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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Modernities, by Horace Barnett Samuel
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-Title: Modernities
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@@ -8051,362 +8018,4 @@ INDEX
_Zwischenspiel_, 172, 173
Zola, 118, 136, 145
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44916 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Modernities, by Horace Barnett Samuel
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-
-
-Title: Modernities
-
-
-Author: Horace Barnett Samuel
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 15, 2014 [eBook #44916]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MODERNITIES***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Marc D'Hooghe (http://www.freeliterature.org) from page
-images generously made available by HathiTrust Digital Library
-(http://www.hathitrust.org/digital_library)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- HathiTrust Digital Library. See
- http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc2.ark:/13960/t9d50kh4d;view=1up;seq=9
-
-
-
-
-
-MODERNITIES
-
-by
-
-HORACE B. SAMUEL
-
-Author of "The Land and Yourself," "The Insurance Act
-and Yourself," etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-E. P. Dutton and Co.
-681, Fifth Avenue
-1914
-
-
-
-
-DEDICATED
-
-TO
-
-MRS. GEORGE JOSEPH
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The ten studies which constitute this volume are devoted to individuals
-who are held out as being reasonably characteristic of that modern
-movement of the last and present century which started with the French
-Revolution. At any rate, they were all modern once. For the spirit of
-modernity enjoys, like the priest-god of the ancient grove, only a
-temporary reign, and is speedily killed by its inevitable successor.
-
-It is somewhat difficult to find any common denominator for the
-subjects of these studies. The essays must be left largely to speak for
-themselves. If, however, an attempt were to be made to pronounce of
-what the spirit of modernity really consists, one might suggest that it
-is a spirit of energy, of fearlessness in analysis, whose sole _raison
-d'être_ and whose sole ideal is actual life itself.
-
-The studies on Miss Marie Corelli and Herr Wedekind are here published
-for the first time. Those on Disraeli, Heine, Stendhal, Schnitzler,
-Strindberg, the Futurists, and Verhaeren have appeared as articles in
-the _Fortnightly Review_; while the essay on Nietzsche's "Genealogy
-of Morals" was first published in the _English Review_. I have
-consequently pleasure in expressing my thanks and acknowledgments
-to Mr. W. L. Courtney and Mr. Austin Harrison for their courtesy in
-allowing these articles to be reproduced in their present form. I have
-also to thank the editor of the _New Statesman_ for permission to
-republish my translation from Marinetti's, "The Pope's Monoplane."
-
-I have made additions to the essays on Schnitzler and the Futurists
-with a view to incorporating some reference to the more recent works of
-Dr. Schnitzler and M. Marinetti.
-
- HORACE B. SAMUEL.
-
- Temple, _October_ 1913.
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- STENDHAL: THE COMPLEAT INTELLECTUAL
- HEINRICH HEINE
- THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DISRAELI
- NIETZSCHE'S "GENEALOGY OF MORALS"
- AUGUST STRINDBERG
- THE WELTANSCHAUUNG OF MISS MARIE CORELLI
- FRANK WEDEKIND
- ARTHUR SCHNITZLER
- ÉMILE VERHAEREN
- THE FUTURE OF FUTURISM
-
- INDEX
-
-
-
-
-MODERNITIES
-
-STENDHAL
-
-THE COMPLEAT INTELLECTUAL
-
-
-"I only write for a hundred readers, and of those unhappy, amiable,
-charming creatures without either hypocrisy or morality whom I should
-like to please, I only know one or two."
-
-On the assumption that with the natural growth of the population, "the
-happy few" for whom Stendhal wrote have sufficiently multiplied in this
-country to render it likely that a reasonable number of readers will
-possess these requisite qualifications, it becomes relevant to give
-both some analysis and some appreciation of a man who is perhaps the
-most perfect type of the "intellectual" that Europe has yet produced.
-
-For Stendhal was an intellectual in the fullest sense of the term.
-Neither a recluse scholar nor a rabid doctrinaire, but a man of the
-world and of action, of brain, heart, and sensibility, he sought and to
-a large extent found in the intellect an energetic servant, by whose
-faithful escort he could sally forth on that "hunt of happiness," which
-led him in his variegated career from the field of battle to the bowers
-of love, and from the high plateaux of reverie to the meticulous _terre
-à terre_ observations of psychological science.
-
-Henri Beyle was born in 1783, in Grenoble in Dauphiné, a town whose
-hidebound provincialism he hated consistently from his childhood to his
-death.
-
-"His childhood," to quote from his own autobiography, "was a continual
-period of unhappiness and of hate and of the sweets of a vengeance
-which was always helpless." Loving his mother, according to his
-somewhat pathetic boast, with a man's passion, he lost her at the age
-of seven. On being told that God had taken her away, he conceived
-with immediate logic an implacable hatred against that Deity who had
-deprived him of the being whom he loved most in the world, a hatred
-which, turning into momentary gratitude on the occasion of the death
-of his _bête noire_, his Aunt Séraphie, was finally merged in the
-chilly negation of the honest atheist. Inasmuch as to the quality
-of logic Stendhal added those of rebelliousness and imagination, it
-is not surprising that even in childhood his relations should have
-been inharmonious with his father, a royalist lawyer situated on the
-borderland between the bourgeoisie and the gentry. The royalism of
-his father immediately sufficed to turn Henri into the reddest of
-republicans. The execution of Louis XVI filled his childish heart with
-holy glee, and the guillotining of two royalist priests at Grenoble
-affected him with an elation which, if solitary, was for that very
-reason all the more genuine. So hot indeed was his republican ardour
-that he even forged an official order requiring his enlistment in a
-body of cadets. But although he was unappreciative of his father,
-whom he would refer to in his diaries and letters by the almost
-equally offensive synonyms of "bastard" and "Jesuit," he none the
-less manifested the deepest affection for his maternal grandfather,
-M. Gagnon, a Voltairean doctor of lively intellect and genial
-disposition, and for the cook and the butler of the paternal house.
-
-The child soon began to stimulate by books his naturally precocious
-imagination, stealing in his thirst for knowledge those volumes which
-the solicitude or conventionalism of his father deemed it inexpedient
-for him to read. From _La Nouvelle Héloïse_ in particular he would
-appear to have derived imaginative transports far transcending the
-joys of a prosaic reality. But he had conceived an early aversion to
-poetry by reason of an awful poem by some Jesuit about a fly that got
-drowned in a cup of milk. The reading of Molière, however, dispelled
-the unpleasant association, and his early ambition became crystallised
-into going to Paris and writing a comedy. For apart from the magnetic
-attraction of the metropolis itself, Grenoble exacerbated his nerves.
-Unappreciated at home, he found himself, with the exception of one or
-two genuine friendships, solitary and unpopular at school among those
-masters and schoolfellows whom he already despised. It is interesting
-to remember, parenthetically, that even when a schoolboy he fought a
-duel, and boldly faced the fire of what subsequently turned out to
-have been an unloaded pistol by concentrating his gaze on a distant
-rock. His intellectual ability carried all before him, and he found in
-mathematics a loophole of escape from his provincial prison. Coming out
-top in the examinations he obtained a bourse at the École Polytechnique
-at the age of sixteen, and was sent to Paris with instructions to place
-himself under the protection of M. Daru, a relative of the family
-and the holder of a ministerial appointment. By this time his erotic
-ambitions were beginning to formulate themselves with comparative
-definiteness. He had already experienced a passion for a Mdlle. Kably,
-a local actress, which while never attaining a more advanced stage
-than that of inquiring the way to her lodgings, was none the less
-violent. Anyway, when the boy went to Paris he had finally decided to
-live up to the best of his ability to the Don Juan ideal.
-
-His first sojourn at Paris, however, surprised both himself and
-his parents. With considerable obstinacy he refused to attend the
-Polytechnique and set himself to study privately in his own rooms. But
-the first essay at the single life proved a fiasco. No dashing romances
-coloured his solitary existence, while he was either too nervous or
-too refined to sully his soul with mere mercenary pleasure. He became
-dreamy and ill, and was eventually taken charge of by the Darus. In the
-pompous officialdom of this family his health recovered, but his spirit
-rebelled. He complains bitterly that he not only had to sleep in the
-house but also to dine with the family. He none the less knit a firm
-friendship with his cousin Martial Daru, a brainless and amiable youth
-who subsequently at Milan and at Brunswick taught him the elementary
-rules of amoristic etiquette.
-
-The Marengo campaign gave him an opportunity of practising that
-Napoleonic worship which was his one and only religion. The influence
-of the Darus procured him a commission, and the passage of the St.
-Bernard was one of the landmarks of his life. He drank to the full
-the intoxication of victory which attended the entry into Milan of
-the youthful army, and conceived for the Countess Angela Pietragrua,
-"a sublime wanton a la Lucrezia Borgia," a passion which ten years
-subsequently was duly rewarded. The Milan period was, according to that
-epitaph which he penned himself, "the finest in his life." "He adored
-music and literary renown, set great store by the art of giving a good
-blow with the sabre and was wounded in the foot by a thrust received
-in a duel. He was aide-de-camp to Lieutenant-General Michaud. He
-distinguished himself. He was the happiest and probably the maddest of
-men when on the conclusion of the peace the minister of war ordered the
-subaltern aides-de-camp to return to their regiments."
-
-Returning to Grenoble on furlough, he fell in love with Mdlle.
-Victorine Bigillon, the sister of one of his best friends, whom he
-suddenly followed to Paris, although his leave would appear to have
-been limited to Grenoble. Reprimanded by the authorities he sent in
-his resignation, and "madder than ever started to study with the view
-of becoming a great man." His experiences, subjective and objective,
-during this period are described in his journal with a detail, a
-lucidity, an honesty which are worthy of some mention. For we see now
-officially scheduled and officially annotated all those heterogeneous
-qualities which made up the sum of this man's psychology; his rigid
-intellectualism, his sentimentality, his ambition, his artistic
-enthusiasm, his constant flow of analytical energy (directed now
-against the external world, now against himself, yet scarcely for
-a single moment losing itself in a complete abandon), his love of
-witty conversation, whether his own or that of others, the sweep of
-his intellectual ideals, his intolerance of bores and fools, that
-apprehensive self-consciousness which so often made him the dupe of the
-fear of being duped, his exuberant _joie de vivre_, and "that love of
-glory and sensibility which are only for the _intimes_ friends."
-
-And extraordinarily stimulating are the reflections, charmingly
-interspersed with English phrases, in this breviary of intellectual
-egoism, where the _I_ and the _Me_ enter into a Holy Alliance in their
-heroic conspiracy against the rest of the world. It was mainly this
-self-consciousness which induced Beyle deliberately to set himself to
-become a psychologist. "Nearly all the misfortunes of life," writes
-our twenty-year-old philosopher, "come from the false notions we have
-concerning that which happens to us. Must know men thoroughly." And how
-he scolds himself when he fails to live up to his ideal, and when "his
-accursed mania for being brilliant results in his being more occupied
-in making a deep impression than in guessing others." And so it is that
-he reflects, "what a fool I am not to have the knack of drawing out
-each man to tell his story, which might prove so useful to me," and
-that the man, who was subsequently to style himself by profession "an
-observer of the human heart" developed that "universal desire to know
-all that passes within a man." Though, however, his love of psychology
-was thus, as we have seen, to some extent a case of reaction from his
-own nervousness and of externalised introspection, it is impossible to
-deny the purity of his intellectual enthusiasm. At an age when even the
-chastest of prose writers may well be pardoned for wallowing in the
-debauchery of purple patches, he inscribes in his journal that the sole
-quality in style is lucidity. It was this deeply rooted abhorrence of
-floridity and ostentation that on a subsequent occasion nearly induced
-him to fight a duel with a man who had praised unduly the well known
-"la cime indéterminable des arbres" of Chateaubriand, that _bête noire_
-of Stendhal's of whom he prophesies in English, "This man shall not
-outlive his century." In the sphere of philosophy, characteristically
-enough his logical and mathematical turn of mind embraced with natural
-love and facility the materialism of the French sceptics.
-
-"Helvetius opened wide to him the doors of the world," and he became
-on terms of affectionate friendship with the aged philosopher Destutt
-Tracy. So radical indeed was Stendhal's philosophic bias, that on one
-occasion, feeling presumably more studious than amorous, he neglects
-an assignation with the lady whom he was pursuing, to plunge with even
-greater gusto into a hundred pages of Adam Smith. Though, too, he
-habitually worked twelve hours a day, he would appear to have cut a
-frequent figure in both those formal and Bohemian sets of the capital
-which offered such refreshing contrasts and facilities to artistic
-young men.
-
-His love for Victorine proved unreciprocated. There followed innocuous
-passages with a respectable demi-vierge, referred to in the journal as
-Adèle of the Gate. But Stendhal found his chief distraction in that
-society of authors, men of the world, and actresses whom he met at the
-house of Dugazon, a celebrated teacher of theatrical elocution. In this
-variegated set, where the mutual relations and complications of the
-various members provided a chronic source of interest and speculation,
-Stendhal met a young mother, named Mélanie Guilbert (the Louason of
-the journal), "a charming actress who had the most refined sentiments
-and to whom I never gave a son." To this lady Stendhal set himself to
-lay a siege, which was eventually successful after a quite unnecessary
-duration.
-
-The demeanour of Stendhal in society is highly instructive. A man of
-such abnormal sensitiveness that "the least thing moved him and made
-the tears come to his eyes," he encased himself in an "irony which
-was imperceptible to the vulgar," and, posing with marked success as
-both a cynic and a roué, notes with interest "the terrifying effect
-which his particular kind of wit produced on society." But if his
-deliberate brilliancies won him respect rather than popularity, they
-certainly consolidated his own selfestimation. "Maximum of wit in my
-life--Je me suis toujours vu aller mais sans gêne pour cela," runs
-one of these honest confidences which he made to himself, "without
-lying, without deceiving himself, with pleasure, like a letter to
-a friend." He needed, however, the audience of a salon to put him
-on his mettle, and would appear, at any rate during this period, to
-have been somewhat ineffective in _tête-à-tête_. His journal records
-a lamentable succession of muddled opportunities, of occasions when
-he was too natural to observe his companion with sufficient acumen,
-and of occasions when he was not natural enough. It was the latter
-characteristic, however, which predominated, and even though the
-emotion of his love was genuine, its expression was a bookish and
-theatrical formulation of an already rehearsed ideal, directed quite
-as much to the critical approbation of his own consciousness as to
-the actual object of his wooing. Yet the full gusto of a rich _joie
-de vivre_ palpitates in this incessant cerebration. Time after time
-do we come upon the entry that such and such a day was the happiest
-in his life. And if at times "his only distraction was to observe his
-own state, it was none the less a great one." His very sensibility
-becomes a source of gratification, and he will congratulate himself
-that he has perhaps lived more in a day than many of his more stolid
-friends will live in the whole of their life. The financial problem
-pressed irksomely upon him at this period, and, combining business
-and sentiment, he obtained a position in a house at Marseilles, in
-which town Louason had obtained an engagement. Whether however because
-of parental pressure or because the distractions of business had
-cured him of his passion, he soon left Marseilles for Grenoble, and
-subsequently returned to Paris.
-
-The campaigns of 1806 to 1809 offered new scope to the ambition of
-Beyle, who always rose successfully to practical emergencies and was,
-as he tells us himself, "most simple and most natural in the greatest
-dangers." He was present at the battle of Jena, came several times into
-personal contact with Napoleon, and discharged with singular efficiency
-the fiscal administration of the state of Brunswick.
-
-The next landmark in his life, however, is his passion for the wife of
-his relative, the punctilious but aged M. Daru, a passion the various
-nuances of which are faithfully recorded in those sections of his
-journal headed "The Life and Sentiments of Silencious Harry," "Memoirs
-of my life during my amour for the Gräfin P----y," the narrative of
-the intrigue between Julien and Mathilde in _Le Rouge et le Noir,_
-and the posthumous fragment entitled "Le Consultation de Banti," a
-piece of methodical deliberation on the pressing question, "_Dois-je
-ou ne dois-je pas avoir la duchesse?_" which, it is believed, is quite
-unparalleled in the whole history of eroticism. For with his peculiar
-faculty of driving his intellect and his heart in double harness,
-he analyses the pros and cons of the erotic and ethical situation,
-the qualifications and defects of the lady with all the documentary
-coldness of a Government report. His diary during this period is so
-delightfully honest as to justify quotations: "Tuesday, 18th April
-1810, 1st day of Longchamps. On the whole I think that I love the
-Countess P----y a little." "10th August, I have proved by an evidence
-the truth of my principles about rousing love in the heart of a woman."
-"The 4th August. I was reading the excellent essay of Hume upon the
-feudal government from two till half-past four o'clock; during this
-time she wanted my presence; _au retour_ she cannot say a word without
-speaking of me or to me. J'eus le tort de ne pas hasarder quelque
-entreprise. Mais je le répète j'ai trop de sensibility pour avoir
-jamais du talent dans l'art de Lovelace!"
-
-Stendhal would appear to have treated this particular liaison rather
-as a polite routine of social amenities than as a serious passion. How
-refreshing is his account of the tedium of the relationship: "At Paris
-I have no time for working to Letellier [a mediocre comedy in verse
-which was never finished], I have here nothing but my passion for C.
-Palfy; 'tis a month that I reproach to myself the money that I spent
-without pleasure of mind into those walls."
-
-Towards the autumn of 1811 Stendhal journeyed to Milan, his favourite
-town in Europe whose citizenship he arrogated in his self-written
-epitaph. Renewing his acquaintance with the Countess Pietragrua, for
-whom he had languished in dumb nervousness on his first visit to
-Milan ten years past, he took an especial joy in compensating for his
-previous clumsiness by displaying the easy brilliancy of the man of
-the world. And then on the eve of his departure from Milan he writes
-in English--"I was, I believe, in love." "Après un combat moral fort
-sérieux où j'ai joué le malheur et jusque le désespoir, elle est à
-moi onze heures et demi. Je pars de Milan à une heure et demie le 22
-septembre 1811."
-
-In 1812 Beyle served in the Moscow campaign, having obtained a position
-in the commissariat department. It is characteristic that he should
-have kept his nerve during the whole of that panic-stricken retreat,
-shaving every day, and repelling with considerable sangfroid and
-bravery an attack by the enemy on a hospital of wounded. Disgusted by
-the Restoration, he settled in Milan in 1814, resumed his relationship
-with Mme. Angelina Pietragrua, who would appear to have systematically
-deceived him, and lived generally the life of the dilettante and the
-man of letters.
-
-In 1814 he published his first work, _The Lives of Haydn and Mozart_
-par Louis Alexander Bombet. This pseudonym is partly due to Beyle's
-habitual mania for anonymity and partly to the consciousness that
-the substantial portion of the work had been coolly plagiarised from
-Carpani. Nor do any morbid pangs of conscience appear to have ruffled
-the serenity of the author, who found a precedent for his action in the
-plagiarisms of Molière and a subsequent justification in the money that
-he obtained. Emboldened indeed by his success he published in London,
-in 1817, a series of travel sketches, _Rome, Naples, and Florence_,
-which owed in some places an unacknowledged debt to the _Italian
-Travels_ of Goethe. Yet even so, viewed as a whole the book possesses a
-richness of material, a raciness of observation, a joy of journeying,
-a spontaneity of verve which give it a high rank among travel
-literature and make it eminently readable even at the present day.
-Less a guide-book than a personal narrative, it describes the actual
-life of the period as actually lived by a man who plumed himself at
-thirty on still retaining all the folly of his youth. The author was an
-enthusiast for the theatre, a devotee of the ballet, and a keen wagerer
-of those exquisite ices which formed one of the chief allurements of
-the Scala Theatre. An enthusiastic anti-clerical and an eager reader
-of forbidden political plays at midnight côteries, he yet feels on
-visiting the Church of the Jesuits "a little of that respect which even
-the most criminal power inspires when it has done great things." And
-how simply natural is the following confession of a traveller's faith:
-"I experience a sensation of happiness on my journeys which I have
-found nowhere else, even in the most happy days of my ambition." In the
-same year, 1817, Stendhal published his _History of Painting in Italy_.
-This book is remarkable, not so much by its purely æsthetic criticism
-as by the application to the sphere of artistic criticism of those
-theories of heredity, climate, and environment which were afterwards to
-be so brilliantly exploited at the hands of Taine. Some mention should
-also be made of that simplicity of lyric fervour which distinguishes
-the extremely fine dedication to Napoleon.
-
-In 1821 much to his disgust, Stendhal, accused, and apparently quite
-unjustly, of being a French spy, was forced to leave Milan. This exile
-was all the more irksome as Stendhal's amoristic history had now
-reached its great climax. If Louason had constituted the initiation
-of his youth, Mme. Daru the acme of his social achievement, and the
-Countess Pietragrua the incarnate realisation of his adventurous search
-for ideal beauty, it was in Mèthilde, Countess Dembowska, that his
-mature heart found a passion which though always ungratified remained
-none the less grand. It is instructive to observe how honest was the
-love, how deep the devotion of this official rake for "une femme
-que j'adorais, qui m'aimait et qui ne s'est jamais donnée a moi."
-Particularly significant is it that this man, whose cynicism had gained
-for him the sobriquet of Don Juan, should have condemned himself to a
-three years' fidelity that thereby he might become more worthy of that
-"âme angélique cachée dans un si beau corps qui quittait la vie en
-1825." But it is even more interesting to notice how there mingles with
-this perfectly genuine attachment the most morbid self-consciousness
-and fear of ridicule:
-
- "Le pire des malheurs, m'écriais-je, serait que ces
- hommes si secs, mes amis au milieu desquels je vais
- vivre, devinissent ma passion pour une femme que je n'ai
- pas eue. Cette peur mille fois répétée a été dans le
- fait la principe dirigeante de ma vie pendant dix ans.
- C'est par là que je suis venu à avoir de l'esprit, chose
- qui était la butte de mes mépris à Milan en 1818 quand
- j'aimais Mèthilde."
-
-In 1822 Stendhal published in Paris that book _De l'Amour_ which he had
-composed at odd moments during his sojourn at Milan. Thought by the
-author to be his most important work, and deemed worthy by the public
-of a total purchase of seventeen copies, the work possesses even at the
-present day considerable claims upon the attention. For it possesses
-the unique characteristic of being a treatise on the sexual emotion
-written by an author who was at the same time an acute psychologist
-and a brilliant man of the world, who could test abstract theories by
-concrete practice, and could co-ordinate what he had felt in himself
-and observed in others into broad general principles. While we do not
-propose to enter into a detailed analysis of this work, which occupies
-more than four hundred pages of close print, we may perhaps mention the
-author's fourfold division of love into "amour-passion, amour-goût,
-amour physique, amour de vanité."
-
-We would also refer to just a few of the innumerable maxims with which
-the book is studded, as typical of that naïvely subtle simplicity which
-is so characteristic of our author:
-
-"L'amour c'est avoir du plaisir à voir, toucher, sentir par tous
-les sens et d'aussi près que possible un objet aimable et qui nous
-aime"--"l'amant erre sans cesse entre ces idées: 1. Elle a toutes les
-perfections. 2. Elle m'aime. 3. Comment faire pour obtenir d'elle la
-plus grande preuve d'amour possible?" "Tout l'art d'aimer se réduit,
-ça me semble, à dire exactement à quels degrés d'ivresse le moment
-comporte, c'est-à-dire en d'autres termes à écouter son âme."
-
-And how curious is the following phrase where the point of view of
-this cynical roué seems for once quite in accord with that of the more
-ladylike of our lady novelists: "Le plus grand bonheur qui puisse
-donner l'amour c'est le premier serrement de main d'une femme qu'on
-aime."
-
-But the philosophical breadth of the author is perhaps best manifested
-by that spirit of comparative erotology, which induces him to analyse
-the various nuances of love all over the world from Boston to
-Constantinople, while he traces the connection between each particular
-variation and the climate of the country and the character of the
-people.
-
-With the habitual cleverness of his tongue exacerbated by the
-misfortune of his love affair, Stendhal became a distinguished but
-unpopular figure with the Parisians. Most in his element "in a salon
-of eight or ten persons where all the women have had lovers, where the
-conversation is gay and flavoured with anecdote, and when light punch
-is served at half-past twelve," he was merciless to the philistine and
-the bore, would rally with tactless truth a highly respectable lady
-on her liaison with the Archbishop of Paris, and would snub unwelcome
-declarations with artistic repartee.
-
-Plunging vigorously into the controversy between the Classicism and
-the Romanticists, Stendhal published in 1825 his celebrated pamphlet
-_Racine and Shakespeare_, which denounced the Alexandrine as a
-_cache-sottise_ and vindicated the live modernity of a present age
-against the dead orthodoxy of a past generation. This little work,
-rushed off in a few hours, is one of Stendhal's happiest efforts. The
-style is bright with a lucid enthusiasm and sharp with a malicious
-logic. How crisp for instance is the truth of the following:
-
-"Le Viellard--'Continuons.'"
-
-"Le jeune Homme--'Examinons.'"
-
-"Voilà tout le dix-neuvieme siècle."
-
-_Shakespeare and Racine_ was followed by the _Life of Rossini_, whom
-Stendhal had known personally at Milan, and by _Armance_ (1827), the
-first of that series of novels on which the literary fame of Stendhal
-substantially rests. This work possesses all the essential Stendhalian
-qualities; the vein of Byronism, the contempt for the bourgeois, the
-lucid style, and above all the detailed description of what takes place
-in the interior of the mind. The plot consists of the sentimental
-complications resultant on the consciousness of the hero, who is one of
-those souls made to feel with energy, of his natural disqualification
-for efficient marriage. Yet with a subtlety which is Jamesian in
-everything but the clearness of the style, the actual difficulty is
-never explicitly mentioned, though every nuance of sensitiveness is
-delicately delineated. And with what delicate simplicity does Stendhal
-narrate the suicide of Octave, who has simply married his adored cousin
-in order to leave her the prestige of a rich and honourable widowhood.
-Shortly after the marriage Octave has left his wife and set sail for
-Greece.
-
-"Never had Octave been so under the spell of the most tender love as
-in this supreme moment. He granted to himself the luxury of telling
-everything to Armance except the nature of his death. A cabin boy from
-the top of the mast cried out 'land.' It was the soil of Greece and
-the mountains of the Morea which were to be perceived on the horizon.
-A fresh wind carried on the vessel rapidly. The name of Greece
-reawakened the courage of Octave. I salute you, he said to himself,
-oh land of heroes. And at midnight on the third of March, as the moon
-was rising behind Mount Kalos, a self-prepared mixture of opium and
-digitalis softly delivered Octave from that life of his which had been
-so agitated. He was found at dawn motionless on the bridge, resting on
-some cordage. A smile was on his lips, and his rare beauty struck even
-the sailors charged with his burial."
-
-Stendhal's next work was the well-known _Promenades en Rome_, an
-admirable book entirely free from the taint of the conscientious
-sightseer, but replete with the original observations of an acute
-cosmopolitan who never shrinks from following his fancy along some
-amiable digression. It was however in _Le Rouge et le Noir_, 1830,
-that Stendhal gave to the world his real masterpiece. This work, which
-has become since the end of the last century the revered object of the
-cult of the Rougistes, among whom it is a point of honour to know the
-whole book by heart, and which occupies an equal rank with that of the
-_Comédie Humaine_ or _Madame Bovary_, is remarkable both by reason of
-the intrinsic character of the hero and the psychological technique
-with which the story is told.
-
-The hero, like Stendhal himself, possesses a subjective and sensitive
-mind, rendered tough and virile by the savage energy of the Revolution.
-In fact some previous knowledge both of Stendhal's life and Stendhal's
-character are requisite for the full appreciation of a book which,
-in spite of the fact that the hero is not only a seducer but also an
-attempted murderer, has yet some claim to be regarded as the dignified
-confession of a robust faith.
-
-Julien Sorel is the son of a carpenter in a small provincial town.
-Proved guilty from his infancy of the unpardonable crime of being
-different from the average child, he is harshly treated by his father.
-The Napoleonic legend inflames his imagination, but he lives in the
-time of the Restoration, when it is the Church and not the Army which
-opens a career to the ambitious parvenu. By a stroke of fortune Julien
-obtains when nineteen the post of tutor to the children of the local
-mayor, M. de Rênal. Feeling acutely the degradation of his menial
-position, he violently rebels against his own sensitiveness, as he
-deliberately forges the natural softness of his heart into the most
-brutal iron. Formulating the ideals of pride and success, he determines
-to live up to them at whatever cost either to himself or others. When
-consequently the charming though ordinary Mme. de Rênal begins to
-manifest towards him a somewhat personal interest, he sets himself
-to force the pace, as a matter neither of sensuality nor even of
-politeness, but of sheer self-respect. What for instance are Julien's
-feelings during the first assignation?
-
-"Instead of being attentive to the transports which he was bringing
-into existence, and to those feelings of remorse which somewhat dulled
-their vivacity, the idea of his duty never ceased to be present
-to his eyes. He was afraid of an awful remorse and of an eternal
-stultification if he should deviate from that ideal model which he
-proposed to follow." From being, however, the mere instrument of his
-ethical self-discipline, Mme. de Rênal becomes the sincere object of
-his romantic devotion. But the intrigue is discovered and Julien is
-packed off to a theological seminary. Though a devout freethinker,
-he sacrifices his beliefs to his ambition. His deviation from the
-mediocre pattern renders him unpopular, but his very unpopularity
-only serves to stiffen his perverse obstinacy for success. After
-an agonising struggle he succeeds in winning the due of abilities,
-and goes to Paris to become secretary to the Marquis de la Môle, an
-influential nobleman, drawn after the model of the author's relative,
-Comte Daru. He gains the confidence of his employer, which he rewards
-by an intrigue with his daughter Mathilde (Mme. Daru). Here again it
-is stern devotion to principle, not natural love, which is the motive.
-It is in fact on purely ethical and idealistic considerations that he
-goes to the nocturnal rendezvous in the same spirit that a soldier
-goes to the field of battle or a martyr to the stake. And as Banti in
-that variation of Hamlet's soliloquy of "To be or not to be," which we
-have already considered, clinched the question by the consideration
-that if he did not embrace the opportunity he would regret it all his
-life, so did Julien exclaim: "Au fond il y a de la lâcheté à ne pas y
-aller, ce mot décide tout." Note also the masterly delineation of the
-girl herself, who, yielding originally by reason neither of her love
-nor her weakness, but simply through her romantic desire to emulate
-an illustrious ancestress, falls completely in love and manifests a
-courage which in spite of some affectation is none the less genuine.
-The Marquis de la Môle is compelled to promise to recognise Julien as
-his son-in-law and procures for him a commission in the army. But now
-just when the hero's ambitions are beginning to realise themselves,
-Mme. de Rênal writes, under priestly instigation, a slanderous letter
-to his prospective father-in-law, who withdraws his consent to the
-marriage. Julien in a fit of rage shoots at Mme. de Rênal, gives
-himself up, and dies "poetically" on the scaffold.
-
-It is not surprising that in view of these facts critics lacking
-in subtlety have found the character of Julien the wildest of
-impossibilities, the most monstrous of distortions. It is, however, a
-reasonably safe maxim to assume that those characters in novels which
-are thought to be too bizarre to exist are taken from actual life. In
-this case the actual framework of fact is drawn from the history of
-a young student of Besançon named Berthet, while as we have already
-seen his mental attitude is that of Stendhal himself. While no doubt a
-villain from the ethical standpoint of a modern serial, Julien is none
-the less, viewed more deeply, the Nietzschean knight-errant of energy
-and efficiency, the successful pursuer of a subjective ideal, and a
-perfect example of the Aristotelian virtue of [Greek: _engkrateia_].
-Of all the discontented young idealists of the literature of the late
-eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, who find themselves thrown
-into collision with conventional society, the Werthers, the Renés, the
-Don Juans, the Karl Moors, and the Vivian Greys, Julien Sorel is by far
-the most interesting and intellectually by far the most respectable. He
-has no hysterical and visionary aspirations, no mawkish Weltschmerz.
-A phenomenal power of analysis renders his aim direct and simple.
-He proposes to open the oyster of the world with the sword of his
-intellect. _Le Rouge et le Noir_ is the tragedy of energy and ambition,
-the epic of the struggle for existence.
-
-Reverting from the emotional content of the book to its more technical
-characteristics, it may be claimed that it was the first novel in the
-history of European literature to portray with successful consistency
-a series of characters alternately complex and simple, in a style
-which, whatever might be the personal sympathies and aversions of the
-author, subordinated all picturesque flourishes to his cardinal aim
-of psychological truth. For on the principle that the external life
-is but the mere mechanical expression of the life carried on within
-the mind, Stendhal portrays his characters by describing their mental
-processes. This method is of course most palpable in Julien, who lives
-in a chronic state of soliloquy which fails, however, to blunt the edge
-of his drastic action, and who keeps inside his brain a register which
-tickets every process with the most copious annotations. But even such
-comparatively simple characters as M. Rênal, the purse-proud mayor of
-a petty provincial town; Mme. de Rênal, the conventionally adulterous
-wife; abbé Pirard, the Jansenist priest, all think too according to
-their dimmer lights and their limited intelligences, and their thoughts
-also are duly recorded with scientific precision.
-
-The same year in which _Le Rouge et le Noir_ was published, Stendhal
-wrote his other great work _La Chartreuse de Parme_, which while
-thought by Taine and Balzac, though not by Goethe, to have been his
-masterpiece, certainly lacks the original outlook and concentrated
-force of the earlier work. In this book, which describes all the
-ramifying intrigues of that Italian court life which Stendhal knew and
-loved so well, the rich tapestry of romance is successfully embroidered
-by the needle of the psychologist. The rapid succession of adventure
-is not an end in itself, but simply a means to the setting in motion
-of this numerous array of characters whose cerebral interiors are so
-faithfully portrayed; Fabrice del Dougo, the hero, no Ishmael of the
-intellect like Julien, but a _jeune premier_ with a soul, who runs a
-wild career of military ardour, amoristic extravagance, justifiable
-homicide, and political persecution, only finally to fall in love with
-his gaoler's daughter and die in the self-chosen exile of a Trappist
-monastery; the Duchess of Sanseverina (a reincarnation of Stendhal's
-mistress, Countess Pietragrua), his dashing and magnanimous aunt who
-loves him with an ardour which the reader thinks must at any rate have
-needed a papal dispensation; Count Mosca, the hardened minister and
-man of the world who is yet capable of all the devotion of a grand
-passion; his enemy, the grotesque and plebeian Raversi; the loyal
-and sonneteering coachman, Ludovici; the pretty and amiable little
-actress Marietta with her obstreperous lover and her avaricious duenna;
-Ranuce Ernest of Parma studiously living up to his majestic rôle; and
-most romantic if not most interesting of all, Clèlia Conti, with her
-pathetic clash of amoristic devotion and filial duty.
