinery as best he could
to meet these demands. He had no choice. He could not scrap his old
machinery and supply his mind with a new equipment better fitted to do
the complex work civilisation demanded.
The result is that the working of these instincts on the experience
presented to the mind has brought about innumerable complications.
These are known in the New Psychology as mental complexes. They have
been to some modern novelists what the miraculous food given to Israel
in the Wilderness was--their sole nutriment. Complexes, or conflicts
resulting from adaptation of the primitive mental machinery to more
intricate and varied processes than those with which it was originally
intended to cope, determine much of man's mental life.
To understand the workings of a mind is like trying to unravel a
tangled skein of thread. The two main difficulties are: (1) That up to
this time our mental training, our perceptions, our consciousness, our
reason, have been exercised for the specific purpose of maintaining
ourselves in the world. They have not been concerned with helping us
to understand ourselves; (2) That there are parts of our minds whose
existence we do not recognise, either because we will not or because
we cannot, for the reason that they have come to be regarded as being
in conflict with other parts which we have long admitted as having
the first claim to recognition. In other words, not having known how
to adapt certain parts of our mental machinery to the newer purposes
for which we needed them, we have tried to suppress them or ignore
them. In doing so we have only deceived ourselves, because they are
still connected up with the main engine and influence all of the
latter's output, harmoniously or jarringly--sometimes to the extent of
interfering seriously with its working.
The work of the practical psychologist is to learn how to overcome
these two difficulties and to teach others how to use the knowledge.
This is the task novelists frequently set themselves, and some,
Willa Cather in “Paul's Case” and Booth Tarkington in “Alice Adams,”
accomplish it admirably. Like the teacher and the priest, they have
learned that surplus energy of the mind may be diverted from the
biologically necessary activities into other fields of useful and
elevating effort. They have learned that the second difficulty can be
best overcome by facing the truth about our minds, however unpleasant
and unflattering it may at first sight appear to be. Recognition
of the existence of the two primitive urges, the instincts of
self-preservation and of the preservation of the race, is the first
step toward appreciation of their reasonable limitations and the extent
to which they may be brought into harmony with the requirements of a
well-balanced life.
This leads us to refer for a moment to a tremendous force which, in any
discussion of the working of the instincts, cannot be ignored. It is a
constant effort or tendency, lying behind all instincts, to attain and
maintain mental, emotional, and spiritual equilibrium. The tendency is
expressed by the interaction, usually automatic and unconscious, which
goes on between complexes and tends to establish the equilibrium. At
the same time the working of individual instincts tends to upset it.
Whenever the automatic process is suspended to any great degree, as by
the cutting off from the rest of the mind of one complex, the result
is a one-sided development which causes mental disturbances and often
eventually mental derangement. As the instincts and complexes incline
to war among themselves, there is a stabilising influence at work
tending to hold us in mental equilibrium and thus to keep us balanced
or sane. No one in the domain of letters has understood this force and
its potentialities like Dostoievsky. “The Possessed” is a chart of that
sea so subject to storm and agitation. The effort toward integration
is perhaps a true instinct, and rests on a sound physiological
basis, so well described by Sherrington. It furnishes a genuine theme
for description of life's activities, and well-wrought studies of
integration and disintegration take highest rank in fiction.
With all their prolixity, the Victorian novelists managed to depict
progress in one direction or another. This is more than can be said of
most modern novelists, who are exhausted when they have succeeded in
a single analysis, and commit the crass literary error of seeking to
explain, when all that the most acute psychologist could possibly do
would be to catch at a pattern, a direction, and an outcome, as mere
description--problem rather than explanation being the dramatic motive.
While the novelist's business is to see life and his aspiration is to
understand what he sees, many novelists of today are, by their work,
claiming to understand life in a sense that is not humanly possible.
Human conduct affords the best raw material for the novelist. If he
represents this in such a way that it seems to reflect life faithfully
he is an artist; but the psychological novelist goes further and feels
bound to account for what he represents. Ordinarily he accounts for
it in one of three ways: (1) by the inscrutability of Providence--as
many of the older novelists did; (2) by theories of his own; (3) by
the theories of those whose profession to understand life and conduct
he accepts. In short, he must have a philosophy of life. The mistake
many novelists are making is to confuse such a philosophy of life with
an explanation of mental processes and a formula for regulating them.
Neither philosophy nor psychology is an exact science. If a novelist
wishes to describe an operation for appendicitis or a death from a
gastric ulcer, he can easily get the data necessary for making the
description true to fact. But if he aspires to depict the conduct,
under stress, of a person who has for years been a prey to conflicting
fear and aspiration, or jealousy and remorse, or hatred and conscience,
what psychologist can give him a formula for the correct procedure?
Who can predict the reactions of his closest friend under unusual
conditions?
With our earnest realistic novelist ready to sit at the feet of science
and avail himself of its investigations--prepared, as Shaw would say,
to base his work on a genuinely scientific natural history--there is
danger of his basing it, too, upon psychology which is not “genuinely
scientific,” because its claims cannot be substantiated by experience.
While the novelist is in such a receptive state along comes a
scientist, hedged also with that special authority which physicians
possess in the eyes of many laymen, and offers the complete outfit of
knowledge and (as he assures the novelist) inductively derived theory
that the novelist has been sighing for. This is Freud. He or his
disciples can explain anything in the character and conduct line while
you wait. If you want to know why a given person is what he is, or why
he acts as he does, Freud can tell you. His outfit is not, ostensibly,
“metaphysical,” like much of the older psychology that our novelist
encountered in college days. It is human, concrete, and surprisingly
easy to understand. A child can grasp the main principles. Our novelist
tests out a few of them on life as he has known it and finds that they
seem to work. If he is not completely carried off his feet, he may
grin at some of the formulas as he might at a smutty joke, but his own
observations concerning the excessively mothered boy and his reading of
some of the great dramas of the world are to him sufficient evidence
of their soundness; and he bases the behaviour of his characters upon
them with the same assurance of their accuracy that he would have in
basing the account of a surgical operation and its results upon the
data supplied him by a surgeon who had successfully performed hundreds
of exactly similar operations and watched their after effects.
One of the rudimentary instincts of human nature is curiosity, an
urge to investigate the unknown, the mysterious. It is mystery that
constitutes romance. It is the unknown that makes romance of one's
future, fate, fortune, mind--at least that part of the mind which
we do not understand and which is always taking us by surprise and
playing us tricks. Curiosity is forced movement developed along the
lines of interest. It is quite likely to follow the line of least
resistance, and just now there is little resistance to sex curiosity.
Those who find fascination in the New Psychology today found the
old psychology of a quarter of a century ago a stupid bore. The old
psychology dealt exclusively with what is now called the “conscious
mind:” with analysing the concept of directed thought, with measuring
the processes of the mind which we harnessed, or believed we harnessed,
and drove subject to our wills to do our work. The old psychology was
academic, dry, as proper and conventional as the C Major scale, without
mystery, without thrills, and therefore without interest, except to the
psychologist.
The New Psychology is different. And this “difference” is exactly why
it has proved to be almost as effective bait to the feminine angler
after romance which may serve her as caviar to the prosaic diet of
every-day existence as are spiritualism and the many other cults and
new religions whose attraction and apparent potency are now explainable
by what we understand of this very psychology--or the science of the
mind. There is no reason to suppose that the current doctrines of
the subconscious will do more for civilisation or art than the older
doctrines of consciousness. The fact that they seize the popular fancy
and are espoused with enthusiasm is of no particular significance,
since the very same attitude was an accompaniment of the older
doctrines.
It would be difficult to exaggerate the prevalent interest in
psychology. I shall cite three indications of it: The pastor of one of
the large and influential churches in New York asked me a short time
ago if I would give a talk on Psychology before the Girls' Club of his
church. When I suggested that some other subject might be more fitting
and helpful, he replied that all the girls were reading books on
psychology, that he was sure none or few of them understood what they
read, and that he was convinced that their indulgence was unhealthy.
Should one go into any large general book-shop in New York or elsewhere
and survey the display, he will find that a conspicuous department
is devoted to “Books on Advanced Thinking,” and upon inquiry he will
find that it is the most popular department of the store. The most
uniform information that a psychiatrist elicits from the families of
youths whose minds have undergone dissolution is that for some time
previous to the onset of symptoms they displayed a great interest in
books on philosophy and psychology, and many of them had taken up
psychoanalysis, or whatever passes under that name; joined some League
of the Higher Illumination; or gone in for “mental fancy work” of some
kind.
Before taking up specific illustrations of psychology in modern
fiction, I wish to say to amateurs interested in the study of
psychology, that frank recognition of their own unconscious minds or
of the part of their instinctive life or memories which may have been
intentionally or automatically pushed out of consciousness, does not
call for digging into the unconscious through elaborate processes
of introspection or through invoking the symbolism of dreams. Even
were it done, the result would probably reveal nothing more startling
than would a faithful account of the undirected thoughts which float
uninvited through the mind during any idle hour. For most normal
persons such thoughts need neither to be proclaimed nor denied.
The involuntary effort toward equilibrium of a normal mind will
take adequate care of them. The study of such mental conditions and
processes in abnormal individuals, however, is often of great service
to the psychologist and facilitates understanding of the workings of
both the normal and the unbalanced mind.
I also desire to call attention to the value of an objective mental
attitude if one would conserve mental equilibrium and keep the working
mind at its highest point of health and productivity. One of the
greatest safeguards of mental equilibrium is the desire for objective
truth. This is an indication that the mind is seeking for harmony
between itself and the external world, and it has a biological basis
in the fact that such harmony between the organism and the external
world makes for security. The desire for objective truth is a straight
pathway between the ego-complex and the ideal of a rational unified
self. Parallel with this rational self there is an ethical self which
has freed itself from the complexes caused by the conflict between the
egoistic instincts and the external moral codes, and uses the rational
self to secure harmony of thought and action based on self-knowledge.
These two ideals may be pursued consciously and may be made the main
support of that complete and enlightened self-consciousness which is
essential for the most highly developed harmonious personality.
For a time it seemed to the casual observer that the New Psychology
was so steeped in pruriency that it could not be investigated without
armour and gas mask. Happily such belief is passing, and many now see
in it something more than the dominancy and vagaries of the libido,
which convention has insisted shall veil its face and which expediency
has suggested shall sit at the foot of the table rather than at the
head. It has awakened a new interest in the life of the spirit, which
is in part or in whole outside consciousness, and it has finally
challenged the statement of the father of modern psychology, Descartes:
“I think, therefore I am.”
The religionist advises us to “Get right with God.” At least he is
bidding for integration of interests. The humanist in literature who
tries to get life going right with its memories is doing the same
thing. To be on good terms with memory is happiness; to be on bad terms
with it is tragedy. Both are fields for literary workmanship. The more
the individual works up his memories in contact with his experiences,
the more objective he becomes. On “Main Street” everybody remembers
everything about everybody else and thinking becomes objective, with
aspects no finer than the daily experiences of the thinkers. There is
no chance for romance and adventure because the memories of the few
who erred by embarking on adventurous ways are so vivid in the minds
of their neighbours, and so often rehearsed by them, as to inhibit the
venturesome. Instead of mental equilibrium between vital and struggling
interests, there is only inertia. This makes a good theme for a
sporadic novel, but it is not a basis for a school of novelists. Mr.
Lewis set himself a task that he could perform. On a level where life
is richer and memories are crowded out by sensational experiences the
task is harder.
It is a mistake to think that psychology is all introspection and
conjecture of the unconscious. Mental life in the broadest sense is
behaviour, instinctive and intelligent. Few have shown themselves
more competent to observe, estimate, and describe such behaviour than
the author of “Main Street.” That novel was a study of temperament, a
portrayal of environment, and an attempt to estimate their interaction
and to state the result. It was recognised by those who had encountered
or experienced the temperament and who had lived, voluntarily or
compulsorily, in the environment, to be a true cross-section of life
focussed beneath a microscopic lens, and anyone who examined it had
before him an accurate representation of the conscious experiences
of at least two individuals, and a suggestion of their unconscious
experiences as well. This permitted the reader, even suggested to
him, to compare them with his own sensations and ideas. Thus it was
that emotions, sentiments, and judgments were engendered which, given
expression, constituted something akin to public opinion. The result
was a beneficence to American literature, for the purpose of the writer
was known, and it was obvious to the knowing that he had accomplished
it.
In “Babbitt” Mr. Lewis set himself a much more limited task. The
picture is life in a Middle Western city of the U. S. A. It is as
accurate as if it had been reflected from a giant mirror or reproduced
from a photographic plate. George F. Babbitt is signalled by his fellow
townsmen as an enviable success from a financial and familiar point of
view. Nevertheless he grows more discontent with life as prosperity
overtakes him. The burden of his complaint is that he has never done a
single thing he wanted to in his whole life. It is hard to square his
words with his actions, but he convinces himself. So having run the
gamut of prosperity, paternity, applause, wine, women, and song--in his
case it is dance, not song--without appeasement, he finally gets it
vicariously through observing his son who not only knows what he wants
to do, but does it. He summarises what life has taught him in a few
words: “Don't be scared of the family. No, nor of all Zenith. Nor of
yourself, the way I've been. Go ahead, old man! The world is yours!”
Mr. Lewis' purpose was to describe the behaviour of a certain type of
man in a certain kind of city, of which the world is full. He gives the
former a definite heredity, an education with an amalgam of sentiment,
a vague belief that material success spells happiness, that vulgar
contact with one's fellows constitutes companionship, and that Pisgah
sights of life are to be had by gaining a social elevation just beyond
the one occupied. Then he thwarts his ambition to become a lawyer with
an incontrovertible outburst of sex and sentimentality, and all his
life he hears a bell tolling the echoes of his thwarted ambition. He
feels that he has been tricked by circumstance and environment, and
that display of chivalry to his wife and loyalty to his chum were
wasted. They were indeed, for they had been offered, like the prayers
of the hypocrites, in clubs and in corners of the street, and displayed
for his own glory.
Materialism was Babbitt's undoing. It destroyed the framework on which
man slings happiness and contentment, and which is called morality and
idealism. When that went he became a creature of Mr. Karel Capek's
creation. Mr. Babbitt, in common with countless benighted parents,
cherished a delusion. He believed that filial love, so-called, is
an integral part of an offspring's make-up. It is an artefact, an
acquisition, a convention: it is a thing like patriotism and creed.
One is born with a certain slant toward it and as soon as he becomes
a cognisant, sentient organism he realises that it is proper to
have it and to display it. In fact he is made to do so during his
formative years; thus it becomes second nature. And that is just what
it is--second nature. Parental love is first nature. If this were a
disquisition on love, instead of on novelists, I should contend that
there are two kinds of love: a parent's love for its child, especially
the mother's; and a believer's love for God. When Mr. Babbitt wallows
in the trough of the waves of emotion because he doesn't get the
affection and recognition from his children which is his due, he
alienates our sympathy and Mr. Lewis reveals the vulnerable tendon of
his own psychology.
Were I the dispenser of eugenic licenses to marry, I should insist that
everyone contemplating parenthood should have read the life history of
the spider, especially the female of the species, who is devoured by
her offspring. All novelists should study spiders first-hand. Filial
love, or the delusion of it, furnishes the material for some of the
finest ironies and deepest tragedies of life, and as Mr. Lewis adopts
it as a medium for characterisation quite free from the teaching of
the Freudians who would make it a fundamental instinct, the reader is
entitled to expect from him a more reasonable treatment of the subject.
Babbitt's tragedy in the failure of his children's affection is the
tragedy of millions of parents the world over. There is hardly a note
that would be more sure of wide appeal. But it cannot be explained by
the mere fact that, despite the Decalogue, no person of reason will
ever “honour” where honour is not merited. It is hard to pity Babbitt
because he could not commandeer the filial respect and honour which he
had failed to inspire. If this were all, the situation would be simple.
But, like countless other deluded parents, Babbitt believes that
merely by bringing children into the world he has staked out a claim
on their love, just as the child has a claim on the love of those who
brought him into the world. And in this belief lies the irony and the
tragedy: in the disparity between tradition and fact; between reason
and instinct. The tradition or convention that filial love corresponds
to parental love probably had its origin in the mind of the parent who
would have liked to supply the child with such reciprocal instinct--a
love that would transcend reason and survive when respect and honour
had failed--but nature has not kept pact with the parental wish. In
the realisation and acceptance of the truth lies the Gethsemane that
each parent must face who would mount to higher heights of parenthood
than the planes of instinct. Hence the universal appeal: the reason
why the reader sympathises with Babbitt even while condemning him.
He has forfeited the right to what he might have claimed--honour and
affection--to fall back upon more elemental rights which were a figment
of the imagination. Mr. Lewis' psychology would have struck a truer
note if he had differentiated more clearly between the universal parent
tragedy and Babbitt's own failure as a parent.
With the regeneration or civic orientation of Babbitt I am not
concerned--that is in the field of ethics. But, as a student of
literary art and craftsmanship, it seems to me the sawdust in Mr.
Lewis' last doll.
To depict the display of Babbitt's consciousness as Mr. Lewis has done
is to make a contribution to behaviourism, to make a psychological
chart of mental activity. One may call it realism if one likes, because
it narrates facts, but it is first and foremost a narrative of the
activities and operation of the human mind.
“Babbitt” may be construed as the American intelligence of Mr. Lewis'
generation turning on its taskmaster. All men who live by writing, and
have any regard for fine art and “belles lettres,” or any ideals for
which, in extremity, they might be willing to get out alone with no
support from cheering multitudes and do a little dying on barricades,
live and work with the Babbitt iron in their souls. Mr. Lewis probably
had his full dose of it. He had been an advertising copy-writer,
selling goods by his skill with a pen, to Babbitts, and for Babbitts.
He had been sub-editor for a time of one of those magazines which are
owned and published by Babbitts and tricked out and bedizened for a
“mass circulation” of Babbitts. He hated Babbitt. When he saw the
favourable opportunity he meant to turn Babbitt inside out and hold
him up to scorn. But Mr. Lewis is not savage enough, and his talent is
not swinging and extravagant enough, and he has not humour enough, to
make him a satirist. He is a photographic artist with an incomparable
capacity for the lingo of “one hundred per cent Americans.” As he
gets deeper and deeper into the odious and contemptible Babbitt,
he begins to be sorry for him, and at the end he is rather fond of
him--faithfully telling the facts about him all the while. He pities
Babbitt in Babbitt's sense of frustration by social environment and
circumstances, and admires him for telling his son not to let himself
be similarly frustrated.
To call such a book “an exceedingly clever satire” and its leading
character “an exceedingly clever caricature” is, it seems to me, to
confess unacquaintance with one's countrymen or unfamiliarity with
the conventional meaning of the words “satire” and “caricature.” Such
admission on the part of the distinguished educator and critic who has
recently applied these terms to it is most improbable.
If a photograph of a man is caricature and a phonographic record of his
internal and externalised speech constitutes satire, then “Babbitt” is
what the learned professor says it is.
There is a type of novel much in evidence at present called
psychological, which is reputed to depict some of the established
principles of psychology. It should be called the psychoanalytic
novel, and psychoanalysis is only a step-child of psychology. There
are hundreds of such novels. Some of them are considered at length
later. Here I shall mention only one; “The Things We Are,” by John
Middleton Murry. The story is of a young man, Boston by name, who has
been unfitted for the experiences of adult life by excess of maternal
love--the most familiar of all the Freudian themes. The narrative is
developed largely through description of successive states of mind
of the subject, with only the necessary thread of story carried by
recounting outward events. After the death of his mother, Boston finds
himself unable to take hold of life and dogged with a sense of the
futility of all things. He tries various kinds of uncongenial work as
cure for the sense that life is but a worthless experience, all of
which fail. Finally he retires to a suburban inn to live on his income,
and there, through the kindly human contact of the innkeeper and his
wife, he experiences the awakening of a latent artistic impulse for
expression and narration. He finds himself believing that he could
give years to becoming the patient chronicler of the suburb which has
provided him such beneficial retreat. Even his small peep at community
and family life gives Mr. Boston uplift and expansion, and makes more
significant the greatest of the Commandments. He sends for his one
London friend, a literary man, who brings with him the young woman to
whom he is practically engaged. The recently released libido of Mr.
Boston focusses and remains focussed upon her. He interests her and
finally wins her, and the long “inhibited” Mr. Boston finds himself
in “normal” love. The environment prepared him and “he effected a
transformation” on Felicia--in the language of the psychoanalyst.
The thesis of the story is that for this particular kind of neurotic
suffering, “suppression of the libido,” cure lies in “sublimation of
the libido,” best effected by art and love in this case, after work,
social service, and religion have been tried and failed.
The psychology of the sick soul is a science in itself, and is known
as psychotherapy. There are many sick souls in the world--far more
than is suspected. Very few, comparatively, of them are confined in
institutions or cloistered in religious retreats or universities. The
majority of them toil to gain their daily bread. They are the chief
consumers of cloudy stuff and mystic literature. The purveyors of the
latter owe it to them not to deceive them about psychoanalysis. As a
therapeutic measure it has not been very useful. The novelist should
be careful not to give it more potentiality for righteousness than it
possesses.
It is the history of panics, epidemics, revivals, and other emotional
episodes that they always recur. The present generation is fated to
be fed on novels embodying the Freudian theories of consciousness
and personality. Like certain bottles sent out from the pharmacist,
they should have a label “poison: to be used with care.” The contents
properly used may be beneficial, even life saving. They may do harm,
great harm. Freudianism will eventually go the way of all “isms,” but
meanwhile it would be kind of May Sinclair, Harvey J. O'Higgins _et al_
to warn their readers that their fiction is based on fiction. A man's
life may be determined for him by instincts which are beyond the power
of his reason to influence or direct, but it has not been proven. It is
hypothesis, and application of the doctrine is inimical to the system
of ethics to which we have conformed our conduct, or tried to conform
it, with indifferent success, for the past nineteen hundred years.
It is often said that man will never understand his mate. There
are many things he will never understand. One of them is why he is
attracted by spurious jewels when he can have the genuine for the same
price. Ten years ago, or thereabouts, a jewel of literature was cast
before the public and was scorned. I recall but one discerning critic
who estimated it justly, Mr. Harry Dounce. Yet “Bunker Bean” is one of
the few really meritorious American psychological novels of the present
generation. It is done with a lightness of touch worthy of Anthony
Hope at his best; with an insight of motives, impulses, aspirations,
and determinations equal to the creator of “Mr. Polly”; and with a
knowledge of child psychology that would be creditable to Professor
Watson.
There are few more vivid descriptions of the workings of the child mind
than that given by Mr. Harry Leon Wilson in the account of Bunker's
visit to “Granper” and “Grammer,” and the seduction of his early
childhood by the shell from the sea. Dickens never portrayed infantile
emotions and reactions with greater verisimilitude than Mr. Wilson when
knowledge of the two inevitables of life--birth and death--came, nearly
simultaneously, to Bunker's budding mind.
If journals whose purpose is to orient and guide unsophisticated
readers, and to illuminate the road that prospective readers must
travel, would give the “once over” to books when they are published
and the review ten years later, it would mark a great advance on the
present method. If such a plan were in operation at the present time
“Bunker Bean” would be a best seller and “If Winter Comes” would be
substituting in the coal famine.
Force or energy in a new form has come into fictional literature within
the past decade, and I propose to consider it as it is displayed in
the writings of those who are mostly responsible for it: James Joyce,
Dorothy Richardson, Marcel Proust, and to consider some of the younger
English novelists from the point of view of psychology.
CHAPTER II
IRELAND'S LATEST LITERARY ANTINOMIAN: JAMES JOYCE
“The supreme question about a work of art is out of how deep a
life does it spring.”--STEPHEN DÆDALUS.
Ireland has had the attention of the world focussed on her with much
constancy the past ten years. She has weathered her storms; she has
calmed her tempests; and she is fast repairing the devastations of her
tornadoes. None but defamers and ill-wishers contend that she will
not bring her ship of state successfully to port and that it will not
find safe and secure anchorage. During her perilous voyage one of her
rebellious sons has been violently rocking the boat of literature. His
name is James Joyce and his craft has had various names: first “The
Dubliners,” and last “Ulysses.”
A few intuitive sensitive visionaries may understand and comprehend
“Ulysses,” James Joyce's mammoth volume, without previous training
or instruction, but the average intelligent reader will glean little
or nothing from it, save bewilderment and disgust. It should be
companioned with a key and a glossary like the Berlitz books. Then
the attentive and diligent reader might get some comprehension of Mr.
Joyce's message, which is to tell of the people whom he has encountered
in his forty years of sentiency; to describe their behaviour and
speech; to analyse their motives; and to characterise their conduct.
He is determined that we shall know the effect the “world,” sordid,
turbulent, disorderly, steeped in alcohol and saturated with jesuitry,
had upon an emotional Celt, an egocentric genius whose chief diversion
has been blasphemy and keenest pleasure self-exaltation, and whose
life-long important occupation has been keeping a note-book in which he
has recorded incident encountered and speech heard with photographic
accuracy and Boswellian fidelity. Moreover, he is determined to tell
them in a new way, not in straightforward, narrative fashion with a
certain sequentiality of idea, fact, occurrence; in sentence, phrase,
and paragraph that is comprehensible to a person of education and
culture; but in parodies of classic prose and current slang, in
perversions of sacred literature, in carefully metred prose with
studied incoherence, in symbols so occult and mystic that only the
initiated and profoundly versed can understand; in short, by means of
every trick and illusion that a master artificer, or even magician, can
play with the English language.
It has been said of the writings of Tertullian, one of the two greatest
church writers, that they are rich in thought, and destitute of form,
passionate and hair-splitting, elegant and pithy in expression,
energetic and condensed to the point of obscurity. Mr. Joyce was
devoted to Tertullian in his youth. Dostoievsky also intrigued him.
From him he learned what he knows of _mise en scene_, and particularly
to disregard the time element. Ibsen and Hauptmann he called master
after he had weaned himself from Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas. But
he calls no one master now; even Homer he calls _comare_. It is related
that “A.E.” once said to him, “I'm afraid you have not enough chaos in
you to make a world.” The poet was a poor prophet. Mr. Joyce has made a
world, and a chaotic one in which no decent person wants to live.
It is likely that there is no one writing English today who could
parallel his feat, and it is also likely that few would care to do it
were they capable. This statement requires that it be said at once that
Mr. Joyce has seen fit to use words and phrases which the entire world
has covenanted not to use and which people in general, cultured and
uncultured, civilised and savage, believer and heathen, have agreed
shall not be used because they are vulgar, vicious, and vile. Mr.
Joyce's reply to this is: “This race and this country and this life
produced me--I shall express myself as I am.”
[Illustration: JAMES JOYCE]
An endurance test should always be preceded by training. It requires
real endurance to finish “Ulysses.” The best training for it is careful
perusal or reperusal of “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,” the
volume published six or seven years ago which revealed Mr. Joyce's
capacity to externalise his consciousness, to set it down in words.
It is the story of his own life before he exiled himself from his
native land, told with uncommon candour and extraordinary revelations
of thought, impulse, and action, many of them of a nature and texture
which most persons do not feel free to reveal, or which they do not
feel it is decent and proper to confide to the world.
The facts of Mr. Joyce's life with which the reader who seeks to
comprehend his writings should be familiar are: He was one of many
children of South Ireland Catholic parents. In his early childhood his
father had not yet dissipated their small fortune and he was sent to
Clongowes Wood, a renowned Jesuit College near Dublin, and remained
there until it seemed to his teachers and his parents that he should
decide whether or not he had a vocation; that is whether he felt
within himself, in his soul, a desire to join the order. Meanwhile he
had experienced the profoundly disturbing impulses of pubescence; the
incoming waves of genesic potency had swept over him, submerged him,
and carried him into a deep trough of sin, from which, however, he was
extricated, resuscitated, and purged by confession, penitence, and
prayer. But the state of grace would not endure. He lost his faith, and
soon his patriotism, and he held those with whom he formerly worshipped
up to ridicule, and his country and her aspirations up to contumely.
He continued his studies in the Old Royal University of Dublin,
notwithstanding the abject poverty of his family. He was reputed to be
a poet then, and many of the poems in “Chamber Music” were composed
at this period. He had no hesitation in admitting the reputation,
even contending for it. “I have written the most perfect lyric since
Shakespeare,” he said to Padraic Colum; and to Yeats, “We have met too
late; you are too old to be influenced by me.” If belief in his own
greatness has ever forsaken him in the years of trial and distress that
have elapsed between then and now, no one, save possibly one, has heard
of it. Mr. William Hohenzollern in his sanguine moments was never as
sure of himself as Mr. James Joyce in his hours of despair.
After graduation he decided to study medicine, and, in fact, he did
pursue the study for two or three years, one of them in the medical
school of the University of Paris. Eventually he became convinced that
medicine was not his vocation, even though funds were available for
him to continue his studies, and he decided to take up singing as a
profession, “having a phenomenally beautiful tenor voice.” These three
novitiates furnished him with all the material he has used in the
four volumes that he has published. Matrimony, parentage, ill-health,
and a number of other factors put an end to his musical ambitions. He
taught for a brief time in Dublin and wrote the stories that are in
“Dubliners,” which his countrymen baptised with fire; and began the
“Portrait.” But he couldn't tolerate “a place fettered by the reformed
conscience, a country in which the symbol of its art was the cracked
looking-glass of a servant,” so he betook himself to a country in the
last explosive crisis of paretic grandeur. In Trieste he gained his
daily bread by teaching Austrians English and Italian, having a mastery
of the latter language that would flatter a Padovian professor. The war
drove him to the haven of the expatriate, Switzerland, and for four
years he taught German, Italian, French, English, to anyone in Zurich
who had time, ambition, and money to acquire a new language. Since the
Armistice he has lived in Paris, first finishing the book which is his
_magnum opus_ and which he says and believes represents everything that
he has to say or will have to say, and he is now enjoying the fame and
the infamy which its publication and three editions within two years
have brought him.
As a boy Mr. Joyce's cherished hero was Odysseus. He approved of
his subterfuge for evading military service; he envied him the
companionship of Penelope; and all his latent vengeance was vicariously
satisfied by reading of the way in which he revenged himself on
Palamedes. The craftiness and resourcefulness of the final artificer of
the siege of Troy made him permanently big with envy and admiration.
But it was the ten years of his hero's life after he had eaten of the
lotus plant, that wholly seduced Mr. Joyce and appeased his emotional
soul. As years went by he realised that his own experiences were
not unlike those of the slayer of Polyphemus and the favourite of
Pallas-Athene, and after careful deliberation and planning he decided
to write an Odyssey. In early childhood Mr. Joyce had identified
himself with Dædalus, the Athenian architect, sculptor, and magician,
and in all his writings he carries on in the name of Stephen Dædalus.
Like the original Dædalus, his genius is great, his vanity is greater,
and he can brook no rival. Like his prototype, he was exiled from
his native land after he had made a great contribution to the world.
Like him, he was received kindly in exile, and like him, also, having
ingeniously contrived wings for himself and used them successfully, he
is now enjoying a period of tranquillity after his sufferings and his
labour.
“Ulysses” is the record of the thoughts, antics, vagaries, and
actions--more particularly the thoughts--of Stephen Dædalus, an
Irishman, of artistic temperament; of Leopold Bloom, an Irish-Hungarian
Jew, of scientific temperament and perverted instincts; and of his
wife, Marion Tweedy, daughter of an Irish major of the Royal Dublin
Fusiliers stationed in Gibraltar, and a Jewish girl. Marion was a
concert singer given to coprophilly, especially in her involutional
stages, spiritual and physical. Bloom's acquired perversion he
attempted to conceal by canvassing for advertisements for _The
Freeman_.
Dublin is the scene of action. The events--those that can be
mentioned--and their sequence are:
“The preparation for breakfast, intestinal congestion, the
bath, the funeral, the advertisement of Alexander Keyes, the
unsubstantial lunch, the visit to Museum and National Library,
the book-hunt along Bedford Row, Merchants' Arch, Wellington
Quay, the music in the Ormond Hotel, the altercation with a
truculent troglodyte, in Bernard Kierman's premises, a blank
period of time including a car-drive, a visit to a house
of mourning, a leave-taking, ... the prolonged delivery of
Mrs. Nina Purefoy, the visit to a disorderly house ... and
subsequent brawl and chance medley in Beaver Street, nocturnal
perambulation to and from the cabman's shelter, Butt Bridge.”
And these are some of the things they thought and talked of:
“Music, literature, Ireland, Dublin, Paris, friendship, woman,
prostitution, diet, the influence of gaslight or the light of
arc and glowlamps on the growth of adjoining paraheliotropic
trees, exposed corporation emergency dustbuckets, the Roman
catholic church, ecclesiastical celibacy, the Irish nation,
Jesuit education, careers, the study of medicine, the past day,
the maleficent influence of the presabbath, Stephen's collapse.”
Mr. Joyce is an alert, keen-witted, educated man who has made it a
life-long habit to jot down every thought that he has had, drunk or
sober, depressed or exalted, despairing or hopeful, hungry or satiated,
in brothel or in sanctuary, and likewise to put down what he has
seen or heard others do or say--and rhythm has from infancy been an
enchantment of the heart. It is not unlikely that every thought he
has had, every experience he has ever encountered, every person he
has ever met, one might say everything he has ever read in sacred or
profane literature, is to be encountered in the obscurities and in
the franknesses of “Ulysses.” If personality is the sum total of all
one's experiences, all one's thoughts and emotions, inhibitions and
liberations, acquisitions and inheritances, then it may truthfully be
said that “Ulysses” comes nearer to being the perfect revelation of a
personality than any book I know.
He sets down every thought that comes into consciousness. Decency,
propriety, pertinency are not considered. He does not seek to give
them orderliness, sequence, or conclusiveness. His literary output
would seem to substantiate some of Freud's contentions. The majority
of writers, practically all, transfer their conscious, deliberate
thought to paper. Mr. Joyce transfers the product of his unconscious
mind to paper without submitting it to the conscious mind, or if he
submits it, it is to receive approval and encouragement, perhaps even
praise. He holds with Freud that the unconscious mind represents the
real man, the man of Nature, and the conscious mind the artificed man,
the man of convention, of expediency, the slave of Mrs. Grundy, the
sycophant of the Church, the plastic puppet of Society and State. For
him the movements which work revolutions in the world are born out of
the dreams and visions in a peasant's heart on the hillside. “Peasant's
heart” psychologically is the unconscious mind. When a master
technician of words and phrases set himself the task of revealing the
product of the unconscious mind of a moral monster, a pervert and an
invert, an apostate to his race and his religion, the simulacrum of a
man who has neither cultural background nor personal self-respect, who
can neither be taught by experience nor lessoned by example, as Mr.
Joyce did in drawing the picture of Leopold Bloom, he undoubtedly knew
full well what he was undertaking, how unacceptable the vile contents
of that unconscious mind would be to ninety-nine out of a hundred
readers, and how incensed they would be at having the disgusting
product thrown in their faces. But that has nothing to do with the
question: has the job been done well; is it a work of art? The answer
is in the affirmative.
The proceedings of the council of the gods, with which the book opens,
are tame. Stephen Dædalus, the Telemachus of this Odyssey, is seen
chafing beneath his sin--refusal to kneel down at the bedside of his
dying mother and pray for her--while having an _al fresco_ breakfast in
a semi-abandoned turret with his friend Buck Mulligan (now an esteemed
physician of Dublin), and a ponderous Saxon from Oxford whose father
“made his tin by selling jalap to the Zulus,” who applauds Stephen's
sarcasms and witticisms. Stephen has a grouch because Buck Mulligan has
referred to him, “O, it's only Dædalus whose mother is beastly dead.”
This Stephen construes to be an offense to him, not to his mother.
Persecutory ideas are dear to Stephen Dædalus. In his moody brooding
this is how he welds words:
“Woodshadows floated silently by through the morning peace from
the stairhead seaward where he gazed. Inshore and farther out
the mirror of water whitened, spurned by lightshod hurrying
feet. White breast of the dim sea. The twining stresses, two
by two. A hand plucking the harp-strings merging their twining
chords. Wavewhite wedded words shimmering on the dim tide.”
Meanwhile his sin pursues him as “the Russian gentleman of a particular
kind” pursued Ivan Karamazov when delirium began to overtake him. He
recalls his mother, her secrets, her illness, her last appeals. While
breakfasting Buck and Stephen plan a glorious drunk to astonish the
druidy druids, with the latter's wage of schoolmaster which he will
receive that day. Later Buck goes in the sea while Stephen animadverts
on Ireland's two masters, the Pope of Rome and the King of England, and
recites blasphemous poetry.
Stephen spends the forenoon in school, then takes leave of the pedantic
proprietor, who gives him his salary and a paper on foot and mouth
disease. Telemachus embarks on his voyage, and the goddess who sails
with him communes with him as follows:
“Ineluctable modality of the visible; at least that if no more,
thought through my eyes. Signatures of all things I am here
to read, seaspawn and seawrack, the nearing tide, that rusty
boot. Snotgreen, bluesilver, rust: coloured signs. Limits of
the diaphane. But he adds: in bodies. Then he was aware of them
bodies before of them coloured. How? By knocking his sconce
against them, sure. Go easy. Bald he was and a millionaire,
_maestro di color che sanno_. Limit of the diaphane in. Why in?
Diaphane, adiaphane. If you can put your five fingers through
it, it is a gate, if not a door. Shut your eyes and see.”
This is the first specimen of the saltatory, flitting, fugitive,
on-the-surface purposeless thought that Stephen produces as he walks
Sandymount Strand. From this point the book teems with it and with
Bloom's autistic thoughts. It is quite impossible to give a synopsis or
summary of them. It must suffice to say that in the fifteen pages Mr.
Joyce devotes to the first leg of the voyage that will give him news
of Ulysses, an hour's duration, a film picture has been thrown on the
screen of his visual cortex for which he writes legends as fast as the
machine reels them off. It is Mr. Joyce's life that is thus remembered:
his thoughts, ambitions, aspirations, failures, and disappointments;
the record of his contacts and their engenderment--what was and what
might have been. On casual examination, such record transformed into
print looks like gibberish, and is meaningless. So does shorthand. It
is full of meaning for anyone who knows how to read it.
The next fifty pages are devoted to displaying the reel of Mr. Leopold
Bloom's mind, the workings of his psycho-physical machinery, autonomic
and heteronomic, the idle and purposeful thoughts of the most obnoxious
wretch of all mankind, as Eolus called the real Ulysses. While he
forages for his wife's breakfast, prepares and serves it, his thoughts
and reflections are answers to the question “Digman, how camest thou
into the realms of darkness?” for no burial honours yet had Irish
Elpenor received.
Then follows a picture of Dublin before the revolution, its newspapers,
and the men who made them, with comment and characterisation by Stephen
Dædalus, interpolations and solicitations by Leopold Bloom. Naturally
the reader who knew or knew of William Brayden, Esquire, of Oakland,
Sandymount, Mr. J. J. Smolley whose speech reminds of Edmund Burke's
writings, or Mr. Myles Crawford whose witticisms are founded on Pietro
Aretino, would find this chapter more illuminating, though not more
entertaining, than one who had heard of Dublin for the first time in
1914. Nor does it facilitate understanding of the conversation there to
know the geography of an isle afloat where lived the son of Hippotas,
his six daughters, and six blooming sons.
Bloom continues his apparently purposeless and obviously purposeful
thoughts after the Irish Læstrygonians had stoned him, for another
fifty pages. Everything he sees and everyone he encounters generate
them. They are connected, yet they are disparate. I choose one of the
simplest and easiest to quote:
“A procession of whitesmocked men marched slowly towards him
along the gutter, scarlet sashes across their boards. Bargains.
Like that priest they are this morning: we have sinned, we have
suffered. He read the scarlet letters on their five tall white
hats: H. E. L. Y. S. Wisdom Hely's. Y lagging behind drew a
chunk of bread from under his foreboard, crammed it into his
mouth and munched as he walked. Our staple food. Three bob a
day, walking along the gutters, street after street. Just keep
skin and bone together, bread and skilly. They are not Boyl:
no: M'Glade's men. Doesn't bring in any business either. I
suggested to him about a transparent show cart with two smart
girls sitting inside writing letters, copybooks, envelopes,
blotting paper. I bet that would have caught on. Smart girls
writing something catch the eye at once. Everyone dying to know
what she's writing. Get twenty of them round you if you stare
at nothing. Have a finger in the pie. Women too. Curiosity.
Pillar of salt. Wouldn't have it of course because he didn't
think of it himself first. Or the inkbottle I suggested with
a false stain of black celluloid. His ideas for ads like
Plumtree's potted under the obituaries, cold meat department.
You can't like 'em. What? Our envelops. Hello! Jones, where are
you going? Can't stop, Robinson, I am hastening to purchase
the only reliable inkeraser _Kansell_, sold by Hely's Ltd.,
85 Dame Street. Well out of that ruck I am. Devil of a job it
was collecting accounts of those convents. Tranquilla convent.
That was a nice nun there, really sweet face. Wimple suited her
small head. Sister? Sister? I am sure she was crossed in love
by her eyes. Very hard to bargain with that sort of a woman.
I disturbed her at her devotions that morning. But glad to
communicate with the outside world. Our great day, she said,
Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. Sweet name too: caramel. She
knew, I think she knew by the way she. If she had married she
would have changed. I suppose they really were short of money.
Fried everything in the best butter all the same. No lard for
them. My heart's broke eating dripping. They like buttering
themselves in and out. Molly tasting it, her veil up. Sister?
Pat Claffey, the pawn-broker's daughter. It was a nun they say
invented barbed wire.”
Man may not think like this, but it is up to the psychologist to prove
it. So far as I know he does. Lunatics do, in manic “flights”; and
flights of ideas are but accentuations of normal mental activity.
The following is a specimen of what psychologists call “flight of
ideas.” To the uninitiated reader it means nothing. To the initiated it
is like the writing on the wall.
“Bloom. Flood of warm jimjam lickitup secretness flowed to flow
in music out, in desire, dark to lick flow, invading. Tipping
her tepping her tapping her topping her. Tup. Pores to dilate
dilating. Tup. The joy the feel the warm the. Tup. To pour o'er
sluices pouring gushes. Flood, gush, flow, joy-gush, tupthrop.
Now! Language of love.”
In the next section Stephen holds forth on ideals and literature and
gives the world that which Mr. Joyce gave his fellow students in
Dublin to satiety, viz. his views of Shakespeare, and particularly his
conception of Hamlet. “Shakespeare is the happy hunting ground of all
minds that have lost their balance,” one of his cronies remarked. Even
in those days Mr. Joyce's ideas of grandeur suggested to a student
of psychiatry who heard him talk that he had the mental disease with
which that symptom is most constantly associated, and to another of his
auditors that he had an _idée fixe_, and that “the moral idea seems
lacking, the sense of destiny, of retribution.” They never hurt Mr.
Joyce--such views as these. The armour of his _amour propre_ has never
been pierced; the belief in his destiny has never wavered. The meeting
in the National Library twenty years ago gives him opportunity to
display philosophic erudition, dialectic skill, and artistic feeling in
his talk with the young men and their elders. It would be interesting
to know from any of them, or from Mr. T. S. Eliot, if the following is
the sort of grist that is brought to the free-verse miller, and can
poetry be made from it.
“Yogibogeybox in Dawson chambers. _Isis Unveiled._ Their Pali
book we tried to pawn. Crosslegged under an umbrel umbershoot
he thrones an Aztec logos, functioning on astral levels, their
oversoul, mahamahatma. The faithful hermetists await the light,
ripe for chelaship, ringroundabout him. Louis H. Victory. T.
Caulfield Irwin. Lotus ladies tend them i' the eyes, their
pineal glands aglow. Filled with his god he thrones, Buddh under
plantain. Gulfer of souls, engulfer. He souls, she souls, shoals
of souls. Engulfed with wailing creecries, whirled, whirling,
they bewail.”
In contrast with this take the following description of the drowned man
in Dublin Bay as a specimen of masterly realism:
“Five fathoms out there. Full fathom five thy father lies. At
one he said. Found drowned. High water at Dublin Bar. Driving
before it a loose drift of rubble, fanshoals of fishes, silly
shells. A corpse rising saltwhite from the undertow, bobbing
landward, a pace a pace a porpoise. There he is. Hook it quick.
Sunk though he be beneath the watery floor. We have him. Easy
now. Bag of corpsegas sopping in foul brine.... Dead breaths
I living breathe, tread dead dust.... Hauled stark over the
gunwale he breathes upward the stench of his green grave, his
leprous nosehole snorting to the sun.”
There are so many “specimens” of writing in the volume that it is quite
impossible to give examples of them. Frankness compels me to state that
he goes out of his way to scoff at God and to besmirch convention, but
that's to show he is not afraid, like the man who defied God to kill
him at 9.48 p.m.
“The playwright who wrote the folio of this world and wrote it
badly (He gave us light first and the sun two days later), the
lord of things as they are whom the most Roman of catholics call
_bio boia_, hangman god, is doubtless all in all in all of us,
ostler and butcher, and would be bawd and cuckold too but that
in the economy of heaven, foretold by Hamlet, there are no more
marriages, glorified man, an androgynous angel, being a wife
unto himself.”
The Dædalus family and their neighbourhood--their pawn-brokers,
shopkeepers, spiritual advisers; the people they despised, those they
envied, the Viceroy of Ireland, now come in for consideration. Mr.
Dædalus is a sweet-tempered, mealy-mouthed man given to strong drink
and high-grade vagrancy who calls his daughters “an insolent pack of
little bitches since your poor mother died.” Their appearances and
emotional reactions, and their contacts with Stephen and Bloom who are
passing the time till they shall begin the orgy which is the high-water
mark of the book, are instructive to the student of behaviouristic
psychology.
Readers of Dostoievsky rarely fail to note the fact that occurrences
of a few hours required hundreds of pages to narrate. The element
of time seems to have been eliminated. It is the same in “Ulysses.”
This enormous volume of seven hundred and thirty-two pages is taken
up with thoughts of two men during twelve hours of sobriety and six
of drunkenness. I do not know the population of Dublin, but whatever
it may be, a vast number of these people come into the ken of Dædalus
and Bloom during those hours, and into the readers'; for it is through
their eyes and their ears that we see and hear what transpires and is
said. And so the trusting reader accompanies one or both of them to the
beach, and observes them in revery and in repose; or to a café concert,
and observes them in ructions and in ruminations. A countryman of Mr.
Joyce, Edmund Burke, said “custom reconciles us to everything,” and
after we have accompanied these earthly twins, Stephen and Leopold,
thus far, we do not baulk at the lying-in hospital or even the red
light district, though others more sensitive and less tolerant than
myself would surely wish they had deserted the “bark-waggons” when the
occupants were invited into the brothel.
The book in reality is a moving picture with picturesque legends, many
profane and more vulgar. For a brief time Mr. Joyce was associated with
the “movies,” and the form in which “Ulysses” was cast may have been
suggested by experiences with the Volta Theatre, as his cinematograph
enterprise was called.
Mr. Joyce learned from St. Thomas Aquinas what Socrates learned from
his mother: how to bring thoughts into the world; and from his boyhood
he had a tenderness for rhythm. It crops out frequently in “Ulysses.”
“In Inisfail the fair there lies a land, the land of holy
Michan. There rises a watchtower beheld of men afar. There sleep
the mighty dead as in life they slept, warrior and princes
of high renown. A pleasant land it is in sooth of murmuring
waters, fishful streams where sport the gunnard, the plaice,
the roach, the halibut, the gibbed haddock, the grilse, the
dab, the brill, the flounder, the mixed coarse fish generally
and other denizens of the aqueous kingdom too numerous to be
enumerated. In the mild breezes of the west and of the east
the lofty trees wave in different directions their first class
foliage, the wafty sycamore, the Lebanonian cedar, the exalted
planetree, the eugenic eucalyptus and other ornaments of the
arboreal world with which that region is thoroughly well
supplied. Lovely maidens sit in close proximity to the roots of
the lovely trees singing the most lovely songs while they play
with all kinds of lovely objects as for example golden ingots,
silvery fishes, crans of herrings, drafts of eels, codlings,
creels of fingerlings, purple seagems and playful insects. And
heroes voyage from afar to woo them, from Eblana to Slievemargy,
the peerless princes of unfettered Munster and of Connacht the
just and of smooth sleek Leinster and of Cruachan's land and of
Armagh the splendid and of the noble district of Boyle, princes,
the sons of kings.”
At other times he seems to echo the sonorous phrasing of some forgotten
master: Pater or Rabelais, or to paraphrase William Morris or Walt
Whitman, or to pilfer from the Reverend William Sunday.
“The figure seated on a large boulder at the foot of a round
tower was that of a broadshouldered deepchested stronglimbed
frankeyed red-haired freely freckled shaggybearded widemouthed
largenosed longheaded deepvoiced barekneed brawnyhanded
hairylegged ruddyfaced, sinewyarmed hero. From shoulder to
shoulder he measured several ells and his rocklike mountainous
knees were covered, as was likewise the rest of his body
wherever visible, with a strong growth of tawny prickly hair
in hue and toughness similar to the mountain gorse (_Ulex
Europeus_). The widewinged nostrils, from which bristles of the
same tawny hue projected, were of such capaciousness that within
their cavernous obscurity the fieldlark might easily have lodged
her nest. The eyes in which a tear and a smile strove ever for
the mastery were of the dimensions of a goodsized cauliflower. A
powerful current of warm breath issued at regular intervals from
the profound cavity of his mouth while in rhythmic resonance
the loud strong hale reverberations of his formidable heart
thundered rumblingly causing the ground, the summit of the
lofty tower and the still loftier walls of the cave to vibrate
and tremble.”
The chapter from which these quotations are taken, when the friends
turn into Barney Kiernan's to slake their thirst, shows Mr. Joyce
with loosed tongue--the voluble, witty, philosophic Celt, with an
extraordinary faculty of words. If an expert stenographer had taken
down the ejaculations as they spurted from the mouth of Tom and Jerry,
and the deliberations of Alf and Joe, and the other characters of
impulsive energy and vivid desire, then accurately transcribed them,
interpolating “says” frequently, they would read like this chapter.
Conspicuous amongst Mr. Joyce's possessions is a gift for facile
emotional utterance. The reader feels himself affected by his impulses
and swept along by his eloquence. He is scathingly sarcastic about
Irish cultural and political aspirations; loathsomely lewd about their
morals and habits; merciless in his revelations of their temperamental
possessions and infirmities; and arbitrary and unyielding in his belief
that their degeneration is beyond redemption. Like the buckets on an
endless chain of a dredger, the vials of his wrath are poured time
after time upon England and the British Empire “on which the sun never
rises,” but they are never emptied. Finally he embodies his sentiment
in paraphrase of the Creed.
“They believe in rod, the scourger almighty, creator of hell
upon earth and in Jacky Tar, the son of a gun, who was conceived
of unholy boast, born of the fighting navy, suffered under rump
and dozen, was scarified, flayed and curried, yelled like bloody
hell, the third day he arose again from the bed, steered into
haven, sitteth on his beamend till further orders whence he
shall come to drudge for a living and be paid.”
He recounts his country's former days of fame and fortune, but he
doesn't foresee any of the happenings of the past three years.
“Where are our missing twenty millions of Irish should be here
today instead of four, our lost tribes? And our potteries and
textiles, the finest in the whole world! And our wool that
was sold in Rome in the time of Juvenal and our flax and our
damask from the looms of Antrim and our Limerick lace, our
tanneries and our white flint glass down there by Ballybough
and our Huguenot poplin that we have since Jacquand de Lyon
and our woven silk and our Foxford tweeds and ivory raised
point from the Carmelite convent in New Ross, nothing like it
in the whole wide world. Where are the Greek merchants that
came through the pillars of Hercules, the Gibraltar now grabbed
by the foe of mankind, with gold and Tyrian purple to sell in
Wexford at the fair of Carmen? Read Tacitus and Ptolemy, even
Giraldus Cambrensis, Wine, peltries, Connemara marble, silver
from Tipperary, second to none, our farfamed horses even today,
the Irish hobbies, with King Philip of Spain offering to pay
customs duties for the right to fish in our waters. What do the
yellowjohns of Anglia owe us for our ruined trade and our ruined
hearths? And the beds of the Barrow and Shannon they won't
deepen with millions of acres of marsh and bog to make us all
die of consumption.”
Nowhere is his note-book more evident than in this chapter.
Krafft-Ebing, a noted Viennese psychiatrist, said a certain disease was
due to civilisation and syphilisation. Mr. Joyce made note of it and
uses it. The _Slocum_ steamboat disaster in New York, which touched all
American hearts twenty years ago; the prurient details of a scandal in
“loop” circles of Chicago; a lynching in the South are referred to as
casually by Lenehan, Wyse _et al_ while consuming their two pints, as
if they were family matters.
That the author has succeeded in cutting and holding up to view a slice
of life in this chapter and in the succeeding one--Bloom amongst the
Nurse-girls--it would be idle to deny. That it is sordid and repulsive
need scarcely be said. It has this in common with the writings of all
the naturalists.
The author's familiarity with the Dadaists is best seen in his chapter
on the visit to the Lying-in Hospital. Some of it is done in the
pseudostyle of the English and Norse Saga; some in the method adopted
by d'Annunzio in his composition of “Nocturne.” He wrote thousands and
thousands of words on small pieces of paper, then threw them into a
basket, and shuffled them thoroughly. With a blank sheet before him and
a dripping mucilage brush in one hand, he proceeded to paste them one
after another on the sheet. A sample of the result is:
“Universally that person's acumen is esteemed very little
perceptive concerning whatsoever matters are being held as
most profitably by mortals with sapience endowed to be studied
who is ignorant of that which the most in doctrine erudite
and certainly by reason of that in them high mind's ornament
deserving of veneration constantly maintain when by general
consent they affirm that other circumstances being equal by
no exterior splendour is the prosperity of a nation more
efficaciously asserted than by the measure of how far forward
may have progressed the tribute of its solicitude for that
proliferent continuance which of evils the original if it be
absent when fortunately present constitutes the certain sign of
omnipollent nature's incorrupted benefaction.”
Tired of this, he paraphrases the Holy Writ.