-
-In 1830 the monetary embarrassments of Stendhal forced him to leave
-Paris and take up the post of consul at Trieste. The Ultramontanes,
-however, with a not unnatural desire to be revenged on a man whose
-attitude to the Church is well crystallised in the phrase that "the
-priests were the true enemies of all civilisation," drove him from
-his position, and he was transferred to Civita Vecchia where he
-remained till 1835, solacing his ennui by the compilation of his
-autobiography and thinking seriously of marriage with the rich and
-highly respectable daughter of his laundress. Returning to Paris,
-Stendhal completed _Lucien Leuwen_, that long posthumous romance of the
-financial, literary, and political life of the age of Louis Philippe,
-a work which, though lacking something of the high vital quality of
-_La Chartreuse_ and _Le Rouge et le Noir_, does ample justice to the
-encyclopædic powers of the author's observation. For here too we
-trace the personal Stendhalian characteristics, the sympathy with
-the isolated intellectual, the contempt for the bourgeois and the
-philistine, the idealisation of an efficiency that is not always
-achieved. We may perhaps give a quotation which well illustrates the
-friendly malice with which this detached novelist treats even his most
-favoured heroes:
-
-"He talked for the sake of talking, he bandied the pro and the con, he
-exaggerated and altered the circumstances of every story which he told,
-and he told a great many and at great length. In a word he talked like
-a young man of parts from the provinces; and consequently his success
-was immense."
-
-And how neat in the subtle simplicity of its irony is the following:
-
-"He was received in this house with that stiffness resulting from
-baulked hopes of matrimony which has the knack of making itself felt in
-such a variety of ways and in so amiable a manner in a family composed
-of six young ladies who are particularly pretty."
-
-Returning to Paris, Stendhal commenced in 1838 the last of his novels,
-the posthumous and unfinished _Lamiel_. Influenced, though by no means
-discouraged by the lack of success of his other novels, he determined
-to write "in a wittier style on a more intelligible subject," and
-with regard to each incident to ask himself the question, "Should it
-be described philosophically or described narratively according to
-the doctrine of Ariosto?" Hence Lamiel, the most fascinating feminine
-character in the whole of the Stendhalian literature. For Lamiel is a
-young woman possessed simultaneously of a brisk intellectual honesty,
-a lively humour, a charming _naïveté,_ and a Nietzschean outlook on
-a tumultuous world. "Her character was based on a profound disgust
-for pusillanimity," and "where there was no danger there she found no
-pleasure." The whole book is crisp with the true comic spirit. The
-scene in particular in which Lamiel purchases her first lesson in the
-essential element of human knowledge, as a mere matter of intellectual
-curiosity, is a masterpiece of racy delicacy. Yet acuteness of
-psychology is never sacrificed to airiness of style. Sansfin the
-malicious hump-backed doctor, Comte D'Aubigné Nerwinde the snob, "a
-serious, prudent, and melancholy paragon always preoccupied with public
-opinion," the plebeian parents of Lamiel, the pompous duchess, the
-conventional young lord, are all portrayed with a delightful malice
-whose satire is never too extravagant to be otherwise than convincing.
-
-But it is Lamiel herself who dominates the book, Lamiel with that
-mixture of high flippancy and deep seriousness which is so essentially
-attractive, ever developing fresh phases in response to her repeated
-change of environment, yet ever retaining a fundamental consistency
-with her original character. It can only be regretted that Stendhal
-should have left unfinished what might well have been possibly the
-greatest, and certainly the most amusing of all his novels, and that
-having traced the adventures of his heroine from her plebeian origin to
-the aristocratic château, and from the aristocratic chateau to Paris,
-he should finally leave her floating jauntily amid all the rich welter
-of Parisian life with only a synopsis of those subsequent experiences
-which if undergone would have entitled her to rank as one of the most
-truly romantic characters in the whole of fiction.
-
-In 1842, Stendhal, with his physical and intellectual faculties still
-unimpaired, died suddenly at the age of fifty-nine. Like his hero
-Julien, he was "game" to the last, and "I have struck nothingness" was
-his self-given substitute for the more orthodox viaticum.
-
-In endeavouring to adjudicate finally the value of Stendhal, it is
-difficult not to yield to the fascination of his cock-sure prophecy of
-his eventual fame. For as Stendhal the man, in his autobiographical
-writings, _La Vie de Henri Brulard, Le Journal_, and _Souvenirs
-d'Egotisme_, would project his ego some years forward and as it
-were shake hands with himself across the gulf of time, so, one can
-almost say, Stendhal, the incarnation of the early nineteenth-century
-Zeitgeist, with his genial greeting, "Je serai compris vers 1880,"
-shakes hands with those modern men of the world who rightly or wrongly
-have imagined themselves to be incarnations of the Zeitgeist of the
-late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as they look back with
-appreciative camaraderie at this earlier manifestation of their own
-selves. And this no doubt is why Stendhal, viewed of course with a not
-unnatural Ultramontane frigidity by such critics as Sainte-Beuve or
-Émile Faguet, has become the spoilt darling of Nietzsche, Taine, and
-Bourget, and indeed all the more intellectual spirits in modern French
-and German literature.
-
-The life of Stendhal no doubt may not have been as ideally satisfactory
-as his theories may have warranted. A man, who professed to find his
-chief interest in life in the erotic emotion, he played as often as
-not the rôle of the unhappy lover. His spasmodic fits of political and
-military ambition spluttered out in the self-complacent consciousness
-of their own intensity. He suffered throughout his life from being a
-dilettante with a financial competence. Yet it is no small achievement
-to have chased happiness so consistently and with so male an energy, to
-have kept unjaded to the last his intellectual gusto and the appetite
-of his _joie de vivre_, and to have been the first man in European
-literature to have put into efficient practice, without thereby in
-any way detracting from the clearness of his own personal note, the
-important principle that the elaborate delineation of character is even
-more the function of the novel than adventurous action or picturesque
-description. And so it is that we entitle Stendhal the patentee of
-psychology, the inventor of introspection, and take our leave of him
-with his own epitaph:
-
- Qui giace
- ARRIGO BEYLE MILANESE
- isse, scrisse, amo.
-
-
-
-
-HEINRICH HEINE
-
-
-Heine seems, viewed superficially, the most baffling, elusive, and
-inconsistent of all writers, the veritable Proteus of poetry. He has
-so many shapes, that at the first blush it seems almost impossible to
-grasp finally and definitely the one genuine Heine. What is really
-this man who is now a gamin and now an angel, whose face seems almost
-simultaneously to wear the sardonic grin of a Mephistopheles and the
-wistful smile of a Christ, this flaunting Bohemian who has written
-some of the tenderest love songs in literature, this cosmopolitan who
-cherished the deepest feelings for his fatherland, this incarnate
-paradox who almost at one and the same moment is swashbuckler and
-martyr, French and German, Hebrew and Greek, revolutionary and
-aristocrat, optimist and pessimist, idealist and mocker, believer and
-infidel?
-
-Yet it is even because of this surface inconsistency, this
-psychological many-sidedness that Heine is a great poet and the one
-who, mirroring in his own mind the complexity that he saw without, is
-typically representative of the varied phases of the early nineteenth
-century. Heine looks at life from every conceivable aspect: he sees
-the gladness of life and rejoices therein; he sees the tears of life
-and weeps; he sees the tragedy of life and cannot control his sobs; he
-sees the farce of life and finds equal difficulty in controlling his
-laughter. "Ah, dear reader," says Heine, "if you want to complain that
-the poet is torn both ways, complain rather that the world is torn in
-two. The poet's heart is the core of the world, and in this present
-time it must of necessity be grievously rent. The great world-rift
-clove right through my heart, and even thereby do I know that the great
-gods have given me of their grace and preference and deemed me worthy
-of the poet's martyrdom."
-
-The first half of the nineteenth century, in fact, in which Heine
-lived, is, like any transition period, disturbed, unsettled,
-paradoxical. The most diverse tendencies boil and bubble together
-in the crucible; the Revolution and the Reaction, Romanticism and
-Hellenism, materialism and mysticism, democracy and aristocracy, poetry
-and science, all ferment apace in the psychological Witches' Cauldron
-of the age.
-
-Heine simply represented the illusions and disillusions of this age, or
-to put it with greater precision, he represented the clash and contrast
-between these illusions and disillusions. To arrive then at a correct
-appreciation of Heine it will be necessary to glance first at the main
-currents of the contemporary events, the political movements of the
-Revolution and the Reaction, and the literary movements of Romanticism
-and Æstheticism.
-
-All these currents flow either directly or indirectly from the French
-Revolution. To the more sanguine and poetical minds of the time the
-Revolution had manifested itself as a species of Armageddon, a gigantic
-cataclysm, which, sweeping away all existing institutions with one
-great shock, was to leave to mankind an untrammelled existence of
-natural and idyllic perfection. These dreamers were destined to be
-rudely disappointed. The Holy Alliance temporarily suppressed the
-Revolution at Waterloo, and an efficient Reaction reigned both in
-France and in Germany. A great religious revival set in in Prussia,
-culminating in the Concordat with the Pope in 1821. The Press was
-gagged by a rigid censorship, while the students at the universities
-were subjected to the most rigorous police espionage. From the point of
-view of the German idealists who hoped for liberty and progress, the
-Revolution had ended in the most dismal of fiascos.
-
-Parallel with the Revolution ran Romanticism, which eventually
-merged in orthodoxy, or, to put it more accurately, in a mystical
-Catholicism. The cardinal characteristic of Romanticism was the
-revolt of the individual against the stereotyped prosaic life of the
-classical eighteenth century. This revolt manifested itself in the
-most untrammelled freedom of the ego, which either took to rioting in
-an elaborate self-analysis, as did Hofmann and Jean Paul Richter, or
-else simply abandoning ordinary life gave itself up to the cult of
-the bizarre, the mystic, the mediæval, and the exotic, and fell in
-love with the Infinite, or, to use the terminology of the school, the
-Blue Flower. Though, however, Heine was in his poetic youth largely
-influenced by the Romanticists (he was, in fact, dubbed by a Frenchman
-with tolerable reason an "unfrocked Romantic"), the essence of his
-maturer outlook on life is far from being romantic. The life-outlook of
-the Romanticists consisted in a vague yearning for the ideal without
-any reference to this earthly life; the life-outlook of Heine on the
-other hand was made up largely of the almost brutal contrast between
-the ideal and the real, between life as it was dreamed and life as it
-actually was.
-
-Another current of thought which it is necessary to mention, though
-of course it exercised rather less influence on Heine than did
-Romanticism, was the æsthetic neo-Hellenic movement represented by
-Winckelmann, Lessing, and to a certain extent by Goethe.
-
-Heine, however, though a lover of the beautiful, lacked almost entirely
-the plastic genius and marble serenity of Hellas, and is, as will be
-shown later, only a Greek in the exuberance of his _joie de vivre._
-To summarise then the main tendencies of the age in which Heine was
-born, we can see these four distinct currents--the glorious ideals of
-the French Revolution, the official reaction against these ideals, the
-cult of the bizarre and the infinite yearning of Romanticism, and the
-Hellenism of the æsthetic movement. Let us now turn to the poet's life,
-and examine the part played by environment, race, and parentage in
-moulding his character.
-
-Heine was born in Düsseldorf on December 1797, and not as is currently
-supposed in 1799.
-
-The Catholic Rhineland, in which Düsseldorf is situated, rebelled more
-than almost any other district in Germany against the despotism of the
-Prussian bureaucracy; it possessed an almost southern _joie de vivre_,
-and only naturally exhibited a distinct inclination to the Catholicism
-of the Romanticists, all of which characteristics in a greater or less
-degree are to be found in Heine.
-
-Further, Heine was a Jew, possessing, in consequence, an hereditary
-tendency to gravitate to the extreme left wing both of thought and of
-politics, while the inborn _Judenschmerz_ in his heart was aggravated
-by the anti-Semitic reaction which followed the benevolent tolerance of
-Napoleon.
-
-The poet's father, Samson Heine, was an easy-going, æsthetic nonentity
-in moderate circumstances, who does not appear to have exercised any
-serious influence on the child's development. This was accomplished by
-the mother, _née_ von Geldern, a cultured and strong-minded woman, and
-a Voltairean by belief, who did her best to foster and stimulate her
-son's youthful intelligence. The favourite authors of the young Heine
-were Cervantes, Sterne, and Swift. Of contemporaries, the two men who
-exercised any real influence were the Emperor Napoleon, and Byron, "the
-kingly man" and the aristocratic revolutionary. Napoleon in particular
-was the god of his boyish adoration. This Napoleonic enthusiasm was
-largely fostered by Heine's friendship with a grenadier drummer of the
-French army named Le Grand, while it reached its climax when he beheld
-with his own eyes the beatific vision of the Emperor himself riding on
-his beautiful white palfrey through the Hofgarten Allee at Düsseldorf,
-in splendid defiance of the police regulations, which forbade such
-riding under a penalty of five thalers.
-
-This worship of the Emperor, moreover, resulted in the wonderful poem
-called "The Grenadiers," written at the age of eighteen. The swing and
-power of the poem have made it classic, especially the great final
-stanza beginning:
-
- "Denn reitet mein Kaiser wohl über mein Grab."
-
-Heine received his early education at a Jesuit monastery. The first
-event of any moment in his life, however, is his calf-love for Josepha,
-or Sefchen, the executioner's daughter, a weird fantastic beauty of
-fifteen, with large dark eyes and blood-red hair. Josepha was the
-inspiration of the juvenile _Dream Pictures_ incorporated subsequently
-in the _Book of Songs_, and exhibiting a genuine power and an even more
-genuine promise.
-
-In 1816 Heine was sent into the office of Solomon Heine, his
-millionaire uncle of Hamburg.
-
-He seems to have been singularly destitute of the financial genius of
-his race, and the business career proved from the outset a fiasco. The
-real key, however, to the three years spent in Hamburg is supplied not
-by Money, but by Love. Having served his apprenticeship in Düsseldorf
-with his calf-attachment to the executioner's daughter, Heine proceeded
-straightway to a _grande passion_ for his uncle's pretty daughter
-Amalie. His love was not reciprocated, and in 1821 the beauteous Amalie
-married a wealthy landowner of Königsberg. This Amalie incident was one
-of the most important in Heine's life, and is largely responsible for
-his early cynicism. He was disillusioned with a vengeance, and could
-now with his own eyes inspect the flimsy material of which "Love's
-Young Dream" is wove. Though, however, a great personal blow, this
-abortive passion is also to be regarded as an invaluable æsthetic
-asset. The poet of necessity is bound to write of his own personal
-impressions and experiences; and it is obvious that the intenser are
-these experiences, the more vital will be his poetry. If Heine's love
-for Amalie was the accursed flame that seared his soul, it was also the
-sacred fire that kindled his inspiration, and it is to Amalie that we
-owe not only a great part of the _Book of Songs_, but also much which
-is characteristic of Heine's subsequent life-outlook.
-
-In 1819, probably because Heine had given convincing proofs of his
-business inefficiency, it was decided that he should go to Bonn to
-study law. He neglected his studies, and it was not long before he fell
-foul of the authorities, owing to his anticipation in the proceedings
-of the Burschenschaften or student political unions.
-
-In 1820 Heine left Bonn for Göttingen. At Göttingen his career was
-brief but thrilling, and he was rusticated after a few months on
-account of a proposed duel with an impertinent _junker_.
-
-Transferring his quarters to Berlin, he now spent by far the most
-enjoyable period of his university career. The intellectual atmosphere
-of Berlin was quicker and less pedantic than that of Göttingen, and he
-plunged into his studies with considerable energy.
-
-In 1821 Heine published the first volume of his poems, containing the
-_Dream Pictures_, some miscellaneous juvenile poems, and the _Lyrisches
-Intermezzo,_ which was inspired by the banker's, in the same way that
-the _Dream Pictures_ had been inspired by the executioner's, daughter.
-
-The book was an immediate success, how great may be gauged by the
-numerous parodies and imitations which it almost instantaneously
-evoked. It was at this period that he wrote the two romantic tragedies
-of _Ratcliff_ and _Almansor_. Both failures and devoid of much merit,
-they served none the less useful purpose of advertising his fame.
-
-In 1823 we see an echo of his passion for Amalie in his love for his
-younger cousin Therese, who seems in many respects to have been a
-replica of her elder sister. Therese, however, refused to be anything
-more than a cousin to him, and his heart was still further embittered
-as is shown by the poem:
-
- "Wer zum erstenmale liebt
- Sei's auch glücklos ist ein Gott
- Aber wer zum zweitenmale
- Glücklos liebt, er ist ein Narr
- Ich, ein solcher Narr, ich liebe
- Wieder ohne Gegenliebe;
- Sonne, Mond und Sterne lachen
- Und ich lache mit und sterbe."
-
-In 1824 he decided to prosecute his studies for his doctorial degree
-with greater seriousness, and leaving behind him the distractions
-of the capital, went back once more to the more staid and prosaic
-Gottingen.
-
-Heine intended not merely to take a degree for the sake of ornament,
-but also to practise seriously as a lawyer. How serious were these
-intentions may be seen from the fact that he went to the length of
-paying in advance the heavy entrance fee which the legal profession
-then exacted from Jews, and became baptized "as a Protestant and a
-Lutheran to boot" on June 28, 1825.
-
-Heine's conversion has frequently been criticised with superfluous
-harshness. Let him, however, explain his position for himself:
-
- "At that time I myself was still a god, and none of the
- positive religions had more value for me than another; I
- could only wear their uniforms as a matter of courtesy,
- on the same principle that the Emperor of Russia dresses
- himself up as an officer of the Prussian Guard when he
- honours his imperial cousin with a visit to Potsdam."
-
-After all, his apostasy brought with it its own punishment, not only
-in its deep-felt shame, but in the fact that he eventually threw up
-law for literature, and thus rendered so great a sacrifice of racial
-loyalty and his own self-respect consummately futile. After selling
-his birthright he found that he had absolutely no use for the mess of
-pottage which he had purchased.
-
-In the summer of 1825, Heine, having just succeeded in passing his
-degree, proceeded to the little island of Norderney, off the coast of
-Holland, to recuperate. Living ardently the simple life and indulging
-to the full his passion for the sea, he now wrote not only the second
-part of the _Reisebilder,_ entitled _Norderney_, but the far greater
-_Nordsee Cyklus,_ which in its irregular swinging metre expresses with
-such marvellous efficiency the whole roar and grandeur of the ocean.
-Speaking generally, of course, Heine was too subjective to be a real
-nature poet. No writer, it is true, fills up so freely and with so
-fantastic an elegance the blank cheques of nightingales and violets,
-lilies and roses, stars and moonshine, yet none the less these rather
-served to grace his measure than as his real flame. His one genuine
-love was the sea. With the sea he felt a deep psychological affinity.
-The sea was the symbol of his own infinite restlessness, of his own
-divine discontent, and mirrored in the sea's ever-changing waters he
-beheld the incessant smiles and storms of his own soul.
-
- "I love the sea, even as my own soul," he writes. "Often
- do I fancy that the sea is in truth my very soul; and
- as in the sea there are hidden water-plants that only
- swim up to the surface at the moment of their bloom and
- sink down again at the moment of their decay, even so
- do wondrous flower-pictures swim up out of the depths
- of my soul, spread their light and fragrance, and again
- vanish."
-
-In 1826 Heine published the _Heimkehr_, the _Nordsee Cyklus_, the airy
-and sparkling _Harzreise_, and the first part of the _Reisebilder_.
-
-From Norderney Heine moved to Hamburg, avowedly to practise, though
-it does not appear that he took his profession with much seriousness.
-At any rate, until 1831, when he migrated to Paris, his career is
-excessively erratic. At one moment he is paying a flying visit to
-England, "the land of roast beef and Yorkshire plum-pudding, where
-the machines behave like men and the men like machines"; at another
-he is on the staff of the _Allgemeinen Politischen Annalen_ and the
-_Morgenblatt_ of Munich; he is now in Hamburg, now in Frankfurt, and
-now in Italy, where his sojourn inspired the racy and brilliant _Italy_
-and _Baths of Lucca_, both of which works obtained the gratuitous and
-well-merited state advertisement of prohibition, and achieved a most
-undeniable _succès de scandale_.
-
-The departure to Paris marks an entirely new epoch in Heine's life, and
-offers a convenient stopping-place at which to give some account of his
-early poetry and prose, as exemplified in the _Book of Songs_, which
-was published in 1827, and the _Reisebilder_, the last part of which,
-the _Baths of Lucca_, was published in 1831.
-
-Though neither the _Book of Songs_ nor the _Reisebilder_ is as great
-or as characteristic as the _Romanzero_ and _Poetische Nachlese_ on
-the one hand, or the _Salon_ on the other, they are yet by far the
-most popular of his works and contain some of his most delightful
-writing. One of the first traits that strikes us in the _Book of
-Songs_ is the Romantic tendency to bizarre and exotic themes. In the
-_Junge Leiden_ and _Lyrisches Intermezzo_ in particular we move in a
-ghostly atmosphere of apparitions, sea-maidens, skeletons, and midnight
-churchyards. Another interesting characteristic of these poems is his
-deep love of the East, a love which is to be probably ascribed more to
-the general eastward gravitation of the Romantic school than to the
-poet's Oriental blood. This tendency is responsible for two of the most
-charming poems in the book, the exquisite lyric starting:
-
- "Auf Flügeln des Gesanges
- Herzliebchen trag ich dich fort
- Fort nach den Fluren des Ganges
- Dort weiss ich den schönsten Ort."
-
- "Dort liegt ein rotblühender Garten
- Im stillen Mondenschein;
- Die Lotosblumen erwarten
- Ihr trautes Schwesterlein."
-
-And--
-
- "Ein Fichtenbaum steht einsam
- Im Norden auf kabler Höh',
- Ihn schläfert; mit weisser Decke
- Umhüllen ihn Eis und Schnee.
- Er traumt von einer Palme,
- Die fern im Morgenland
- Einsam und schweigend trauert
- Auf brennender Felsenwand."
-
-This latter poem in particular illustrates admirably the vague melting,
-infinite yearning which Heine at first experienced as deeply as did any
-of the Romanticists. There are not wanting, however, and especially
-towards the end of the book, examples of his later manner, of that note
-of rebellion which he was afterwards to strike with such inimitable
-precision. Occasionally his wistful pessimism suddenly changes into
-cynicism, and in reaction from his morbid sensitiveness he derives a
-sardonic satisfaction from probing his own wounds as in the already
-quoted "Wer zum erstenmale liebt," while in the mock-heroic _Donna
-Clara_ and in the _Frieden_ we see that artistic use of the anti-climax
-of which he was afterwards to acquire an even greater mastery. Even in
-the comparatively early _Lyrisches Intermezzo_ we see him constantly
-playing on that contrast between the Real and the Ideal, between Dream
-Life and Waking Life, which formed so integral a part of his subsequent
-life-outlook. Speaking generally, however, the _Book of Songs_ exhibits
-the sentimental rather than the cynical side of Heine's mind. It
-possesses moreover those qualities which remained in Heine throughout
-his life, the light, airy touch, the intimate personal note, the
-delicate lyric sweetness, and that concision which is found in poetry
-with such extreme rarity.
-
-Let us turn now to the _Reisebilder_. Its most dominant characteristics
-are its inimitable swing and the absolute irresponsibility of its
-transitions. The grave, the gay; the lively, the severe; the sublime,
-the ridiculous; the reverent, the frivolous; the refined, the crude;
-the poetic, the obscene, all jostle pell-mell against each other
-in this most fascinating of literary kaleidoscopes. It is no mere
-guide-book, this record of his wanderings in the Harz, in Norderney, in
-England, and in Italy, but rather a description of those reflections
-on men and things which were suggested by his various adventures. In
-style the _Reisebilder_ marks a new epoch in German prose, or, as has
-been said, showed for the first time since Lessing and Goethe that such
-a thing as German prose really did exist. Heine was the first to show
-convincingly that a Gallic grace and flexibility could be imparted into
-the cumbrous and heavy-footed Teutonic language.
-
-Psychologically the most interesting part of the _Reisebilder_ is the
-fervent Napoleonic worship which, combined with his love of liberty and
-revolt against reaction, largely contributed to mould his life. The
-general tone, moreover, of political, sexual, and religious freedom
-that characterises the latter part of the _Reisebilder_ rendered
-Heine not a little obnoxious to official Germany, not only because of
-the intrinsic heresy of the sentiments themselves, but of the joyous
-rollicking insolence with which they were paraded.
-
-It is small wonder, then, that the Paris July Revolution of 1830 made
-the poet feel "as if he could set the whole ocean up to the very North
-Pole on fire with the red-heat of enthusiasm and mad joy that worked in
-him," and that in the spring of 1831 he migrated finally and definitely
-from Germany to Paris.
-
-This migration to Paris marks the turning-point in Heine's life. His
-career in Germany had throughout been erratic, unsatisfactory, and
-hampered by political restrictions. In Paris he settled down, felt
-that now at last he was in a congenial element, and--found himself.
-It was at Paris that he wrote his most brilliant prose and found
-inspiration for his highest poetry, that he experienced his wildest
-joys and his intensest sufferings. The first ten years of his sojourn
-were probably the happiest in his life. His increased literary and
-journalistic earnings helped to solve the financial problem, while
-socially he was, as always, a pronounced success. He soon found his
-way into the centre of the artistic set of the capital, and was on a
-footing of intimacy with such writers as Lafayette, Balzac, Victor
-Hugo, Georges Sand, Théophile Gautier, Michelet, Dumas, Gérard de
-Nerval, Hector Berlioz, Ludwig Borne, Schlegel, and Humboldt. In
-social life Heine's most characteristic feature was wit--a wit so
-irrepressible as to burst forth impartially on practically all
-occasions, and to resemble that of the Romans of the early Empire,
-who preferred to lose their heads rather than their epigrams. Yet
-in private life he was a devoted son and brother, an ideal husband.
-The correspondence which he maintained up to his death with his
-sister Lotte and his mother show conclusively what stores of German
-_Gemut_ he treasured in his heart. Particularly significant is the
-fact that during the whole eight years in which he languished in his
-mattress-grave he assiduously concealed from his mother the real state
-of his health. Yet none the less "he could hate deeply and grimly
-with an energy which I have never yet met in any other man, but only
-because he could love with equal intensity," writes the poet's friend,
-Meissner. Heine disapproved on principle of swallowing an injury; when
-he was hit, he hit back. Not infrequently, as in his rather scandalous
-attack on Börne, he would _riposte_ with somewhat superfluous
-efficiency, though according to his own theories it must have been
-after all only a mistake on the safe side.
-
-"Yes," writes Heine, "one must forgive one's enemies, but not until
-they have been hanged."
-
-Heine's quarrel with Börne originally arose out of the abomination with
-which Börne, who was Radical to the point of fanaticism, regarded the
-somewhat poetic and elastic Liberalism of his fellow-Jew, and it is
-instructive to enter into an examination of the depth and strength of
-those views which supplied the real motive power which drove him from
-Germany to France. There can be no doubt that Heine himself took his
-Liberalism with perfect seriousness. "In truth I know not," he writes,
-"if I merit that my coffin should be decorated with a laurel wreath.
-However much I loved Poesy, she was ever to me only a holy toy or a
-consecrated means for heavenly ends. It is rather a sword that they
-should lay on my coffin, for I was a brave soldier in the Liberation
-War of Humanity." It should be observed, however, that this Liberal had
-the most aristocratic contempt for the uncultured [Greek: _deimos_],
-as is shown by passages such as the following: "The horny hands of the
-Socialists who will unpityingly break all the marble statues which are
-so dear to my heart"; and, "If Democracy really triumphs, it is all up
-with poetry."
-
-Yet there can be no gainsaying that Heine's political orthodoxy was
-perfectly unimpeachable on that anti-clericalism which has always been
-one of the most cardinal points of Continental Liberalism.
-
-He is rarely tired of tilting at Catholicism, and while he regarded
-ascetic mediæval Catholicism as the vampire which sucked the blood
-and light out of the hearts of men, he dubbed the modern Catholic
-reactionaries in Germany "the Party of lies, the ruffians of
-Despotism, the restorers of all the folly and abomination of the Past."
-
-Yet, if his beliefs were too wide to admit of the narrowness of a
-consistent partisanship, his enthusiasm was deep and sincere for the
-joy, light, and liberty of a new era that was to sweep away all the
-unhealthy and plaguy humours of that blind, delirious, and anæmic
-mediævaldom, which, to use his own phrase, has spread over the
-countries like an infectious disease, till Europe was but one huge
-hospital. Politically, in fine, Heine is a brilliant freelance, who,
-too proud to wear the uniform of party, none the less fought valiantly
-for the army of Progress and Humanity, a forlorn outpost in the War of
-Freedom.[1]
-
-Heine's polemical modernity manifested itself most efficiently in
-the _Deutschland_, which, together with its sequel, _The Romantic
-School_, was issued as a counter-blast to Madame de Staël's work of the
-same name. This history of the religion, literature, and philosophy
-of Germany is the masterpiece of Heine's extant prose. An academic
-philosophic treatise, of course, it neither is nor professes to be.
-As a description half-serious, half-flippant, however, of the main
-currents of modern and mediæval Germany by a writer who sees life from
-the bird's-eye view of the combined poet, journalist, thinker, and man
-of the world, it is unrivalled. It contains some of Heine's loftiest
-and most sublime flights, some of his most brilliant and trenchant
-epigrams.
-
-Particularly happy is the comparison drawn between the furious
-onslaughts made by the French Revolutionists under Robespierre and the
-German philosophers under Kant on respectively the divine rights of
-kings and the divine rights of God.
-
-How delicious is the conclusion of the parallel between the two men:
-"Each eminently represents the ideal middle-class type--Nature had
-decreed that they should weigh out coffee and sugar, but Fate willed
-that they should weigh out other things, and in the scales of the one
-did she lay a King and in the scales of the other a God....
-
-"And they both gave exact weight."
-
-As, however, has been previously pointed out, Heine's chief
-characteristic as a prose writer is that marvellous elasticity which
-can rebound from the frivolous to the sublime with the most consummate
-ease and celerity. Interspersed with the bright flash-light of the
-epigrammatic pyrotechnics lie really great passages, and pieces in
-particular like those on Luther and Goethe possess the clear golden
-ring of the grand style.
-
-Heine's political ideals were subjected to the inevitable
-disillusionment. The Revolution of July, which he had fondly hoped
-would complete the work of the great movement of 1793, merely resulted
-in the anti-climax of the establishment of a bourgeois constitution
-under a bourgeois monarch. He tended to become generally embittered.
-Money matters, too, began to irritate him, and his health to give
-him trouble, and though he found a devoted sick-nurse in Matilde
-Crescenzia Mirat, a grisette whom he married in 1841, the lady with
-whom "he quarrelled daily for six years in that life-long duel at
-the termination of which only one of the combatants would be left
-alive," yet none the less his condition began to deteriorate. "The
-damp cold days and black long nights of his exile" oppressed him, and
-he began to yearn for the old German soil. He gratified his _Heimweh_
-by a flying and surreptitious visit to Germany that inspired the
-well-known _Germany_ or a _Winter Tale_, which, together with the
-somewhat similar _Atta Troll_, constitutes his most sustained poetic
-achievement. These two poems are about as characteristic as anything
-which he wrote. They represent admirably his wild classic Dionysiac
-fantasy, his sudden dips from the most extravagant Romanticism to the
-harsh, crude facts of reality, the marvellous swing and sweep of his
-Aristophanic humour.
-
-Very typical is the following satire on the intimate relation between
-anthropo- and arctomorphism.
-
- "Up above in star-pavilion,
- On his golden throne of lordship,
- Ruling worlds with sway majestic,
- Sits a Polar bear colossal."
-
- "Stainless, snow-white shines the glamour
- Of his skin, his head is wreathed
- With a diadem of diamonds,
- Flashing light through all the heavens."
-
- "Harmony rests in his visage,
- And the silent deeds of thought,
- Just a whit he bends his sceptre,
- And the spheres they ring and sing."
-
-The above quotation shows excellently the essentially poetic quality
-by which Heine's wit is illumined. A satirist as keen and vivid as
-Voltaire, he possesses all the logical aptness of the Frenchman without
-his dryness. His chief characteristic, in fact, is the method by which
-in his imaginative flights he combines the maximum of this logical
-aptness with the maximum of humorous incongruity. No humorist dives
-for his metaphors into stranger water or brings up from the deep more
-bizarre and fantastic gems. A charming example of Heinean humour is
-the following passage from one of his prefaces: "A pious Quaker once
-sacrificed his whole fortune in buying up the most beautiful of the
-mythological pictures of Giulio Romano in order to consign them to the
-flames--verily he merits thereby to go to heaven and be whipped with
-birches regularly every day."
-
-One of the most cardinal traits of Heine's wit and humour is a
-phenomenal freedom of tone and language, a freedom that is occasionally
-not always in the most unimpeachable taste. Heine, in fact, is a
-writer who admits the public gratis to his psychological toilette,
-where he exposes with studied recklessness his most private thoughts.
-This question cuts too deep into Heine's life-outlook to be lightly
-passed over, and necessitates some examination. In the first place
-even Heine's most enthusiastic admirer will admit that a great deal of
-this licence is sheer gaminerie; Heine is the mischievous schoolboy
-of literature who thoroughly revels in being naughty, grimacing by an
-almost mechanical instinct, so soon as he catches a glimpse of the
-sacred figures of religion and sex. Like Baudelaire, he loves, almost
-indeed as a matter of conscientious principle, to make the hairs of
-the philistines stand on end. His one excuse, however, is that even
-when he causes the hairs of the philistines almost to spring from their
-roots, as indeed he does not infrequently, he conducts the operation
-with so light a touch, so exquisite a grace, that the offence is almost
-redeemed. Let him speak in his own defence, in the lines from the great
-Jewish poem, "Jehudah Halevy":
-
- "As in Life so too in poetry
- Grace is aye Man's highest Good;
- Who has grace, he never sinneth
- Not in verse nor e'en in prose."
-
- "And by God's grace such a poet
- Genius we do entitle,
- King supreme and uncontrolled
- In the great desmesne of thought."
-
-Not unnaturally his coarseness grew apace with the virulence of his
-disease, and he himself explains his cause to his friend "La Mouche":
-"Vois-tu c'est la faute de la mort qui arrive à grands pas, et quand
-je la sens ainsi tout près de moi comme à present j'ai besoin de me
-cramponner la vie ne fût ce par une poutre pourrie." This final phase
-in fact was simply a reaction against his fate, and is not altogether
-without analogy to that same psychological principle which dictated
-much of the crude buffoonery of Swift and Carlyle by way of an heroic
-protest against their own helplessness.
-
-Far more important, however, is the fact that this particular trait
-of Heine is profoundly symbolic of his outlook on life, especially
-where an obscene jest marks the climax of a genuinely poetical flight.
-Circumstance turned him into a cynic, who saw frequently in Liberty but
-the uprising of a squalid proletariate, who heard in the "sweet lies
-of the nightingale, the flatterer of spring," merely the "harbingers
-of the decay of its queenliness," and who beheld in love but a mere
-illusion of the senses that vanishes so soon as the beloved one utters
-a syllable. Held fast in the grip of the great World-paradox, Heine
-is forced to look at life as a glaring phantasmagoria of blacks and
-whites, in which the sublime and the ridiculous, the pathetic and the
-grotesque, the refined and the crude, dance along hand in hand till
-they become so confused that it is impossible for the observer to
-distinguish the individual partners, and he is reduced to describing,
-in pairs, the giddy, whirling couples that make up the fantastic medley.
-
-This incessant antithesis makes Heine one of the most complete of
-modern writers.
-
-The poet's world is composed of two hemispheres: one is the abode of
-the beautiful, the grand, the tragic; the other of the ugly, the petty,
-the comic. Most poets confine their efforts to only a small portion
-of one of these hemispheres. Heine, however, is the Atlas of poetry,
-who supports both of the half-spheres of the world, and who, by way of
-proving how easily his burden sits upon him, suddenly turns juggler,
-and after showing his audience one side of the magic globe, will, _hey
-presto_! whisk the whole world round, and before they know where they
-are smilingly confront them with the other.
-
-In 1848 the spinal affection from which he suffered became so acute
-that Heine was compelled to take to that mattress-grave where,
-paralytic and half-blind and racked intermittently by the most
-agonising spasms, he dragged out the eight most ghastly years of his
-life. At first the death-chamber was one of the favourite rendezvous
-of fashionable Paris, but as the novelty wore off, his circle of
-friends grew narrower and narrower, until eventually a visit from
-Berlioz seemed only the crowning proof of the musician's inveterate
-eccentricity.
-
-Heine, however, rose manfully to the occasion, and did all that
-he could under the circumstances. Always a passionate lover of
-the paradoxical, he now began to appreciate with an intense and
-unprecedented relish the infinite humour of the great Life-farce, one
-of the most effective scenes of which was even now being enacted in the
-person of the poet of _joie de vivre_, who, enduring all the agonies of
-the damned, lay dying in La Rue d'Amsterdam to the quick music of the
-piano on the story underneath, while only a few feet away shone all the
-glow and glitter of Parisian life.
-
-The chief occupation and solace of the dying man was the writing of his
-Memoirs, the great _Apologia pro vitâ suâ_ which was to square his
-accounts with the world, and win for him the future as his own.
-
-Yet at times the greatness of his sufferings would soften his heart.
-He would find in the Bible the magic book which had power to dispel
-his earthly torments; the "_Heimweh_ for heaven" would fall upon him,
-and again would he know his God. It would seem, however, that Heine's
-death-bed reconversion is simply to be regarded as one of the numerous
-instances of the Prince of Darkness exhibiting monastic proclivities
-under the stress of severe physical _malaise_. For eight years Heine
-lay a-dying, and with the skeleton of Death assiduously serving the
-few bitter crumbs that yet remained of his feast of life, he was, as a
-simple matter of pathology, almost bound to believe once more, even if
-he had been the most hardened infidel in existence. Heine, however, was
-no cynical atheist. The current religions, it is true, he considered
-pretty poetry, but bad logic, yet none the less he was genuinely imbued
-with the ethical idea.
-
-"I am too proud," he writes, "to be influenced by greed for the
-heavenly wages of virtue or by fear of hellish torments. I strive after
-the good because it is beautiful and attracts me irresistibly, and I
-abominate the bad because it is hateful and repugnant to me."
-
-What, in fact, served Heine in the stead of a theology was his fervid
-enthusiasm for Progress and Humanity. His real religion was the
-religion of Freedom, the religion of the poor people, the new creed
-of which Jean Rousseau was the John the Baptist and Voltaire the
-chief apostle; Heine's Madonna was the red goddess of Revolution, who
-exacted from her worshippers innumerable hecatombs of human victims;
-the Man-god whom he revered as the Saviour of Society was Napoleon,
-the Son of the Revolution, the drastic reorganiser of the world, who,
-unappreciated by the pharisees and reactionaries of his time, and
-finding his Golgotha on the "martyr-cliffs of St. Helena," endured for
-more than five years all the agonies of a moral crucifixion; while to
-complete our version of the Heinesque theology, his _Heilige Geist_
-was the Holy Spirit of the Human Intellect which he says "is seen in
-its greatest glory in Light and Laughter," and the Revelation which
-inspired him most deeply was, to use once more his own phrase, "the
-sacred mystic Revelation that we name poesy."
-
-It is interesting to trace the influence of these last ghastly years
-on Heine's writings. His almost complete physical prostration brought
-with it its own compensation in the shape of a marvellous psychic
-exaltation, and the _Romanzero_ and the _Poetische Nachlese_ contain
-some of his greatest and most moving poems. Nowhere do we see more
-clearly his most characteristic excellences, his delicacy, his power of
-antithesis, his concision.
-
-It is Heine's compression, in fact, which is one of the most pronounced
-features of his poetic style. The whole quintessence of joy and pain,
-of love and sorrow, is frequently distilled into one short poem. This
-Heinesque condensation is a variant of the same theory that can be
-traced in the old Impressionist school of painters which is concerned
-with the outline and the proper light and shading of the outline to the
-exclusion of minor details, and in the journalistic cult of the "story"
-in which the ideal aimed at is "the point, the whole point, and nothing
-but the point." Heine, in fact, is unique among the poets for narrating
-a tale with the minimum of space and the maximum of effect, for
-narrating it in such a way that each line serves to heighten the level
-of intensity, till at length the edifice is crowned by the climax. This
-feature of his style is well illustrated by the end of the frequently
-quoted poem, "The Asra," in the _Romanzero_:
-
- "And the slave spake, I am called
- Mohammed, I am from Yemen,
- And my stock is from those Asras,
- _They who die whene'er they love_."
-
-Though, moreover, he protested to the last against his fate, his tone
-in the _Romanzero_ and the earlier _Poetische Nachlese_ is more mellow
-than in his earlier writings. His cry from the heart is not the cry
-of defiance but rather of the pathetic wistfulness of impotence. Yet
-before the candle of his life became extinguished it leapt up in one
-final flicker, the most marvellous of all. A characteristic caprice
-of fate made him acquainted during the last months of his life with
-his one true soul-affinity, the charming woman who is known under the
-pseudonym of Camille Selden or La Mouche.
-
-Is it then to be wondered at that when the rich feast of a perfect
-love, for which he had craved Tantalus-like all his life, was offered
-to him almost at the very minute that his lips were being sealed
-by the cold kiss of death, the whole soul of the man should leap
-up in indignant protest, and that such poems as "Lass die heiligen
-Parabolen," and the even more wonderful series of stanzas with the
-refrain, "O schöne Welt du bist abscheulich," should exhibit the cold
-insolent shrug of the man convinced of the righteousness of his plea
-that of all the places in the universe this human earth "where the just
-man drags himself along beneath the blood-stained burden of his cross,
-while the wicked man rides in triumph on his high steed," is the most
-iniquitous?
-
-Heine died at four o'clock in the morning of February 17, 1856. He was
-buried by his own directions in Montmartre, "in order to avoid being
-disturbed by the crowd and bustle of Père Lachaise."
-
-His writings form an incessant stream of paradoxes, but his life is the
-greatest paradox of all. The prophet of the new religion of liberty, he
-was repudiated by his country, and his happiest days were spent in the
-land of exile; throughout his life he sought for love, to live years
-of the most healthy prosaic domesticity with his mistress, and to find
-his one true romance on his death-bed; he imagined that he was a great
-political force, but it is rather as a poet that he survives; as a poet
-his chief theme was the Joy and Light of Life, and he drew his truest
-inspiration from the darkest depths of his agony; even as a great
-writer he has been chiefly known by the comparatively inferior _Book
-of Songs_ and _Reisebilder,_ while his masterpiece, the _Memoirs_, the
-great highly barbed Parthian arrow shot from the grave to transfix his
-enemies for all eternity, lay mouldering for many years amid the dusty
-archives of the Vienna Library.
-
-His message, too, the core and kernel of his philosophy, is again
-a paradox. To the sphinx-like riddle with which every thinker is
-confronted, "Is Life poetry or prose, tragedy or farce?" Heine made
-answer that the pathos and poetry of life were contained in the fact
-that life was so essentially grim and unpoetical, and that the real
-tragedy of the world lay in the ghastly farce of it all.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: _Cf._ the poem "Enfant perdu," beginning "Verlorner Posten
-in dem Freiheits Kriege."]
-
-
-
-
-THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DISRAELI
-
-
-The recent centenary of the birth of Benjamin Disraeli renewed our
-interest in the most striking figure in the English history of the last
-century. Throughout his life Disraeli made it an important part of his
-_métier_ to be interesting, and it is certainly a convincing proof
-both of his great natural fascination and of the adroitness with which
-he worked his pose, that even beyond the grave his character should
-still exercise our curiosity and blind us with the various facets of
-its brilliancy. He fairly bristles with paradoxes, this cynic, who
-was also a sentimentalist, this Oriental mystic, who was one of the
-most finished dandies in London, this shameless adventurer, with his
-pathetic and chivalrous devotion to his sovereign, this political
-Don Juan, who provided a classic example of conjugal affection.
-Many have essayed to solve the riddle of the "Primrose Sphinx"; but
-the best testimony to their almost universal failure is that nearly
-every biographer has produced a completely different version of his
-character. Mr. Hitchman, "one of the helpless, somnambulised cattle
-whom he led by the nose," to use Carlyle's phrase, portrays him
-(in _The Public Life of the late Lord Beaconsfield_) with charming
-_naïveté_ as the "disinterested and patriotic statesman." Mr. T. P.
-O'Connor, on the other hand, who, when still sowing his literary
-wild oats, painted Disraeli even blacker than the Prince of Darkness
-himself, in a book unworthy of any serious biographer, simply
-overshoots the mark. Froude, in his _Life_, comes nearer to the truth,
-but is hampered by being forced to compress the history of a crowded
-life and the psychology of a complex character into a narrow and
-inadequate compass. Both Froude, however, and Mr. Sichel, who has given
-us an interesting volume on Disraeli's personality, lay too much stress
-on his imaginative and idealistic features.
-
-The reason for this inability to comprehend a character, in many
-respects singularly typical of his age, lies not so much in the
-alleged inadequacy of the materials as in the incapacity of most
-English writers for handling general ideas. The English mind is too
-concrete for social psychology; it delights in the almost mechanical
-work of classifying animals, but fails to produce any classification
-of characters worth the name. The Disraeli problem is admittedly
-difficult; the secrecy which until recently kept us from all knowledge
-of the greater portion of his papers and correspondence is undoubtedly
-a handicap, but the difficulty is by no means insuperable, nor the
-material so scanty as is usually supposed. Let us take Disraeli in
-relation to his age, his environment, his ancestry, then what would
-otherwise have struck us as strange, not to say impossible, stands out
-clear and inevitable. Another valuable source of information is to be
-found in his novels, though it is always difficult to discriminate
-between what is and what is not autobiographical in these works.
-
-A vigorous and imaginative mind, when writing about its own history,
-will naturally not stint itself in its licences; it will abandon
-itself to all kinds of hypotheses; it will take a certain phase of
-itself, frame circumstances to suit its development, and proceed on the
-fictitious assumption; it will indulge freely both in caricature and
-idealisation. In _Vivian Grey_, for instance, Disraeli has slightly
-exaggerated the more cynical side of his nature; _Sidonia_, on the
-other hand, is an idealised version of Disraeli; it is Disraeli raised
-to a higher power; it is what he would have liked to have been, but
-was not, any more than the actual Byron was as brave, as romantic, and
-as fascinating as the ideal Byron who is portrayed in _Conrad, Childe
-Harold_, and _Don Juan_.
-
-Yet, none the less, _Sidonia, Fakredeen, Vivian Grey,_ and _Contarini
-Fleming_ possess a strong family likeness, and strike a genuine
-autobiographical note. With regard to the two latter, Mr. Sichel, in
-his study of Disraeli, is unwarranted in his attempted depreciation of
-their evidence, on the theory that they represent merely a distorted
-and transient phase of Disraeli's development, to be ascribed to
-ill-health and immaturity. On the contrary, the contortions of great
-men in adolescence are peculiarly instructive. It is then that the
-very elements of the future man are fermenting in the crucible; and
-is not growth more significant than maturity? It is not a paradox,
-but a fundamental truth, to say that a man is never more himself than
-when he is not himself; it is in periods of violent upheaval that the
-conventional superstructure is destroyed and the innermost foundations
-of character are laid bare. It is far easier to tone down than to touch
-up, and the unrestrained sincerity of these early novels, written under
-the impetus of intense emotion, throws far more light on Disraeli's
-real character than a book like _Endymion_, the official pronouncement
-of his maturer years. A prudent use, then, of the novels, and an
-examination of his relations to his age, environment, and ancestry
-should enable us to construct a psychology of Disraeli that should be
-at once convincing and consistent, and adequate to shed light on many
-of the obscure points of his character.
-
-The _Sturm und Drang_ age of the Revolution in which Disraeli was
-born marked the passing of Europe from childhood to manhood, from
-mediævalism to modernity. Like all transition periods, it was
-peculiarly complex; the tendencies being so varied, and were so
-frequently accompanied by the reactions against themselves, that it
-requires considerable care to disentangle the principal threads.
-
-It was an age of progress where reaction was frequently to be seen at
-work; it was an age significant for a violent outburst of scientific
-materialism, and the consequently inevitable mysticism of a religious
-revival. It was an age at once scientific and romantic, individual
-and cosmopolitan. It was an age where circumstances produced strange
-mixtures, so that in England we are brought face to face with the
-paradox that Gladstone, the founder of democratic idealism, obtained
-his seat under the old system of close boroughs, while Disraeli, the
-most brilliant example of the new democratic theory of _la carrière
-ouverte aux talentes_, found his way to power as the head of the
-aristocratic and conservative party. The predominant note, however, was
-one of democratic individualism. With the French Revolution the yoke
-of responsibility, political and religious, was violently thrown off;
-new and wide fields had been opened out to commerce by the extended
-communications and the new mechanical inventions. A quickened life
-broke in upon the lethargy of the previous century. The struggle for
-existence entered on a sharper and intenser phase. Ambitious men
-vehemently dashed themselves against the social barrier, which day by
-day became more easy to climb. In every department it was the age of
-the clever and ambitious parvenu. In war and in politics Napoleon, in
-poetry Burns, in fiction Balzac, give convincing testimony to the power
-of the new régime. It was the age of the French Revolution and of the
-Holy Alliance, of Condillac and of Chateaubriand, of Laplace and of
-Shelley, of Godwin and of Tom Paine.
-
-But equality is a medal with two faces: on the one side is written,
-"I am as good as, if not better than, everyone else"; on the other,
-"Everyone else is as good as, if not better than, myself." The first
-was the motto of the rampant individualism and vigorous national
-policy of Disraeli, the latter of the hesitating Christian spirit
-and sentimental cosmopolitanism of Gladstone. Gladstone, indeed, is
-such an excellent foil to Disraeli that we may well be permitted the
-following quotations, where the rift in Gladstone's lute, between
-the churchman and the politician, stands in pointed contrast to the
-unity of purpose that from his earliest years actuated his rival.
-Gladstone, torn between his missionary impulse and yearning for
-apostolic destination on the one hand, and healthy ambition on the
-other, writes to his father: "I am willing to persuade myself that in
-spite of other longings, which I often feel, my heart is prepared to
-yield other hopes and other desires for this: of being permitted to
-be the humblest of those who may be commissioned to set before the
-eyes of man the magnanimity and glory of Christian truth. Politics are
-fascinating to me, perhaps too fascinating. My temper is so excitable
-that I should fear giving up my mind to other subjects, which have ever
-proved sufficiently alluring to me, and which I fear would make my life
-a series of unsatisfied longings and expectations." Disraeli is less
-undecided, as is clear from the following quotation from _Contarini
-Fleming_: "I should have killed myself if I had not been supported by
-my ambition, which now each day became more quickening, so that the
-desire of distinction and of astounding action raged in my soul, and
-when I realised that so many years must elapse before I could realise
-my ideal, I gnashed my teeth in silent rage and cursed my existence,"
-Disraeli will give up anything rather than his chance of being a great
-man. At a time when most clever young men of his age were thinking of a
-scholarship he had finally decided to go in for a premiership. He has
-planned his campaign, he will fool the world to the top of its bent.
-When yet a boy Disraeli says, as Vivian Grey: "We must mix with the
-herd, we must sympathise with the sorrow that we do not feel and share
-the merriment of fools. To rule men we must be men, to prove that we
-are strong we must be weak. Our wisdom must be concealed under folly,
-our constancy under caprice."
-
-None the less, Disraeli had too vivid an imagination, too keen a
-sense of the picturesque, not to be affected to a certain extent
-by the current Romanticism. We see this in the Eastern novels of
-_Tancred_ and _Alroy_, also in _Contarini Fleming_, the English
-Wilhelm Meister, which exhibits the weaker and more morbid side of the
-author's character, and is a useful supplement to Vivian Grey. But it
-is the latter, however, who represents most accurately the ideals and
-aspirations of the young Disraeli, and, taken generally, is a broad
-adumbration of his subsequent career. But the Disraeli of Vivian Grey
-was not so unique as is usually considered, and an analogy between
-him and the celebrated Frenchman, who wrote a novel about the same
-period, and one, moreover, singularly typical of his age, proves
-instructive. Benjamin Disraeli and Henri Beyle were in all superficial
-details so absolutely different that one might well hesitate before
-making the comparison, yet they were radically similar in many of their
-larger outlines, and in particular their characters, as revealed in
-the heroes of two novels, _Vivian Grey_ and _Le Rouge et le Noir_,
-show an extraordinary resemblance. Both Julien Sorel and Vivian Grey
-are impelled by a violent and overwhelming ambition; both, originally
-excluded by their status from participation in the great prizes of the
-world, set out undaunted to conquer, the one as a priest, the other as
-a politician. Cynical, with that extreme and savage species of cynicism
-which is the reaction from intense sensitiveness, they both wage war
-on society in their passion for success, while the nobler and more
-generous instincts with which nature had endowed them perish in the
-struggle.
-
-But this Time-Spirit of individualism was no mere cold-blooded
-philosophy of egoism. It was, after all, an age of genuine poetry, of
-fresh ideals. The halo of romance played around the most abandoned
-sinners. Individualism found, in addition, an æsthetic sanction, as
-was seen in the prodigious vogue of Byron, where the picturesque pose
-of the one man pitted against society appealed strongly to the popular
-imagination. How deeply Disraeli was imbued with Byronism is evidenced
-not only by the whole tone and manner of his early life, but by his
-resuscitation of the Byronic legend in _Venetia_.
-
-This spirit of combined idealism and intense practical energy is met
-with again in Disraeli's race and ancestry. The Jewish race is a
-compound of materialism and idealism. The Jew is the dreamer in action,
-combining fluid imagination with adamantine purpose. These two phases
-of the Jewish character are seen excellently in Disraeli's father and
-paternal grandfather. The latter, an Italian Jew, came over to England
-about the middle of the eighteenth century, and quickly made a fortune
-by dint of his shrewd business talent and fixity. His son Isaac was
-gifted with an unfortunate superfluity of the poetic temperament. His
-youth was erratic and unhappy, but when close on thirty he found a
-secure refuge in the quiet waters of literature. To his Semitic blood
-is also to be traced Disraeli's prodigious tenacity of purpose. He
-came of a stiff-necked people, so that opposition stimulated him, and
-his early failures served but to render sweeter his eventual success.
-He had, too, the calculating foresight of the Jew, and could pierce
-the future, if not with prophetic vision, at any rate, with marvellous
-intuition. His Oriental strain of mysticism served him in good stead.
-He never forgot that he was a scion of the Chosen People, and came of
-a race which had never sullied its purity of lineage by changing its
-blood. Was he not the chosen man of the chosen race? Could he not read
-his future, if not in the stars, "which are the brain of heaven," yet
-in his own brilliant and meteoric brain? He had a full measure of the
-pride of race, and plumed himself to the last on what he may well have
-called "the Oriental ichor in his veins." If his enemies dubbed him a
-parvenu he would fling the wretched taunt back in their faces, bidding
-them realise that they came from a parvenu and hybrid race, while he
-himself was sprung from the purest blood in Europe. How keen was this
-genealogical Judaism we can see from the classic letter to O'Connell,
-where he wrote that "the hereditary bondsman had forgotten the clank of
-his fetters," and from his masterpiece of character-drawing, Sidonia,
-who, with wealth, intellect, and power at his command, yet found his
-chief "source of interest in his descent and in the fortunes of his
-race." Disraeli's Judaism, however, did not extend to the religious
-tenets of the creed. Few, no doubt, are the instances of a converted
-Jew proving a genuine Christian, but Disraeli had too much of the
-mystic in him to be an atheist, and if we take into account the
-elasticity of his imagination, there is little reason to doubt that he
-was at any rate reasonably sincere in his belief that Christianity was
-merely completed Judaism, Calvary but the logical corollary of Sinai;
-he would also, no doubt, find a malicious joy in reminding those who
-taunted him with his origin, that "one half of Christendom worships
-a Jew and the other half a Jewess." Anyway, the Christian religion
-played nothing approaching an integral part in his life; while an
-amiable acquiescence in its dogmas was, at the best, as it has been
-with so many, but an intellectual habit. His Jewish origin helped him,
-moreover, in that he approached the problems of politics with a mind
-free from conventional British prejudices. He was never a thorough
-Englishman, and was proud of the fact, instead of thanking God "that he
-was born an Englishman," as do many of his race, who betray in their
-every word and action their Jewish nationality. His admirable expert
-knowledge of the English character was throughout professional, not
-sympathetic.
-
-When we turn to Disraeli's early environment, we find that it was one
-calculated to foster both ambition and a literary imagination. He
-breathed from his earliest days the atmosphere of books, and almost
-from the cradle imbibed avidly the many volumes of Voltaire. Nothing
-is so stimulating to the youthful mind as the unchecked run of a
-library, with its delightful excursions into the unexplored country of
-literature. His natural sensitiveness was hardened by his experiences
-at school, where his nationality and cleverness rendered him unpopular.
-The reaction intensified his already precocious ambition, and gave him
-that consciousness of semi-isolation which formed one of the chief
-parts of his strength. His ambition was further heightened by the smart
-literary set which he met constantly at his father's house, and his
-early glimpses of the great world. Disraeli is palpably exaggerating
-when he says, _apropos_ of Vivian Grey, that "he was a tender plant in
-a moral hot-house," but the following passage is significant:
-
- "He became habituated to the idea that everything could
- be achieved by dexterity, that there was no test of
- conduct except success; to be ready to advance any
- opinion, to possess none; to look upon every man as a
- tool, and never to do anything which had not a definite
- though circuitous purpose."
-
-It is this trait of doing things with an object which supplied the true
-clue to Disraeli as a man of letters. We admit, of course, the _verve_
-and brilliancy of the novels, their claim to rank as classic, but it is
-impossible to arrive at a correct appreciation of them unless they be
-taken in the closest conjunction with their author's political career.
-_Vivian Grey_, for instance, no doubt afforded an excellent outlet for
-the fermenting passion of Disraeli's youth; it was itself one of the
-best society novels ever written, but it was something more. Before
-that time the future Premier had been hiding his light. How could
-he obtain a free field for the exercise of his gifts? His father's
-Bohemian clique scarcely answered his purpose. How could he burst open
-the doors of society? The bombshell was supplied by _Vivian Grey_. It
-was a case of self-advertisement raised to the level of a fine art, and
-Disraeli introduced himself to the public with a bow of most elaborate
-flourishes. _Contarini Fleming_ strikes a slightly different note,
-exhibiting the more poetic side of its author's character; but we must
-not forget that at the time when it was published Disraeli's long
-absence in the East had temporarily obscured his fame in London, and
-that it was the success of _Contarini Fleming_ which secured for him
-once more the _entrée_ into society. Similarly, _Coningsby, Sybil_,
-and _Tancred_ were, in the main, but the gospels in which, in the rôle
-of a political saviour, he propagated the new creed of Young England.
-_Lothair_ and _Endymion_ were partly written to replenish his empty
-exchequer. The protagonists, moreover, in all his chief novels were
-fashioned in the image of himself, and even Lord Cadurcis in _Venetia_,
-who is theoretically Byron, is portrayed with the physical features of
-the author, so as to ensure a vivid impression on the public mind of
-his own personality. Not that Disraeli did not experience a genuine
-joy in the wielding of the pen. He could soar high in his flights of
-mysticism and romance; could describe the picturesque and the beautiful
-in passages of inspired rhetoric, though it was in the dash and
-brilliancy of his satire which at its best equalled that of Heine, or
-Voltaire, or Byron, that he was most himself. His style is redolent of
-his race. It possesses the genuine Oriental glamour, the Oriental love
-of gorgeous and grandiose magnificence, the Oriental lack of symmetry
-and proportion. His prodigious genius for sarcasm was also Semitic,
-if we are to believe Mr. Bryce, who considers that gift a peculiar
-property of the race, instancing, as examples, Lucian and Heine, the
-greatest satirists of ancient and modern times.
-
-This same combination of temperament and policy which explains
-Disraeli, the man of letters, explains Disraeli, the dandy. Living
-as he did in an age which revolted, under the leadership of Count
-D'Orsay, against the chaste and classic traditions of Brummel,
-and which offered in the elaborate picturesqueness of its dress an
-excellent medium for the expression of personality, is it to be
-wondered at that so ambitious a nature as Disraeli's should, apart
-from other reasons, enter gaily into the sartorial arena? These early
-years remind us of Alcibiades, who, in his youth, his genius, his
-precocious political ambitions, his aristocratic lineage and superb
-insolence, his extravagance and irresponsibility, offers a fairly close
-analogy. Disraeli, however, was an Alcibiades with ballast, and his
-most erratic phases were governed by a consistent purpose. He had,
-it is true, the regular Hebrew love for the picturesque, the racial
-craving for flamboyant display; but the unique characteristic of the
-man was the ingenious method by which he exploited even his weaknesses
-to advance his purpose. Realising that nothing was more fatal to his
-career than the indifference of the public, that to be hated was better
-than to be ignored, and that notoriety was a passable substitute for
-fame, he was determined to bulk largely in the public eye. Living,
-fortunately, in an age when dandyism, if not an art, was at any rate
-a career, and when "wild, melancholy men" were still the rage among
-the ladies, he manipulated the dandy and Byronic pose with phenomenal
-success. But his social career was not all pose. Though political
-ambition was to him always the main point of existence, he was far too
-healthy to lose sight of the small change of life. He had, moreover,
-a genuine love of society. His remark _apropos_ of Gladstone, "What
-can we do with a leader who is not even in society?" was sincere in
-spite of being an epigram, and the hosts of great ladies who crowd his
-novels attest conclusively to his social fastidiousness. But the most
-convincing proof of this lighter side of his nature is to be found in
-his correspondence with his sister. Those letters, dashed off hurriedly
-to his "dearest Sa," written with that complete lack of ceremony which
-is the sign of a perfect intimacy, show with what zest he frequented
-balls and water-parties, dinners and _soirées_. Yet his ambition is
-never far in the background. He goes to the House of Commons, hears the
-big man speak, and then writes to his sister, "But between ourselves I
-could floor them all." His genius for conversation is historic, and we
-are not surprised that he considered that the one unforgivable sin was
-to be a bore. He had not, it is true, Gladstone's habit of unburdening
-himself freely to the most casual of acquaintances. How many, indeed,
-were there of his intimates who had penetrated into the secret places
-of his heart? But over-much sincerity is a hindrance to the art of
-conversation; and many of his most brilliant paradoxes were thrown off
-as an evasive retort to an impertinent question. When, however, we come
-to Disraeli's social and private life, the most interesting question
-that presents itself is that of his relation to his wife. Even though
-he had discoursed in _Contarini Fleming_ of the grand passion with all
-the high-flown sentimentalism of the age, it was obviously impossible
-for him, considering the disparity of their ages, to be seriously in
-love with Mrs. Disraeli; and it must have seemed that he had been
-forced to exchange the poetry of the mistress for the prose of the
-wife. Had he not, about ten years before his marriage, written to his
-sister, "How would you like Lady B---- for a sister-in-law? Clever,
-£25,000, and domestic. As for love, all my friends who have married for
-love either beat their wives or live apart from them. This is literally
-true. I may commit many follies, but never that of marrying for love,
-which, I am convinced, cannot but be a guarantee of infelicity." Yet
-this union, based originally on mere policy and camaraderie, was
-eventually crowned with the most faithful of loves. It was his wife's
-absorbing interest in his career that supplied the link. He has himself
-written that the most exquisite moment in a man's life was when he
-surprised his lady-love reading the manuscript of his first speech, and
-the sympathy of Mrs. Disraeli in his successes may well have given them
-a yet further charm. The situation is well expressed in the remark of
-Mrs. Disraeli's: "You know you married me for money, and I know that if
-you had to do it again you would do it for love."
-
-In fact the warm and constant affection Disraeli lavished on his wife
-during her lifetime, and the poignant grief that he evinced at her
-death, furnish a more than sufficient refutation to those who persist
-in regarding him as a mere cynical fortune-hunter. Disraeli, like
-Browning, had
-
- "Two soul sides, one to face the world with,
- One to show a woman when he loves her."
-
-In the other departments of private life he was likewise exemplary.
-His hardness was limited to politics; he was the most dutiful of sons,
-the most affectionate of brothers, the most faithful of friends. His
-debts, for the most part, were incurred by backing the bills of other
-men. His touching and romantic friendship for Mrs. Brydges Williams,
-the eccentric old Cornish lady who gave him pecuniary assistance at a
-critical period of his career, is well known. The story, again, of the
-Premier and his wife dancing a Highland jig in their night apparel on
-hearing of the success of an old friend, shows how little the bitter
-struggles of politics had hardened his heart. Particularly touching,
-also, is the mutual affection between him and the Queen, that
-sweetened his last years. She was, as we read in a letter of Disraeli's
-to the Marchioness of Ely, "the best friend he had in the world."
-
-But Disraeli, though he fulfilled himself in many ways, was first
-of all a politician, and it is Disraeli the politician rather than
-Disraeli the man of letters, the dandy, or the human being, that
-principally provokes our interest. What were his real views on
-politics? How far can we distinguish between the official edition of
-himself which he displayed for public inspection and the original that
-he alone could read? Given his policy, how far was it justifiable, how
-far rational? The view of his most devoted, but yet in reality, quite
-unappreciative, admirers, that throughout a political career of over
-half a century he remained consistently and absolutely faithful to his
-original ideals, and that he introduced into politics an integrity and
-disinterestedness that Parliament had rarely witnessed, is even more
-absurd than the opinion of his blind and malignant enemies that he
-was a mere charlatan who juggled with parties and the people without
-possessing a single genuine political faith of his own. Disraeli, as
-was inevitable in a man of so detached and unprejudiced a nature,
-simply took the then party system at its true worth, and, of course,
-realised from the outset that before he could do anything worth
-doing he must first obtain that power which alone could give him the
-opportunity of doing it. His attack on Peel was, _primâ facie_, an
-occasion that it would have been the depth of folly to have missed, and
-Mr. Birrell's statement that Disraeli "ate his peck of dirt," and his
-comparison of him to Casanova, is mere petulance. For these preliminary
-stages of the higher politics Disraeli was admirably fitted, and the
-following autobiographic passages from _Tancred_ show how congenial
-were his Herculean labours: "To be the centre of a maze of manoeuvres
-was his empyrean, and while he recognised in them the best means of
-success he found in their exercise a means of constant delight"; and
-again, "'Intrigue,' cried the young prince, using, as was his custom, a
-superfluity of expression both of voice and hand and eyes, 'intrigue,
-it is life, it is the only thing. If you wish to produce a result
-you must make a combination, and you call combination intrigue.'"
-Disraeli viewed party politics from the dispassionate standpoint of
-a chess-player, "playing off the proud peers like pawns," skilfully
-manoeuvring his knights and bishops beneath the shadow of the old
-mediæval castles, though it was "in his masterly manipulation of his
-queen" that he really surpassed himself. What a contrast to Gladstone's
-youthful frame of mind, who entered politics because he felt a strong
-moral duty to defend that Church which he was afterwards partly to
-disestablish against the insidious attacks of philosophic Radicalism.
-But Disraeli's point of view was, after all, merely that which was
-obvious and rational. It is well known that in Disraeli's day the whole
-efficiency of the party system as a means of carrying on the government
-was based on that sagacious inconsistency, so characteristic of this
-country, which, cheerfully accommodating the most untractable of facts
-to the most docile of theories, drew between the two parties no clear
-dividing line either of principle or of class. Those genuine lines
-of cleavage both of policy and interest that now tend to become more
-and more clearly marked did not then exist. The only vital political
-distinction then existing in England was that between the Ins and the
-Outs. Whigs and Tories were, in their origin, merely the names for the
-two rival organisations for the pursuit of political power into which
-the oligarchy of the time had divided itself, and the party catch-words
-then indicated as much essential difference as the badges by which the
-two sides of a "scratch" game symbolise a fictitious distinction.
-
-Particularly interesting is the following quotation from a letter of
-Gladstone, written comparatively early in his career, which shows
-convincingly that the subsequent democratic idealist fully realised
-the intrinsic farce of the then party system: "Each of them, the Whig
-and the Tory Party, comprises within itself far greater divergencies
-than can be noticed as dividing the more moderate portion of the one
-from the more moderate portion of the other. The great English parties
-differ no more in their general outlines than by a somewhat different
-distribution of the same elements in each." It is impossible for
-the opportunist position to be more cogently stated. It is, indeed,
-a strange paradox that political integrity should be traditionally
-associated with the name of Gladstone, who accomplished more than any
-other of our statesmen in changing statesmanship into demagogy. His
-pronouncedly religious temperament, however, led to extraordinary
-results, and his psychological condition was best expressed in the
-well-known epigram that "he followed his conscience in the same manner
-that the driver of a gig follows the horse." It was not that he was
-deliberately insincere. He could deceive himself as well as others
-with his ingenious sophisms. His sincerity was merely so elastic,
-his enthusiasm so adaptable, that he found it easy to be sincere and
-enthusiastic, _inter alia_, about those things which coincided with his
-interests.