“And whiles they spake the door of the castle was opened and
there nighed them a mickle noise as of many that sat there at
meat. And there came against the place as they stood a young
learning knight yclept Dixon. And the traveller Leopold was
couth to him sithen it had happed that they had had ado each
with other in the house of misericord where this learning knight
lay by cause the traveller Leopold came there to be healed
for he was sore wounded in his breast by a spear wherewith a
horrible and dreadful dragon was smitten him for which he did
do make a salve of volatile salt and chrism as much as he might
suffice. And he said now that he should go into that castle for
to make merry with them that were there.”
When this palls, he apes a satirist like Rabelais, or a mystic like
Bunyan. Weary of this, he turns to a treatise on embryology and a
volume of obstetrics and strains them through his mind. One day some
serious person, a disciple or a benighted admirer, such as M. Valery
Larbaud, will go through “Ulysses” to find references to toxicology,
Mosaic law, the Kamustra, eugenics, etc., as such persons and scholars
have gone through Shakespeare. Until it is done no one will believe the
number of subjects he touches is marvellous, and sometimes even the way
he does it. For instance this on birth control:
“Murmur, Sirs, is eke oft among lay folk. Both babe and parent
now glorify their Maker, the one limbo gloom, the other in purge
fire. But, Gramercy, what of those Godpossibled souls that we
nightly impossibilise, which is the sin against the Holy Ghost,
Very God, Lord and Giver of Life.”
It is worthy of note also that Mr. Joyce defines specifically the sin
against the Holy Ghost, which for long has been a stumbling block to
priest and physician. He does not agree with the great Scandinavian
writer toward whom he looked reverently in his youth. Ella Rentheim
says to Borkman, “The Bible speaks of a mysterious sin for which there
is no forgiveness. I have never understood what it could be; but now I
understand. The great, unpardonable sin is to murder the love-life in a
human soul.”
The object of it all is to display the thought and erudition of Stephen
Dædalus, “a sensitive nature, smarting under the lashes of an undivined
and squalid way of life”; and the emotions, perversions, and ambitions
of Leopold Bloom, a devotee of applied science, whose inventions were
for the purpose of
“rendering obsolete popguns, elastic airbladders, games of
hazard, catapults. They comprised astronomical kaleidoscopes,
exhibiting the twelve constellations of the Zodiac from Aries
to Pisces, miniature mechanical orreries, arithmetical gelatine
lozenges, geometrical to correspond with zoological biscuits,
globemap playing balls, historically costumed dolls.”
It is particularly in the next chapter, one of the strangest of
literature, that Mr. Joyce displays the apogee of his art. Dædalus
and Bloom have passed in review on a mystic stage all their intimates
and enemies, all their detractors and sycophants, the scum of Dublin,
and the spawn of the devil. Mr. Joyce resurrects Saint Walpurgis,
galvanises her into life after twelve centuries' death intimacy with
Beelzebub, and substituting a squalid section of Dublin for Brocken,
proceeds to depict a festival, the devil being host. The guests in the
flesh and of the spirit have still many of their distinctive corporeal
possessions, but the reactions of life no longer exist. The chapter is
replete with wit, humour, satire, philosophy, learning, knowledge of
human frailties, and human indulgences, especially with the brakes of
morality off. And alcohol or congenital deficiency takes them off for
most of the characters. It reeks of lust and filth, but Mr. Joyce says
life does, and the morality he depicts is the only one he knows.
In this chapter is compressed all of the author's experiences, all his
determinations and unyieldingness, and most of the incidents that gave
a persecutory twist to his mind, made him an exile from his native
land, and deprived him of the courage to return. He does not hesitate
to bring in the ghost of his mother whom he had been accused of killing
because he would not kneel down and pray for her when she was dying,
and to question her as to the verity of the accusation. But he does
not repent even when she returns from the spiritual world. In fact,
the capacity for repentance is left out of Mr. Joyce's make-up. It is
as impossible to convince Mr. Joyce that he is wrong about anything
on which he has made up his mind as it is to convince a paranoiac
of the unreality of his false beliefs, or a jealous woman of the
groundlessness of her suspicions. It may be said that this chapter
does not represent life, but I venture to say that it represents life
with photographic accuracy as Mr. Joyce has seen it and lived it;
that every scene has come within his gaze; that every speech has been
heard or said; and every sentiment experienced or thrust upon him. It
is a mirror held up to life--life which we could sincerely wish and
devoutly pray that we were spared; for it is life in which happiness is
impossible, save when forgetfulness of its existence is brought about
by alcohol, and in which mankind is destitute of virtue, deprived of
ideals, deserted by love.
To disclaim it is life that countless men and women know would be
untrue, absurd, and libellous. I do not know that Mr. Joyce makes any
such claim, but I claim that it is life that he has known.
Mr. Joyce had the good fortune to be born with a quality which the
world calls genius. Nature exacts a galling income tax from genius,
and as a rule she co-endows it with unamenability to law and order.
Genius and reverence are antipodal, Galileo being the exception to
the rule. Mr. Joyce has no reverence for organised religion, for
conventional morality, for literary style or form. He has no conception
of the word obedience, and he bends the knee neither to God nor man.
It is interesting and important to have the revelations of such a
personality, to have them first hand and not dressed up. Heretofore our
only avenues of information concerning them led through asylums for the
insane, for it was there that revelations were made without reserve. I
have spent much time and money in my endeavour to get such revelations,
without great success. Mr. Joyce has made it unnecessary for me to
pursue the quest. He has supplied the little and big pieces of material
from which the mental mosaic is made.
He had the profound misfortune to lose his faith, and he cannot rid
himself of the obsession that the Jesuits did it for him. He is trying
to get square by saying disagreeable things about them and holding
their teachings up to scorn and obloquy. He was so unfortunate as to be
born without a sense of duty, of service, of conformity to the State,
to the community, to society; and he is convinced he should tell about
it, just as some who have experienced a surgical operation feel that
they must relate minutely all its details, particularly at dinner
parties and to casual acquaintances.
Not ten men or women out of a hundred can read “Ulysses” through,
and of the ten who succeed in doing it for five of them it will be a
_tour de force_. I am probably the only person aside from the author
that has ever read it twice from beginning to end. I read it as a test
of Christian fortitude: to see if I could still love my fellow-man
after reading a book that depicts such repugnance of humanity, such
abhorence of the human body, and such loathsomeness of the possession
that links man with God, the creative endowment. Also the author is
a psychologist, and I find his empiric knowledge supplements mine
acquired by prolonged and sustained effort.
M. Valery Larbaud, a French critic who hailed “Ulysses” with the
reverence with which Boccaccio hailed the Divine Comedy, and who has
been giving conferences on “Ulysses” in Paris, says the key to the
book is Homer's immortal poem. If M. Larbaud has the key he cannot
spring the lock of the door of the dark safe in which “Ulysses” rests,
metaphorically, for most readers. At least he has not done so up to
this writing.
The key is to be found in the antepenultimate chapter of the book; and
it isn't a key, it's a combination, a countryman of Mr. Joyce's might
say. Anyone who tries at it long enough will succeed in working it,
even if he is not of M. Larbaud's cultivated readers who can fully
appreciate such authors as Rabelais, Montaigne, and Descartes.
The symbolism of the book is something that concerns only Mr. Joyce,
as nuns do, and other animate and inanimate things of which he has
fugitive thoughts and systematised beliefs.
After the Cheu-sinese orgy, Bloom takes Stephen home, and
unfortunately they awaken Marion, for she embraces the occasion to
purge her mind in soliloquy. Odo of Cluny never said anything of a
woman's body in life that is so repulsive as that which Mr. Joyce has
said of Marion's mind: a cesspool of forty years' accumulation. Into it
has drained the inherited vulgarities of Jew and gentile parent; within
it has accumulated the increment of a sordid, dissolute life in two
countries, extending over twenty-five years; in it have been compressed
the putrid exhalations of studied devotion to sense gratification.
Mr. Joyce takes off the lid and opens the sluice-way simultaneously,
and the result is that the reader, even though his sensitisation has
been fortified by reading the book, is bowled over. As soon as he
regains equilibrium he communes with himself to the effect that if the
world has many Marions missionaries should be withdrawn from heathen
countries and turned into this field where their work will be praised
by man and rewarded by God.
Mental hygiene takes on a deeper significance to one who succeeds in
reading “Ulysses,” and psychology has a larger ceinture.
Much time has been wasted in conjecturing what Mr. Joyce's message is.
In another connection he said, “My ancestors threw off their language
and took another. They allowed a handful of foreigners to subject them.
Do you fancy I am going to pay in my own life and person debts they
made? No honourable and sincere man has given up his life, his youth,
and his affections to Ireland from the days of Tone to those of Parnell
but the Irish sold him to the enemy or failed him in need or reviled
him and left him for another. Ireland is the old sow that eats her
farrow.”
“Ulysses” is in part vendetta. He will ridicule Gaelic renaissance of
literature and language; he will traduce the Irish people and vilify
their religion; he will scorn their institutions, lampoon their morals,
pasquinade their customs; he will stun them with obscene vituperation,
wound them with sacrilege and profanity, immerse them in the vitriolic
dripping from the “tank” that he seeks to drive over them; and for what
purpose? Revenge. Those dissatisfied with the simile of the fury of a
scorned woman should try “Ulysses.”
Mr. Joyce has made a contribution to the science of psychology, and he
has done it quite unbeknownst to himself, a fellow-countryman might
say. He has shown us the process of the transmuting of thought to
words. It isn't epoch making like “relativity,” but it will give him
notoriety, possibly immortality.
“A man of genius makes no mistakes; his errors are volitional
and are the portals of discovery.”--STEPHEN DÆDALUS.
CHAPTER III
FEODOR DOSTOIEVSKY: TRAGEDIST, PROPHET, AND PSYCHOLOGIST
A hundred years ago, in Moscow, a being manifested its existence, who
in the fullness of extraordinary vision and intellectuality heralded
a religious rebirth, became the prophet of a new moral, ethical, and
geographical order in the world, and the prototype of a new hero. Time
has accorded Feodor Mikhailovitch Dostoievsky the position of one of
the greatest writers of the nineteenth century, and as time passes his
position becomes more secure. Like the prophet of old, during life he
was fastened between two pieces of timber--debts and epilepsy--and sawn
asunder by his creditors and his conscience. Posterity links his name
with Pushkin and Tolstoi as the three great writers of their times.
They are to the Russian Renaissance what Leonardo, Michelangelo, and
Raphael were to the Italian Renaissance.
It is appropriate now, the centenary of his birth, to make a brief
statement of Dostoievsky's position as a writer or novelist, and
in so doing estimate must be made of him as a prophet, preacher,
psychologist, pathologist, artist, and individual. Though he was not
schooled to speak as expert in any of these fields, yet speak in them
he did, and in a way that would have reflected credit upon a professor.
It is particularly the field of morbid psychology, usually called
psychiatry, that Dostoievsky made uniquely his own. He described many
of the nervous and mental disorders, such as mania and depression, the
psychoneuroses, hysteria, obsessive states, epilepsy, moral insanity,
alcoholism, and that mysterious mental and moral constitution called
“degeneracy” (apparently first hand, for there is no evidence or
indication that he had access to books on mental medicine), in such a
way that alienists recognise in his descriptions masterpieces in the
same way that the painter recognises the apogee of his art in Giotto or
Velázquez.
Not only did he portray the mental activity and output of the
partially and potentially insane, but he described the conduct and
reproduced the speech of individuals with personality defects, and
with emotional disequilibrium, in a way that has never been excelled
in any literature. For instance, it would be difficult to find a more
comprehensive account of adult infantilism than the history of Stepan
Trofimovitch, a more accurate presentation of the composition of a
hypocrite than Rahkitin, of “The Brothers Karamazov.” No one save
Shakespeare has shown how consuming and overwhelming jealousy may be.
That infirmity has a deeper significance for anyone familiar with the
story of Katerina Ivanovna. Indeed Dostoievsky is the novelist of
passions. He creates his creatures that they may suffer, not that they
may enjoy from the reactions of life, though some of them get pleasure
in suffering. Such was Lise, the true hysteric, who said, “I should
like some one to torture me, marry me and then torture me, deceive me
and then go away. I don't want to be happy.”
[Illustration: FEODOR DOSTOIEVSKY]
Like Baudelaire and Nietzsche, whom he resembled morally and
intellectually, Dostoievsky was an intellectual romantic in rebellion
against life. His determination seemed to be to create an individual
who should defy life, and when he had defied it to his heart's content
“to hand God back his ticket,” having no further need of it as the
journey of existence was at an end. There is no place to go, nothing
to do, everything worth trying has been tried and found valueless, and
wherever he turns his gaze he sees the angel standing upon the sea
and upon the earth avowing that there shall be time no longer; so he
puts a bullet in his temple if his name is Svidrigailov, or soaps a
silken cord so that it will support his weight when one end is attached
to a large nail and the other to his neck, if it is Stavrogin.
Dostoievsky as a littérateur was obsessed with sin and expiation.
He connived and laboured to invent some new sin; he struggled and
fought to augment some old one with which he could inflict one of his
creation, and then watch him contend with it, stagger beneath it, or
flaunt it in the world's face. After it has wrought havoc, shipwrecked
the possessor's life, and brought inestimable calamity and suffering
to others, then he must devise adequate expiation. Expiation is
synonymous with sincere regret, honest request for forgiveness, and
genuine determination to sin no more, but Dostoievsky's sinners must
do something more; they must make renunciation in keeping with the
magnitude of their sins, and as this is beyond human expression they
usually kill themselves or go mad.
He had planned for his masterpiece “The Life of a Great Sinner,” and
the outline of it from his note-book deposited in the Central Archive
Department of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, has
now been published. The hero is a composite of the Seven Deadly Sins:
pride, covetousness, lust, anger, gluttony, envy, and sloth, plus the
sin against the Holy Ghost. No one has yet succeeded in defining that
sin satisfactorily, but it is what Dostoievsky's antinomian heroes were
trying to do, especially such an one as Stavrogin. Another noteworthy
feature about them is that they were all sadistic or masochistic: they
got pleasure varying from an appreciative glow to voluptuous ecstasy
and beyond, from causing pain and inducing humiliation, or having it
caused in them by others.
This was a conditioning factor of conduct of all his antinomian heroes,
and unless it be kept in mind when reading of them, their antics and
their reflections are sometimes difficult of comprehension. He makes
one of them, one of the most intellectual and moral, Ivan Karamazov,
say “You know we prefer beating-rods and scourges--that's our national
institution.... I know for a fact there are people who at every blow
are worked up to sensuality, which increases progressively at every
blow they inflict.”
It is difficult for a psychiatrist, after reading Dostoievsky's novels,
to believe that he did not have access to the literature of insanity
or have first-hand knowledge of the insane, and the criminologist must
wonder where he got his extraordinary knowledge of the relation between
suffering and lust. It may be that the habits of the Emperor Cheou-sin
Yeow-waug were known to him, just as those of Caligula and Claudius
were known to him.
It is not with the passions of the body or of the senses alone that
his heroes contend, but with those of the mind. The fire that burns
within them is abstraction, and the fuel that replenishes it is
thought--thought of whence and whither. By it the possessors are lashed
to a conduct that surpasses that of hate, jealousy, lubricity, or any
of the baser passions as the light of an incandescent bulb surpasses
that of a tallow candle. They are all men of parts, either originally
endowed with great intelligence or brought to a certain elevation of
intellectuality by education. Their conduct, their actions, their
misdeeds, their crimes are the direct result of their argumentation,
not of concrete, but of abstract things, and chiefly the nature and
existence of God, the varieties of use that an individual may permit
his intelligence, free-will, free determination, and of the impositions
of dogma founded on faith and inspiration which seem contrary to reason
and science.
All his heroes are more or less insane. Herein lies Dostoievsky's
strength and his weakness in character creation. None of them could
be held fully responsible in a court of justice. Out of the mouth
of babes and sucklings the Lord ordained strength, but there is no
writing to show that out of the mouths of the insane comes wisdom. Not
that insanity is inimical to brilliant, even wise, utterance; but the
pragmatic application of wisdom to life calls for sanity.
Dostoievsky himself was abnormal. He was what the physician calls a
neuropathic and psychopathic individual. In addition, he had genuine
epilepsy, that is, epilepsy not dependent upon some accidental disease,
such as infection, injury, or new growth. He was of psychopathic
temperament and at different times in his life displayed hallucination,
obsession, and hypochondria.
He wrote of them as if he were the professor, not the possessor. The
psychopathic constitution displays itself as:
“An unstable balance of the psychic impulses, an overfacile
tendency to emotion, an overswift interchange of mental phases,
an abnormally violent reaction of the psychic mechanism. The
feature most striking to the beholder in the character of such
sufferers is its heterogeneous medley of moods and whims, of
sympathies and antipathies; of ideas in turn joyous, stern,
gloomy, depressed and philosophical; of aspirations at first
charged with energy then dying away to nothing. Another feature
peculiar to these sufferers is their self-love. They are the
most naïve of egoists; they talk exclusively and persistently
and absorbedly of themselves; they strive always to attract the
general attention, to excite the general interest and to engage
everyone in conversation concerning their personality, their
ailments and even their vices.”
Scores of his characters had such constitution, and in none is it more
perfectly delineated than in Katerina Ivanovna, though Lise Hohlakov,
of the same novel, had wider display of the hysteria that grew on this
fertile soil.
The facts of Dostoievsky's life that are important to the reader who
would comprehend his psychopathic creations are that his father,
surgeon to the Workhouse Hospital at Moscow, was a stern, suspicious,
narrow-minded, gloomy, distrustful man who made a failure of life. “He
has lived in the world fifty years and yet he has the same opinions
of mankind that he had thirty years ago,” wrote Feodor when seventeen
years old. His mother was tender-minded, pious, and domestic, and died
early of tuberculosis. Although much has been written of his boyhood,
there is nothing particularly interesting in it bearing on his career
save that he was sensitive, introspective, unsociable, and early
displayed a desire to be alone. The hero of the book “Youth” relates
that in the lowest classes of the gymnasium he scorned all relations
with those of his class who surpassed him in any way in the sciences,
physical strength, or in clever repartee. He did not hate such a person
nor wish him harm. He simply turned away from him, that being his
nature. These characteristics run like a red thread through the entire
life of Dostoievsky. A tendency to day-dreaming was apparent in his
earliest years, and he gives graphic accounts of hallucination in “An
Author's Diary.” At the age of sixteen he was admitted to the School of
Engineering and remained there six years. During the latter part of his
student days he decided upon literature as a career. Before taking it
up, however, he had a brief experience with life after he had obtained
his commission as engineer, which showed him to be totally incapable
of dealing with its every-day eventualities, particularly in relation
to money, whose purpose he knew but whose value was ever to remain a
secret. It was then that he first displayed inability to subscribe or
to submit to ordinary social conventions; indeed, a determination to
transgress them.
From his earliest years the misfortunes of others hurt him and
distressed him, and in later life the despised and the rejected, the
poor and the oppressed, always had his sympathy and his understanding.
God and the people, that is the Russian people, were his passion. “The
people have a lofty instinct for truth. They may be dirty, degraded,
repellent, but without them and in disregard of them nothing useful
can be effected.” The intellectuals who held themselves aloof from
the masses he could not abide, and atheists, and their propaganda
socialism, were anathema. He demanded of men who arrogated to
themselves a distinction above their fellow men, “who go to the people
not to learn to know it, but condescendingly to instruct and patronise
it,” not only repentance, but expiation by suffering.
His first important literary contribution was entitled “Poor Folk.”
He was fortunate enough to be praised by his contemporaries and
particularly by Bielinsky, an editor and great critic, who saw in
the central idea of the story corroboration of his favourite theory,
viz.: abnormal social conditions distort and dehumanise mankind to
such an extent that they lose the human form and semblance. As the
result of this publication, Dostoievsky made the acquaintance of the
leading literary lights of St. Petersburg, many of whom praised him too
immoderately for his own good, as he produced nothing worthy of his
fame until many years after the event in his life which must be looked
upon as the beginning of his mental awakenment--banishment and penal
servitude in Siberia.
Toward the middle of the nineteenth century the doctrines of the
Frenchman, Charles Fourier, were having such acceptance in this
country, where the North American Phalanx in New Jersey and the
Brook farm in Massachusetts were thriving, as to encourage the
disciples of that sentimental but wholly mad socialist in other lands,
particularly in Russia, that their hopes of seeing the world dotted
with _Phalansteres_ might be fulfilled. Dostoievsky later stated most
emphatically that he never believed in Fourierism, but nibbling at it
nearly cost him his life. In fact, all that stood between him and death
was the utterance of the word “Go,” which it would seem the lips of the
executioner had puckered to utter when the reprieve came. Dostoievsky
was suspected of being a Revolutionary. One evening at the Petrashevsky
Club he declaimed Pushkin's poem on Solitude:
“My friends, I see the people no longer oppressed,
And slavery fallen by the will of the Czar,
And a dawn breaking over us, glorious and bright,
And our country lighted by freedom's rays.”
In discussion he suggested that the emancipation of the peasantry might
have to come through a rising. Thus he became suspected. But it was not
until he denounced the censorship and reflected on its severity and
injustice that he was taken into custody. He and twenty-one others were
sentenced to death. He spent four years in a Siberian prison and there
became acquainted with misery, suffering, and criminality that beggars
description.
“What a number of national types and characters I became
familiar with in the prison; I lived into their lives and so
I believe I know them really well. Many tramps' and thieves'
careers were laid bare to me, and above all the whole wretched
existence of the common people. I learnt to know the Russian
people as only a few know them.”
After four years he was, through the mediation of powerful friends,
transferred for five years to military service in Siberia, chiefly at
Semipalatinsk. In 1859 he was permitted to return to St. Petersburg,
and in the twenty years that followed he published those books upon
which his fame rests; namely, “Crime and Punishment,” “The Idiot,” “The
Possessed,” “The Journal of an Author,” and “The Brothers Karamazov.”
In 1867 he was obliged to leave Russia to escape imprisonment for debt,
and he remained abroad, chiefly in Switzerland, for four years.
In his appeal to General Todleben to get transferred from the military
to the civil service and to be permitted to employ himself in
literature, he said:
“Perhaps you have heard something of my arrest, my trial and
the supreme ratification of the sentence which was given in the
case concerning me in the year 1849. I was guilty and am very
conscious of it. I was convicted of the intention (but only the
intention) of acting against the Government; I was lawfully
and quite justly condemned; the hard and painful experiences
of the ensuing years have sobered me and altered my views in
many respects, but then while I was still blind I believed in
all the theories and Utopias. For two years before my offense
I had suffered from a strange moral disease--I had fallen into
hypochondria. There was a time even when I lost my reason. I was
exaggeratedly irritable, had a morbidly developed sensibility
and the power of distorting the most ordinary events into things
immeasurable.”
While Dostoievsky was in prison his physical health improved very
strikingly, but, despite this, his epilepsy, which had previously
manifested itself only in vague or minor attacks, became fully
developed. Attempts have been made to prove that prison life and
particularly its hardships and inhumanities were responsible in a
measure for Dostoievsky's epilepsy; but such allegations are no more
acceptable than those which attribute it to his father's alcoholism.
His epilepsy was a part of his general make-up, a part of his
constitution. It was an integral part of him and it became an integral
part of his books.
The phenomena of epilepsy may be said to be the epileptic personality
and the attack with its warning, its manifestations, and the
after-effects. The disease is veiled in the same mystery today as it
was when Hercules was alleged to have had it. Nothing is known of its
causation or of its dependency, and all that can truthfully be said
of the personality of the epileptic is that it is likely to display
psychic disorder, evanescent or fixed. Attacks are subject to the
widest variation both as to frequency and intensity, but the most
enigmatic things about the disease are the warnings of the attack, and
the phenomena that sometimes appear vicariously of the attack--the
epileptic equivalent they are called. Dostoievsky had these _auræ_ and
equivalents in an unusual way and with extraordinary intensity, and
narration of them as they were displayed in the different characters
of his creation who were afflicted with epilepsy, and of their effects
and consequences is an important part of every one of his great books.
Dostoievsky would seem to have been of the belief that a brain in
which some of the mechanisms are disordered may yet remain superior
both intellectually and morally to others less affected, and that
the display of such weakness or maladjustment may put the possessor
in tune with the Infinite, may permit him to blend momentarily with
the Eternal Harmony, to be restored temporarily to the Source of its
temporal emanation. Although he describes this in his “Letters,” as he
experienced it, he elaborates it in his epileptic heroes, and in none
so seductively as in “The Idiot.” He makes Prince Myshkin say:
“He thought amongst other things how in his epileptic
condition there was one stage, just before the actual attack,
when suddenly in the midst of sadness, mental darkness and
oppression his brain flared up, as it were, and with an unwonted
outburst all his vital powers were vivified simultaneously. The
sensation of living and of self-consciousness was increased at
such moments almost tenfold. They were moments like prolonged
lightning. As he thought over this afterward in a normal state
he often said to himself that all these flashes and beams of
the highest self-realisation, self-consciousness and “highest
existence” were nothing but disease, the interruption of the
normal state. If this were so, then it was by no means the
highest state, but, on the contrary, it must be reckoned as the
very lowest. And yet he came at last to the very paradoxical
conclusion: What matter if it is a morbid state? What difference
can it make that the tension is abnormal, if the result itself,
if the moment of sensation when remembered and examined in the
healthy state proves to be in the highest degree harmony and
beauty, and gives an unheard-of and undreamed-of feeling of
completion, of balance, of satisfaction and exultant prayerful
fusion with the highest synthesis of life? If at the last moment
of consciousness before the attack he had happened to say to
himself lucidly and deliberately “for this one moment one might
give one's whole life,” then certainly that moment would be
worth a lifetime. However, he did not stand out for dialectics;
obfuscation, mental darkness and idiocy stand before him as the
obvious consequences of those loftiest moments.”
It is a question for the individual to decide whether one would give
his whole life for a moment of perfection and bliss, but it is probable
that no one would without assurance that some permanent advantage, some
growth of spirit that could be retained, some impress of spirituality
that was indelible, such as comes from an understanding reading of
“Hamlet” or a comprehended rendering of “Parsifal,” would flow from
it or follow it. But to have it and then come back to a world that
is “just one damn thing after another” it is impossible to believe.
Dostoievsky was right when he said that Myshkin could look forward
to obfuscation, mental darkness, and imbecility with some certainty,
for physicians experienced with epilepsy know empirically that the
unfortunates who have panoplied warnings, and especially illusions,
are most liable to become demented early. But that all epileptics with
such warnings do not suffer this degradation is attested by the life of
Dostoievsky, who was in his mental summation when death seized him in
his sixtieth year.
Another phenomenon of epilepsy that Dostoievsky makes many of his
characters display is detachment of the spirit from the body. They
cease to feel their bodies at supreme moments, such as at the
moment of condemnation, of premeditated murder, or planned crime.
In other words, they are thrown into a state of ecstasy similar to
that responsible for the mystic utterances of St. Theresa, or of
insensibility to obvious agonies such as that of Santa Fina. He not
only depicts the phenomena of the epileptic attack, its warnings, and
its after-effects in the most masterful way, as they have never been
rendered in literature, lay or scientific, but he also describes many
varieties of the disease. Before he was exiled, in 1847, he gave a most
perfect description of the epileptic constitution as it was manifested
in Murin, a character in “The Landlady.” The disease, as it displays
itself in the classical way, is revealed by Nelly in “The Insulted and
Injured,” but it is in Myshkin, in “The Idiot,” that we see epilepsy
transforming the individual from adult infantilism, gradually, almost
imperceptibly, to imbecility, the victim meantime displaying nobility
and tender-mindedness that make the reader's heart go out to him.
The first fruits of Dostoievsky's activities after he had obtained
permission to publish were inconsequential. It was not until the
appearance of “Letters from a Deadhouse,” which revealed his
experiences and thoughts while in prison, and the volume called “The
Despised and the Rejected,” that the literary world of St. Petersburg
realised that the brilliant promise which he had given in 1846 was
realised. Some of his literary adventures, especially in journalism,
got him into financial difficulties, and he began to write under the
lash, as he described it, and against time.
In 1865 appeared the novel by which he is widely known, “Crime and
Punishment,” in which Dostoievsky's first great antinomian hero,
Raskolnikov, a repentant nihilist, is introduced to the reader.
He believes that he has a special right to live, to rebel against
society, to transgress every law and moral precept, and to follow
the dictates of his own will and the lead of his own thought. Such
a proud, arrogant, intellectual spirit requires to be cleansed,
and inasmuch as the verity, the essence of life, lies in humility,
Dostoievsky makes his hero murder an old pawnbroker and his sister and
then proceeds to put him through the most excruciating mental agony
imaginable. At the same time his mother and sister undergo profound
vicarious suffering, while a successor of Mary Magdalene succours
him in his increasingly agonised state and finally accompanies him
to penal servitude. Many times Raskolnikov appears upon the point of
confessing his crime from the torments of his own conscience, but, in
reality, Svidrigailov, a strange monster of sin and sentiment, and the
police officer, Petrovitch, a forerunner of Sherlock Holmes, suggest
the confession to him, and between the effect of their suggestion and
the appeal of Sonia, whose love moves him strangely, he confesses but
does not repent. He does not repent because he has done no sin. He has
committed no crime. The scales have not yet fallen from his eyes. That
is reserved for the days and nights of his prison life and is to be
mediated by Sonia's sacrificial heroism.
It is interesting to contemplate Dostoievsky at the state of
development when he wrote “Crime and Punishment,” or rather the state
of development of his idea of free will. Raskolnikov has the same
relation to Stavrogin of “The Possessed” and to Kirillov, the epileptic
of the same book, as one of the trial pictures of the figures in the
Last Supper has to Leonardo's masterpiece. Dostoievsky apparently was
content to describe a case of moral imbecility in its most attractive
way, and then when he had outlined its lineaments, to leave it and not
adjust it to the other groupings of the picture that was undertaken.
It would seem that his interest had got switched from Raskolnikov to
Svidrigailov, who has dared to outrage covenants and conventions,
laws and morality, and has measured his will against all things.
Svidrigailov knows the difference between good and evil, right and
wrong; indeed he realises it with great keenness, and when he finds
that he is up against it, as it were, and has no escape, he puts the
revolver to his temple and pulls the trigger. Death is the only thing
he has not tried, and why wait to see whether eternity is just one
little room like a bathhouse in the country, or whether it is something
beyond conception? Why not find out at once as everything has been
found out? Svidrigailov is Dostoievsky's symbol of the denial of God,
the denial of a will beyond his own.
“If there is a will beyond my own, it must be an evil will
because pain exists. Therefore I must will evil to be in
harmony with it. If there is no will beyond my own, then I must
assert my own will until it is free of all check beyond itself.
Therefore I must will evil.”
Raskolnikov represents the conflict of will with the element of moral
duty and conscience, and Svidrigailov represents its conflict with
defined, deliberate passion. This same will in conflict with the will
of the people, the State, is represented by Stavrogin and Shatov, while
its conflict with metaphysical and religious mystery is represented
by Karamazov, Myshkin, and Kirillov. Despite the fact that they pass
through the furnace of burning conflicts and the fire of inflaming
passions, the force of dominant will is ever supreme. Their human
individuality, as represented by their ego, remains definite and
concrete. It is untouched, unaltered, undissolved. Though they oppose
themselves to the elements that are devouring them, they continue to
assert their ego and self-will even when their end is at hand. Myshkin,
Alyosha, and Zosima submit to God's will but not to man's.
“Crime and Punishment” and “The Brothers Karamazov” are the books by
which Dostoievsky is best known in this country, and the latter, though
unfinished, was intended by him to be his great work, “a work that is
very dear to me for I have put a great deal of my inmost self into
it,” and it has been so estimated by the critics. Indeed, it is the
summary of all his thoughts, of all his doubts, of all his fancies, and
such statement of his faith as he could formulate. It is saturated in
mysticism and it is a _vade mecum_ of psychiatry. It is the narrative
of the life of an egotistic, depraved, sensuous monster, who is a toad,
a cynic, a scoffer, a drunkard, and a profligate, the synthesis of
which, when combined with moral anæsthesia, constitutes degeneracy; of
his three legitimate sons and their mistresses; and of an epileptic
bastard son who resulted from the rape of an idiot girl.
The eldest son, Dimitri, grows up unloved, unguided, unappreciated,
frankly hostile to his father whom he loathes and despises,
particularly when he is convinced that the father has robbed him of his
patrimony. He has had a rake's career, but when Katerina Ivanovna puts
herself unconditionally in his power to save her father's honour he
spares her. Three months later, when betrothed to her, he has become
entangled in Circe's toils by Grushenka, for whose favour Fyodor
Pavlovitch, his father, is bidding.
The second son, Ivan, half brother to Dimitri, whose mother was driven
to insanity by the orgies staged in her own house and by the lusts
and cruelties of her husband, is an intellectual and a nihilist. He
is in rebellion against life, but he has an unquenchable thirst for
life, and he will not accept the world. To love one's neighbours is
impossible; even to conceive of it is repugnant. He will not admit
that all must suffer to pay for the eternal harmony, and he insists
“while I am on earth, I make haste to take my own measures.” He does
not want forgiveness earned for him vicariously. He wants to do it
himself. He wants to avenge his suffering, to satisfy his indignation,
even if he is wrong. Too high a price is asked for harmony; it is
beyond our means to pay so much to enter on it. “And so,” he says to
his younger brother, the potential Saint Alyosha, “I hasten to give
back my entrance ticket. It's not God that I don't accept, only I most
respectfully return Him the ticket.”
Dostoievsky speaks oftener out of the mouth of Ivan than of any of his
other characters. When some understanding Slav like Myereski shall
formulate Dostoievsky's religious beliefs it will likely be found that
they do not differ materially from those of Ivan, as stated in the
chapter “Pro and Contra” of “The Brothers Karamazov.” He sees in Christ
the Salvation of mankind, and the woe of the world is that it has not
accepted Him.
The third brother, Alyosha, is the prototype of the man's redeemer--a
tender-minded, preoccupied youth, chaste and pure, who takes no thought
for the morrow and always turns the other cheek, and esteems his
neighbour far more than himself. At heart he is a sensualist. “All the
Karamazovs are insects to whom God has given sensual lust which will
stir up a tempest in your blood,” said Ivan to Alyosha when he was
attempting to set forth his philosophy of life. But this endowment
permits him the more comprehensively to understand the frailties of
others and to condone their offences. The monastic life appeals to
him, but he is warded off from it by Father Zosima, the prototype of
Bishop Tikhon, in “Stavrogin's Confession,” whose clay was lovingly
moulded by Dostoievsky, but into whose nostrils he did not blow the
breath of life. This monk, who had been worldly and who, because of
his knowledge, forgives readily and wholly, is a favourite figure
of Dostoievsky, and one through whom he frequently expresses his
sentiments and describes his visions. His convictions, conduct and
teaching may be summarised in his own words:
“Fear nothing and never be afraid; and don't fret. If only your
penitence fail not, God will forgive all. There is no sin, and
there can be no sin on all the earth, which the Lord will not
forgive to the truly repentant! Man cannot commit a sin so great
as to exhaust the infinite love of God. Can there be a sin
which could exceed the love of God? Think only of repentance,
continual repentance, but dismiss fear altogether. Believe
that God loves you as you cannot conceive; that He loves you
with your sin, in your sin. It has been said of old that over
one repentant sinner there is more joy in heaven than over ten
righteous men. Go, and fear not. Be not bitter against men.
Be not angry if you are wronged. Forgive the dead man in your
heart what wrong he did you. Be reconciled with him in truth.
If you are penitent, you love. And if you love you are of God.
All things are atoned for, all things are saved by love. If I,
a sinner, even as you are, am tender with you and have pity on
you, how much more will God. Love is such a priceless treasure
that you can redeem the whole world by it, and expiate not only
your own sins but the sins of others.”
Alyosha is Dostoievsky's attempt to create a superman. He is the most
real, the most vital, the most human, and, at the same time, the most
lovable of all his characters. He is the essence of Myshkin and
Stavrogin and Karamazov and Father Zosima, the residue that is left
in the crucible when their struggles were reduced, their virtues and
their vices distilled. He is Myshkin whose mind has not been destroyed
by epilepsy, he is Stavrogin who has seen light before his soul was
sold to the devil, he is Ivan Karamazov redeemed by prayer and good
works, he is the apotheosis of Father Zosima. “He felt clearly and as
it were tangibly that something firm and unshakable as the vault of
heaven had entered into his soul. It was as though some idea had seized
the sovereignty of his mind--and it was for all his life and for ever
and for ever.” In other words, Alyosha realises in a mild form and
continuously that which Myshkin realises as the result of disease and
spasmodically. Alyosha goes into a state of faith, of resignation,
of adjustment with the Infinite, and Myshkin goes into dementia via
ecstasy.
As a peace-maker, adjuster, comforter, and inspiration he has few
superiors in profane literature. His speech at the Stone of Ilusha
embodies the whole doctrine of brotherly love.
Dimitri's hatred of his father becomes intense when they are rivals for
Grushenka's favours, so that it costs him no pang to become potentially
a parricide on convincing himself that the father has been a successful
rival. Psychologically he represents the type of unstable, weak-willed,
uninhibited being who cannot learn self-control. Such individuals
may pass unmarked so long as they live in orderly surroundings, but
as soon as they wander from the straight path they get into trouble.
Their irritability, manifested for the smallest cause, may give rise
to attacks of boundless fury which are further increased by alcohol,
and the gravest crimes are often committed in these conditions. The
normal inhibitions are entirely absent; there is no reflection, no
weighing of the costs. The thought which develops in the brain is at
once translated into action. Their actions are irrational, arbitrary,
dependent upon the moment, governed by accidental factors.
Despite overwhelming proof, Dimitri denies his guilt from the start.
It is an open question if the motive of this denial is repentance,
shame, love for Grushenka, or fear. The three experts of the trial each
has his own opinion. The first two declare Dimitri to be abnormal.
The third regards him as normal. The author himself has made it easy
to judge of Dimitri's state of mind. Though on the boundary line of
accountability, he is not in such a pathological condition as to
exclude his free determination; however, he is not fully responsible
for the crime, and extenuating circumstances have to be conceded by the
judge.
Smerdyakov, the illegitimate child of the idiot girl whom Karamazov
_pere_ raped on a wager and who eventually murders his father
(vicariously, as it were, his morality having been destroyed by Ivan),
is carefully delineated by Dostoievsky. He is epileptic. Not only are
the disease and its manifestations described, but there is a masterly
presentation of the personality alteration which so often accompanies
its progress. In childhood he is cruel, later solitary, suspicious,
and misanthropical. He has no sense of gratitude and he looks at the
world mistrustfully. When Fyodor Pavlovitch hears he has epilepsy he
takes interest in him, sees to it that he has treatment, and sends him
to Moscow to be trained as cook. During the three years of absence his
appearance changes remarkably. Here it may be remarked that though
Dostoievsky lived previous to our knowledge of the rôle that the
ductless glands play in maintaining the appearance and conserving the
nutritional equilibrium of the individual, he gives, in his delineation
of Smerdyakov, an extraordinarily accurate description of the somatic
and spiritual alteration that sometimes occurs when some of them
cease functioning. It is his art also to do it in a few words, just
as it is his art to forecast Smerdyakov's crime while discussing the
nature and occurrence of epileptic-attack equivalents, which he called
contemplations.
The way he disentangles the skeins from the confused mass of putridity,
disease, and crime of which this novel is constituted, has been the
marvel and inspiration of novelists the world over for the past fifty
years. Dimitri wants to kill his father for many reasons, but the one
that moves him to meditate it and plan it is: Grushenka, immoral and
unmoral, will then be beyond the monster's reach; Grushenka whose
sadism peeps out in her lust for Alyosha and who can't throw off
her feeling of submission for the man who had violated her when she
was seventeen. Dimitri loves Grushenka and Grushenka loves Dimitri
“abnormals with abnormal love which they idealised.” During an orgy
which would have pleased Nero, Dimitri lays drunken Grushenka on the
bed, and kisses her on the lips.
“'Don't touch me,' she faltered in an imploring voice. 'Don't
touch me till I am yours.... I have told you I am yours, but
don't touch me ... spare me.... With them here, with them close
you mustn't. He's here. It's nasty here.'”
He sinks on his knees by the bedside. He goes to his father's house at
a propitious time and suitably armed for murder; he hails him to the
window by giving the signal that he has learned from Smerdyakov would
apprise him of the approach of Grushenka; but before he can strike
him Smerdyakov, carrying out a plan of his own, despatches him, and
Dimitri flees. The latter half of the book is taken up with the trial
of Dimitri and the preliminaries to it, which give Dostoievsky an
opportunity to pay his respects to Jurisprudence and to medicine and
to depict a Slav hypocrite, Rahkitin. Smerdyakov commits the crime to
find favour in the eyes of his god Ivan. He knows that Ivan desired
it, suggested it, and went away knowing it was going to be done--at
least that is the impression the epileptic mind of Smerdyakov gets--and
under that impression he acts when he despatches his father with
the three-pound paper weight. The unprejudiced reader will feel the
sympathies that have gradually been aroused for Smerdyakov because
of his disease fade as he reads of the plan that the murderer made,
and when he has hung himself after confessing to Ivan. In proportion
as they recede for the valet, they will be rearoused for Ivan whose
brain now gives away under the hereditary and acquired burden. This
gives Dostoievsky the opportunity to depict the prodromata and early
manifestations of acute mania as they have never, before or since, been
depicted in lay literature.
Description of the visual hallucination which Ivan has in the early
stages, that a “Russian gentleman of a particular kind is present,”
and the delusion that he is having an interview with him, might have
been copied from the annals of an asylum, had they been recorded there
by a master of the narrative art. It is one of the first, and the most
successful attempts to depict dual personality, and to record the
beliefs and convictions of each side of the personality. He listens to
his _alter ego_ sit in judgment upon him and his previous conduct, and
is finally goaded by him to assault, as was Luther under similar though
less dramatic circumstances. “Voices,” as the delirious and insane
call them, have never been more accurately rendered than in the final
chapters of the Ivan section of the book.
An exhaustive psychosis displaying itself in intermittent delirium, and
occurring in a profoundly psychopathic individual, is the label that
a physician would give Ivan's disorder. Alyosha saw in it that God,
in whom Ivan disbelieved, and His truth were gaining mastery over his
heart, which still refused to submit.
“The Idiot” was one of Dostoievsky's books which had a cold reception
from the Russian reading public, but which has been, next to “The
Brothers Karamazov” and “Crime and Punishment,” the most popular in
this country. The basic idea is the representation of a truly perfect
and noble man, and it is not at all astonishing that Dostoievsky made
him an epileptic. He had been impressed, he said, that all writers who
had sought to represent Absolute Beauty were unequal to the task. It is
so difficult, for the beautiful is the ideal, and ideals have long been
wavering and waning in civilised Europe. There is only one figure of
absolute beauty, Christ, and he patterns Prince Myshkin upon the Divine
model. He brings him in contact with Nastasya Filipovna, who is the
incarnation of the evil done in the world, and this evil is represented
symbolically by Dostoievsky as the outrage of a child. The nine years
of brooding which had followed the outrage inflicted upon Nastasya as
a child by Prince Tosky had imprinted upon her face something which
Myshkin recognises as the pain of the world, and from the thought of
which he cannot deliver himself, and which he cannot mitigate for her.
She marries him after agonies of rebellion, after having given him to
her _alter ego_ in virginal state, Aglaia Epanchin, and then takes
him away to show her power and demonstrate her own weakness; but she
deserts him on the church steps for her lover Rogozhin, who murders
her that night. Myshkin, finding Rogozhin next morning, says more than
“Forgive them, Father, they know not what they do.” He lies beside him
in the night and bathes his temples with his tears, but fortunately in
the morning when the murderer is a raving lunatic a merciful Providence
has enshrouded Myshkin in his disease.
As Dimitri Merejkowski, the most understanding critic and interpreter
of Dostoievsky who has written of him, truthfully says, his works are
not novels or epics, but tragedies. The narrative is secondary to the
construction of the whole work, and the keystone of the narrative is
the dialogue between the characters. The reader feels that he hears
real persons talking and talking without artifice, just as they would
talk in real life; and they express sentiments and convictions which
one would expect from individuals of such inheritance, education,
development, and environment, obsessed particularly with the
injustices of this world and the uncertainties of the world to be,
concerned day and night with the immortality of the soul, the existence
of God, and the future of civilisation.
It has been said that he does not describe the appearance of his
characters, for they depict themselves, their thoughts and feelings,
their faces and bodies, by their peculiar forms of language and tones
of voice. Although he does not dwell on portraiture, he has scarcely a
rival in delineation, and his portraits have that quality which perhaps
Leonardo of all who worked with the brush had the capacity to portray,
and which Pater saw in the _Gioconda_; the revelation of the soul and
its possibilities in the lineaments. The portrait of Mlle. Lebyadkin,
the imbecile whom the proud Nikolay Stavrogin married, not from love
or lust, but that he might exhaust the list of mortifications, those
of the flesh, for himself, and those of pride for his family; that he
might kill his instincts and become pure spirit, is as true to life as
if Dostoievsky had spent his existence in an almshouse sketching the
unfortunates segregated there. The art of portraiture cannot surpass
this picture of Shatov, upon whose plastic soul Stavrogin impressed his
immoralities in the shape of “the grand idea” and who said to Stavrogin
in his agony, “Sha'n't I kiss your foot-prints when you've gone? I
can't tear you out of my heart, Nikolay Stavrogin:”
“He was short, awkward, had a shock of flaxen hair, broad
shoulders, thick lips, very thick overhanging white eyebrows, a
wrinkled forehead, and a hostile, obstinately downcast, as it
were shamefaced, expression in his eyes. His hair was always
in a wild tangle and stood up in a shock which nothing could
smooth. He was seven or eight and twenty.”
It is not as a photographer of the body that Dostoievsky is a source
of power and inspiration in the world today, and will remain so for
countless days to come--for he has depicted the Russian people as has
no one else save Tolstoi, and his pictures constitute historical
documents--but as a photographer of the soul, a psychologist.
Psychology is said to be a new science, and a generation ago there was
much ado over a new development called “experimental psychology,” which
was hailed as the key that would unlock the casket wherein repose the
secrets of the mind; the windlass that would lift layer by layer the
veil that has, since man began, concealed the mysteries of thought,
behaviour, and action. It has not fulfilled its promise. It would be
beyond the truth to say that it has been sterile, but it is quite true
to say that the contributions which it has made have been as naught
compared with those made by abnormal psychology. Some, indeed, contend
that the only real psychological contributions of value have come from
a study of disease and deficiency, and their contentions are granted by
the vast majority of those entitled to opinion.
Dostoievsky is the master portrayer of madness and of bizarre states
of the soul and of the mind that are on the borderland of madness.
Not only has he depicted the different types of mental alienation,
but by an intuition peculiar to his genius, by a species of artistic
divination, he has understood and portrayed their display, their
causation, their onset--so often difficult to determine even for the
expert--and finally the full development of the disease. Indeed,
he forestalled the description of the alienists. “They call me a
psychologist,” says Dostoievsky; “it is not true. I am only a realist
in the highest sense of the word, that is I depict all the soul's
depth. Arid observations of every-day trivialities I have long ceased
to regard as realism--it is quite the reverse.”
It is the mission of one important branch of psychology to depict the
soul's depth, the workings of the conscious mind, and as the interior
of a house that one is forbidden to enter is best seen when the house
has been shattered or is succumbing to the incidences of time and
existence, so the contents of the soul are most discernible in the
mind that has some of its impenetralia removed by disease. It was in
this laboratory that Dostoievsky conducted his experiments, made his
observations, and recorded the results from which he drew conclusions
and inferences. “In my works I have never said so much as the twentieth
part of what I wished to say, and perhaps could actually have said. I
am firmly convinced that mankind knows much more than it has hitherto
expressed either in science or in art. In what I have written there
is much that came from the depth of my heart,” he says in a letter to
a friendly critic, to which may be added that what he has said is in
keeping with the science of today, and is corroborated by workers in
other fields of psychology and psychiatry.
“The Possessed,” in which Dostoievsky reached the high-water mark of
personality analysis, has always been a stumbling block to critics
and interpreters. The recent publication by the Russian Government of
a pamphlet containing “Stavrogin's Confession” sheds an illuminating
light on the hero; and even second-hand knowledge of what has gone
on in Russia, politically and socially, during the past six years
facilitates an understanding of Pyotr Stepanovitch, Satan's impresario,
and of Kirillov, nihilist.
The task that Dostoievsky set himself in “The Possessed” was not
unlike that which the Marquis de Sade set himself in “Justine, or the
Misfortunes of Virtue,” and Sacher-Masoch in “Liebesgeschichten”; viz.,
to narrate the life of an unfortunate creature whose most important
fundamental instinct was perverted and who could get the full flavour
of pleasure only by inflicting cruelty, causing pain, or engendering
humiliation.
“Every unusually disgraceful, utterly degrading, dastardly, and
above all, ridiculous situation in which I ever happened to
be in my life, always roused in me, side by side with extreme
anger, an incredible delight.”
Stavrogin was apparently favoured by fortune: he had charm, education,
wealth, and health. In reality he was handicapped to an incalculable
degree. After a brilliant brief career in the army and in St.
Petersburg society, he withdrew from both and associated with the dregs
of the population of that city, with slip-shod government clerks,
discharged military men, beggars of the higher class, and drunkards of
all sorts. He visited their filthy families, spent days and nights in
dark slums and all sorts of low haunts. He threw suspicion of theft
on the twelve-year-old daughter of a woman who rented him a room for
assignations that he might see her thrashed, and a few days later he
raped her. The next day he hated her so he decided to kill her and
was preparing to do so when she hanged herself. This is not featured
in the novel as it now stands. Until the publication of “Stavrogin's
Confession” interpreters of Stavrogin's personality who maintained
that he was a sadist were accused of having read something into his
character that Dostoievsky did not intend him to have. After committing
this “greatest sin in the world,” he determined to cripple his life
in the most disgusting way possible, that he might pain his mother,
humiliate his family, and shock society. He would marry Marya, a
hemiplegic idiot who tidied up his room. After the ceremony he went
to stay with his mother, the granddame of their province. He went to
distract himself, which included seducing and enslaving Darya, Shatov's
sister, a ward of his mother, and a member of the family.
Suddenly, apropos of nothing, he was guilty of incredible outrages
upon various persons and, what was most enigmatic, these outrages
were utterly unheard of, quite inconceivable, entirely unprovoked and
objectless. For instance, one day at the club, he tweaked the nose of
an elderly man of high rank in the service. When the Governor of the
club sought some explanation Stavrogin told him he would whisper it in
his ear.
“When the dear, mild Ivan Ossipovitch hurriedly and trustfully
inclined his ear Stavrogin bit it hard. The poor Governor would
have died of terror but the monster had mercy on him, and let go
his ear.”
The doctor testified that he was temporarily unbalanced, and after a
few weeks' rest and isolation he went abroad for four years and there
Lizaveta Nikolaevna, Shatov's wife, and several others succumbed, and
he also met his old tutor's son, Pyotr Stepanovitch, his deputy in
the Internationale, who from that moment became his apologist, his
tool, his agent, and finally the instrument of his destruction. The
gratification of Stavrogin's perverted passion, the machinations of the
Republicans and nihilists, and the revelations of Shatov's limitations
and of Mr. Kirillov's nihilistic idealism are the threads of the story.
Shatov was the son of a former valet of Stavrogin's mother who had been
expelled from the University after some disturbance, a radical with a
tender heart, who had held Stavrogin up as an ideal.
“He was one of those idealistic beings common in Russia who are
suddenly struck by some overmastering idea which seems, as it
were, to crush them at once and sometimes for ever. They are
never equal to coping with it, but put passionate faith in it,
and their whole life passes afterward, as it were, in the last
agonies under the weight of the stone that has fallen upon them
and half crushed them.”
Shatov's overmastering idea was that Nikolay Vsyevolodovitch could do
no wrong, and the stone that crushed him was Nikolay's misdeeds. Mr.
Kirillov, the engineer, believed that he who conquers pain and terror
will become a god.
“Then there will be a new life, a new man, everything will be
new ... then they will divide history into two parts: from the
gorilla to the annihilation of God, and from the annihilation of
God to the transformation of the earth and of man physically.
Man will be God and will be transformed physically and all men
will kill themselves.”
“He who kills himself only to kill fear will become a god at once.”
Kirillov believed or feared that eternal life was now, not hereafter.
There are moments when time suddenly stands still for men, and it
was fear that it might become eternal that he could not tolerate. In
Dostoievsky's books there is always one contemptible character, a
sanctimonious hypocrite, a fawning holier-than-thou, a pious scandal
monger, a venomous volunteer of first aid to the morally injured. In
this book his name is Liputin, an elderly provincial official.
These are the chief figures of the drama.
When Shatov had been killed; when Kirillov's promise: namely, that he
would commit suicide on request, had been exacted; when Stavrogin's
imbecile wife and her brother Lebyadkin had been despatched; when
Lisa, who was abducted by Stavrogin on the eve of her marriage and
then abandoned, had been knocked on the head and killed by the mob
because she was Stavrogin's woman who “had come to look at the wife
he had murdered”; when Shatov's wife had come back to him and borne
Stavrogin's child in his presence; when Stepan Trofimovitch had
displayed his last infantile reaction and his son Peter, the Russian
Mephistopheles, had made a quick and successful get-away, Stavrogin
wrote to Darya and suggested that she go with him to the Canton of
Uri, of which he was a citizen, and be his nurse. Darya, for whom
humiliation spelled happiness, consented and Varvara Petrovna, hearing
of the plan, succumbed to the sway of maternal love and arranged to go
with them.
The day they had planned to begin their journey Stavrogin was not to be
found, but search of the loft revealed his body hanging from a hook by
means of a silken cord which had been carefully soaped before he slung
it around his neck.
At the inquest the doctors absolutely and emphatically rejected all
idea of insanity.