-
-Carlyle hits the mark in dubbing Gladstone a deeper and unconscious
-juggler as contrasted with Disraeli, the clever, conscious juggler. The
-latter, at any rate, played the game straight with himself. He did not,
-like his rival, have recourse to super-natural inspiration for every
-argument that dropped from his specious lips, or degrade his deity into
-a veritable _deus ex machinâ_, whose function it was to sanction the
-most elementary dictates of Parliamentary tactics.
-
-Yet, though he exhibited a prudent elasticity in his handling of the
-minor details of party politics, in the main outlines of his policy
-he remained consistent and true to himself throughout his career. The
-romantic strain in his temperament rendered him congenitally opposed to
-the cut and dried utilitarianism of the Whigs. The renovated Toryism
-of New England, for which he was largely responsible, though to a
-great extent merely a move in the game, is deeply stamped with the
-impress of his own nature. That his bias was naturally aristocratic no
-one can doubt who has read the passage in _The Revolutionary Epicke_
-on Equality, or has appreciated the tone of personal superiority
-and contempt for the mediocre that pervades all his writings. His
-Conservatism, however, was not the orthodox Conservatism of the Eldon
-school, "the barren mule of politics which engenders nothing," to
-use his own phrase, but a more picturesque and practical policy. He
-poured successfully the new wine of Democracy into the old bottles
-of Toryism, and thus, while no doubt indulging the more romantic
-side of his nature, placed, his party on a more modern and workable
-basis. Disraeli's policy, in fact, was always one of sane and rational
-opportunism. In the same way that Gambetta, the exponent of French
-Opportunism, opposed "a policy of results to the policy of chimeras"
-of the reactionaries, Disraeli opposed to Gladstone's dangerous and
-visionary ideals a policy that was at once feasible and salutary.
-Disraeli invariably treated England as a definite country with a
-definite personality of its own, requiring individual attention and
-delicate handling, while Gladstone regarded her as a mere _tabula rasa_
-on which the latest new-fangled doctrines could be easily imprinted.
-Precisely the same spirit induced Gladstone to treat the Queen as a
-department of State and Disraeli to treat her as a woman. In home
-politics he has grasped well that transition from feudal to federal
-principles which was the keynote of the last century politics. His
-detractors object that no great measures stand identified with his
-name; but here the fates were against him. It was a cruel paradox
-that when at last he obtained an untrammelled power he was too old
-and jaded to initiate any new creative measure in domestic affairs.
-I quote Mrs. Disraeli: "You don't know my Dizzy; what great plans he
-has long matured for the good and greatness of England. But they have
-made him wait and drudge so long, and now time is against him." In his
-foreign policy, however, he displayed his characteristic combination
-of practical and imaginative strength. In the same spirit in which
-he himself had obtained the foremost place in England, he desired
-that England should acquire the foremost rank among the nations;
-while, as is shown by his Imperial policy, he infused something of
-his own picturesqueness into the policy of the most prosaic Power in
-Europe. His Indian policy, in particular, proves with what practical
-imagination he had divined how much lay in a name, and that to the
-feudatory princes it meant all the difference whether they paid their
-allegiance to the Queen of England or to the Empress of India.
-
-Disraeli's master-passion was ambition. But he was no monomaniac like
-Napoleon. In the same way that Sidonia, the complete and perfect man,
-according to Disraeli, played with a master-hand on the whole gamut
-of life, so did Disraeli, though in a lesser scale, live largely and
-fully. He lived in the solitudes of the Arabian deserts and in the
-crowded drawing-rooms of St. James's; in the halls of Westminster and
-the shady quietude of Bradenham; in the privacy of his own study, and
-in the historic chambers of Downing Street. To few men has it been
-given to express themselves in so many different ways. What matter if
-his feats of statesmanship were restricted by the limitations of the
-Parliamentary system and the handicap of his own failing health? To
-such a nature the joy of life lay rather in the winning than in the
-using of the prize. It is the romance and character of the man that
-perpetuate his memory rather than his political achievements. He lives
-as a great career. When yet a boy he had mapped out his future, and he
-realised his ambition in every detail. By sheer force of intellect and
-determination he lifted himself from the Ghetto to the highest position
-in England. As he himself said, in one of Mrs. Craigie's novels: "Many
-men have talent; few have genius; fewer still have character."
-
-
-
-
-THE GENEALOGY OF MORALS
-
-
-I
-
-_The Genealogy of Morals: a Polemic_! Nietzsche was well advised to
-append the word "polemic" to his title, for it supplies the key to
-his whole position. To some extent, no doubt, the "Genealogy" may be
-the expression in more philosophic language of those ideas, which
-find in Zarathustra their poetic and almost biblical formulation. Yet
-philosopher though he may be, Nietzsche is no abstract thinker sitting
-down stolidly on some icy height to solve the riddle of the universe,
-whatever it may be, by the rigid rules of abstract logic, so that he
-may placidly present the solution to such members of the public as
-happen to be interested in metaphysics. On the contrary his mind, and
-even more truly his temperament, are made up from the outset. Certain
-ideas grip him so tensely, and for him, at any rate, constitute so
-fiery and omnipresent a reality, as to be from his standpoint things
-transcending the mere cavillings of logicians and scientists.
-
-"You ask me why," says Zarathustra, "but I say unto you I am not one of
-those whom one may ask their why."
-
-The same idea is more technically expressed in the preface to the
-Genealogy--"that new immoral, or at least, 'amoral' _a priori_, and
-that 'categorical imperative,' which was its voice (but, oh I how
-hostile to the Kantian article, and how pregnant with problems), to
-which since then I have given more and more obedience (and, indeed,
-what is more than obedience)." For, startling though it may seem to
-the orthodox, albeit acceptable enough to the acolytes of the new
-faith, the fact stands out irresistibly, that all the later writings of
-Nietzsche are saturated through and through with the religious spirit.
-
-For Nietzsche was inspired with as supreme a consciousness of the
-infallibility and paramount necessity of his message, as rigid a belief
-in exclusive salvation through his own teachings, as has overwhelmed
-the brain of any prophet or Messiah known to human history. "I have
-given mankind the deepest book it possesses," writes Nietzsche to
-Brandes, and means it quite deliberately and quite literally. The
-content, indeed, of the religion of this converse Christ may be
-diametrically opposed to that of the original, but the machinery is the
-same. With the same exalted spirit in which Jesus preached the kingdom
-of heaven, so did Nietzsche preach the kingdom of this earth, while it
-may be noted incidentally that both kingdoms were the perquisites of
-a select few; and as the spurned god of Israel taught self-abasement
-to the weak with an intensity that, rightly or wrongly, seems a little
-extravagant to our modern taste, so does Nietzsche, and with every whit
-as honest a fanaticism, thunder forth to the strong the sublime dogma
-of self-expression and self-glorification. Turn, in fact, the doctrines
-of Christianity upside down, but leave constant the missionary
-enthusiasm of its founder, his chronic fits of extreme depression and
-extreme exaltation, and you have the quintessence of Nietzsche.
-
-As, however, it is the boast of all religions that they are beyond the
-realms of exact logic and empirical science, it would be as unfair
-to look in our prophet's polemic for the mathematical accuracy of a
-Euclidian proposition, as it would be to search for such accuracy amid
-the many grandiose and tragic thoughts that loom over the invectives of
-Isaiah, Jesus, and Jeremiah.
-
-Not, indeed, but what there are many new, swift, and illuminating
-truths in our philosopher's gospel, just as there were in the
-pronouncements of his afore-said Hebrew brethren. But the essence, the
-_raison d'être_ of the whole book is purely polemical. Nietzsche is out
-to kill, and so long as his weapons effectually subserve that object,
-he is, and quite logically, indifferent to aught else.
-
-Before, however, we analyse in detail the philosophy of this book, it
-is advisable to adjust our sights to those particular targets on which
-Nietzsche trained his gigantic and murderous artillery. We shall also
-have a better prospect of getting really into touch with "the very
-inner pulse of the machine," the real core of this philosophy, if we
-take a necessarily short, but it is to be hoped none the less vivid,
-glance at those reasons which induced Nietzsche to envisage the objects
-of his attack with so tense and implacable a hatred.
-
-Now Nietzsche found his intellectual jumping-off ground in that
-hybrid of Christianity and Buddhism stuck on a pedestal of sex, which
-constituted the philosophy of Schopenhauer and the essence of the
-fashionable pessimism of mid-century Germany. To endeavour to condense
-one of the most brilliant and elaborate systems of the last century
-into a few words is at best a delicate and hazardous task, yet perhaps
-we may adumbrate tentatively the radical elements which spurred
-Nietzsche to so sanguinary a revolt.
-
-Life according to Schopenhauer was a sorry failure, a thing not worth
-living on its merits, but kept going by the driving impetus of a blind
-life-force and knit with a mutual pity. Life then being intrinsically
-evil, the remedy for the evil was to live as little as possible--"Draw
-your desire back from the world so that there may be an end of that
-phenomenal life which is nothing but grief." Apart from general
-asceticism, there were two specific anodynes prescribed by Schopenhauer
-for the disease called life--art which transcended life, and lifted
-the spectator or listener on to another plane, and philosophy which,
-as it were, blunted the sting of life by the contemplation of the
-essentially unreal nature of the phenomenal universe. But the greatest
-good was Nirvana, a kind of Pantheistic Absolute of negativity, into
-which one eventually merged, to enjoy the supreme paradox of a peaceful
-self-consciousness of one's own nothingness.
-
-It is easy for us to sneer, nowadays, at this bilious and suicidal
-system, and to explain the whole theory of the Will to Live by the
-keen and chronic tyranny which the sexual instinct exercised over
-the philosopher himself; the fact remained, Schopenhauer was the
-dominant influence of the day--how dominant, can be seen from the
-fact that the whole of later Wagnerian music is merely a translation
-of his philosophy into the language of sound. It is easy to see the
-extent to which Schopenhauer and Wagner were saturated with the whole
-spirit of primitive and mediæval Christianity. Human life, forsooth,
-is essentially bad and essentially unreal; salvation only lies in
-the mortification and annihilation of the self. Apart, however,
-from philosophical and theological technicalities, the profound
-psychological import of this nihilistic pessimism and neo-Christian
-romanticism is patent. Man looks at man's life on earth, and gives it
-up as a bad job, or at best makes some fantastic effort to create a
-new world to redress the balance of the old. "They wanted to run away
-from their misery, and the stars were too far away. Then they sighed,
-Oh, that there were heavenly ways, forsooth, to slink into another
-Being and Happiness."
-
-It has, in fact, been well put that, as the motto of Goethe was
-"_Memento vivere_," so was the motto of Schopenhauer, "_Memento mori_."
-
-Now, Nietzsche voiced the revolt of those temperaments whose ears
-were attuned rather to "_Memento vivere_" than "_Memento mori_." We
-must remember, moreover, that that Christian romanticism which finds
-its best metaphysical formulation in Schopenhauer was in itself but
-a reaction from the real spirit of the century, that ebullience and
-exuberance of the human ego of which Stendhal is perhaps the most
-typical manifestation. It might well indeed be instructive to trace the
-intellectual descent of Nietzsche from Stendhal, and, applying again
-the sociological method, to speculate as to how far he derived some of
-the impetus for his philosophy of egoism from the aggressive wars of
-Prussia, as exemplified in the Sadowa campaign and the Franco-German
-war. It is time, however, that we came to the temperament of the
-philosopher himself. It is indeed a platitude, that as man makes his
-gods in his own image, so does the philosopher create his systems.
-What is Aristotle's ideal of the _bios theokritikos_, and
-his conception of the self-contemplative god but the erection into
-a universal norm of the thinker's natural philosophic idiosyncrasy?
-What is the elaborate "I and Me" of the cosmology of Fichte but the
-attribution to the universe of the personal idiosyncrasies of Fichte,
-the self-conscious Doppelgänger? And how Schopenhauer promoted sex
-into the devil, whose heat animates this earthly hell, we have
-already seen. What, then, was the impetus which impelled Nietzsche
-to batter down the walls of the contemporary moral and philosophic
-universe? The theory of an innate _joie de vivre_, a system highly if
-not over-charged with vitality, supplies but half the answer. The real
-explanation lies in the stiffening of this natural exuberance beneath
-the tension of a grim incessant struggle with a nervous malady.
-
-It is not actually necessary to go as far as the Swedish writer,
-M. Bjerre, who finds in Nietzsche's deliberate and revolutionary
-transvaluation of values that break up of the cerebral system from
-its previous condition which signalises the earlier stages of general
-paralysis. Yet Nietzsche's own writings, particularly his letters,
-reveal how potent was the stimulus exercised on his ego by those
-nervous headaches which hounded him over the Continent. To prevent
-defeat his will had to be perpetually strained to the maximum pitch of
-tension. The sweets of comfort being denied him, the only alternative
-left was to find a kind of super-happiness in the ecstasies and
-exultations of that Titanic contest which was perpetually fought on
-the battlefield of his own person. Let him speak for himself: "I made
-of my wish to get well, to live, my philosophy--it should, in fact, be
-noted--the years when my vitality descended to its minimum were those
-when I ceased to be a pessimist."
-
-We have not, however, at this juncture space to elaborate further
-the theory of the superman. Let it be enough to say that it is the
-raising to the _n_th power of the spirit of struggling and aggressive
-efficiency, and the venting of an over-full vitality by the creation of
-new values out of the wealth of the individual ego. As, however, the
-glorification of strength involves, and logically so, the degradation
-of weakness, and "to build up a sanctuary it is necessary for a
-sanctuary to be destroyed," it is not surprising that Nietzsche should
-clear the ground for his new creations by a ferocious bombardment of
-the crumbling ruins that still encumbered the site. Schopenhauer,
-who had been the fount from which Nietzsche's philosophic youth had
-drawn its inspiration before, as it were, he had found him out, is
-always treated with a certain amount of respect. But the arch-enemy
-was the, to him, poisonous system of altruism, self-annihilation, and
-world-renouncement which was called Christianity.
-
-The cynical may smile at the inordinate and concentrated frenzy of this
-attack. "Is not your wildly militant prophet simply wasting his powder
-and shot? Who in his senses ever heard of Christianity being taken _au
-pied de la lettre_, even by the most orthodox of modern bishops? What
-is it, to use another metaphor, but flogging a dead horse?" To which
-Nietzsche's answer would be that it is by removing the foundations
-that you remove also the superstructure, or to translate our metaphor,
-"Let me kill Christianity, and I kill at the same time all that system
-of altruism for altruism's sake, of abstract truth for the sake of
-abstract truth, which is built on that hateful foundation." It may also
-be observed that, even apart from the poetic and prophetic licence to
-which a man writing under such circumstances would be legitimately
-entitled, there are even now not wanting people who do in point of fact
-take Christianity with all the implicit seriousness of the mediæval
-monks or the early Fathers. It is, indeed, a phenomenon not without a
-certain intrinsic humour, that almost at the very moment when Tolstoi
-was making his pathetic efforts to resuscitate literal Christianity
-with the abortive tears of pity, Nietzsche should swing along to
-flagellate the semi-inanimate ghost of the bleeding God, in no monkish
-spirit, forsooth, but with all the grim and scientific energy of the
-most enthusiastic of executioners, compared to whom Voltaire was but
-the most urbane of wits, and Heine the most innocuous of schoolboys.
-Having thus taken a brief view of the targets, and of the implacable
-and very serious spirit that animates the assailant, let us glance
-briefly at the chief lines of attack.
-
-
-II
-
-The first essay of the Genealogy consists of an essay on "Good and
-Evil, Good and Bad." The line of attack is double, being first
-etymological, and secondly historical.
-
-Without going into philological exactitudes, it is, we think, fairly
-safe to follow Nietzsche in his theory that the word "good" and its
-analogues were originally applied to designate those qualities which
-were peculiar to the governing aristocratic classes, albeit qualities
-by no means susceptible of the title of "ethical" goodness. Physical
-valour being in primitive times the most valuable asset of the
-community, it is not unnatural that that quality should be held in
-universal esteem. We would remark, however, in passing, that though
-Nietzsche professes to make a flying expedition into the domain of
-early Greek ethics, which would appear, according to his teachings, to
-be represented as an ideal system worthy of modern imitation, he is
-apparently oblivious to the fact that the spirit of cunning prudence,
-of which he so emphatically disapproves, was one of the most admired
-qualities of primitive Greece.
-
-On the general question, however, we may perhaps supplement Nietzsche's
-by Spencer's argument on the meaning of the English word "good,"
-which, as is notorious, has the double meaning of "ethical" and
-"efficient." Instructive, however, though this argument is, it cannot
-be said to clinch the question, since, even in the times of ancient
-Greece, there were not wanting words such as [Greek: _kalos, aichros,
-osios_ to denote, albeit mostly in æsthetic terminology, that ethical
-meaning, of which the word _agathos_] fell so signally short.
-In other words, to use Nietzschean terminology, the ethical taint even
-then existed, though in a less virulent form.
-
-The other line of attack, however, is more serious, and penetrates to
-the very core of the modern moral system with its savage onslaught on
-Christianity. What is Christianity, says Nietzsche, but the revolt
-of the slaves in the sphere of morals? Our philosopher's suggestion,
-of course, that Christianity was a deliberate stratagem on the part
-of a revengeful Israel to square accounts with the conqueror, has,
-on the face of it, no claim to serious consideration as anything
-but a poetic thought. The fact, however, that Christianity from its
-beginning catered avowedly for the poor, the weak, the oppressed, the
-inefficient, is admittedly true, whatever disputes may range as to the
-inferences to be drawn from this fact. And that the accusation of being
-a slave-morality is something more than empty abuse, is substantiated
-by the numerous slaves who did, in fact, subscribe to the infant
-creed. It is, moreover, not without its interest to watch nowadays a
-recurrence of the same phenomenon. Just, indeed, as at present the
-proletariate are _ipso facto_ ready to believe, quite apart from any
-question of any economic justification of the doctrine, in the genuine
-iniquity of the rich capitalist, so in the early Christian era the
-proletariate were not reluctant to put their faith in the saying, that,
-"it was as easy for a camel to go through the eye of a needle as for
-a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven." The difference, however,
-between modern and ancient Christianity stands out clearly from the
-fact that though this identical creed is invoked with something
-approaching equal facility on the sides both of the angels and the
-devils, it is, on the whole, now identified with the richer and more
-prosperous classes.
-
-It must, however, be frankly admitted that Nietzsche somewhat
-overshoots the mark, both in dubbing the history of the world a
-conflict between the two ideals, of Rome and Judæa, the egoistic and
-altruistic ideals, and in asseverating that the primitive "beast of
-prey prowling avidly after booty and victory" was the only type of the
-human species worthy of admiration, and that the tamed modern species
-is but a diseased distortion. We will deal later with the lacuna
-caused in Nietzsche's philosophy by his refusal to recognise the true
-significance of the Aristotelian doctrine that man is a [Greek: _zoön
-politikon_] when we show that even from his own standpoint the modern
-state of man is preferable to the primal. Suffice it for the present
-to say that, however large a part of the truth Nietzsche captured with
-this potent theory, there remains a not inconsiderable part which still
-eluded him.
-
-
-III
-
-Having endeavoured thus to dispose of the "ethically good" and
-"ethically bad" by the theory that such ideas are merely distortions
-of the ideas of "practically good and practically bad," Nietzsche in
-the second essay of the Genealogy makes a similar effort to take the
-sting out of the ideas of "Schuld" (guilt, debt), and "schlechtes
-Gewissen" (bad conscience). But here, again, difficulties beset our
-revolutionary. He approves of responsibility and the sacredness of the
-promise, but disapproves of the bad conscience by which the individual
-would enforce these things on himself. He blesses justice, but damns
-the social system. We shall find it hard to follow him in his attempted
-reconciliation of these divergent standpoints. When, for instance,
-he alludes with almost paternal approbation to the savage mnemonics
-by which the "conscience" (_per se_) was produced, and then proceeds
-to an envenomed, if none the less brilliant polemic against the "bad
-conscience," we see that in reality it is not so much the existence of
-a conscience _quâ_ conscience, to which he objects, but the existence
-of a conscience functioning on what he conceives to be a vicious
-basis. Indeed, even the most faithful of our prophet's disciples would
-admit that the Nietzschean teaching lays down as thorny and toilsome
-a path for the "bold, bad man," or _übermensch_, as Christianity ever
-decreed for the good man or weakling. The only difference, in fact,
-between Nietzschean and Christian ethics is that between excessive
-self-affirmation and excessive self-negation. But one has only to read
-_Zarathustra_ to realise immediately that this self-affirmation is no
-heedless hedonism, but a tense and chronic struggle of the ego against
-the world, subject to as rigid rules and braving as intense martyrdoms
-as does the Christian struggle of the spirit against the flesh. We may
-say, in fact, that on an officially Nietzschean basis the "bad" man who
-fails in being thoroughly and perfectly bad is, and apparently properly
-so, subject to as poignant pangs as is the "good" man who fails in
-being thoroughly and perfectly good.
-
-Granted, however, that it is the content of the bad conscience rather
-than the existence of a bad conscience _per se_, which provokes his
-righteous indignation, let us make some attempt to see how far
-Nietzsche is logical in condemning, as he does, existing ethics as the
-bastard child of contract and revenge, thriving amid a civilisation
-which has no real right to exist. Nietzsche starts off in fine
-feather to prove that the word "Schuld" (guilt) is the same as the
-word "Schuld" (debt), as though that momentous piece of philological
-research crushed all ethics once and for all. We do not for a moment
-dispute the philology. Moreover, as far as the general principle is
-concerned, it had been previously pointed out by Maine that all crimes
-were in their origin torts--that is to say, private wrongs against the
-individual (though doubts as to how far this theory is to be carried
-are raised by the universal execration which even in the most primitive
-societies was visited on murderers like Cain or Orestes).
-
-It may, moreover, be true that in many cases the local god is simply
-a deceased ancestor promoted to a heavenly status, who requires
-payment for protecting his descendants. But such arguments can at the
-best merely have effect on the theological conception of morality
-as a divine ordinance descending immediately from heaven. From the
-sociological standpoint, indeed, to derive "ethics" from "contract"
-is simply to consolidate one phase of the social instinct by deriving
-it from another. As, however, has been hinted before, it was the
-theological conception that was Nietzsche's main objective. So long
-as he could kill that, he was indifferent to the price, if, indeed,
-his morbidly classic and aristocratic standpoint did not hold that
-the taint of the bourgeois and the [Greek: _banausos_] attached
-automatically to everything commercial.
-
-The shifts, however, to which Nietzsche is driven are well illustrated
-when we come to that further stage in his evolution of the moral idea,
-which consists in deriving modern ethics or the "bad conscience" from
-the principle of "resentment" or "revenge," which is alleged to be
-a totally distinct thing from the "active feeling" by which Justice
-enforces its sanctions. But with all due respect to Nietzsche and his
-official expounders, we find it hard to appreciate any real difference
-in principle between the various drastic measures by which the social
-organism enforces its decree. The punishment for murder, we suggest,
-would be equally death both in a Nietzschean and in a non-Nietzschean
-state, and how anything more than the merest verbal distinction is
-achieved by labelling one sanction the "active emotion of justice" and
-the other "the principle of resentment" we are frankly at a loss to
-conceive. We can only say that the basing of the "bad conscience" on
-the spirit of revenge is true in the sense that from one aspect the
-function of the social organism is to protect the many against the few
-by the enforcements of drastic punishments against its transgressors.
-That, moreover, the strong are unduly restricted to pamper the weak is
-an arguable proposition, how arguable, can be seen from the present
-volubility of the financially strong when menaced nowadays with
-taxation for the benefit of the financially weak. But to go to the
-length of saying that the whole social fabric is a morbid distortion,
-a thing intrinsically bad, a kind of quasi-theological fall from an
-ideal state of primitive anarchy, is, at the most charitable estimate,
-a mere piece of poetic extravagance. Yet to this length Nietzsche goes
-when he pictures his blonde primæval beast swung into "new situations
-and conditions of existence"; in other words, into the "pale of society
-with a spring and rush." The apparent suddenness of the transition
-strikes us, indeed, as naïf as the philosophy of Rousseau or of Hobbes,
-who actually conceived the social contract as a specific bargain
-entered into at a specific time.
-
-One of the most interesting parts, however, of the whole essay is
-Nietzsche's explanation of the "bad conscience" as the result of
-the primitive energy of the savage venting itself in psychological
-self-torture when debarred from its natural outlet of physical
-violence. "All instincts which do not vent themselves without vent
-themselves within," so runs the dictum of the prophet, a dictum
-no doubt of great psychological truth, and capable of concrete
-illustration when applied to nuns, monks, and other ascetics, or to
-definite cases of neurotic introspection, but clearly not deserving to
-be treated as the key to the whole social fabric.
-
-We have already remarked that the real weakness of the Nietzschean
-philosophy lay in the neglect of the Aristotelian theory that man was a
-_zoön politikon_ or a social animal. Let us resume this line
-of inquiry. Nietzsche does, it is true, refer to the "herd instinct"
-of the weak, but only to exhibit his very palpable contempt against
-the weak who herd together so as to be able effectually to combat the
-strong. A yet further proof of Nietzsche's bitter hatred of the social
-organism is supplied by the celebrated phrases in _Zarathustra_, "as
-little state as possible," and "the slow suicide which we call the
-state." In our view, however, the real test of Nietzsche's position
-is touched when we come to the position of the aristocratic strong
-man. "Are they," one wonders, "tainted or untainted with the herd
-instinct?" Nietzsche's answer to this question seems to be that, so
-far as concerns the vast bulk of the herd, they are inimical to the
-social instinct, but that none the less they find social organisation
-(apparently that identical state which we have seen spoken of as
-"slow suicide") necessary, not only for keeping the herd in proper
-order, but for the purpose of "their own fight with other complexes
-of power." Viewed impartially, however, it does not seem to us that
-Nietzsche pays sufficient importance to the universality and value of
-the social instinct. Perhaps the root of the whole matter lies in the
-fact that Nietzsche fixes apparently the human unit as the individual,
-whereas, in point of fact, it is that state in miniature, the family.
-The origin of the family may no doubt be found in the primæval
-instincts of sex and parentship. None the less, it is an indisputed
-sociological fact that the family, or its larger manifestation the
-tribe, is, as is evident from the slightest perusal of the works of
-Darwin, Maine, or Westermarck, the primitive form of human life. It
-would obviously be outside the scope of this preface to go in detail
-into the whole question of the origin of society, but it would also
-appear an indisputable platitude that man, _quâ_ man, thrives by
-co-operation and association. In economical terminology this truth is
-known as the division of labour, in sociology by our frequently quoted
-Aristotelian dictum that man is a social animal. Nietzsche, it is
-true, tries to evade, or at any rate minimise, the force of this fact
-by treating law as the concrete exemplification of might is right.
-This, of course, is true as far as it goes, but it is only one side
-of the medal. All law is based on sovereignty, and all sovereignty is
-in the last resort based on force. It is possible, no doubt, for this
-force, this ultimate sanction to be exercised on approved Nietzschean
-principles by the few against the many. To quote the words of Ihering,
-the great Austrian jurist: "And so force, when it allies itself with
-insight and self-control, produces law. It is the origin of law out
-of the power of the stronger who stands in opposition to another,
-of which we now begin to get a glimpse." Yet, even though for the
-moment we confine ourselves to this aspect, it is obvious that while
-such a law subjugates the weak to the strong, it also regulates and
-curtails the rights of the strong among themselves, creating, as it
-were, a state within a state, or, to use once again the language of
-Ihering, "the self-limitation of force in its own interest." Equally
-important, however, is the obverse side of the medal, on which appears
-the exercise of the ultimate sanction by the many against the few.
-To quote Ihering for the last time: "The crucial point in the whole
-organisation of law is the preponderance of the common interests of
-all over the particular interests of the individuals." The vice, then,
-of Nietzsche's theory is that he bisects law into its two constituent
-phases, ignores one phase and confines himself to the other, apparently
-in blissful oblivion of the fact that even in the most aristocratic of
-aristocracies there exists, even though in miniature, the "slow suicide
-of the state."
-
-There is a further criticism which seems to arise properly out of
-Nietzsche's vehement denunciation of civilisation. The state and
-civilisation are bad according to Nietzsche, because they take the
-sting out of this struggle for existence, and cut the fangs of the
-superman. But, according to Nietzschean principles, are they not
-equally good in so far as they enable the superman to refine and
-elaborate his scale of combat? It is, indeed, obvious that the
-intellectualisation of the blonde beast of primitive times into the
-newspaper proprietor, American financier, or revolutionary philosopher
-of modernity would have been impossible but for the intervention of
-a very highly developed social organism. Yet even the most confirmed
-Nietzschean would admit that Mr. Rockefeller is, in spite of his
-evangelistic proclivities, a more highly developed specimen of the
-superman than Tamerlane, and Lord Northcliffe than, say, Cæsar Borgia.
-
-One final observation: according to Nietzsche the test of merit is
-efficiency and the test of efficiency is success. Supposing, however,
-that a large number of individuals comparatively weak overpower through
-sheer force of combination a small number of individuals comparatively
-strong. Are not the weak changed into the strong, and conversely? We do
-not say that this is necessarily so: we merely adduce the argument to
-show how easily Nietzschean principles lend themselves to exploitation
-at the hands of the Socialists.
-
-Nietzsche's philosophy, however, was above all didactic, missionary.
-He analysed contemporary morality, not by way of an academic or
-scientific exercise, but with a view to striking, and striking hard,
-at that aspect of it which he quite honestly believed to be vicious
-and deleterious. Hence it is that having in his first two essays
-dealt with the etymological and legal aspects of the question, he now
-goes straight to the root of the whole matter. What is the practical
-application of all these tendencies which he has analysed? The ascetic
-ideal--and against this ideal our teacher proceeds to deliver as
-tense and concentrated a sermon as ever fell from the lips of any
-denouncer of the luxurious or non-ascetic ideal. We have not space,
-unfortunately, to follow Nietzsche through his elaborate analysis both
-of the ascetic ideal in its origin and in its eventual distortion and
-corruption at the hands of the ascetic priest. We will only observe
-that to grasp properly Nietzsche's position, stress should be laid
-on the fact that in the same way in which it was not the conscience
-_per se_, but the current content of the conscience, so it was not
-asceticism _per se_, but the current content of asceticism to which
-Nietzsche objected.
-
-As he explains in drastic and elaborate style, the philosopher, like
-the jockey or the athlete, would, through the simple exigencies of his
-_métier_, live the ascetic life. In such cases asceticism is simply the
-mechanical condition precedent of complete concentration. Similarly,
-the _übermensch_ (superman) would no doubt be compelled to live the
-ascetic life in his strenuous struggle with subsisting values. The
-asceticism, however, to which Nietzsche in fact did object, was the
-asceticism which was not like the philosopher's asceticism, a means to
-creating or promoting actual human life, but was a means to destroying
-and minimising actual human life, the asceticism which denied the right
-to happiness, and which found in sin the solution to the riddle of the
-human world.
-
-Indeed, it is thoroughly characteristic of Nietzsche's whole attitude
-that he demurs vigorously to almost any solution of the riddle of the
-world. According to his reasoning, the need for any solution at all,
-whether transcendental, after the pattern of Kant and the Idealists, or
-quasi-transcendental, after the pattern of the pseudo-metaphysics of
-the scientists, argues an inability to take life on its own merits and
-on its own valuation.
-
-Let us finally glance briefly at the practical application of the
-Nietzschean philosophy, a course thoroughly consistent with the
-intensely practical spirit of our prophet. We are at first almost
-overwhelmed by the heterogeneous character of those who profess to be
-the true disciples of the great master, a character so heterogeneous,
-forsooth, that Nietzsche seems occasionally to be nothing but a
-catch-word mouthed by every conceivable school of thought with
-the rankest impunity. The Socialists, conveniently forgetting the
-opprobrious designation by the sage as "spiders," and their apostolic
-"Man is not equal," which he had thundered forth, find a bond of
-sympathy in their common disapproval of Christianity, though even
-here their standpoints are radically different, since while the
-"tarantulæ" rebelled against it as being too narrow a prison, Nietzsche
-scorns it as being too comfortable a lounge. Zarathustra, moreover,
-showed himself truly Persian in his repudiation of the claims of
-the child-bearing machine called woman to equal rights with the
-warrior-man: "When thou goest with women," quoth the prophet, "forget
-not the whip." Nothing daunted, however, the shrieking hordes of
-the ultra-modern sisterhood, from the "Free Lover" to the "Ethical
-Lifer," find in Nietzsche the most emphatic justification for alike
-their theories and their practices. Does not _Es Lebe das Leben_, the
-well-known drama of Sudermann, portray the philosophical dogma of
-self-expression leading to highly unphilosophic applications? Does not
-the Scandinavian writer and woman with a mission, Ella[1] Key, start
-her book _Personality and Beauty_ with the following quotations from
-Nietzsche: "Follow after thyself--what says thy conscience?--thou shalt
-be that which thou art--let the highest self-expression be thy highest
-expression." Truly the Nietzschean aphorisms seem caps guaranteed
-to fit the most diverse heads so, but they show the slightest
-disposition to tumidity. Young men and nations in a hurry, Socialists
-and aristocrats, æsthetes and "woman's righters," all combine in a
-cacophonous chorus well calculated to make the shade of Zarathustra,
-should he visit Europe, hasten back in disgust to the mountain peaks of
-his solitude.
-
-Yet, however susceptible to abuse the Nietzschean philosophy may be,
-such a multifarious exploitation, though repudiated from the official
-standpoint, does not strike us as necessarily illogical. The doctrine
-of the superman, indeed, has in Nietzsche two distinct meanings--the
-evolution of generic man to his extreme limit, as exemplified in the
-aphorism, "Man is a bridge between beast and superman," and secondly
-the idealisation of the clash between the individual and society, the
-apotheosis of the aggressive combatant element in man, the [Greek:
-_to thumoeides_] of the Platonic trinity. Yet, whatever meaning may
-be chosen, it is well-nigh impossible to prevent individuals from
-cherishing the honest and sincere belief that in developing themselves
-(whether with or without the rigid discipline incumbent upon the
-orthodox superman), they are either helping the development of the
-race, or providing a picturesque expression of a considerably altered,
-but still authentic, "Athanasius contra mundum." With the present boom
-no doubt Nietzscheanism may become a craze (in Germany, of course, it
-is already _passé_ and has become academic and respectable), like the
-æstheticism of the Wilde period and grown liable to equal if dissimilar
-perversions.
-
-Yet none the less, if taken very broadly and very sanely, Nietzsche
-is capable of constituting a valuable modern bible for the
-twentieth-century man who proposes to live vastly and to play for grand
-stakes. It may no doubt be true that while Heine and Voltaire merely
-shot poisoned arrows at Christianity, Nietzsche blew it clean away with
-the giant salvos of his artillery; yet on the tremendous space that he
-cleared he built a temple to Energy and Efficiency. And note, that he
-worships these deities not for any ulterior advantage, but for their
-own sake solely. His frenzy for life precludes him at once from being
-a pessimist; it does not follow, however, that he is an optimist (in
-the hedonistic sense of the word), for neither in his own life, nor in
-his conception of that of others, do we find it clearly expressed that
-the pleasures of life outweigh the pains. More accurate is it to say
-that he is a philosophy transcending optimism. "On! On!! On!!! Live!
-Live!! Live!!! whatever the result and whatever your fate. Fight life
-and chance everything, for the fight's the thing rather than the mere
-trumpery guerdon." So we would venture to phrase the true Nietzschean
-spirit, or if an actual quotation is required, "_I say unto you it is
-not the good cause which sanctifies the war, but the good war which
-sanctifies the cause_."
-
-The most marvellous thing, however, about this grim lust of life is
-that it is absolutely insatiate, absolutely infinite. According to
-the theory of the Eternal Return, the events of this life will repeat
-and repeat with the tireless inevitability of a recurring decimal.
-Taken literally, no doubt this theory is simply the mystical dance
-of a Titanic mind striving to scale infinity. But the psychological
-significance is none the less profound. Is it not turning the tables
-with a vengeance on the Christian idea of a prospective non-earthly
-existence, compared with which this existence is a mere shadowy
-preparation, to pile future life on future life on future life, and
-every one of them a repetition of man's life on earth? It is impossible
-for the affirmation of human existence to be carried further. And
-this human existence, what is its solution, None, or rather itself!
-Existence is its own sanction, its own _raison d'être_, and he who
-coldly ravishes the sphinx of life has found a drastic solution far
-excelling that of any Oedipus.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: transcriber's note: "Ella" (sic). Should be "Ellen" Key.
-(M.D.)]
-
-
-
-
-AUGUST STRINDBERG
-
- "I seek God and find the Devil."
-
- "My hate is boundless as the wastes, burning as the sun,
- and stronger than my love."
-
-
-The above quotations give some idea of that black pessimism which is,
-at any rate, the most patent characteristic of Strindberg. Yet neither
-quotation, motto, nor catch-word can do justice to the multifarious
-life and character of this man. For Strindberg, more than any other
-European author of our age, has boxed the whole compass of our
-modernity with its tumults, its aspirations, its perversities; its
-glaring searchlights of science, its pallid flames of mysticism, and
-its needle ever pointing to the two opposite though connected poles
-of sex. He is in turns the most rabid of atheists, the most devout of
-Catholics, the most esoteric of occultists; now the most Utopian of
-Socialists, now the most uncompromising of individualists. Running the
-gauntlet of three unhappy and dissolved marriages, he has become the
-European specialist in conjugal infelicity, to say nothing of being
-credited with innumerable conquests, which he himself would doubtless
-have designated as captures. His novels, his autobiographies, and his
-equally subjective dramas all exhale the most sulphurous hate against
-the distorted anomaly of the new woman, yet he is an Orpheus who,
-scorning the prosaic joys of some normal and uninteresting Eurydice,
-surrenders himself with almost pathological gusto to be torn to
-pieces by the monstrous mænads of modernity. The paroxysms of his hate
-alternate with moods of the most sentimental idealism, and the harsh
-impetus of his onslaught is only equalled by the, at times, abject
-meekness of his romantic devotion.
-
-Before, consequently, we embark on some slight survey of Strindberg's
-life and of the more characteristic of his numerous works, let us
-endeavour to lay hold of the clues of one or two primary features
-which will serve as a guide in the, at first sight, extremely tangled
-labyrinth of his psychology.
-
-Now the dominant emotion in Strindberg's temperament is fear. It is
-this fear which, at times assuming the dimensions of _paranoia_ or
-systematised delusion and persecution mania, largely supplies the
-explanation to his whole attitude towards Man, Woman, and God. He
-possessed also a vehemently explosive egoism and a gigantic intellect,
-at times dominating his fear and functioning with the most powerful
-precision, but as often as not interpreting the whole external world in
-the terms of some preconceived subjective emotion. Add also a morbidly
-hypertrophied sexual sensibility, together with a distinct strain of
-genuine idealism, and one may perhaps be able to envisage with some
-accuracy the cardinal points of our author's brain.
-
-August Strindberg was born in 1849, the son of a _mésalliance_ between
-a shipping agent and a servant girl. The circumstances of his childhood
-tended to magnify that morbid sense of fear which, according to our
-most eminent psychologists, is always innate and never altogether
-acquired. The two parents, the seven children, and the two servants
-lived in two rooms, and the family always appeared to him like "a
-prison in which two prisoners watched each other, a place where
-children were tortured and maids brawled." His mother died when he was
-thirteen, to be succeeded by the inevitable stepmother. His school life
-also was unhappy, but his description of it, though no doubt perfectly
-consistent with actual hardship, exhibits at the same time the
-reactions of a morbid sensibility to the hard facts of external life.
-"Life was a penitentiary for crimes which one had committed before one
-was born, so that the child always went about with a bad conscience."
-
-Note also, at the same time, the presence of the combative aggressive
-element in the boy who would lose nearly every game of chess by the
-inconsidered vehemence of his attack, or would break open chests of
-drawers in the fury of his desire to obtain their contents. And observe
-the early manifestations of that fundamental emotion which was to
-obtain throughout his life alternative outlets in the two parallel
-channels of religion and sex. Thus, like Byron, he experienced a
-violent passion for a girl before the age of puberty. So far, again,
-as religion was concerned, he had a great horror of darkness and the
-unknown, and his deity would appear to have been a god rather of fear
-than of love. And though Scandinavians as a race take Christianity far
-more seriously than the inhabitants of any other European country, he
-would appear to have possessed, even for a Scandinavian, the religious
-temperament to an unusual degree. Thus, he said his prayers on his way
-to school, and evinced a precocious desire to become a priest. But
-the religious element became dormant amid the chequered vicissitudes
-which signalised his youth and his adolescence. He started to study
-medicine at the University of Upsala, but his lack of funds broke into
-his college career and compelled him to earn his own living. He is by
-turns telegraph clerk, editor of an insurance paper (for which purpose
-he specially learns the higher mathematics), tutor in the family of a
-rich Jewish physician, actor in the Karl Moor of Schiller's _Robbers_,
-journalist on a daily paper (where the drastic offensiveness of his
-criticisms made his position on the staff intolerable), and librarian
-in the Royal Library of Stockholm (when he specially learns Chinese
-for the purpose of compiling a catalogue). His struggles were bitter
-and continued, and the acuteness of his privations manifests itself in
-a deep consciousness of class hatred against the prosperous and not
-infrequently dishonest philistinism of the day.
-
-Note, also, the occurrence of combined religious and persecution mania
-in the crises of his illness and despondency. For at such times he
-takes the Devil himself as seriously as the Deity, believes in an
-"Evil God to whom the Creator had handed over the world," and "has the
-consciousness of being personally persecuted by personal powers of
-evil." These emotional outbursts are all the more interesting because
-intellectually he had become the most fanatical of freethinkers, had
-read with profit Buckle's _History of Civilisation in England_, and
-was a fervent disciple of the new naturalism. During this period he
-had already begun to write dramas, none of which, however, have any
-substantial significance with the possible exception of the historical
-drama _Meister Olof_, which was unsuccessfully performed in 1877-8, and
-into which the already misogynous author had introduced the character
-of the prostitute, "in order to show that the difference between her
-and the ordinary woman is not so enormously great."
-
-In 1879, however, Strindberg achieved a _succès de scandale_ with
-his novel _The Red Room_. The satire of this book (written, it will
-be remembered, during his freethought years), may, no doubt, be the
-milk of Christian charity when compared with the concentrated vitriol
-of the _Black Flags_ of his Catholic period, and the various scenes
-and pictures may, no doubt, strike the critic as episodic and lacking
-in systematic cohesion, yet the work has some claim to recognition
-by reason of the vivid force of its description of contemporaneous
-life. The naïvely idealistic hero, the shady actress passing from
-seduction to seduction with all the facility of the experienced
-_ingénue_, the respectable director of the shoddy insurance company,
-the insidious Jewish financial broker, the cynical journalist, the
-grim but benevolent doctor, are all portrayed in a style which at once
-shines and chills with all the brightness of the coldest steel. Viewed
-psychologically, the book is significant as exhibiting the Socialistic
-fury of an embittered man "whose class-hatred lay in his blood and in
-his nerves," and who revenges himself on the system which had conspired
-against him, by exposing with sinister precision its most repulsive
-truths.
-
-The cynicism of _The Red Room_ was succeeded by the Utopian
-romanticism of the dramas, _Das Geheimniss der Gilde_, _Frau Margit_,
-_Gluckspeter_. The change in mood is probably to be ascribed to the
-vogue of _The Red Room_, and to the initial success of his alliance
-with his first wife, Siri von Essen, the actress, whom he had married
-in 1878, and who was subsequently to enjoy the ambiguous blessing of
-being officially immortalised in _The Confession of a Fool_.
-
-This mood, in its turn, was soon replaced by a concentrated and
-fanatical misogynism which was to dominate practically every book
-which Strindberg was subsequently to write. The fundamental cause
-was, no doubt, the morbidly irritable and suspicious nature of the
-man himself. Strindberg's whole attitude towards woman, however, is
-only fully understood by some appreciation of the New Woman Movement,
-which under the auspices of Ellen Key flourished vigorously in Sweden
-in the "eighties." Like, for instance, our own Suffragette agitation,
-or indeed, any popular craze, however intrinsically meritorious, this
-movement, which was, above all, a crusade for sexual equality, was
-attended by wild and perverse extravagances. Not merely the genuinely
-masculine woman, but every little doll of a woman in every little
-doll's house, became obsessed with the imperative necessity of the
-emancipation of her own body and the self-development of her own soul.
-A holy war of the sexes was proclaimed, and the sacred shibboleth of
-the New Thought, the New Ethics, and the New Love was soon in the mouth
-of every woman possessed of the true feminine _esprit de corps._ And
-with the praiseworthy object of adjusting the balance of nature, and of
-arriving so far as possible at the ideal harmony of an almost perfect
-equation, in some cases even the little boys would be brought up as
-girls, while, conversely, the little girls would be educated as boys.
-
-But the misogynism of Strindberg was something far more than a merely
-intellectual appreciation of the Anti-Feminist standpoint. Even making
-allowance for the considerable impetus doubtless given to his attack
-by reason of his personal matrimonial complications, the cause lay far
-more deeply ingrained in his own constitution. For the arrogation by
-the female of equal rights to the male would of itself tend to provoke
-the violent apprehensiveness of a man always morbidly alarmed at the
-slightest suggestion of any interference with his own personal rights,
-and always scenting a grievance with all the superhuman _flair_ of
-the true maniac of persecution. Strindberg's hatred of woman is thus
-to a large extent the hatred self-begotten of fear out of its own
-spirit, and without the superfluous aid of a concrete reality. If,
-too, we identify Strindberg himself with some of his men characters
-(_e.g._ Kurt in _The Death Dance_, Axel in _Playing with Fire_, or the
-narrator of _The Confession of a Fool_), who render to the objects
-of their passion acts of the most abject servility, and who kiss the
-feet of women almost as frequently as their lips, we would hazard the
-suggestion that he himself (who owns to having found in his reverence
-for woman a substitute for his reverence for God) would in certain
-moods welcome with morbid alacrity this new feminine domination, while
-his reaction from this inverted attitude would but lash his misogynism
-to even more hysterical paroxysms.
-
-These considerations may perhaps explain why in so many of his works
-the Strindberg woman and the Strindberg man are so highly specialised.
-The typical Strindberg woman is a fiend with the physique of a Madonna
-and the soul of a vampire, who sucks dry the life-blood of her heroic
-victim. The typical Strindberg man is a Samson shorn of his strength,
-writhing in the toils of some Delilah, protesting vociferously, and
-yet taking a morbid delight in his own bondage. English readers
-will remember the not altogether unanalogous case of John Tanner,
-that converse Don Juan of Mr. Shaw, who, with all his fanfaronnade
-of masculine independence, is, as he has from the beginning feared,
-anticipated and desired, successfully hunted down by his sly and
-dashing _Donna Juana_.
-
-After the publication of _The Red Room_, Strindberg visited both
-Switzerland and Paris, where he was invited to meet Björnsen, entered
-into relations with the Théätre Libre of M. Antoine, had one or two of
-his plays produced, and meditated an unfortunately written satire on
-the French capital. In 1883 he produced _Swedish Destinies_, a volume
-of essays on contemporary problems, whose romantic masquerade would
-seem to have effectively concealed its underlying satire.
-
-The most significant work, however, which he published at this period
-was the volume of twelve (subsequently expanded to twenty) short
-stories, entitled _Marriage_. These tales all treat of the various
-phases, economic, social, psychological, and physiological, of the
-sexual problem, which he observed either in his own life or in the
-couples whom he saw in a Swiss _pension._ The characteristic of this
-work is its extraordinary seriousness. For to Strindberg the sexual
-problem provides neither the excuse for the philosophic flippancy
-of the cynic, nor for the priggish modernity of the ethical or
-intellectual snob, but is the one obsessing reality of actual life.
-
-Compared with the black pessimism of this work (relieved though it may
-be at times by a ray of tender sentiment or deep paternal feeling), the
-grimmest stories of Wedekind are benignly jovial and the most scabrous
-tales of De Maupassant but innocently sportive. Neither smile, nor
-even leer, ever breaks the set visage of this stern irony, which seems
-indistinguishable from life itself. There are no artificial climaxes
-or ostentatious flourishes of style to prick the senses of the reader.
-Described in a language of the most brutal phlegm and the most forceful
-simplicity, the facts of reality do their own unaided work. Each story
-is no mere dexterously elaborated incident, but a condensed life. How
-powerful, for instance, is such a story as _Asra,_ the history of the
-pious youth afflicted with anæmia by reason of his own continence,
-and dying two years after his marriage with that superabundantly
-healthy ethical worker who subsequently married twice again, had eight
-children, and wrote articles on over-population and immorality. And how
-genuinely awful is _Autumn_, that frigid anti-climax of a stale and
-re-hashed honeymoon:
-
- "And she sang, 'What is the name of the land in which
- my darling dwells?' But, alas, the voice was thin and
- sharp. It was at times like a shriek from the depths of
- the soul that fears that the noon is passed, and that
- the evening is approaching. When the song was over, she
- did not at first dare to turn round, as though she was
- expecting that he would come to her and say something.
- But he did not come; and there was silence in the room.
- When at last she turned round on her chair, he sat on
- the sofa and cried. She wanted to get up, take his head
- in her hands, and kiss him as before; but she remained
- seated, motionless, with her gaze turned to the floor....
-
- "They drank coffee, and spoke about the coolness of the
- summer weather, and where they would spend the summer
- next year. But the conversation began to dry up; and
- they repeated themselves. At last he said, after a long,
- undisguised yawn, 'I'm going to bed now.' 'So will I,'
- she said, and got up, 'but I will go first and have a
- look on the balcony.'
-
- "When she came back, she remained standing and listening
- at the door of the bedroom. All was quiet inside, and
- the boots were outside the door. She knocked, but there
- was no answer. Then she opened the door, and went in. He
- slept! He slept!"
-
-Though, moreover, the characters in _Marriage_ are more normal and
-average than in any other of Strindberg's works, the author airs again
-and again his pet sexual grievances. _Corinna_, in particular, and
-_The Duel_, are savage attacks respectively on the ethical amazon and
-the womanly woman who makes her very womanliness an engine of tyranny,
-while the _Breadwinner_ narrates how an apparently quite impeccable
-husband and father, writing himself to death to support his family,
-was driven to suicide by the naggings and exactions of a querulous and
-discontented wife.
-
-_Marriage_ was succeeded by the Utopian _Swiss Tales_; but the
-strenuous economic struggles to which Strindberg was now subjected
-forced him to discard as insipid the vague compromise of free-thought
-and to drink the bracing tonic of a Nietzschean and self-reliant
-atheism. "God, Heaven, and Eternity had to be thrown overboard if the
-ship was to be kept afloat; and it had to be kept afloat because I was
-not alone ... I became an atheist as a matter of duty and necessity."
-
-Yet it is interesting to observe that, taking the solution of the
-World-Riddle as a matter of acute personal importance, he studies the
-whole history of mankind to satisfy himself that he is right in his
-conclusion, and that the element of superstition is still so strong
-that when his child is ill he prays, atheist that he is, with all the
-fervour of a Christian Scientist. To the period of his atheism are to
-be ascribed, with the exception of _Black Flags_, his most powerful,
-most drastic work, his two packed volumes of one-act plays, the
-autobiographic _Confession of a Fool_, and the Nietzschean novel, _The
-Open Sea_.
-
-Note also that his matrimonial misery and his divorce from his first
-wife had given an additional poison to a sting which was always
-morbidly eager to inject its venom.
-
-The plays of Strindberg belong to the naturalistic school of
-problem-play which was in full vogue during the period of their
-composition. Technically their originality lies in the intensity of
-their concentration. Though many of them are one-acters and they nearly
-all observe the unity of place, they resemble less the ordinary
-curtain-raiser than the one solitary act round which the ordinary
-modern play is usually written. Each play is nothing but climax. Though
-in some cases they are nearly as long as ordinary drama, it is rare
-that they have any subsidiary characters. Even the protagonists are too
-occupied with the urgencies of their own immediate crises, and with
-exposing the nakedness of their own souls, to have time for either the
-artificial jewels of the Pinerovian epigram or the flying rockets of
-the Shavian dialectic. The problem is stuck too deep into their lives
-to require any artificial flourishing. Observe, too, that nearly every
-play is a variation on one theme, the mutual hate, fear, and war of a
-malevolent humanity. Their very love but sharpens their enmity, and
-they draw blood with nearly every word.
-
-The three-act play, _The Father_, ventilates the author's chronic
-grievance of the ruin of the man by the woman. The plot is cruel
-in its simplicity. The husband, though in a state of acute nervous
-disorder, is not certifiable. The wife, anxious for a freer life,
-smuggles a doctor into the house, plays adroitly on the man's pet
-mania that he is not the father of his own daughter, forges in his
-handwriting a letter branded with insanity, goads him into throwing
-a burning lamp at her, and with the aid of his old nurse gets him by
-a ruse into a strait-jacket, in which he succumbs to a stroke. Yet
-with all its concentrated sensationalism, and work though it may be
-of a constitutional maniac of persecution, the play is too deep, too
-sincere, too fundamentally convincing to be ever near that line which
-separates the realm of tragedy from the pandemonium of melodrama. With
-what ghastly irony does the daughter innocently prick the sensitive
-sore in her father's brain:
-
- [Rittmeister _sits huddled up on the settee_.
-
- BERTHA. Do you know what you've done? Do you know you've
- thrown the lamp at Mamma?
-
- RITTMEISTER. Have I?
-
- BERTHA. Yes, you have. Just think if she'd been hurt?
-
- RITTMEISTER. What would that have mattered?
-
- BERTHA. You are not my father if you can talk like that.
-
- Rittmeister (_gets up_). What do you say? Am I not your
- father? How do you know that? Who told you so? And who
- is your father, then? Who?
-
-But of all Strindberg's plays, indisputably the most powerful is _Miss
-Julie_, that gripping tragedy of the over-sexed young woman who on an
-oppressive mid-summer evening insists on being seduced by her father's
-butler. The girl is of noble birth, and the duel of sex is intensified
-by the duel of class. In the fifty pages of this play, with its three
-characters of the woman, the butler, and the cook, which observes
-rigorously the Aristotelian unities, every element of the highest
-and gravest tragedy is introduced with the most accurate and natural
-psychology--the exaggerated dancing of the daughter of the house, who
-competes with her own cook for the favours of her own butler-lover; the
-ribald grins and songs of the servants; the mingled insolence, common
-sense, and respectfulness of the domestic; the hysterical reaction
-of the _déclassée_ and dishonoured girl. The following passages may
-perhaps give some faint idea of this work's sustained and infernal
-power:
-
- [John _opens the cupboard, takes a bottle of wine out,
- and fills two used glasses_.
-
- THE YOUNG LADY. Where do you get the wine from?
-
- JOHN. From the cellar.
-
- THE YOUNG LADY. My father's burgundy.
-
- JOHN. Ain't it good enough for his son-in-law?
-
- THE WOMAN. Thief!
-
- JOHN. Are you going to blab?
-
- THE LADY. Oh--oh--the accomplice of a thief....
-
- JOHN. You hate men-folk, miss?
-
- THE LADY. Yes, as a rule!... But at times, when I feel
- weak--ugh!
-
- JOHN. You hate me, too?
-
- THE LADY. Infinitely! I could have killed you like an
- animal....
-
-And how clutching is the climax, when the girl, a simultaneous prey
-to nausea with life and to fear of death, persuades her domestic to
-hypnotise her into suicide at almost the precise minute when her father
-is ringing for his boots:
-
- THE YOUNG LADY. Have you never been in a theatre and
- seen the mesmerist? He says to the subject: "Take the
- broom"; he takes it. He says "Sweep"; and he sweeps....
-
- JOHN (_takes his razor and puts it into her hand_). Here
- is the broom--go now where there's plenty of light--into
- the barn--and--(_whispers into her ear_).
-
-_Miss Julie_ is remarkable as being the only one of Strindberg's
-works in which the man comes off victorious with the exception of the
-four-act _Comrades,_ that sombre comedy of Parisian artist life, where
-the crowing wife bullies her self-sacrificing husband on the score of
-having ousted him from the Salon by her own successful picture, only
-to be told that he had simply changed the numbers, and to be finally
-ejected from her perverted home by that reasserted man whose efficiency
-she had despised and exploited, but whose virile despotism she now
-begins to love.
-
-In _The Creditor_, Strindberg treats again his favourite theme of the
-vampire woman and the spoliated man. Thekla, the usual worthless,
-demoniac female, having dissolved her marriage with the schoolmaster
-Gustav, has married the artist Adolph. The scene is the sea-side.
-Thekla has gone off on some jaunt. Her new husband, who is apparently
-even more miserable without than with his wife, is a nervous wreck.
-He makes the acquaintance of the old husband, who presents himself
-incognito to readjust the balance of his matrimonial account. Gustav
-plays with masterly hypnotism on the suggestibility of his colleague,
-making him doubt himself, his vocation, his health, and at last his
-wife. And then when his wife returns, and the enfeebled husband has
-made an abortive attempt at asserting his theoretic virile superiority,
-he makes love to the wife, is detected by the visitors, and goes
-back to his own solitary misery, to leave his wife stranded and his
-new confrere dead. Note, too, that here again the human triangle is
-complete in itself, and that the agony is protracted to the last shred
-of its passion without ever flagging for one single moment.
-
-Space prohibits any complete discussion of the remaining plays in
-the cycle of Strindberg's _Eleven One-acters_. Yet we would mention
-_Motherly Love,_ a variation on the theme of Mrs. Warren. The
-_souteneuse_ mother, with all her loathsome affectation of wounded
-parental feeling, plays judiciously on the morbidly filial conscience
-of a clean-minded but weak-willed actress-daughter, prevents her from
-obtaining respectable friends or advancement on the stage, in order to
-preserve for herself her sole professional stock-in-trade.
-
-Equally impressive is _The Bond_, which expresses in one divorce-court
-scene the whole mordant tragedy of wrangling matrimony and authentic
-parental affection.
-
-In a lighter vein is _Playing with Fire_, the one real comedy which
-Strindberg ever wrote. In this the delightful _ménage_ of a young son,
-a young wife, a young friend of the family, a young charity cousin,
-and a philistine but by no means senile father, everybody is flirting
-with everybody else. Particularly admirable in its mixture of the comic
-and the ironic is the character and attitude of the conceited and
-ultra-modern artist-husband, genuinely jealous of that friend and of
-that wife whom he loves so sincerely, and yet throwing them into each
-other's arms in a compounded mood of priggish bravado and authentic
-affection. The friend, apprehensive lest he may have a bad conscience,
-is anxious to take a room in the village.
-
- THE WIFE. Why don't you stay with us? Out with it.
-
- THE FRIEND. I don't know. I think you ought to be left
- quiet. Besides it might happen that we should get fed up
- with each other.
-
- THE WIFE. Are you fed up with us already? I tell you, it
- won't do. I tell you that if you stay out there in the
- village, people will begin to talk.
-
- THE FRIEND. Talk? What will they talk about?
-
- THE WIFE. Oh, you know perfectly well how stories get
- put together.
-
- THE SON. You stay here--there's an end of it. Let them
- talk. If you stay here, it goes without saying that
- you're my wife's lover, and if you stay in the village,
- it goes without saying that you've broken with each
- other, or that I've kicked you out. Consequently, I
- think it more honourable for you to be regarded as her
- lover--eh, what?
-
- THE FRIEND. You certainly express yourself with
- considerable lucidity; but in a case like this, I'd
- rather prefer to consider which is honourable for you
- two.
-
-As we have already hinted, an additional bitterness had been introduced
-into Strindberg's misogynism by the unhappiness of his own first
-marriage, which was dissolved in 1889. It is this marriage which
-Strindberg celebrates in that phenomenal piece of official sexual
-autobiography, _The Confession of a Fool_, which has successfully
-scandalised the whole Continent of Europe. In comparison with this book
-the _New Machiavelli_ is but the tamest Sunday-school reading, and
-the romantic confessions of Mr. George Moore the merest healthy pranks
-of robustious youth. This work throughout has the real spontaneity of
-the genuine diary rather than the studied frankness of the elaborate
-literary artificer. The young librarian is in Stockholm. A young lady
-makes advances to him. "She has an adventurous appearance, hovering
-between the artist, the blue-stocking, the daughter of the house,
-the _fille de joie_, the new woman, and the coquette." She presses
-her suit, looks at him in an unambiguous manner, and "he only owes
-his virtue to her extraordinary ugliness." He is introduced to her
-friends, the Baron and Baroness X. He becomes the _ami de famille_.
-But the demon of sex is at work, and simply through keeping step with
-her in walking he will experience a unification of their whole nervous
-systems. Honourable man that he is, he runs away from danger, starts
-for Paris in a steamship, and is seen off amid the combined tears
-of the married pair. The ship sails. His nerves break down; and in
-an hysterical paroxysm he insists on being disembarked, is attended
-by a priest and doctor at a small hotel, and returns post-haste to
-Stockholm. The Baroness runs away to a watering-place. But matters only
-progress with even greater rapidity on her return. The Baron is largely
-occupied with a cousin; and an official declaration takes place between
-the wife and the lover. With ultra-modern honesty they immediately
-apprise the husband, who while giving them the widest margin within
-which to exercise their platonic affections, yet reposes implicit trust
-in their combined honour. A financial crash, however, disposes of the
-Baron; and the gentleman is landed with his lady. There ensue all the
-joys and agonies of a ten-years' union. The couple are linked in the
-burning bonds of a mutual love and a mutual hate. The author has to
-sacrifice his own well-being and career to push forward his wife in
-her amateurish efforts in journalism and acting. From that time "legal
-prostitution enters into the marriage...." She belongs to the public,
-she makes up and dresses for the public, and she consequently becomes
-"a prostitute who will finally send in her bill for such and such
-services."
-
-The moods alternate with the regularity of a pendulum. If at one moment
-"the nest of love has become transformed into a dog-kennel," and the
-author is morbidly jealous of nearly every man and every woman with
-whom his wife has the slightest acquaintance, strikes his wife, and
-endeavours to drown her; it is only subsequently, in the last stages of
-servile uxoriousness, to idolise her again as a martyr and as a saint.
-Six times does he leave her (expending on one occasion in debauchery
-the proceeds of his pawned wedding-ring), and six times does he return,
-only to draw up at last this monstrous dossier of his conjugal life:
-"The story is at an end, my beloved one; I have revenged myself; the
-account is squared."
-
-Not altogether inexplicably, Strindberg has been much attacked on the
-score of this book. He has been charged with wickedly defaming an
-innocent and deserving woman. Yet even though the book be objectively
-false, it is subjectively true. It is impossible to doubt its
-prodigious sincerity, even though this merely be the implicit sincerity
-of persecution mania. Every single nuance of the emotions of a man who
-honestly thinks that he is being unscrupulously exploited is faithfully
-described. The book may shock by its vehement coldness, its abnormal
-callousness, its matter-of-fact explicitness; yet from the literary
-standpoint, its entire absence of affectation, the drastic ease of
-its simplicity, the swift naturalness of its diction, cannot fail to
-convince. It stands out from the whole of European literature as the
-superlative masterpiece of suspicious love and monstrous morbid hate.
-
-In the great novel, _By the Open Sea_ (1890), Strindberg's Nietzschean
-mood achieves its grand zenith. The hero, Axel Borg (whom we may
-already remember from _The Red Room_), "instead of, like the weak
-Christians, embracing a God outside himself, took what he could seize
-with his own hands and in his own self, and sought to make his own
-personality into a complete type of humanity." Borg, who combines with
-the ideals of the superman the hyper-sensitiveness of the neurotic,
-lives the single life as an inspector of fishery in a little village on
-the Swedish coast, where the sea "frightens not like the forest with
-its dark mystery, but brings quietude like an open great big true eye."
-He is pursued and caught by an over-sexed young woman, realises her
-worthlessness, and sails out to commit suicide.
-
- "Out toward the new Star of Christmas, ran his voyage,
- out over the Sea, the All-Mother, from whose bosom the
- first spark of life was kindled, the inexhaustible
- source of fertility and love, life's origin and life's
- foe."
-
-This book, with its splendid nature-descriptions, the tragic dignity
-of its hero, and the azure swiftness of its limpid style, is one
-of Strindberg's most impressive feats. Yet even here the author's
-characteristic traits can be distinctly traced. The noble male is
-ruined by a despicable woman; while here, too, the cosmic mysticism of
-the professed atheist (whose mood can perhaps be best expressed by the
-worn _cliché_ of "being in tune with the infinite"), reveals only too
-clearly the emotional bias of a fundamentally religious temperament.
-
-This temperament was soon to manifest itself in the most tragic form.
-Jaded with literature, and unhappy again in his second marriage with
-the Austrian authoress, Frida Uhl, in 1893, Strindberg embarked on
-the study of chemistry, took rooms in the Latin quarter, attended the
-Sorbonne laboratories, and imagined that he had revolutionised science
-by the discovery of a new element in sulphur. He had by now attained
-the, to him, crucial period of the late "forties," and the chronic
-excesses of his emotionalism now assumed a religious form, to the
-accompaniment of the most acute mania of persecution.
-
-His experiences in these years, 1895-8, are described in the _Inferno_
-and the _Legends_, works which the mystic and the psychologist can read
-with equal if heterogeneous edification. In these books, which are
-based on Strindberg's diaries during the actual time, the aberrations
-of a disorganised brain are set out with the most unconscious literary
-art. His delusions became systematised with all the ingenuity of the
-_paranoiac_. Every casual suggestion thrown up by his memory, or the
-events and associations of every-day life, every bit of science that
-he had ever studied or of mysticism that he had ever felt, are all
-utilised to build the infernal scheme of his mania. He is "the innocent
-sacrifice of an unjust persecution," the prey of unknown powers, the
-conducting-point of electrical streams from unknown agencies. He asks
-for a miracle and sees in the heavens the ten commandments and the name
-of Jehovah. His friend Popoffski (in point of fact, the Polish-German
-novelist Przybeszewski) has come to Paris; it is with the sole object
-of killing him by poison. His usual seat at his usual café is occupied;
-he is the victim of a universal conspiracy. Eventually the hells of
-his torment burn themselves out in an abject ecstasy of atonement, in
-Catholicism, Swedenborgianism, and the bastard hybrid of a scientific
-occultism.
-
-From this time the religious obsession sits upon most, if not
-all, of his subsequent work. To this mood are due the officially
-religious dramas _To Damascus, Midsummer_, the extremely weak
-_Advent and Easter_, his new-found theory of _The Conscious Will in
-the World-History_, his historical dramas (where the characters,
-particularly Luther, were too subjectively conceived to be historically
-convincing), and his _Dream-Play_ (where telephones, lawyers, theatres,
-enchanted woods, Indra's daughter, military officers, married
-couples, casinos, poets, and ballet-dancers all combine to weave the
-filmy phantasmagoria of a Buddhistic reality). We may also mention
-in this connection the _Blue Books_, the official synthesis of his
-life (a series of miniature essays on such apparently heterogeneous
-subjects as, _inter alia_, Troy, Christ, electro-chemistry, botany,
-surds, Assyriology, optics, geology, Hammurabi, astrology, morphium,
-Swedenborgianism, spermatozoic analysis, mystic numbers, Kipling, and
-Jehovah).
-
-Although, speaking generally, Strindberg achieved his masterpieces
-during the period of his atheism, many of his later works have
-indisputable value. The play _Intoxication_ (1900), for instance
-(though the killing through sheer unconscious force of will, by the
-hero, of the child of one mistress, in order to gratify the caprice of
-another, may strike the unimaginative critic as slightly melodramatic,
-and his eventual retirement into a Catholic monastery as somewhat of an
-anti-climax), is a work of extraordinary power.
-
-So also is the _Death Dance_ (1900), in which the middle-aged captain
-and his _passée_ wife grind each other to ruin and despair beneath
-the mutual mill-stones of their hate, "that most unreasonable hate,
-without ground, without object, but also without end." Does not the
-author plumb the extreme depths of human malevolence in the passage in
-which the wife in company with her cousin is expecting her paralytic
-husband to fall down dead?
-
- KARL. What are you looking at over there, dear, by the
- wall?
-
- ALICE. I'm seeing if he's tumbled down.
-
- KARL. Has he tumbled down?
-
- ALICE. NO, more's the pity. He deceives me in everything.