“The Possessed” has been the most enigmatic of the writer's books
because critics could not agree as to the motives of Stavrogin's crimes
and conduct. With the publication of “Stavrogin's Confession” the
riddles were solved. In the book as originally planned (and modified
at the request of the publisher of the periodical in which the novel
originally appeared), Stavrogin, instead of hanging himself, went
to Our Lady Spasso-Efimev Monastery and confessed himself to Bishop
Tikhon. Dostoievsky recruited his spiritual _menschenkenners_ from
the ranks of those who, in youth, had played the game of life hard,
transgressed, and repented. Tikhon was one of them, a strange composite
of piety and worldliness chained to his cell by chronic rheumatism and
alcoholic tremours.
Stavrogin had been obsessed by a phrase from the Apocalypse: “I know
thy works; that thou art neither hot nor cold. I would thou wert cold
or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot,
I will spew thee out of my mouth.” He would be lukewarm no longer. He
handed Tikhon three little sheets of ordinary small-sized writing paper
printed and stitched together. It was entitled “From Stavrogin” and
was a confession of his sins. He couldn't dislodge from his mind the
vision of the little girl Matryosha. He identified her with photographs
of children that he saw in shop windows. A spider on a geranium leaf
caused the vision of her as she killed herself to rise up before him,
and this vision came to him now every day and every night
“not that it comes itself, but that I bring it before myself and
cannot help bringing it although I can't live with it. I know I
can dismiss the thought of Matryosha even now whenever I want
to. I am as completely master of my will as ever. But the whole
point is that I never wanted to do it; I myself do not want to,
and never shall.”
Tikhon suggested that he would be forgiven if his repentance was
sincere, and told him he knew an old man, a hermit and ascetic of such
great Christian wisdom that he was beyond ordinary understanding. He
suggested that Stavrogin should go to him, into retreat, as novice
under his guidance, for five years, or seven, for as many as were
necessary. He adjured him to make a vow to himself so that by this
great sacrifice he would acquire all that he longed for and didn't
even expect, and assured him that he could not possibly realise now
what he would obtain from such guidance and isolation and repentance.
Stavrogin hesitated and the Bishop suddenly realised that he had no
intention of repenting. It dawned upon him that Stavrogin's plan was to
flaunt his sin in the face of God as he had previously flaunted it in
the face of society, and in a voice which penetrated the soul and with
an expression of the most violent grief Tikhon exclaimed,
“Poor lost youth, you have never been so near another and a
still greater crime as you are at this moment. Before the
publication of the 'Confession,' a day, an hour perhaps before
the great step, you will throw yourself on another crime, as a
way out, and you will commit it solely in order to avoid the
publication of these pages.”
Stavrogin shuddered with anger and almost with fear and shouted “You
cursed psychologist!,” and left the cell without looking at Tikhon.
The annihilation of the sense of time in Dostoievsky's stories was
first dwelt upon by Merejkowski, and it has been much discussed by all
of his serious commentators. Events occur and things take place within
a few hours in his books which would ordinarily take months and years.
The reason for this timeless cycle of events may be sought in the
experiences that the author had in the moments preceding his attacks of
epilepsy in which he had thoughts and emotions which a lifetime would
scarcely suffice to narrate.
Dostoievsky is the greatest of subjective writers because he goes
deepest and is the most truthful. His books are narratives of sins and
crimes and descriptions of attempts at expiation. He didn't invent
sins, he took them from life; he presented those he had committed and
seen committed. He invented only the expiation, and some of that,
it must be admitted, he experienced. His sinners are never normal
mentally. They are never insane legally, but all of them are insane
medically.
Dostoievsky himself was far from “normal” mentally, aside from his
epilepsy, though he made approximation to it as he grew older. His
mind was a garden sown with the flower seeds of virtue and the thistle
seeds of vice. All of them germinated. Some became full blown, others
remained stunted and dwarfed.
“I have invented a new kind of enjoyment for myself,” he wrote
to his brother, “a most strange one--to make myself suffer. I
take your letter, turn it over in my hand for several minutes,
feel if it is full weight, and having looked on it sufficiently
and admired the closed envelope, I put it in my pocket. You
won't believe what a voluptuous state of soul, feeling and heart
there is in that!”
That is the _anlage_ of masochism. In the outline of “The Life of a
Great Sinner,” the novel whose completion would permit him to die in
peace, for then he should have expressed himself completely, one sees
the wealth of detail taken by the author from his boyhood and early
manhood. The hero of the “Life” was unsociable and uncommunicative;
a proud, passionate, and domineering nature. So was Dostoievsky. So
here was to be apotheosis of individualism, consciousness of his
superiority, of his determination, and of his uniqueness. Dostoievsky
wrote of himself in 1867, “Everywhere and in everything I reach the
furthest limits; I have passed beyond the boundaries of all life.”
The most inattentive reader of his “Letters” will be reminded of
Dostoievsky when they read that the hero of the “Life” “surprised
everybody by unexpectedly rude pranks,” “behaved like a monster,”
“offended an old woman,” and that he was obsessed with the idea of
amassing money; and the alternative stages of belief and disbelief of
the hero are obviously recollections of his own trials. “I believe I
shall express the whole of myself in it” he wrote of it to a friend,
and no one familiar with his books and his life can read the outline
of it and doubt that he would have succeeded. Wherever Dostoievsky
looked he saw a question mark and before it was written “Is there a
God? Does God exist?” He was determined to find the answer. He had
found Christ abundantly and satisfactorily, but the God of Job he never
knew, nor had He ever overthrown him or compassed him with His net.
Dostoievsky was a rare example of dual personality. His life was the
expression of his ego personality (and what a life of strife and misery
and unhappiness it was!), revealed with extraordinary lucidity in his
“Letters” and “The Journal of an Author”; and his legacy to mankind
is the record of his unconscious mind revealed in his novels. The
latter is the life he would have liked to live, and in it he depicts
the changes in man's moral nature that he would have liked to witness.
His contention was that man should be master of his fate, captain of
his soul. He must express his thought and conviction in action and
conduct, particularly in his relation to his fellow-man. He must take
life's measure and go to it no matter what it entails or how painful,
unpleasant, or disastrous the struggle, or the end.
Many thoughtful minds believe that Dostoievsky has shown us the only
salvation in the great crisis of the European conscience. The people,
it matters not of what nationality, still possess the strength and
equilibrium of internal power. The conviction that man shall not live
as a beast of burden still survives in the Russian people and is shared
with them by the masses throughout the civilised world. Salvation from
internal anarchy was his plea, and it is the plea that is today being
made by millions in other lands than his.
As a prophet he foresaw the supremacy of the Russian people, the
common people succoured to knowledge, faith, and understanding by
liberty, education, and health, and by conformation to its teaching
the Renaissance of the Christian faith, which shall be a faith that
shall show man how to live and how to die, and which shall be manifest
in conduct as well as by word of mouth; primacy of the Russian church;
and the consummation of European culture by the effort and propaganda
of Russia. “Russia is the one God-fearing nation and her ultimate
destiny shall be to make known the Russian Christ for the salvation
of lost humanity.” No one can say at this day that his prophecies may
not come true, and to the student of history there may seem to be more
suggestive indication of it in the Russia of today than in that of half
a century ago; for from a world in ferment unexpected distillations
may flow. But to the person who needs proof Russia is silent now.
Dostoievsky's doctrines have not dropped as the rain, nor has his
speech been distilled as the dew, though he published the name of the
Lord and ascribed greatness unto our God. Indeed, the fate that has
overtaken Russia would seem to deny the possibility of the fulfillment
of his prophecies either for his country or his people.
As a narrator of the events of life here, and of the thoughts of life
here and hereafter, he has had few peers of any nation or language.
That he did it in a disorderly way must be admitted; that the events of
his tragedies had little time incidence is obvious to the most casual
reader; that the reader has to bring to their perusal concentration
and application is beyond debate; and that his characters are
“degenerates,” using that word in its biological sense, there is no
doubt. But despite these defects, Dostoievsky succeeds in straining the
essence of the Russian's soul through his unconscious to his conscious
mind, and then expressing it; and his books are the imperishable
soul-prints of his contemporaneous countrymen. Not only does he stand
highest in literary achievement of all men of his time, but he is a
figure of international significance in the world of literature. His
life and struggle was Hauptmann's song,
“Always must the heart-strings vibrate in the breath of the
world's sorrow, for the world's sorrow is the root of heaven's
desire.”
He foresaw with clairvoyancy the necessity of making religion livable,
not professed with the lips and scorned in action, but a code or
formulation that would combine Life, Love, and Light pragmatically;
and although he was not able to formulate his thought or to express
it clearly and forcibly, to synthetise and codify it, as it were,
formulators of the new religion, of Christianity revivified or
dematerialised, will consult frequently and diligently the writings of
Feodor Dostoievsky.
CHAPTER IV
DOROTHY RICHARDSON AND HER CENSOR
The novelists are behind the naturalists in the recording of minutiæ.
Many of the latter have set down the life history of certain species
of birds in exhaustive detail--every flip of the tail, every peck
preceding the grand drama of courtship and marriage, every solicitude
of paternity, every callousness of guardianship.
An analogous contribution to realism in the domain of fiction has
been made by Dorothy M. Richardson, an interesting figure in English
literature today. She has written six books about herself. When one
considers that her life has been uneventful, one might say drab,
commonplace, and restricted, this is an accomplishment deserving of
note and comment.
Critics and connoisseurs of literary craftsmanship have given her a
high rating, but they have not succeeded in introducing her to the
reading public. She is probably the least known distinguished writer
of fiction in England, but she has a certain public both in her own
country, and in this in which all her novels have been republished.
Her influence on the output of English fiction since the publication
of “Pointed Roofs,” in 1913, is one of the outstanding features in
the evolution of novel-writing during the present decade. Since
Flaubert set the pace for a reaction against the conception of the
realistic novel as the faithful transcription of life as perceived
by the novelist; and his followers introduced into novel-writing a
more subtle art than that of mere transcription of life, by making
the hypothetical consciousness through which the story is presented
a determining factor in its essence, this factor has been assuming a
more and more important rôle. The autobiographical novel, tracing its
lineage straight back to Rousseau, has become a prevailing fashion
in fiction. It remained, however, for Miss Richardson to give the
example--aside from James Joyce and Marcel Proust--of a novel in which
the consciousness of the writer should assume the leading rôle in a
drama that just missed being a monologue. Miss Richardson has made,
not herself in the ordinary sense of the word, but her subjective
consciousness, the heroine of her narrative; and the burden of it has
been to present the development of this consciousness, or energy,
directly to the reader in all its crudity and its dominancy. The
result is a novel without plot, practically without story interest.
It is a question what influence this “artistic subjectivism,” as Mr.
J. Middleton Murry has called it, will have upon the fiction of the
future. Of its influence upon that of the present there can be no
question.
Her technique is intensive, netting in words the continuous flow of
consciousness and semi-consciousness. She is first and foremost a
symbolist, an exponent of autistic thinking, a recorder of the product
of what is called by the popular psychology her “unconscious mind,”
which has got by the “censor,” a mythical sort of policeman who, in her
case, often sleeps on his post, or is so dazed by the supply from her
unconscious he cannot carry on.
This recently rechristened official, from the baptismal font of the
Freudians, is responsible for much literature of questionable value.
Latterly he has become something of a radical and has been permitting
stuff to get by on many wires and postal avenues that seems to those
whose “censors” have been doing duty in the name of Reason or _Amour
Propre_ to be, if not immoral, at least indecent. Miss Richardson's
“censor” is a Socialist, but he is not a Red. He hasn't much time for
appearances and diplomacy, and he has so many fish to fry that he
cannot have all his time taken up with putting his best foot forward.
Therefore Miriam Henderson doesn't believe in the religion of her
forebears, she isn't strong for the National cause, and she doesn't
hark to any party cry. She doesn't like her mother, and it is the
tendency of the modern “censor” to emphasise that; but to “pater”
her allegory and her ordered stream of thought are uniformly kind
and indulgent. Her “censor” early in life warned her that he was no
parent of shams and if she wanted to live a peaceful life she must
be unconventional. So Miriam determined to be “different.” She is
unsociable. She cannot think of anyone who does not offend her. “I
don't like men and I loathe women. I am a misanthrope. So is pater.”
He further assured her that “freedom” is the gateway and roadway to
happiness, and to travel thereon, with a little money to satisfy the
self-preservative urge, constituted the joy of life. Up to this point
Miriam and the “censor” got on famously. It was when he announced that
he was determined not to exhaust himself keeping down her untutored
passions that she revealed a determination that staggered him. The
“censor” capitulated. The result is that Miss Richardson's books are of
all symbolic literature the least concerned with the sinfulness of the
flesh, therefore furthest removed from comedy.
Miriam Henderson--who is Dorothy M. Richardson, the narrator of her
own life--is the third of four daughters of a silly, inane, resigned
little mother and an unsocial father of artistic temperament, the son
of a tradesman whose ruling passion is to be considered a country
gentleman. His attitude toward life and his efforts to sustain it have
culminated in financial ruin, and Miriam finds herself at the age of
eighteen, all reluctant and unprepared, confronted with the necessity
of depending upon her own efforts for a living--unless she can achieve
escape, as do two of her sisters, in marriage. She meets the situation
bravely--cowardice is not one of her faults--and the six books contain
a statement of her struggles against circumstance and a psychological
analysis of her personality. As self is less able to accept compromises
or to make adaptations in her case than in that of the average mortal,
the conflict is fierce; but it is soul struggle, not action.
Miriam's first tilt with life, recorded in “Pointed Roofs,” is as
a governess in a small German boarding-school, from which she is
politely dismissed, without assigned reason, at the close of the
first term. Her second, in “Backwater,” is as a teacher of drab
youngsters in a North London school. After less than a year, ennui,
restlessness, and discontent compel her to resign without definite
outlook or prospects. She finds herself, in “Honeycomb,” established
as governess to two children in the country home of a prosperous Q.C.
The situation suddenly becomes unendurable after a few months--for no
stated reason--and she eagerly seeks escape in her mother's illness. In
“The Tunnel” she at last finds a “job” to her taste when she becomes
assistant in the office of several London dentists, and denizen of a
hall bedroom in a dismal Bloomsbury rooming-house. In “Interim” she
loses her opportunity of marrying a wholesome Canadian by flirting with
a Spanish Jew. And in “Deadlock” she puts forth her first tentative
efforts to write and becomes engaged to a man with whom she believes
herself to be in love, but of whom she does not intellectually approve.
Her next novel is likely to be called “Impasse,” for meanwhile, in real
life, Miss Richardson has married and a new element has been introduced
into her life which she will not be able to keep from tincturing and
tinting her “unconscious,” but which she will not be able to get past
her “censor.” It would not surprise us either should she switch from
this series and cast her next book in the form of an episode or short
story. Revelations of impulses, thoughts, determinations have been
considered “good form” in literature when they were one's own, but when
they were another's, submitted to the narrator's judgement or reason,
especially a wife's or a husband's, it has been considered bad taste
either to narrate or to publish them. Moreover the alleged facts are
always questioned.
In the six books, whose titles are symbolic and which were originally
meant to be grouped under the one head of “Pilgrimage”--her adventure
of life--the author has presented what might be described as a cinema
of her mind, not particularly what the New Psychology calls, with
all the assurance of infallibility, the “unconscious mind.” She has
the faculty of taking a canvas and jotting down everything she sees
in a landscape and then finishing it in the studio in such a way as
to convince the person who has seen similar landscapes or who has an
eye for scenic beauty that her work is nearly perfect. She does it by
a skillful blending of the mind products of purposeful and autistic
thinking.
The autonomic mechanism of man displays the closest approximation to
perpetual motion that exists. It never rests. As yet we do not know
how far thought is conditioned by the autonomic nervous system, but
we know that the mind is never idle any more than the heart or the
lungs. Constantly a stream of thoughts flows from it or through it.
These thoughts vary in quality and quantity, and their variations
have formed endless and bitter discussions of psychologists. Whenever
the waking mind is not entirely occupied with directed thoughts, it
is filled with a succession of more or less vivid or vague thoughts,
often popularly referred to as “impressions,” which seem to arise
spontaneously and are usually not directed toward any recognised end or
purpose. A significant feature of them is the prominence of agreeable
impressions concerning oneself, people or things--or thoughts of these
as one would wish them to be, rather than as they are known to be. It
is these autistic, or wishful thoughts, which, constantly bubbling
up to the surface of consciousness like the water of a spring, give
colour to personality. They reveal it more luminously than anything
else--unless one goes still deeper and lays bare the thoughts at the
hidden source of the spring, thus penetrating the unconscious itself,
as the Freudians claim to do through the symbolism of dreams.
Whether Miriam Henderson, proceeding in this fashion, revealed more
of her real self than did Marie Bashkirtseff, or Anatole France in
“Le Petit Pierre,” “La Vie en Fleur” and the other charming books
with which he has been ornamenting his old age, is an open question.
However, Dorothy M. Richardson has established a reputation as one of
the few Simon-pure realists of modern English literature.
Another faculty which is developed to an exceptional degree in Miriam
is what psychologists call the association of cognitions and memories.
The “Wearin' of the Green” on a hand organ while she is big with
thoughts of what her trip to a foreign land may bring her makes her
think of
“rambles in the hot school garden singing 'Gather roses while
ye may,' hot afternoons in the shady north room, the sound of
turning pages, the hum of the garden beyond the sun-blinds,
meeting in the sixth form study ... Lilla with her black hair
and the specks of bright amber in the brown of her eyes, talking
about free-will.”
Then she stirs the fire and back her thoughts whisk to her immediate
concerns.
Music more than anything else calls into dominancy these associated
recollections. Listening to the playing of one of the schoolgirls at
the German school she suddenly realises:
“That wonderful light was coming again--she had forgotten
her sewing--when presently she saw, slowly circling, fading
and clearing, first its edge, and then, for a moment the
whole thing, dripping, dripping as it circled, a weed-grown
mill-wheel.... She recognised it instantly. She had seen it
somewhere as a child--in Devonshire--and never thought of it
since--and there it was. She heard the soft swish and drip
of the water and the low humming of the wheel. How beautiful
... it was fading.... She held it--it returned--clearer this
time and she could feel the cool breeze it made, and sniff
the fresh earthly smell of it, the scent of the moss and the
weeds shining and dripping on its huge rim. Her heart filled.
She felt a little tremour in her throat. All at once she knew
that if she went on listening to that humming wheel and feeling
the freshness of the air, she would cry. She pulled herself
together, and for a while saw only a vague radiance in the room
and the dim forms grouped about. She could not remember which
was which. All seemed good and dear to her. The trumpet notes
had come back, and in a few minutes the music ceased.... Someone
was closing the great doors from inside the schoolroom.”
It would be difficult to find in literature a better illustration
of revival of unconscious or “forgotten” memory than this. An
extraordinary thing about it is that these and similar revivals are
preceded by an aura or warning in the shape of a light, similar to the
warnings that Dostoievsky had before having an epileptic attack during
which he experienced ecstasy so intense and overpowering that had it
lasted more than a few seconds the human mechanism would have broken
beneath the display. Miriam's ecstasy is of a milder sort, and the
result is like that which the occupant of a chamber with drawn blinds
and sealed windows might experience should some magic power stealthily
and in a mysterious way flood it gradually with sunshine and replace
the stale atmosphere with fresh air.
Many can testify from personal experience the power that music has to
influence purposeful thinking. It would not astonish me to hear that
Einstein had solved some of the intricate problems of “relativity”
under the direct influence of the music of Beethoven, Wagner, or Liszt.
It is the rod with which most temperamental persons smite the rock of
reality that romance may gush out and refresh those who thirst for it.
Miriam often wields the rod in her early days to the reader's intense
delight.
While giving Miss Richardson her full measure of praise as recorder of
her unconscious mental activity in poetic and romantic strain, we must
not overlook her unusual capacity to delineate the realities of life,
as they are anticipated and encountered.
The description of her preparation for going away in the first chapter
of “Pointed Roofs” is perfect realism: the thoughts of a young girl
in whom a conflict between self-depreciation and self-appreciation
is taking place. This is marvellously portrayed in the narration of
her thoughts and apprehensions of her ability to teach English in the
German school to which she is journeying. It is a fool's errand to be
going there with nothing to give. She doubts whether she can repeat the
alphabet, let alone parse and analyse.
This mastery of realism is displayed throughout the series. The
inwardly rebellious governess in the country house of prosperous people
is made vivid in her setting when she says:
“There was to be another week-end. Again there would be the
sense of being a visitor amongst other visitors; visitor was not
the word; there was a French word which described the thing,
'convive,' 'les convives' ... people sitting easily about a
table with flushed faces ... someone standing drunkenly up with
eyes blazing with friendliness and a raised wineglass ... women
and wine, the rose of Heliogabalus; but he was a Greek and
dreadful in some way, convives were Latin, Roman; fountains,
water flowing over marble, white-robed strong-faced people
reclining on marble couches, feasting ... taking each fair mask
for what it shows itself; that was what this kind of wealthy
English people did, perhaps what all wealthy people did ... the
maimed, the halt, the blind, _compel_ them to come in ... but
that was after the others had refused. The thing that made you
feel jolliest and strongest was to forget the maimed, to _be_ a
fair mask, to keep everything else out and be a little circle of
people knowing that everything was kept out. Suppose a skeleton
walked in? Offer it a glass of wine. People have no right to be
skeletons, or if they are to make a fuss about it. These people
would be all the brighter if they happened to have neuralgia;
some pain or emotion made you able to do things. Taking each
fair mask was a fine grown-up game. Perhaps it could be kept up
to the end? Perhaps that was the meaning of the man playing
cards on his death-bed.”
The author has the gift of narration, too, of making a picture with a
few sweeps of the brush. In “Pointed Roofs” Miriam gives a synopsis
of her parents and their limitations in a few words, which is nearly
perfect. She does it by narration of her thoughts in retrospection,
which is another striking feature of her technique.
“She thought sleepily of her Wesleyan grandparents, gravely
reading the 'Wesleyan Methodist Recorder,' the shop at
Babington, her father's discontent, his solitary fishing and
reading, his discovery of music ... science ... classical
music in the first Novello editions ... Faraday ... speaking
to Faraday after lectures. Marriage ... the new house ... the
red brick wall at the end of the garden where young peach-trees
were planted ... running up and downstairs and singing ... both
of them singing in the rooms and the garden ... she sometimes
with her hair down and then when visitors were expected pinned
in coils under a little cap and wearing a small hoop ... the
garden and lawns and shrubbery and the long kitchen-garden
and the summer-house under the oaks beyond and the pretty
old gabled 'town' on the river and the woods all along the
river valley and the hills shining up out of the mist. The
snow man they both made in the winter--the birth of Sarah
and then Eve ... his studies and book-buying--and after five
years her own disappointing birth as the third girl, and the
coming of Harriet just a year later ... her mother's illness,
money troubles--their two years at the sea to retrieve ...
the disappearance of the sunlit red-walled garden always in
full summer sunshine with the sound of bees in it or dark
from windows ... the narrowings of the house-life down to the
Marine Villa--with the sea creeping in--wading out through
the green shallows, out and out till you were more than waist
deep--shrimping and prawning hour after hour for weeks together
... poking in the rock pools, watching the sun and the colours
in the strange afternoons ... then the sudden large house
at Barnes with the 'drive' winding to the door.... He used
to come home from the City and the Constitutional Club and
sometimes instead of reading 'The Times' or the 'Globe' or the
'Proceedings of the British Association' or Herbert Spencer,
play Pope Joan or Jacoby with them all, or Table Billiards and
laugh and be 'silly' and take his turn at being 'bumped' by
Timmy going the round of the long dining-room table, tail in
the air; he had taken Sarah and Eve to see 'Don Giovanni' and
'Winter's Tale' and the new piece, 'Lohengrin.' No one at the
tennis-club had seen that. He had good taste. No one else had
been to Madame Schumann's Farewell ... sitting at the piano
with her curtains of hair and her dreamy smile ... and the
Philharmonic Concerts. No one else knew about the lectures at
the Royal Institution, beginning at nine on Fridays.... No one
else's father went with a party of scientific men 'for the
advancement of science' to Norway or America, seeing the Falls
and the Yosemite Valley. No one else took his children as far as
Dawlish for the holidays, travelling all day, from eight until
seven ... no esplanade, the old stone jetty and coves and cowrie
shells....”
Nature was in a satirical mood when she equipped Miriam for her
conflict. Early the casual reader recognises her as the kind of girl
who is socially difficult and who seems predestined to do “fool
things.” The psychologist looks deeper and sees a tragic jest. Plain
in appearance, angular in manner, innocent of subtlety, suppleness,
or graciousness of body or soul, with a fine sensitiveness fed by
an abnormal self-appreciation, which she succeeds in covering only
at the cost of inducing in it a hot-house growth, Miriam Henderson
enters upon the task of an unskilled wage-earner with a mind turned
inward and possessed by that modern and fashionable demon politely
known as a “floating libido.” Dogged, if not actually damned, by her
special devil, Miriam is driven in frenzied and blinded unrest from
one experience to another, in vain efforts to appease its insistent
demands, placing the blame for her failure to achieve either success or
happiness everywhere except where it belongs.
Tortured by romantic sentimentalism unrelieved by a glimmer of
imagination or humour; over-sexed but lacking the magnetism without
which her sex was as bread without yeast; with a desire for adulation
so morbid that it surrounded itself with defences of hatred and
envy, Miriam's demon drove or lured her through tangled mazes of the
soul-game, and checkmated every effort to find herself through her
experiences.
In “Pointed Roofs,” even through the wall of self, the reader catches
the charm with which the German school held Miriam, in the music
floating through the big _saal_, the snatches of schoolgirl slang and
whimsical wisdom, and Fraulein Pfaff with her superstitions, her rages,
her religiosity, and her sensuality. But this is the background of the
picture, just as the background of the home which she had so clingingly
left had been the three light-hearted sisters with their white plump
hands and feminine graces, the tennis, the long, easy dreamy days; and
the foreground had been Miriam cherishing a feeling of “difference”
toward the feminine sisters, feeding her smarting self-love by her
fancied resemblance to her father who hated men and loathed women,
and dreaming of the “white twinkling figure coming quickly along the
pathway between the rows of hollyhocks every Sunday afternoon.”
The “high spot” in her experience at the German school is revealed in
the answer to the question: Why could not Miriam get on with “tall
Fraulein Pfaff smiling her horse smile”? Miriam leaves the school
cloaked in injured innocence. But the cloak is no mask for the native
wit of the schoolgirls. They know--and Miriam knows--that the answer
is the old Swiss teacher of French upon whom the Fraulein herself has
designs. Even before he is revealed reading poetry to the class with
a simper while Miriam makes eyes at him, or in a purported chance
encounter alone in the _saal_, the girls have twitted Miriam in a way
that would have warned a more sensible girl that she was venturing upon
dangerous ground. But Miriam's demon had made her insensible to such
hints, just as it had robbed her of the common sense which would have
made her understand, even without warnings, that she could not work for
a woman and “go vamping” on her preserves.
If Miriam's flirtation with the Swiss professor had been in a spirit of
frolicsomeness it would have presented at least one hopeful symptom.
But Miriam is incapable of frolicking--abnormally so. The absence of
the play impulse in her is striking, as is the lack of spontaneous
admirations or enthusiasms for people or things. Her impressions are
always in terms of sensuous attraction or repulsion--never influenced
by appeal to intellect, æsthetic taste, admiration, or ambition.
Other girls exist for her, not as kindred spirits, but as potential
rivals--even her sisters--and she is keen to size them up solely by
qualities which she senses may make them attractive to the other sex.
The exceptions to this are certain German girls whose over-sentimental
make-up furnishes easy material for Miriam's starved libido.
The next picture is at her country home where a dance has been staged,
in Miriam's own consciousness, especially as a temporary farewell
appearance of the “white twinkling figure,” now materialised into Ted.
Ted appears on programme time bringing with him a strange young man
with a German name and manner of speech, with whom she promptly goes
off spooning in a dark conservatory, where she is discovered by Ted.
She hopes the scene will stir Ted to emulation. But it does not. When
she returns to the light Ted has gone home. And that seems to be the
last of him. The strange young man is keen to announce his departure
the coming day for foreign parts. So Miriam is left to set off for her
next school without further adventures in love-making, and the reader
is left to wonder whether she is not one of the girls who are incurably
given to taking their Teds more seriously than they intend to be taken.
In “Backwater” Miriam is a teacher of little girls in a Bambury Park
school kept by three quaint refined little old English women--a
palatable contrast to the coarseness of Fraulein Pfaff--for nine
months. She is successful as a teacher, but finds her situation
unendurable and resigns. The emotional shallowness of the girls and
their lower middle-class mothers with aspirations to “get on” are
dreary, but hardly sufficiently dismal to provoke the black despair and
unreasoning rage which cause her to cry out in her moments of revolt,
“But why must I be one of those to give everything up?” There is no
masculine element connected with the school life, as there had been
with that of the German school. She contrasts herself with her sisters
who have made adaptations to life, two having become engaged and the
third having settled happily into a position as governess. But Miriam
can not settle, nor adapt. Her demon will not permit.
A girl of nineteen, brought up in middle-class culture, without
previous experiences except as teacher in two girls' schools, becomes
governess, as “Honeycomb” relates, in the country home of a Q. C.,
upon the introduction of friends of a future brother-in-law. From the
day of her arrival her wishful thinking revolves around the man of the
family. She loathes teaching the children and fails to hide from them
her boredom. By lampooning the eccentricities and stupidities of Mrs.
Corrie she betrays her hatred of women, her besetting “inferiority
complex,” which, in this instance, is partly justified by the adult
infantilism of the lady and her absorbing attachment to a woman of
questionable morality. Without anything to which to tie it on the
other side, Miriam constructs--as a spider might a web out of her own
unconscious self--a bridge of affinity between herself and the Q. C.,
placing such significance as her demon prompts upon his insignificant
words or looks, until he snubs her at dinner when she attempts to take
too leading a part in the conversation. Immediately she hates it all,
with the collapse of her bridge, and is ready to throw up her “job” and
all it implies.
Romance would seem remote from a hall bedroom in a sordid London
rooming-house and the duties of first aid to a firm of dentists. But
this is where Miriam finds it, for a time at least. The central figure
is one of the dentists in whom her autistic thoughts discover a lonely
sensitive man eager for the sympathetic understanding which Miriam is
ready to offer. The boredom of teaching gives place to ecstasy in the
discharge of the details, often repellent, which go to fill up the
“strange rich difficult day.” Her drab existence becomes a charmed
life until Miriam's libido, which has been running away with her like
a wild horse, shies right across the road at the first young girl she
sights within the orbit of the dentist. Judging from the reaction of
the latter, the explosion of jealousy and hatred that took place in
Miriam's mind must have found outward expression, for he retreats
behind a barrier of an “official tone,” which infuriates Miriam into
demanding an explanation and brings in reply to her demand a letter
from him beginning: “Dear Miss Henderson--You are very persistent”;
and concluding “foolish gossip which might end by making your position
untenable.” For the first time Miriam admits her folly, saying,
“I have nothing now but my pained self again, having violently
rushed at things and torn them to bits. It's all my fault from
the very beginning.... I make people hate me by _knowing_ them
and dashing my head against the wall of their behaviour.... I
did not know what I had. Friendship is fine, fine porcelain.
I have sent a crack right through it.... Mrs. Bailey (her
landlady) ... numbers of people I never think of would like
to have me always there.... At least I have broken up his
confounded complacency.”
When Miriam's dingy lodging-house becomes a boarding-house new food
comes to her creative urge in the form of daily association with
masculine boarders. Her resolution in the early pages of “Interim” to
take “no more interest in men,” collapses like a house of cards upon
the first onslaught. A close companionship develops between her and
a Spanish Jew of more than unconventional ideas and habits. But her
special devil is soon busy again, and Miriam discovers romance in the
presence in the house of a young Canadian who is studying in London.
When he comes into the dining-room where Miriam is sitting with other
boarders after dinner, and sits down with his books to study:
“He did not see that she was astonished at his coming nor her
still deeper astonishment in the discovery of her unconscious
certainty that he would come. A haunting familiar sense of
unreality possessed her. Once more she was part of a novel; it
was right, true like a book for Dr. Heber to come in in defiance
of every one, bringing his studies into the public room in order
to sit down quietly opposite this fair young English girl. He
saw her apparently gravely studious and felt he could 'pursue
his own studies' all the better for her presence.... Perhaps if
he remained steadily like that in her life she could grow into
some semblance of his steady reverent observation. He did not
miss any movement or change of expression.... It _was_ glorious
to have a real, simple homage coming from a man who was no
simpleton, coming simple, strong and kindly from Canada to put
you in a shrine....”
And yet all he does is to look at her! She goes for a walk and
“the hushed happiness that had begun in the dining-room half an
hour ago seized her again suddenly, sending her forward almost
on tiptoe. It was securely there; the vista it opened growing in
beauty as she walked; bearing within her in secret unfathomable
abundance the gift of ideal old-English rose and white gracious
adorable womanhood given her by Dr. Heber.”
When he goes to church she interprets it as a symptom of falling in
love, but if it is, the further progress of the disease is along
lines which would baffle even those who have specialised in the study
of the malady in fiction and poetry through ages. He goes back to
Canada, along with his companion students, without saying a word to his
fellow-boarder and leaves to the landlady the difficult task of warning
Miriam that her association with the Spanish Jew has furnished a
subject of gossip in the house, and that another boarder has confided
to her that Dr. Heber had “made up his mind to speak,” but that he had
been scared by Miriam's flirtation with the little Jew.
Miriam never questions the correctness of the landlady's diagnosis, nor
the authenticity of her information. Still less does she doubt her own
interpretation of the wholesome direct-minded Canadian's silent looks
in her direction.
Finally a man comes into her life who literally proposes marriage.
He is a young Russian Jew student, small of stature and suggestive
of an uncanny oldness. Under his influence she begins translating
stories from the German and seems to find some of the beneficial
possibilities of “sublimation” in the task. The test is not a true
one, however, because this little stream into which the current of her
libido is temporarily turned is too closely associated with the main
channel--Shatov--and when she becomes engaged to him the translation
seems to be forgotten.
“Deadlock” is the conflict between instinct and taste, involved in
marrying a man with whom she is in love but who arouses a revolt of her
inherited traditions and intellectual and æsthetic biases; or between
her ego instinct and her herd instinct. There the reader takes leave of
her at the end of the sixth volume.
A far more serious deadlock than that presented by her engagement is
the deadlock imposed upon Miriam by nature in creating her a woman and
endowing her with qualities which keep her in a state of revolt against
her Creator and against what to her is the indignity of being a woman.
This is epitomised splendidly in “The Tunnel,” when she is fretting her
mind through the wearying summer days to keep pace with the illness
that is creeping upon her. Entries in the dentists' index under the
word “Woman” start the train of thought:
“inferior; mentally, morally, intellectually and physically
... her development arrested in the interest of her special
functions ... reverting later towards the male type ... old
women with deep voices and hair on their faces ... leaving off
where boys of eighteen began.... Woman is undeveloped man ... if
one could die of the loathsome visions.... Sacred functions ...
highest possibilities ... sacred for what? The hand that rocks
the cradle rules the world? The future of the race? What world?
What race? Men.... Nothing but men; forever.... It will go on
as long as women are stupid enough to go on bringing men into
the world ... even if civilised women stop the colonials and
primitive races would go on. It was a nightmare. They despise
women and they want to go on living--to reproduce--themselves.
None of their achievements, no 'civilisation,' no art, no
science can redeem that. There is no possible pardon for men.
The only answer to them is suicide; all women ought to agree to
commit suicide.... All the achievements of men were poisoned at
the root. The beauty of nature was tricky femininity. The animal
world was cruelty. Jests and amusements were tragic distractions
from tragedy.... The woman in black works. It's only in the
evenings she can roam about seeing nothing. But the people she
works for know nothing about her. She knows. She is sweeter than
he. She is sweet. I like her. But he is more me.”
Earlier, but less consciously, she expresses it when, watching the men
guests at the Corrie's,
“Miriam's stricken eyes sought their foreheads for relief.
Smooth brows and neatly brushed hair above; but the smooth
motionless brows were ramparts of hate; pure murderous hate.
That's men, she said, with a sudden flash of certainty, that's
men as they are, when they are opposed, when they are real.
All the rest is pretence. Her thoughts flashed forward to a
final clear issue of opposition, with a husband. Just a cold
blank hating forehead and neatly brushed hair above it. If a
man doesn't understand or doesn't agree he's just a blank bony
conceited thinking, absolutely condemning forehead, a face
below, going on eating--and going off somewhere. Men are all
hard angry bones; always thinking something, only one thing at
a time and unless that is agreed to, they murder. My husband
shan't kill me.... I'll shatter his conceited brow--_make_ him
see ... two sides to every question ... a million sides ... no
questions, only sides ... always changing. Men argue, think they
prove things; their foreheads recover--cool and calm. Damn them
all--all men.”
Few writers could have sketched Miriam Henderson without condemning her
and without inviting the condemnation of the reader. Miss Richardson
has done it. She has given us Miriam as she knows herself, without
explanation, plea, or sentence, and left us to judge for ourselves. She
does not label her. And this is probably the reason Miss Richardson's
work has found so small an audience. People demand labels. They want to
be “told.” And she does not “tell” them. She invites them to think, and
original thinking is an unpopular process.
If ten people were to read these books and write their impressions of
them, the results would be as different as were the thoughts of the ten
people. Because each result would add what the author has left out: a
judgment, or an estimate of Miriam. And this judgment would be rendered
upon the evidence, but according to the mind of the judge.
The question which everyone must decide for himself is: when such
revelations of the conscious and the unconscious are spread before
him in words and sentences, does the result constitute gibberish or
genius; is it slush or sanity; is it the sort of thing one would try
to experience; or should one struggle and pray to be spared? It may be
the highroad to dementia--this concentrating of all one's thoughts upon
oneself, and oneself upon a single instinct. And Miriam might well have
been headed for it when she failed to differentiate between ideas based
upon objective evidence and ideas created solely out of her instinctive
craving, which is an approach toward the belief of the insane person in
his own delusions.
We identify ourselves, motives, and conduct with the characters of
fiction who cut a good figure; we identify with the ones who do not,
those we dislike, disdain, or condemn. Has anyone identified himself
with Miriam Henderson and added to his or her stature?
The strongest impression made upon an admirer of Miss Richardson's
craftsmanship is a wish that it might be applied to the study of a
different, a more normal, type of personality. But the wish that such
a study might be given us is burdened with a strong doubt whether its
fulfillment would be humanly possible. Could anyone but an extreme type
of egocentric person make such a study of himself? Could anyone whose
libido was normally divided in various channels follow its course so
graphically? And would not such division destroy the unity essential to
even so much of the novel form as Miss Richardson preserves?
Here is a deadlock for the reader: Miss Richardson's art and Miriam as
she is; or a Miriam with whom one could identify oneself as a heroine
of fiction.
The novel, according to Miss Richardson, may be compared to a
picture-puzzle in a box. Properly handled, the pieces may be made
to constitute an entity, a harmonious whole, a thing of beauty, a
portrait or a pergola, a windmill or a waterfall. The purpose of
the novel is to reveal the novelist, her intellectual possessions,
emotional reactions, her ideals, aspirations, and fulfilments, and to
describe the roads and short-cuts over which she has travelled while
accomplishing them. People and things encountered on the way do not
count for much, especially people. They are made up largely of women,
whom she dislikes, and men, whom she despises. It should be no part
of its purpose to picture situations, to describe places, to narrate
occurrences other than as media of author-revelation. Undoubtedly
it is one of the most delightful things in the world--this talking
about oneself. I have known many persons who pay others, physicians
for instance, to listen. But unless the narration is ladened with
adventure, or interlarded with humour, or spiced with raciness, it is
often boring; and reluctantly it must be admitted that when we have
ceased to admire Miss Richardson's show of art, when we no longer
thrill at her mastery of method, when we are tired of rising to the fly
of what Miss Sinclair calls her “punctilious perfection” of literary
form, she becomes tiresome. Egocentrics should have a sense of humour.
Samuel Butler thus endowed might have been assured of immortality.
Lacking that, they should have extensive contact with the world. That
is what enlivens the psychological jungle of Marcel Proust. If Henri
Amiel had had a tithe of Jean Jacques Rousseau's worldly and amatory
experiences his writings might have had great influence and a large
sale.
Miss Dorothy M. Richardson has revealed herself a finished technician.
She may be compared to a person who is ambitious to play the Chopin
Studies. She practices scales steadily for a year and then gives a
year to the Studies themselves. But when she essays to play for the
public she fails because, although she has mastered the mechanical
difficulties, she has not grasped the meaning. She reveals life without
drama and without comedy, and that such life does not exist everybody
knows.
She may have had compensation for her effort from two sources: her
imitators and her benefactors. The former are too numerous to mention,
but Mr. J. D. Beresford and Miss May Sinclair would undoubtedly admit
their indebtedness.
It is vicarious compensation, also, to be praised by one's peers and
superiors. If Dorothy M. Richardson hasn't yet had it, in the writer's
judgment she may look forward to it with confidence.
CHAPTER V
MARCEL PROUST: MASTER PSYCHOLOGIST AND PILOT OF THE “VRAIE VIE”
Marcel Proust may justly be hailed as the greatest psychological
novelist of his time. He was to normal psychology what Dostoievsky
was to abnormal psychology: an unsurpassed observer, interpreter, and
recorder of men's thoughts and conduct.
It would be hazardous to attempt to estimate the place he will
eventually have in literature until the remaining volumes of “A la
Recherche du Temps Perdu,” and “Le Temps Retrouvé” are published. But
the volumes of the former that have appeared: “Du Côté de Chez Swann,”
“Á l'Ombre des Jeunes Filles en Fleurs,” “Le Côté de Guermantes,” and
“Sodome et Gomorrhe” justify the statement that with the death of
their author in November, 1922, France lost a writer whose fame will
rank with that of Balzac. It is not likely that he will ever have
a popularity comparable to Balzac or even to Bourget, Barbusse, or
several other contemporaries, for M. Proust is an author for writers.
He will never be read by the large class of novel readers who create
the market demand for novels of action and plot; nor will he appeal
to that hardly less numerous class--chiefly women--who find the
emotional novel palatable food. However, those who, like the writer,
cannot punish themselves by struggling through a detective story and
by whom the most skillfully contrived plot can be endured only if the
harassment which it causes is counterbalanced by the charm of its
literary style or its interpretation of the personality of the author
reacting to conditions more or less common to all mankind, may find
in M. Proust a novelist whom they can ill afford to ignore. And no
writer of fact or fiction today would be just to himself were he to
proceed with his art without making the acquaintance of this master
artificer and psychologist. Proust will be remembered as a pioneer
who explored the jungle of the unconscious memory, and a marvellous
interpreter of the laws governing associated memories. I doubt not his
name will be as inseparably connected with the novel of the future as
that of de Maupassant or Poe has been with the short story of the last
few decades, even while his wares will still find scant sale, save to
writers, dilettantes, professional students of letters, of form, and of
psychology.
The measure of success that was vouchsafed him came late in life. He
was fifty when the Goncourt Prize was awarded “A l'Ombre des Jeunes
Filles en Fleurs” in 1919. Until that time his writings were known to
readers of “La Nouvelle Revue Française,” to friends, and to a limited
circle whose members have an urge for the unusual, and a flair for
the picturesque in literature. Then readers began to nibble at “Du
Côté de Chez Swann,” and the more they nibbled, that is the oftener
they read it, or attempted to read it--for it is difficult even for a
cultured Frenchman--the more keenly aware did they become that they
had encountered a new force, a new sensibility in literature, and,
like appetite that comes with eating, the greater was their desire
to develop an intimacy with him. “Le Côté de Guermantes” showed that
he walked and talked, dined and wined, registered the thoughts and
interpreted the dreams of the aristocracy with the same security,
understanding, perspicacity, and clairvoyancy that he had brought to
bear on the bourgeoisie in “Du Côté de Chez Swann.” In “Sodome et
Gomorrhe” he did the impossible. He talked with frankness and with a
tone of authority of an enigmatic, inexplicable aberration of nature,
inversion of the genesic instinct, which antedates possibly by millions
of years the differentiation of man from anthropoid stock; which
has always been with us, now the patent of good form, the badge of
intellectual superiority, the hallmark of æsthetic refinement, as in
the days of Hellenic supremacy; now the stigma of sin, the scarlet
letter of infamy, the key of the bottomless pit, as today; and which
unquestionably will always continue to be with us. He divested it
of pruriency; he rescued it from pornography; he delivered it from
pathology; and at the same time he made the penologist pause and
“normal” man thoughtful.
Whether this freakishness of nature is as common as M. Proust
says, whether it bulks so large in the conduct of daily life as he
intimates, is a matter for the individual to estimate. No statistics
are available, but experienced psychiatrists and discerning pedagogues
know that a considerable proportion of mankind is so constituted. To
deny it is equivalent to acknowledging that one is immune to evidence;
to consider it a vice is to flaunt an allegation of falsehood in
the face of biology. One can imagine the shock the world would have
today if everyone told the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth about his genesic instinct. If, then, it was decided to
segregate and deprive of liberty the inverted, what a strange medley
it would be of general and soldier, of prince and pauper, of priest
and parishioner, of genius and moron, of ambassador and attaché, of
poet, artist, and savant. It will mark an epoch in modern civilisation
when this strange variation from the normal shall be subject to study
by such investigators as Mendel, de Vries, Tschermak, and the host of
biologists who are slowly solving the mysteries of heredity. Meanwhile
the preparation for such work is the formation of public opinion, and
probably there is no better way to accomplish it than that adopted by
M. Proust.
So far the only one of M. Proust's books that has appeared in English
is “Du Côté de Chez Swann,” (Swann's Way), by C. K. Scott Moncrieff.
The translation itself is a work of art, and the reading public is
under profound obligation to this master stylist.
[Illustration: MARCEL PROUST IN 1890]
The narrator is M. Proust himself, but the reader who would understand
Proust must keep in mind that he has distributed his own personality
between two characters, the narrator of the story, and Swann. Those who
see Proust only in the first, or only in Swann, see but half of him.
In the overture he recalls the memories of a precocious, sentimental,
sickly childhood spent in his aunt's house in Combray, with an
indulgent mother, a sensible matter-of-fact father, an archaic
paternal grandmother, and two silly sentimental grandaunts. He
succeeds in introducing in the most incidental way M. Swann, the son
of a stockbroker, “a converted Jew and his parents and grandparents
before him,” who has successfully unlocked the door of smart and
savant society; his former mistress Odette de Crecy whom he has now
married, to the disgust of his neighbours; his daughter with whom the
narrator is to fall in love; M. Vinteuil whose sonata contains the
solvent of Swann's amatory resistance, and his daughter, a Gomorrite;
M. de Villeparisis; and M. de Charlus, who we shall see in “Sodome et
Gomorrhe” is not like other men.
The setting is in Brittany.
“Combray at a distance, from a twenty-mile radius, as we used
to see it from the railway when we arrived there every year
in Holy Week, was no more than a church epitomising the town,
representing it, speaking of it and for it to the horizon, and
as one drew near, gathering close about its long, dark cloak,
sheltering from the wind, on the open plain, as a shepherd
gathers his sheep, the woolly grey backs of its flocking houses,
which a fragment of its mediæval ramparts enclosed, here and
there, in an outline as scrupulously circular as that of a
little town in a primitive painting.”
He who invokes his memories is a boy of ten or thereabouts, lying in
bed and awaiting dinner to end and M. Swann to depart that his mother
may kiss him goodnight. Memory of it was like a luminous panel, sharply
defined against a vague and shading background.
“The little parlour, the dining-room, the alluring shadows
of the path along which would come M. Swann, the unconscious
author of my sufferings, the hall through which I would journey
to the first step of that staircase, so hard to climb, which
constituted, all by itself, the tapering 'elevation' of an
irregular pyramid; and, at the summit, my bedroom, with the
little passage through whose glazed door Mamma would enter; in
a word, seen always at the same evening hour, isolated from all
its possible surroundings, detached and solitary against its
shadowy background, the bare minimum of scenery necessary (like
the setting one sees printed at the head of an old play, for its
performance in the provinces); to the drama of my undressing,
as though all Combray had consisted of but two floors joined by
a slender staircase, and as though there had been no time there
but seven o'clock at night.”
The power not only of reproducing scenes and events, but also of
revivifying states of consciousness long past through invoking
associated memories, is utilised with an effect rarely parallelled
in literature. It is invoked through any of the special senses, but
chiefly through taste and hearing. The little cake soaked in tea which,
taken many years after the trivial events of his childhood at Combray
had been all but forgotten, unlocks, as if by magic, the chamber stored
with memories.
“No sooner had the warm liquid, and the crumbs with it,
touched my palate than a shudder ran through my whole body,
and I stopped, intent upon the extraordinary changes that were
taking place. An exquisite pleasure had invaded my senses, but
individual, detached, with no suggestion of its origin. And at
once the vicissitudes of life had become indifferent to me, its
disasters innocuous, its brevity illusory--this new sensation
having had on me the effect which love has of filling me with a
precious essence; or rather this essence was not in me, it was
myself. I had ceased now to feel mediocre, accidental, mortal.”
He then tries to analyse the state, and
“that nothing may interrupt it in its course I shut out every
obstacle, every extraneous idea, I stop my ears and inhibit
all attention to the sounds which come from the next room....
Undoubtedly what is thus palpitating in the depths of my being
must be the image, the visual memory which, being linked to
that taste, has tried to follow it into my conscious mind....
Will it ultimately reach the clear surface of my consciousness,
this memory, this old, dead moment which the magnetism of an
identical moment has travelled so far to importune, to disturb,
to raise up out of the very depths of my being?”
It does reach the surface of consciousness, for
“once I had recognised the taste of the crumb of madeleine
soaked in her decoction of lime-flowers which my aunt used to
give me (although I did not yet know and must long postpone the
discovery of why this memory made me so happy) immediately the
old grey house upon the street, where her room was, rose up
like the scenery of a theatre to attach itself to the little
pavilion, opening on to the garden.... And just as the Japanese
amuse themselves by filling a porcelain bowl with water and
steeping in it little crumbs of paper which until then are
without character or form, but, the moment they become wet,
stretch themselves and bend, take on colour and distinctive
shape, become flowers or houses or people, permanent and
recognisable, so in that moment all the flowers in our garden
and in M. Swann's park, and the water-lilies on the Vivonne and
the good folk of the village and their little dwellings and the
parish church and the whole of Combray and of its surroundings,
taking their proper shape and growing solid, sprang into being,
town and gardens alike, from my cup of tea.”
M. Proust's description of the first effect upon him of the little
“madeleine” dipped in tea, when, “weary after a dull day, with the
prospect of a depressing morrow, I raised to my lips a spoonful of the
tea in which I had soaked a morsel of the cake” is almost a paraphrase
of the words of Locke in his “Essay Concerning Human Understanding.”
Music, more than anything else, has the power of invoking Swann's
associated memories. A little phrase of old Vinteuil's Sonata runs like
a fine thread all through the tangle of Swann's love for Odette de
Crecy, although the memory of the phrase goes back prior to his meeting
Odette--to the night of the party at which he had heard it, after going
home from which
“he was like a man into whose life a woman, whom he has seen for
a moment passing by, has brought a new form of beauty, which
strengthens and enlarges his own power of perception, without
his knowing even whether he is ever to see her again whom he
loves already, although he knows nothing of her, not even her
name.”
Swann had tried in vain to identify the fugitive phrase which had
awakened in him a passion for music that seemed to be bringing into his
life the possibility of a sort of rejuvenation.
“Like a confirmed invalid whom all of a sudden, a change of
air and surroundings, or a new course of treatment, or, as
sometimes happens, an organic change in himself, spontaneous
and unaccountable, seems to have so far removed from his malady
that he begins to envisage the possibility, hitherto beyond all
hope, of starting to lead--and better late than never--a wholly
different life, Swann found in himself, in the memory of the
phrase that he had heard, in certain other sonatas which he
had made people play over to him, to see whether he might not,
perhaps, discover his phrase among them, the presence of one of
those invisible realities in which he had ceased to believe, but
to which, as though the music had had upon the moral barrenness
from which he was suffering a sort of recreative influence, he
was conscious once again of a desire, almost, indeed, of the
power to consecrate his life.”
“It is a labour in vain to attempt to recapture our own past;
all the efforts of our intellect must prove futile. The past
is hidden somewhere outside the realm, beyond the reach of
intellect, in some material object (in the sensation which that
material object will give us) which we do not suspect. And as
for that object, it depends on chance whether we come upon it or
not before we ourselves must die.”
Associative memory depends upon the fact that though the grouping
of the stimuli is novel, the elementary components are individually
similar to previous stimuli, and Proust avails himself of this
established fact. These elementary stimuli leave retention traces
in the central nervous system. When the same stimuli recur in a new
grouping the pathways and centres that bear such traces are brought
into connection and are combined in new ways. This modifies the form of
the response. As the separate retention traces were due to conditions
resembling the present, the new response will tend to be adaptive. This
associative memory is known in psychology as mnemonic combination.
Although no attempt is made to describe the development of the
personality of the sensitive, sentimental, impressionable, precocious
child who narrates the story, one gets an extraordinarily vivid picture
of him. He has the hallmarks and habituations of neuropathy, and
amongst them phantasying and substitution.
“In those days, when I read to myself, I used often, while I
turned the pages, to dream of something quite different. And to
the gaps which this habit made in my knowledge of the story more
were added by the fact that when it was Mamma who was reading to
me aloud she left all the love-scenes out. And so all the odd
changes which take place in the relations between the miller's
wife and the boy, changes which only the birth and growth of
love can explain, seemed to me plunged and steeped in a mystery,
the key to which (as I could readily believe) lay in that
strange and pleasant-sounding name of _Champi_, which draped
the boy who bore it, I knew not why, in its own bright colour,
purpurate and charming.”
That his neuropathic constitution was a direct inheritance is obvious.
He got it through his Aunt Leonie
“who since her husband's death, had gradually declined to leave,
first Combray, then her house in Combray, then her bedroom,
and finally her bed; and who now never 'came down,' but lay
perpetually in an indefinite condition of grief, physical
exhaustion, illness, obsessions, and religious observances....
My aunt's life now was practically confined to two adjoining
rooms, in one of which she would rest in the afternoon while
they aired the other.”
Despite these apparent restrictions of life's activities she knows more
of the happenings of the village than the town crier, and in a way she
conditions the conduct of her neighbours whose first question is “What
effect will it have on Aunt Leonie?” Her contact with people is limited
to Françoise, a perfect servant, to Eulalie, a limping, energetic, deaf
spinster, and to the reverend Curé.
“My aunt had by degrees erased every other visitor's name from
her list, because they all committed the fatal error, in her
eyes, of falling into one or other of the two categories of
people she most detested. One group, the worse of the two, and
the one of which she rid herself first, consisted of those who
advised her not to take so much care of herself, and preached
(even if only negatively and with no outward signs beyond
an occasional disapproving silence or doubting smile) the
subversive doctrine that a sharp walk in the sun and a good
red beefsteak would do her more good (her, who had had two
dreadful sips of Vichy water on her stomach for fourteen hours)
than all her medicine bottles and her bed. The other category
was composed of people who appeared to believe that she was
more seriously ill than she thought, in fact that she was as
seriously ill as she said. And so none of those whom she had
allowed upstairs to her room, after considerable hesitation and
at Françoise's urgent request, and who in the course of their
visit had shown how unworthy they were of the honour which had
been done them by venturing a timid: 'Don't you think that if
you were just to stir out a little on really fine days...?'
or who, on the other hand, when she said to them: 'I am very
low, very low; nearing the end, dear friends!' had replied: 'Ah,
yes, when one has no strength left! Still, you may last a while
yet'; each party alike might be certain that her doors would
never open to them again.”
[Illustration: A PAGE OF CORRECTED PROOF SHOWING MARCEL PROUST'S METHOD
OF REVISION]
With all his literary art, and mastery of the mysterious powers that
suggestion has to heighten awareness and deepen information, M. Proust
does not succeed in enlightening us as to how the boy at Combray
comes to possess so much information of people and such knowledge of
the world. Part of it is intuitive, but understanding of Vinteuil's
daughter, who “after a certain year we never saw alone, but always
accompanied by a friend, a girl older than herself, with an evil
reputation in the neighbourhood, who in the end installed herself
permanently at Montjouvain,” thus leading M. Vinteuil broken-hearted
to the grave because of the shame and scandal of her sadism, is beyond
possibility even for a boy of his precocity and prehensibility.
“For a man of M. Vinteuil's sensibility it must have been
far more painful than for a hardened man of the world to
have to resign himself to one of those situations which are
wrongly supposed to occur in Bohemian circles only; for they
are produced whenever there needs to establish itself in the
security necessary to its development a vice which Nature
herself has planted in the soul of a child, perhaps by no more
than blending the virtues of its father and mother, as she
might blend the colours of their eyes. And yet however much M.
Vinteuil may have known of his daughter's conduct it did not
follow that his adoration of her grew any less. The facts of
life do not penetrate to the sphere in which our beliefs are
cherished; as it was not they that engendered those beliefs,
so they are powerless to destroy them; they can aim at them
continual blows of contradiction and disproof without weakening
them; and an avalanche of miseries and maladies coming, one
after another, without interruption into the bosom of a family,
will not make it lose faith in either the clemency of its God or
the capacity of its physician.”
Thus does he introduce most casually a subject which bulks large in
“Sodome et Gomorrhe,” and which M. Proust understands like a composite
priest, physician, and biologist.
Most of the grist of the boy's mill comes over the road that skirts
Swann's park, but some comes the Guermantes Way. In “Le Côté de
Guermantes,” which followed “A l'Ombre des Jeunes Filles en Fleurs,”
he makes us as intimately acquainted with the Duchesse de Guermantes,
Mme. de Villeparisis, and other notables of the _société élegante_, as
he does in “Swann's Way” with the Verdurins and their “little nucleus”
which furnishes a background to Odette, and furnishes M. Proust with
canvas upon which to paint the portrait of an Æsculapian bounder, Dr.
Cottard, who, it has been said, is still of the quick. M. Proust was
the son and the brother of a physician and had abundant opportunity
not only to get first-hand information but to have his natural insight
quickened. In the same way one discovers his Jewish strain (his mother
was a Jewess) in his mystic trends and in his characters such as Bloch
and Swann. “Whenever I formed a strong attachment to any one of my
friends and brought him home with me that friend was invariably a Jew.”
Moreover his lack of a sense of humour is an Hebraic trait. With the
exception of the reaction provoked in his grandfather by the advent
of one of these friends, “Swann's Way,” and indeed all M. Proust's
writings, are humourless.
The genesis of Swann's love and the dissolution of Odette's take up one
volume. If it is not a perfect description of the divine passion in a
mature man surfeited by conquest and satiated by indulgence, it is an
approximation to it.
He was introduced one day at the theatre to Odette de Crocy by an old
friend of his, who had spoken of her to him as a ravishing creature
with whom he might very possibly come to an understanding. She made no
appeal to Swann; indeed she not only left him indifferent, aroused in
him no desire, but gave him a sort of physical repulsion. But Odette
knew the _ars amandi_ as did Circe or Sappho, and ere long she had
entangled him in the meshes of Eros' net. When the net was drawn to
her craft and the haul examined, it didn't interest her, though she
kept it, for it contributed to her material welfare. Then M. Proust
did a psychological stunt which reveals an important aspect of his
mastery of the science. Swann identified Odette with Zipporah, Jethro's
daughter, whose picture is to be seen in one of the Sixtine frescoes by
Botticelli. Her similarity to it enhanced her beauty and rendered her
more precious in his sight. Moreover it enabled him to introduce the
image of Odette into a world of dreams and fancies where she assumed a
new and nobler form. And whereas the mere sight of her in the flesh,
by perpetually reviving his misgivings as to the quality of her face,
her figure, the whole of her beauty, used to cool the ardour of his
love, those misgivings were swept away and that love confirmed now that
he could re-erect his estimate of her on the sure foundations of his
æsthetic principles. Instead of placing a photograph of Odette on his
study table, he placed one of Jethro's daughter, and on it he lavished
his admiration and concentrated his intensity in all the abandon of
substitution.
The author utilises the potency of suspense to bring Swann's ardour to
the boiling point. One evening when Odette had avoided him he searched
the restaurants of the Boulevards in a state of increasing panic.
“Among all the methods by which love is brought into being,
among all the agents which disseminate that blessed bane, there
are few so efficacious as the great gust of agitation which, now
and then, sweeps over the human spirit. For then the creature in
whose company we are seeking amusement at the moment, her lot
is cast, her fate and ours decided, that is the creature whom
we shall henceforward love. It is not necessary that she should
have pleased us up till then, any more, or even as much as
others. All that is necessary is that our taste for her should
become exclusive.”
He proceeded to cultivate his love in an emotional medium and to
inoculate himself with the culture which rendered him immune to
love of another. The culture medium was furnished by Vinteuil, the
old composer, who had died of a broken heart. “He would make Odette
play him the phrase from the sonata again ten, twenty times on end,
insisting that, while she played, she must never cease to kiss him.”
“Watching Swann's face while he listened to the phrase, one
would have said that he was inhaling an anæsthetic which allowed
him to breathe more deeply.”
The effect that it had was deep repose, mysterious refreshment.
He felt himself transformed into a “creature foreign to humanity,
blinded, deprived of his logical faculty, almost a fantastic unicorn,
a chimera-like creature conscious of the world through his two ears
alone.”
Swann's discovery of the spiritual and bodily inconstancies of his
mistress, the perfidies and betrayals of the Verdurins, his jealousy,
planned resentments, and resurrection are related in a way that
convinces us that Proust saw life steadily and saw it whole.
To appease his anguish, to thwart his obsession, to supplant his
preoccupation he decided to frequent again the aristocratic circles
he had forsaken. The description of the reception at Mme. de Saint
Euverte's, showing the details of fashionable life, is of itself a
noteworthy piece of writing. Not only is it replete with accurate
knowledge of such society, but it gives M. Proust the opportunity
to display understanding of motives and frailties and to record
impressions of contact with the world abroad. Speaking of one of the
guests he says:
“She belonged to that one of the two divisions of the human
race in which the untiring curiosity which the other half feels
about people whom it does not know is replaced by an unfailing
interest in the people whom it does.”
The peculiar tendency which Swann always had to look for analogies
between living people and the portraits in galleries reasserted itself
here in a more positive and more general form. One of the footmen
was not unlike the headsman in certain Renaissance pictures which
represent executions, tortures, and the like. Another reminded him of
the decorative warriors one sees in the most tumultuous of Mantegna's
paintings. “He seemed as determined to remain as unconcerned as if he
had been present at the massacre of the innocents or the martyrdom
of St. James.” As he entered the salon one reminded him of Giotto's
models, another of Albert Dürer's, another of that Greek sculpture
which the Mantuan painter never ceased to study, while a servant with a
pallid countenance and a small pig-tail clubbed at the back of his head
seemed like one of Goya's sacristans.
It was this soirée that conditioned irrevocably Swann's future life,
and the little phrase from Vinteuil's Sonata did it for him. To have
heard it “in this place to which Odette would never come, in which no
one, nothing was aware of her existence, from which she was entirely
absent” made him suffer insupportably. While listening to it
“suddenly it was as though she had entered, and this apparition
tore him with such anguish that his hand rose impulsively to his
heart.... All his memories of the days when Odette had been in
love with him, which he had succeeded, up till that evening, in
keeping invisible in the depths of his being, deceived by this
sudden reflection of a season of love, whose sun, they supposed,
had dawned again, had awakened from their slumber, had taken
wing and risen to sing maddeningly in his ears, without pity for
his present desolation, the forgotten strains of happiness.”
It raised the flood-gate of the dam in which he had stored the
memories of Odette when she loved him and before he loved her. Not
only did it liberate the memories of her, but the memories that were
associated with them: all the net-work of mental habits, of seasonable
impressions, of sensory reactions, through which it extended over a
series of groups its uniform meshes, by which his body now found itself
inextricably held.
“When, after that first evening at the Verdurins', he had had
the little phrase played over to him again, and had sought to
disentangle from his confused impressions how it was that, like
a perfume or a caress, it swept over and enveloped him, he had
observed that it was to the closeness of the intervals between
the five notes which composed it and to the constant repetition
of two of them that was due that impression of a frigid, a
contracted sweetness; but in reality he knew that he was basing
this conclusion not upon the phrase itself, but merely upon
certain equivalents, substituted (for his mind's convenience)
for the mysterious entity of which he had become aware, before
ever he knew the Verdurins, at that earlier party, when for the
first time he had heard the sonata played....
“In his little phrase, albeit it presented to the mind's eye
a clouded surface, there was contained, one felt, a matter so
consistent, so explicit, to which the phrase gave so new, so
original a force, that those who had once heard it preserved the
memory of it in the treasure-chamber of their minds. Swann would
repair to it as to a conception of love and happiness....
“Even when he was not thinking of the little phrase, it
existed, latent, in his mind, in the same way as certain other
conceptions without material equivalent, such as our notions
of light, of sound, of perspective, of bodily desire, the
rich possessions wherewith our inner temple is diversified
and adorned. Perhaps we shall lose them, perhaps they will be
obliterated, if we return to nothing in the dust. But so long as
we are alive, we can no more bring ourselves to a state in which
we shall not have known them than we can with regard to any
material object, than we can, for example, doubt the luminosity
of a lamp that has just been lighted, in view of the changed
aspect of everything in the room, from which has vanished even
the memory of the darkness....
“So Swann was not mistaken in believing that the phrase of the
sonata did, really, exist. Human as it was from this point of
view, it belonged, none the less, to an order of supernatural
creatures whom we have never seen, but whom, in spite of that,
we recognise and acclaim with rapture when some explorer of the
unseen contrives to coax one forth, to bring it down from that
divine world to which he has access to shine for a brief moment
in the firmament of ours.”
From that evening Swann understood that the feeling which Odette
had once had for him would never revive. He had made his bed, and
he resolved to share it in holy matrimony with Odette, though this
discomforted his friends and made him a species of Pariah.
Mme. Swann in Combray was a solitary, but not in Paris. There she
queened it, as many lovely ladies had done before her. The account of
that, and of the narrator's love for Gilberte, Swann's daughter, who,
when he had encountered her casually at Combray, had made a stirring
and deep impression on him; and the advent of Albertine, a potential
Gomorrite, make up the contents of the succeeding instalment, entitled
“A l'Ombre des Jeunes Filles en Fleurs.” Gilberte, Swann's daughter,
and the narrator now approaching puberty, came to play together in the
Champs Elysées, frolicking like children, innocently, though another
feeling began soon to bud in him, a feeling which he did not yet
understand. In this volume the narrator relates the experiences he had
when a youth, and therefore there is more precision in the description
of the persons with whom he came in contact. The volume also throws
much light indirectly on Proust's personality. From a certain incident
which he tells regarding the way he was brought up, one sees that
his father was a rigourous aristocrat, stiff in his demeanour, and
very particular in the choice of his connections. He, the narrator,
was brought up in a way the Germans would call “schablonenmässig”:
everything was discussed at a family council, as though he were an
inanimate plaything. His naïvete, the result of such training, is very
characteristic.
For some time he had been longing to see “Phèdre” played by the famous
Mme. La Berma (evidently Sarah Bernhardt, for at that time she was the
only one who played “Phèdre”). After long deliberation because of his
illness, it was decided he should go chaperoned by his grandmother,
to see his ideal actress. The scene opened with two men who rushed
on in the throes of heated argument. He did not know that this was
part of the play and that the men were actors; he thought they were
some ruffians who had forced their way into the theatre and who would
surely be ejected by the officials. He wondered, though, that the
spectators not only did not protest, but listened to them with the
greatest attention. Only when the theatre re-echoed with applause did
he understand that the two men were actors. Afterwards, when two ladies
came upon the stage, both of portly bearing, he could not decide which
one was La Berma; a little later he learned that neither of them was
the great actress. To reconcile such unsophistication with the account
of the peeping Tom episode when he laid bare Mlle. Vinteuil's deforming
habituation is very difficult.
Swann, now ill, and repentant, was consumed with ambition to introduce
his wife, Odette, into high society, in which he succeeded to a great
extent. Though he did not like M. Buntemps because of his reactionary
opinions, he, “the director of the minister's office,” was an important
personage and his wife, Mme. Buntemps, was a steady visitor in Odette's
salon. But once in a while he was malicious enough to exasperate
Mme. Buntemps. He told her once he would invite the Cottards and the
Duchesse de Vendome to dinner. Mme. Buntemps protested, saying it was
not seemly that the Cottards should be at the same table with the
Duchesse. In reality she was jealous of the Cottards who were going to
share the honour with her. The Prince d'Agrigente was invited, because
it was altogether “private”! Odette is described as a woman of low
intelligence, without education, speaking faulty French, but shrewd,
dominating her husband. One of her guests was Mme. Cottard, the wife
of Dr. Cottard, the medical bounder who had now become Professor, a
woman who did not belong to her present circle. But she had to invite a
person who could tell her former friends of her high connections, so as
to raise their envy.
The Marquis de Norpais, a former ambassador, is admirably drawn. He was
naturally considered by the narrator's father as the cream of society.
Just think of it! a man with two titles: Monsieur l'Ambassadeur,
and Son Excellence Monsieur le Marquis! It is true that he was an
ambassador under a republican government. But because of this he was
interesting, for despite his antecedents he was entrusted with several
extraordinary missions by very radical ministers. When a monarchist
would not accept that honour, the republican government having had no
fear that he might betray it, M. de Norpais himself willingly accepted
the charge. Being in his blood a diplomat, he could not help exercising
the functions of a diplomat, though in his heart he detested the
republican spirit of government.
The narrator's mother did not admire his intelligence, but for the
father every word of M. l'Ambassadeur de Norpais was an oracle. He had
always wished that his son should become a diplomat, while the son
wished to take up literature so as not to be separated from Gilberte.
M. de Norpais, who did not much like the new style diplomats, told the
narrator's father that a writer could gain as much consideration and
more independence than a diplomat. His father changed his mind.
It is quite impossible, within the space of an essay, to give even an
outline of the remaining volumes that have already appeared of this
amazing and epochal novel.
Without doubt M. Proust had a definite idea in mind, a determination to
make a contribution: to prove that the dominant force in mental life
is association, the chief resource of mentality reminiscence. Thus the
primitive instincts of mankind and their efforts to obtain convention's
approbation furnish the material with which he has built. It is
extraordinary how large association bulks: individuals remind him of
famous paintings, not merely the general characters of the people whom
he encounters in his daily life, but rather what seem least susceptible
of generalisation, the individual features of men and women whom he
knows. For instance, a bust of the Doge Loredan by Antonio Rizzo,
is suggested by the prominent cheekbones, the slanting eyebrows, in
short a speaking likeness to his own coachman Rami; the colouring of a
Ghirlandajo, by the nose of M. de Palancy; a portrait by Tintoretto, by
the invasion of the plumpness of the cheek by an outcrop of whisker,
the broken nose, the penetrating stare, the swollen eyelids of Dr. du
Bolbon.
If, on descending the stairs after one of the Doncières evenings,
suddenly on arriving in the street, the misty night and the lights
shining through suggest a time when he arrived at Combray, at once
there is thrown on the screen of his consciousness a picture of
incidents there and experiences elsewhere that are as vivid and as
distinct as if he were looking at them on a moving-picture screen. Then
suddenly there appears a legend “the useless years which slipped by
before my invisible vocation declared itself, that invisible vocation
of which this work is the history.” Like the monk who seeks God in
solitude, like Nietzsche who sought Him in reason, M. Proust has sought
to reveal his soul, his personality, the sum total of all his various
forms of consciousness by getting memory to disgorge her contents, the
key to the chamber being association.
“We try to discover in things, endeared to us on that account,
the spiritual glamour which we ourselves have cast upon them;
we are disillusioned, and learn that they are in themselves
barren and devoid of the charm which they owed, in our minds,
to the association of certain ideas; sometimes we mobilise all
our spiritual forces in a glittering array so as to influence
and subjugate other human beings who, as we very well know, are
situated outside ourselves, where we can never reach them.”
There are so many features of M. Proust's work that excite admiration
that it is possible to enumerate only a few. Despite a studied style
of confusion and interminable sentences, suspended, hyphenated,
alembicated, and syncopated, that must forever make him the despair
of anyone whose knowledge of French is not both fundamental and
colloquial, he makes telling, life-like pen pictures of things and
persons. Such is one of Françoise, the maid at Combray,
“who looked as smart at five o'clock in the morning in her
kitchen, under a cap whose stiff and dazzling frills seemed
to be made of porcelain, as when dressed for church-going;
who did everything in the right way, who toiled like a horse,
whether she was well or ill, but without noise, without the
appearance of doing anything; the only one of my aunt's maids
who when Mamma asked for hot water or black coffee would bring
them actually boiling; she was one of those servants who in a
household seem least satisfactory, at first, to a stranger,
doubtless because they take no pains to make a conquest of him
and show him no special attention, knowing very well that they
have no real need of him, that he will cease to be invited to
the house sooner than they will be dismissed from it; who, on
the other hand, cling with most fidelity to those masters and
mistresses who have tested and proved their real capacity, and
do not look for that superficial responsiveness, that slavish
affability, which may impress a stranger favourably, but often
conceals an utter barrenness of spirit in which no amount of
training can produce the least trace of individuality.
“The daughter of Françoise, on the contrary, spoke, thinking
herself a woman of today and freed from all customs, the
Parisian argot and did not miss one of the jokes belonging to
it. Françoise having told her that I had come from a Princess:
'Ah, doubtless a Princess of the cocoanut.' Seeing that I
was expecting a visitor, she pretended to think that I was
called Charles. I answered 'No,' naïvely, which permitted
her to exclaim 'Ah, I thought so! And I was saying to myself
Charles waits (charlatan).' It wasn't very good taste, but I
was less indifferent when as a consolation for the tardiness
of Albertine, she said, 'I think you can wait for her in
perpetuity. She will not come any more.' Ah, our gigolettes of
today!
“Thus her conversation differed from that of her mother but what
is more curious the manner of speaking of her mother was not the
same as that of her grandmother, a native of Bailleau-le-Pin
which was near the country of Françoise. However the patois were
slightly different, like the two country places. The country
of the mother of Françoise was made up of hills descending
into a ravine full of willows. And, very far from there, on
the contrary, there was in France a little region where one
spoke almost exactly the same patois as at Meseglise. I made
the discovery at the same time that I was bored by it. In fact,
I once found Françoise talking fluently with a chambermaid of
the house who came from the country and spoke its patois. They
understood each other mostly. I did not understand them at
all. They knew this but did not stop on this account, excused,
so they thought, by the joy of being compatriots, although
born so far apart, for continuing to speak before me this
foreign language as if they did not wish to be understood. This
picturesque study of linguistic geography and comradeship was
followed each week in the kitchen without my taking any pleasure
in it.”
Time, M. Proust was convinced, was made for slaves. It takes longer
to read his account of a soirée at the Prince de Guermantes' than
it would to attend it. It requires half a volume to narrate it. The
account is masterly, and the reader is filled with the feelings that
actual experience might produce. Those who have had contact with
aristocracy, and whose lucidity of mind has not been impaired by it,
also find such an account interesting. Here one meets aristocrats of
every complexion, heirs of the oldest and proudest names in Gotha's
Almanach, and those whose pedigree is not so ancient, upon whom the
former look condescendingly. As in a Zoo, one sees a great variety
of the aristocrat genus, and if one has believed that the nobility
is formed of people different and better than the common herd the
delusion is dissipated. Here is a light that fairly dazzles those who
are susceptible to the appeal of clothes, wealth, and jewels. If one's
yearnings are for things more substantial in human nature he will not
be satisfied as a guest of the Prince de Guermantes. Diogenes there
would have used his lantern in vain.
One becomes intimately acquainted with the _haut monde_, their colossal
pride, and overweening conceit, concealed from the eyes of those
below them in the hierarchy by thin veils of conventional and shallow
amiability which they make more and more transparent as the people
they deal with are further removed from the blue zone of the _nobilior
spectrum_. One discovers also another characteristic: the capacity for
putting up with such pride and conceit from above, and for making the
best of it for the sake of securing the lustre which comes with the
good will of those higher up, and contact with them.
In the society of the Guermantes one becomes acquainted with such
specimens of human meanness and hatefulness, such hypocrisy, such
paucity of the sentiments that ennoble life, that he finds himself
wondering why better flowers do not grow in the enchanted gardens.
Those which seemed so beautiful at a distance turn out to be not only
without fragrance, but with a bad odour. The _grand monde_, in truth,
seems to be nothing but a small world of gossiping and shallow talk,
a world aware of no other nobility than that of inherited titles, and
scorning the idea that real nobility is a refinement of the soul,
produced by education, to which rich and poor, high and low, may all
aspire. The feeling of a man not recognised as an aristocrat who,
for some special reason, gains admission to this circle, is made
vivid in the experience of a talented physician who has saved the
life of the Prince de Guermantes and who owes his invitation to the
reception to the Prince's gratitude. The experience of a Bavarian
musician is also interesting. It shows how great can be the insolence
of aristocracy swollen with vanity. At the soirée we meet nobles who
never possessed ideals which acted as armour against pollution, nobles
with imaginations easily inflamed by the attractions of women servants,
whose lust for a chambermaid is sufficient to dim all consciousness
of their pedigrees. And we meet others who are even lower, noblemen
and ladies who keep up the traditions of Sodom and Gomorrah in modern
society.
It may be beside the question to inquire the intention of the author
in painting this picture of high society and then dwelling on aspects
of it that can only cause disgust. His words at times seem to reveal
a sarcastic intention. His descriptions are so full of minute details
and so rich in incidents of extreme naturalness that it is impossible
to believe that even a lively imagination could fabricate them. One
easily sees that they are fragments of real life. This keeps the
interest alive, despite the involved style. His periods are so twisted
and turgid with associated thoughts, so bristling with parenthetical
clauses that often profound effort is required to interpret them.
There is none of the plain, clear, sane, sunny style of a Daudet,
or of Paul Bourget. This causes a sensation of discomfort at times,
especially when the author indulges in introspection that reveals a
morbid imagination and pathological sensitiveness; as, for instance, in
the distinction between abiding sorrows and fugitive sorrows; on how
our beloved departed ones live in us, act on us, transform us even more
than the living ones; and how those who are dead grow to be more real
to us who love them than when they were alive.
We feel an unhealthiness under it all. We have to stop and analyse, to
unravel the main idea from the tangled skein in which it is hidden.
But it is a work that brings its own reward. It brings real jewels of
_finesse de pensée et d'observation_, such as those on the reminiscence
of departed sensations and feelings; on the different selves which we
have been in the past and which coexist in our present individuality;
on the eclipses to which the latter is subject when one of its
components suddenly steps from the dark recesses into the vivid light
of consciousness; on the elements of beauty apparent in different
individuals who are partial incarnations of one great beauty without;
on reminiscence of Plato; on the anxiety of expectation while awaiting
a person; on the effect which consciousness of his own sinfulness has
on the sinner; on the interchange of moral qualities and idiosyncrasies
of persons bound by mutual sympathy; on the permanence of our
passions--in mathematical jargon, a function of the time during which
they have acted on our spirit. It also discloses treasures of delicate
feeling, such as are awakened in a person by the image of a beloved one
that flashes vivid in his memory.
But to discover such treasures one has often to wade through a series
of long and indigestible sentences of thirty or forty lines.
I recall reading in an English magazine, a number of years ago,
an article entitled “A Law in Literary Expression.” Stated in its
plainest terms, the law is this: that the length of the phrase--not the
sentence, but its shortest fraction, the phrase--must be measured by
the breath pause. M. Proust breaks this law oftener than any citizen of
this country breaks the prohibition law, no matter how imperious may be
his thirst.
Finally the frank and scientific way in which he has discussed a
subject that has always been tabooed in secular literature calls for
remark. Of the posterity of Sodom he says it forms a colony spread all
over the world, and that one can count it as one can count the dust of
the earth. He studies all the types and varieties of sodomists. Their
manners and ways, their sentiments, their aberrations of the senses,
their shame are passed in review. It is a sort of scientific, poetical
treatise. The actions in which the sodomistic instinct finds its outlet
are often compared to the seemingly conscious actions by which flowers
attract the insects that are the instruments of their fecundation.
Botany and sexuality are mixed together. Sometimes the scientific
spirit, gaining the upper hand, leads him to look upon these phenomena
of genesic inversion as manifestations of a natural law, and therefore
marvellous, like all the workings of nature. He is nearly carried away,
and finds excuses for what is considered a vice, and seems to be on the
verge almost of expressing his admiration.
Some of his observations on sodomistic psychology are highly
interesting, although expressed in long periods.
I append a few pages of literal translation from the opening chapter
of “Sodome et Gomorrhe”; first, that the reader may have a sample
of M. Proust's style; second, that he may gain an insight of the
grasp the writer has of one of nature's most unsolvable riddles; and
finally, that he may have the description of an individual who plays an
important part in the novel.
“At the beginning of this scene, before my unsealed eyes, a
revolution had taken place in M. de Charlus, as complete, as
immediate as if he had been touched by a magic wand. Until
then, not understanding, I had not seen. The vice (so-called
for convenience), the vice of each individual, accompanies him
after the manner of those genii who are invisible to those who
ignore their presence. Goodness, deceit, a good name, social
relations do not allow themselves to be discovered, they exist
hidden. Ulysses himself did not at first recognise Athene. But
gods are immediately perceptible to gods, the like to the like,
so M. de Charlus was to Julien. Until now, in the presence of
M. de Charlus, I was like an absent-minded man in company with
a pregnant woman, whose heavy figure he had not remarked and
of whom, in spite of her smiling reiteration 'Yes, I am a bit
tired just now,' he persists in asking indiscreetly, 'What is
the matter with you then?' But, let some one say to him, 'She
is pregnant,' he immediately is conscious of her abdomen and
hereafter sees nothing but that. Enlightenment opens the eyes;
an error dissipated gives an added sense.
“Those persons who do not like to believe themselves examples of
this law in others--towards the Messieurs de Charlus of their
acquaintance whom they did not suspect even until there appears
on the smooth surface of a character, apparently in every
respect like others, traced in an ink until then invisible,
a word dear to the ancient Greeks, have only to recall, in
order to satisfy themselves, how at first the surrounding world
appeared naked, devoid of those ornamentations which it offers
to the more sophisticated, and also, of the many times in their
lives that they had been on the point of making a break. For
instance, nothing upon the characterless face of some man could
make them suppose that he was the brother, the fiancé or the
lover of some woman of whom they are on the point of making an
uncomplimentary remark, as, for example, to compare her to a
camel. At that moment, fortunately, however, some word whispered
to him by a neighbour freezes the fatal term on his lips. Then
immediately appears, like a _Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin_, these
words, 'This is the fiancé, or the brother, or the lover of the
woman, therefore it would be impossible to call her a camel
before him,' and, this new notion alone causes the retreat or
advance of the fraction of those notions, heretofore completed,
that he had had concerning the rest of the family.
“The real reason that M. de Charlus was different from other men
was because another being had been engrafted upon him, like the
horse upon the centaur, that his being was incorporated with
that of the Baron. I had not hitherto perceived. The abstract
had not become materialised, the being, finally understood had
lost its power of remaining invisible, and the transmutation of
M. de Charlus into a new person was so complete that not only
the contrasts of his face, of his voice, but retrospectively
the heights and depths of his relations with me, everything,
in fact, which had until then appeared incoherent, became
intelligible, disclosed itself, like a phrase which, without
meaning so long as the letters composing it are scattered
becomes, if the characters be placed in their proper order, a
thought impossible to forget.
“Moreover I now understood why, a short time ago, when I saw
M. de Charlus coming out from Mme. de Villeparisis' I thought
he looked like a woman. It was because he was one! He belonged
to that race of beings whose ideal is virile because their
temperament is feminine, and who are, in appearance only, like
other men. The silhouette cast in the facet of their eyes,
through which they see everything in the universe, is not that
of a nymph but of a beautiful young man. One of a race upon
whom rests a curse, who is forced to live in an atmosphere of
falsehood and perjury because he knows that his desire, that
which gives to all creatures the greatest satisfaction in life,
must be unavowed, being considered punishable and shameful, who
must even deny God himself, since when even as a Christian he
appears as an accused at the bar of the tribunal he must before
Christ and in his name defend himself as if from a calumny from
that which is his very life; son without a mother, forced to lie
to her all her life, even to the moment when he is closing her
eyes, friend without friendships, in spite of all those who are
attracted by his charm, fully recognised, and whose hearts would
lead them to be kind--for can those relations, which bloom only
by favour of a lie, be called friendship, when the first burst
of confidence he might be tempted to express, would cause him to
be rejected with disgust? Should he, by chance, have to do with
an impartial mind, that is to say a sympathetic one, even then
diverted from him by a psychology of convention, would permit
to flow from the confessed vice even the affection which is the
most foreign to him--as certain judges extenuate and excuse more
easily assassination amongst inverts and treason amongst Jews
from reasons drawn from original sin and fatality of race.
“Finally, lovers (at least according to the first theory
advanced which one will see modified by the continuation and
which would have angered them above everything had not this
contradiction been wiped out from before their eyes by the same
illusion that made them see and live) to whom the possibility
of this love (the hope of which gives them the force to bear so
many risks, so much solitude) is nearly closed since they are
naturally attracted to a man who does not resemble in any way a
woman, a man who is not an invert and who therefore cannot love
them; consequently their desire would remain forever unappeased
if money did not deliver to them real men or if the imagination
did not cause them to take for real men the inverts to whom
they are prostituted. Whose only honour is precarious; whose
only liberty provisory, up to the discovery of the crime; whose
only situation is unstable like the poet, who, fêted at night
in all the salons, applauded in all the theatres of London
is chased from his lodgings in the morning and can find no
place to lay his head. Turning the treadmill like Sampson and
saying like him, 'The two sexes will die each on his own side.'
Excluded even (except during the days of great misfortune
when the greatest number rallies around the victim like the
Jews around Dreyfus--from the sympathy--sometimes of society)
excluded even from their kind who see with disgust, reflected
as in a mirror which no longer flatters, all those blemishes
which they have not been willing to see in themselves and which
make them understand that that which they call their love (and
to which, playing upon the word, they have annexed everything
that poetry, painting, music, chivalry, asceticism can add to
love) comes not from an ideal of beauty which they have chosen,
but from an incurable malady. Like the Jews again (save a few
who only care to consort with their own race and have always
on the lips ritualistic words and consecrated pleasantries);
they fly from each other, seeking those who are most unlike
them, who will have nothing to do with them, pardoning their
rebuffs, intoxicating themselves with their condescensions; but
also reassembled with their kind by the very ostracism which
strikes them, the opprobrium into which they have fallen, and
finally taking on (as a result of a persecution similar to that
of Israel) the physical and moral characteristics of a race,
sometimes beautiful, often frightful, finding (in spite of all
the mockeries that those more homogeneous, better assimilated
to the other race, in appearance less of an invert heap upon
him who is apparently more of one) finding even a kind of
expansion in frequenting with their kind, even an aid from
their existence so that while denying that they belong to that
race (whose very name is the greatest of injuries) those who
have succeeded in hiding the truth, that they also are of that
despised race, unmask those others, less to injure them, not
detesting them, than to excuse themselves, as a physician seeks
the appendicitis inversion in history, they find pleasure in
recalling that Socrates was one of them and that the same thing
was said of Jesus by the Israelites, without remembering that
then when homo-sexuality was normal there was no abnormality,
as there were no anti-Christians before Christ, also that
opprobrium alone makes it crime, since it has been only allowed
to exist as crime because it is refractory to all predication,
all example, to all punishment by virtue of special innate
disposition which repulses men more (although it may accompany
high moral qualities) than certain vices which contradict high
moral qualities, such as theft, cruelty, bad faith, better
understood, therefore more easily excused by men in general.
“Forming a free-masonry, much more extended, more efficacious
and less suspected than that of the lodges, because it rests
upon an identity of tastes, of needs, of habits, of dangers, of
apprenticeships, of knowledge, of traffic and of language. Whose
members avoid one another and yet immediately recognise each
other by natural or conventional signs, involuntary or studied,
which disclose to the mendicant one of his kind in the lord
whose carriage door he opens, to the father in the fiancé of his
daughter, to him who had wished to be cured, to confess, in the
physician, the priest or the lawyer whom he had gone to consult;
all obliged to protect their secret, but, at the same time,
sharing the secret of the others, which was not suspected by the
others and which makes the most improbable romances of adventure
seem true to them, for, in their romantic life, anachronically,
the ambassador is the friend of the criminal, the prince who,
with a certain freedom of manner, (which an aristocratic
education gives and which would be impossible with a little
trembling bourgeois) leaves the house of the duchess to seek the
Apache. Rejected part of the human collectivity but all the same
an important part, suspected where it does not exist, vaunting
itself, insolently with impunity where it is not divined;
counting its adherents everywhere, amongst the people, in the
army, in the temple, in the prison, upon the throne; finally
living, at least a great number of them, in a caressing and
dangerous intimacy with men of the other race, provoking them,
enticing them to speak of this vice as if it were not theirs, a
game which is made easy by the blindness or the falseness of the
others, a game which may be prolonged for years--until the day
of Scandal, when these conquerors are devoured. Until this time
obliged to hide their true life, to turn away their regards from
where they would wish to fix them, to fix them upon that from
which they would naturally turn away--to change the meaning of
many adjectives in their vocabulary, a social constraint merely,
slight compared to that interior constraint which their vice, or
that which is improperly called so, imposes upon them, less with
regard to others than to themselves and in a manner which makes
it seem not to be a vice--to themselves. But certain ones, more
practical, more hurried, who have not time to bargain and to
renounce the simplification of life and the gain of time that
might result from cooperation, have made two societies, of which
the second is exclusively composed of beings like themselves.”
M. Proust's work is the first definite reply in the affirmative to the
question whether fiction can subsist without the seductive power due
to a certain illusory essence of thought. Whether in this respect he
will have many, if any, successful followers is to be seen. But his
own volumes stand as an astonishing example of an organic and living
fiction obtained solely by the effort to portray truth.
Because of the unique qualities of his novels and the fact that they
are developed on a definite psychological plan, more than the usual
interest in a favourite writer is attached to the personality of M.
Proust. During his lifetime inaccessible both because of aristocratic
taste and of partial invalidism, his figure is likely to become more
familiar to the reading world--even to those who never read his
books--than the figures of great authors who walked with the crowd and
kept the common touch.
Neither Proust the man nor Proust the author can be considered apart
from his invalidism. It shows all through his writings, although
what the malady was which rendered him, if not a _de facto_ invalid,
certainly a potential invalid, is not known. Some of his friends
accused asthma, others a disease of the heart, while still others
attributed it to “nerves.” In reality his conduct and his writings were
consistent with neuropathy and his heredity. And if the hero of “A
la Recherche du Temps Perdu” is to be identified with himself, as is
popularly supposed, he was from early childhood delicate, sensitive,
precocious, and asthmatic, that is profoundly neuropathic.
He was fastidious in his tastes; he liked the best styles, the most
elegant ladies, aristocratic salons, and fashionable gatherings. He was
noted for the generosity of his tips. His life reminds one of the hero
of Huysman's famous novel. In his early days, M. Proust was a great
swell, and there is no doubt that many of his descriptions of incidents
and persons are elaborations of notes that he made after attending a
reception given by the Duchesse de Rohan, or other notables of the
Faubourg St. Germain, in whose houses he was an habitué.
His social activity may have been deliberate preparation for his work,
as his fifteen-year apprenticeship to Ruskin was preparation. Or it may
have been a pose, much the same as his mannerisms, habits, customs,
and possibly some features of his invalidism, were a pose. Surely he
enjoyed the reputation of being “different.”
He ruminated on Rousseau and studied Saint-Simon. When he arrived at
the stage where he could scoff at one and spurn the other, he learned
Henry James by heart. Then he wrote; he had prepared himself. The
deficit which art and endeavour failed to wipe out was compensated by
his maternal inheritance.
One may infer whither he is going by reading Proust once, but to
accompany him he must be read a second time. Those who would get
instruction and enlightenment must read him as Ruskin, his master,
said all worth while books must be read: “You must get into the habit
of looking intensely at words and assuring yourself of their meaning,
syllable by syllable.”
The discerning reader must look intensely at M. Proust's words. If he
looks long enough they seem to take on the appearance of _Mene, Tekel,
Phares_.
CHAPTER VI
TWO LITERARY LADIES OF LONDON: KATHERINE MANSFIELD AND REBECCA WEST
Many persons are so constituted that they accept any positive statement
as fact unless they know it to be false. Few more positive statements
are made in print than “So and So is England's or America's or France's
leading or most popular writer of fiction or verse.” Publicity agents
have found apparently that such claim sells books and needs no
substantiation. The reading public rarely protests. It denies in a more
effective way, but before the denial gets disseminated many credulous
seekers of diversion and culture are misled.
There are several young women writing fiction in England today of whom
it can be said truthfully that they ornament the profession of letters.
Women have long justified their reputation for being intuitive by their
fictional writing. It is likely that they may proceed to establish
an equal reputation for accurate observation, logical inference, and
temperate narrative. Had not the waves of death recently encompassed
Katherine Mansfield in her early maturity she would have remained at
the top of the list, the place where now, varying with individual taste
and judgment, stand the names of Dorothy Richardson, Rebecca West,
Stella Benson, Virginia Woolf, Sheila Kaye-Smith, Mary Webb, Rose
Macaulay, to mention no others. For the first time in history women
prose writers preponderate, and it is a good augury for a country which
has been so quickly and successfully purged of anti-feminism.
Katherine Mansfield's output has been small, but quality has made
up for quantity. Her reputation is founded on two volumes of short
stories. To say that they reveal capacity to create life, to recognise
the temperament, intellectuality, and morality of the ordinary human
beings that one encounters, and to display their behaviour; as well
as a power to analyse personality and to depict individuality that
equals de Maupassant, is to make a truthful statement, and a temperate
one. Indeed, she seemed to her contemporaries to be possessed of some
unsanctified and secret wisdom.
Her history is brief. She was Kathleen Beauchamp, third daughter of
a man of affairs, recently knighted, and was born in Wellington, New
Zealand. She was 23 years old when she married, just before the war,
J. Middleton Murry, the British critic and novelist. Her first book
“In a German Pension,” published when she was 21, gave no promise of
great talent. Her first mature work was a series of book reviews in
_The Nation and Athenæum_, about 1919. She was quickly recognised to
be a subtle and brilliant critic. In 1920 the publication of “Bliss
and Other Stories” revealed her metal and temper. Development and
maturity marked her second and last collection, “The Garden-Party and
Other Stories,” which followed in 1922. Hardly had the promise of her
early work been recognised before it was overshadowed by progressive
pulmonary disease, and after long months of illness, during which she
was obliged to spend most of her time away from England, she died in
France on January 9, 1923.
Katherine Mansfield had a technique which may be compared to that of
a great stage manager. When the play is put on, the scenes and the
characters, the atmosphere and the environment, the sentiment and the
significance are satisfying, intelligent and convincing. The world seen
through her eyes, and the conduct of its most highly organised product,
is the world that may be seen by anyone who has normal, keen vision.
The conduct of the people who encumber it is that which an observer
without inherited bias or acquired bigotry knows intuitively, and has
learned from experience, is the conduct that reflects our present
development, our attitudes, our interests, our desires, and most of all
our dispositions.
[Illustration: KATHERINE MANSFIELD]
She prepared the stage and then her characters came on. She didn't
bore with narrative of their birth, weary with incidents of their
development, or disgust with details of their vegetative existence.
They reacted to their immediate desires and environment in the way that
people act in real life. She had a comprehensive understanding of human
motives, and she realised how firmly engrained in man is the organic
lust to live and to experience pleasure.
To find the balance in fiction midway between the “joy stuff” which for
the last decade has been threatening to reduce American literature to
a spineless pulp, and morbid realism which, in both England and this
country, has been reflecting the influence of so-called psychoanalysis,
is an accomplishment deserving of the thanks of all admirers of sanity
in art. Miss Mansfield has succeeded in doing this, with the result
that a large measure of the charm of her art lies in its sanity,
its extraordinary freedom from obsessions, from delusions, and from
excessive egocentricity. To borrow a term from music, she may be said
to have possessed an unerring sense of pitch.
The easiest way of estimating any unknown element is to compare it
to something already known, and Katherine Mansfield has been called
the Chekhov of English fiction. Such a comparison may be useful as an
approach to her work. In truth, however, while her position in English
fiction may be compared with that of the illustrious Russian, she is in
no sense an imitator, a disciple of him or of any one else. Her art is
her own.
It can best be estimated from study of her last published story. If
Katherine Mansfield, feeling herself already drawn into the shadow of
approaching death, had tried to leave the world one final sample of
her art which would epitomise her message and her method, “The Fly,”
published in _The Nation and Athenæum_ of March 18, 1922, is a lasting
triumph of her success. In a story of twenty-five hundred words she
has said more than most authors say in a one-hundred-thousand word
novel, or, indeed, in many novels. Not only is every word pregnant
with meaning, but for those who can read between the lines there is an
indictment of the life she is picturing too poignant for any but strong
souls who can look upon the wine of life when it is red; who can even
drain the cup to the bitter dregs in their sincere desire to learn its
truth, without suffering the draft to send its poison into their souls.
It is not that Katherine Mansfield was poisoned with the bitterness of
life, or weakened with the taint of pessimism. On the contrary, she
was as immune to bitterness, to poison, to weakness, as a disembodied
spirit would be to disease. She was like pure white glass, reflecting
fearlessly the part of life that was held before her, but never
colouring it with her own personality. Her reflection was impartial.
In “The Fly” the _dramatis personæ_ are old Mr. Woodifield, the boss,
and the fly. Old Mr. Woodifield is not described, but the reader sees
him, small of body and of soul, shrivelled, shaky, wheezy, as he
lingers in the big, blatantly new office chair on one of the Tuesdays
when, since the “stroke” and retirement from his clerkship, he has
escaped from the solicitude of the wife and the girls back into his
old life in the city--“we cling to our last pleasures as the tree
clings to its last leaves”--and revelled in the sense of being a guest
in the boss's office. The boss is more graphic because he remains
nameless. “Stout, rosy, five years older than Mr. Woodifield and
still going strong, still at the helm” is what we are told he is, but
this is what we see: A brutal, thick man, purring at the admiration
of the old clerk for his prosperity revealed in the newly “done-up”
office; self-satisfied, selfish, and supercilious, offering a glass
of whiskey as a panacea for the old man's tottering pitifulness, and
then listening, insolently tolerant, to the rambling outpourings of
the old soul, harmless, disciplined to long poverty of purse, of life,
of thought, about the “Girls” visit to the soldier's grave in Belgium
and the price they paid for a pot of jam. Then the picture changes.
The shuffling footsteps of the old man have died out, the door is
closed for half-an-hour, the photograph of a “grave-looking boy in
uniform standing in one of those spectral photographers' parks with
photographers' storm-clouds behind him,” looks out at the boss who has
“arranged to weep.” But the floodgates which have opened at the tap of
the one sentiment of which the boss was capable are now suffering from
the rust of six years. Tears refuse to come.
A fly drops into the pot of ink, and the boss, absent-mindedly noticing
its struggles for freedom, picks it out with a pen and shakes it on
to the blotting paper, where the little animal makes a heroic effort
to clean off the ink and get ready for life again. But the boss has
an idea. In spite of himself, his admiration is aroused by the fly's
struggle, his pluck--“that was the way to tackle things, that was the
right spirit. Never say die; it was only a question of.... But the
fly has again finished its laborious task and the boss has just time
to refill his pen, to shake fair and square on the newly cleaned body
yet another dark drop. What about it this time?” And yet another.
“He plunged his pen back into the ink, leaned his thick wrist on the
blotting paper, and as the fly tried its wings, down came a great
heavy blot. What would it make of that?... Then the boss decided
that this time should be the last, as he dipped the pen deep in the
inkpot. It was. The last blot fell on the soaked blotting-paper and the
bedraggled fly lay in it and did not stir.” And as he rings for some
new blotting-paper, a feeling of unaccountable wretchedness seizes him
and he falls to wondering what it was he had been thinking about before
the fly had attracted his attention. “For the life of him, he could not
remember.” And that is the end of the story.
Katherine Mansfield's art resembles that of the great Russian
physician-novelist in that she preaches no sermon, points no moral,
expounds no philosophy. Although there is no available exposition of
her theories, her work is evidence that her conception of art was
to depict the problematic as it was presented to her, and leave the
interpretation to the reader's own philosophy. She made Raoul Duquette
say, in “Je ne parle pas Française,” one of the most psychologically
remarkable of her stories: “People are like portmanteaux, packed with
certain things, started going, thrown about, tossed away, dumped down,
lost and found, half emptied suddenly or squeezed fatter than ever
until finally the Ultimate Porter swings them on to the Ultimate Train,
and away they rattle.” That may have been her own belief.
While it may be true in a certain sense that the artist sees only
himself in his art, there is an essential difference between seeing
himself reflected in life and in seeing life as in himself. Katherine
Mansfield habitually did the latter. And it is this fact that enabled
her to use as models, or accessories, or background any of the chance
travellers she may have encountered with almost equal success. If she
ever reflected herself in her art, it was a normal and objective self,
a self which was interested in the drama being enacted about her, not
merely the drama of her own soul; and in the fine points of this drama
as well as in its leading actors and more obvious aspects.
Her world from which she has gathered the material for her two books of
stories has been richly variegated, and her readers are given the full
benefit of a versatile experience. She was _La Gioconda_ of English
fiction writers. “Je ne parle pas Française” shows that she knew
the soul maladies and, like Walter Pater's conception of Leonardo's
masterpiece, she knew some of the secrets of the grave: though she had
not “been a diver in deep seas,” nor “trafficked for strange webs with
Eastern merchants.” She did not _finish_ an individual. She narrated
an episode which revealed his or her character; she didn't lead up to
some epochal event like marriage, a dramatic reconciliation, a studied
folly, or a crime. She depicted an episode, and left you to put
such interpretation upon it, or to continue it, as your experience,
imagination, or desire might suggest. She was a picture maker, not
pigment by pigment, cell by cell, but with great sweeps of the brush.
She usually depicted sentimental _men_, whose long suits were fidelity
and constancy, or men whose fundamental urges were not harmonised
to convention. Her women were, in the main, fickle, designing,
inconstant, shallow, truckling, vain. “Marriage à la Mode,” is a
specimen. William keeps his romantic and sentimental view of life
after prosperity and progeny come. Isabel doesn't. She is all for
progress and evolution--new house, new environment, new friends, new
valuation of life's possessions. He goes home for week-ends chockful
of love and sentimentality. She meets him at the station with her new
friends--sybarites and hedonists in search of sensation. He soon finds
he isn't in the game at all as Isabel now plays it. So he decides to
abbreviate his visit. On the way back to town he concocts a long letter
full of protestations of unselfish love, and willingness to stand aside
if his presence is a drag on her happiness. She reads it aloud to her
guests who receive it with sneers and jeers. Isabel has a moment of
self-respect, and withdraws to her room and experiences the vulgarity
and loathesomeness of her conduct. She will write to William at once
and dispel his fears and reassure him, but while she is holding her
character up to her eyes disparagingly she hears her guests calling her
and decides “I'll go with them and write to William later--some other
time. Not now. But I shall _certainly_ write.” Procrastination, not
hesitation, condition her downfall.
In “Je ne parle pas Française” she handled a subject--the implantation
of the genesic instinct--in such a way that the reader may get little
or much from it, depending upon his knowledge and experience. But in
the lines and between the lines there is exposition of practically all
that is known of the strange deviations of the libido. Raoul Duquette
and Dick, his English friend, who cannot kill his mother, cannot give
her the final blow of letting her know that he has fallen in love with
Mouse, are as truly drawn to life as Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud,
or as Encolpius and Giton of the Satyricon.
It is a far cry from the depths glimpsed--but with such terrible
sureness--in this story, to the budding soul of a young girl from the
country as pictured in Leila in “Her First Ball”; or to the very spirit
of healthy youth, both frivolous, superficial youth, and sensitive
idealising youth, which exudes from the pages of “The Garden-Party.”
She depicted transformation of mental states, the result of suggestion
or impulse, much as a prestidigitator handles his Aaron's rod. This is
particularly well seen in Leila. The reader shares her joyous mental
state, full of vistas of hope and love and joy. Then a fat man who has
been going to parties for thirty years dances with her and pictures her
future follies, strifes, struggles, and selfishness at forty. At once
she realises her doll is stuffed with sawdust, and cries and wants to
go home, but a young man comes along, dances with her again, and behold
the filling isn't sawdust, but radium!
Katherine Mansfield's art may be studied in such a story as “At the
Bay.” The _dramatis personæ_ are: Beryl, a temperamental young lady
looking for romance, seeking fulfilment of destiny, thwarted by a
Narcissus inhibition; Linda, her sister, without temperament, to whom
fulfilment is repellant; Mrs. Harry Kember, unmoral and immoral, a
vampire with a past and keen for a future; Harry Kember, her husband of
whom many things are said, but none adequate to describe him; Stanley
Burnell, a conventional good man--mollycoddle; Jonathan Trout, a poet
compelled by fate to be a drone; Alice, a servant in transformation
from chrysalis to butterfly; Mrs. Stubbs, a vegetative hedonist; and
several delightful children and a devoted “Granma.”
They spend a holiday at the seashore and Beryl looks for romance. Here
is the picture:
“Very early morning. The sun was not yet risen, and the whole
of Crescent Bay was hidden under a white sea-mist. The big
bush-covered hills at the back were smothered. You could not see
where they ended and the paddocks and bungalows began. The sandy
road was gone and the paddocks and bungalows the other side of
it; there were no white dunes covered with reddish grass beyond
them; there was nothing to mark which was beach and where was
the sea. A heavy dew had fallen. The grass was blue. Big drops
hung on the bushes and just did not fall; the silvery, fluffy
toi-toi was limp on its long stalks, and all the marigolds and
the pinks in the bungalow gardens were bowed to the earth with
wetness. Drenched were the cold fuchsias, round pearls of dew
lay on the flat nasturtium leaves. It looked as though the sea
had beaten up softly in the darkness, as though one immense wave
had come tippling, rippling--how far? Perhaps if you had waked
up in the middle of the night you might have seen a big fish
flicking in at the window and gone again....”
You feel the wetness of it. Then come the first signs of waking up in
the place: the shepherd with his dog and flock making for the Downs,
the cat waiting on the gatepost for the milk-girl--harbingers of the
day's activities.
Then the picture is animated.
“A few minutes later the back door of one of the bungalows
opened, and a figure in a broad-striped bathing suit flung down
the paddock, cleared the stile, rushed through the tussock
grass into the hollow, staggered up the sandy hillock, and
raced for dear life over the big porous stones, over the
cold, wet pebbles, on to the hard sand that gleamed like oil.
Splish-splosh! Splish-splosh! The water bubbled round his legs
as Stanley Burnell waded out exulting. First man in as usual!
He'd beaten them all again. And he swooped down to souse his
head and neck.”
This is a complete revelation of his character--smug, righteous,
selfish, the centre of a world in which every tomorrow shall be like
today, and today is without romance. He feels cheated when Jonathan
Trout tries to talk to him.
“But curse the fellow! He'd ruined Stanley's bathe. What an
unpractical idiot the man was! Stanley struck out to sea again,
and then as quickly swam in again, and away he rushed up the
beach.”
There is something pathetic in his determination to make a task of
everything, even the entailments of matrimony.
“You couldn't help feeling he'd be caught out one day, and then
what an almighty cropper he'd come! At that moment an immense
wave lifted Jonathan, rode past him, and broke along the beach
with a joyful sound. What a beauty! And now there was another.
That was the way to live--carelessly, recklessly, spending
oneself. He got on to his feet and began to wade towards the
shore, pressing his toes into the firm, wrinkled sand. To take
things easy, not to fight against the ebb and flow of life, but
to give way to it--that was what was needed. It was this tension
that was all wrong. To live--to live!”