-
-We would also mention the Maeterlinckian beauty of the _Crown Bride_
-and _Swan White_ (1900), the heroine of which is an idealisation of
-the author's third wife, the actress, Harriet Bosse; the delicate
-fantasy of _Tales_ (1908); and the _Swedish Miniatures_, of which the
-_Sacrifice Dance_ in particular is a positive masterpiece of swift
-bloodiness.
-
-Cruelty, moreover, is an integral element in at any rate primitive
-religion. This may conceivably explain why, faithfully fulfilling
-what he personally professed to have found a joyless duty, Strindberg
-successfully performed in _Black Flags_, his celebrated _roman à clef,_
-the intellectual flaying and dismemberment of all Stockholm Bohemia.
-It is amusing to remember that he successfully consulted the oracle
-of the Book of Job before he published the work in 1905, to face the
-protesting shrieks of his victims with all the devout conscience of
-some early priest of Thor who gravely officiates at some blood-stained
-human sacrifice.
-
-It is outside the purpose of this essay to discuss whether these
-descriptions of the intellectual and sexual clique of the Swedish
-capital constitute a fair portrait or a monstrous defamation, or
-whether, for instance, Hanna Paj is a malignant travesty or a
-euphemistic delineation of that lady whom all who have the slightest
-acquaintance with the Continental Feminist Movement will immediately
-recognise.
-
-As a sheer piece of satire the book waves its black flag unchallenged
-amid all the fluttering multicoloured pennons of modern European
-literature. What matter if the characterisation be true or false? So
-far, at any rate, as the non-Swedish reader is concerned, the illusion
-is complete. Kilo, "the little bookseller, with the suffering eyes
-of a sick dog"; Falkenstrom, the idealist, whose wife is induced by
-her bosom friend to join some alleged monstrous cosmopolitan masonic
-sisterhood; Hanna Paj, the feminist lecturer, the fury with the flag
-of hate on which was written the device, "Revenge on Man"; Smartman,
-the debonair intriguing editor with his two sets of rooms--all these
-pictures of "the galley-slaves of ambition linked together in the
-fetters of interest, these murderers and thieves who steal each other's
-thoughts, addresses, friends, and personalities," are perfectly
-convincing. Above all there stands out the delineation of Lars Peter
-Zachrisson, "the intellectual cannibal," the "broker of literature, the
-promoter of mutual admiration societies, the speculator in reputations,
-the founder of syndicates for the manufacture of celebrities," the
-morphia maniac, the tippler "who laughs humorously in his moustache and
-weeps tears of whisky from his eyes," the father of "that resurrected
-corpse, that wandering shame, whose face was known to all, and who was
-branded with his own name." And how devilish is the description of this
-domestic hell of human hate, where he mocks his wife on her failing
-charms and encourages her gluttony with the specific object of spoiling
-her figure, where the mother in her turn brings up her children like a
-breed of dachshunds whom she sets to bait their father, and where the
-two spouses yet feel some inexplicable need of being together in the
-same room for the purpose of that mutual nagging and mutual reviling
-which constituted the chief interest in their miserable existence.
-
-To sum up, we have seen how throughout his life the persecution mania
-of Strindberg expressed itself in his attitude to sex, religion, and
-society, as like at once some veritable Rhadamanthine recorder, and
-some cowering victim of divine vengeance, he dispenses and fears those
-words of doom in his black adamant of diction. Yet it is impossible
-casually to brush the man aside as some mere _paranoiac_. The very
-torments of his soul fructified in the stupendous genius of his
-intellectual production. With all his perversities, with all his
-aberrations, Strindberg remains the blackest, and in his own particular
-spheres the most drastic, intelligence in the whole of our European
-literature.
-
-
-
-
-THE WELTANSCHAUUNG OF MISS MARIE CORELLI
-
-
- "By my faith I would as soon listen to the gabbling of
- geese in a farmyard as to the silly glibness of such
- inflated twaddling, such mawkish sentiment, such turgid
- garrulity, such ranting verbosity."
-
- "Clearness of thought, brilliancy of style, beauty of
- diction, all these were hers united to consummate ease
- of expression and artistic skill."
-
-
-The above quotations, extracted from _Ardath_ and from the
-autobiographical if unofficial description of Mavis Clair in _The
-Sorrows of Satan_, are well adapted to express the two extreme views
-concerning the merits and the demerits of the lady who, rightly or
-wrongly, certainly occupies the most conspicuous position among our
-English women-novelists. It is not surprising that such divergent views
-should be provoked by a character who, however simple she may be in her
-own personal psychology, is from the literary standpoint essentially
-complex.
-
-In _The Romance of Two Worlds_, for instance, the first fruits of
-her literary genius, the novelist's theory of the "Soul Germ" and
-her conception of the "Electric Principle of Christianity" running
-through the whole cosmology would seem unmistakably to foreshadow the
-Bergsonian theory of the _élan de vie,_ while the subtly delineated
-character of the twentieth-century Chaldæan magician, Heliobas, "who
-never promises to effect a cure unless he sees that the person who
-comes to be cured has a certain connection with himself," bears a
-distinct analogy to the cabalistic mysticism of Mr. Aleister Crowley.
-On the other hand, that grim tragedy entitled _Vendetta_ is in almost
-equal degrees reminiscent of the stark inexorableness of Æschylus,
-and of the human, all-too-human, humanity of Mr. Walter Melville. In
-_Ardathy_ that "tale of beauty, of horror, and of extraordinary amours"
-(if we may quote from the authorised biography of our novelist), a
-subject-matter that might well have emanated from the pen of a Pierre
-Louys, is handled with the unimpeachable correctness of a Samuel
-Smiles. So, too, the great _Tendenzroman_ "Wormwood" is a dexterous
-combination of the _macabre_ phantasy of Mr. Ranger Gull and the
-ethical "uplift" of Mr. Guy Thorne. She is, moreover, an authoress who
-is keenly alive to the social problems of the day, treating in _Boy_
-and _The Mighty Atom_ of the Wedekindian problem of the influence
-of free-thought on the mind of puberty (though it must be confessed
-that her solution of that exceedingly thorny problem is by no means
-identical with that of the slightly cynical author of _Spring's
-Awakening_), and handling in _The Murder of Delicia_ the almost equally
-delicate subject of the modern _maquereau_.
-
-While, too, Miss Corelli has enriched the literature of Anti-Semitism
-with such novel and crushing phrases as "Jew-speculator,"
-"Jew-proprietor of a stock-jobbing newspaper," "the fat Jew-spider
-of several newspaper webs," her denunciation of certain phases of
-Continental Christianity as "the sickening and barbarous superstition
-everywhere offered as the representation of sublime Deity" indicates
-some cleavage between her own Protestant theology and that rigid
-Ultramontanism which would appear nowadays to be one of the essential
-qualifications for the really full-fledged Anti-Semite. And if at
-times with the thyrsus of her ecstatic style she is frequently the
-Juvenalian flagellant of that "brilliant fashionable dress-loving crowd
-of women who spend most of their time in caring for their complexions
-and counting their lovers," her features exhibit not so much the sadic
-grin of the mænad as the seraphic loving-kindness of some mediæval
-saint dumped down by a caprice of a fantastic Providence amid all the
-howling welter of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. While too
-such phrases as "retrospective and introspective repentance" show
-an almost Jamesian preciosity in the fine-drawn distinction between
-the repentance for the sins that have been already committed in the
-past and for those which are about to be committed in the future,
-and between the repentance which takes place within the four corners
-of the human soul, and that which occurs within some other sphere of
-psychological activity, our lady's entire lack, generally speaking, of
-all the affectations of our ultra-modern subtlety are more reminiscent
-of the downright horse-sense of President Roosevelt or the transparent
-but by no means necessarily shallow simplicity of such writers as Mrs.
-L. T. Meade, Mrs. Annie Swan, Mr. Charles Garvice, and Mr. William Le
-Queux.
-
-It is then in view of the fundamentally complex problem constituted by
-Miss Corelli that, disregarding alike the convention of her admirers
-that she is above criticism, and the convention of her detractors that
-she is beneath it, we propose to examine our authoress with the maximum
-of seriousness at our command, and to await with sanguine interest the
-result of what from the point of view at any rate of the critic is so
-revolutionary a procedure. The contents of at any rate the majority of
-the volumes of Miss Corelli being necessarily familiar to all readers
-of culture, we propose to confine our analysis to a survey of the
-cardinal points in our lady's _Weltanschauung_. Strange though it may
-seem to "the fashionable atheism of the day" (if we may quote one
-of our authoress's favourite and most persistent phrases), it is the
-religious instinct which supplies the key of the Corellian psychology.
-In this connection it is interesting to remember parenthetically the
-pretty anecdote of how when the future novelist, then quite a little
-girl, was rejoicing in the sobriquet of "The Rosebud," she would always
-have the nocturnal consciousness that angels were present in her
-bedroom, and that Dr. Mackay, the mid-Victorian littérateur who had
-adopted the child at the early age of three months, is reported to have
-made the gentle but not inapposite remark, "Never mind, Dearie! It is
-there, you may be sure, and if you behave just as if you saw it, you
-will certainly see it some day."
-
-It was perhaps a few years later that the little girl dreamt of
-founding a new religious order, and that an education at a French
-convent left on her virgin soul that white cachet which even the
-corruptness of Edwardian society, "when the infidelity of wives is
-most unhappily becoming common--far too common for the peace and good
-repute of society," has signally failed to in any way pollute (if as
-a mere matter of grammatical conviviality we may venture to split an
-infinitive with our distinguished _consoeur_). When, however, Miss
-Corelli attained the ripeness of complete womanhood, the voice of the
-angels would appear to have whispered in her ear the great injunction
-"to leave the world a little better than she found it," and the
-sacred odour of her exceedingly important mission is to be detected
-practically in every work that has issued from her pen. Holding,
-like Torquemada, Mr. Torrie, Attila, Loyola, and the late Dr. Elijah
-Dowie and many other great religious enthusiasts of all epochs, that
-conversion is the most efficient method of spiritual improvement, she
-concentrates her fire with especial vehemence on the "women-atheists,
-who had voluntarily crushed out the sweetness of the sex within them,
-the unnatural product of an unnatural age," who have "as haughty a
-scorn of Christ and His teaching as any unbelieving Jew," and on
-"the common boor who, reading his penny Radical paper, thinks he can
-dispense with God and talks of the carpenter's son of Judæa with the
-same easy flippancy and scant reverence as his companion in sin."
-
-Thus it comes that Miss Corelli, with her full share of that
-intolerance which is the classical concomitant of all true religion,
-would close the harbour of England to the exiled Jesuits of France,
-and exclude the Jews from their prominent position in contemporary
-society and finance. So far from shedding a single tear over the
-tragic death of Zola, she gloats with righteous gusto over his
-asphyxiation, which she ascribes to a specific piece of theological
-revengefulness on the part of an orthodox and insulted Providence. At
-times her strictures come nearer home, and more frequently perhaps
-than any other woman-novelist of the day does she castigate those
-Episcopalian clergymen who indulge in the mental and physical enjoyment
-of illicit sex in wilful disregard of the most fundamental elements
-of their professional etiquette, "the vicious and worldly clerical
-bon-vivants ... talking society scandal with as much easy glibness
-as any dissolute lay decadent that ever cozened another man's wife
-away from honour in the tricky disguise of a soul." In _Thelma_, for
-instance, the lascivious minister of Christ intent on compassing the
-almost compulsory seduction of the prettiest of his own parishioners,
-while his "conscience was enveloped in a moral leather casing of
-hypocrisy and arrogance," is a piece of characterisation which in its
-own particular line of vice forms a fitting analogue to the monstrous
-clergyman in Mrs. Voynich's _Jack Raymond_.
-
-So far, moreover, as the nuances of dogma are concerned our teacher
-takes the delicate and middle course, being as deeply shocked by the
-ritualistic excesses of the High Church as by what Mr. G. K. Chesterton
-has epigrammatically described as the "tea-leaves of Nonconformity." In
-fact her theology may perhaps be crystallised in the following formula,
-which however difficult in actual practice is from the stylistic
-standpoint of perfect simplicity:
-
- "Why should we be followers of Luther, Wesley, or
- any other human teacher or preacher when all that is
- necessary is that we should be followers of Christ?"
-
-But Miss Corelli is no credulous bigot. She is as sceptical of the
-historical trustworthiness of part of the initial chapters of Genesis
-as Colonel Ingersoll, Mr. G. W. Foote, or Mr. Horatio Bottomley. Let
-us quote from _Free Opinions_ the following eloquent parenthesis: "A
-legend, which, like that of the Tree of Good and Evil itself requires
-stronger confirmation than history as yet witnesseth, which, by the
-way, was evidently invented by man himself for his own convenience."
-
-Let us, however, now turn from Miss Corelli's solitary excursion into
-the sphere of the Higher Criticism to some brief survey of her more
-positive and constructive philosophy.
-
-The Corellian cosmology is most fully expounded in _The Romance of Two
-Worlds_. This novel is the story of a young girl who, sick in body and
-mind, visits the Continent. She makes the acquaintance of a Chaldsean
-_mage_ of magnetic personality called Heliobas. Heliobas, realising at
-the first sight of the young girl "that her state of health precludes
-her from the enjoyment of life natural to her sex and age," gives her
-to drink of some rare and special potion with the result that her
-soul, dissociated for the time being from her body, takes a flying
-trip through space and purgatory, and the lady awakens to a more
-complete spiritual harmony. In this book the authoress's individual
-theories of the Soul Germ and the Electric Circle are expressed in
-voluminous digressions and dialogues whose inexhaustible opulence
-might well be called a Platonic Dialectic brought up to the date of
-nineteenth-century science.
-
-This fusion of science and mysticism, which at first sight seem as far
-apart as the poles or the sexes, into a harmonious if heterogeneous
-unity, can also be traced in the Corellian physiology. Thus in _Thelma_
-we meet the unfortunate creature Sigurd, "an infant abortion, the evil
-fruit of an evil deed," destined to so tragic and well-described a
-death, while in _Temporal Power_ we are confronted with the strange
-character of Paul Zouche, "the human eccentricity, the result of an
-amour between a fiend and an angel."
-
-In the sphere of ethics, Miss Corelli is careful to avoid that
-misplaced originality which is so often the gaudy masquerade for a
-pallid and degenerate licentiousness. Our authoress finds sufficient
-both for her own personal requirements and the spiritual health of her
-reader in those good old maxims enshrined in the Bible, the _Family
-Herald_, and the copy-books of all self-respecting seminaries. Good
-is Good, she says, and Right is Right. We may note also the Corellian
-principle of the inevitable triumph of the hero or heroine and the
-inevitable damnation of the villain or villainess, a principle which
-bears a distinct affinity to the Jewish and Christian doctrines of
-Recompense, the Æschylean doctrine of _nemesis_, and the
-dramaturgy of the Transpontine Theatre. It may perhaps be urged by the
-ultra-modern critic that novels of the stamp of _Anne Veronica, The New
-Machiavelli_, or _Esther Waters_, where sin emerges from its slough,
-sometimes in triumph, yet always in dignity and comfort, have a closer
-correspondence with the actual facts of our modern civilisation. But
-our authoress would no doubt confidently retort that it is the pious
-duty of the moral missionary to censor ruthlessly such pernicious
-intelligence, and that she is proud to prefer the higher if not always
-accepted truths of ethics to the lower and degrading truths of a sordid
-reality.
-
-This sublime principle of Divine Justice is perhaps best exemplified
-in _Holy Orders_. In this extraordinary book, Jacqueline, the local
-prostitute of a picturesque English village, marries a man named
-Nordheim, "one of the smartest Jew-millionaires that ever played with
-the money-markets of the world." But the wages of sin, though for a few
-years a motor car and a Rockefellerian income, turn out in the long
-run to be death in a balloon in the illicit company of an aristocratic
-drunkard. For sheer psychology and for sheer English the following
-portrayal of the villain which represents the cream of two or three
-separate passages merits quotation.
-
- "Claude Ferrers? Why, he is a famous aeronaut; a man
- who spends fabulous sums of money in the construction
- of balloons and aeroplanes and airships. He is the
- owner of a gorgeous steerable balloon in which all the
- pretty 'smart' women take trips with him for change of
- air. He is an atheist, a degenerate, and--one of the
- most popular 'Souls' in decadent English society--just
- to have a look at the fat smooth-faced sensualist and
- voluptuary whose reputation for shameless vice makes him
- the pride and joy of Upper-Ten Jezebels will help you
- along like a gale of wind. Claude Ferrers is a modern
- Heliogabalus in his very modern way, and by dint of
- learning a few salacious witticisms out of Molière and
- Baudelaire he almost persuades people to think him a wit
- and a poet."
-
-In view, no doubt, of the high moral tendency of most of the comedies
-of Molière, who in _Tartuffe,_ for instance, satirises hypocrisy almost
-as effectively, if with a less palpable directness than does Miss
-Corelli herself, and in view of the essentially religious or at any
-rate mystical spirit that animates so many of the poems of the author
-of _Les Fleurs de Mai,_ it must be reluctantly confessed that Miss
-Corelli is more impressive as a moralist and as a psychologist than as
-a woman of letters and an expert in French literature. It is possible,
-however, that this slight error may be explained by the fact that her
-acquaintance with these authors may only be second-hand, that she
-was involuntarily misled by the rhyme in the two names, and that her
-unimpeachable principles have debarred her from even hearing the names
-of such refined exponents of the Gallic spirit as M. Abel Hermant and
-M. Octave Mirbeau.
-
-It is, of course, highly characteristic of our authoress's simplicity
-of vision that all her characters are either very, very, very good
-or very, very, very bad. Realising that complexity of temperament
-is but too frequently the mere euphemism for dissoluteness of life,
-she is content that her young heroes should be immaculate with all
-the immaculacy of the _jeune premier_, that her middle-aged heroes
-should be those strong silent men who have contributed so largely
-to make England what she is, and that her heroines should be all
-equally typical and equally sweet flowers of our English womanhood.
-Her villains invariably smile with all the depraved and diabolical
-cynicism of Drury Lane, and her villainesses are branded as degenerate
-super-women of intrigue and lust. And if the authoress by thus
-delineating her characters in the two primary colours of black and
-white thus denies herself the intellectual pleasure of minutely
-analysing some ultra-modern soul torn a myriad ways by unnumbered and
-unmentionable emotions, she has the consolation that she certainly
-points her moral with a more obvious precision.
-
-The only character who in any way suffers from a complex temperament
-is Maryllia, the sweet-named heroine of _God's Good Man_. By nature
-as white and pure a specimen of Anglo-Saxon girlhood as ever spent to
-some good moral purpose her fragrance in the pages of the prettiest
-novelette, Maryllia is so corrupted by the fashionable whirl of smart
-society, "where without mincing matters it can be fairly stated that
-the aristocratic Jezebel is the fashionable woman of the hour, while
-the men vie with one another as to who shall best screen her from
-their amours with themselves," that she becomes addicted to the vice
-of smoking. God's Good Man, however, in the person of that high-minded
-clergyman the Rev. John Walden, has the courage to rebuke her at a
-dinner-party with an incivility which is, fortunately, more than
-counterbalanced by the fundamental kindness of his intention:
-
- "I have always been under the impression that English
- ladies never smoke."
-
-Maryllia, it is true, at first bridles at this essentially well-meant
-reprimand, only, however, to return finally repentant and converted to
-her prospective husband.
-
-It is, consequently, not surprising to find that Miss Corelli's
-attitude to modern problems is one of a rugged and uncompromising
-conservatism. Thus she disapproves not merely of smoking but also of
-the bridge-party and the motor-car and of the _décolleté_ dress which
-she so severely satirises in the phrase, "the brief shoulder-strap
-called by courtesy a sleeve which keeps her ladyship's bodice in place."
-
-Consistently enough, also, in the sphere of philosophy she chaffs
-the agnostic dilettantism of Mr. Balfour with the most delicate of
-badinage: "His study of these volumes is almost as profound as that of
-Mr. Balfour must have been when writing _The Foundations of Belief_,"
-and flicks with a deadly though gentle irony the "sort of cliquey
-reputation and public failure attending a certain novel entitled
-_Marius the Epicurean_."
-
-True Englishwoman that she is, Miss Corelli yields to none in her
-reverence for established institutions, and does not shrink from
-attacking boldly the complex questions of contemporary royal and
-political life. Thus, in the 600-page romance, _Temporal Power_,
-apparently disapproving of that democratic shuffling of the classes
-which is so marked a feature of our ultra-modern age, she treats with
-exquisite taste of the problems of the sinister Semitic capitalist,
-the intriguing politician who was once a manufacturer, and of the
-morganatic marriage of a sailor-prince.
-
-For our authoress has at bottom a true respect for the social order
-of England. What though the monarch masquerade as an anarchist in
-_Temporal Power_ and sign his name in the red letters of a woman's
-blood? Does not the repeated insistence on the title "Sir Philip," in
-referring to the virile and delectable hero of _Thelma_, show that it
-is less society _per se_ than the abuses and perversions of society
-which constitute the target of the Corellian invective? Does not
-again the following passage show the bias of a soul which inclines
-with the sincerest sympathy to that innate munificence which forms
-the chief petal in the "fine flower" of the English gentry: "They got
-their overcoats from the officious Briggs, tipped him handsomely, and
-departed arm in arm?" Does not similarly such a phrase as "a dignified
-_grande dame_ clad in richest black silk" show that most generous of
-loyalties which will not allow the true majesty of the aristocracy to
-be imperilled through the stinting of an extra adjective or the lack of
-a superlatively appropriate dress.
-
-Unfortunately many passages in Miss Corelli's novels may occasion
-her admirers some heart-searchings as to the reliability of her
-social psychology. In such a sentence, for instance, as "Why does
-an English earl marry a music-hall singer? Because he has seen her
-in tights," it would appear that the real heart of the matter is
-tactfully adumbrated rather than specifically described. When again
-that lecherous Jew, David Jost, the chief villain in _Temporal Power_,
-is sitting at home in his study a few minutes before midnight, after
-he had already "supped in private with two or three painted heroines
-of the foot-lights," does not our authoress attribute to the horrible
-Hebrew a capacity for concentrating an amount of pleasure into a
-brief period, more consistent with the powers of some hustling and
-record-breaking American than with the more protracted languors of
-the Oriental? Similarly, when she writes that "the public are getting
-sick of having the discarded mistresses of wealthy Semites put forward
-for their delectation in 'leading' histrionic parts," Miss Corelli is
-either inverting the more natural and logical order of events, or is
-attributing to such isolated members of the Jewish race as happen to be
-licentious a retrospective generosity in respect of past kindness which
-however gratifying to their co-religionists seems somewhat inconsistent
-with the general trend of her attitude.
-
-The Corellian dialogue also frequently gives the psychologist food
-for thought. "O God" (cried impetuously the heroine of _Thelma_ after
-she had listened virtuously to the illicit overtures of the villain,
-a "lascivious dandy and disciple of no creed and self-worship"), a
-magnificent glory of disdain flashing in her jewel-like eyes, "what
-thing is this that calls itself a man--this thief of honour--this
-pretended friend of me, the wife of the noblest gentleman in the land!"
-
-Or take again so characteristic a specimen as the following:
-
- "You will be made the subject for the coarse jests of
- witticisms at your expense--your dearest friends will
- tear your name to shreds--the newspapers will reek of
- your doings, and honest housemaids reading of your fall
- from your high estate will thank God that their souls
- and bodies are more clean than yours."
-
-If, however, Miss Corelli disdains the more gramophonic accuracy of
-Mrs. Humphry Ward, she is none the less perfectly entitled to answer
-that her characters like those of Mr. G. Bernard Shaw, being something
-more than mere mechanical and objective copies of humanity, subserve
-the far higher function of being the mouthpieces of the subjective
-philosophy of their creator.
-
-Our last quotation, however, brings us to the burning question of Miss
-Corelli's attitude towards the sexual problem. In this connection it
-will not be without its interest to draw some slight analogy between
-Miss Corelli and her equally distinguished if not equally popular
-sister-in-letters, Mrs. Elinor Glyn.
-
-We would remark in the first place that the sexual problem clutches
-Miss Corelli hotly in its drastic grip. Her religious temperament
-may no doubt occasion a profound and genuine abhorrence for physical
-sin, but as was the case with the even more religious Tolstoi, or
-that strangely interesting character Elfrida (the ethical sexual
-reformer in Herr Frank Wedekind's _Totentanz_), her abhorrence merely
-supplies an added vehemence to the unflinching nature of her treatment
-and the drastic audacities of her missionary work, while the proud
-consciousness of her own personal virtue may conceivably entitle her to
-find at once a duty and a recompense in the sanguinary flagellation of
-her less immaculate sisters. Though, moreover, a moral teacher, Miss
-Corelli is also a psychologist, and her aphorism "Men never fall in
-love with a woman's mind, only with her body," can be well compared
-for its bold but delicate cynicism with Mrs. Glyn's maxim, "Love is a
-purely physical emotion."
-
-But Miss Corelli with all her unimpeachable correctness is by no means
-blind to the temperamental significance of a _grande passion_, though
-of course she does not specialise on this subject to the same extent
-as her distinguished colleague. It is none the less instructive to
-compare Miss Corelli's saving grace of a _grande passion_, "the one of
-those faithful passions which sometimes make the greatness of both man
-and woman concerned and adorn the pages of history with the brilliancy
-of deathless romance," with the following fine passage from Mrs. Glyn
-in which she admonishes those philistine readers "who have no eye to
-see God's world with the stars in it and to whom Three Weeks will be
-but the sensual record of a passion" with a dignified apologia for the
-life of her heroine--"Now some of you who read will think her death was
-just, in that she was not a moral woman, but others will hold with Paul
-that she was the noblest lady who ever wore a crown."
-
-The latter quotation, however, brings us to an important distinction
-in the sexual ethics of our two novelists. For while Miss Corelli
-on the one hand is no respecter of persons and would be prepared to
-treat an "Upper-Ten Jezebel" or a "soiled dove of the town" (if we may
-borrow two typically Corellian phrases) with scrupulous impartiality
-according to their respective deserts, the novels of Mrs. Elinor Glyn
-constitute a valuable sexual hierarchy by which the degree of license
-to be enjoyed and condoned is in direct proportion to the social rank
-of the lady or her paramour. Thus the continued adultery on the part
-of the Princess throughout a period of three weeks in the novel of
-that name is freed from any taint of offensiveness or indignity by the
-exalted rank of that royal personage who is decorated in this one book
-with several sets of stars. The ordinary untitled gentlewoman, however
-(if we except Agnes the lady in _Elizabeth's Visits to America_, who
-"had an affair with her chauffeur," and the Mildred in _Beyond the
-Rocks_, whose lovers, however, were "so well chosen and so thoroughly
-of the right sort"), though she may frequently infringe the spirit
-of the seventh commandment, is usually far too prudent to break the
-letter. Thus the romantic young wife in _Beyond the Rocks_, in spite
-of the assiduous attentions of an extremely fascinating peer, "an
-ordinary Englishman of the world who had lived and loved and seen many
-lands," succeeds by the most heroic self-control in preserving the
-technical chastity of a Prévostian _demi-vierge_. Note, however, by way
-of contrast the extremely wide margin which is allowed to the hale and
-energetic duchess: "Her path was strewn with lovers and protected by a
-proud and complacent husband who had realised early he never would be
-master of the situation and had preferred peace to open scandal. She
-was a woman of sixty and, report said, still had her lapses."
-
-But the paramount importance of social etiquette in sexual relationship
-is most effectively illustrated in _His Hour_. This novel deals with
-the mutual physical passion between a barbaric and dissolute Russian
-prince and a typical and refined modern Englishwoman. Matters reach a
-crisis when the prince lures the lady by night to the sinister solitude
-of a deserted hut. "His splendid eyes blazed with the passion of a
-wild beast"; the lady faints, and when she wakes up in the morning of
-course assumes that she has been ravished. Not unnaturally she is quite
-upset that she should have been the victim of such insulting behaviour,
-"she, a lady, a proud English lady." The commands of society, however,
-are inexorable in such matters and she consequently writes proposing
-marriage with dignified irony to that bestial nobleman, who had,
-according to her own theory, put her own status as a gentlewoman into
-such delicate jeopardy: "I consent--I have no choice--I consent. Yours
-truly, Tamara Lorane."
-
-So far as mere erotic description and dialogue is concerned, there is
-very little to choose between our authoresses. The following passages
-are fair examples of Mrs. Glyn's conception of romantic love-making:
-
- "Then, sweet Paul, I shall teach you many things, and
- among them I shall teach you how to LIVE."
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- "Beloved, beloved," he cried, "let us waste no more
- precious moments. I want you, I want you, my sweet."
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- "My darling one," the lady whispered in his ear, as she
- lay in his arms on the couch of roses, crushed deep and
- half-buried in their velvet leaves, "this is our soul's
- wedding, in life and in death they can never part us more."
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
-If, however, we would make any distinction between the respective
-techniques of the two ladies, we would say that while Mrs. Glyn tends
-to exhibit the practical modernity of Mayfair or Continental society,
-Miss Corelli is at times more exotic and luxuriant, at times more
-explicit and direct, for blunt, plain woman that she is, she never even
-once dabbles in those mystic messages of the stars which Mrs. Glyn
-interprets with so facile and consummate a felicity. We search in vain,
-for instance, in the works of Mrs. Elinor Glyn for a passage like the
-following, which but for the pendent nominative might quite well have
-come out of the _Aphrodite_ of M. Pierre Louys or the _Mafarka le
-Futuriste_ of M. Marinetti:
-
- "This done, they rose and began to undo the fastenings
- of her golden domino-like garment; but either they were
- too slow, or the fair priestess was impatient, for
- she suddenly shook herself free of their hands, and
- loosening the gorgeous mantle herself from its jewelled
- clasps it fell slowly from her symmetrical form on the
- perfumed floor with a rustle as of fallen leaves."
-
-Again, the delicious sachets of Mrs. Elinor Glyn's diction never
-somehow exhale such whiffs of unadulterated English as the following:
-
- "With the seduction of your nude limbs and lying eyes
- you make fools, cowards, and beasts of men."
-
-We may, perhaps, conclude this portion of our comparative analysis by
-suggesting for the erotic crest of Mrs. Elinor Glyn a Debrett and an
-Almanach de Gotha enveloped in a silk and scented "nightie"; for that
-of Miss Marie Corelli, a volume of the Self-and-Sex series lying open
-between a doffed domino and a crinoline.
-
-It is also noticeable that while Miss Corelli, with whatever detail she
-may feel it her duty to portray their erotic sins, is always primarily
-concerned with her characters' ethical significance for good or for
-evil, Mrs. Glyn devotes herself more specifically to their physical
-qualifications. Miss Corelli's typical hero, for instance, is the
-Rev. John Walden, that middle-aged God's Good Man whose ripe dignity
-of manhood is subordinated to the description of his more spiritual
-qualities. Mrs. Glyn's typical hero is the Paul of _Three Weeks_, "a
-splendid young English animal of the best class."
-
-We thus find that the space which Mrs. Elinor Glyn will devote to
-telling us that her heroine's skin "seemed good to eat," or that her
-hero had "fine lines" and "velvet eyelids," will be devoted by Miss
-Corelli to the description of the corresponding attributes of her
-hero or heroine's soul. Miss Corelli, however, is by no means obtuse
-to the baleful effect on the spiritual life exercised by physical
-blandishments. She will thus explain the precocious corruption by
-senile perversity of a young girl in a remarkable passage whose stark
-realism certainly succeeds in portraying fully an important ethical and
-physiological truth:
-
- "Old roués smelling of wine and tobacco were eager to
- take me on their knees and pinch my soft flesh;--they
- would press my innocent lips with their withered
- ones--withered and contaminated by the kisses of
- cocottes and soiled doves of the town."
-
-As showing the comprehensive ultra-modernity of Miss Corelli's outlook
-on the sexual question, we would refer finally to her frequent
-allusions to "the unnatural and strutting embryos of a new sex which
-will be neither male nor female." Though, however, she is in one of
-her maxims apparently of opinion that "true beauty is sexless," we
-would infer from the following passages that she does not go so far as
-Péladan in ascribing an important ethical and sociological significance
-to this new type:
-
- "Men's hearts are not enthralled or captured by a
- something appearing to be neither man nor woman. And
- there are a great many of these Somethings about just
- now.... Beauty remains intrinsically where it was first
- born and first admitted into the annals of Art and
- Literature. Its home is still in the Isles of Greece
- where burning Sappho loved and sang."
-
-Returning, however, from Lesbos to Stratford-on-Avon, let us make some
-brief survey of Miss Corelli's style. To condense into a few phrases
-so delicate and baffling a phenomenon is difficult. At one moment her
-weighty nouns, guarded not infrequently by a triple escort of epithets,
-possess the pomp and luxuriance of the true Asiatic style, at another
-the brisk horsiness of her diction has all the spontaneous force of
-English as it is actually spoken. At times such passages as "A moisture
-as of tears glistened on the silky fringe of his eyelids--his lips
-quivered--he had the look of a Narcissus regretfully bewailing his own
-perishable loveliness. On a swift impulse of affection Theos threw one
-arm round his neck in the fashion of a confiding schoolboy walking
-with his favourite companion.... Sah-lûma looked up with a pleased yet
-wondering glance. 'Thou hast a silvery and persuasive tongue,' he said
-gently," are reminiscent of the mellifluous cadences of _Dorian Gray_.
-Anon she will indulge in a vein of frank but militant simplicity that
-bears a greater resemblance to the style of Mr. Robert Blatchford, the
-celebrated atheist:
-
- "A small private dinner-party at which the company are
- some six or eight persons at most is sometimes (though
- not by any means always) quite a pleasant affair; but a
- 'big' dinner in the 'big' sense of the word is generally
- the most painful and dismal of functions except to
- those for whom silent gorging and after-repletion are
- the essence of all mental and physical joys. I remember
- --and of a truth it would be impossible to forget--one
- of those dinners which took place one season at a very
- 'swagger' house--the house of a member of the old
- British nobility, whose ancestors and titles always
- excite a gentle flow of saliva in the mouths of snobs."