The whole world of his home moves round Stanley. When he returns for
breakfast he has every member of the family working for him. When Beryl
does not help him at once, its mechanism must be dislocated. But Linda
he can't draw into the net. “Linda's vagueness on these occasions could
not be real, Stanley decided.”
The bathing hour on the beach for the women and children is as vivid as
if taken by a camera.
“The firm, compact little girls were not half so brave as the
tender, delicate-looking little boys. Pip and Rags, shivering,
crouching down, slapping the water, never hesitated. But Isabel,
who could swim twelve strokes, and Kezia, who could nearly swim
eight, only followed on the strict understanding they were not
to be splashed. As for Lottie, she didn't follow at all. She
liked to be left to go in her own way, please. And that way was
to sit down at the edge of the water, her legs straight, her
knees pressed together, and to make vague motions with her arms
as if she expected to be wafted out to sea. But when a bigger
wave than usual, an old whiskery one, came lolloping along in
her direction, she scrambled to her feet with a face of horror
and flew up the beach again.”
Mrs. Harry Kember and Beryl give an exhibition of the vampire and the
novice, while Linda dreams the morning away in revery and retrospect.
Beryl's dream of romance when she is alone in the garden after
everybody else in the household has gone to bed receives a rude jolt
from Harry Kember.
The story is illustrative of Miss Mansfield's art in leaving her
characters without killing or marrying them or bringing great adventure
into their lives. It leaves one with a keen interest in what is next
for Beryl, although she is not the most attractive of the figures in
the story, but there is no indication that we shall meet her again.
“Granma” and the children are the features of this story, and appear as
real as life. The author's faculty in making the reader interested in
characters who do not play heroic or leading rôles is distinctive. Even
the sheep-dog's encounter with the cat on the gatepost is delightful,
also the glimpse of Mrs. Stubbs' cottage with its array of bathing
suits and shoes and the lady's reception of Alice are art: “With her
broad smile and the long bacon knife in her hand, she looked like a
friendly brigand.”
“Prelude,” the introductory story of “Bliss and Other Stories,” is
a further revelation of Beryl, with side lights on her sister Linda
and Linda's husband, Stanley, and her quite wonderful mother. The
Narcissus in Beryl has bloomed. Forced to accept bed and board from her
brother-in-law, she bewails her fate while chanting the praises of her
physical charms and mental possessions. Linda, by this time, has given
herself all the air of confirmed invalidism. Linda gets her emotional
appeasement from what might have been; Beryl, from what is going to
be--both foundationed in introspection. When Linda first met Stanley
out in Australia she scorned him, but previous to or after their
marriage she fell in love with him. But her antipathy to childbearing
and her fear of it are so profound that they colour all her thoughts
and emotions. This is best seen when she relates her dream about birds.
“Prelude” is not a story of Linda, but of Beryl and her hypocrisy.
It should be dovetailed into “At the Bay.” The overtures and the
temptation which were made to her by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kember have
not borne fruit. She is in love with herself and it may be that that
is what the author meant to convey. The description of herself and
her comment on her own appearance: “Yes, my dear, there is no doubt
about it, you really are a lovely little thing” is very illuminating.
She persuades herself that she is a potential Nina Declos and that
if opportunity had not been denied her she could rival Messalina.
Hypocrisy is bearing in on her and it is not quite evident, at the
close of “Prelude,” where it is going to lead her.
The burden of the story is to intensify interest in Beryl, and her
influences and surroundings, and to heighten the suspense of the
reader. On finishing “At the Bay” one has a picture of the romantic
girl; at the close of “Prelude” one feels that something is going to
happen to her before the author finishes with her. The reader gets no
clue, however, to what it might be, except that it would be the working
out of her temperament--admiration for self and longing for romance
through which to express this self. Her longing at first seemed to be
for expression of self biologically and intellectually; now it seems
to be to find a setting in which to frame becomingly this adorable
self--an essential difference in character and the difference that is
the axis upon which the story might be expected to turn. If people are
their temperaments, it is such subtle differences of temperament which
determine destiny, or what they shall work out for themselves from
given circumstances.
Beryl is more cold-blooded, more calculating than she at first appeared
to be, and never again will she be in danger of capitulating to a
Kember. What she wants is to shine, and she is going to use her valued
attractions designedly as currency to accomplish this. Beryl and Linda
are studies in selfishness and introspection. The latter is phlegmatic
and lazy, mentally and emotionally as well as physically.
“Granma” and the children are still the most attractive figures in the
family. How such a woman as “Granma” could have had daughters like
Beryl and Linda is truer to life than to fiction. Had we known their
father they might not have been so enigmatic.
Katherine Mansfield had a genius for catching the exact meaning of
the little touches in life, the little ironies and comedies as well
as the single little wild flower in a rank growth of weeds. She was
delightfully objective. She had a quality rare in women writers,
especially, of not putting all her treasures in one basket, of not
concentrating upon one character and that character more or less the
expression of herself; and of being interested in the whole drama as it
passed. She could enter into the soul of a charwoman or a cat and take
a snap-shot of it which made the reader love the charwoman or the cat,
as well as she could paint a picture that gives the very atmosphere
of children at play or of dawn at the seashore or night in a quiet
house--even better than she could make an X-ray study of the soul of a
selfish woman or a stupid self-righteous man.
The “high light” of “The Garden-Party” is the contrast between a
typical happy prosperous family and an equally unhappy poor one; a
garden-party for the young girls of the first family, the accidental
death of the man and the wage-earner of the second. One lives on the
hill in the sunlight; the other in the damp forbidding hollow below.
They are near neighbours in point of space; strangers in all other
respects. One makes an art of the graces and pleasures of life; the
other is familiar with the gloom typified by poverty and death.
Both accept their existences unquestioningly, in worlds as different
psychologically as they are physically.
The author does not preach; there is no straining for effect. Laura,
one of three sisters, is more sensitive than the other members of the
family. She alone feels contrasts. She is revelling in the preparations
for the garden-party when she hears from the workmen of the man's
sudden death, and her joy is clouded. But her mother and sisters make
light of it, and the party proceeds--a picture of average wholesome
young joyousness. Then the mother sends Laura, with a basket of cakes,
to the man's family. The dramatic contrast is in Laura's impressions
when she goes, in her party clothes, with the frivolous-looking basket,
down into the hollow at dusk. That is all. There is no antagonism, no
questioning of fate, no sociology--just a picture. Only the ability
not to use an extra word, the taste and the humour which kept out any
mawkishness saved the story from being “sob stuff.”
When Katherine Mansfield read virtues into her female characters she
usually made them humble, lowly, or plain, such as Ma Parker, Miss
Brill, and Beryl's mother. She could introduce Ma Parker who cleaned
the flat of the literary gentleman every Tuesday, and in eleven pages,
without a single approach to sentimentality, make you in love with the
old scrubwoman, with her hard life and heroic unselfish soul, when you
left her standing in the cold street wondering whether there was any
place in the world where she could have a cry at last. The motive of
this story is much the same as that of “The Garden-Party,” the sharp
contrast between two extreme types of life which circumstances bring
close together.
In “The Daughters of the Late Colonel” the author walked with a sure
step on thin ice from the first sentence to the last, never taking a
false step or undignified slide. Humour alone preserved the balance
where the ice was not too thin, and kept her from slipping over the
invisible line of safety in the direction of bathos on the one side,
or of the coarsely comic on the other. To make two old ladies who had
spent their lives “looking after father, and at the same time keeping
out of father's way” and who at father's death find themselves among
those whom life had passed by, interesting and intriguing, is a severe
test for a writer. Not only are they dead emotionally, but their habit
of thought has become too set to be readjusted to their new freedom.
Miss Mansfield made them as funny as they naturally would have been,
without “making fun” of them. Their funniness is lovable. For instance:
“At the cemetery while the coffin was lowered, to think that
she and Constantia had done this thing without asking his
permission. What would father say when he found out? For he was
bound to find out sooner or later. He always did. 'Buried. You
two girls had me buried.' She could hear his stick thumping.”
Or when the organ-grinding and the spot of sunshine on their mother's
picture start in both silent reminiscence as to whether life might have
been different if she had lived.
“Might they have married? But there had been nobody for them to
marry. There had been father's Anglo-Indian friends before he
quarrelled with them. But after that she and Constantia never
met a single man except clergymen. How did one meet men? Or even
if they'd met them, how could one have got to know men well
enough to be more than strangers? One read of people having
adventures, being followed, and so on. But nobody had ever
followed Constantia and her.”
“Miss Brill” is a sketch with a whimsical pathos. A little old maiden
lady who dresses up every Sunday and goes to the _Jardin Publiques_ in
Paris and sits on a bench, getting her romance out of watching people
and feeling that she is a part of the passing life, goes one Sunday as
usual. The feature in the sketch is the little fur piece around her
neck.
“Miss Brill put up her hand and touched her fur. Dear little
thing! It was nice to feel it again. She had taken it out of its
box that afternoon, shaken out the mothpowder, given it a good
brush, and rubbed the life back into the dim little eyes.”
It is to her like a pet animal or even a child. At first she finds the
park less interesting than usual, but finally, as she senses romance
in a pair of park lovers who sit down on her bench, she hears the boy
say, “that stupid old thing at the end there. Why does she come here at
all--who wants her? Why doesn't she keep her silly old mug at home?”
And the girl, giggling, replies, “It's her fu-fur which is so funny....
It's exactly like a fried whiting.” Suddenly the romance and the joy
have all gone out of the old lady, and when she lays away her little
fur piece in its box sadly and puts on the lid she thinks she hears
something crying.
Ability to depict the hidden speck of beauty under an uncompromising
exterior not only inspired some of Katherine Mansfield's finest
touches, but is especially refreshing after acquaintance with many
writers who seem bent solely upon discovering some inmost rottenness
and turning upon it the X-rays. There are many old ladies in this book,
and the loving skill with which she has reproduced for the reader the
charm she was able to see in them is indicative not only of her art,
but also of her essential wholesomeness.
“The Man Without a Temperament” is an objective study of an unpopular
man. One knows him from the few outward glimpses given of him as well
as if the author had made an intensive psychological study of him.
That is, one knows him as one knows other people, not as he knows
himself. The sketch is pregnant with irony and pathos. Without a
temperament--unfeeling--is the world's verdict of him. In reality, he
has more feeling than his critics. What he lacks is not feeling, but
expression. He is like a person with a pocketful of “paper” who has
to walk because he hasn't change to pay his carfare, or to go hungry
because he can't pay for a meal. People who know him trust him, even
if they do not fancy him or feel quite at ease with him; but with
strangers he has no chance. A life study of such a character would make
him interesting. A photograph shows him as one of the people who “never
take good pictures.”
In “Bliss and Other Stories,” the author went into deeper water than in
the other collection. She was less concerned with the little ironies
and with the fine points of her characters, and more with great
passions.
“Bliss,” the story, shows the same method as do many of her other
stories, but reversed. It is as if her reel were being run before the
reader backwards. Instead of hunting out the one flower in a patch
of weeds, she painted a young married woman's Garden of Eden and
then hunted down the snake. From the first note of Bertha Young's
unexplainable bliss one knows that the snake motive is coming, but
does not know how or where. The feeling of it runs through Bertha's
psychical sense of secret understanding--the “something in common”
between herself and Pearl Fulton, who, by a subtle uncanniness, is made
to suggest a glorified “vamp.” The leading motive of the story is the
psychic sympathy between the women, who are antitheses. Commonly such
a sense of understanding would take the form of antipathy. That it
is attraction--harking back in all likelihood to something in Bertha
remote and unrecognised--constitutes the distinctiveness of the motive.
The art is revealed in a clear-cut picture--nothing more. Katherine
Mansfield knew so marvellously where to stop. She had a good eye, a
deft hand, an understanding mind, a sense of humour, and she loved her
fellow-beings.
* * * * *
Until “The Judge” was published Miss Rebecca West, in the opinion of
many amateur and professional critics, was the most promising young
woman to enter the field of literature in the reign of King George. Her
advent to the literary world was impressive, and in a little book on
Henry James in the “Writers of the Day” series she revealed a capacity
of interpretation and facility of expression which made her elders
envious and her contemporaries jealous. It was obvious to the casual
reader of this book, and of her journalistic contributions, that not
only had she the artistic temperament, but that she was familiar with
its display in others, and that she had read widely, discriminatingly,
and understandingly. Moreover, she was a thoroughly emancipated young
woman and bore no marks of the cage that had restrained her sex. Her
cleverness, her erudition, her resourcefulness were admitted. It was
rated to be an asset, also, that she did not hesitate to call a spade
a spade or to use the birch unsparingly when she felt it was for the
benefit of the reading public, misled and deluded as it so often is
by false prophets, erring evangelists, and self-seeking promoters. In
other words, though she had sentiment and sympathy, she knew how to use
them judiciously. In “Notes on Novels” she constantly reminds herself
that there is a draught that we must drink or not be fully human. One
must know the truth. When one is adult one must raise to one's lips the
wine of truth, heedless that it is not sweet like milk but draws the
mouth with its strength, and celebrate communion with reality, or else
walk forever queer and small like a dwarf. Miss West does not intend
that her countrymen shall display these deformities.
Her first novel, “The Return of the Soldier,” a fictional exposition
of the Freudian wish, was acclaimed by critics as the first fulfilment
of the promise she had given. The teachings of the Austrian mystic
were not much known then in England, the country that now seems to
have swallowed them, bait, line, and sinker, not only in the fields
of fiction but in pedagogy and in medicine; so Miss West's little
book was more widely read and discussed than it might be today when
Miss May Sinclair, Mr. J. D. Beresford, Mr. D. H. Lawrence, and many
other popular novelists have made his theories look like facts to the
uninitiated.
The story is of Christopher, the ideal type of young Englishman who
knows how to fight and to love.
“He possessed in a great measure the loveliness of young men,
which is like the loveliness of the spring, foal or the sapling,
but in him it was vexed with a serious and moving beauty by the
inhabiting soul. To see him was to desire intimacy with him so
that one might intervene between this body which was formed
for happiness and the soul which cherished so deep a faith in
tragedy.”
It is narrated by his cousin who has loved him platonically since
youth. Chris had a romantic and ardent love affair with an inn-keeper's
daughter in his youth, but he married Kitty, a beautiful little
conventional non-temperamental young woman with a charming and
cultivated soprano voice, of the class of women who
“are obscurely aware it is their civilising mission to flash the
jewel of their beauty before all men so that they shall desire
and work to get the wealth to buy it, and thus be seduced by
a present appetite to a tilling of the earth that serves the
future.”
He goes to the war, gets concussion of the brain which causes amnesia,
or forgetfulness of certain epochal events in his life, particularly
his marriage to Kitty. “Who the devil is Kitty?” he replies when he
is told she might have something to say on hearing of his plan to
marry Margaret Allingham. Though some of the events of his life from
twenty-one, when he fell in love with Margaret, to thirty-six, when
he got injured, can be revived in his memory by Jenny, a resourceful
understanding person, the sort of cousin every man should have, no
argumentation can reconcile him to Kitty, and “he said that his body
and soul were consumed with desire for Margaret and that he would never
rest until he once more held her in his arms.”
After exhausting every means that love and science can suggest to jog
his memory or wipe out the amnesia, it is decided to bring him and
Margaret together. No one who had known her as the “Venus of Monkey
Island,” a composite of charity and love, would recognise her now,
seamed and scarred and ravaged by squalid circumstance, including
dreary matrimony to a man with a weak chest that needed constant
attention. Moreover, “all her life long Margaret had partaken of the
inalienable dignity of a requited love, and lived with men who wore
carpet slippers in the house.” Such experience had left deforming
scars. However, Chris sees her with the eyes of youth, and her presence
resurrects juvenile emotions. Under their influence Margaret undergoes
transformation.
“She had a little smile in her eyes as though she were listening
to a familiar air played far away, her awkwardness seemed
indecision as to whether she would walk or dance to that distant
music, her shabbiness was no more repulsive than the untidiness
of a child who had been so eager to get to the party that it has
not let its nurse fasten its frock.”
However, their interviews do not get them anywhere from Kitty's
standpoint, and she decides to send for Dr. Gilbert Anderson.
“Heaven knows she had no reason for faith in any doctor, for
during the past week so many of them sleek as seals with their
neatly brushed hair and their frockcoats, had stood around Chris
and looked at him with the consequential deliberation of a
plumber.”
But Dr. Anderson was different.
“He was a little man with winking blue eyes, a flushed and
crumpled forehead, a little grey moustache that gave him the
profile of an amiable cat and a lively taste in spotted ties,
and he lacked that appetiteless look which is affected by
distinguished practitioners.”
[Illustration: REBECCA WEST] Photograph by _Yevonde, London._
Dr. Anderson explains to the family that Christopher's amnesia is the
manifestation of a suppressed wish and that his unconscious self
is refusing to let him resume his relations with his normal life.
He forgot his life with his wife because he was discontented, and
there was no justification for it for “Kitty was the falsest thing
on earth, in tune with every kind of falsity.” The doctor proposes
psychoanalysis, but Margaret says she knows a memory so strong that it
will recall everything else, in spite of his discontent, the memory of
the boy, his only child who had died five years before. Dr. Anderson
urges her to take Christopher something the boy had worn, some toy they
used to play with. So she takes a jersey and ball and meets Chris in
the garden where there is only a column of birds swimming across the
lake of green light that lays before the sunset, and as Chris gazes
at Margaret mothering them in her arms the scales fall from his eyes
and he makes obeisance to convention and bids his creative libido _au
revoir_.
Jenny is witness of the transformation and when Kitty asks “How does he
look?” she answers, though her tongue cleaves to the roof of her mouth,
“Every inch a soldier.”
When Miss West next essayed fiction in “The Judge” it was the
diagnosis of the creative urge that was her theme. It is one of
Freud's contentions that the male child, before it hears the voice
of conscience and the admonition of convention, has carnal yearnings
for the mother, the female child for the father. With the advent of
sense, with the development of individuality, with the recognition of
obligation to others, and particularly with the acquisition of the
sense of morality, these are replaced with what are called normal
desires. In some instances the transformation does not take place. The
original trend remains, and it is spoken of as an infantile fixation.
Its juvenile and adult display is called sin ethically and crime
socially.
The wages of sin still is death, according to Miss West's portrayal,
but it is not called sin. It is merely behaviourism interpreted in the
light of the New Psychology.
“Every mother is a judge who sentences the children for the sins of
the father” is her thesis. As a work of art “The Judge” has elicited
much praise. As a human document, a mirror held up to actual life, a
statement of the accepted facts of heredity and of behaviour, and of
the dominancy and display of passion, lust, jealousy, anger, revenge, I
doubt that it merits unqualified approbation.
Marion Yaverland, daughter of a Kentish father and a French mother,
had yielded without compunction to the wooing of the local squire and
had borne a child, Richard, around whose development, personality, and
loving the story is built.
“Vitality itself had been kneaded into his flesh by his parents'
passion. He had been begotten when beauty, like a strong
goddess, pressed together the bodies of his father and mother,
hence beauty would disclose more of her works to him than to
other sons of men with whose begetting she was not concerned.”
But the goddess did not give him straight genesic endowment, so he
was not able to keep filial love and carnal love in their proper
channels. And from this flowed all the tragedy. His mother realised his
infirmity, though she didn't look upon it as an infirmity, from the
earliest days; and, unfortunately, she did not attempt to eradicate
it--if it is ever eradicable.
Squire Harry behaved badly to Marion, save financially, and public
opinion backed up by a stoning in the streets (a real Old Testament
touch) by a moron and his more youthful companions, made her accept an
offer of marriage from the squire's butler, a loathsome creature called
Peacey. In proposing marriage and promising immunity to its obligations
he said:
“Marion, I hope you understand what I'm asking you to do. I'm
asking you to marry me. But not to be my wife. I never would
bother you for that. I'm getting on in life, you see, so that I
can make the promise with some chance of keeping it.”
But Peacey deceived no one save Marion. Miss West's description of
the one visit of violence which he made to his wife, and which was
followed in due time by Roger, whom Richard hated from birth, is a bit
of realism that in verisimilitude has rarely been excelled. Roger was
a pasty, snivelling, rhachitic child who developed into a high-grade
imbecile of the hobo type, and finally managed to filter through the
Salvation Army owing to some filter paper furnished by his mother that
bore the legend “For the Gov^t and Comp^a of the Bank of England.”
From earliest childhood Richard and his mother both realised that their
intimacy was unnatural and unpromising for happiness. When he was two
years old
“He used to point his fingers at her great lustrous eyes as he
did at flowers, and he would roll his face against the smooth
skin of her neck and shoulders; and when he was naked after his
bath he liked her to let down her hair so that it hung round him
like a dark, scented tent.”
Poor little monster, how unfortunate that he could not then have been
given a hormone that would extrovert his budding perversion!
“She always changed her dress for tea, and arranged her hair
loosely like a woman in a picture, and went out into the garden
to gather burning leaves and put them in vases about the room,
and when it fell dark she set lighted candles on the table
because they were kinder than the lamp to her pain-flawed
handsomeness and because they kept corners of dusk in which
these leaves glowed like fire with the kind of beauty that
she and Richard liked. She would arrange all this long before
Richard came in, and sit waiting in a browse of happiness,
thinking that really she had lost nothing by being cut off from
the love of man for this was very much better than anything she
could have had from Harry.”
Somewhat like the way the daughter of Senator Metellus Celere, called
by some Claudia and by others Lesbia, arranged the visits of Catullus.
When Richard was sixteen he forced life's hand and leapt straight
from boyhood into manhood by leaving school where he had shown great
promise in science, and becoming a sailor so that he should be
admirable to his mother. His wanderings took him to South America
where he had great success in affairs of the heart and of the purse.
It is with disposition of the latter that the book opens in the office
of a lubricitous old Scotch solicitor where sits a young red-haired
temperamental suffragette whimpering for the moon.
Ellen Melville is a lovable Celt of seventeen, and her creator displays
a comprehensive insight into her mind and emotions. She is what Rebecca
West once was and wished to be. It is sad that the pathway of her life
leads so early to the _Via Dura_ and that Richard Yaverland had not
tarried in Vienna or Zurich to be psychoanalysed.
Richard falls in love with her at first sight. He woos her ardently,
though simply, and she responds like a “nice” girl, like a girl who
feels that for the endowment of that most wondrous thing in the world,
the cerebral cortex, it is vouchsafed her to exercise restraints and
make inhibitions which insects and animals cannot. In the highest sense
she is rational and instinctive.
Ellen goes south to visit her future mother-in-law and a few days later
Richard joins them. Roger meanwhile has “found Jesus,” and Poppy, a
Salvation Army lassie, one stage removed from “Sin.” While knocking
at Marion's door to gain entry that they may announce their intention
to marry, their gaze floats upward and they see Ellen being kissed by
the man to whom she will be married in three months. Roger, who is
instinctive but not rational, puts a wrong interpretation upon it, and
from that mal-interpretation the final tragedy flows. A few days later
Marion realises there is no happiness for Richard and Ellen so long
as she lives. She walks out into the marshes. Roger accuses Richard
of driving his mother to it “because she saw that there was something
wrong between you two.” He elaborates the accusation, and Richard
drives a bread-knife into Roger's heart.
Richard knows his doom is sealed. So he invites Ellen to share a
cattlemen's hut with him on the farther side of the creek where his
mother had drowned herself, until the people come to take him--and to
share it comprehensively.
“Her love had not been able to reach Richard across the dark
waters of his mother's love and how like a doom that love had
lain on him. Since life was like this she would not do what
Richard asked.”
But she does.
The mode in which “The Judge” is cast is noteworthy because of its
novelty and of the success attending it. Here is no sequential
narrative, no time-table of events in the order in which they happened.
The contact of Richard and Ellen is set forth in a straightforward
way, but the main thesis of the book, the Laocoon grip of mother-love
on Richard is conveyed indirectly, surreptitiously, atmospherically
rather than verbally. Ellen, though she is quite normal, senses it at
once when she meets Marion, and the writer approximates perfection of
her art most closely in narrations of the first interviews of these two
women, who are as unlike as the Colonel's lady and Judy O'Grady.
While this mode may not prove an obstacle to an easy grasp of the
novel upon first reading by writers or critics, it is doubtful whether
the casual reader for diversion will comprehend its significance
without special effort and perhaps several attempts at mastering the
intricacies in the development of the story. The plan which the author
has adopted of beginning, in direct narrative form, with the mature
life of Richard and his love for Ellen, and then revealing through
retrospect and suggestion the events of his early life and that of his
mother, is a tax upon the technique of any novelist. The form has been
used with notable success by Miss Elizabeth Robins in “Camilla.” But
Miss West has not entirely mastered its difficulties, and her failure
to do so seriously mars the story.
Miss West's reputation for brilliancy has not suffered by “The Judge,”
but if one were to sentence her after reading it, he would be compelled
to say she is no novelist. If it is an index of her imaginative
capacity, of her conception of life, of her insight into conduct,
of her knowledge of behaviour, we must content ourselves with her
contributions as critic and guide.
The subject of her two novels is behaviourism of sexual motivation. It
is an index of the change that has taken place in Great Britain within
the past ten years, a change that should be acclaimed by everyone
desirous of the complete emancipation of women.
Rebecca West has leaned her ear in many a secret place where rivulets
dance their wayward round, and beauty born of murmuring sound has
passed into her soul, to paraphrase the words of one who, were he in
the flesh, would likely not meet Miss West's entire approbation.
CHAPTER VII
TWO LESSER LITERARY LADIES OF LONDON: STELLA BENSON AND VIRGINIA WOOLF
Miss Stella Benson and Mrs. Virginia Woolf are young women who have
come to the fore very rapidly. The former, who lived in this country
for two years after the war, published in 1915, when she was barely
out of her teens, a novel called “I Pose” which revealed an unusual
personality with an uncommon outlook on life, and an enviable capacity
to describe what she saw, felt, and fabricated. Until the appearance
of her last novel it might be said that she created types which
symbolised her ideas and attitudes and gave expression to them through
conveniently devised situations, rather than attempting to paint models
from life and placing them in a realistic environment.
“I Pose” is a story of allegorical cast lightened with flashes of
whimsical sprightliness. A pensive Gardener who likes to pose as
“original,” a Suffragette who disguises romance under a mask of
militancy, a practical girl, Courtesy, and a number of others take
an ocean voyage and have many adventures, at the end of which the
Suffragette and the Gardener find themselves in love, just as any other
young people who had been dancing and playing tennis, instead of posing
as individuals with convictions.
For the setting of her two succeeding books, “This is the End,” and
“Living Alone,” Miss Benson created a world of her own, and in a
foreword to the latter book she says:
“This is not a real book. It does not deal with real people,
nor should it be read by real people. But there are in the
world so many real books already written for the benefit of real
people, and there are still so many to be written, that I cannot
believe that a little alien book such as this, written for the
magically-inclined minority, can be considered too assertive a
trespasser.”
Her world is not the traditional fairyland of the nursery, nor are the
supernatural endowments of some of the characters the classic equipment
of witches and fairies, although her _dramatis personæ_ include both
who function under the law of Magic. Rather is her dramatic machinery
in these books a vehicle in the form of a sort of delicate symbolism
for getting over a very sane attitude toward certain social foibles and
trends of today. Incidentally it gives her opportunity of expressing
this attitude in frequent witticisms and epigrammatic sayings for which
she has a gift. In “Living Alone” social service and organised charity
are the targets for her irony. She says,
“Perception goes out of committees. The more committees you
belong to, the less of ordinary life you will understand. When
your daily round becomes nothing more than a round of committees
you might as well be dead ... organizing work consists of
sitting in 'busses bound for remote quarters of London, and
ringing the bells of people who are almost always found to be
away for a fortnight.”
So after Sarah Brown, whose work consists of
“sitting every morning in a small office, collecting evidence
from charitable spies about the Naughty Poor, and, after
wrapping the evidence in mysterious ciphers, writing it down
very beautifully upon little cards, so that the next spy might
have the benefit of all his forerunners' experience,”
eats the magic sandwiches which the witch has given her for her lunch,
the scales fall from her eyes. “I am sentimental,” she says to herself.
[Illustration: STELLA BENSON]
“It is sentimental to feel personal affection for a Case, or to
give a child of the Naughty Poor a penny without full enquiry,
or to say 'a-goo' to a grey pensive baby eating dirt on the
pavement ... or in fact to confuse in any way the ideas of
charity and love.”
She resigns her “job” and her place on the committees and goes to live
in the House of Living Alone.
In other words, Miss Benson gives the artist in her what is called
“rope.” She doesn't ask herself, “Will people think I am mad, or
infantile?” She doesn't care what “people think.” And that is an
encouraging sign. Women writers will come to their estates more
quickly and securely the more wholeheartedly they abandon themselves
to portraying instincts as they experience them, behaviour as they
observe it, motives and conduct as they sense and encounter them,
accomplishments and aspirations as they idealise them, the ideals being
founded, like the chances of race horses, on past performances.
In her last novel, “The Poor Man,” Miss Benson's art shows tremendous
development. This story is characterisation in the finest sense.
Edward, the poor man, as a psychological study, is living, vivid,
almost tragically real in the reactions which betray his inherent
defects--a poor devil who never gets a chance. Miss Benson preaches
no sermon, points no moral, makes no plea. She gives us a slice of
life--and gives it relentlessly, but justly. It is the Old Testament
justice which visits the iniquity of the father upon the third and
fourth generations, and leaves the reader with the congenial task of
finishing the sentence by supplying the mercy without which this old
world could hardly totter under the weight of this Commandment. The
story, however, makes no reference either to eugenics or to religion.
The application is for the reader to supply--if he is so inclined.
The author is not concerned with “science,” but with art. She does
not bore us with a history of Edward's heredity or of his early life.
She introduces him to us sitting in Rhoda Romero's room in San
Francisco--an unwelcome guest--without throwing light upon his previous
existence, except that he had been “shell-shocked” and had experienced
three air raids in London.
From his introduction we know Edward as we know an acquaintance, not
as we know ourselves. His tragedy is his feeble mentality and still
feebler temperament, and the heart of the tragedy is the contrast
between his intentions and his acts. Edward always means well. He is
not vicious; not lazy. But he is stupid. He wants to be decent; wants
to be liked; even wants to work. He is weak, sickly, drinks too much,
and there is nothing he knows how to do well. It is as a victim, rather
than as an aggressive wrong-doer, that we see him secretly currying
favour with school-boys he is supposed to be teaching, and ignoring
their insults, selling what belongs to others, and at last robbing a
boy of thirteen who has been left alone by his father in a hotel in
Pekin, whence Edward has gone in headlong and blind pursuit of Emily,
with whom he has become infatuated without even knowing her name. But
such is the art of his delineator that one finds oneself almost pitying
him when his infatuation climaxes in the declaration from Emily: “Can't
you leave me alone? I can't bear you. I couldn't bear to touch you--you
poor sickly thing.” It is on this note that the drama ends.
If one were obliged to confine himself to backing one entry in the
Fiction Sweepstakes now being run in England (entries limited to women
above ten and under forty), he would do well to consider carefully the
Stella Benson entry. Many would back Sheila Kaye-Smith, but the expert
and seasoned bettor would be likely to find so many characteristics of
the plough-horse that he would not waste his money.
Had Rose Macaulay not succumbed to smartness and become enslaved by
epigram, her chances would have been excellent. As it is, she attempts
to carry too much weight. The committee, the literary critics, have
done what they could to lighten it, but “Mystery at Geneva” is her
answer.
E. M. Delafield, Clemence Dane, and even G. B. Stern would be selected
by many, no doubt. But judged from their record, not on form, they
cannot be picked as winners.
The entry that is most likely to get place, if it doesn't win, is the
youngest daughter of the late Sir Leslie Stephen, Mrs. Virginia Woolf.
“Mark on the Wall,” her most important story, deals with the flood
of thought, conscious and unconscious, when so-called abstraction
is facilitated by intent gazing. The hypnotist anæsthetises the
consciousness by having the subject gaze at some bright object, she by
gazing at a snail. The illusion facilitates thought of the place and
of the lives that have been lived there. The richness of the thought
stream thus induced gives full play for her facility of expression and
capacity for pen pictures.
There is in Mrs. Woolf a note of mysticism, of spirituality which
reveals itself in a conscious or unconscious prayer for the elusive
truth. This note of itself sets her apart from the realistic woman
writers of today. Although often vividly realistic in her form, there
is in her work an essence which escapes the bounds of realism. This is
most strongly acknowledged in “Monday or Tuesday,” a volume of short
stories and sketches. The book takes its name from a little sketch of
three hundred and fifty words, for which the only accurate label is
“prose poem.” It is a direct illustration of the author's meaning when
she makes her hero say, in “The Voyage Out”:
“You ought to write music.... Music goes straight for things.
It says all there is to say at once. In writing it seems to me
there's so much scratching on the match-box.”
For prose writing “Monday or Tuesday” is a triumph in the elimination
of “scratching on the match-box.” One recognises in it the longing,
more or less vaguely felt by all people, but inexpressible by most
of them who are not poets, musicians, or artists in form or colour,
for some supreme good which she calls truth. The New Psychology
would attribute it to the unconscious and call it an ugly name. But
Mrs. Woolf does not name it; she merely gives voice to the aspiration
welling up from somewhere in people's deeper selves and hovering
hauntingly, just out of range but near enough to colour the quality of
their thoughts, even when they are occupied with the most trivial and
commonplace business of life. They can never elude it, any more than
they can long elude the “Hound of Heaven,” but unlike the latter it
is not a relentless pursuer, but a lovely, tantalising wraith--always
present but never attainable or definable.
In “An Unwritten Novel,” in the same collection, Mrs. Woolf again
reveals a power of discernment, as well as the irony which is a part of
her large human sympathy, in the conclusion of the story, which opens
with:
“Such an expression of unhappiness was enough by itself to make
one's eyes slide over the paper's edge to the poor woman's
face--insignificant without that look, almost a symbol of human
destiny with it.”
During a railway journey the writer makes up a novel to fit the face
of the old woman opposite her--a story of an old maid whom life had
cheated, thwarted, and denied all expression of sex, and left her
embittered, resentful, envious, and starved.
“They would say she kept her sorrow, suppressed her secret--her
sex, they'd say--the scientific people. But what flummery to
saddle her with sex!”
When she reaches her destination the old woman is met by her son--and
the “story” remains unwritten.
In “A Society,” Mrs. Woolf shies a few brick-bats--and well-aimed
ones--at modern feminism. Her gesture is, however, more one of the
irresistible impulse of the humourist to enjoy herself than any
intention to do serious violence.
The members of the Society, who are a number of young girls bent upon
self-education and believing that the object of life is to produce
good people and good books, find themselves as a result of their
investigations forced to acknowledge that if they hadn't learned to
read they might still have been bearing children in ignorance, and that
was the happiest life after all. By their learning they have sacrificed
both their happiness and their ability to produce good people, and they
are confronted, moreover, with the awful thought that if men continue
to acquire knowledge they will lose their ability to produce good books.
“Unless we provide them with some innocent occupation we shall
get neither good people nor good books; we shall perish beneath
the fruits of their unbridled activity; and not a human being
will survive to know that there once was Shakespeare.”
The Society disbands with the conclusion that when a little girl has
learned how to read “there's only one thing you can teach her to
believe in--and that is in herself.”
“Kew Gardens” is as vivid a picture as if it had been painted in
colour, of the public gardens on a hot summer day, with their
procession of varied humanity, old, young, and in the flush of life,
each flashing for a moment with all of its own intense personality,
like a figure in a cinema, before the reader, and then passing into
the shadow as vague as the breath of the flowers, the buzzing of the
dragon-fly, or the memories which for a moment the garden had invoked.
The two novels, “The Voyage Out,” published in 1915, and “Night and
Day,” in 1919, are love stories in which, through the efforts of the
lovers to find and express themselves, the author reveals her own ideas
of life. Her machinery is largely that of dialogue between the lovers,
and her chief actors are normal young men and women, wholesome in their
outlook, as well as frank in their expression of their problems, which
revolve largely around matrimony. The result is that while the novels
are introspective in a way, as well as daring in their analysis of
the author's psychology, they are free from the morbidness of many of
the introspective books of today. “The Voyage Out” is the expression
of healthy, normal youth reverently but straightforwardly seeking in
marriage the deeper values that underlie its superficialities and
justify the quality of its idealism.
In no more striking and creditable way have the women of Britain
demonstrated the legitimacy of “Rights” than by their fiction of the
past few years.
CHAPTER VIII
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DIARIST: W. N. P. BARBELLION
“The life of the soul is different. There is nothing more
changing, more varied, more restless ... to describe the
incidents of one hour would require eternity.”--_Journal of
Eugénie de Guérin._
Bruce Frederick Cummings, an English entomologist and assistant at the
Natural History Museum, South Kensington, developed in early life an
infectious disease of the central nervous system called disseminated
sclerosis, which riddles the brain and spinal cord with little islets
of tissue resembling scars, and died of it October 22, 1919, in the
thirtieth year of his age. Six months before his death he published
a book entitled “The Journal of a Disappointed Man,” under the pen
name of W. N. P. Barbellion. It is not destined to live as long as
Pepys' “Diary” or Amiel's “Journal,” but it may outlive “The Journal
of Marie Bashkirtseff”--the three great diaries of the past century.
“The Journal of a Disappointed Man,” in conjunction with another called
“A Last Diary,” published after his death, may be looked upon as the
revelation of a conscious mind, as complete as the conscious mind can
make it. These books afford us opportunity to study the psychology
of one variety of self-revelation, just as the books of James Joyce
and Dorothy Richardson permit study of the subconscious mind, and
more specifically undirected or wishful thinking, technically called
autistic.
While absolute classification of people is always inaccurate and
misleading, still for the convenience of this study, in order to bring
into high relief the features which distinguish Barbellion's diaries
from the other three great self-revelations of the conscious mind,
the authors mentioned may be said to typify four distinct classes of
diarists. The immortal Pepys may be dismissed with the words: pedant,
philosopher, humourist. Amiel may be considered the mystic poet, with
emphasis upon the spiritual side of his nature; Marie Bashkirtseff, the
emotional artist whose talent was interpretive rather than creative;
and Barbellion, the man of science, direct, forceful, effective on
his objective side, but subjectively morbid and egocentric, unable to
estimate correctly his own limitations or to direct his emotions into
channels which would have made for happy living or sane thinking.
Cummings began to keep a diary when he was thirteen years old, and
after seventeen years he had accumulated twenty post-quarto volumes
of manuscript. Two years before his death he made an entry “Am busy
rewriting, editing and bowdlerising my Journal for publication against
the time when I shall have gone the way of all flesh. Reading it
through again, I see what a remarkable book I have written.” In it and
in another small volume published posthumously, called “The Joy of
Life,” he said,
“You will find much of Bruce Frederick Cummings as he appears
to his Maker. It is a study in the nude, with no appeal to
pemmicanised intellects, but there is meaty stuff in it, raw,
red or underdone.”
The noteworthy features of his life may be stated briefly. He was the
youngest child of a journalist known in the little town of Barnstable,
in Devon, as a shrewd and facile man, and of a timid, pious mother
of the lower middle class. A puny child, backward in development
mentally and physically, solitary, sensitive, shy, secretive, and
self-conscious, he displayed an uncommon interest in nature, birds,
fishes, insects, and all wild creatures. When he was fourteen he
determined to become a naturalist, but his father's illness obliged him
to contribute to the family maintenance. At sixteen he wrote,
“Signed my death warrant, i.e. my articles apprenticing me to
journalism for five years. By Jove, I shall work frantically
during these years so as to be ready at the end of them to take
up a natural history appointment.”
And work he did, for in little more than a year he was offered a small
appointment at the Plymouth Marine Laboratory, which he had to refuse
because of his father's complete incapacity. But after another year of
newspaper work and intensive study at night and at odd moments, he won
an appointment in competitive examination to the staff of the Natural
History Museum at South Kensington. There he remained six years, until
July, 1917, when he was compelled to resign owing to the progress
of his disease. In September, 1915, he married, after he had been
declared unfit for military duty and after the secret of his obscure
and baffling disease, and its outcome, had been revealed to some of his
family and to his fiancée.
Two months after he married, despite his infirm state, he offered his
services to his King and Country, having previously obtained from his
own physician a letter addressed to the Medical Officer Examining
Recruits. The recruiting officer promptly rejected him, so the letter
was not presented. On his way home Barbellion opened it and read his
death sentence. “On the whole, I am amazed at the calm way in which I
take this news.” At first he thought he would read up his disease in
some System of Medicine, but the next day he wrote,
“I have decided never to find out what it is. I shall find out
in good time by the course of events. A few years ago the news
would have scared me. But not so now. It only interests me. I
have been happy, merry, quite high spirited today.”
But this was soon followed by depression and despair, as the progress
of the disease was attested by the occurrence of rapidly increasing
incapacity to get about, to use his arm, and to see. At that time he
was ignorant of the fact that his wife had been informed of the nature
and outcome of his disease previous to their marriage, and he was very
much concerned lest she should find out. Within a year he discovered
that she had known from the beginning and he was “overwhelmed with
feelings of shame and self-contempt and sorrow for her.”
The last months of his life were made as comfortable as possible by
funds subscribed by a few literary men who had become interested in
him from the publication of some chapters of the book in the London
_Mercury_, and by the royalties from the publishers of the “Journal” in
book form.
Barbellion's appearance, as described by his brother A. J., in the
Preface to “The Last Diary,” was striking. He was more than six feet
tall, thin as a rake, and looked like a typical consumptive. His head
was large and crowned with thick brown hair which fell carelessly about
his brow; his face pale and sharply pointed; eyes deepset, lustrous and
wide apart; nose slightly irregular; mouth large and firm; and chin
like a rock. “Few people, except my barber, know how amourous I am.
He has to shave my sinuous lips.” He had an indescribable vividness
of expression, great play of features, and a musical voice. His hands
were strong and sensitive and he had a characteristic habit of beating
the air with them in emphasising an argument. He moved and walked
languidly, like a tired man, and stooped slightly, which gave him an
attitude of studiousness.
Barbellion's fame depends entirely upon “The Journal of a Disappointed
Man.” “Enjoying Life and Other Literary Remains” is commonplace and
might have been done by any one of countless writers whose years
transcend their reputations. “The Last Diary,” on the other hand, has a
note of superficiality which is prejudicial to permanence. It suggests
that it was done for effect and displays studious effort to be wise and
philosophical. Although the book contains many beautiful specimens of
sentiment and shows that Barbellion had enhanced his literary skill
and added to his capacity for expression and sequential statement, it
also shows that the processes of dissolution, physical and mental, were
going on apace.
So much for the outward facts of his life. The value of the record lies
entirely in the sincerity and completeness of the “portrait in the
nude” which the author has painted of himself and which furnishes the
basis for a psychological study of the original.
Three characteristics make the shape and colour of this portrait.
Whether seen in one comprehensive glance as a composite picture, or
subjected to a searching analysis of its separate parts, these three
facts must be reckoned with in any estimate of his life or of his
personality as a whole; or of the smallest act, thought, or emotion
which entered into it. The features or leading motives which shaped the
human study that Barbellion has given us in his diaries are what he
calls ambition to achieve fame, a passion for the study of zoology, and
a struggle against disease.
Every life which raises its possessor above the level of the clod
may be called a battleground. The battle, in Barbellion's case a
hard-fought one, was between ambition which inspired and actuated him
and disease which seriously handicapped him during most of his life and
finally caused his death--not, however, until after the victory had
been won, since the odds were between fame and sickness, not between
life and death. Judged, therefore, solely by the strength of the forces
involved in the conflict and not at all by the value of the stakes,
Barbellion's struggle and early death may claim a little of the glory
suggested in the lines “Oft near the sunset are great battles won.”
That the second motive mentioned, the love of zoology, entered into the
conflict only as an ally, and not even an essential one, of the desire
to become famous, has a special psychological interest. Unquestionable
and persistent as was this passion for the science, it did not seem
to form the basis for his ambition nor even to be inextricably bound
up with it, as is usually the case with persons possessed of one
strongly marked talent or taste combined with a dominant ambition. When
nature has favoured an individual with a gift in the way of desire
and ability to do one thing particularly well he usually concentrates
on it. In fact the desire to achieve success through the talent, and
the impulse for self-expression along the line of the talent, are so
closely related that it is impossible to disentangle them and to say
where the impulse for self-expression ends and the ambition to succeed
begins. Barbellion's diaries, however, present no such difficulty.
Conscious from early childhood of a great attraction to zoology for
the sheer love of the science, his early life-plan naturally took the
form of a career as a zoologist. Thwarted by circumstances, he still
held to the plan with an admirable persistence and a measure of success
which, considering his handicaps in the way of illness and lack of
opportunities for study and training, would have been satisfactory to a
less ambitious man. Such success would not, however, have given him the
fame which it was the ruling motive of his life to achieve. Whether or
not it was the recognition of this that determined the direction of his
ambition it is impossible to say. The fact that stands out with great
clearness, after reading his diaries, is that the consuming passion of
his life was the desire for fame for its own sake, to be known of men,
and to stand out from the mass of humanity as a man of distinction,
a successful man. This seemed to be the full measure of Barbellion's
ambition, and in this he succeeded, since the diaries have made him
famous as the author of a record which shows him to the world as the
winner of a losing game with life, though not as a scientist or as a
writer of distinction.
A closer analysis of the particular qualities of Barbellion's ambition
is the first step in an estimate of his personality.
The urge to keep a journal may come from within or from without the
individual. Barbellion does not tell us which it was with him. In late
childhood he began making frequent records of his doings, which were
those of a lonely romantic child interested in natural history. During
the first three years there is no record of thought, but beginning with
his sixteenth year it makes its appearance, and there is ample evidence
that he was not only mature beyond his years, but ambitious as well. He
says of himself,
“I was ambitious before I was breeched. I can remember wondering
as a child if I were a young Macaulay or Ruskin and secretly
deciding that I was. My infant mind even was bitter with those
who insisted on regarding me as a normal child and not as a
prodigy. Since then I have struggled with this canker for many a
day, and as success fails to arrive it becomes more gnawing.”
That the “canker” was eating its way into his soul as life progressed
and success seemed no nearer from day to day is evidenced by the
statements:
“I owe neither a knee nor a bare grammercy to any man. All that
I did I did by my own initiative, save one exception. R. taught
me to love music.”
“I am daily facing the fact that my ambitions have overtaxed my
abilities and health. For years my whole existence has rested on
a false estimate of my own value, and my life has been revolving
around a foolish self-deception. And I know myself as I am at
last and I am not at all enamoured.”
As the “Journal” progresses it becomes evident that the author's hopes
for the realisation of his ambition rested entirely on its publication,
and it is in the expressions concerning his hopes and fears in
connection with the book that the struggle of the soul in its death
grip with advancing disease and threatening failure is most poignantly
expressed. Three years before he died he said,
“It is the torture of Tantalus to be so uncertain. I should be
relieved to know even the worst. I would almost gladly burn
my MSS. in the pleasure of having my curiosity satisfied. I
go from the nadir of disappointment to the zenith of hope and
back several times a week, and all the time I am additionally
harassed by the perfect consciousness that it is all petty and
pusillanimous to desire to be known and appreciated, that my
ambition is a morbid diathesis of the mind. I am not such a fool
either as not to see that there is but little satisfaction in
posthumous fame, and I am not such a fool as not to realise that
all fame is fleeting, and that the whole world itself is passing
away.”
A few months later, after a reference to his infant daughter, he said,
“If only I could rest assured that after I am dead these
Journals will be as tenderly cared for--as tenderly as this
blessed infant! It would be cruel if even after I have paid
the last penalty, my efforts and sufferings should continue to
remain unknown or disregarded. What would I give to know the
effect I shall produce when published! I am tortured by two
doubts--whether these MSS. (the labour and hope of many years)
will survive accidental loss and whether they really are of
value. I have no faith in either.”
Again he wrote:
“My Journal keeps open house to every kind of happening in
my soul. Provided it is a veritable autochthon--I don't care
how much of a taterdemalion or how ugly or repulsive--I take
him in and--I fear sponge him down with excuses to make him
more creditable in other's eyes. You may say why trouble
whether you do or whether you don't tell us all the beastly
little subterranean atrocities that go on in your mind. Any
eminently 'right-minded' _Times_ or _Spectator_ reader will
ask: 'Who in Faith's name is interested in your retrospective
muck-rakings--in fact, who the Devil are you?' To myself, a
person of vast importance and vast interest, I reply--as are
other men if I could but understand them as well. And in the
firm belief that whatever is inexorably true however unpleasant
and discreditable (in fact true things can never lack a
certain dignity), I would have you know Mr. _Times-_ and Mr.
_Spectator-_ reader that actual crimes have many a time been
enacted in the secrecy of my own heart and the only difference
between me and an habitual criminal is that the habitual
criminal has the courage and the nerve and I have not....”
It is more than probable that the hope of getting the “Journal”
published was suggested by acquaintance with “The Journal of
Marie Bashkirtseff” when Barbellion was twenty-four years old. On
encountering a quotation from her in a book on Strindberg at that time,
he noted,
“It would be difficult in all the world's history to discover
any two persons with temperaments so alike. She is the very spit
of me. We are identical. Oh, Marie Bashkirtseff, how we should
have hated one another! She feels as I feel. We are of the
same self-absorption, the same vanity and corroding ambition.
She is impressionable, volatile, passionate--ill, so am I. Her
Journal is my Journal. She has written down all my thoughts
and forestalled me. Is there anything in the transmigration of
souls? She died in 1886. I was born in 1889.”
Barbellion's own estimate of what he calls his ambition is well summed
up in the following words:
“My life appears to have been a titanic struggle between
consuming ambition and adverse fortune. Behold a penniless youth
thirsting for knowledge introduced into the world out of sheer
devilment, with a towering ambition, but cursed with ill health
and a two-fold nature, pleasure loving as well as labour loving.”
It would be interesting to find out in what way he was pleasure loving.
As far as I can see from reading the “Journal,” the only pleasure that
he sought was the occasional pleasure of contemplating nature, which
was really a part of his work, and from hearing music.
“You can search all history and fiction for an ambition more
powerful than mine and not find it. No, not Napoleon, nor
Wilhelm II, nor Keats. No, I am not proud of it, not at all. The
wonder is that I remain sane, the possessed of such a demon.”
In the same way it is difficult to find evidence of this colossal
ambition, save his statement of it. In reality he was ambitious for one
thing: call it favour, applause, publicity, notoriety, or what not. He
wanted to do something in literature which would focus the vision of
the world upon him, and to accomplish this he devoted an incredible
energy and labour to the production of a diary which was the record of
aggressive, directed, logical thinking. He may have had capacity for
creative literature, or he may have developed such capacity, but he did
not display it. His career can be compared with no other because of
the immeasurable handicap of his illness. But if it were not for this
illness, it would be interesting to compare him with Huysmans, who,
working as a clerk in a Governmental office in Paris, produced a series
of books which gave him a commanding and perhaps a permanent place in
French literature.
Unquestionably some resemblance exists between the passion for fame,
or whatever it may be called, that Barbellion and Marie Bashkirtseff
had in common, although in the case of the latter its relation to a
definite talent was more evident. But that in either of the two cases
it partook in any great measure of the nature of what is generally
understood as ambition--the ambition, for instance, of Napoleon,
Wilhelm II, or Keats to whom Barbellion compares himself--is not
proved by either of their self-revelations. There is a quality well
known to psychologists that may be described as the passion to attract
attention, which is a distinguishing attribute of the neurotic
temperament. It sometimes acts as an urge to the expression of a talent
in case the possessor of the temperament is also the possessor of a
talent--which is by no means infrequent and which was undoubtedly
true in the case of Marie Bashkirtseff. It, however, exists in
innumerable other cases where the neurotic has been gifted by nature
with no special talent or ability for expression of any kind. The mere
reiteration, therefore, of a passion to focus the attention of the
world upon himself, while it would invite questions as to his balance
or the lack of it, affords no proof of mental qualities upon which the
hope of achieving such distinction might reasonably be placed.
The next question which arises in relation to Barbellion's ambition
or desire for distinction is: What were his intellectual possessions?
And the first step in answering this question is the examination of
his interests. By a man's admirations, as by his friends, you may know
him. He identified himself, in a measure, with Keats; he had great
admiration for Sir Thomas Browne; James Joyce was a writer after his
own heart; and he admired Dostoievsky and Francis Thompson.
Barbellion's objective intellect stands out rather clearly in his
record, particularly as the evidence is written more forcibly between
the lines than in his statements. Deduction, induction, and analysis
are rather high. In fact, he possessed wisdom, ingenuity, caution, and
perception; that is, the elements of objective thought. He showed no
great ability to estimate the nature and bearing of his surroundings
or to devise ways of dealing with them so as to turn them to his
advantage, but had it not been for illness he might have done so. As to
the actual results of his intellectual efforts, naturalists say he made
some important contributions to their science; and, although these were
trifling, they were in the right direction. His working life really
ended at twenty-five, an age at which the working life of most men of
science has scarcely begun.
It is almost entirely upon his subjective thought, that is upon his
estimate of himself, that the value of his record rests. Everyone
in his progress through life and his intercourse with his fellows
measures himself more or less deliberately against, and estimates his
own capacity relatively to, theirs, not only with respect to wisdom,
cleverness, or caution, but with respect to special accomplishments.
Besides this relative estimate, he learns to form an absolute estimate
of his intellectual powers. He knows what he can understand at once,
what he has to study hard before he can understand, and what is wholly
beyond his comprehension. Some people habitually underestimate their
ability; others, the majority, overestimate it. It is very difficult
to say, from the literary remains of Barbellion, whether he was of the
latter class or not. He had literary taste, a prodigious appetite,
and he displayed considerable capacity for assimilation. It is
quite possible that, as the result of these, he might have revealed
constructive imagination; but his life was very brief, it was riddled
with illness, and he matured slowly.
Barbellion's estimate of himself may be fairly judged by the epitome
of his whole life which he made in an entry of August 1, 1917, in
connection with his retirement from the staff of the British Museum:
“I was the ablest junior on the staff and one of the ablest
zoologists in the place, but my ability was always muffled by
the inferior work given me to do. My last memoir was the best
of its kind in treatment, method and technique--not the most
important--that ever was issued from the institution. It was
trivial because the work given me was always trivial, the idea
being that as I had enjoyed no academic career I was unsuited
to fill other posts then vacant--two requiring laboratory
training--which were afterwards filled by men of less powers
than my own. There was also poor equipment for work and I had
to struggle for success against great odds. In time I should
have revolutionised the study of Systematic Zoology, and the
anonymous paper I wrote in conjunction with R. in the _American
Naturalist_ was a rare _jeu d'esprit_, and my most important
scientific work. In the literary world I fared no better. I
first published an article at fifteen, over my father's name. My
next story was unexpectedly printed in the _Academy_ at the age
of nineteen. The American _Forum_ published an article, but for
years I received back rejected manuscript from every conceivable
kind of publication from _Punch_ to the _Hibbert Journal_.
Recently, there has been evidence of a more benevolent attitude
towards me on the part of London editors. A certain magnificent
quarterly has published one or two of my essays.... I fear,
however, the flood-tide has come too late.”
In regard to one of the essays, he noted that it called forth
flattering comment in _Public Opinion_, but that it did not impress
anybody else, even E., his wife, who did not read the critique,
although she read twice a pleasant paragraph in the press noticing some
drawings of a friend.
It was one of Barbellion's persecutory ideas that he was not
appreciated at his full value.
“Ever since I came into the world I have felt an alien in this
life, a refugee by reason of some prenatal extradiction. I
always felt alien to my father and mother. I was different from
them. I knew and was conscious of the detachment. I admired
my father's courage and happiness of soul, but we were very
far from one another. I loved my mother, but we had little in
common.”
When his mother warned him that he was in danger of being friendless
all his life because of his preference for acerbities to amenities he
replied, “I don't want people to like me. I shan't like them. Theirs
will be the greater loss.”
His family feeling seems to have been concentrated largely on his
brother, A. J., who prefixed a brief account of his life and character
to “The Last Diary.”
Of him Barbellion said,
“He is a most delightful creature and I love him more than
anyone else in the wide world. There is an almost feminine
tenderness in my love.”
There were times when, despite his habitual self-appreciation,
Barbellion sold his stock fairly low, and especially after he had been
in London for two or three years and realised what little progress
he was making in the world and how small the orbit of his activity
remained.
“I have more than a suspicion that I am one of those who grow
sometimes out of a brilliant boy into a very commonplace man.”
In speaking of his personal appearance he said, “I am not handsome, but
I look interesting, I hope distinguished”; and at another time,
“If sometimes you saw me in my room by myself, you would say
that I was a ridiculous coxcomb. For I walk about, look out of
the window, then at the mirror--turning my head sideways perhaps
so as to see it in profile. Or I gaze down into my eyes--my eyes
always impress me--and wonder what effect I produce upon others.
This, I believe, is not so much vanity as curiosity.”
Naturally Barbellion's estimate of himself and of his potentialities
varied from time to time, but he never rated his abilities lower than
the sum total of his accomplishments would seem to justify, save in
hours of extreme depression and discouragement. When twenty-one years
of age he wrote,
“Sometimes I think I am going mad. I live for days in the
mystery and tears of things so that the commonest object, the
most familiar face--even my own--becomes ghostly, unreal,
enigmatic. I get into an attitude of almost total scepticism,
nescience, solipsism even, in a world of dumb, sphinx-like
things that cannot explain themselves. The discovery of how I am
situated--a sentient being on a globe in space overshadows me. I
wish I were just nothing.”
A more hopeful note, and one that is of interest in that it foreshadows
the plan of publication of the diary, is sounded after he had been
working in the museum for less than a year.
“My own life as it unrolls itself day by day is a source of
constant amazement, delight and pain. I can think of no more
interesting volume than a distilled, intimate, psychological
history of my own life. I want a perfect comprehension at
least of myself. We are all such egoists that a sorrow
or hardship--provided it is great enough--flatters our
self-importance.”
At the age of twenty-five Barbellion had reached the depth of
depression and discouragement.
“I have peered into every aspect of my life and achievement and
everything I have seen nauseates me. My life seems to have been
a wilderness of futile endeavour. I started wrong from the very
beginning. I came into the world in the wrong place and under
the wrong conditions. As a boy I was preternaturally absorbed in
myself and preternaturally discontented. I harassed myself with
merciless cross examinations.”
A year later he checked up on such moods and said,
“My sympathy with myself is so unfailing that I don't deserve
anybody else's. In many respects, however, this Journal I
believe gives the impression that I behave myself in the public
gaze much worse than I actually do.”
Man is invariably judged finally by his conduct. Opinion is often
formed of him from what he says, but the last analysis is a review and
estimate of the several activities which together constitute conduct.
Conduct is the pursuit of ends. The conduct that is conditioned by
taking thought does not by any means embrace all one's activities. The
biological discoveries of the latter half of the Nineteenth Century
showed conclusively that the ultimate end to which all life is directed
and toward which every living being strives is the continuation of the
race to which the individual belongs. Life becomes, therefore, a trust,
not a gift, and the only way in which the obligation it entails can
be discharged is by transmitting life to a new generation. Barbellion
had bodily characteristics which permit the biologist to say that his
gonadal redex was dominant, and throughout the diary there are frequent
entries showing that, despite his shyness, self-consciousness, and lack
of “Facility” (using the word in its Scottish sense), the opposite sex
made profound appeal to him. His conduct from early youth would seem to
indicate that he held with the Divine Poet--
“--In alte dolcezze
Non si puo gioir, se non amando.”
But his love was evanescent and he was continually asking himself if it
was real or but the figment of desire.
“To me woman is _the_ wonderful fact of existence. If there be
any next world and it be as I hope it is, a jolly gossiping
place with people standing around the mantelpiece and discussing
their earthly experiences, I shall thump my fist on the table as
my friends turn to me on entering and exclaim in a loud voice,
'Woman!'”
Here and there in the “Journal” there are entries which would indicate
that his conduct with women transgressed conventions, though perhaps in
harmony with custom. When he was twenty-five he went to see the “Irish
Play Boy,” and sitting in front of him was a charming little Irish
girl, accompanied by a man whose appearance and manner were repulsive.
He flirted with her successfully. Later, haunted with the desire to
meet her, he sent a personal advertisement to a newspaper hoping that
her eye would encounter it. The advertisement and the money were
returned, as it was suspected that he was a white slave trafficker.
His admiration of the Don Juan type of man is evidenced by an entry in
which he referred to his friendship with a bachelor of sixty, a devotee
of love and strong drink.
“This man is my devoted friend and truth to tell I get on with
him better than I do with most people. I like his gamey flavour,
his utter absence of self-consciousness and his doggy loyalty
to myself. He may be depraved in his habits, coarse in his
language, boorish in his manners, ludicrous in the wrongness of
his views, but I like him just because he is so hopeless. If he
only dabbled in vice, if he had pale, watery ideas about current
literature, if he were genteel, I should quarrel.”
The entries that show Barbellion's attitude toward what may be called
the minor activities of social life are illuminating. These are the
latest activities to be acquired and, in a way, testify to or set forth
the individual's development or limitations.
Companionship with one's fellows is necessary to the mental health of
man, and it is of prime necessity that he should secure their good
opinion. The loss of esteem and the knowledge that he is reprobated and
held in contempt and aversion causes a stress that invariably has its
baneful effect, particularly upon a sensitive, self-conscious youth.
Barbellion was the type of individual who sits in ready judgment on
his fellows, and oftentimes his judgment was violently prejudiced. He
had little community feeling. As a youngster he was ostracised by his
school fellows because he was different, and he felt alien. He never
played games with them, but went off on long solitary rambles after
school hours. Nor did he form intimacies with his masters.
“I presented such an invertebrate, sloppy, characterless
exterior that no one felt curious enough to probe further into
my ways of life. It was the same in London. I was alien to my
colleagues. Among them only R. has ventured to approach my life
and seek a communion with me. My wife and child seem at a remote
distance from me.”
In another connection he says,
“A day spent among my fellows goads me to a frenzy by the
evening. I am no longer fit for human companionship. People
string me up to concert pitch. I develop suspicions of one that
he is prying, or of another that he patronises. Others make
me horribly anxious to stand well in their eyes and horribly
curious to know what they think of me. Others I hate and loathe
for no particular reason. There is a man I am acquainted with
concerning whom I know nothing at all. I should like to smash
his face in. I don't know why.”
Barbellion retained many infantile traits in his adult years and these
were displayed in his attitude and conduct toward people.
At twenty-six he said,
“I have grown so ridiculously hypercritical and fastidious that
I will refuse a man's invitation to dinner because he has watery
blue eyes, or hate him for a mannerism or an impediment or
affectation in his speech. Some poor devil who has not heard of
Turner or Debussy or Dostoievsky I gird at with the arrogance
of a knowledgeable youth of seventeen.... I suffer from such a
savage _amour propre_ that I fear to enter the lists with a man
I dislike on account of the mental anguish I should suffer if he
worsted me. I am therefore bottled up so tight--both my hates
and loves ... if only I had the moral courage to play my part in
life--to take the stage and be myself, to enjoy the delightful
sensation of making my presence felt, instead of this vapourish
mumming. To me self-expression is a necessity of life, and what
cannot be expressed one way must be expressed in another. When
colossal egotism is driven underground, whether by a steely
surface environment or an unworkable temperament or, as in my
case, by both, you get a truly remarkable pain--the pain one
might say of continuously unsuccessful attempts at parturition.”
This may seem adorned and artificial, but to me it is the most
illuminating entry in the “Journal” and reveals many of his limitations.
At twenty-eight he made the entry,
“The men I meet accept me as an entomologist and _ipso facto_,
an enthusiast in the science. That is all they know of me, and
all they want to know of me, or of any man. Surely no man's
existence was ever quite such a duplicity as mine. I smile
bitterly to myself ten times a day, as I engage in all the
dreary technical jargon of professional talk with them. How
they would gossip over the facts of my life if they knew! How
scandalised they would be over my inner life's activities, how
resentful of enthusiasm other than entomological!”
It would have contributed to his peace of mind had he studied more
closely the writings of the immortal physician of Norwich, from whom he
believed he had spiritual descent:
“No man can justly censure or condemn another; because indeed
no man truly knows another. This I perceive in myself; for I am
in the dark to all the world; and my nearest friends behold me
but in a cloud. Those that know me superficially think less
of me than I do of myself; those of my near acquaintance think
more; God who truly knows me knows that I am nothing. Further
no man can judge another, because no man knows himself; for we
censure others but as they disagree from that humour which we
fancy laudable in ourselves, and commend others but for that
wherein they seem to quadrate and consent with us. So that in
conclusion, all is but that we all condemn, self-love.”
Self-love, or over-appreciation of self, was Barbellion's most serious
stumbling-block. He never got himself in the right perspective
with the world, and it is unlikely, even though his brief life had
been less tragic, that he would have succeeded in doing so. He was
temperamentally unfit.
Barbellion's friends say that he was courteous and soft mannered, but
his own estimate of capacity for display of the amenities is so at
variance with this that we are forced to believe the manner they saw
was veneer.
The following description of Lermontov by Maurice was, he averred, an
exact picture of himself:
“He had, except for a few intimate friends, an impossible
temperament; he was proud; overbearing, exasperated and
exasperating, filled with a savage _amour-propre_, and he took
a childish delight in annoying; he cultivated 'le plaisir
aristocratique de deplair.'... He could not bear not to make
himself felt and if he was unsuccessful in this by fair means he
resorted to unpleasant ones.”
Two years later he expressed much the same opinion of his social
characteristics when he described himself as something between
a monkey, a chameleon, and a jellyfish and made himself out an
intellectual bully. He was honest enough not to omit an invariable
trait of the bully--cowardice. He says,
“The humiliating thing is that almost any strong character
hypnotises me into complacency, especially if he is a
stranger.... But by Jove, I wreak vengeance on my familiars,
and on those brethren even weaker than myself. They get my
concentrated gall, my sulphurous fulminations, and would wonder
to read this confession.”
In order that any community may exist and thrive each individual
must do things for the common welfare. He must regulate his activity
so as not to impair or jeopardise the property and self-respect of
his neighbours. He must contribute to its existence and development
by an active execution of deeds that draw more closely the bonds of
fellowship and knit more securely the fabric of society. He must
exercise self-restraint in those countless ways by which the conduct
of a person in the presence of others is shorn of indulgences which he
allows himself when alone, and he must perform those ceremonies and
benevolences which constitute politeness and courtesy. The unwritten
law which compels these in order that he may have a reputation for
“normalcy” is even more inexorable than the written law which compels
him to pay taxes and serve on juries and does not permit him to beat
carpets or rugs in the open. Although Barbellion seemed to be very
keen in participating in the defence of the country against external
foes, his diary does not reveal that he had any desire to undertake
municipal, political, or social duties. Illness may explain this, but
illness did not keep him from recording the desire to do so or the
regret that he was prevented from participation in the full life.
Every estimate of Barbellion must take his illness into consideration.
Readily might he subscribe to Sir Thomas Browne's statement, “For the
world, I count it not as an inn, but an hospital; and a place not to
live, but to die in.” In the first entries of the diary he speaks of
being ill, and although the disease of which he died is not habitually
associated with mental or emotional symptoms, it is nevertheless
so horribly incapacitating and is accompanied by such distressing
evidences of disturbed bodily functions that it invariably tinges
the victim's thoughts with despondency and tinctures his emotional
activities with despair.
Barbellion capitalised his infirmity to an extraordinary degree. He
says we are all such egotists that a sorrow or hardship, provided it is
great enough, flatters our self-importance. We feel that a calamity by
overtaking us has distinguished us above our fellows. Were it not for
his illness his book would never have found a publisher, for it is not
a psychological history of his own life--which he believed would make
such an interesting volume--but a Pepysian record of his doings, which,
taken _in toto_, is fairly drab. It was the display of equanimity,
resignation, and courage when confronted with the inevitable, and the
record of his thoughts during that time that give the book its value
and vogue. He was constantly fighting disease and cognisant of his
waning strength.
“I do not fear ill health in itself, but I do fear its possible
effect on my mind and character. Already my sympathy with myself
is maudlin. As long as I have spirit and buoyancy I don't care
what happens, for I know that so long I cannot be counted a
failure.”
This is one of the keynotes of his character--that he shall not be
counted a failure. The other--and it is the same--keynote, is that he
shall be a success; that he will make a noise in the world.
The entries after he had got a two-months' sick leave are pathetic. He
was on the point of proposing marriage; he had been to see a well-known
nerve specialist who said that a positive diagnosis could not be made;
he had set out for his holiday at the seaside and had a most depressing
time. When he returned to London he was no better; in fact he was much
worse, and had thoughts of suicide. After he had found out the nature
of his disease he expressed himself with great fortitude, saying,
“My life has become entirely posthumous. I live now in the grave
and am busy furnishing it with posthumous joys. I accept my fate
with great content, my one-time restless ambition lies asleep
now, my one-time furious self-assertiveness is anæsthetised
by this great war; the war and the discovery about my health
together have plucked out of me that canker of self-obsession
... for I am almost resigned to the issue in the knowledge that
some day, someone will know, perhaps somebody will understand
and--immortal powers!--even sympathise, 'the quick heart
quickening from the heart that's still.'”
Barbellion's account of his experience with physicians engenders
sadness. He went from general practitioner to chest specialists,
digestion specialists, ophthalmologists, neurologists, without ever
getting the smallest intimation of the nature of his illness, until it
had progressed to an advanced stage. For a long time, indeed, it seemed
to baffle all the physicians who were consulted. One of the distresses
of the diary is that it testifies that doctors are far from omniscient.
Nearly always he was advised to go and live on the prairies; and, like
all sufferers from incurable diseases, the quacks finally got him.
With the spectre of disease always lurking in the background, when
not taking an evident part in the drama of Barbellion's life, it is
inevitable that his attitude toward death should colour his thoughts to
a very marked degree. As early as 1912, when he was twenty-three years
old, he wrote, “As an egoist I hate death because I should cease to be
I”; and the next year,
“What embitters me is the humiliation of having to die, to
have to be pouring out the precious juices of my life into
the dull earth, to be no longer conscious of what goes on, no
longer moving abroad upon the earth creating attractions and
repulsions, pouring out one's ego in a stream. To think that the
women I have loved will be marrying and forget, and that the men
I have hated will continue on their way and forget I ever hated
them--the ignominy of being dead!”
If this latter entry had been written a few years later, one might
suspect the influence of Rupert Brooke. As the date stands, one can
only infer that Barbellion, in spite of his much vaunted morbidness,
possessed a little of the zest of life which so richly flavoured the
genius of that young poet.
The entries in the “Journal” after the nature of his disease had been
made known to him express a marked difference in his attitude toward
death. In 1917 he said,
“I ask myself; what are my views on death, the next world, God?
I look into my mind and discover I am too much of a mannikin to
have any. As for death, I am a little bit of trembling jelly of
anticipation. I am prepared for anything, but I am the complete
agnostic; I simply don't know. To have views, faith, beliefs,
one needs a backbone. This great bully of a universe overwhelms
me. The stars make me cower. I am intimidated by the immensity
surrounding my own littleness. It is futile and presumptuous
for me to opine anything about the next world. But I _hope_
for something much freer and more satisfying after death, for
emancipation of the spirit and, above all, for the obliteration
of this puny self, this little, skulking, sharp-witted ferret.”
This, one might almost say, shows Barbellion at his best.
A power of fancy which is displayed in few other connections throughout
the book made him say, during the same year,
“What a delightful thing the state of death would be if the dead
passed their time haunting the places they loved in life and
living over again the dear delightful past--if death were one
long indulgence in the pleasures of memory! If the disembodied
spirit forgot all the pains of its previous existence and
remembered only the happiness! Think of me flitting about the
orchards and farmyards in----birdnesting, walking along the
coast among the seabirds, climbing Exmoor, bathing in streams
and in the sea, haunting all my old loves and passions, cutting
open with devouring curiosity Rabbits, Pigeons, Frogs, Dogfish,
Amphioxus; think of me, too, at length unwillingly deflected
from these cherished pursuits in the raptures of first love,
cutting her initials on trees and fences instead of watching
birds, day-dreaming over _Parker and Haswell_ and then bitterly
reproaching myself later for much loss of precious time. How
happy I shall be if Death is like this; to be living over again
and again all my ecstasies, over first times.... My hope is that
I may haunt these times again, that I may haunt the places, the
books, the bathes, the walks, the desires, the hopes, the first
(and last) loves of my life all transfigured and beatified by
sovereign Memory.”
Nothing in the diaries illustrates more strikingly Barbellion's zest
for living than these allusions to death. In the first decade of life,
the average person gives no thought as to whether he will live or die;
in the second decade he rarely becomes concerned with thoughts of death
unless they are forced upon him by painful or persistent illness. In
the third decade, when the fear of death is very common, Barbellion
knew that he must soon die. This flair for life, which he must have
possessed to a marked degree, is evidenced in his love of nature and in
his appreciation of beauty and of literature to an immensely greater
extent than in contact with his fellows. His pleasure in æsthetics was
real and profound, and included an appreciation of sound, colour, and
form, both in nature and in art. His capacity for the appreciation of
beauty of sound was greater than for the beauty of colour or form.
Although apparently he had never studied music, he said of Beethoven's
Fifth Symphony that it “always worked me up into an ecstasy”; and after
listening to music by Tschaikovsky, Debussy, and others that, “I am
chock-full of all this precious stuff and scarcely know what to write.”
Whether or not his suspicion that “my growing appreciation of the
plastic art is with me only distilled sensuality” was true, the
appreciation was unquestionably genuine, as shown by his comment on
Rodin's “The Prodigal Son” that it was “Beethoven's Fifth Symphony
done in stone. It was only on my second visit that I noticed the small
pebble in each hand--a superb touch--what a frenzy of remorse!,” and
on “The Fallen Angel” that “The legs of the woman droop lifelessly
backwards in an intoxicating curve. The eye caresses it--down the
thighs and over the calves to the tips of the toes--like the hind legs
of some beautiful dead gazelle.”
Above his appreciation of æsthetic beauty, however, Barbellion
realised, theoretically at least, that the topmost levels of pleasure
and pain are constituted of qualities dependent upon achievements of
the moral order--of duty well done, of happiness conferred, of services
rendered, of benefits bestowed; or of the antithesis, of remorse for
abstention and neglect of these or for active misdeeds. He says in “The
Last Diary,”
“Under the lens of scientific analysis natural beauty
disappears. The emotion of beauty and the spirit of analysis
and dissection cannot exist contemporaneously. But just as
man's scientific analysis destroys beauty, so his synthetic
art creates it. And man creates beauty, nature supplying the
raw materials. Because there is beauty in man's own heart, he
naïvely assumes its possession by others and so projects it into
nature. But he sees in her only the truth and goodness that are
in himself. Natural beauty is everyone's mirror.”
Barbellion's strong sense of moral values was always coloured by his
passion--which was almost a mania for receiving appreciation and
applause. Although he denied wanting to be liked, respected, and
admired, yet he clamoured for it. He displayed pain upon receiving the
marks of disapprobation, and reproof he disliked and despised.
He was singularly free from spontaneous disorder of will; that is, of
delay, vacillation, and precipitation. The only evidence he gave of
vacillation was about his marriage, and that showed his good judgment.
He was much more inclined to precipitation than to vacillation, and
for a neurotic individual he was strangely without obsession--that
is the morbid desire to do some act which the would-be performer
discountenances and struggles not to do.
With all his sensitiveness, Barbellion seemed to have been not
without an element of cruelty. This was of the refined, indirect sort
and was chiefly noticeable in references to his wife. While he was
contemplating a proposal of marriage he made an entry in his diary,
“I tried my best, I have sought every loophole of escape, but
I am quite unable to avoid the melancholy fact that her thumbs
are lamentable. Poor dear, how I love her! That is why I am so
concerned about her thumbs.”
In speaking of his fiancée's letters, he once wrote,
“These letters chilled me. In reply I wrote with cold steel
short, lifeless, formal notes, for I felt genuinely aggrieved
that she should care so little how she wrote to me or how she
expressed her love. I became ironical with myself over the
prospect of marrying a girl who appeared so little to appreciate
my education and mental habits.”
Two years later he added to this entry “What a popinjay!” But then
two years later he was a confirmed invalid and she was making great
sacrifice to take care of him.
In another place he taunted her, after admitting her letters
disappointed him with their coldness, and added, “Write as you would
speak. You know I am not one to carp about a spelling mistake”; and at
another time he recorded,
“My life here has quite changed its orientation. I am no longer
an intellectual snob. If I were E. and I would have parted ere
now. I never like to take her to the British Museum because
there all the values are intellectual.”
Of his wife the diaries give a very vague picture. Once he exclaimed,
“To think that she of all women, with a past such as hers, should be
swept into my vicious orbit!” but no information is given regarding
this past. The idea of marriage was in his thoughts for several years,
but his attitude was one of doubt and vacillation. In 1914 he wrote:
“I wish I loved more steadily. I am always sidetracking myself.
The title of 'husband' scares me.”
When he finally recorded his marriage as having taken place at the
Registry Office he added,
“It is impossible to set down here all the labyrinthine ambages
of my will and feelings in regard to this event. Such incredible
vacillations, doubts and fears.”
“The function of the private journal is one of observation, experiment,
analysis, contemplation; the function of the essay is to provoke
reflection,” wrote Amiel. Barbellion's observation was of himself and
of nature; his experiment how to adjust himself to the world; his
analysis almost exclusively of his ego; and his contemplation the
mystery of life and death. A “sport” in the biological sense, that
is, differing markedly from his immediate ancestors, he fell afoul of
infection early in life. From the beginning it scarred and debilitated
him.
He was an egotist and proud of it. He did not realise that the ego
is a wall which limits the view rising higher with every emotional
or intellectual growth. There is a certain degree of greatness from
which, when a man reaches it, he can always look over the top of the
wall of his egotism. Barbellion never reached it. He was a man above
the ordinary, capable of originality and of learning from experience,
clever at his profession, apt at forming general ideas, sometimes
refined and sometimes gross; a solitary, full of contradictions, ironic
or ingenuous by fits, tormented by sexual images and sentimental ideas,
and possessed by the desire to become famous, but haunted by the fear
that he would not live to see his desire accomplished.
He had the misfortune to be without faith or ability to acquire it, but
in compensation he was given to an envious degree immunity to fear, and
he endured disease and faced death with courage and resignation. If we
contrast his thought and conduct with that of another egotist, Robert
Louis Stevenson, after he came to know the number of days that remained
for him, as thought and conduct are recorded in the “Vailima Letters,”
Barbellion suffers from the comparison, for Stevenson was devoid of
vanity and selfishness. But the comparison would not be a just one, for
euphoria is a feature of the disease with which Stevenson contended,
and despair of Barbellion's. Moreover, Stevenson was a Celt and had
a sense of humour. Everyone likes to think that his distinguishing
characteristic is a sense of humour. Barbellion believed he possessed
it tremendously. He may have, but his books do not reveal it.
He forced himself without academic training upon a most conservative
institution, a close corporation, archaically conventionalised, and he
gave earnest that he could mount the ladder of preferment quickly and
gracefully.
He saw himself with the lucidity of genius, but his admirers will not
admit that he was the man he said he was. One admirer does.
Would that he had added to his litany: _Defenda me, Dios, de me!_--The
Lord deliver me from myself. Had he done so, he would have accomplished
to a greater degree the object of life: to be happy and to make others
happy.
CHAPTER IX
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE DIARIST: HENRI-FRÉDÉRIC AMIEL
“True serenity does not consist in indifference to the phenomena
of life amongst which we live. It consists of judging in an
elevated way men and facts. True serenity does not reign
apart from life. It is in the land of the hurricane that it
is a grand virtue to know how to remain calm. Possibly he who
can accomplish this will succeed in avoiding its perils, or
surmounting its consequences. Perhaps it is better to lose
one's foothold in the waves than it is to prosper in a solitude
without echo. Only solitude that has been wrought from the
tumult is precious.”--GEORGES DUHAMEL.
No brief statement ever made applies more fittingly to Henri-Frédéric
Amiel--more widely known now, one hundred years after his birth, than
during his lifetime--than these words of one of the most promising
young men of letters of France.
Amiel says in his “Journal Intime”:
“There remains the question whether the greatest problems which
have ever been guessed on earth had not better have remained
buried in the brain which found the key to them, and whether the
deepest thinkers--those whose hand has been boldest in drawing
aside the veil, and their eye keenest in fathoming the mystery
beyond it--had not better, like the prophet of Iliom, have kept
for Heaven, and for Heaven alone, secrets and mysteries which
human language cannot truly express nor human intelligence
conceive.”
* * * * *
“To win true peace, a man needs to feel himself directed,
pardoned, and sustained by a supreme power, to feel himself in
the right road, at the point where God would have him be--in
order with God and the universe. This faith gives strength and
calm. I have not got it. All that is, seems to me arbitrary and
fortuitous. It may as well not be, as be. Nothing in my own
circumstances seems to me providential. All appears to me left
to my own responsibility, and it is this thought which disgusts
me with the government of my own life. I longed to give myself
up wholly to some great love, some noble end; I would willingly
have lived and died for the ideal--that is to say, for a holy
cause. But once the impossibility of this made clear to me, I
have never since taken a serious interest in anything, and have,
as it were, but amused myself with a destiny of which I was no
longer the dupe.”
* * * * *
“There is a great affinity in me with the Hindoo genius--that
mind, vast, imaginative, loving, dreamy, and speculative, but
destitute of ambition, personality, and will. Pantheistic
disinterestedness, the effacement of the self in the great
whole, womanish gentleness, a horror of slaughter, antipathy
to action--these are all present in my nature, in the nature
at least which has been developed by years and circumstances.
Still the West has also had its part in me. What I have found
difficult is to keep up a prejudice in favour of any form,
nationality, or individuality whatever. Hence my indifference
to my own person, my own usefulness, interest, or opinions
of the moment. What does it all matter? _Omnis determinatio
est negatio._ Grief localises us, love particularises us, but
thought delivers us from personality.... To be a man is a poor
thing, to be a man is well; to be _the_ man--man in essence and
in principle--that alone is to be desired.” (Written at the age
of fifty-four.)
The “Journal Intime,” upon which alone Amiel's fame rests, is studded
with such expressions, all of which go to prove that he was handicapped
with an inability to participate in life. One may call it aboulia,
or lack of will power; but it was not lack of will power. That the
intellect which could produce such work was not directed into some
practical channel during a long and healthy life naturally arouses a
question; and this question has been answered by Amiel's admirers and
his critics in various ways. The only conclusion, however, to which
an unbiassed examination of his life and of his book can lead is the
simple one that Amiel was born that way, just as some people are
born Albinos, or, to put it in other words, that he was temperamentally
unfit for practical life.
[Illustration: HENRI-FRÉDÉRIC AMIEL]
Henri-Frédéric Amiel was born in Geneva September 27, 1821, and died
there March 11, 1881. His ancestors were Huguenots who sought refuge in
Switzerland after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. There is no
record that any of them achieved greatness or had greatness thrust upon
them. Very little has been written of his parents, who died when he
was twelve years old, or of his uncle and aunt, in whose house he was
brought up apart from his two sisters. All those who have written about
Amiel himself are singularly silent about his boyhood, so that we know
practically nothing of the formative years of his life save that he was
a sensitive, impressionable boy, more delicate than robust, disposed to
melancholy, and with a deep interest in religious problems. In school
and college he was studious but not brilliant; he had no interest in
games or sports and made few intimacies, and these with men older
than himself. When he was nineteen he came under the influence of a
Genevan philologist and man of letters, Adolphe Picquet, whose lectures
answered many a positive question and satisfied many a vague aspiration
of this youth already in the meshes of mysticism. They exercised a
decisive influence over his thought, filled him with fresh intuitions,
and brought near to him the horizons of his dreams.
When he was twenty he went to Italy and stayed more than a year, and
while there he wrote several articles on Christian Art, and a criticism
of a book by M. Rio. The next four years he spent in Germany, where
he studied philosophy, philology, mythology, and history. After this
he travelled about the university cities of Central Europe for two
years, principally Heidelberg, Munich, and Vienna; and in 1849, when
he was twenty-eight years old, he returned to Geneva and secured the
appointment of Professor of Moral Philosophy in the Academy there.
The appointment was made by the Democratic Party, which had just
then come into control of the Government. The Aristocratic Party,
which had had things their own way since the days following the
restoration of Geneva's independence in 1814, would have nothing to do
with intellectual upstarts, puppets of the Radical Party, so Amiel,
by nature and conviction a conservative, found himself in the right
pew, but the wrong church; and many of his friends thought that the
discouragement which was manifest in his writings and in his conduct
may, in a measure at least, have been due to the conflict between his
discomfiture and his duty.
He had few friends, but these he impressed enormously by his learning
and his knowledge. He made no particular reputation as a professor
or as a poet, and had it not been for the “Journal,” he would never
have been heard of save by his friends and pupils. It is now forty
years since the first volume of the book was published at Geneva. It
had been put together from the thousands of sheets of diary which
had come into the hands of his literary heirs. The Preface to the
volume announced that this “Journal” was made up of his psychological
observations and impressions produced on him by books. It was the
confidant of his private and intimate thoughts; a means whereby
the thinker became conscious of his own inner life; a safe shelter
wherein his questionings of fate and future, the voice of grief, of
self-examination and confession, the soul's cry for inward peace might
make themselves freely heard.
It made a great noise in the world and the reverberations of it will
not cease.
Some consider that the “Journal Intime” occupies a unique place in
literature, not because it is a diary of introspection, but because
of the tragedy which attended its production. This is the height of
absurdity. There was no tragedy about its production. Amiel lived an
unhealthy life, thwarted nature's laws, and nature exacted the penalty.
N. J. Symons, in an article in the _Queen's Quarterly_, says, “To
be gifted with the qualities of genius, yet to be condemned by some
obscure psychosis to perpetual sterility and failure; to live and
die in the despairing recognition of this fact; and finally to win
posthumous fame by the analysis and confession of one's failure is one
of the most puzzling and pathetic of life's anomalies.” It would be if
it were true. But what were the qualities of genius that Amiel had? And
how did he display the obscure psychosis? He discharged the duties of
a professor from the time he was twenty-eight until he was sixty. He
poetised pleasantly; he communed with nature and got much pleasure from
it; and he had very definite social adaptability. His general level of
behaviour was high. He was a diligent, methodical worker; he reacted
in a normal way to conventional standards; he had few personal biases
or peculiarities and none that drew particular attention to him; and
he seemed to have adjusted himself without great difficulty to the
incidences of life that he encountered.
To say that such a man was the victim of some obscure psychosis is
either to speak beyond the facts or to speak from the possession of
some knowledge that is denied one familiar with his writings and what
has been written about him.
Unique the “Journal Intime” unquestionably is, in that it is the
sincere confession of failure, both as a man and as a writer, of a
man whose intellectual qualities justified his friends in expecting
from him a large measure of success as both. Both admirers and critics
agree that Amiel's failure was his refusal or his inability to act.
This refusal to act was not the expression of some obscure psychosis,
but was entirely consistent with his philosophy of life, which was
arrived at through a logical process of thought. “Men's thoughts are
made according to their nature,” says Bacon. It is to Amiel's nature,
or temperament, or personality, that we must look for the answer to the
question: To what can his confessed failure be charged?
Any estimate of personality must weigh not only the capacity for
dealing with thoughts, but the capacity for dealing with men and with
things as well. Intellectual qualities are of value only in relation
to the dynamic quality of the mind; emotional qualities must be
measured by the reactions to the environment; and the individual, in
the last analysis, must take his standing among his fellows upon his
acts, not upon his thoughts. In a balanced personality act harmonises
with thought, is conditioned and controlled by it. Purely impulsive
action carried to the extreme means insanity, and in milder degrees
it exhibits itself in all grades and forms of what is known as lack
of self-control. Such action is too familiar to call for comment.
But there is the opposite type of individual whose impulses are not
impelling enough to lead to expression in outward form of either
thoughts or emotions. Such thoughts and emotions are turned back
upon themselves and, like a dammed-up stream, whirl endlessly around
the spring, the ego, until the individual becomes predominantly
introspective and egocentric.
Amiel possessed the power of clear logical thought to a high degree,
but he limited its expression largely to the introspective musings of
the diary. Aside from his daily life, which was narrow but normal and
conventional, it is to Amiel's deepest interests and admirations as
revealed by his diary that one must look for light upon his emotional
make-up. The things with which he occupied himself were extremely few:
introspective literature, philosophy and religion, and contemplation
of God and the hereafter. The diary covers the years of his life from
twenty-seven to sixty, the entire fruitful span of most men's lives.
During all of this time his interests showed little or no variation.
Nowhere throughout the record do we find any evidence of interest in
the developments which were shaping the course of the world's history.
Still less do we find any indication of a desire or a conscience
to participate in such history. Amiel evidently felt no urge to be
an actor in the drama. He was not even a critic or an interested
on-looker. Rather did he prefer to withdraw to a sheltered distance
and forget the reverberations of the struggle in contemplation of
abstractions.
He lived in an era in which the world was revolutionised. The most
deforming institution which civilisation has ever tolerated, slavery,
was razed and dismantled; yet he never said a word about it. He was
a witness of one of the greatest transformations that has ever been
wrought, the making of things by machinery rather than by hand; and he
never commented on it. His life was contemporaneous with the beginning
of discovery in science, such as the origin of species and the general
evolutionary doctrine associated with Darwin's name; and it seems only
to have excited his scorn.
“The growing triumph of Darwinism--that is to say of
materialism, or of force--threatens the conception of justice.
But justice will have its turn. The higher human law cannot be
the offspring of animality. Justice is the right to the maximum
of individual independence compatible with the same liberty
for others;--in other words, it is respect for man, for the
immature, the small, the feeble; it is the guarantee of those
human collectivities, associations, states, nationalities--those
voluntary or involuntary unions--the object of which is to
increase the sum of happiness, and to satisfy the aspiration
of the individual. That some should make use of others for
their own purposes is an injury to justice. The right of the
stronger is not a right, but a simple fact, which obtains only
so long as there is neither protest nor resistance. It is like
cold, darkness, weight, which tyrannise over man until he has
invented artificial warmth, artificial light, and machinery.
Human industry is throughout an emancipation from brute
nature, and the advances made by justice are in the same way a
series of rebuffs inflicted upon the tyranny of the stronger.
As the medical art consists in the conquest of disease, so
goodness consists in the conquest of the blind ferocities and
untamed appetites of the human animal. I see the same law
throughout:--increasing emancipation of the individual, a
continuous ascent of being towards life, happiness, justice,
and wisdom. Greed and gluttony are the starting-point,
intelligence and generosity the goal.”
Nor is there anything in the “Journal Intime” to indicate that he had
ever heard of Pasteur, or Morton, or Simpson, who laid the foundation
of a diseaseless world and a painless world. His diary is a record of
his own thoughts, to be sure, but one's thoughts are engendered, in a
measure at least, by what is going on in the world. An inhabitant of
any other world whose knowledge of this could be obtained only from
Amiel's book, would be left with an abysmal ignorance of the subject.
He would learn something of the German philosophers and of French
littérateurs and of Amiel's ideas of God and of infinity.
Schopenhauer says that
“It is not by the unification of the intellect and the will that
man attains to higher truth, but by their dissociation. When
the intellect casts off the yoke of the will it rises above the
illusion of finite life and attains a vision of transcendent
truth. When one can contemplate without will, beyond, when
he can dissolve the life instinct in pure thought, then he
possesses the field of higher truth, then he is on the avenue
that leads to Nirvana.”
Higher truth is possible only through the annihilation of the will,
and if this annihilation is done after taking thought, that is after
planning to do it and determining to do it, the price that one has to
pay, or the penalty that is exacted, is an incapacity or diminished
capacity for practical life. Amiel was a real mystic, not by choice,
perhaps, but by birth. He was proud of it in his youth and early
maturity; he questioned it in his late maturity; and regretted it in
his senescence. When he was fifty years old he wrote,
“The man who gives himself to contemplation looks on at rather
than directs his life, is a spectator rather than an actor,
seeks rather to understand than to achieve. Is this mode of
existence illegitimate, immoral? Is one bound to act? Is such
detachment an idiosyncrasy to be respected or a sin to be
fought against? I have always hesitated on this point, and I
have wasted years in futile self-reproach and useless fits
of activity. My western conscience, penetrated as it is with
Christian morality, has always persecuted my Oriental quietism
and Buddhist tendencies. I have not dared to approve myself, I
have not known how to correct myself.... Having early caught
a glimpse of the absolute, I have never had the indiscreet
effrontery of individualism. What right have I to make a merit
of a defect? I have never been able to see any necessity for
imposing myself upon others, nor for succeeding. I have seen
nothing clearly except my own deficiencies and the superiority
of others.... With varied aptitudes and a fair intelligence, I
had no dominant tendency, no imperious faculty, so that while
by virtue of capacity I felt myself free, yet when free I could
not discover what was best. Equilibrium produced indecision and
indecision has rendered all my faculties barren.”
If Amiel had been a real Christian, that is, if he had taken his
orientation and orders from Christ, he would have had no doubt whether
such a mode of existence was illegitimate and immoral or not. He could
have found specific instruction telling him he was bound to act. He was
a nominal Christian, but a _de facto_ Buddhist.
Next to the output of a man's activity as shown by his work,
his selection of recreational outlets for his emotional life is
illuminating. What were Amiel's amusements? So far as the diary shows,
day dreaming, poetising, fancy, and a contemplation of nature furnished
the only outlets for his more organised emotional nature. For play in
any form he apparently felt no need.
There is a type of individual whose failure to bring his performance up
to the standard which his intelligence would seem to warrant takes the
form of inability to face concrete situations. Unable to adjust himself
to his environment when realities present difficulties that call for
solution, such an individual becomes burdened with a sense of his own
inadequacy; and from this he is inclined to seek escape in impersonal
abstractions, usually described by him as ideals. Mystic philosophy in
some form is the frequent refuge of such tender souls from their own
sense of inability to cope with life and its concrete problems.
Throughout the record divergence between ideals and acts stands out.
Idealism is everywhere pled as the basis of the hesitation to act. The
conscious and foredoomed disparity between conception and realisation
is made the excuse for the absence of effort.
“Practical life makes me afraid. And yet, at the same time, it
attracts me; I have need of it. Family life, especially, in
all its delightfulness, in all its moral depth, appeals to me
like a duty. Sometimes I cannot escape from the ideal of it. A
companion of my life, of my work, of my thoughts, of my hopes;
within, a common worship, towards the world outside, kindness
and beneficence; educations to undertake, the thousand and one
moral relations which develop round the first--all these ideas
intoxicate me sometimes. But I put them aside, because every
hope is, as it were, an egg whence a serpent may issue instead
of a dove, because every joy missed is a stab, because every
seed confided to destiny contains an ear of grief which the
future may develop.”
* * * * *
“I have never felt any inward assurance of genius, or any
presentiment of glory or happiness. I have never seen myself
in imagination great or famous, or even a husband, a father,
an influential citizen. This indifference to the future, this
absolute self-distrust, are, no doubt, to be taken as signs.
What dreams I have are vague and indefinite; I ought not to
live, for I am now scarcely capable of living.--Recognise your
place; let the living live; and you, gather together your
thoughts, leave behind you a legacy of feeling and ideas; you
will be more useful so. Renounce yourself, accept the cup given
you, with its honey and its gall, as it comes. Bring God down
into your heart. Embalm your soul in him now, make within you
a temple for the Holy Spirit; be diligent in good works, make
others happier and better. Put personal ambition away from
you, and then you will find consolation in living or in dying,
whatever may happen to you.”
Complaining of a restless feeling which was not the need for change, he
said,
“It is rather the fear of what I love, the mistrust of what
charms me, the unrest of happiness.... And is there not another
reason for all this restlessness, in a certain sense of void--of
incessant pursuit of something wanting?--of longing for a truer
peace and a more entire satisfaction? Neighbours, friends,
relations--I love them all; and so long as these affections are
active, they leave in me no room for a sense of want. But yet
they do not _fill_ my heart; and that is why they have no power
to fix it. I am always waiting for the woman and the work which
shall be capable of taking entire possession of my soul, and of
becoming my end and aim.”
Amiel's life was a constant negation. His ideals were all concerned
with concepts of perfection, with the absolute, and being sane enough
to realise the impossibility of attaining such perfection, he refused
compromises. He would not play the game for its own sake, nor for the
fine points. If he could not win all the points--and being sane he knew
beforehand that he could not--he preferred not to play at all. But he
made a virtue of his weakness and called it idealism. Had he possessed
the courage to hitch his wagon to a star--and let the star carry him
where it would; had he heeded the warning,
“And the sin I impute to each frustrate ghost
Is--the unlit lamp and the ungird loin”;
or gone the way of thousands of practical idealists who have made their
idealism an incentive to action and thereby left the world richer
for having passed through it, he would have needed no excuse for his
failure to attain perfection. On the contrary, he would have learned
with the sureness of a hard-learned lesson that idealism is worth our
loyalty only when it becomes an inspiration to living, and that it is
worse than futile when it serves merely as a standard for thought or an
excuse for failure.
Amiel coddled his sensibilities for fear of rebuff; he hid his
intellectuality in the diary lest he should suffer from the clear
light of publicity; he denied life out of apprehension that life might
bruise his ego. He told himself that he was protecting his idealism. In
reality he was protecting his egoism. If he had been the victim of a
psychosis he would not have recognised his limitations nor stated them
so clearly. It was sanity that enabled him to see the impossibility
of attaining the perfection of which he dreamed and wrote. It was
cowardice, not a psychosis, which made him refuse to act in the face of
this knowledge. Had he been a Roman Catholic, he might have rested upon
the conception of absolute perfection offered in the authority of the
Church and the life of the cloister. But being a Protestant, both by
inheritance and by conscience, he had to think things out for himself;
and the more he thought the wider became the breach between his
conception of perfection and his hope of realising it. He was tortured
by a conscience goading him to action and a temperament paralysing him
with the fear that the end would fall short of anticipation. He lacked
the moral courage to put his power to the test and be disappointed. He
was without the stamina of the man who fights and runs away. He was too
much of an egoist to risk a losing game, and in consequence he never
tasted the sweet flavour of work well done--even though the end was
apparent failure.
The growing sense of inadequacy between the conscience to act and
the temperament to deny action is written plainly in these random
quotations from the “Journal” during the record of many years. At
thirty he wrote,
“He who is silent is forgotten; he who abstains is taken at
his word; he who does not advance, falls back; he who stops is
overwhelmed, distanced, crushed; he who ceases to grow greater
becomes smaller; he who leaves off gives up; the stationary
condition is the beginning of the end--it is the terrible
symptom which precedes death. To live, is to achieve a perpetual
triumph; it is to assert oneself against destruction, against
sickness, against the annulling and dispersion of one's physical
and moral being. It is to will without ceasing, or rather to
refresh one's will day by day.”
Ten years later when the conflict was closing in upon him he wrote,
“In me an intellect which would fain forget itself in things, is
contradicted by a heart which yearns to live in human beings.
The uniting link of the two contradictions is the tendency
towards self-abandonment, towards ceasing to will and exist
for oneself, towards laying down one's own personality, and
losing--dissolving--oneself in love and anticipation. What I
lack above all things is character, will, individuality. But, as
always happens, the appearance is exactly the contrary of the
reality, and my outward life the reverse of my true and deepest
aspiration. I whose whole being--heart and intellect--thirsts to
absorb itself in reality, in its neighbour man, in Nature and in
God--I, whom solitude devours and destroys--I shut myself up in
solitude and seem to delight only in myself and to be sufficient
for myself.”
At forty-seven, when most men's work is at the high tide of
realisation, he said,
“I have no more strength left, I wish for nothing; but that
is not what is wanted. I must wish what God wishes; I must
pass from indifference to sacrifice, and from sacrifice to
self-devotion. The cup I would fain put away from me is the
misery of living, the shame of existing and suffering as a
common creature who has missed his vocation; it is the bitter
and increasing humiliation of declining power, of growing
old under the weight of one's own disapproval, and the
disappointment of one's friends.”
At fifty-four,
“What use have I made of my gifts, of my special circumstances,
of my half century of existence? What have I paid back to my
country?... Are all the documents I have produced ... anything
better than withered leaves?... When all is added up--nothing!
And worst of all, it has not been a life used up in the service
of some adored object, or sacrificed to any future hope.”
Psychology teaches that too much emphasis cannot be laid in education
upon the reconciliation of ideals and performance, nor too much effort
devoted to the formation of habits of facing concrete situations
squarely, reaching definite decisions, and thereby making efforts,
however ineffective and crude, to link ideals to action. It has been
proved that if natural dispositions are ignored or denied by the
repression of normal primary instincts, disassociation of personality
is likely to be the result. Amiel's ineffectiveness, his lack of
dynamic quality, while in no sense a psychosis, may be considered as
a personality defect. How far this defect may have been conditioned
by his denial of the basic springs of human action cannot be stated.
Neither can it, in any impartial estimate of his life and personality,
be ignored. Next to the instinct of self-preservation, the instinct
for the preservation of the race to which one belongs is the dominant
impulse of the individual. No system of thought, no plan of life can
ignore it and not pay the penalty. Amiel's diary is full of such
denials, and they frequently carry with them the consciousness that he
realised the death sentence to aspiration and realisation which he was
reading to himself between the lines.
Amiel was a shy, sensitive, solitary child. We know very little about
his adolescent struggles and transition to heterosexual fixation.
Indeed we do not know whether it ever came about, and that is where
the chief hiatus in our knowledge of Amiel lies. As a youth he became
intoxicated with philosophic idealism, and Hegel was for him the
fountainhead of all philosophic thought.
There is nothing in the diary to indicate that the normal love-making
of healthy youth had any part in his thoughts or his life. Later,
his sex consciousness colours the record to a great extent--indeed it
might be said to give the colour to the book--but always in the guise
of repressions, fears, hesitations, and longings for unattainable
perfection, and finally of half-hearted regrets for his own denials.
“I am capable of all the passions, for I bear them all within
me. Like a tamer of wild beasts, I keep them caged and lassoed,
but I sometimes hear them growling. I have stifled more than one
nascent love. Why? Because with that prophetic certainty which
belongs to moral intuition, I felt it lacking in true life, and
less durable than myself. I choked it down in the name of the
supreme affection to come. The loves of sense, of imagination,
of sentiment--I have seen through and rejected them all; I
sought the love which springs from the central profundities of
being. And I still believe in it. I will have none of those
passions of straw which dazzle, burn up, and wither; I invoke,
I await, and I hope for the love which is great, pure, and
earnest, which lives and works in all the fibres and through
all the powers of the soul. And even if I go lonely to the end,
I would rather my hope and my dream died with me, than that my
soul should content itself with any meaner union.”
This is the basis of monasticism in the Catholic Church, and it is, in
my judgment, the most violent offence to God that can be given. Goethe
says that he never wrote a new poem without having a new love affair.
Amiel was intrigued by Goethe secondly only to Hegel. If he had copied
Goethe more nearly in living, he might have said with him,
“Wonach soll man am Ende trachten?
Die Welt zu Kennen und nicht zu Verachten.”
There have been books made up of beautiful quotations from Amiel's
“Journal Intime,” which are supposed to help people live, to mitigate
pain, to disperse apprehension, and to assuage misery. They are not a
patch on the Bible or on the writings of Socrates.
“The oracle of today drops from his tripod on the morrow,” said John
Morley. Will this apply to Amiel? Is he a passing fashion? And why
has his popularity grown? The best answer to these questions is found
in the nature of his audience. To what kind of people does Amiel
appeal? To the contemporary purveyors of cloudy stuff; to mystics;
to the tender-minded; to those who prefer the contemplation of far
horizons to travelling the road just ahead. He does not appeal to
anyone with fighting blood, whether he be facing the conflict with the
glorious self-confidence of healthy untried youth, the magnetism of
past success, the tried measure of his own limitations and powers, the
scars of honest defeat, or the pluck of the one who fights a losing
fight with more courage and idealism than he would have mustered for a
winning one.
Amiel's tragedy was that he outraged nature's unique law and nature
exacted the penalty. If the world had a few thousand Amiels and they
got the whip hand, it might cease to exist.
CHAPTER X
GEORGES DUHAMEL: POET, PACIFIST, AND PHYSICIAN
The world is thronged with people who are busying themselves with
world ordering. They may be divided into two great groups: those who
believe that it is to be brought about by revolution; and those who are
convinced that it is to be accomplished by following the instructions
given by the Master to the lawyer who asked the question: “Which is
_the_ great commandment in the law?” The former are called Bolshevists;
the latter Pacifists; and both terms are habitually used derisively.
Amongst the latter there are few more conspicuous in France than
Georges Duhamel, a physician by profession, a littérateur by choice,
who at thirty-eight years of age finds himself in a commanding position
in French letters.
I have recently had the opportunity of an interview with this brilliant
young man, and it occurs to me to present a summary of his aspirations
and an estimate of his accomplishments.
His history is brief. Early success, like a happy country, does not
furnish history. He was born in Paris in 1884, the son of a physician
and the grandson of a farmer. This evolution from farmer to littérateur
in three generations Duhamel says is common in France, indeed in all
Central Europe. His tastes seem to have been largely influenced, if
not formed, by the setting and atmosphere with which his father's
profession surrounded his early life. Until he was mobilised in 1914
Duhamel had not practised medicine. Even as a youth he had experienced
the literary urge and felt that he would eventually succumb to it. He,
however, devoted himself to the sciences and to medicine in the firm
belief that such study provides the best preparation for the vocation
of literature. In this M. Duhamel is in full accord with another famous
theoretical world orderer, Mr. H. G. Wells, but in disagreement with a
practical one, Mr. Charles E. Hughes.
“One does not learn life from letters, but from life, through seeing
suffering and death,” said he when asked to speak of the factors that
influenced him to abandon medicine for letters.
In the midst of his studies as a youth he had what he now calls rather
a strange adventure.
“I spent much time in the society of friends: writers, painters
and sculptors. All of us were seized with a strong desire to
shrink from society as it was constituted. Although we were not
all Fourierites, we decided to form a phalanstery in which we
could live a community life, each one taking part in the work
and in the joy of living in an atmosphere adapted to our tastes
and our professions. We agreed to make our living by means of
manual work, and to abolish the relation of master and servant.
We decided to adopt the trade of typography, which would permit
us to advance our art. Through mutual economies we bought a
printing press and our first books were published by 'L'Abbaye
de Creteil,' as our little publishing house was called. The
phalanstery was disbanded for financial reasons, but we had a
taste of an agreeable life, independent, oftentimes difficult,
but in many respects quite ideal.”
When asked about his earliest literary productions and why he essayed
poetry rather than prose, he replied,
“Generally speaking, all writers begin with poetry and gradually
forsake metre. Our little group wanted to initiate a great
literary epoch and we believed that this could be done only by
creating an atmosphere favourable to intellectual work.”
He might have borrowed Socrates' reply when Cebes asked the same
question: “For I reflect that a man who means to be a poet has to use
fiction and not facts for his poems.” M. Duhamel's training had been in
facts, and his greatest success in letters has been in the recording
of facts. His smallest success has been in establishing postulates
based upon them.
[Illustration: GEORGES DUHAMEL] From a drawing by _Ivan Opffer_ in _THE
BOOKMAN._
In 1909 M. Duhamel received his degree in medicine and shortly after
appeared the four plays which, with his poetry, “Des Légendes, des
Batailles,” a collection of verse published by “L'Abbaye” in 1907;
“L'Homme en Tête,” in 1909; “Selon ma Loi,” in 1910; and “Compagnons,”
in 1912, gave him a definite place in the literary hierarchy. These
plays were “La Lumière,” which appeared in 1911; “Dans l'Ombre des
Statues,” in 1912; “Le Combat,” a symbolic drama in _vers libres_, in
1912; and “L'Œuvre des Athlètes” in 1920. All of these were produced on
the Paris stage and all save the last have appeared in translations by
Sasha Best in _Poet Lore_, Boston, in 1914 and 1915.