-
-We would incidentally mention that Miss Corelli is above all a purist
-in her diction, and that she has registered her emphatic protest
-against the use of the expression "Little Mary," "a phrase which,
-although invented by Mr. J. M. Barrie, is not without considerable
-vulgarity and offence." Though, moreover, her language is on the whole
-essentially English, Miss Corelli by no means disdains the use of
-classical figures. For instance in the phrase "after-repletion" from
-our last quotation we meet an interesting survival of the Greek use
-of a preposition to qualify a noun. The occasional anacoluthon also
-(or lack of orthodox syntax) which is found in her works points to a
-by no means unprofitable study of Thucydides, unless indeed it is
-simply in order to emphasize her lack of any literary snobbery that our
-authoress so frequently declines to curtsey to the affected rigidities
-of pedantic grammar. Her frequent use, again, of compound words such
-as "socially-popular," "brilliantly-appointed," "Jew-spider" betrays
-the distinct influence of the Teutonic idiom, while such a phrase as
-"braced with the golden shield of Courage" shows what unique results
-can be obtained by a metaphor simultaneously fashioned out of the
-defensive article of war of the ancient Spartan and the preservative
-article of attire of the modern European.
-
-Finally, what is the real secret of Miss Corelli's success? It is
-that she is sincere and that she means well. Whether her invective
-rises to the lofty scorn of an Isaiah, a Mrs. Ormiston Chant, or a
-Juvenal, or whether the smooth current of her hate meanders along
-with all the tepid benevolence of a grandmotherly facetiousness, it
-is impossible to doubt her portentous sincerity. It is this quality
-which distinguishes her most effectively from the merely journalistic
-authors of the "big" serials. These ladies and gentlemen, it is true,
-effect their object and succeed in presenting the outlook on life of
-the typical man or woman in the typical street or alley. But their
-most brilliant productions but produce the effect of an intellectual
-_tour de force_, as though achieved in despite of the natural bias
-of their temperaments, by dint of a diligent study of the well-known
-Manual of Serialese. Miss Marie Corelli needs no such manual. Her
-_Weltanschauung_, broad, plain, simple, touched at once with a high
-consciousness of her ethical mission and a ruthless observation for
-all the sins and follies of the age, is the authentic and spontaneous
-outcome of her own unique psychology.
-
-
-
-
-FRANK WEDEKIND
-
-
- "Alike in the comedies and dream-plays too You see but
- a domesticated Zoo, Their blood so thin that in that
- hot-house air They batten on a vegetable fare, And revel
- chronically in chat and calls, Sitting like our friends
- yonder in the stalls, _One's_ stomach of liqueurs will
- disapprove, Another wonders if he really love, Another
- hero starts with threats to pass From this foul world to
- one perhaps more divine, But through five mortal acts
- behold him whine, Yet no kind friend supplies the _coup
- de grâce_, But the real thing, the wild and beauteous
- beast, I, ladies, only I provide that feast."
-
-
-These lines, delivered by a lion-tamer in the due professional
-panoply of riding-coat, top-boots, and a revolver, are extracted
-from the prologue of Frank Wedekind's tragedy, _Die Erdgeist_, and
-illustrate efficiently the bizarre and Mephistophelian genius of a
-German dramatist alike in his qualities and his defects indisputably
-unique. Buccaneering no small way in front of the very left wing of
-the æsthetic movement, Wedekind is at once the _bête noire_ of the
-reactionaries and the spoilt darling of the ultra-moderns. To his
-enemies he is a mere shoddy Anti-Christ, to his friends a dramatic
-Messiah leading back the inner circles of the chosen intellects into
-the promised land of vice and crime. It cannot be denied that his
-subject-matter gives considerable colour to both these theories. Life,
-as seen through the medium of his plays, is but a torrent of sex
-foaming over the jagged rocks of crime and insanity. Take examples
-from his three most powerful plays. In _Die Erdgeist_, the theme
-of which is the baleful glamour of the "Evil Woman," three of the
-four acts are punctuated with almost complete regularity by a death;
-_Frühlingserwachen_, again, deals with hoydens and hobbledehoys, whose
-only occupation appears to be the creation, discussion, and destruction
-of life: In _Die Totentanz_, on the other hand, the scene is laid in
-a "private hotel" (if one may borrow the highly convenient euphemism
-of Mr. Shaw), while a charming interlude in lyrics is provided by one
-of the boarders and a temporary visitor, and the hero and proprietor
-is a "marquis," who psychologically is much more closely related to
-Hamlet than to Sir George Crofts. Add to this choice of subject-matter
-a violently impressionist technique and a hangman humour, whose grin is
-at its broadest amid the sharpest agonies of the victims, and one can
-form an approximately accurate idea of an author, conceivably somewhat
-poisonous to anæmic constitutions, but certainly both piquant and
-stimulating to the hardened and the adventurous. To arrive, however,
-at a correct appreciation of so monstrous a phenomenon, it will be
-advisable to investigate first the literary and social tendencies by
-which it has been produced, together with the character of the audience
-for whose edification it disports itself, and then by the light of such
-investigations to proceed to an analysis of his individual works.
-
-For the ten or fifteen years following 1880, both the novel and the
-drama in Germany were transformed into a Zolaesque laboratory, where
-interesting human experiments were conducted by skilled operators
-with scientific precision. There were three chief causes for this:
-firstly, a healthy reaction against the colourless and conventional
-school which had held the stage for so many years, a school somewhat
-analogous to that of our own Mid-Victorians with their strong silent
-men and sweet insipid women; secondly, a dogmatic and uncompromising
-materialism was the creed of the most ambitious and efficient
-intellects who found their chief mental diet in Zola, Taine, Darwin,
-and Haeckel; thirdly, the abstract theory of the struggle for
-existence had received an excessively concrete exemplification in the
-Franco-German war and the colossal commercial impetus that followed
-in the wake of a united Germany. Naturalism, however, was destined by
-the very character of the nation to be but a passing phase. Even apart
-from the inevitable swing of the pendulum and the powerful Catholic and
-religious reaction, whose force is seen at a glance in the numerical
-majority of the Centrum, the German temperament is in its essence as
-romantic as the French is logical. The nation, moreover, being at
-bottom religious, "the death of God," to use the classic phrase of
-Nietzsche, left a most crying lacuna. The philosopher of the Superman
-adroitly filled the vacancy by the deification of Man. Human life
-became an end in itself embraced with the most poetic exaltation and
-pursued with all the zeal of religious martyrdom. The struggle for
-existence, ceasing to be a bare scientific formula, was metamorphosed
-into a classic arena in which the "life-artist" battled for the crown
-of his Dionysiac agonies, finding the most delicious music in the
-perpetual clash of brain with brain, and experiencing a sweetness in
-the very bitterness of the conflict.[1]
-
-Crushed then by the force of these tendencies, pure realism died. _Die
-Ehre_ and _Die Weber_, it is true, still hold the German stage, but in
-_Johannes_ and in _Die Versunkene Glocke_ respectively both Sudermann
-and Hauptmann have deserted to the Romantic camp, taking with them,
-however, a good proportion of the Realistic equipment. Particularly
-typical of this amalgamation of the two forces is _Hannele_, where the
-pathological and mystical explanations are to be accepted concurrently
-and not as alternatives, as in Mr. Henry James's _Turn of the Screw_.
-As was, however, only natural, there was a considerable reaction, and
-orthodox naturalism was deliberately flouted by the Secessionsbühne in
-1899 with their penchant for fairy-dramas and their genuinely æsthetic
-project of stretching between the stage and the audience a veil of
-transparent gauze intended to draw the scene into a misty distance. The
-rankest idealism seemed for a time the order of the day. "All that the
-young and the moderns have fought against with such animosity between
-1880 and 1890, pseudo-idealism, bookish dialogue, false and artificial
-characterisation, clap-trap stagecraft, all this celebrates in this
-drama a joyous resurrection; let us acknowledge it; we have lost the
-battle against falsehood and stupidity, conventionalism, and the
-public, lost it absolutely," writes Julius Hart in the _Tag_ of 1902.
-
-But the most interesting direction was given to this neo-romanticism by
-the æsthetic movement and _Kunstschwarmerei_ which began to sweep over
-music, literature, painting, and the drama with an almost Nietzschean
-intensity. Pure realism and pure romanticism, then, both being extinct,
-and an agressive horde of exuberant and heretical artists being alive,
-the solution for the artistic problem was found in the æsthetic and
-romantic treatment of realistic themes. The prose of the human document
-became illuminated with the poesy of the human imagination. Realism
-and Romanticism went into partnership in the freest of unions, and
-Wedekind is one of the most interesting fruits of this drastic alliance.
-
-The realistic method might be worse than useless for æsthetic purposes,
-but the realistic stock-in-trade was invaluable material for spirits
-bursting with an almost morbid healthiness, spirits for whom no subject
-was too terrible, no sensation too violent. Let us, however, turn to
-the official pronouncement of Wedekind's preface to his revised and
-expurgated edition of _Die Büchse von Pandora_, in which he states his
-defence to the prosecution which the first edition of that interesting
-book had brought upon his martyred head: "Wedekind is an apostle
-of the modern movement. It is the motto of this movement to effect
-a transvaluation of æsthetic values in style and stagecraft. The
-followers of this movement have for over fifteen years repudiated the
-claims of the so-called 'æsthetic-content' and of mere formal beauty;
-they hold it permissible to depict artistically and to represent on
-the stage the ugly, the crude, the repulsive, and even the vulgar,
-provided always that such characteristics are not treated as ends in
-themselves--that is to say, when the work is not created by love of the
-abhorrent for its own sake but is merely the medium for the expression
-of an artistic idea. Wedekind, accordingly, as the disciple of these
-authors, chooses to shed a light upon the darkest crannies of vice, and
-in particular to surround with a poetic framework those sexual subjects
-which have been the peculiar subject of medical science. The end and
-goal of his writings is to awaken fear and pity."
-
-Such an apologia can scarcely be said to be superfluous when one of the
-sub-plots of the play in question deals with the heroic, if somewhat
-nauseating, rebellion of a woman in the determination of whose lot
-nature has made a somewhat unfortunate mistake.
-
-Before, however, we proceed to gaze upon the black and lurid pictures
-of our dramatic artist, it is advisable to turn very briefly to the
-audience for whose particular benefit they exercise their hellish
-fascination. Wedekind's audience, in a word, is the extreme left
-wing. The German left wing, however, is considerably more numerous,
-more advanced, and more dangerous than the English. Our own æsthetic
-movement was killed almost instantaneously by the Wilde debacle. We
-still, of course, have our ultra-modern movement, such as it is, but
-for practical purposes no one could be more amiable or innocuous
-than the ladies and gentlemen who used to constitute the highly
-respectable audiences of the Court Theatre, or who find in the Stage
-Society a mildly audacious means of spending their Sabbath evenings.
-Germany, however, with its vastly superior education, and its horde
-of professional men and women, schoolmasters and piano-mistresses,
-lawyers, doctors, poets, and littérateurs, has the disease of modernity
-with a vengeance, carrying through each symptom to its logical
-conclusion with a violence and intensity to which our own fluttering
-unconventionalism affords but the faintest and most shadowy parallel.
-Free-love, which, with the possible exception of a certain ephemeral
-incident successfully immortalised in three or four recent novels,
-is in England little more than a name, the mythical bogey with which
-the halfpenny press pretend to frighten their delighted readers, or
-is at best among the smart and the semi-educated rich the philosophic
-sanction for highly unphilosophic impulses, is in Germany a theoretic
-dogma almost as sacred as that of woman suffrage and demanding almost
-as devout sacrifices on the shrine of its philosophic altar. When again
-the subtle souls of Great Britain will so far break the ice of their
-insular reserve as to discourse about the tragedy of existence, the
-far more heroic spirits of German modernity will have recourse to all
-the æsthetic delights of a fine and artistic suicide, which indeed
-in the most advanced circles is almost a fashionable analogue to our
-own appendicitis, or will find in the modern dogma of "living their
-own life" the substantial though possibly slightly less exhausting
-equivalent to our English hunger-strike. How strong is the neo-æsthetic
-movement may be gauged by the phenomenal success in Berlin of _Salome_
-and _Monna Vanna,_ the great scenes of which were followed avidly
-by young girls with an enthusiasm which was more than æsthetic. It
-may also be mentioned incidentally that Wilde's _De Profundis_ was
-published in German before it appeared in England, a circumstance
-due quite as much to a keener intellectual enthusiasm as to superior
-commercial enterprise.
-
-Realising, then, that while it is orthodox in England to be ashamed of
-one's passions and emotions, the German ambition is to plume oneself on
-taking everything _an grand sérieux_, let us turn to a consideration
-of those plays in which, on a large canvas and in big bold splashes
-reminiscent of the not unanalogous methods of the Secessionist
-painters, Wedekind is pleased to present framed in gigantic irony:
-
- "Les immondes chacals, les panthères, les lices,
- Les singes, les scorpions, les vautours, les serpents,
- Les monstres glapissants, hurlants, grognants, rampants,
- Dans la ménagerie infâme de nos vices."
-
-It will, perhaps, be well to start with that little masterpiece of
-a dramatic caricature, _Der Kammersänger_. A fashionable singer,
-having completed his engagements in a provincial town, is snatching
-at last a few minutes' well-earned repose prior to catching his
-train. He has given strict orders that he is at home to no one. But
-there is no repose for the famed. An English school miss, who has
-waited two hours in the rain, smuggles herself into the room: she
-prattles her enthusiasm with pretty infantile gush: a few deft words
-of paternal advice and she is summarily dismissed. But again the great
-man's seclusion is desecrated by the entrance of a brother artist, a
-pathetically grotesque figure of a megalomaniac failure whose publisher
-complains that he spoils his one chance of success by refusing to die
-and thus afford an opportunity for posthumous discovery. But the genial
-tolerance of the illustrious one is considerably harshened when his
-colleague insists on playing his own compositions in a scene every whit
-as racy and delightful as the classic episode in Wycherley's _Plain
-Dealer_, where Major Oldfox, having tied down the Widow Blackacre,
-discharges at her helpless person the most deadly poetical fusillade.
-Exit, however, the composer, after an interesting philosophic lecture
-by his victim on the singer's life and of the contempt which as
-a practical man (for at an early period in his career he was "in
-carpets") he has for his fashionable bourgeois audience for whom he is
-a mere article of luxury as much in request as a motor-car or a new
-dress. Then, as the climax of this crescendo of invaders, enter Helene:
-a formal invitation to elope: the artist, however, has his contracts
-to fulfil and his train to catch, and the favour is declined with
-thanks: tears and threats of suicide: he endeavours to pacify her, and
-she promises to be good: he will miss his train if he is not quick.
-The romantic woman, however, unable to bear the final parting, shoots
-herself on the spot. The remorseful lover follows her example? Not a
-bit of it. He is politely regretful for the contretemps, but after all
-business is business, and he must catch his train. It is impossible
-without copious quotations to give a full idea of the piquant irony
-with which the comedy is salted; the truth and reality of the theme
-stand out all the more brilliant from their garb of romantic travesty,
-while the superb impudence of utilising death as an essentially comic
-climax is without parallel in European literature.
-
-Let us, however, now turn from light comedy to serious tragedy in
-the shape of _Der Totentanz_. The scene, as already mentioned, is
-laid in a "private hotel." Where Shaw, however, sees but the problem,
-Wedekind has only eyes for the poetry. To Shaw the irony is a weapon,
-to Wedekind an end in itself. Elfrida, a young lady in Reformkleid,
-one of the most militant members of a suppression society, interviews
-the proprietor, the Marquis Casti Piani, on the subject of a former
-maid of hers, for whom she has been searching for some years. The girl
-is identified, and the whole question philosophically discussed. The
-proprietor, moreover, who is an extremely well-dressed gentleman with
-a first-class education, polished manners, and all the introspective
-subtlety of the most modern of decadents, neatly turns the tables
-by announcing that the real impetus which made the girl change her
-calling was the "suppression literature" which the puritanical young
-woman had with unpardonable carelessness left lying about. The ice
-being thus broken, he proceeds in his capacity of sexual expert to
-diagnose the respective psychologies of his _tête-à-tête_ and himself.
-Why, they are both tarred with the same brush. If he, the trafficker,
-pursues his unpopular vocation even more as a matter of sexual mania
-than of commercial enterprise, so does she, the philanthropist, ply
-her good work out of an equally morbid craving to move in a congenial
-atmosphere. Are they not both but the obverse and reverse of the same
-medal? Paradoxical and super-Shavian dissertations on the theory of
-woman are then followed by blandishments and caresses, in respect of
-which with a marvellous genius for brutality he chaffs her on the
-crudity and inexperience of her technique. Then comes the most _outré_
-scene of the play when Casti Piani and Elfrida watch from behind
-a screen the courtship of Lisiska, the missing servant-girl, by a
-young man in a check knickerbocker suit; the bizarre paradox is but
-accentuated by the swing and beauty of the lyrics in which this wooing
-is conducted, and the distorted idealism of the girl, who, as the
-martyr-priestess of the _joie de vivre_, is almost genuinely convinced
-of the sanctity of her mission. The interlude over, the audience come
-from behind the curtain. Stung to the wildest pitch of emulation, the
-extreme limit of self-sacrificing ecstasy, the neurotic woman completes
-the cycle of her psychic revolution by the supplication, "Verkaufen Sie
-mich." The marquis, who has thus succeeded beyond his most sanguine
-expectations, in a fit of nervous revulsion shoots himself before the
-girl's eyes. Three of the inmates rush from three distinct doors,
-and the over-civilised satyr expires with their kisses on his lips,
-kisses savoured and criticised with all the frenzy of the moribund
-connoisseur--"Küsse mich--nein, das war nicht--Küsse--küsse mich
-anders."
-
-It is impossible to express more cogently the whole tragedy of the
-dying sensualist.
-
-No normal Englishman can be expected to enjoy such a play; in justice,
-however, to the author, this freny is æsthetic as well as sexual. New
-worlds, in fact, have been needed to regale the insatiate appetites of
-the dramatist and his hearers; "Heaven has been blown to pieces by the
-artillery of science; earth is cold, stale and unpalatable; perforce
-let us batten on the fires of hell," would run his motto. As Baudelaire
-in verse, and Beardsley in painting, found their theme in the vicious
-and the abhorrent, so does Wedekind in the drama. As an ordinary play,
-_Der Totentanz_ falls outside judgment; as a sheer literary curiosity,
-a dramatic fantasia on the sex-motif, a deliberate essay in the art of
-the ironical and the brutal, the piece achieves its own and peculiar
-ambition.
-
-_Die Junge Welt_, on the other hand, flows in a current which, in
-spite of the eventual madness of the principal male character, is
-limpid and playful by comparison with the Phlegethontian course of the
-_Totentanz._ The theme of the comedy is the woman movement. In the
-prologue, one of his most aery and delicious pieces of work, Wedekind
-shows us a bevy of schoolgirls at lessons, chattering, fooling, and
-"ragging" their master with the most delightful _naïveté_. They have a
-pretty taste in literature, forsooth, reading surreptitious copies of
-_The Arabian Nights_, talking gravely of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche,
-and quoting with the prettiest of pedantry Schiller, Goethe, and even
-Ovid. No mere prattlers, however. Glorying in their grievance, they
-found a league, the solemn oath of whose members is never to marry
-until the most glaring outrages in the education of the young are
-remedied. Towards the end of the scene some youthful figures of the
-opposite sex enter. How long will the league last?
-
-Then we come to the actual play where the sacred circle has been
-already cut by a marriage of one of the members. The whole comedy, in
-fact, shows how irresistibly the Life Force claims its own. The brisk
-racy dialogue and the satiric character drawing of the ultra-moderns
-are equally delicious. Particularly charming are Anna, masking the
-temperament of her Shavian namesake beneath the pose of the new woman;
-Karl, the picturesque scamp, who has married a seamstress on abstract
-socialistic principles; and Meyer, the modern poet, who, when his
-fiançée presents herself to recite a poem which he has written, in
-the most faithful of Cupid costumes, is most righteously indignant
-because--the dress fails to harmonise with the subtle spirit of his
-masterpiece.
-
-A masterly little piece of irony, again, is the celebrated
-stage-direction, when, at the climax of an intense passage, a
-baby squalls, and is carried off the stage by its mother, to the
-accompaniment of music. Perhaps, however, the deftest touch of
-satire is the analysis of the decline of the _détraqué littérateur,_
-accustomed to transcribe each kiss fresh from the lips of his beloved
-into his artistic note-book.--"When I made my psychological studies on
-Anna, then Anna becomes unnatural--on some other specimen--she became
-jealous--there was no other alternative but to make them on myself."
-
-Wedekind's dramatic masterpieces, however, are _Die Erdgeist_. and
-_Frühlingserwachen_, which merit, consequently, a somewhat more
-detailed analysis. _Die Erdgeist_, as has been already remarked,
-deals with the theme of the modern Lilith, not from the point of view
-of orthodox dramatic technique like Mr. Pinero, not scientifically
-like Zola, but æsthetically. No show of esoteric detail, no orthodox
-_dénouement_; simply atmosphere. The play, together with its sequel,
-_Die Büchse von Pandora_, constitutes the epic of the courtesan. In the
-first act, Schwarz, a painter, is at work on the portrait, in pierrot
-costume, of the wife of a Dr. Goll, a lady rejoicing in the various
-Christian names of Nellie, Eva, and Lulu. A middle-aged journalist,
-named Schön, who is in the studio, is on old and friendly terms with
-Frau Goll. The fact that female beauty is the _raison être_ of the
-creature's existence is soon made apparent by the following dialogue:
-
- LULU. Here I am.
-
- SCHÖN. Splendid.
-
- LULU. Well?
-
- SCHÖN. You put the wildest imagination to the blush.
-
- LULU. Do you find me nice?
-
- SCHÖN. You're a picture that makes artists despair.
-
-The pompous conventionalism of the doctor is seen almost immediately,
-when he suggests with heavy gravity that she is not wearing her costume
-with sufficient reserve. The artist proceeds to work, and the mere
-mechanism of posing brings out at once the sheer sexuality of the
-animal which he is painting. Goll is carried off by Schön, and the
-artist and the pierrot are left alone. The young painter proves more
-attractive than the old professor, who arrives towards the climax of a
-wild scene. In the scuffle, Goll is killed. Death, however, is a pet
-theme of Wedekind, who proceeds to batten thereon with abnormal gusto.
-
- SCHWARZ. The doctor is bound to be here in a minute.
-
- LULU. Doctoring won't help him.
-
- SCHWARZ. Still, in a case like this, one does what one
- can.
-
- LULU. He doesn't believe in doctors.
-
- SCHWARZ. Won't you, at any rate, change?
-
- LULU. Yes, at once.
-
- SCHWARZ. Why are you waiting?
-
- LULU. I say--
-
- SCHWARZ. What?
-
- LULU. Please close his eyes.
-
- SCHWARZ. They are awful.
-
- LULU. Nothing like as awful as you.
-
- SCHWARZ. As I?
-
- LULU. You're a depraved character.
-
- SCHWARZ. Doesn't all this affect you?
-
- LULU. Yes, I too am as well moved.
-
- SCHWARZ. Then I ask you not to say anything.
-
- LULU. You are moved as well.
-
-Shocked by her comparative callousness, Schwarz subjects her to a
-catechism--does she believe in a Creator, a soul, or anything--only to
-find himself beating against an eternal "I don't know."
-
-So ends the first act, and this creature, whose hair is a net of
-murder, whose lips are poisoned fruit, and whose eyes are pits of hell,
-has already one death to her credit.
-
-The second act discloses Schwarz married to Lulu, and in the heyday of
-artistic fame and fortune. A fleeting light is cast on the swamp, from
-which the fiend has emerged, by the entry and departure of Schigolch,
-her old ragamuffin of a sire. Then follows a _tête-à-tête_ between Lulu
-and Schön. Combining, as she does, the soul of an Ibsen woman with
-the body of a Phryne, she complains of her husband's obtusity: "He
-is not a child--he is commonplace--he has no education--he realises
-nothing--he realises neither me nor himself--he is blind, blind--he
-doesn't know me, but he loves me; that is an unbridgeable gulf." The
-painter returns, and is given by Schön the outlines of his wife's past.
-Schön had picked her out of the gutter at the age of twelve, and had
-had her educated; her antecedents were ghastly; after the death of
-Schön's wife, Lulu wished to marry him; to obviate that, he made her
-marry Dr. Goll with his half a million. Lulu is anxious to be good,
-but must be taken seriously. The painter then commits suicide, and the
-author feasts again on the carnage in a scene which, for sheer horror,
-challenges even _Macbeth_.
-
-"After you," says Lulu, after they have heard the body fall, and Schön
-has opened the door.
-
- SCHÖN. There's the end of my engagement. Ten minutes ago
- he lay here.[2]
-
- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-
- SCHÖN. That is your husband's blood.
-
- LULU. It leaves no stain.
-
- SCHÖN. Monster!
-
- LULU. Of course you will marry me.
-
-Then, by way of a really strong curtain, they send for a reporter, and
-dictate the official version of the thrilling story. The third act is
-the dressing-room of Lulu; she has gone on the music-hall stage as a
-barefoot dancer of classical measure; Schön, having temporarily freed
-himself from the spell, is about to marry a charming, "innocent child,"
-whom he has brought to witness the spectacle. The insult stimulates
-the girl to a supernormal fascination. Having refused the proposals
-of a prince, she deliberately sets herself to cast her wand over the
-journalist. She mocks him brazenly, with her magic potency over him, in
-a scene of the most subtle cruelty.
-
- SCHÖN. Don't look at me so shamelessly.
-
- LULU. No one is keeping you here.
-
-The Circæan witchery is complete, and the man, transformed, writes, at
-the dictation of the enchantress, a letter breaking off his engagement.
-
-In the fourth act, nemesis is at hand. His marriage with Lulu shatters
-the constitution of the aging journalist, who falls a victim to
-persecution-mania. Lulu, though genuinely in love with him, surrenders
-herself almost mechanically to the kisses of his son. The journalist
-can stand no more--such a creature is not fit to live--she must commit
-suicide with the revolver which he produces. Simply as a matter of
-self-preservation, she turns the weapon against the man himself. Then
-ensues the most devilish scene of all. Fearing the prison-cage, the
-brute turns for help to the child of its prey: "I shot him because he
-wanted to shoot me. I loved no man in the world like I did him. Alwa,
-demand what you will. Look at me, Alwa; look at me, man, look at me."
-
-Those anxious for the further history of Lulu should turn to the livid
-pages of _Die Büchse von Pandora._ There, in flaming characters, they
-will read of her imprisonment, of how, being deprived of a mirror,
-she at last found relief by seeing her reflection in a new spoon, of
-her rescue therefrom by her inamorata, the Countess Geschwitz, and of
-her flight to Paris with Alwa Schön; they will read of her life there
-among _souteneurs_, blackmailers, and millionaires, of her migration
-from Paris to London, of her degradation to the streets, and her final
-assassination at the hands of Jack the Ripper.
-
-Wedekind, who to the _métier_ of the artist joins that of the
-_enfant terrible_, strains in this play every nerve to shock. As the
-susceptibilities of the left wing of most of the English intellects
-are about on a par with those of the right wing of the German æsthetic
-movement, from our own point of view he more than overshoots the mark.
-None the less, the English reader, though stifled amid the fumes of the
-monstrous debauch, is forced to admire here and there passages of a
-potency truly infernal. The final scene in the wet and noisome garret
-is indisputably tragic, when the squalid thing gazes at Schwarz's
-pierrot picture of her dead beauty, only to throw it in revulsion out
-of the window, or where Alwa and Schigolch analyse the melancholy past.
-
- ALWA. She should have been a Catherine of Russia.
-
- SCHIGOLCH. That beast!
-
- ALWA. Although her development was precocious, she
- once had the expression of a gay and healthy child of
- five years old. She was then only three years younger
- than I. In spite of her marvellous superiority to me
- in practical matters, she let me explain to her the
- meaning of _Tristan and Isolde_, and how fascinating
- she was when I read it to her and she grasped its
- meaning. From the little sister that felt herself like
- a schoolgirl in her first marriage, she became the wife
- of an unfortunate and hysterical artist; from being
- the wife of the artist, she became the wife of my late
- father; from being the wife of my father, she became my
- mistress; so flows the stream of the world. Who can swim
- against it?
-
-So ends a play not without some resemblance to Hogarth's _Harlot's
-Progress_, if one can imagine the fanatical moralist treating such
-a subject with the artistic irony of a very much Germanised Aubrey
-Beardsley.
-
-But Wedekind's most serious contribution to dramatic literature is to
-be found in _Frühlingserwachen._ The orthodox stage-conventions, it
-is true, are sweepingly ignored; the scene is changed with more than
-Shakespearean frequency; the characters indulge in prolonged romantic
-soliloquies; none the less, the night of genuine tragedy broods over
-the whole piece.
-
-The first act opens with a conversation between Frau Bergman and her
-daughter Wendla. The girl is growing up, fit to wear longer dresses,
-and exhibiting the morbidity appropriate to her years. In the next
-scene we see schoolboys at talk; with intense gravity they travel
-from their work to religion, and from religion to sex, discussing the
-Platonic and American systems of education, remarking that Superstition
-is the Charybdis into which one flies out of the Scylla of religious
-mania, or comparing notes on the growth of their respective manhoods.
-Melchior, the leading spirit of the knot, promises to provide his less
-experienced friend, Moritz, with a written synopsis of the mechanism
-of life. In the third scene, we get the other side of the medal, when
-a bevy of girls discuss life. How shall we dress our children? Which
-is it better to be--a girl, or a man? Then, again, the scene is filled
-with schoolboys, and we see the academic enthusiasm of young Germany.
-
-"I've got my move," cried Melchior. "I've got my move--now the world
-can go to pot--if I hadn't got my move, I'd have shot myself." A
-British youth with his cricket or football "colours" fresh on his
-victorious head could not possibly have manifested a more sacred joy,
-and one thinks incidentally of the Viennese student who shot the
-professor who had ploughed him in his viva voce.
-
-Scene V, after a short philosophic exposition by Melchior of the
-universality of egoism, contains an episode between himself and Wendla,
-when at her own request he hits and beats her, so that, forsooth, she
-may realise the sufferings of a friend of hers similarly handled by her
-parents. After we have paid a visit to Melchior's study, where Melchior
-and Moritz are reading _Faust_ together, we are transported once again
-to the house of Wendla and her mother. This scene is the most pathetic
-in the first act. The old fairy tales about the stork cease to obtain
-credence, but the birthright of knowledge claimed by the child is
-refused by the mother.
-
- "Why can't you tell me, Mother dear--see, I kneel at
- your feet and lay my head upon your lap--you put your
- skirt over my head and tell me, and tell me as if you
- were alone in the room. I promise not to move--I promise
- not to shriek."
-
-Could the dim forebodings of innocence, the harrowing consciousness of
-mystery, be more poignantly delineated?
-
-In the third act, events move apace. A poetic nemesis befalls the
-prudish mother, for the child surrenders all unwitting to the ardour
-of Melchior. Spring has indeed awakened. Moritz, however, has been
-unsuccessful at school; he wanders into the forest to make the end.
-Four pages of soliloquy; a dramatic device, no doubt, but none the less
-indicative of the exaggerated introspective pedantry of the average
-German schoolboy. "I wander to the altar like the youth in old Etruria,
-whose death-rattle purchased deliverance for his brothers in the coming
-year." Then, when his thoughts are at their darkest, a pretty little
-artist's model comes tripping along barefoot; gay and sparkling is her
-careless life. "Come home with me." But the schoolboy has his lessons
-to do, and he hies himself to his final task. Act III.--Apprehensive of
-a suicide epidemic, the masters hold a meeting in which the question
-of whether the window shall be open or shut is apparently of as much
-importance as the expulsion of Melchior. Then comes the funeral of
-Moritz; the father repudiates the paternity of so prodigal a son, while
-the classical professor sapiently remarks, "If he had only learnt his
-history of Greek literature, he would have had no occasion to hang
-himself." Melchior, however, is still at large, and after a harrowing
-dialogue between his father and mother, is packed off to a reformatory.
-
-But the transformation scene goes merrily on, and we behold first the
-reformatory, from which Melchior effects an escape, and then Wendla's
-sick-room. Amid the most trenchant satire on the pompous fashionable
-doctor, it becomes apparent that the child has brought home to her
-mother the full wages of innocence.
-
- FRAU BERGMANN. You have a child.
-
- WENDLA. But that is not possible, Mother. I am not
- married. Oh, Mother, why did you not tell me everything?
-
-The finale of the play is laid in the churchyard, over whose wall there
-clambers the escaped Melchior; he walks past the tombstone of Wendla,
-dead from her mother's heroic efforts to save her reputation; after an
-interview with Moritz, out for a nocturnal stroll, with his head tucked
-under his arm, he meets a mysterious stranger, who launches him in the
-world.
-
-Such is a synopsis of a play produced in Germany amid the wildest
-acclamation and disparagement. Its success is largely due to the fact
-that it is pregnant with a problem which, in Germany, at any rate, is
-of peculiar moment. "Is such a subject capable of artistic treatment?"
-demands the man of the old school. If, however, the treatment is
-somewhat more drastic than in Longfellow's
-
- "Standing with reluctant feet
- Where the brook and river meet,"
-
-the subject is the same, the reason for the difference being that
-German blood flows with a swifter current and a fuller volume than the
-thin New England trickle of the early nineteenth century. As a sheer
-piece of psychology, the work is as great as James's _The Awkward Age_,
-if one may compare a Vulcanic forge with a Daedalean web. That, indeed,
-the theme is unfit for tragic treatment, let those maintain whose
-ideally balanced temperaments have never experienced the throes and
-travails that attend the birth of manhood or womanhood.
-
-Some reference should be made to Wedekind's less important works--to
-the somewhat inferior farce, _Der Liebestrank_; to the highly
-serious _So ist das Leben_, a work whose psychology and symbolism
-are analogous to Ibsen's _Volksfiend_[3]; to the amusing, but not
-particularly significant _Marquis von Keith_, with its mixture of
-the problem, the extravaganza, and the character study, and its
-delightful comedy passage, when a boy wins his way with his father
-by blackmailing him with suicide; to _Minnehaha_, the prose-poem,
-compounded of the spirits of the classics and the coulisses; to the
-satiric grotesque, _Oaha_, an elaborate skit on the celebrated Munich
-journal with its chronic confiscations by the police and its special
-"prison-editor"; and to _Hidalla_, that rollicking burlesque tragedy
-of Free Love and Eugenics. On a higher plane, however, are the volume
-of short stories, _Feuerwerk_, and the collection of poems entitled
-_Die Vier Jahrzeiten_. Like Guy de Maupassant, Wedekind treats only
-the one subject. His technique, however, is different, and while the
-Frenchman crowns each tale with a climax, the German clothes it with an
-atmosphere. _Feuerwerk,_ moreover, is worth reading, if only for the
-style, with its noble simplicity and its majestic roll. The masterpiece
-of the series is _Der Greise Freier_, where, set in the background of
-an Italian honeymoon, lies painted the grey romance of a young girl
-realising her love in the very arms of death. Matchless, again, as a
-mock heroic _tour de force_ is _Rabbi von Ezra_, a philosophic sermon
-by an aged Hebrew, delivered in the grandiose style of the prophets,
-on his comparative experiences with the wife of his bosom and the
-strange woman. The poems, also, are, with a few exceptions, innumerable
-variations of the eternal theme. With all its fantastic bizarrerie,
-reminiscent of Baudelaire, Poe, or Verlaine, the mood is throughout
-more masculine, not to say more brutal. No lover has yet set his
-enamoured features to a grin of such tigerish ferocity; no writer of
-songs has yet refined melodious lyrics with such Nietzschean gusto,
-such Satanic exultation. _Keuscheit_, in particular, is truly the
-apotheosis of the super-brutal. In a more normal vein, making quite a
-new departure in the art of light verse, is the charming poem beginning:
-
- "Ich habe meine Tante geschlachtet,
- Meine Tante war alt und schwach."