These dramas, as well as his early poetry, show the influence of Walt
Whitman. His message is conveyed through the medium of symbolism, his
method being to create types rather than individual studies, and his
purpose to bring art closer to the masses. The result, as might have
been expected, is drama of no great popularity.
Almost simultaneously with his work as poet and dramatist M. Duhamel
achieved prominence as a critic. For some years he was critic of
poetry for _Le Mercure de France_, and his articles contributed to
that publication were collected in book form in 1914 under the title
of “Les Poètes et la Poésie.” His earliest critical work, however, was
a collaboration with M. Charles Vildrac, called “Mots sur la Technique
Poétique.” “Propos Critique,” published in 1912, is largely devoted to
comments on the efforts of the younger and, at that time, comparatively
unknown writers, and it is of special interest that many of these
writers are now famous.
“Paul Claudel: le philosophe--le poète--l'ecrivain--le dramaturge,”
published in 1913, is considered by some of Duhamel's admirers as the
best of his critical works, marked as it is by the same gifts of
analysis and charm of style which distinguished his briefer critical
writings.
It is, however, chiefly of his work since the beginning of the war, and
the direction which his ideas and aims have taken under the influence
of the war, that this article is concerned.
When the war broke out it found Georges Duhamel--then about thirty
years of age--intent upon his literary work: poetry, criticism,
interpretation, which had put him in the first rank of littérateurs of
his country. Mobilised in the Medical Corps he first went to Verdun and
found himself in the thick of the carnage; but he was soon transferred
to the Marne where in the comparative quiet of a hospital he was able
to make the observations and write the reflections which have carried
his name throughout the civilised world. During the four years of the
war he produced four remarkable volumes: “Vie des Martyrs” (The New
Book of Martyrs), “Civilisation,” “Possession du Monde” (The Heart's
Domain), and “Entretiens dans le Tumulte” (Interviews in the Tumult),
four of the most noteworthy and important books inspired by the war.
Plunged at once into the great war hopper whose purpose was to reduce
all human material to a homogeneous mass that would furnish energy for
the war machine, Duhamel preserved his perspective and his individual
outlook both upon the war and upon life. Nothing illustrates this so
strikingly as some of his stories in “Civilisation,” gathered from
scenes with which he came into contact after he had become a seasoned
soldier.
No stronger proof is needed of the essential wholesomeness and strength
of Duhamel's make-up than the fact that while these stories, and those
of “Vie des Martyrs,” were inspired by the horrors of the war, they do
not depict horrors, nor do they create an atmosphere of horror. It is
not the picture of healthy men in the flower of youth, in the vigour
of virility fed to the war machine and left lacerated and broken,
that Duhamel impresses upon the imaginations of his readers. It was
thus that he had seen them in the first days of the siege of Verdun,
in an improvised ambulance where from minute to minute new torments
developed to increase their previous torments, while the fragile roof
over their heads became a great resounding board for the projectiles
of the siegers and the assieged. He had, however, the vision to see
them in another light, and he was filled with pity and admiration for
the French poilu. It is these two emotions, rather than horror, which
make the atmosphere and colour of the two books of war stories. He
sensed the significance of pain and saw the reactions of strong men to
suffering. He saw man in his agony give the lie to the most misleading
of all statements: that man is born equal. For neither in living nor in
dying is there equality. Men are equal, we trust, before God, and they
are alleged to be equal before the law, but after that equality of man
does not exist.
It is this book particularly that makes Duhamel the interpreter of
the poor, the obscure, the stupid, the inarticulate. With an unerring
intuition he reaches the soul. His sympathies are so large, his
understanding so comprehensive, and his reflection of them so complete,
that his readers suffer with the suffering. It seems impossible to
depict the sufferings of these poor martyrs, sent like droves of cattle
to be struck down for what purpose they knew not, more accurately and
convincingly than he does. With the reader's sympathy thus awakened,
one wonders that the individual can be deprived of his own right to
judge whether the cause is great enough for him to lay down his all; to
be crushed by the chariots of the god of war.
M. Duhamel, in “Vie des Martyrs,” has succeeded in making his martyrs
immortal. To him has been given in a superlative degree that seeing
eye, that understanding heart, that power of vision which, perhaps more
than any other gift, enriches life, since it enables the fortunate
possessor to rid himself of the trammels of his own narrow existence
and live the lives of many.
He has made a contribution to behaviouristic psychology in these little
stories, or better said sketches from life, that will endure. He has
been able to convey to unenlightened man the difference between the
_bon_ and the _mauvais blessé_ and to show that it is soul difference
as well as bodily difference. He has portrayed in simple colours the
desire to live, and the determination to live, factors which physicians
know are most important in forecasting the chances of recovery of every
sick man. And with it all there is tenderness, which the author has had
the power to convey through delicacy of style that makes prose poetry
of much of his narrative of the thoughts, aspirations, sentiments, and
plans of individual men who, from their appearance and position, are
the most commonplace of the commonplace. There is no anger, violence,
hatred, or despair in any of his pictures. There is sometimes irony,
but it is of so gentle a nature that it strengthens the impression of
sympathy with his characters, rather than suggesting judgment of them.
“A human being suffers always in his flesh alone, and that is why
war is possible,” says M. Duhamel in “Civilisation.” This is one of
those marvellous epitomes of human conduct, of which he has framed
many. It is vouchsafed to but few to understand and suffer another's
pain. To the majority of mankind it is denied. Were it not so, the
fellow-feeling that makes us wondrous kind would displace greed.
There are so many remarkable features of M. Duhamel's war books, such,
for instance, as what may be called the thesis of “Vie des Martyrs”:
that men suffer after their own image and in their own loneliness; or
of “Civilisation”: that consciousness has outrun life; that it has
created for itself reactions and inhibitions so intricate and profound
that they cannot be tolerated by life, that I was keen to learn how
these attitudes had developed. When questioned, this is what he said:
“I am forced to divide things in the way practiced in the
sciences; that is to say, not to confuse the study of facts with
conclusions drawn from them. In these two books I showed as
faithfully as I could the life and sufferings of soldiers during
the war. In the latter two (“The Heart's Domain” and “Interviews
in the Tumult”) I drew conclusions from the facts established
in the first two. This procedure seemed to me the best way to
handle anti-war propaganda. The weakness of most books results
from the fact that the idea or subject is confused with other,
regrettably often sentimental, considerations. The procedure
employed in the sciences seems to be more orderly, and therefore
more convincing for the exposition of my ideas. These books
awoke a great echo, because they corresponded closely to the
state of mind of sensible men who are bent on doing everything
to make war impossible. Because of this I was looked upon as
a Pacifist, and I regard this as an honour. I have never been
politically active nor do I belong to any political group.
However I am a Pacifist and an Internationalist. I believe that
it is only the individual that can be an Internationalist.
A nation will never be Internationalist for the reason that
Pacifism and Internationalism are indissolubly bound up with
individualism.”
M. Duhamel's work cannot, therefore, be considered solely in the light
of its literary qualities. By his own admission he is a writer with a
purpose, and this purpose is the suppression of war. In the interview
he stated that this purpose fills all of his work and “will be, I
believe, the axis of my work all my life.”
Regarding the four war books in this light, a sincere critic can hardly
escape the conviction that the author has accomplished the first part
of his task with immeasurably greater success than the latter part. Of
the convincing appeal of the two books which aim only to present vivid
and truthful pictures of the sufferings of the soldiers during the war
there can be no question. But of the author's power as a propagandist
against war, as expressed in the two latter books, it is by no means
easy to form so satisfactory an estimate.
Duhamel does not believe that the war developed a _modus vivendi_ for
the world. He thinks it left us where it found us, only exhausted.
Unless something is devised while this exhaustion is being overcome,
the conflict will be taken up again. He believes that a revolution is
necessary, but not a revolution in the sense of the term that applies
to the affairs of Russia or Ireland.
When Duhamel is read in the light of history, especially of the last
one hundred and twenty-five years, one is less hopeful than if he were
ignorant of history. If any _ex cathedra_ statement is justifiable
it would seem to be this: the world war flowed more or less directly
from the revolutionary movement which began with the dissemination of
the doctrine of the French philosophers, especially Rousseau, toward
the end of the Eighteenth Century. His discourse “On the Origin of
Inequality Amongst Men” is the fountainhead of modern socialism and the
source from which the ferment that brought about the world revolution
emanated. Rousseau's thesis was that civilisation had proven itself to
be the curse of humanity and that man in his primitive state was free
and happy.
“The first time he knew unhappiness was when convention stepped
in and said 'you must not do this and you must not do that,' and
the State stepped in and said 'this is private property.' The
first man who bethought himself of saying 'this is mine,' and
found people simple enough to believe him was the real founder
of civil society. What crimes, what wars, what murders, what
miseries and horrors would he have spared the human race who,
snatching away the spade and filling in the ditches, had cried
out to his fellows: 'beware of listening to this impostor; you
are lost if you forget that the fruits of the earth belong to
all and the earth to no one.'”
It was the dissemination of this doctrine and the writings of Voltaire
which led to the “Feast of Reason,” and the publication of the
“Encyclopédie” that led to the world volcanic eruption of 1789, which
had its repetition in 1914.
It seems that most of these ideas were to be found in the writings of
Adam Weishaupt, an apostate Catholic, who founded the secret society
known as the “Illiminati” in 1776. It is interesting to compare some of
his statements with Duhamel's aspirations.
“When men united themselves into nations, national love took the
place of universal love. With the division of the globe into
countries benevolence restricted itself behind boundaries that
it was never again to transgress. It became a virtue to spread
out at the expense of those who did not happen to be under our
dominion. In order to attain this goal it became permissible to
despise foreigners and to deceive and offend them. This virtue
was called patriotism. Patriotism gave birth to localism, to
the family spirit, and finally to egoism. Thus the origin of
states or governments of civil society was the seed of discord
and patriotism found its punishment in itself. Do away with this
love of country, and men will once more learn to know and love
each other as men; there will be no more partiality; the ties
between hearts will unroll and extend.”
Duhamel wants to develop this relationship between men, but he wants to
do it in a very different way.
This moral revolution will be accomplished when men love one another,
and when they reward good for evil. Even though this had not been
shouted from the housetops and whispered through the lattice, in
every tongue and in every clime for the past twenty centuries, we
should still feel that M. Duhamel is in error, for these precepts are
at variance with the teachings of biology, the science for which M.
Duhamel has so much respect. You might just as well ask a man who is
drowning not to struggle as to ask a man to return good for evil--that
is unless he is doing it as a stunt, an artefact, or in redemption of
the promise to be saved. It is against nature. First teach him to put a
new valuation on life and to get new standards of what makes life worth
living. Then M. Duhamel will have a foundation to build upon.
That M. Duhamel is no less earnest than sincere in his purpose is
proved by his lectures through Europe during the last few years, as
protagonist for the suppression of war; and also by the fact that
he was one of the co-founders of “Clarté,” so named for the book by
Barbusse, which is a group of men who preach anti-militarism, the
intellectual solidarity of nations, and the social equality of all
citizens.
“Possession du Monde” is by virtue of its title a frank avowal of
its aim to set forth the author's idea of finding some satisfactory
substitute for the world possession for which the war was fought. It is
the effort of a wholesome, buoyant, sympathetic man, after having been
brought into contact with the horrors of the war, to find a substitute
for orthodox religion; the expression of an emotionally religious man
without a creed. M. Duhamel, who was brought up a Catholic, lost all
religion, he said, when he was fifteen years old.
The panacea which Duhamel offers in this book for human suffering
and world ills is the conscious striving for happiness by means of a
sort of “culture of the soul.” He puts a personal construction upon
happiness and holds that it is and should be the object of all humanity
and of the whole world of living things. He quotes Maeterlinck to the
effect that “As man is created for health, so was man created for
happiness.” This soul culture is rather an attitude of feeling toward
things than an attitude of thought. There is no attempt to think out
any of the problems which have puzzled men for ages. Neither is there
any denying of them. He simply says substantially: I am a practical
man. Of course I take things as they are--or as they seem to be--but I
take the best that is in them. I take the sunshine, the flowers, the
wisdom of the ages, the art that has come down to us, the science,
human love, the fine qualities of friendship, work, play, my sorrows
and adversities, even religion--but I take only what is good out
of them all; and I take that temperately, sanely, according to the
limitations which nature and circumstances have imposed. And I am
happy. You can do likewise and you can be happy.
But can I take poverty and want, and particularly can I take them with
equanimity while my neighbour or brother is swaggering with riches,
some of which he has robbed me because he is stronger or cleverer than
I? Duhamel's formula for achieving happiness, as well as his conception
of what constitutes happiness, only fits the average man, and it has
been proven countless thousands of times that there is no such person.
It is sufficient, perhaps, for people who feel normally and do not
think for themselves. So it may be sufficient for the present for a
mass of people who want to be led--if they are pious and healthy.
But how about the people who are different, or who are not healthy,
or who think they are safer custodians of wealth and power than their
so-called brothers? It brings no help to the people who are tortured
by an insistent need to think things out for themselves, or else to
find something which will answer their questions as to the why. Nor
does it tell those who are handicapped, physically, mentally, or even
temperamentally, how they can overcome their handicaps so as to, as it
were, extract the honey from the flowers. The world is full of people
with all degrees of unusualness and abnormality. One may ignore them,
but no scheme of things can deny them. Duhamel uses them by preference
as a basis for his fiction.
In his conception of happiness Duhamel reads himself and his own
emotions into all things. He avers that the algæ growing in a tank of
water with nothing but a few grains of dust and sunlight are happy
because they subsist and work out their humble joy. Has any sentient
soul told him he was happy under parallel circumstances? That is the
question. He reads his own philosophy into the algæ. To him to be
living as nature intended one to live is to be happy. But who can say?
Just here I am reminded of a quotation from Anatole France of which
Duhamel makes use in this book: “Men have cut each others' throats
over the meaning of a word.” People might argue forever over the
meaning of the word “happiness” and never get anywhere.
Duhamel says that happiness is the ultimate end of life and that
religion is the search for happiness in a life to come after this.
Everybody wants to be happy in this life and some people expect to
be happy in a life after this--of these two assertions there can be
no doubt. But Duhamel says there is no life after this, and that the
sole object of life is to be happy in this world. He does, however,
speak of “saving the soul,” and he implies his belief in God. He says
substantially that the plants are happy because they are fulfilling
their destiny, or doing what God meant them to do; and implies that man
will be happy if he does the same. Very likely. But shall he strive to
fulfill his destiny--to do what God meant him to do--merely in order
to be happy? Or shall he strive to fulfill his destiny--and happiness
will follow incidentally? Which should be his conscious end, happiness
or the fulfilment of his destiny? Most religious people would say the
latter. Duhamel says the former. But, for working purposes they are
about the same, except that, for people who are at all temperamental
or who meet with many discouragements, it is frequently difficult to
strive for a happiness which seems elusive. Whereas, such people, if
they are spiritually minded, can always find a stimulus in trying to do
what they were intended to do. And if they believe in God the stimulus
becomes greater. And if they can believe that the soul grows through
every honest effort--that nothing is ever lost, whether the result
appears to be success or failure--and that the limits of its growth
are not bounded by what their senses can tell them in this life, their
capacity for striving becomes sometimes amazing. How else account for
the man who expends ten times the effort in playing a losing game that
he would have spent in one that promised an easy success?
That the soul will find its greatest happiness in the contemplation
of itself, is Duhamel's belief. “He is the happiest man who best
understands his happiness; for he is of all men most fully aware that
it is only the lofty idea, the untiring courageous human idea, that
separates gladness from sorrow,” he quotes from Maeterlinck. A man
should think about his soul at least once every day. But it would
be safe to say that for one man who finds happiness in a life of
contemplation ten find it in a life of action. The wholesome, sane,
average, happy men--of whom Duhamel is an excellent example--are mostly
men of action. The very existence of this book is a contradiction of
his happiness of contemplation theory as applied to himself. It may
well be questioned whether Duhamel would have written “Possession du
Monde” if he had not been the kind of man who finds happiness in giving
expression to every emotion. Besides self-study is safe only for strong
natures. Self-analysis was the undoing of the man in one of Duhamel's
best books, “Confession de Minuit.”
Finally, what is “happiness”? Is it merely a feeling? Gladness? If
that were all, and the ultimate end of life, would not the logical
conclusion be that the happiest--and therefore the most successful--man
would be the joyful maniac?
The publication of M. Duhamel which has the greatest popularity is the
one that his admirers would wish he had not written: “Possession du
Monde.” It is a protest against the evaluation of life commercially,
and a plea for a moral or spiritual standard. This is a topic for an
epoch maker, and one who has not a vision or a plan should not essay
it. M. Duhamel may have both, but he does not reveal them. He displays
only the wish that the world should be better. In the jargon of the
Freudian, it is a wish-fulfilment that does not realise. It is neither
well done nor convincing, and it has been well and convincingly done
by many writers, and still we have not profited by it. Amiel did it;
Maeterlinck did it; Karr did it; and “others too numerous to mention.”
They may have had some effect upon individuals, but the history of
the past eight years shows that they had no effect upon the world
at large, its evolution, or devolution. Moreover, there is a note
of unction and self-satisfaction running through the book that is
displeasing, if not offensive. It is quite true, or likely to be true,
that “to think about the soul, to think about it at least once in the
confusion of every crowded day, is indeed the beginning of salvation,”
but there is a book in which this is said in a more convincing way than
M. Duhamel can ever hope to say it.
Viewed from a literary standpoint alone, the book is in keeping with,
if not quite up to, the standard of his other works. His prose is
always musical, and he often creates an atmosphere rather than an
edifice. He is never emphatic, mandatory, severe, superlative. He is
soft, gentle, often ironical, but always human.
Two remarkable pieces of fiction constitute Duhamel's output since the
four war books: “Les Hommes Abandonnés” (Abandoned Men) and “Confession
de Minuit” (Midnight Confession). The first contains eight histories
which try to prove that when men are gathered together in a crowd they
are abandoned by the individual soul. It is an illustration on the
reverse side in favour of individualism.
“Confession de Minuit” is particularly significant as being named
by the author in the interview as his favourite work. “As a human
research I believe that it is the one with the most meaning,” he said
of this novel; and it is, therefore, a matter of self-congratulation
on the part of the writer that he found this book to be the one
which interpreted to him the author's particular genius in the most
convincing and interesting light The story has its bearing upon the
author's theories because it illustrates more clearly than any of his
other works a statement made by him in the interview:
“People often reproach me with being interested only in my
stories with sick people or with children. Healthy men do
not register the motives which govern them. When one studies
a sick person one is able to see the relations between moral
characteristics which in the healthy man exist, but are hidden.”
However, I hold that the average man, healthy, typical, scarcely
exists in literature, and that the most interesting creations
from the human point of view had for their subjects men who were
unbalanced--from Hamlet to Leopold Bloom; from Raskolnikov to
Dorian Gray.
“Confession de Minuit” is the self-revelation of a man who was
decidedly unbalanced. As a bit of art work the book is unique and
remarkable. Almost the unity of a short-story is preserved without
recourse to any of the usual machinery of the ordinary novel, such as
plot, action, or conversation, except a very little of the most casual
nature. To a person who reads fiction for character delineation this
absence of trappings is a distinct gain.
“Confession de Minuit” is the story of a man than whom a more
uninteresting person could hardly be found in life; and yet as told by
the man himself, Duhamel sustains the interest of the reader in the
recital of pitiful weakness from the first page to the last without one
lapse into dryness or loss of sympathy for the character, with whom, in
the flesh, it would have been hard to feel any sentiment besides pity.
It opens with the incident which causes the man to lose his position
as a small clerk in an office through an utterly senseless--although
perfectly harmless--performance: yielding to a sudden impulse to touch
the ear of his employer just to assure himself that the employer
was really made of flesh and blood, as himself. As society, or in
this case the employer, is more afraid of an insane person than of a
criminal, the reader does not share the man's feeling of injustice
because he is first confronted with a revolver and then thrown speedily
and bodily out of the office where he had been a faithful worker for
several years; although he is able to pity the victim. The story,
as told by the man himself, traces his rapid deterioration through
progressive stages of self-pity, self-absorption, and inability to get
hold of himself, to make an effort to re-establish himself, or even
to seek advice or sympathy, until the last night when he pours out
his “confession” to a stranger, with the statement that, on account
of his failure in every relation in life, he is never going home to
his old mother who has supported him with her small income and her
needlework--nor is he ever going anywhere else, so far as the reader
can see. He does not commit suicide. In fact, the story leaves one with
the impression that he is merely “going crazy.” Whether or not he is
insane when the recital begins with the commission of the insane act is
a matter for neither the novelist nor the critic to state.
The great art of the writer lies in his ability to sustain interest at
a high level in a pure character study of what is frequently described
as a “shut-in personality.”
This novel seems to have been written without reference to the author's
happiness or “cult of the soul” theory. It might almost be construed
as a contradiction of it. One might put a fatalistic construction upon
it, if one did not take a material point of view of health and disease.
I do not see how anyone could get away from the conviction that the
man who makes the “Midnight Confession” of his own pitiful failure
in life is a victim of either his own mental limitations, or else of
his particular environment, or of both. The only other way in which
anyone might account for his utter inability to get hold of life or to
stand up against his first discouragement is the refuge of the Radical
Socialist--that society gave him no chance, the concrete illustration
being the cruel way in which constituted authority, or his employer,
treated his first downward step. But if the author had intended to
condemn the employer and to excuse the man he would hardly have
selected for this step an act which would so readily arouse a question
as to the man's sanity, nor would he have followed the incident with
a story in which the only development was rapidly increasing loss of
touch with the outside world. No philosophy, or religion, or cult could
have helped this man, who was handicapped with a nature so weak that it
could not resist an impulse which would have been suppressed instantly
by any well-balanced person; nor could it have given him the strength
to withstand the simple discouragements that are the inevitable lot of
all men. He simply was not able to cope with something--define it as
one may.
One moral the story teaches. And that is the nobility of sympathy with
even the weakest, most despised, and least interesting of human beings.
M. Duhamel consecrates his life to the prevention of war. It is a noble
gesture. He is gifted, sane, articulate, and temperamentally adapted
and adjusted to the task. Were he a platonist and not a neo-platonist,
I am sure greater success would crown his efforts. Twenty-five hundred
years ago a man who penetrated the mysteries of life and death more
deeply than anyone before or since said to his pupils who had gathered
to speed him to the Great Beyond, the ship having returned from Delos
and the Eleven having decided to release Socrates from his fetters:
“The body fills us with passions and desires, and fears, and all
manner of phantoms and much foolishness; and so, as the saying
goes, in very truth we can never think at all for it. It alone
and its desires, cause war and factions and battles for the
origin of all wars is the pursuit of wealth.”
Until that pursuit can be substituted, the labours of M. Duhamel and
his co-founders of “Clarté” are likely to be in vain.
CHAPTER XI
EVEN YET IT CAN'T BE TOLD--THE WHOLE TRUTH ABOUT D. H. LAWRENCE
About twenty years ago a brilliant, unbalanced, young Austrian Jew
wrote a book, “Sex and Character,” whose purpose was to show that woman
had played a greater rôle in the world than her possessions warranted,
that she was inherently devoid of morality, and that men should cease
to procreate. In the autumn of 1903 its author, Otto Weininger, then
twenty-three years old, shot and killed himself in the house in Vienna
in which Beethoven had died. The author's awful theme and his tragic
end caused the book to be widely read and even more widely discussed.
Amongst those impressed by it was a boy of humble but uncommon
parents, bred in the coal-fields of mid-England where he had led a
strenuous life struggling with the sex question, contending with the
stream of consciousness as it became swollen with the tributaries of
puberty--“Oh, stream of hell which undermined my adolescence.” While
still a youth he felt the influence of another Austrian mystic of the
same faith, Sigmund Freud, who maintains that the unconscious is the
real man, that its energiser and director is the libido, and that
the conscious is the artificed, the engendered man whose tenant and
executive is the ego. By day and by night this exceptionally gifted and
burdened boy took his grist to these two mystic millers. To comfort
himself, to keep up his courage in the dark on his journeys to the mill
and from it, he read the Bible, the poetry of Walt Whitman and Robert
Browning, and the prose of Thomas Hardy. From the Old Testament he got
an unsurpassed capacity for narrative and metaphor, while the “grey
poet” whetted his appetite for worship and exaltation of the human
body. Well might he say of Whitman, as Dante said of Virgil:
“Tu sè'lo mio maestro e il mio autore
Tu sè'solo colui, da cui io tòlsi
Lo bèllo stile che m'à fatto onore.”
Thus D. H. Lawrence, like Jeshurun, waxed fat and kicked, forsook
God which made him, and lightly esteemed the Rock of his Salvation.
And he began to pour forth his protest in a series of books, each a
little more lawless than its predecessor, culminating in “The Rainbow.”
The book was suppressed by the Government of his own country, but
the censors of our “free country,” who pronounced “Jurgen” a book
prejudicial to public morals, allowed “The Rainbow” to be published
here. Perhaps that is the reason “Jurgen” has been published in England
without molest. After that, when Mr. Lawrence wished to circulate his
contributions to world-purification and progress, which many call
pornography, he resorted to the camouflage of “published privately for
subscribers only.”
My information is that Mr. Lawrence is not so widely read in the United
States as are many of his contemporaries, Mr. Compton Mackenzie or
Mr. Frank Swinnerton, for example. But there is a Lawrence cult here
and it is growing, particularly amongst those who like to be called
Greenwich Villagers, the breath of whose nostrils is antinomianism,
especially sex antinomianism. Moreover, he has a way of interpolating
between his salacious romances and erotic poetry books of imagination,
observation, and experience, such as “Bay” and “Twilight in Italy,”
that are couched in language whose swing and go few can withstand.
These are replete with descriptions of sense-stirring scenery and
analyses of sex-tortured souls, analyses which give lyric expression
to the passions of the average man, who finds their lurid and ecstatic
depiction diverting. Finally, Mr. Lawrence is striving to say
something--something of sex and self which he believes the world should
know; indeed, which is of paramount importance to it--and his manner
of saying it has been so seductive that there are probably many who,
like myself, have been clinging to him, as it were, buying his books
and reading him with the hope that eventually he would succeed.
The time limit given him by one of his admirers and well-wishers has
expired. In taking leave of him I purpose to set down my reasons for
severing the emotional and intellectual thread that has kept us--even
though so very loosely, and to him, quite unawaredly--together.
This renders unavoidable a line or two about criticism. I accept
Matthew Arnold's estimate of the function of criticism, “to make known
the best that is thought and known in the world,” providing that the
critic also exposes the poor and meretricious which is being palmed
off as “just as good,” or which is bidding for estimate, high or low.
A guide should not only show the traveller upon whose eyes the scales
still rest, or who has set out on a journey before the dawn, the
right road, but he should also warn him of perilous roads and specify
whether the peril is from bandits, broken bridges, or bellowing bulls.
It is needless to say that the guide should have travelled the road
and should know it and its environment well, and that his information
should be recent.
The road that Mr. D. H. Lawrence has been travelling for the past
decade and more, and making the basis for descriptions of his trips, is
well known to me. I have worked upon it, laughed upon it, cried upon it
for more than a quarter of a century. My information of it is recent,
for there, even now, I earn my daily bread. It is the road leading from
Original Sin to the street called Straight. All must travel it. Some
make the journey quickly; some laboriously. Some, those who have morbid
sex-consciousness in one form or another, inadequate or deviate genetic
endowment, are unable to finish the journey at all.
[Illustration: D. H. LAWRENCE]
Mr. Lawrence seems to have learned early that he could not fulfill
his own nature passionately, and he has been struggling all his life to
find the way in which fulfilment lies. It is generally believed that
“Sons and Lovers” is largely autobiographical and that the writer is to
be identified with Paul. In that book he gave ample testimony that he
could not fulfill himself because of the conflict between mother-love
and uxorial love; for we may venture to catalogue Paul's consortional
experiences under that heading, even though he had no marriage lines.
He has never been able to define just how he expected to fulfill his
nature, but one may legitimately conclude from some of his recent
publications that he believes, if the strings of the lyre of sensuality
can be made taut enough and twanged savagely enough, the tone produced
will constitute not only fulfilment and happiness, but an eternity of
ecstasy, a timeless extension of that indescribable exaltation that
Dostoievsky was wont to experience in moments preceding his epileptic
seizures, which is so vividly described by him and which made such
an impression upon his thoughts and so influenced his imagery. Mr.
Lawrence apparently believes that fulfilment will be meditated by one
“who will touch him at last on the root and quicken his darkness and
perish on him as he has perished on her.” When this happens,
“We shall be free, freer than angels, ah, perfect”;
and,
“After that, there will only remain that all men detach
themselves and become unique Conditioned only by our pure single
being, having no laws but the laws of our own being.”
Finally:
“Every human being will then be like a flower, untrammelled.”
“Ideas and ideals are the machine plan and the machine
principles of an automatonised Psyche which has been so
prejudicial to human progress and human welfare. We must get
rid of them both.”
In fact, it is a world without ideals for which Mr. Lawrence is
clamouring and which he maintains he is in process of creating. It must
be allowed that he is working industriously to do it, but most people,
I fancy, will continue to believe that his world will not be a fit
place to live in should he be able to finish his task. Meanwhile he
is doing much to make the world less livable than it might otherwise
be, particularly for those who are not competent to judge whether any
of Mr. Lawrence's contentions are tenable or any of his statements in
harmony with the evidence of science.
“Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious” contains more misinformation in
a small space than almost any recent book save the “Cruise of the
Kawa.” It may reasonably be expected that anyone who writes upon
psychoanalysis and the unconscious today and expects a hearing should
know something about biology. But no biologist would accept such
dogmatic statements as
“Life begins now, as always, in an individual living creature.
In the beginning of the individual living creature is the
beginning of life, every time and always. And life has no
beginning apart from this.... There is no assignable and no
logical reason for individuality.”
To give such sentences the semblance of truth there should have
been added, “so far as I know.” It is misleading to follow up such
statements by saying, “having established so much,” etc. A poet may be
permitted to say that “The young bull in the field has a wrinkled and
sad face.” Indeed, he may abandon all morphology and animal behaviour
and make the graceful serpent rest its head upon its shoulder! But the
man who invades the field of science should, at least, practise some
accuracy of expression, even though he give himself the latitude of
poetic license.
“The White Peacock” was Mr. Lawrence's first novel. It was favourably
received. Letty, the principal character, is the trial portrait of all
his later heroines. Her creator, in his youth and inexperience, did
not know how to make her “carry on,” but she is the _anlage_ for all
his female characters, their immoralities and bestialities. Her story
is a simple one. Her mother, a lady of fine character, has been put to
the acid test by the moral defalcation of her father, a drunkard and
wastrel with charm. Leslie, a young man with money and social position,
commonplace, emotionally shallow, spiritually inelastic, unimaginative,
but intelligent and straightforward, wooes the temperamental, volatile,
romantic Letty. The appeal which Leslie did not make to her is made by
George, a young farmer “stoutly built, brown-eyed and fair-skinned,”
whom Letty finds “ruddy, dark and with greatly thrilling eyes” and
whom she calls her bull. Meanwhile George and Letty's brother form
a friendship which is in dimmest outline the prototype of that
extraordinary relationship existing between Gerald Crich and Rupert
Birkin in “Women in Love.”
The book shows the influence of Thomas Hardy, after whom Lawrence
in his early youth sedulously patterned himself. In those days he
was concerned with the photographic description of rustic scenes and
particularly the lives of farmers and miners--which he knew from
experience--and showed a sensitive appreciation of natural beauty.
But the interest of the book is in the fact that it contains trial
pictures of most of his later characters. George is Tom Brangwen of
“The Rainbow”; Leslie, grown up and more arrogant, is Gerald in “Women
in Love” and Gerald Barlow in “Touch and Go”; Cyril, more experienced
and daring, is called Rupert Birkin when he is introduced again. In
all of Lawrence's books the same characters appear. They vary only
in having different standards and different degrees of immorality.
The environment is always the same--a mining town; a countryside
pitted with collieries; farms teeming with evidence of vegetable and
animal life which is described with such intensity that the reader
feels he is witnessing a new era of creation; mean drab houses; and
squalid pubs. Into these and the schoolhouses and churches he puts his
sex-tortured men and hyper-sexed women and surges them with chaotic
vehemence of invitation and embrace and with the aches, groans, and
shrieks of amorous love.
His second novel, “The Trespassers,” shows the author to have, in
addition to a sensitive and impassioned apprehension of nature, great
capacity for describing the feelings of commonplace people. Helena,
headstrong, determined, emancipated, self-sufficient, falls in love
with her music teacher, Sigmund, a man of forty who had married when
seventeen a matter-of-fact young woman who gave him many children which
he ill-supported while she slaved and became sour and slatternly.
Helena notices that Sigmund is tired and suggests that they spend a few
days together in the Isle of Wight. She makes the plans, finds a nice
motherly person who will take them into her cottage more for company
than money, and, though this seems to be her first adventure, she acts
with the certainty which attends experience. The scenery and tools
that Mr. Lawrence uses so skilfully are all here: moonlight and its
effect to produce ecstasy; bathing and lying naked on the sand or the
grass and gazing approvingly at the body; lovely flowers and plants;
and above all, a knowledge of the effects of baffled eroticism, of
collision between primitive simple passion and artificial fantasying
aberrant passion. Like Hermione Roddice of “Women in Love,” Helena's
genetic instincts are abnormal. She has her Louisa, ten years her
senior, whom she treats with indifference, cruelty, or affection, as it
pleases her. Early in the history of man the prototype of Helena and
Hermione was known. Shuah's second son, it is alleged, was the first
example. The Lord slew Onan as soon as he deliberately violated the
first and most essential principle of nature, but this drastic measure
did not eradicate the biologic aberration, for it has displayed itself
in the human species from that day to this, and even today gives more
concern to parents and pedagogues than any other instinct deviation.
Fortunately novelists, until the advent of Mr. Lawrence, have not
featured this infirmity.
Even in these juvenile days, Mr. Lawrence left very little to the
imagination. Helena and Sigmund, lying on the cold wet beach in the
twilight, enveloped in the Scotch mist (parenthetically it may be
said that his heroes and heroines are wholly insensitive to bodily
discomfort when they are in the throes of concupiscence) were
practising the “Overture to Love,”
“and when Helena drew her lips away she was much exhausted.
She belonged to that class of dreaming women with whom passion
exhausts itself at the mouth. Her desire was accomplished in a
real kiss. She then wanted to go to sleep. She sank away from
his caresses, passively, subtly drew back from him.”
The next morning Sigmund goes into the sea, and this gives the author
opportunity to display the burning passion which the sight and
contemplation of the male human body seems to cause in him.
“He glanced at his wholesome maturity, the firm plaiting of
his breasts, the full thighs, creatures proud in themselves,
and said 'She ought to be rejoiced at me, but she is not. She
rejects me as if I were a baboon under my clothing.'”
When Mr. Lawrence convinced himself that he could write a more
panoplied description of erotic ecstasy than that with which he
afflicted Helena, he wrote the description of Ursula's encounter with
the moon in “The Rainbow.” Indeed the real motive of “The Trespassers”
is a trial portrait of Ursula; and while making up his mind as to
the size of the canvas and the colours that he would use in painting
that modern Messalina, Mr. Lawrence gave the world “Sons and Lovers,”
which more than any other of his books, gave him a reputation for an
understanding of the strange blood bonds that unite families and human
beings, and for having an unusual, almost exquisite discrimination in
the use of language.
From boyhood Mr. Lawrence seems to have been possessed of a demon who
whispered to him by day and shrieked to him by night, “Be articulate,
say it with words,” and the agony of his impotence is heartrending,
as frustration after frustration attends his efforts. He tries it
in prose, then in verse. Gradually, from taking thought, from sex
experience and from hasty perusal of scientific and mystic literature,
there formulated in his mind a concrete thought, which in time
engendered a conviction, finally an obsession. A brief exposition of
the mental elaboration and the Laocoon grip that it took on him follows:
The Greeks, fanning the embers of Egyptian civilisation and getting no
fire for their torch, said,
“Let there be an ideal to which all mankind shall bow the knee.
Let consciousness and all its manifestations be expressed in
terms of ideals and ideas or in conduct that expresses them, and
finally let everything that tends to hinder such expression,
such as the sensual and animal in man be subdued and repressed.”
Christianity went a step further and said,
“Not only shall ideals be exalted, but pure spirituality and
perfection--man's goal--can only be obtained by the annihilation
of what are called Animal Instincts.”
[Illustration: D. H. LAWRENCE] From a drawing by _Jan Juta._
Christianity's promoters and well-wishers realised, however, that
the continuance of the race depended upon the gratification of these
appetites, and so laws and conventions were made under whose operation
they could be legitimately indulged, there being small hope that the
wish expressed by Sir Thomas Browne, the author of “Religio Medici” and
a flock of children, that man might procreate as do the trees, should
ever be gratified. In civilised lands the conquest of the lower self
has been objective. Man has moved from a great impulse within himself,
the unconscious. Once the conquest has been effected, the conscious
mind turns, looks, and marvels:
“E come quei che con lena affannata
Uscito fuor del pelago alla riva,
Si volge all'acqua perigliosa, e guata.”
This self-conscious mental provoking of sensation and reaction in the
great affective centres is called sentimentalism or sensationalism.
The mind returns upon the affective centres and sets up in them a
deliberate reaction. These are passions exploited by the mind. Or the
passional motive may act directly, and not from the mental provocation,
and these reactions may be reflected by a secondary process down into
the body. This is the final and most fatal effect of idealism, because
it reduces everything to self-consciousness into spuriousness, and it
is the madness of the world today. It is this madness that Mr. Lawrence
has sworn to cure. He is going to do it by conquering what he calls
the lower centres, by submitting the lowest plane to the highest.
When this is done there will be nothing more to conquer. Then all is
one, all is love, even hate is love, even flesh is spirit. The great
oneness, the experience of infirmity, the triumph of the living spirit,
which at last includes everything, is then accomplished. Man becomes
whole, his knowledge becomes complete, he is united with everything.
Mr. Lawrence has mapped out a plan of the sympathetic nervous system
and has manipulated what biologists call the tropisms in such a way as
to convince himself that he has laid the scientific foundation for his
work, but as there is scarcely a page or paragraph in his little book
that does not contain statements which are at variance with scientific
facts, it is unnecessary to say that his science will not assist him
in his propaganda nearly so much as his fiction. Like Weininger, he
finally eliminates women. As he puts it: “Acting from the last and
profoundest centres, man acts womanless.” It is no longer a question
of race continuance. It is a question of sheer ultimate being, the
perfection of life nearest to death and yet furthest away from it.
Acting from these centres man is an extreme being, the unthinkable
warrior, creator, mover, and maker. “And the polarity is between man
and man.”
That sentence contains to him who can read it aright the whole truth of
Mr. D. H. Lawrence. To some that brief statement has the luminousness
and significance of the writing on the wall. Anyone who reads Mr.
Lawrence's later books attentively--and I appreciate that it is some
task to do it--will understand it; and those who, like myself, have
devoted themselves to study of aberrations, genesic and mental, as they
display themselves in geniuses, psychopaths, and neuropaths, as well as
in ordinary men, will sense it correctly.
Mr. Lawrence thinks there are three stages in the life of man: the
stage of sexless relations between individuals, families, clans, and
nations; the stage of sex relations with an all-embracing passional
acceptance, culminating in the eternal orbit of marriage; and finally,
the love between comrades, the manly love which only can create a new
era of life. One state does not annul the other; it fulfills the other.
Such, in brief, is the strange venture in psychopathy Mr. Lawrence
is making, and contributions to it up to date are “Women in Love,”
“Psychoanalysis and the Unconscious,” and “Aaron's Rod.” “The Prussian
Officer,” “The Rainbow,” “The Lost Girl,” “Look, We Have Come Through”
were merely efforts to get his propaganda literature into shape.
The Adam and Eve of Mr. Lawrence's new creation are Tom Brangwen and
his wife; and to understand their descendants (and no one, not even
Mr. Lawrence, can understand them fully) one must study the parents.
Tom, the youngest of the Brangwen family, as a boy is rather heavy
and stupid intellectually, sensitive to the atmosphere around him,
brutal perhaps, but at the same time delicate, very delicate. He does
not get on in school, so he leaves precipitously when he is fifteen,
after having laid open the master's head with a slate, but not before
he has formed a masochistic friendship with a warm clever frail boy.
Sex desire begins soon to torment him. His first experience causes his
sensibilities to rebel, and the second is a failure because of his
self-consciousness and the dominancy of a budding inferiority complex.
He is on the way to anæsthetising desire by brandy drinking, to which
he periodically gives himself, when one day he meets on the street a
demure lady whose curious absorbed flitting motion arrests him and
causes a joy of pain to run through him.
“She had felt Tom go by almost as if he had brushed her. She
had tingled in body as she had gone up on the road. Her impulse
was strong against him because he was not of her sort. But one
blind instinct led her to take him, to have him, and then to
relinquish herself to him. It would be safety. Also he was young
and very fresh.”
Her passional reactions are not from the mind. They are spontaneous
and know no inhibition. After a second quite casual meeting, Tom
goes to the vicarage where she, a Polish lady, is housekeeper since
her husband, a doctor obliged to leave his country for political
reasons, had died and left her and her baby daughter in dire want.
“Good evening,” says Tom, “I'll just come in a minute”; and having
entered, he continues, “I came up to ask if you'd marry me.” He
arouses an intensity of passion in her that she cannot, or wishes
not, to withstand. But Tom is conventional and so they are married.
The description of his marital lust is lurid to the last degree, and
finally after one great debauch “he felt that God had passed through
the married pair and made Himself known to them.” Tom is largely brawn
and brute, though he has a vein of sentiment, and finally he yields
to drink and meets a violent death, leaving two sons, a namesake who
is attracted to his own sex, Fred who suffers the tortures of a
mother-sapped spirit, and Anna, his stepdaughter.
Anna hates people who come too near her until she meets Will Brangwen,
the son of Tom's brother who had flagrantly offended matrimonial
convention. She is fascinated by this æsthetic serious self-satisfied
youth with a high-pitched voice, who sings tenor and who is interested
in church architecture and ritualism. Anna hurls herself at Will's head
and tells him in no uncertain tones of her all-consuming love before
he makes any protests. She arranges the wheat shocks in the moonlight
so that they will propitiate her purpose, but only passionate caresses
and a proposal of marriage result. This disappoints her, but the men
of the Brangwen family, though consumed with elemental passion, are
sex-slackers compared with the women. Will goes into states of ecstasy
sitting motionless and timeless, contemplating stained-glass windows
and other religious symbols, and she hates him violently.
“In the gloom and mystery of the church his soul lived and ran
free, like some strange, underground thing, abstract. In this
spirit he seemed to escape and run free of her.”
They are happy only when in the throes of conjugality. She is
profoundly fecund and has periods of ecstasy when she thinks God has
chosen her to prove the miracle of creation. In her exaltation, big
with child as she is, she dances naked in her bedroom, to the Creator
to Whom she belongs.
In order to develop the now widely disseminated Freudian ideas about
the love of the eldest girl for the father, the antagonism between the
mother and daughter, etc., Will falls in love with his oldest child,
Ursula. “His heart grew red-hot with passionate feeling for the child”
when she is about a year old. “Her father was the dawn wherein her
consciousness woke up wide-eyed, unseeing, she was awakened too soon.”
The writer, master as he is of the mysteries of perversion, uses this
sympathy and Will's extrauxorial vagaries and wanderings to cause,
vicariously, a welling-up of passion in Anna. After a revolting scene
with a grisette, Will goes home to his wife who immediately detects
that there is a change in him, that he has had a new experience. She
is excited to wild lubricity, and “he got an inkling of the vastness
of the unknown sensual store of delight she was.” But this is the book
of Ursula. The spontaneous passions of the grandmother and mother are
incidental.
Ursula goes through with the son of the old Polish clergyman Baron the
same sort of experience that her father went through with the flapper
that he picked up at the movie, only not with such _slancio_. The
purpose of this episode is to point out the intensity of love in the
female and her clamour for the dominant male. When Ursula finds that
Skrebensky is a slacker,
“She stood filled with the full moon, offering herself. Her two
breasts opened to make way for it, her body opened wide like a
quivering anemone, a soft, dilated invitation touched by the
moon. She wanted the moon to fill into her, she wanted more,
more communion with the moon, consummation.”
Since Ursula has not met the one-hundred-per-cent male, and as “her
sexual life flamed into a kind of disease within her,” Mr. Lawrence now
brings her into relations with a finely portrayed Lesbian, Winifred
Inger. The description of their first real contact in the bungalow at
night and their night bath is willfully and purposely erotic. Ursula,
tired of Winifred, plans to marry her to her uncle, Tom. When they meet
“he detected in her a kinship with his own dark corruption. Immediately
he knew they were akin.” One might safely say that Mr. Lawrence had
before him, or in his mind's eye, when he penned the description of
Tom, the photograph of one of his fellow-poets of a generation ago whom
the English public found necessary to put in the Reading Gaol.
“His manner was polite, almost foreign, and rather cold.
He still laughed in his curious, animal fashion, suddenly
wrinkling up his wide nose, and showing his sharp teeth. The
fine beauty of his skin and his complexion, some almost waxen
quality, hid the strange, repellant grossness of him, the slight
sense of putrescence, the commonness which revealed itself in
his rather fat thighs and loins.”
It is in the chapter “The Bitterness of Ecstasy” that Mr. Lawrence
takes off the brakes. In London, whither she has gone with Skrebensky,
Ursula decides to solve the riddle of the Sphinx. She goes about it in
the conventional Brangwen way by biting him, clawing him, and generally
tearing him to pieces. It seems good to him and he likes her and wants
to marry her. One day, after they have had some tall bouts of love at
Richmond, she tells him that she won't marry him and he has a grand
crisis of hysteria. She is sorry she has hurt him. She hails a cab and
takes the sobbing wooer home, and the lecherous cabby is moved nearly
to violence by the radiation of passion from Ursula. She senses danger
and persuades Tony to walk. She knows then that he is but a simulacrum
of man, and when she has gone home she decides that she will not marry.
Finally, however, she gives in and the date is more or less arranged.
Then comes the _grande finale_ with the scene wonderfully set in the
moonlight by the seashore. There she makes an onslaught on him that is
tigress-like to the last degree, throws him on the sand, devours him,
wrings him like a dirty rag, shows him that he is no good, and hurls
him from her, a sucked lemon. He sneaks away and offers himself to his
Colonel's daughter, is accepted, and is off to India, leaving “the need
of a world of men for her.”
Then comes “The Rainbow,” a parody of Freud's exposition of the dream
of being trampled upon by horses. Ursula finds after a time that the
customary result has followed her experiences, so she writes a letter
to Skrebensky saying she'll be good and go out and marry him. She goes
for a walk in the mist and the rain, into the wood where the trees
are all phallic symbols “thrust like stanchions upright between the
roaring overhead and the sweeping of the circle underfoot.” She begins
to hallucinate, to feel her subconsciousness take possession of her,
and the sight of a group of horses fills her bestial soul with a hope
that she might finally be possessed in such a way as would give her
satisfaction, that she might get “some fantastic fulfilment in her
life.” She goes into a state of delirium and several weeks later, when
it has passed, she finds that she has miscarried. This is followed by
a mild dementia; she thinks she is moral and will be good, but as she
gets strong she sees the rainbow, which is Eros kindling the flames
again.
“And she saw in the rainbow the earth's new architecture, the
old brittle corruption of houses and factories swept away, the
world built up in a living fragment of Truth, fitting to the
overarching heaven.”
Mr. Lawrence, exhausted with the perpetration of these sensual delights
and disappointed with the distrusts of the flesh, turned for a short
time to nature to refresh his spirit and bathe his soul. He sensed
frustration despite the unleashment of passion; he realised that
sublimation had eluded him, and so he turned to primitive life and
primitive people, the peasants of Italy. Soon his torments began to
creep up again in “Twilight in Italy.” The roused physical sensations
will not subside. They penetrate pastoral scenes and emanate from
sylvan scenery.
After having refreshed himself, he gave the world “The Lost Girl,”
whose genesic aberrations are comparatively mild, and whose antics
with the half-gipsy, half-circus folk are rather amusing. Some of Mr.
Lawrence's early admirers were encouraged to look for his reformation,
especially after the appearance of a thin book of poems entitled “Bay.”
Even in this, here and there, the inhibited and mother-sapped spirit
crops out, as in the poem called “The Little Town in the Evening,” but
for the most part the verses are founded on sane ideas, even ideals,
truths, and morality. Most of them are poems of the war, wonderful pen
pictures and silhouettes, such as “Town,” a London transformed by the
war as no picture or prose description could render it, ending,
“It is well,
That London, lair of sudden
Male and female darknesses
Has broken her spell.”
In previous volumes of poems, particularly in “Amores” and in “Look,
We Have Come Through,” he had published verse which was highly
appraised by competent critics, and hailed by a small group steeped in
preciosity, as epoch-making. However, if most of his poems have any
central or dominant idea, he is unable to express it. They are the
verbal manifestations of moods expressed symbolically, allegorically;
of sensuous desires, satisfactions, and satieties “seeking polarity,”
to borrow his favourite expression. Nearly everything is passion with
Mr. Lawrence, or suggestive of passion. The pure lily is a phallic
symbol, the bee sucking honey from a flower is a ravisher of innocence,
the earth itself bursts asunder periodically in the throes of secret
sensuality. Only the sea is free from the trammels of lust, and it is
“Sworn to a high and splendid purposelessness
Of brooding and delighting in the secret of life's going.”
“New Poems,” published in this country in 1920, did not fame or defame
him, although “Piano,” “Intime,” “Sickness,” and “Twenty Years Ago”
might well have done the former, and “Seven Seals” the latter.
The lull did not last long, and it was only a lull before a storm,
a hurricane, a tornado which spent its force and destruction upon
the author and made him the outlaw, if not the outcast, of English
literature. “Women in Love” is the adventure of two sisters, Ursula
and Gudrun Brangwen, the Brangwens whose frightful passions we have
now known for three generations, and two men of breeding, wealth,
and culture, Gerald Crich, a Sadist by inheritance and natural
inclination, and Rupert Birkin, an intellectual, apparently male, but
contradicted in this by his instinct and by his conduct, whose purpose
and ambition is to fall into the long African process of purely sensual
understanding.
The portrait of Rupert Birkin is superb. No excerpt could convey Mr.
Lawrence's capacity for characterisation as well as the paragraph which
describes him:
“He was thin, pale and ill-looking. His figure was narrow but
nicely made. He went with a slight trail of one foot, which
came only from self-consciousness. His nature was clever and
separate. He did not fit at all in the conventional occasion.
He affected to be quite ordinary, perfectly and marvellously
commonplace. And he did it so well, taking the tone of his
surroundings, adjusting himself quickly to his interlocutor and
his circumstance, that he achieved a verisimilitude of ordinary
commonplaceness that usually propitiated his onlookers for a
moment, disarmed them from attacking his singleness. He did not
believe in any standards of behaviour though they are necessary
for the common ruck. Anyone who is anything can be just himself
and do as he likes. One should act spontaneously on one's
impulses--it's the only gentlemanly thing to do, provided you
are fit to do it.”
Hermione Roddice, daughter of a Derbyshire baron, a tall slow reluctant
woman, with a weight of fair hair and pale long face that she carries
lifted up in the Rossetti fashion, and that seems almost drugged as if
a strange mass of thoughts coil in the darkness within her allowing her
no escape, is in love with him. “She needed conjunction with Rupert
Birkin to make her whole and, she believed, happy. But the more she
strove to bring him to her, the more he battled her back.”
Gerald Crich, whose gleaming beauty and maleness is like a young
good-natured smiling wolf, flashes upon Gudrun Brangwen and she
succumbs at once, just as the Polish lady did when Gudrun's grandfather
got sight of her from the tail of his eye. The first time Gerald and
Rupert meet “There was a pause of strange enmity between the two men
that was very near to love.” Going up in the train to London together,
they have a talk about ideals, the object and aim of life. This gives
Rupert time to formulate his thought that Humanity does not embody the
utterance of the incomprehensible any more. Humanity is a dead letter.
There will be a new embodiment in a new way. Let humanity disappear as
quickly as possible. They are introduced into bohemia; that is, the
haunts of the semi-abandoned and the perverted. Birkin shares a flat
with Halliday, a degenerate “with a moving beauty of his own,” and his
friends. Just how far this group expresses Mr. Lawrence's own views
of art and philosophy, in their discussion of wood carvings of the
primitive negroes of West Africa, we need not attempt to estimate, but
that need not deter us from saying that the description of a gathering
around the fireplace in a state of complete nudity is indecent and
disgusting, even though Mr. Lawrence thinks this kind of thing marks a
milestone on the way to that which he calls “Allness.”
A large portion of the book is, in my judgment, obscene, deliberately,
studiously, incessantly obscene. Obscenity, like everything else, has
its gradations, its intensities, its variations, and the author of this
book knows how to ring the changes upon obscenity in a way that would
make Aretino green with envy. For instance, the so-called wrestling
scene between Rupert and Gerald is the most obscene narrative that I
have encountered in the English language--obscene in the etymological
sense, for it is ill-omened, hence repulsive; and in the legal sense,
for it tends to corrupt the mind and to subvert respect for decency
and morality. The major part of Hermione's conduct with Rupert is in
the realm of perversion, and Rupert in his speech to her conveys by
innuendo what Mr. Lawrence knows the laws of his country would not
permit him to say directly. The Marquis de Sade was a mere novice
in depicting the transports of lust that result from inflicting
injury or causing humiliation compared with Mr. Lawrence; and as for
Sacher-Masoch, who worked on the other side of the shield, he merely
staked out the claim for a young Britisher to cultivate.
Hermione says that if we could only realise that in the spirit we are
all one, all equal in spirit, all brothers there, the rest would not
matter. There would then be no more struggle for power and prestige,
the things which now destroy. This drives Rupert to violence. He denies
it savagely. We are alike in everything _save_ spirit. In the spirit he
is as separate as one star from another; as different in quality and
quantity. Establish a state on that. This destroys the last vestige of
Hermione's restraint and facilitates the consummation of voluptuous
ecstasy at last. With a beautiful ball of lapis lazuli, a paper weight,
she smashes his skull while he is sitting in her boudoir.
A second blow would have broken his neck had he not shied it with a
volume of Thucydides (a deft touch to make the immortal Greek save the
prototype of the Superman that Mr. Lawrence is introducing while he
buries Greek idealism).
“She must smash it, it must be smashed before her ecstasy was
consummated, fulfilled forever. A thousand lives, a thousand
deaths matters nothing now, only the fulfilment of this perfect
ecstasy.”
But he gets away from her.
“Then she staggered to the couch, and lay down, and went heavily to
sleep”; and he wanders into the wet hillside that is overgrown and
obscure with bushes and flowers. Here Mr. Lawrence gives a classic
description of masochistic lust.
“He took off his clothes and sat down naked among the primroses
... but they were too soft. He went through the long grass to
a clump of young fir trees, that were no higher than a man.
The soft-sharp boughs beat upon him, as he moved in keen pangs
against them, threw little cold showers of drops on his belly,
and beat his loins with their clusters of soft-sharp needles.
There was a thistle which pricked him vividly, but not too much,
because all his movements were discriminate and soft. To lie
down and roll in the sticky young hyacinths, to lie on one's
belly and cover one's back with handfuls of fine wet grass, soft
as a breath, softer and more delicate and more beautiful than
the touch of any woman; and then to sting one's thighs against
the living dark bristles of the fir-boughs; and then to feel
the light whip of the hazel on one's shoulders, stinging, and
then to clasp the silvery birch trunk against one's breast, its
smoothness, its hardness, its vital knots and ridges--this was
good, this was all very good, very satisfying.”
And this is the man who Mr. Lawrence would have us believe was
Inspector of Schools in England in the beginning of the Twentieth
Century! The idea that he wants a woman is now absurd. This is his idea
of bliss. He knows where to plant himself, his seed: along with the
trees in the folds of the delicious fresh-growing leaves. This is his
place, his marriage place.
It may interest Mr. Lawrence to know that this procreative idea of
Birkin's is not original with him. Many years ago I encountered a
man in the Kings Park State Hospital who was of the same belief and
addicted to the same practice.
It would not be convincing if only æsthetes, intelligentsia, artists,
and the like had revolutionary ideas. Gerald, a man of business, an
executive, a coal baron, aggressive, capable, also had them, inherited
from his mother, acquired from Birkin and “made in Germany” where he
had been sent to school. He makes love to Ursula by expounding his
theories of life:
“If only man was swept off the face of the earth, creation would
go on so marvellously, with a new start, non-human. Man is one
of the mistakes of creation--like the ichthyosauri. If only we
were gone again, think what lovely things would come out of the
liberated days; things straight out of the fire.”
He wants her without contract, understood or stated:
“There is a final me which is stark and impersonal and beyond
responsibility. So there is a final you. And it is there
I should want to meet you--not in the emotional, loving
plane--but there beyond, where there is no speech and no terms
of agreement. There we are two stark, unknown beings, two
utterly strange creatures. I should want to approach you and
you me.--And there could be no obligation, because there is no
standard for action there, because no understanding has been
reaped from that plane. It is quite inhuman--so there can be no
calling to book, in any form whatsoever--because one is outside
the pale of all that is accepted, and nothing known applies. One
can only follow the impulse, take that which lies in front, and
responsible for nothing, asked for nothing, giving nothing, only
each taking according to the primal desire.”
In other words, sheer savagery, and the worst African variety at that!
One of Mr. Lawrence's obsessions is that he can distinguish between
the sexual writhings of his characters, depending upon the environment
in which they writhe and the immediate exciting cause. This justifies
him in describing the same writhe over and over with a different
setting. Of the five hundred pages, at least one hundred are devoted
to descriptions of the sensations that precede and accompany ecstasy
provoked and induced by some form of unhealthy sexual awareness.
It is impossible to give even a brief synopsis of “Women in Love.” One
chapter, however, must be mentioned, for in a way it is the crux of the
book. For some time Birkin has been trying to state his case to Ursula
and stave off her clamour for consummation. He wants sex to revert
to the level of the other appetites, to be regarded as a functional
process, not as fulfilment. He wants her to give him her spirit.
“He knew he did not want further sensual experience, he thought.
His mind reverted to the African statues in Halliday's rooms.
They displayed their thousand upon thousand of years of sensual
knowledge, purely unspiritual. Thousands of years ago that
which was imminent in himself must have taken place in these
Africans. This is what was imminent in him; the goodness, the
holiness, the desire for creation and productive happiness
must have lapsed, leaving the single impulse for knowledge in
one sort, mindless, progressive knowledge through the senses,
knowledge arrested and ending in the senses, mystic knowledge in
disintegration and dissolution. Is the day of our creative life
finished or are we not ready for the sensual understanding, the
knowledge in the mystery of dissolution? The man Ursula would
take must be quaffed to the dregs by her, he must render himself
up to her. She believed that love surpassed the individual. She
believed in an absolute surrender to love. He didn't.”
They then have a violent verbal altercation in which Ursula tells
him what she thinks of his obscenity and perverseness in words that
admit of no misunderstanding. She then leaves him in a state of wrath
and resentment after having thrown the topaz engagement ring, bought
from a second-hand dealer, in his face. But her ardour conquers her
righteousness and she goes back to him, saying, “See what a flower I
found you.” And then it is settled quietly and as if they were normal
humans. They go to a hotel and there they have super-corporeal contact
that beggars description. As far as can be made out, there is no
consortion in the ordinary sense. It is neither love nor passion.
“She had established a rich new circuit, a new current of
passional electric energy, between the two of them released
from the darkest poles of the body and established in
perfect circuit, and she had done this in some mysterious
ways by tracing the back of his thighs with her sensitive
fingertips, his mysterious loins and his thighs. Something more
mystically-physically satisfying than anything she had imagined
or known--though she had had some experience--was realised. She
had thought that there was no source deeper than the phallic
source, but now from the strange marvellous flanks and thighs
came the flood of ineffable darkness and ineffable riches.”
They laughed and went to the meal provided. And this is what they had:
“There was a venison pasty, of all things, a large broad-faced
cut ham, eggs and cresses, and red beet root, and medlars and
apple tart, and tea.”
There is a deep, dark significance in this meal, which the Freudian
will understand perfectly, but which to the uninitiated will seem quite
meaningless, even after Ursula says, “What _good_ things. How noble it
looks.”
There is a lot more about the full mystic knowledge that she gets from
his suave loins of darkness, the strange, magical current of force in
his back and his loins, that fills with nausea. They finish by driving
to Sherwood Forest, taking all their clothes off and beginning anew
their effort for fulfilment.
“She was to him what he was to her, the immemorial magnificence
of mystic, palpable, real utterance.”
I have neither the strength nor the inclination to follow Gudrun in her
search for her amatory _Glückeritter_, or to hear further exposition of
the _credo_ of the strange freak of nature that Mr. Lawrence strives
to apotheosise. Suffice it to say that the precious quartette go off
to the Tyrol, Ursula and Birkin having gone through the formality of
marriage; Gudrun and Gerald dispensing with it. And there Gudrun begins
writhings which are designed to put all the others in the shade. And in
a way they do, because Gerald's violent death is required to facilitate
her supreme moment. They introduce a super-degenerate Loerke, a
sculptor, who represents the rock bottom of all life to Gudrun.
“There was the look of a little wastrel about him that intrigued
her, and an old man's look, that interested her, and then,
besides this, an uncanny singleness, that marked out an artist
to her. He had come up from a street Arab. He was twenty-six,
had thieved, sounded every depth. He saw in Gudrun his
soul-mate. He knew her with a subconscious, sinister knowledge,
devoid of illusions and hopes. The degradation of his early
life also attracted her. He seemed to be the very stuff of
the underworld of life. There was no going beyond him. Birkin
understood why they should like him, the little obscene monster
of the darkness that he is. He is a Jew who lives like a rat, in
the river of corruption.”
Birkin and Ursula come back for Gerald's funeral. Birkin does some
soliloquising, the burden of which is “He should have loved me. I
offered him.” He is sure Gerald would have been happy if he had
accepted. When Ursula wants to know if she is not enough for him, he
says,
“No, to make life complete, really complete, I wanted eternal
union with a man too, another kind of love.”
“It is a perversity,” she said.
“Well----,” he said.
“You can't have two kinds of love. Why should you?” she said.
“It seems as if I can't,” he said. “Yet I wanted it.”
“You can't have it because it's wrong, impossible,” she said.
“I don't believe that,” he answered.
And that is the unvarying and final answer of the advocates of the
enigmatic aberration whose doctrines Mr. Lawrence is trying to foist
upon an unsuspecting English-reading public.
In “Aaron's Rod” Mr. Lawrence returns to the theme of “The Rainbow”
and “Women in Love.” His ardour, fortunately, has cooled somewhat, but
his psychology is more at variance with facts and his philosophy more
mystic than in either of these. Aaron Sisson, a miner's checkweighman,
with a talent for music, marries when twenty, an over-sexed young woman
of better social position than himself. Though he soon betrays her,
they manage to live, with their three children, an average family life
for twelve years. He then determines that he will not be the instrument
and furnisher of any woman. He rebels against the sacrament by which we
live today; namely, that man is the giver, woman the receiver. He can
not and will not tolerate the life centrality of woman. Man's contact
with woman should be for procreational purposes, but man should blend
his spirit with man: “Born in him was a spirit which could not worship
woman, and would not.”
So he sets up the Christmas tree for the children, goes out to buy
candles for it, and never returns. Instead, he falls in with a
family group of inverts which the little mining towns always seem to
have--a man of perverted type; his fiancée, a Lesbian, the daughter
of a promiscuous Hermione and her complaisant husband; and several
others--and they proceed to have a mild orgy in the ugly midland
mining town, “in which it is remarkable how many odd or extraordinary
people there are to be found.” Aaron gets a position as flutist in an
orchestra, and at the opera he meets Mr. Lilly, who, though married, is
by nature of inverted genesic instinct. He is Aaron's downfall.
It is to be noted that there is a deep symbolism in the names that
Mr. Lawrence selects for his heroes and heroines. Aaron is sure
that he never wanted to surrender himself to his wife, nor to his
mother, nor to anybody. But he falls ill, and Lilly cares for him and
nurses him like a mother, and then goes off to Italy--Aaron after
him like a hound after the scent. We are introduced to a choice lot
of males in Florence, all portraits of exiled Britishers who find
it suits their tastes, which their country calls their infirmities,
to live there, and easily recognisable by anyone who has lived in
Florence. We are regaled with their philosophy and with Mr. Lawrence's
reflections on art and Sixteenth Century music. Finally, to show
Aaron's charm and concupiscense, the author throws a modern brooding
Cleopatra--Anthony-less--across his path. She is an American woman
from the Southern States whose father was once Ambassador to France.
Aaron capitulates at the second interview and then despises himself.
But again he falls a few days later, and then he realises that there
is nothing left for him but flight, flight to Lilly and abandonment of
the love idea and the love motive. Life submission is his duty now,
and when he looks up into Lilly's face, at the moment resembling a
Byzantine Eikon, and asks, “And to whom shall I submit?” the reply
comes, “Your soul will tell you.”
And my soul tells me that he who submits himself to reading the
doctrines promulgated by D. H. Lawrence deserves his punishment.
Moreover, I maintain that, both from the artistic and the psychological
standpoints, Mr. Lawrence's performances are those of a neophyte and a
duffer. He can make words roar and sing and murmur, and by so doing he
can make moral, poised, God-fearing, sentiment-valuing man creep and
shudder, indeed, almost welcome the obscurity of the grave, so that he
will not have to meet his fellow again in the flesh. He libels and he
bears false witness against man. There are persons in the world such
as Mr. Lawrence describes. So are there lepers and lunatics. We do not
talk about them as if the whole world were made up of them; and we do
not confidently look for world reformers or world orderers among them.
Mr. Lawrence is a self-appointed crusader who is going to destroy
European civilisation and at the same time revivify that of six
thousand and more years ago. He is the most shining avatar of mysticism
the Twentieth Century has yet produced, and the most daring champion
of atavism in twenty centuries. He is using a medium to facilitate his
manifestations and embodiments of which he is a consummate master,
viz., fiction. But his statements, both when he uses the language of
science, and when he uses that of fiction, are at variance with truth
and fact; and he has not furnished, nor can he furnish, a particle
of evidence to substantiate his thesis: enhancement of the awareness
and potency “of that other basic mind, the deepest physical mind” by
sensuous satisfaction or through sexual ecstasy. His “broodings and
delightings in the secret of life's goings” are anathema.
During the past decade biology has accumulated a convincing amount of
evidence to show that sex intergrades, or imperfect sex separation and
differentiation frequently exist, and furthermore it may be produced
experimentally. These facts justify the belief that individuals
with the convictions and conduct of Birkin result from a definite
developmental condition, which is the fundamental cause of the peculiar
sex reactions. Such persons are actually different from fully expressed
males or females, and their peculiar condition is permanent, present
from childhood to old age, and uninfluenceable by any measures;
pedagogy or punishment, mandate or medicine.
My experience as a psychologist and alienist has taught me that
pornographic literature is created by individuals whose genesic
endowment is subnormal _ab initio_, or exhausted from one cause or
another before nature intended that it should be, and that those who
would aid God and nature in the ordering of creation are sterile, or
approximately so. This is a dispensation for which we cannot be too
grateful.
There are two ways of contemplating Mr. Lawrence's effort. Has he a
fairly clear idea of what he is trying to say, of what he is trying
to put over; or is he a poetic mystic groping in abysmal darkness? I
am one of those who is convinced that he knows just what he wants to
accomplish, and that he could make a statement of it in language that
anyone could understand, did the censor permit him. Public opinion
is adequate to deal with the infractions of taste and ethics that he
has perpetrated, and it is quite safe to leave him finally to that
judiciary.
Mr. Lawrence once wrote, “The Americans are not worthy of their
Whitman. Miracle that they have not annihilated every word of him.” To
which I would make rejoinder, “The Britishers have not deserved D. H.
Lawrence. Pity it is that they do not annihilate every trace of him.”
Ten years have gone since Henry James, walking up and down the charming
garden of his picturesque villa in Rye, discussing the most promising
successors of Hardy, Meredith, and Conrad, said to me, “The world is
sure to hear from a young man, D. H. Lawrence.” It has heard from him.
He has sown in glory and raised in corruption. He has triumphed,
and his triumph has stained English literature. He has debased an
unusual talent and devoted his splendid endowment of artistry to
spoking the wheel of evolutionary progress, even to spinning it in a
reverse direction. He has arrived, and in arriving has brought with
him a sweltering, suffocating South African atmosphere, difficult
and dangerous for one of his former admirers to breathe, who as he
withdraws from it ventures to call the attention of others to its
noxiousness.
CHAPTER XII
THE JOY OF LIVING--AND WRITING ABOUT IT: JOHN ST. LOE STRACHEY
Twenty-five years ago, browsing among the second-hand book-shops of
Shaftesbury Avenue, my attention was arrested by a sombre volume
entitled “From Grave to Gay,” by J. St. Loe Strachey.
Until then I had not heard of Mr. Strachey, and though I admit it with
reluctance, I had not even heard of his famous cousin, Henry Strachey,
who was private secretary to Lord Clive. But the subtitle of his
book: “Concerned with Certain Subjects of Serious Interest, with the
Puritans, with Literature and with the Humours of Life, Now for the
First Time Collected and Arranged,” intrigued me. Those were the very
subjects, I had convinced myself, with which I was concerned, for did
they not give spice to life and make for surcease of its burdens? “Now
for the First Time Collected and Arranged” I construed to be a belief
on the part of the writer that from time to time he could substitute
for the word “first” the other numerals in progressive order. Whether
or not he has been able to do so, I have not determined, but every
one knows that he became “editor and sole proprietor” of the London
_Spectator_ and has occupied a conspicuous place in journalism for
the past quarter of a century. And now he recounts his life, or such
parts of it as seem to him will permit others to understand how and
why he has carried on, and he calls it “The Adventure of Living: A
Subjective Autobiography,” stressing “the influences that have affected
my life and for good or evil made me what I am.” He emphasises that the
interesting thing about a human being is not what he is, but how he
came to be what he is, which naturally includes what he does and why he
does it.
Mr. Strachey came to be what he is from his heredity, aided and
guided--after it had formulated itself in the organism to which, a few
months later, the name John St. Loe was given--by Mrs. Salome Leaker,
the family nurse. Once the reader gets her name out of the realm of
risibility, he falls in love with her. A face radiant with a vivid
intelligence, a nature eager and active, a fiery temper--reserved
almost entirely for grown-ups--an appreciation for good literature and
art, which, although she had been brought up in illiteracy, she had
developed by self-education and “threw quotations from the English
classics around her in a kind of hailstorm,” supplemented a genuine
love of children and abounding common sense.
“There was no nonsense in her nursery as to over-exciting our
minds or emotions, or that sort of thing. She was quite prepared
to read us to sleep with the witches in 'Macbeth' or the death
scene in 'Othello.' I can see her now, with her wrinkled, brown
face, her cap with white streamers awry over her black hair
beginning to turn grey. In front of her was a book, propped up
against the rim of a tin candlestick shaped like a small basin.
In it was a dip candle with a pair of snuffers. That was how
nursery light was provided in the later 'sixties and even in
the 'seventies. As she sat bent forward, declaiming the most
soul-shaking things in Shakespeare between nine and ten at
night, we lay in our beds with our chins on the counterpane,
silent, scared, but intensely happy. We loved every word and
slept quite well when the play was over.”
The pen picture of Mrs. Salome Leaker, and the photograph, are of the
book's best. It is not unlikely that Mr. Strachey owes his worldly
success and pleasure quite as much to his nurse as to “the famous men,
and our fathers who begat us,” of whom his father, “though without a
trace of anything approaching pride, was never tired of talking.”
[Illustration: J. ST. LOE STRACHEY] From a drawing by _W. Rothenstein._
In his early childhood he was subject to occasional experiences--a
sense of spiritual isolation with poignancy amounting to awe. Although
he devotes several pages to them he does not succeed in describing
his sensations, but in characterising them. One day while standing
in a passage he suddenly had a sensation of being alone, not merely
in the house, but in the world, the universe. With this came a sense
of exaltation and magnification of personality so ample that it was
difficult to describe. He felt then, though he was only six, that his
soul had become naked. The effect on him was intensely awe-inspiring,
so much so as to be disturbing in a high degree. Though not terrified,
he experienced a kind of rawness and sensitiveness of soul, such as
when a supersensitive mucous membrane is touched roughly by a hand or
instrument. In addition to this awe and sensitiveness, was a sudden
realisation of the appalling greatness of the issues of living, not
only of the imminence but of the ineffable greatness of the whole of
which he was a part. He felt that what he was “in for” as a sentient
human being was immeasurably great. It was thence that the sense of
awe came, thence the extraordinary sensitiveness, thence the painful
exhilaration, the spiritual sublimation. “As a human being I was not
only immortal but _capax imperii_,--a creature worthy of a heritage so
tremendous.”
Mr. Strachey defines his state as one of _isolement_, and further
defines it as ecstasy. The latter term has probably been borrowed from
current psychoanalytic terminology. It is purely a subjective term, and
as this is a subjective autobiography, satisfies his needs, though it
puts us only a little way on the road to understanding.
No objective description of this state has been worked out. A
scheme for it would be elaborate and require more patience than the
behaviourists have so far displayed. They know some things in an exact
way about organic reactions to simplified laboratory situations. They
have never followed out the life history of any of the reactions
they describe, either exactly or in tentative descriptive terms.
Autobiographic writings furnish rich material for an objective
psychologist. Mr. Strachey, for instance, has an unusual memory,
has never suffered any serious breaks in his reaction system, and
would seem not to be subject to any wealth of parallel reactions.
The objective psychologists may, in the not distant future, work
out a description of _isolement_ in terms of organic reactions, and
their life histories in terms of organic memory. I do not see how a
highly organised intelligence in such a setting--reminiscent father,
tradition-ladened background, cultivated and uncultivated mysticism of
his nurse--could have failed to develop some such moments.
It is quite likely that the main outlines of Mr. Strachey's
intelligence as a working mechanism had been laid down, even at this
early age. It was said of him that when a little more than two and a
half years old, when his family was starting on a long journey to Pau,
he insisted that his father should take with him Spenser's “Faerie
Queene!” He must have had in late childhood a rich freight of memories.
An elaborate and delicate set of reaction mechanism, spontaneously
called forth these definite movements of detachment in the interests
of further internal organisation. Moreover, it seems to me entirely a
normal experience, in view of the fact that there was so much incentive
to fantasy and so little progress beyond mere normal ecstasy.
It is a fearsome thing to contemplate how little fruit the arrival of
powers of abstraction bring with them. Immediately Mr. Strachey was
plunged into the artificial region of letters and politics, he made no
effective contacts with scientific and social thinking of his period.
His whole mental career from this standpoint was a gradually elaborated
detachment, significant mainly for its richness, brilliancy, and
generally prevailing consistency.
One other psychic experience he records, a dream during an afternoon
nap: His wife came to him with a telegram in her hand which related
that his son had been killed in a hunting accident in France. The
incident of this telepathic dream from the objective standpoint is not
very significant. The dreamer had plenty of reasons for apprehension
over the welfare of his son, who was in a country where hazards were of
frequent enough occurrence to make some time identity between dream and
occurrence possible. The form of the hazard in the dream could probably
have been traced at the time to some recent event or hearsay, and was
gratuitously attached to the state of apprehension which came to the
surface in the dream state.
The story of one who for a third of a century has been in British
journalism while the world was being recast and remoulded must of
necessity be rich in the raw material of “human interest,” as well as
of history and politics. But it is not this material which the author
of the subjective autobiography has chosen to present. It is with the
adventure of his own life that he would interest the reader. He says,
“Every life is an adventure, and if a sense of this adventure
cannot become communicated to the reader, any one may feel sure
that it is the fault of the writer, not of the facts.”
He quotes Sir Thomas Browne's advice to a son about to write an account
of his travels in Hungary
“not to trouble about methods of extracting iron and copper from
the ores, or with a multitude of facts and statistics, but not
to forget to give a full description of the 'Roman alabaster
tomb in the barber's shop at Pesth.'”
The alabaster tomb in the barber's shop, rather than high politics
or even high literature, is the goal which he has set before him in
writing this book. The test by which he invites judgment of it is the
power to enthrall the imagination of the reader with the sense of
adventure.
The “supreme good luck to be born the second son of a Somersetshire
squire and to be brought up in a Somersetshire country-house” was
reinforced by the influence of parents to whose qualities he pays
tribute in a chapter devoted to memories of his parents, and in another
devoted to the stories told him as a child by his father. These stories
serve to cloak the genealogical facts that always flavour so keenly,
to the adventurer himself, the zest of his adventure. In this case
they leave the reader free to trace, should he possess a relish for
such a trail, through the rattling rust of ancient armour, the spell
of great country houses and other symbols of authority. One may also
trace Mr. Strachey's hereditary urge for literature, for there was a
certain ancestor who “almost certainly knew Shakespeare” and “had a
considerable amount of book-writing to his credit,” including “two or
three pamphlets written by him and published as what we should now call
'Virginia Company propaganda.'” No light is thrown upon the heritage,
guardian angel, or kind fate which was responsible for providing the
adventurer at the outset of his journey with the most fortunate of all
possessions, the temperament to “take the good the gods provide,” and
for relieving him of all encumbrances in the way of “inferiority” and
other complexes, which have become so fashionable a part of the modern
adventurer's equipment.
If, indeed, anything in the way of good fortune was wanting in the
gifts of fate to the author of the autobiography, he was more than
compensated by a disposition which made it easy for him to appreciate
the good qualities of others, even of his mother-in-law--that usually
most unappreciated of all human relations--and to live in unimpaired
serenity in her family. Of her we are told that
“she was an admirable talker and full of clear and interesting
memories. I had no sooner entered the Simpson house and family
than I found that there were a hundred points of sympathy
between us. She had known everybody in London who was worth
knowing ... and had visited most of the political country
houses in England on the Whig side, and most of the neutral
strongholds.”
Aside from the chapters on his parents and old nurse, only a few
glimpses are given of a normal and happy childhood passed in the
good old days when ladies still had time to cultivate the art of
correspondence--of which he says, “I have no time to dwell on my
mother's most intimate friendship with Lady Waldegrave and with their
habit of writing daily letters to each other.” The salient point of his
childhood seems to be that he was saturated with precocity and filial
piety. He was not quite so strong as other boys and was not sent to
public school, and “the irony of accident,” he says, “had designed my
mental equipment to be of a kind perfectly useless for the purposes
of the preliminary Oxford examinations.” Knowledge of literature, a
power of writing, a not inconsiderable reading in modern history, and
a commendable grasp of mathematics were of no use whatever for the
purpose of matriculation. So the youthful Strachey turned to Latin and
Greek and finally entered Balliol as an unattached student. The first
discord in the harmony of his relations with life was sounded when he
became a student at Balliol, where he did not get on well with the Dons.
“I can say truthfully that I never received a word of
encouragement, of kindly direction, or of sympathy of any sort
or kind from any of them in regard to work or anything else. The
reason, I now feel sure, was that they believed that to take
notice of me would have only made me more uppish.”
His recollections of Jowett, the Master of Balliol, are tempered by the
successes and the good fortune that have come to him in the intervening
forty years, but he remains convinced that “the Master of Balliol
evidently felt the Stracheyphobia very strongly, or perhaps I should
say felt it his duty to express it very strongly.” The sarcasm that
Jowett poured upon him on his return to Balliol after his first year
as an unattached student still rankles. But in those early days there
must have been an atmosphere of self-sufficiency, complacency, possibly
one might be justified in saying conceit, that dissolved the testy
Master's inhibitions.
Mr. Strachey is never tired of emphasising the good fortune of his
friendships.
“I have no doubt I was considered odd by most of my
contemporaries, but this oddness and also my inability to play
football or cricket never seemed to create, as far as I could
see, any prejudice. Indeed I think that my friends were quite
discerning enough and quite free enough from convention to be
amused and interested by a companion who was not built up in
accordance with the sealed pattern.”
Nothing better illustrates his mental endowment and his cultural
equipment as estimated by himself than this statement:
“In my day we would talk about anything, from the Greek feeling
about landscape to the principles the Romans would have taken
as the basis of actuarial tables, if they had had them. We
unsphered Plato, we speculated as to what Euripides would have
thought of Henry James, or whether Sophocles would have enjoyed
Miss ----'s acting, and felt that it was of vital import to
decide these matters.”
Good old days, indeed! We can imagine what the fate of the student at
Harvard, let us say, would be today if he shaped his talk to indicate
that “the most important thing in the world” was talk of this kind.
At an early age Mr. Strachey yielded to the urge of poetry writing, and
even had a book of verses printed by a local publisher, of which he
says:
“The thing that strikes me most, on looking back at my little
volume of verse, is its uncanny competence, not merely from the
point of view of prosody, but of phraseology and what I may
almost term scholarship.”
_Omne ignotum pro magni-_ (or _miri_) _fico_. In spite of this he felt
no great desire to adopt poetry-making as his profession.
“Possibly I thought the trade was a bad one for a second son who
must support himself. It is more probable that I instinctively
felt that although it was so great a source of joy to me,
poetry was not my true vocation. Perhaps, also, I had already
begun to note the voice of pessimism raised by the poets of the
seventies, and to feel that they did not believe in themselves.”
“The pivot of my life has been _The Spectator_, and so _The Spectator_
must be the pivot of my book.” His connection with it began when he was
about twenty-six, after he had settled in London to study for the Bar.
The book opens with an account of the spectacular success of his first
adventure of writing for this journal. Armed with a formal introduction
from his father, who had been a friend of the joint editors, Mr. Hutton
and Mr. Townsend, and a frequent contributor to the paper, Mr. Strachey
called at _The Spectator_ office in Wellington Street and listened to
the well-worn story--no less true thirty years ago than it is today--of
“more outside reviewers than they could possibly find work for,” and
received, out of friendship for his father alone, the choice of five
volumes to notice. One of them was an edition of “Gulliver's Travels,”
and it was destined to play a leading rôle in the adventure of John
St. Loe Strachey. Nothing daunted by the indifferent encouragement,
he promptly despatched the completed reviews, and in due time again
presented himself at the office for the sole purpose of returning the
books. Great was his amazement when, instead of a lukewarm reception,
he was immediately asked to select anything he would like to review,
from a new pile of books. When he protested that he had not come to ask
for more books to review, he learned that the position of the editors
had been entirely changed by the review of “Gulliver's Travels,” and
“they hoped very much that I should be able to do regular work for _The
Spectator_. I was actually hailed as 'a writer and critic of the first
force.'” Even a stronger head might have been turned by such praise
from such a source.
This, however, was only the first chapter of his successful adventure
with _The Spectator_. Shortly afterwards, he received a letter from Mr.
Hutton asking him to write a couple of leaders a week and some notes
while Mr. Townsend was away for a holiday. His first leader brought a
delighted response from Mr. Townsend, who requested him to remain as
his assistant while Mr. Hutton was away, and soon afterward suggested,
“with a swift generosity that still warms my heart, that if
I liked to give up the Bar, for which I was still supposing
myself to be reading, I could have a permanent place at _The
Spectator_, and even, if I remember rightly, hinted that I
might look forward to succeeding the first of the two partners
who died or retired, and so to becoming joint editor or joint
proprietor.”
His second political leader, entitled the “Privy Council and the
Colonies,” brought down even bigger game than the first. Fate, always
the ally of Mr. Strachey, so arranged that Lord Granville, then
Colonial Secretary, had been prevented by a fit of gout from preparing
a speech which he was to deliver when he received the Agents-General of
the self-governing Colonies, and he supplied the hiatus by beginning
his speech with the words: “In a very remarkable article which appeared
in this week's _Spectator_”--and then going on “to use the article as
the foundation of his speech,” with the result that Mr. Hutton was
“greatly delighted, and almost said in so many words that it wasn't
every day that the editors of _The Spectator_ could draw Cabinet
Ministers to advertise their paper.”
So the “first two leaders had done the trick.” Still, as the young
adventurer was soon to learn, it was possible for an aspirant to
success to get by both editors, and even a Cabinet Minister, and
still fail of entire recognition from the most critical member of
_The Spectator_ staff. Even this distinction, however, Mr. Strachey
was destined promptly to achieve. “The last, the complete rite of
initiation at _The Spectator_ office,” occurred one day as he was
talking over articles, when
“a large, consequential, not to say stout black tom-cat slowly
entered the room, walked around me, sniffed at my legs in
a suspicious manner, and then, to my intense amazement and
amusement, hurled himself from the floor with some difficulty
and alighted upon my shoulder.... The sagacious beast had
realised that there was a new element in the office, and
had come to inspect it and see whether he could give it his
approval. When that approval was given, it was conceded by all
concerned that the appointment had received its consecration.”
And so, having received the unqualified endorsement of the office cat,
the future “editor and sole proprietor” of _The Spectator_, within a
few weeks of his introduction to the office, had his career mapped
out for him. That Mr. Strachey has been content with that career this
subjective autobiography is likely to convince the most sceptical.
Two chapters are devoted to an estimate of Meredith Townsend, who was
successively his chief, his partner, and later--after Mr. Strachey
became “sole proprietor and editor-in-chief”--merely leader-writer for
_The Spectator_. The sketch of Mr. Townsend, which will undoubtedly
appeal more to British than to American readers, is vivid and
sympathetic, bringing into high relief the rather picturesque side of
an altogether lovable and thoroughly practical personality--although
any weak points which he may have displayed as leader-writer are not
blurred over. His fairness, both toward his junior partner and toward
those who differed with him, is emphasised, as well as his sound
philosophy, his wit, his capacity for felicitous epigram, and his
mental directness and forcefulness.
Mr. Strachey has the same pleasure in recalling his early days with
_The Spectator_ that the aged courtesan is alleged to have in telling
of her youthful _amours_.
“When an occasion like this makes me turn back to my old
articles, I am glad to say that my attitude, far from being one
of shame, is more like that of the Duke of Wellington. When
quite an old man, somebody brought him his Indian dispatches to
look over. As he read, he is recorded to have muttered: 'Damned
good! I don't know how the devil I ever managed to write 'em.'”
When Mr. Strachey became “proprietor, editor, general manager,
leader-writer, and reviewer” of _The Spectator_ he naturally asked
himself: “What is the journalist's function in the State, and how am
I to carry it out?” After reflection and deliberation he decided that
the journalist must be the watch-dog of society, and this in full
recognition of the fact that the watch-dog is generally disliked, often
misunderstood, and burdened with a disagreeable job, even with its
compensations. He defends the watch-dog for barking,
“in a loud and raucous way, even for biting occasionally. It is
good for the dog and it is good for the one who is barked at or
bitten, though the latter, like the boy who is being flogged for
his good, neither sees it nor admits it.”
Mr. Strachey recites a specific instance of his watch-dog methods in
dealing with Cecil Rhodes, whose methods of expanding the British
Empire seemed to _The Spectator_ dangerous and inconsistent with the
sense of national honour and good faith. He therefore
“warned the British public that Rhodes, if not watched, would
secretly buy policies behind their backs and that the party
machine, when in want of money, would with equal secrecy sell
them. And I proved my point, incredible as it may seem.”
Mr. Strachey says that he could, of course, mention other examples of
the way in which this particular watch-dog gave trouble and got himself
heartily disliked, but recounting them would touch living people. Mr.
Strachey does not bow the knee to archaic conventions like “_De mortuis
nil nisi bonum_.”
Next to the watch-dog function of the journalist is that of publicity.
Publicity is one of the pillars of society, and while this has long
been recognised in America, Mr. Strachey says, it is only very recently
that it has come to be thoroughly appreciated in his country. Publicity
is as important a thing as the collection and preservation of evidence
at a trial, but it is not the whole of journalism. Comment is an
important part, and infinitely more important apparently in Britain
than in this country. The journalism of comment may be divided into two
parts: judicial, and the journalism of advocacy. It is the former that
Mr. Strachey has practised or that he has meant to practise.
On the ethics of newspaper proprietorship he thinks that it makes for
soundness that newspaper proprietors should be pecuniarily independent.
It is also most important that they should be men whose money is
derived from their newspapers, and not from other sources. A great
newspaper in the hands of a man who does not look to it for profit, but
owns it for external reasons, is a source of danger. In view of this
opinion, it is interesting to recall that the control of the greatest
newspaper in the world has recently passed, in great part, into the
hands of a man who possesses a considerable portion of one of America's
greatest fortunes.
The chapters of Mr. Strachey's book which should have been most
interesting are those entitled “Five Great Men,” in which he discusses
Lord Cromer, John Hay, Theodore Roosevelt, Cecil Rhodes, and Joseph
Chamberlain. Many will find them the most disappointing, particularly
those who knew in the flesh any of these great men. They would be less
disappointing, perhaps, if they were not so palpably self-laudatory.
Mr. Strachey had a profound admiration for Lord Cromer and he shared it
with thousands of his countrymen and Egyptian well-wishers the world
over. Recalling a visit to Lord Cromer in Cairo, he says:
“Inexperienced as I then was in public affairs, it was a matter
of no small pleasure and of no small amount of pride to find my
own special opinions, views, and theories as to political action
plainly endorsed by an authority so great. In not a single case
was I disappointed or disillusioned either with what had been my
own views or with what were Lord Cromer's.”
This reminds strangely of Mr. Strachey's opinion of the Dons in his
youthful days at Oxford. Future biographers of Lord Cromer will have
to note the fact that “he was, with the single exception of my cousin,
Lytton Strachey, the most competent reviewer I ever had,” and that
“he wrote a review every week for _The Spectator_ on some important
book,” also that “he took an immense amount of trouble to realise and
understand _The Spectator_ view, and to commit me to nothing which he
thought I might dislike.”
In the same way, Mr. Strachey tells with great relish how he won the
approval of Roosevelt with his tact and discretion when the President
invited him to be present at one of his Cabinet meetings, and of
Roosevelt's admiration when Mr. Strachey went with him in floods of
rain for a ride on a dark November evening. In curious contrast to his
statement that on this occasion he was mounted on a superb Kentucky
horse procured from the cavalry barracks, “a creature whose strength
and speed proved how well deserved is the reputation of that famous
breed,” is the photograph of Mr. Strachey on his pony at the end of
the chapter, from which one would not readily gather that he had been
selected by Mr. Roosevelt to accompany him “on these afternoon winter
rides” as a test of men.
Mr. Strachey says that the bed-rock of his political opinions is a
whole-hearted belief in the principles of democracy, and he defines
his conception of democracy as being
“not devotion to certain abstract principles or views of
communal life which have the label 'democratic' placed upon
them, but a belief in the justice, convenience and necessity of
ascertaining and abiding by the lawfully and constitutionally
expressed Will of the Majority of the People.”
He states his belief in the referendum
“in order to free us from the evils of log-rolling and other
exigencies of the kind which Walt Whitman grouped under the
general formula of 'the insolence of elected persons.'”
He admits, however, that a whole-hearted belief in the democratic
principles need not prevent one from having strong views on special
points of policy, and one of his special points of policy is in regard
to Ireland.
“I objected to Home Rule as bad for the Empire, bad for the
United Kingdom, and bad in an even extremer degree for Ireland
herself. If, however, it should be determined that some measure
of Home Rule must be passed, then the existence of the two
Irelands must be recognised in any action which should be
determined upon. When, therefore, the support which the Unionist
party decided on giving to Mr. Lloyd George at the end of the
war made some form of Home Rule seem almost inevitable, I
strongly advocated the division of Ireland as the only way of
avoiding a civil war in which the merits would be with Northern
Ireland.”
One who comes to this delightful narrative as an admirer of the author
may feel, on taking leave of it, that what Mr. Strachey has said of a
famous fellow editor, William T. Stead, might also be said of him:
“Stead, though a man of honest intent, and very great ability,
was also a man of many failings, many ineptitudes, many
prejudices and injustices. Further, there was an element of
commonness in his mental attitude, as in his style.”
Yet this would not be quite fair or accurate. Mr. Strachey is a man
of honest intent and very great ability, but there is no element of
“commonness” in his mental attitude. His admirers would not admit that
he is a man of many failings and many injustices. The word “some”
should be substituted for “many,” in any case. But then there are his
pronunciamentos on Ireland and his recollections of Cecil Rhodes.
CHAPTER XIII
THE KING OF GATH UNTO HIS SERVANT: MAGAZINE INSANITY
For one who has devoted a considerable portion of his life to a study
of the human mind in dissolution there are few things more diverting
than popular disquisitions on the subject of insanity. If popular
comments and interpretations regarding other subjects--world politics,
for instance--are as apropos and penetrating as are those on mental
disorder, the less readers are guided by them the more instructed they
may expect to be.
I have recently read in an important magazine an article entitled
“Up from Insanity” which has all the qualities that a contribution
intended to be instructive and helpful should not have. It reeks
with misinformation, not only misstatement of facts, but unwarranted
inferences and unjustifiable and illogical conclusions.
The Editor of that distinguished and dignified periodical says: “It
is a revealing narrative, genuine down to the latest detail.” And so
it is. It reveals the writer's incapacity to grasp the fundamental
principles of psychology, established experimentally and empirically,
and which have taken their place amongst the eternal truths of the
world; and it reveals that the writer, whether because of his previous
mental disorder, or willfully, is quite ignorant of what has been
accomplished by countless students and innumerable workers in the field
of psychiatry by way of throwing some light upon the mysteries of the
normal mind.
“I am almost a pioneer in the field of written experience of insanity,”
he writes; and yet Mr. Clifford Beers' book, “A Mind that Found
Itself,” and “The Autobiography of a Paranoic,” two comparatively
recent works that are most illuminating and have had a great effect
in concentrating the attention of the public on insanity as a social
problem, must have been known to him.
“It is a privilege conferred upon few men in the world to return
from the dark and weird adventure [meaning insanity] to live a
normal life.”
Considering that upward of one-third of all insane individuals recover,
there is no other interpretation to be put upon this statement than
that the writer of it does not know whereof he speaks.
“A friend of mine lost his mind from thinking too much about his
income tax.”
This may be an attempt at facetiousness on the part of the writer.
No physician who has dealt with the insane has ever encountered an
individual made insane by “thinking too much.” If so, he has been
silent about it.
“I suppose, first of all, you would like to know how it feels to
be insane. Well, it is indeed a melancholy situation.”
It is, indeed, a melancholy situation if you have melancholia, but if
you have mania, and especially if you have certain forms in which your
self-appreciation is enhanced and your belief in your potencies and
possessions quickened to an immeasurable degree, it is far from being a
melancholy sensation. It is a sensation of power and possession which
renders its possessor incapable of believing that any such thing as
depression exists in the world.
“Lately a movement has arisen to change the name of insane
asylums to 'mental hospitals.' We now recognise former madmen
as merely sick people. We used to think of insane people
as wild-eyed humans gnawing at prison bars or raving in a
straight-jacket.”
The casual reader might infer from this that “lately” means within
the past few years, and yet three generations have come and gone
since Conolly, Hack, Tuke and others initiated the movement which
accomplished this.
“It was inconceivable to a well-known New York publisher that
an insane man could play golf, go to Africa, or talk about his
experiences.”
The mental and emotional make-up of “well-known New York publishers” is
enigmatic. There is general agreement on that point, but if there is
one amongst them who believes that an insane man cannot play golf, he
could readily divorce himself from the conviction by driving past any
hospital for the insane. There he will see a golf course and some of
the patients playing, though he will not be able to distinguish them
from “regular” golfers. As for an insane man talking about his golf
or his experiences in Africa, no New York publisher, well-known or
otherwise, would need proof to convince him that an insane man can do
that.
“On my way through New York I called on a celebrated specialist
who told me that I had only six months to live and told me to go
out and hunt, roam the world and make the best of the passing
hours. Six months later that great physician died insane.”
It is to be assumed that the celebrated specialist was a specialist
in diseases of the mind. If that is so, the writer is in error. No
celebrated alienist of New York has died insane within the past quarter
of a century. In the second place, there has never been a celebrated
alienist in New York who would fit the description,
“forty, rich, famous, living in an elegant home amid exquisite
surroundings on University Heights with his wife, one of the
most beautiful women I ever looked upon, a statuesque blonde of
astounding loveliness.”
save in the last qualification. Each one of them has had a beautiful
wife, but none “a statuesque blonde of astounding loveliness.”
If the writer consulted a physician who made that statement to him,
he had the misfortune not only to be insane himself but to seek the
counsel of a physician who was also insane.
The writer of the article says that he will attempt seriously to show
that the centre of the will is distinct from the centre of the mind,
and is a separately functioning organ; but in the stress of relating
his experiences he forgot to do so. In fact, there would be no more
satisfactory way of estimating his mental possessions and equilibrium
than from an examination of this written document.
Those who are experienced with the insane give great diagnostic weight
to their writings, not only the orthography and the syntax, but the
sequence of thought, the rhythm of expression, the continuity of
narrative, the pertinency of reference, the credibility of citation or
example, the discursiveness of the narrative, and the way in which the
writer develops and finally presents the central thought or idea. All
these and other features of the written document are evidences to which
he gives great weight. “Up from Insanity” is neither sequential in
thought nor in narrative. Nearly every paragraph furnishes evidence of
the distractibility of the writer's mind, and the discursiveness of the
entire article amounts almost to rambling. It is marked with journalese
jargon which reminds me of the newspaper accounts of the kidnapping or
spiriting from Cuba of Señorita Cisneros.
The pith of the human document that we are discussing is that “every
man's strength wells up from some centre deeper in him than the brain.”
It does. A man's personality at any moment is the sum total of all
the reactions of every cell or physiological unit in his body; but
acceptance of this fact does not alter the universally accepted belief
that the brain is the organ of mind. To have it said by a psychopathic
individual that his restoration to a normal mental state came after
he had observed “that a double nerve centre at the base of the spine
had been aroused and the function of these centres brought balance and
poise and strength, which was instantly reflected in every movement
and thought, and that these basic nerve centres are the centre of the
will,” neither proves that there is such a centre nor makes it at all
probable that it exists.
Why such humanistic and scientific puerilities as these should have
been taken seriously is not easy to understand.
Our knowledge concerning the human mind is not by any means complete
or satisfactory, but there are certain things about it which we know.
For instance, we know that there is a conscious mind and a subconscious
mind. The discovery in 1866 of the “subliminal consciousness” of the
psychologist (the “unconscious mind” of the psychoanalyst), was called
by William James the greatest discovery in modern psychology. We know
that the person the individual thinks he is is the equivalent of his
conscious mind. The man that he really is is the man his unconscious
mind makes him. The face that he sees when he looks in the glass is the
face that goes with his conscious mind. The face that others see is
the one that fits his unconscious mind. Anyone who would observe the
revelations of that unconscious mind in literature can readily gratify
his wish by reading the “Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,” that
remarkable presentation by James Joyce.
Many believe today that a man's ego or individuality is the equivalent
of this unconscious mind; that therein lies the power of genius,
the source of vision, the springs of inspiration that gush forth in
prophecy, in artistic creation, in invention.
We are now engaged in investigating this subliminal consciousness,
or unconscious mind, with every means at our disposal, and year by
year we are making headway. Our progress is not adequate, perhaps,
to satisfy the impatient and the impulsive, but with each succeeding
decade there is a distinct achievement. Nevertheless, in the
half-century during which we have been working at the matter in a
methodical--perhaps one might almost say a scientific--way, we have
discovered things about the mind which are truly epoch-making.
It is evident that the writer of the article, “Up from Insanity,”
has never been insane. He is a psychopathic individual who has had
distressing episodes. At times these episodes have parallelled with
considerable closeness the features of definite mental diseases such as
manic depressive insanity, at other times they seem to have resembled
the features of dementia præcox; but he never was the victim of either
one. He inherited an unstable nervous system which displayed itself in
youth as a shut-in, markedly sensitive, anti-social personality. Like
the majority of individuals so burdened, he was subject to periods of
excitation, at which times he did things at top speed. Neurologists
call this a “hypo-manic state,” that is, a state that resembles mania
in miniature. Such states would be followed by periods of inadequacy,
of retardation of mental and physical activity, and of depression.
After a severe attack which he suffered when he was twenty-one, he
had what is called in polite circles a “nervous breakdown,” the chief
symptoms being abortive delusions of reference. He thought that certain
parts of his body had changed so materially that it was necessary to
hide them from the gaze of onlookers. It made him sick to look at his
own face. He had to wear coloured glasses in order that others might
not read his secret from his eyes, and his sense of relationship with
everything constituting the external world was disordered disagreeably.
Accompanying this there were a series of symptoms which constitute
“feeling badly,” and all the functions of the body that were concerned
with nutrition were disordered, so that he became weak and lost flesh.
Oftentimes his depression of spirits was so great that he convinced
himself he wanted to die, but he did not embrace a good opportunity to
accomplish this end when it was offered to him. In fact, he struggled
so valiantly with the run-away horse that he checked him and “slid from
his back ingloriously,” physically exhausted. It would be interesting
to know why sliding off the back of a horse who has run away and
whose frenzy has been subdued by the rider should be an inglorious
dismounting. Of course it might be more glorious to tame him to such
a degree that his master could stand upon his back and direct his
capriciousness with a glance or a silken cord, but surely there is
nothing inglorious about any kind of dismount from the back of a horse
who has been transformed from a gentle to a wild animal.
Nevertheless, the experience was a beneficial one. When he reviewed
his prowess he realised that he had imposed his will-power, mediated
by muscle, upon the animal, and it occurred to him, a victim of
aboulia like the majority of psychopathic individuals, that to impose
a similar will-power upon himself would be a salutary procedure. With
this discernment came other revelations. One was that he had always
been lacking in concentration and was easily distracted--psychopathic
hallmarks which can be effaced to a remarkable degree, in many
instances, by training. The first fruit of his labour in this direction
was the discovery that Dr. Cook had been understudying Ananias,
Munchausen, _et al._
In another part of his article he says, with consummate familiarity,
“You are from Missouri when it comes to asking you to accept new
thoughts.” He may be assured that one of his readers is not. New
thoughts are as acceptable to this reader as breath to his nostrils;
but he would claim citizenship in that State if asked to accept it as
an indication of perspicacity to have discovered that Dr. Cook was a
fake.
Despite the fact that the writer of the article had “developed the
sixth sense to a startling degree,” which assured him success as a
journalist, he was chafing under his impotencies when he met a former
medium who “had given up that life since her marriage.” Unlike the
celebrated specialist's wife, who was the most beautiful creature
he had ever seen up to the time he met his own wife, this one was
“the most insignificant little woman I ever saw.” Whether it was her
experience gained as a medium, or as the wife of a rich lumberman of
the Middle West, that prompted her to shy the alleged lunatic, fearing
he would bore her with a narrative of his troubles, or whether she
did not want to rake up her past, cannot be gathered from the meagre
narrative. However, he got from her this nugget of wisdom:
“To be really successful you must get in touch with the great
reservoir of experience.”
From “one of the country's greatest physicians,” the like of which are
his personal friends, he got a paraphrase of the Scripture:
“Learn a lesson from the flowers of the field, be humble and
modest, be natural and play a man's part.”
It was then that calm repose settled upon him, and his nervous energy
returned to the old channels and nourished him.
If Mr. E. J. had only appended a few of his dreams to his human
document, there would be very little difficulty in pointing out the
emotional repression that was at the bottom of all his mental symptoms.
That he conforms to a certain well-known type of psychic fixation
there is very little doubt. He has always been bereft, because he has
a feeling of being spiritually or mentally alone. He never learned to
be independent in mind, but always looked for an uncritical, soothing,
maternal sort of love from people who were not ready or willing to give
it. He has not changed materially. Now that his so-called recovery has
come, and being unable to find what he demands, he takes refuge in the
next best thing, and plays at obtaining it vicariously; he convinces
himself that he is going to devote himself to doing for others “all the
little kindnesses that life offers.”
The layman who would get some knowledge of insanity should avoid such
confessions as that of E. J. If he would make acquaintance with the
self-coddling of a neurotic individual who delights in self-analysis,
self-pity, and exaggeration of his symptoms, and who is a fairly
typical example of juvenile fixation, his purpose will be accomplished
by reading this and similar articles. There is, however, a safer and
more satisfactory way of securing such information, and that is by
reading the writings of Pierre Janet. There he will find the obsessed,
the hysteric, the aboulic, the neurasthenic individual discussed in
masterly fashion, and he will find the presentation unmixed with
mediæval mysticism and puerile platitudes, unflavoured with specious
“uplift” sentiment and psychological balderdash.
On the other hand, he may get real enlightenment from “The Jungle of
the Mind,” published recently in the same magazine, providing he closes
his eyes to the editorial comment and refuses to read the letter “of a
physician of reputation” which sets forth that “according to all our
text-book symptoms of dementia præcox she was surely that.”
The purpose of such editorial comment must be either to suggest that
the enigmatic dissolution of the mind to which Schule gave the name
“precocious dementia” may eventuate in recovery, or to show that
doctors make mistakes. If it is the former, it needs a lot of proof; if
the latter, none whatsoever. Though students of mental pathology know
little or nothing of the causes of the mental disorders of hereditarily
predisposed individuals who get wrecked on the cliffs of puberty, or of
the alterations and structure of the tissues that subserve the mind,
they know, as they know the temperaments of their better halves, the
display, the types, the paradigms of the disease. And the lady who has
recently contributed some notes on a disfranchisement from the state of
_non compos mentis_ to the _Atlantic Monthly_ with such subtle display
of proficiency in the literary art, may be assured that the doctors who
averred she had dementia præcox added one more error to a list already
countless. With the daring of one who hazards nothing by venturing an
opinion, I suggest that she merely made a journey into a wild country
from whose bourne nearly all travellers return. The country is called
“Manic-Depressive Insanity.”
A young woman of gentle birth develops, while earning her bread in
uplift work, “nervous prostration,” that coverer of a multitude of
ills. Her sister's home, to which she goes, brings neither coherence
nor tranquillity. In fact, she gathers confusion rapidly there, and
seeks to get surcease of it in oblivion. After three attempts at
suicide, she is sent to a sanitarium. Six months of that exhausts
her financial resources. This, with increasing incoherency and
fading actuality, necessitate transfer to a state hospital, and
there she remains three years, going through the stages of violence,
indifference, tranquillity, resignation, and finally the test of work
and recreation, culminating happily in probational discharge and
resumption of previous work.
This is the record of thousands in this country and in every civilised
country. The variety of insanity which she had (and it is the commonest
of all the insanities) nearly always terminates in recovery--that
is, from the single attack. There is, of course, the likelihood of
recurrence. How to avoid that is what we are keen to learn from mental
hygienists and from those taught by experience. If this disenfranchised
lady will tell us ten years hence what she has done to keep well and
how her orientation has differed from that of the ten years following
puberty, she will make a human document of value intellectually, not
emotionally, as this one is. Meanwhile, should she be disposed to do
something for future psychopaths, she may record the experiences
of her life from childhood to the period of full development, and
particularly of the decade following her fifth year. If she will do
this with the truthfulness of James Joyce, the chasteness of Dorothy
M. Richardson, and the fullness of Marie Bashkirtseff, it may be said
of her: “Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected
praise.”
It may be literature to describe one's fellow inmates of a psychopathic
hospital, to portray their adult infantilisms, to delineate their
schizophrenias, to recount their organised imageries, but it does not
contribute an iota to our knowledge of insanity, how to prevent it, and
how to cure it.
We need intrepid souls who will bare their psychic breasts and will
tell us, without fear or shame, of their conventionalised and primitive
minds: how the edifice was constructed, the secrets of the architect,
and of the builder. If Dostoievsky had been insane, not epileptic, the
literature of psychiatry would today be vastly more comprehensive.
THE END
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75230 ***
The doctor looks at literature
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Book Information
- Title
- The doctor looks at literature
- Author(s)
- Collins, Joseph
- Language
- English
- Type
- Text
- Release Date
- January 28, 2025
- Word Count
- 94,363 words
- Library of Congress Classification
- PN
- Bookshelves
- Browsing: Literature, Browsing: Psychiatry/Psychology
- Rights
- Public domain in the USA.
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