-
-Of course it is inevitable that, like the Secessionist painters,
-seeking, as he does, such drastic effects by such drastic means, when
-he falls, he should fall with overwhelming heaviness. Occasionally,
-instead of being powerful, he is merely crude. At his best, however,
-his poems exhibit the swing and ripple of the authentic lyric. Typical
-of him at his best are _Heimweh_ and _Der Blinde Knabe_. Yet now and
-again the cry of the sufferer pierces the cynic's mask.
-
- "Ich stehe schuldlos vor meinem Verstand,
- Und fühle des Schicksals zermalmende Hand."
-
-Among Wedekind's more recent works we would mention _Zensur_ and
-_Schloss von Wetterstein_ and, far more particularly, _Musik_ and
-_Franziska_.
-
-_Zensur_, with its sub-title _a Theodicy_, is an _apologia pro vitâ
-suâ_, arising more particularly out of the fact that the play, _Die
-Büchse von Pandora_, was actually censored even in Munich. The
-protagonist of this work, _Walter Buridan_, is without disguise
-Frank Wedekind, for the postulate of the Wedekindian personality,
-as a fundamental element in contemporary national culture, is as
-important in Germany as was some years ago the postulate of the Shavian
-personality in England. And, indeed, with all his clownings and
-buffooneries, Wedekind is frequently as serious as Mr. Shaw himself. It
-will therefore be appreciated that the passage which we are now going
-to quote out of the dialogue between Buridan and the Court official
-is meant deliberately, not as a mere piece of impudence but in all
-earnestness.
-
- BURIDAN. But can you adduce anything out of my writings
- which hasn't for its ultimate object to glorify and
- represent artistically that eternal justice before which
- we all bend the knee with all humility?
-
- DR. PRANTL. What do you mean by eternal justice?
-
- BURIDAN. I understand by eternal justice the same thing
- as that which John the Evangelist called the Logos. I
- understand by it the same thing as that which the whole
- of Christendom worships as the Holy Ghost. In no one
- of my works have I put forward the good as bad or the
- bad as good. I have never falsified the consequences
- which accrue to a man as the result of his actions. I
- have simply portrayed those consequences in all their
- inexorable necessity.
-
-In a somewhat different vein is the weird trilogy, _In Allen Satteln
-Gerecht_ (_Ready for Everything_), _Mit Allen Hüden Gehetzt_ (_Up
-to Everything_), and _In Allen Wassern Gewaschen_, which have
-been recently published together, under the title of _Schloss von
-Wetterstein._ In these three plays the lascivious and the intellectual,
-the monstrous and the real, the comic and the tragic, are linked
-together in a union which, though to some extent burlesque, is on
-the whole successful. The dialogue, in particular, in this hybrid
-of tragedy and extravaganza, with its ingenious twists, its lusty
-thwackings, its shrewd, violent thrusts, not merely home, but, as it
-were, right through the body, is in its own way packed with genius.
-Effie, in particular, with her insatiable appetite in the erotic
-sphere, is the greatest _enfant terrible_ in the whole of modern
-European literature. And truly tragic is her dismay when she discovers
-that that _Unersättlichkeit in Liebe_, on which she has built her whole
-philosophy of life, is simply to be attributed to chronic indigestion,
-and that the instantaneous effect which she produces upon males is
-simply due to a diseased liver.
-
-More serious, though with the usual Wedekindian sardonic undercurrent,
-is _Musik_. This play consists of four "pictures" from the life of
-a young singing student, Klara Hûhnerwadel, studying her art in the
-household of a professor who is married to another woman. Events take
-their normal course, but there is a great uproar owing to the arrest
-and trial of the woman, through whose illegal assistance Klara had
-successfully escaped the natural corollary of her rash romanticism.
-Klara is consequently packed off across the frontier to avoid arrest
-herself. She returns, however, is duly arrested, and the second
-"picture" shows her in prison. In the third "picture," she is once
-more back at the professor's house, and once more does history repeat
-itself, though in this case the legal ordinances are not infringed. In
-the fourth "picture," Klara has given birth to a son, of whom she is
-devotedly fond. With true Wedekindian irony, however, the child dies on
-the stage. Such is the skeleton of the plot, squalid, though no doubt
-highly plausible. But the play must be read itself to appreciate the
-sheer force of its sinister realism. The characters in this piece are
-among the most convincing that ever walked the boards of a Wedekind
-play, painted too in colours far more sober than those fantastic
-luridities with which this author is accustomed to disport himself.
-It is, in fact, if we may draw a slightly startling analogy, a "slice
-of life" play of the Galsworthian genre. Before passing from _Musik_,
-we would like to quote the passage describing the child's death as
-typically characteristic of the author's brutal pathos.
-
- ELSE. The bath will do him good (_with her bare arm in
- the water_)--it's all cooking salt--the salt won't hurt
- him, will it, doctor?
-
- DR. SCHWARZKOPF (_by the cot, dully_). There is nothing
- more to be done. The child is dead.
-
- KLARA (_gives an agonised shriek_).
-
- [_The_ Landlady _picks up the tub of water from the
- floor and carries it out_.
-
-In _Franziska_ (1912), Wedekind has given fresh rein to his fantastic
-exuberance. This weird drama deals with the experiences of an
-ultra-modern Mademoiselle de Maupin, who, having sold herself to the
-devil in the shape of an impresario, who holds her strictly to her
-bargain, proceeds to see life like a veritable twentieth-century female
-Faust. And life, forsooth, she sees with a vengeance, playing the smart
-"blood" in a gay _Weinstube_; marrying a rich heiress, so naïve and
-so unsophisticated as to put everything down to sheer frigidity on
-the part of her imagined husband; successfully masquerading in silk
-knee-breeches to a silly old monarch as a genuine spirit, only finally,
-like a contemporary
-
- "In veterem Cæneus revoluta figuram,"
-
-to subside both purified and enlightened byher kaleidoscopic
-experiences into the healthy bliss of the quasi-domestic life with a
-new, honest, and well-meaning lover.
-
-The wild, rollicking humour of this play will perhaps appeal in vain
-to the more stolid of our English minds. Some help may perhaps be
-found for the due appreciation of this, and, indeed, of all Wedekind's
-plays, if it be borne in mind that for a modern woman to live her own
-life in Southern Germany (_sich auszuleben_, to employ the technical
-and official phrase) is not revolutionary but elementary, and is far
-more of a cliché than a new departure. Further, the play claims to be
-treated not by the standards of the ordinary drama, but as a problem
-farce, an Aristophanic modernity, a philosophic extravaganza, a
-dramatic anomaly, very much _sui generis_, and consequently requiring
-very special critical standards. Judging it by these standards, it is
-impossible not to be swept away by the high spirits of this strange
-piece of art. Who, too, can gainsay the practical up-to-dateness of a
-play where maidens insure against children, wives against infidelity,
-monarchs against madness? And who will not admire the almost morbid
-conscientiousness of Franziska, who, having had one lover of the
-name of Veit, and another lover of the name of Ralph, and becoming
-subsequently a mother, determines, out of comprehensive precaution
-and sheer sense of fairness, to call the little boy by the impartial
-designation of Veitralph? It is, however, only fair to state, as we
-have already hinted, that the play finishes up on a note of genuine
-pathos and semi-conjugal affection.
-
-What, then, is Wedekind's final claim? As a play-wright in the ordinary
-sense of the word, his pretensions are negligible. One of the most
-marked features, however, of the last decade and a half has been the
-evolution of fresh species in the genus drama. Thus, apart from the
-drama or play of action, with its orthodox _dénouement_ and climax, we
-have the "idea" play, as in Mr. Shaw; the "slice of life" play, as in
-Mr. Galsworthy; or the "æsthetic atmosphere" play, as in Maeterlinck.
-Whether we call such work drama, or quasi-drama, is as immaterial
-from the larger standpoint as the surname we choose to give to the
-individual who did, or who did not, write _Hamlet_. Even, however,
-with this extended classification, it is difficult to docket into any
-definite pigeon-hole so idiosyncratic a temperament. If we have to
-commit ourselves, we would say that the Wedekind play is the lyric play
-of irony--irony both comic and tragic. Even making all due allowances
-for defects, for the superfluous thickness with which sometimes he
-places his harsh and violent colours, or for occasional amorphous
-construction, as in _Frühlingserwachen_, as a master of irony he is
-indisputably a genius. No _soeva indignatio_, it is true, lends its
-ethical sanction, no Hellenic [Greek: _eironeia_] its delicate grace:
-it is for his own fiendish delectation that he plies his knout on that
-world of abnormalities called into existence for this express purpose,
-and writhing prettily in the most ingenious of dances. Yet with what
-art and dexterity does he operate, finding with unerring aim the raw
-place of his victims, and drawing from these apparent grotesques the
-blood of genuine humanity. Your specialist will no doubt diagnose him a
-decadent, yet he is tense with a frenzied virility. It is, as we have
-said before, the very exuberance and violence of his energy that leads
-him plumb the abyss. He has himself well expressed his whole outlook
-on life, and indeed the whole Nietzschean standpoint, in the following
-lines:
-
- "For them your kind and gracious face,
- For me the sword smiles sweet,
- For me the savage bear's embrace,
- For them old Bruin's meat.
- The brutal foe's own strife I choose,
- They the humanities of truce."
-
-
-[Footnote 1: _Cf._ the lines of Ricarda Huch to life: "Denn du bist
-suss in deinen Bitternessen."]
-
-[Footnote 2: It is curious to notice that almost identical words were
-used in _Irene Wycherley_.]
-
-[Footnote 3: "Volksfiend" (sic); German is "Volksfeind", Norwegian is
-"Folkefiende"--transcriber's note--M.D.]
-
-
-
-
-ARTHUR SCHNITZLER
-
-
- "My dear friend, as far as that grotesque realism is
- concerned, which considers it its duty to get along
- without stage management or prompter, that realism in
- which a fifth act frequently fails to be reached because
- a tile has fallen upon the hero's head in the second
- act--I am not interested. As for myself, I let the
- curtain go up when it begins to be amusing, and I let it
- go down at the moment which I consider fit."
-
-
-In these words, touched with a delicate flippancy which is thoroughly
-characteristic, Arthur Schnitzler endeavours to summarise that
-technique which, though it has lifted him to the summit of the Austrian
-drama, is as yet comparatively unknown to the English public, if one
-excepts the recent performance by the Stage Society of _The Green
-Cockatoo_ and _Countess Mizzi_, and the production of _Anatol_ at the
-Palace Music Hall.
-
-It is, in fact, because Schnitzler's plays combining, and on the whole
-combining efficiently, the psychological interest of pure "problem"
-with the emotional interest of pure "drama," afford specimens of a
-type novel to, at any rate, the majority of our theatre-goers, that
-they provoke something more than a cursory examination, not only of
-themselves, but of the standpoint and method of the man who wrote
-them. Above all is this the case in a country like England, where
-the problem play is hampered by so many handicaps. The exaggerated
-officialdom of our English propriety, beneficial though it may be
-from the moral aspect, produces artistically unfortunate results.
-Many first-class problem plays are exiled from the stage, but that is
-not where the mischief ends. Even when they are produced, it is only
-to be looked on with suspicion as eccentric symptoms of dangerous,
-not to say anarchistic tendencies. When, however, official and
-"respectable" dramatists (_i.e._ dramatists of the stamp of Mr. Pinero
-or of Mr. Sutro) produce so-called problem plays before official and
-"respectable" audiences (_i.e._ audiences of a calibre other than
-that of those who patronise the Little Theatre and Stage Society
-performances), it will be usually found (if, indeed, the play is not
-an innocuous family drama, or simply a comedy of intrigue, for in many
-cases the word "problem" has degenerated into a mere euphemism for some
-slight forgetfulness of the Seventh Commandment) that the dramatist
-has sacrificed the duty of working out his problems logically and
-artistically to the still more paramount duty of appeasing the moral
-consciousness of his audience.
-
-Further, it is one of the precepts of our dramatic technique, most
-honoured in the observance, that the action should take place among
-people of high social position; as, however, it so happens that it is
-rather among the more intellectual and introspective of the middle
-classes that genuine problems tend to arise, the scope of the dramatist
-becomes automatically narrowed. Of course we have our dramatic left
-wing, Mr. Shaw, Mr. Galsworthy, Mr. Barker, our ultra-modern exponents
-of the drama of ideas and the drama of psychology. But here, again,
-our revolutionaries overshoot the mark in their reaction from the
-orthodox. Mr. Shaw will bombard us with ideas till we can hardly
-stand. When, however, we have recovered our balance, we observe that,
-however indisputable may be his pre-eminence as a thaumaturgic apostle
-of a successfully dechristianised Christianity, his characters are
-marked by comparatively few traits of individual psychology, and
-participate in comparatively little dramatic action. It is, indeed,
-with profound appreciation of his weakness that "talking" is set by
-Mr. Shaw as a final seal on the _Superman_. Mr. Galsworthy and Mr.
-Barker, it is true, do give us not only elaborate discussion of social
-problems (though not infrequently an airy discussion of things in
-general is dragged in forcibly with no, or little, reference to the
-action of the play), but also refined and delicate delineations of
-individual character. But with the possible exception of the grandiose
-and monstrous _Waste_ and the statuesque thesis and antithesis of the
-sociological _Strife_, their plays are not dramatic. To express it with
-almost childish implicity, their plays are not "exciting." With a few
-exceptions, they are charged with no atmosphere and abut at no climax.
-
-Mere ideas, however, will not make the dramatic world go round, and
-mere psychology often only makes it go flat. Few words are mouthed with
-such fluent irresponsibility as "technique," but it may be said--and
-said, we think, truly, and without affectation--that no play can be
-a success without a certain minimum of "technique"; that is to say,
-either one continuous thread of dramatic interest on which successive
-acts are strung, or some particular arch-effect to which (especially if
-a one-acter) the whole play abuts, and to the atmosphere of which all
-the elements are harmoniously toned.
-
-The vice of the English drama, then, is this: plays of good technical
-mechanism possess little or no "problem" interest; plays of "problem"
-or psychological interest possess little or no technical mechanism.
-
-Let us, consequently, glancing first at his plays, and perhaps later
-at those short stories which stand in the most intimate relation
-to his one-acters, ascertain to what extent Schnitzler has solved
-successfully the great "problem of the problem."
-
-_Liebelei_, which was produced first in 1895, is an excellent example
-both of Schnitzler's powers and of Schnitzler's limitations. The
-_motif_ of the play is the problem of the refined middle-class girl,
-who stands, if we may borrow the terminology of popular melodrama, at
-the cross-roads. Which turning is it better for her to take--the right
-turning, or the wrong turning?
-
-Fritz, a sentimental young Viennese student, is discussing in his rooms
-the affairs of his heart with the saner and more practical Theodor.
-Fritz is melancholy. He has been sustaining a grand passion for a
-married woman, but the looming shadow of the husband obsesses him. Are
-his nerves playing him tricks, or has the husband ascertained?
-
-Theodor advises him to sail in shallower and less troubled waters. "You
-must go for your happiness where I did--and found it, too--where there
-are no great scenes, no dangers, and no tragic developments, where
-the first steps are not particularly hard and the last, again, are
-not painful, where one receives the first kiss with a smile and parts
-finally with the softest feeling."
-
-Scruples are out of place on the principle, "Better myself than someone
-else, and the someone else is as inevitable as Fate."
-
-Theodor, moreover, has not only prescribed the cure, but has ordered
-the medicine. Enter Mizzi, the actual "happiness" of Theodor,
-and Christine, the prospective "happiness" of Fritz. Mizzi the
-practical prepares supper, while the sweet _naïveté_ of the genuinely
-unsophisticated Christine captivates the jaded soul of our _fin de
-siècle_ romantic. There ensues a scene of the most delicate gaiety
-and camaraderie. All is health and goodwill. Even Mizzi the prosaic
-shows her passion for the picturesque on learning that Fritz is in the
-Dragoons:
-
- MIZZI. Are you in the yellow or the black?
-
- FRITZ. I'm in the yellow.
-
- MIZZI. (_dreamily_). In the yellow.
-
-Could there be a more subtle probing into the soul of the
-novelette-reading shopgirl?
-
-Then, at the zenith of the feast, when glasses are clinking and souls
-are flowing, enter the skeleton. The company is packed into the next
-room, and Fritz is left to arrange a duel with the man whom he has
-wronged. Exit the skeleton, re-enter the revellers; yet the shadow of
-the looming death casts a gloom even over the unconscious minds of
-the others. The girls bid a gay farewell to the young men, but the
-aftermath of the old love is already poisoning the sweets of the new.
-
-The next scene is in the lodgings of Christine on the eve of that duel
-of which the love-stricken girl is in blissful ignorance. Christine,
-_bien entendu_, in contradistinction to the casual and heart-whole
-Mizzi, is taking her love-affair with the maximum of seriousness.
-Katherine, a benevolent busybody of a neighbour, puts Weiring, the
-musician father of Christine, on his guard. Weiring, however, having
-been the uncomplaisant brother of his sister, is determined, on the
-strength of his experience, to be the complaisant father of his
-daughter.
-
- WEIRING. I became, Heaven knows, proud, and gloried in
- my conduct--and then, little by little, the grey hairs
- came and the wrinkles, and one day went by another
- till her whole youth was gone--and gradually, so that
- one could scarcely notice it, the young girl became an
- old maid, and then I first began to suspect what I had
- really done.
-
- KATHERINE. But, Herr Weiring....
-
- WEIRING. I can see how she often used to sit with me in
- the evening by this lamp in this room, with her silent
- smile, with a strange kind of devotion, as if she still
- wished to thank me for something, and I--the one thing
- I wanted most to do was to throw myself on my knees and
- ask for her forgiveness for guarding her so well from
- all dangers and from all happiness.
-
-The act ends with a love-scene between Christine and Fritz, poignant in
-its irony. He is all-in-all to her, she is just something to him; but
-he goes off to fight a duel on account of another woman without so much
-as bidding her a real farewell.
-
-In the third act the news of Fritz's death is broken to Christine,
-and here comes the most subtle and delicate touch of all. Poignant as
-is her grief at his death, her grief at the casual flippancy of his
-treatment is even more poignant. Our _fin de siècle_ Ophelia rushes
-madly out of the house to commit suicide in the nearest brook, or
-perhaps more probably under the nearest train, to point the philosophic
-moral, "_A bas la grande passion! Vive l'Amourette!_"
-
-The play, however, should be read or seen to obtain an adequate
-appreciation of the precision with which each character is drawn, the
-spontaneity with which the dialogue flows, and the lyric pathos with
-which the whole is invested. The limitations, such as they are, simply
-lie in the fact that each act is self-complete in itself. However
-good they may be, three consecutive one-acters never made a drama.
-To compare great things with low, each act of a drama, like each
-instalment of a _feuilleton_, should leave, as it were, the hanging
-tag of some vital interrogation. The dramatic banquet should not only
-regale the mind of the spectator during, but titillate it with the
-aftermath between the acts.
-
-As we shall see later, when he comes to dramatise on the larger
-scale, Schnitzler not infrequently exhibits the defects of those very
-qualities which make him so supreme in the sphere of the one-acter.
-
-In _Märchen_ (the Fairy Tale), on the other hand, the problem is
-brought more officially into the foreground of the play, while each
-act is more closely connected with those which follow or precede it.
-Fedor Denner, a romantic young journalist (nearly all Schnitzler's
-young men are highly romantic), is in love with Fanny, a young actress
-on the threshold of theatrical success, and of those dangers which
-follow so closely in the wake of theatrical success. Fedor, moreover,
-is not only romantic, he is modern--ultra-modern. And so, in the
-inspiring atmosphere of Fanny's home circle, where the mother bustles
-about with the refreshments and the "good" piano-teacher of a sister
-discourses music for the edification of the journalists, painters, and
-students who frequent the house, he gives an impassioned little lecture
-on the "Fairy Tale of the Fallen Woman" and on the "washed-out views
-and dead-beat ideas" of which the fairy tale is composed. The little
-lecture, however, goes off just a little too successfully. In a climax,
-marvellous in its tacit concentration, Fanny takes an opportunity
-of kissing his hand. Fedor is revolted, however, by the revelation
-implied in this pathetic gratitude. He had contemplated marriage, but
-now----. For the time being he nurses in solitary misery all the pangs
-of retrospective jealousy. Then Fanny, unable to bear the separation,
-rushes headlong into his arms. Then comes the great act of the play. We
-are back once more in the house of Fanny's mother. The young actress,
-having scored a brilliant success on the Vienna stage, has been offered
-a splendid contract in St. Petersburg by Moritzki, the agent. If,
-however, she goes to St. Petersburg, she will have to face the pains
-and pleasures of life unsheltered by the respectability of a family.
-The problem is acute. Fanny, however, places the Fate of her life on
-the knees of--Fedor. And Fedor shuffles and vacillates.
-
- FANNY. Come, and you--what do you say yourself?
-
- FEDOR. After you have received Herr Moritzki at the
- house you can scarcely seriously mean to refuse him.
-
- FANNY. Herr Denner, I consider you an exceptionally
- shrewd man, I ask you for your advice.
-
- FEDOR. Yes, I think ... I would accept.
-
- Fanny. Good! [_To_ Moritzki.] Herr Moritzki.
-
-Woman-like, however, having signed the contract, she craves time to
-reconsider. Fedor looks at it again.
-
- FANNY. Fedor--you gave me the contract back.
-
- FEDOR. Well, yes.
-
- FANNY. You should have torn it up, dear. Why didn't you
- do it?
-
- FEDOR. You should not have signed it, Fanny.
-
- FANNY. Fedor! It is unbearable--you're driving me out of
- my senses.
-
- FEDOR. But you yourself don't quite know your own mind.
- There's something in you which craves for adventures.
-
- FANNY. Fedor--if you would only put me to the test--I
- will do anything you want--only tell me.
-
-And then, eventually, Fedor owns up.
-
- FEDOR. Would I not still have to kiss away from your
- lips the kisses of other men?
-
-And so Fanny forsakes the life of domesticity for the life of the
-actress.
-
-The chief defect, however, in this play is that, in spite of all its
-dramatic compound of psychology, pathos, and problem, the problem is
-not fairly presented, in that Fanny, being of inferior social status
-to Fedor, the question of whether he shall marry her must inevitably
-be influenced by purely snobbish considerations. It is only when the
-woman is of equal, if not slightly superior, rank to the man that the
-real problem of her ante-nuptial chastity can be discussed with real
-sociological fairness.
-
-In _Die Vermächtniss_ (produced in Berlin in 1898), the problem which
-our dramatist has made the centre of his play is the relation to the
-family of the mistress and child of the dead son of the house. The
-dashing young cavalry officer is brought home fatally wounded from
-a fall from his horse. Realising his approaching death, he informs
-his parents of his responsibilities. Death raises the home circle to
-a pitch of more than ordinary humanity. In spite of their poignant
-jealousy at the existence of other affections and another home life,
-they send for their son's household, and accede to his dying request to
-incorporate it into the family.
-
-Act II shows the mistress installed in the bosom of her lover's family.
-Modernity, however, though satisfying to the heroic pose, has its
-penalties. Our ultra-modern family finds itself confronted with social
-ostracism. Still, they love their grandchild, and the mother of the
-grandchild is the price that they must pay. But the grandchild dies.
-The semi-official daughter-in-law consequently becomes a somewhat
-unprofitable luxury, and in the final act is given her _congé_. Even
-more than in _Liebelei_, however, the claim to merit lies almost
-exclusively in the precision with which each successive phase of
-the problem is portrayed. As a series of family pictures, the play
-succeeds, and succeeds brilliantly; as a drama of continuous interest,
-it fails, and fails hopelessly.
-
-The next play of Schnitzler is _The Veil of Beatrice._ This "tragedy
-of sensualism" has qualities too arresting to be lightly disregarded.
-The dramatist has forsaken his problems to portray how the fatal
-temperament of a young girl of the Italian Renaissance works out its
-own destruction.
-
-In the first act, we are shown the garden of Filippo, a poet of
-Bologna, which is on the eve of being plundered by the enemy. The
-heads on Bolognese shoulders are worth little purchase, and who leaves
-not the town to-night will never leave the town at all. The Duke
-invites Filippo to the palace to recite his poems. Filippo refuses,
-so that he may leave the city of doom with his beloved Beatrice,
-a daughter of the people. On learning, however, that Beatrice has
-dreamt of the Duke, he spurns her in an egoistic paroxysm of refined
-jealousy, typical in its subtlety more of the twentieth century than
-the Renaissance.
-
- "So much I give thee, more than thou canst dream,
- So much that to be worthy of my love,
- Loathing should fasten on thee at the thought
- This earth is trod by other men than I."
-
-Beatrice leaves him with the vague intimation--
-
- "Feel I that without thee I cannot live
- And have desire for death, I come again
- To take thee with me."
-
-In the second act, Beatrice is on the point of marrying her legitimate
-suitor, Vittorino, and escaping from the town, when the Duke appears
-and proposes to exercise the _jus ultimæ nodis_. Owing to the
-remonstrances of her brother Francesco, he generously offers to
-relinquish his intentions. Beatrice is bidden to go on her way, but
-stands riveted to the spot by a fatalistic impulse to realise her
-dream. And what is more, she insists on being the wife of the Duke.
-Her wish is granted. The nuptials are celebrated by a gigantic _fête_
-in the palace, whose doors are thrown open to rich and poor. Beatrice,
-however, with the placid _naïveté_ of her will-less temperament, flies
-to Filippo.
-
- "What boots it,
- Were I this eve an empress to whom worlds
- Bowed, or the callat of a fool? For I
- Am with thee now to die by thine own side."
-
-Filippo pretends to poison both her and himself, and on her discovering
-the ruse, commits suicide in earnest. Beatrice rushes back to the
-palace, but discovering that she has left behind that priceless veil
-which was the wedding-gift of her husband, leads back the Duke to the
-chamber of love and death. The living is confronted with the dead
-rival, and the indignant Francesco slays his sister.
-
-The power of this tragedy, however, lies not so much in the actual
-plot or even in the marvellous delineation of Beatrice, gracefully and
-innocently childish in the very irresponsibility of her fated sin,
-as in the rich tints of the picture and the gorgeous frame in which
-the picture is set. All the multicoloured elements of the Renaissance
-take their place in the vivid scheme--poets, sculptors, courtiers,
-courtesans, soldiers, and populace. Annihilation and vitality grow each
-more grandiose from their mutual juxtaposition, and the red blood of
-life flows but the quicker and the warmer beneath the black shadow of
-doom. Few more eloquent tragedies have been written on the great twin
-themes: "In the midst of life we are in death; in the midst of death we
-are in life."
-
-Reverting back to prose, we come to _Der Einsame Weg_ (_The Lonely
-Way_, 1903). If, however, the tendency to import the methods of
-the short story and the long novel were apparent in _Liebelei_ and
-_Vermächtniss_, it is even more marked in this play. A son, finding
-a sire in the shape of the middle-aged lover of his now dead mother,
-repudiates the natural for the putative father; a neurotic and
-over-sexed young girl, finding that her lover, unknown to himself, is
-suffering from an incurable disease, dies by her own act. These are the
-two _motifs_, knit together by no shred of logical connection, which
-form the threads on which the drama is hung. Yet, if here we have
-Schnitzler at his worst, the many excellences even of this play attest
-by implication the merits of Schnitzler at his best. The scene between
-father and son is a sheer masterpiece. How delicately does the father
-intimate that "mothers also have their destinies like other women." And
-how complete is his rejection.
-
- JULIAN. It is now absolutely impossible for you to
- forget that you are my son.
-
- FELIX. Your son--it is nothing but a word--it is a mere
- empty sound--I know it, but I don't realise it.
-
- JULIAN. Felix!
-
- FELIX. You are further away from me since I know it.
-
-Interesting, again, is the Nietzschean sanction for intrigue: "One has
-the right to exploit to the completest extent all one's life with all
-the ecstasy and all the shame which is involved."
-
-Far superior, however, to _Der Einsame Weg_, with its heavy Ibsenite
-atmosphere, is _Zwischenspiel_ (1905), where that problem of the
-quadrangle, compared to which that of the triangle is from the more
-advanced standpoint but _vieux jeu_, is treated with the most delicate
-and biting raillery. Victor Amadeus, the pianist, and his wife
-Cecilie, the singer, love each other with as much genuine constancy
-as can be expected from normal persons of the artistic temperament.
-Victor Amadeus, however, philanders with a countess, and his wife
-with a prince. Mutual jealousy! Too civilised, however, to interfere
-by any display of primitive emotion with the sacred love of the
-new modernity, they grant each other, on general principles, _carte
-blanche_. And so, at the end of Act I, they separate for their mutual
-holiday. Henceforward the husband and wife are to be the most Platonic
-of comrades. The necessities of their professional engagements,
-however, bring about their meeting in their old home. But the
-affair with the countess is dead, and the affair with the prince has
-apparently not yet matured. Then do Victor Amadeus and Cecilie forget
-the ultra-modern theories which they are bound in duty to exemplify,
-and only realise that they are man and woman. Bursting with his new
-humanity, Victor Amadeus begins in the third act to be quite jealous
-of the prince. His astonishment can consequently be imagined when his
-Serene Highness presents himself to ask the husband formally for the
-hand of the wife. On the situation being explained to him, the prince
-gracefully retires, gallant gentleman that he is. But the reunited pair
-cannot live happily ever after. Cecilie, it is true, had been faithful,
-but faithful, she explains, by the narrowest of margins. She cannot
-guarantee the future; and does not history repeat itself? True, they
-had loved each other, but what love can be proof against the theories
-of the newer sexual ethics?
-
-"If we had only before," says Cecilie, "shrieked into each other's
-faces our rage, our bitterness, our despair, instead of posing as
-superior people who never lost their heads, then we should have been
-true to ourselves--and that we never were."
-
-And so that parting, taking place, as it does, when all barriers but
-their two selves have disappeared, rings down the curtain on this most
-brilliant of satires on the ultra-modern.
-
-On almost as high a level is _Freiwild_[1], a piece which gains an
-added interest from the fact that it has not only been censored because
-an army officer is given a box on the ears, but that the actors on one
-occasion refused to play it till solemnly assured by the author that
-the apparent realism of the portrayal of the _procurer-impresario_
-was, after all, merely poetic licence. The play is a vehement satire
-on the duel. In a scene marvellous in its ingenious stagecraft
-and airy atmosphere, we are shown the picturesque gardens of an
-Austrian pleasure resort. Close by is the local theatre, where
-musical comedy is performed for the entertainment of officers. One
-of the actresses, however, Anna, shocks all orthodox traditions by
-refusing to participate in that social life which, according to the
-manager, is the sacred duty of the efficient chorus girl. For Anna,
-Paul Rohring, an analytical painter, entertains feelings which are
-quixotic, and Karinski, a heavy bully of a fire-eater, feelings typical
-of a less exalted Don. But the overtures of Karinski are rebuffed
-ignominiously. Rohring[2] cannot repress the smile of sarcastic
-triumph. The discomfited lady-killer, aspersing the name of Anna
-with an insolent _gaucherie_, has his ears boxed for his pains. The
-inevitable challenge is brought to Rohring by one Poldi, the complete
-exponent of punctilious aristocracy, the past-master in all the
-intricacies of the _duelli codex_, the super-gentleman. But Rohring,
-who is anxious to marry Anna and live a long and happy life, rejects
-the inevitable challenge. Genuine consternation on the part of Poldi,
-who explains that the unpurged shame of the box on the ears spells
-ruin to Karinski's military career. Poldi proposes a compromise--the
-solemn farce of a bloodless duel. Rohring, however, disdains playing
-dummy parts in solemn farces. It is all madness. It is in vain that the
-incarnation of military honour expostulates.
-
-"For you it is madness, but others have grown up in this madness; what
-is madness to you is for others the very element in which they live."
-
-Finally, Rohring is given to understand that, unless he flees, the
-outraged Karinski will shoot him at sight. But with a somewhat human
-perversity our heroic painter refuses to run away. An encounter _à
-l'Américaine_ takes place in the gardens, but Rohring, drawing just
-a second too late, is shot dead. And now, as orthodox applause to the
-red-handed, cold-blooded murderer, comes from the mouth of Karinski's
-own friend in six words the indictment of the duel, irrevocably damning
-in the cold subtlety of its satire: "And now you have won back your
-honour."
-
-If, however, in this play Schnitzler proved his ability to write a
-problem drama which should be something more than a mere series of
-isolated phases, we find again in his next play, _The Call of Life_, in
-spite of its many excellences, the old taint of the one-acter.
-
-The _motif_ of the play is the claim of the desire for life to ride
-rough-shod over all other claims. A beautiful daughter is wasting the
-best years of her life in the care of a querulous father, incurably
-ill, but never dying. The little garrison town is agog with the
-excitement of a newly declared war. This war, moreover, has a special
-interest, in that the local regiment, the Blue Cuirassiers, had in
-the last war, by ignominious flight, branded itself with shame.
-Though this episode took place over thirty years ago and none of the
-actual renegades are now in the regiment, the Blue Hussars, with that
-inflated idea of honour only found in Teutonic countries, resolve
-to purge the disgrace by dying gloriously in the front of the fray.
-Among the officers is Lieutenant Max, who has cast on Marie, the
-beautiful daughter, eyes of admiration. Irony, moreover, sharpens the
-situation when the bedridden father, who was once a member of the Blue
-Cuirassiers, explains he himself was responsible for the historic
-flight.
-
- "What was the good of it? Who would have thanked me?
- They would have put me in a grave with a thousand others
- and piled the earth on top, and that would have been the
- end of it. And I wouldn't have it. I wanted to live--to
- live like others. I wanted to have a wife and children
- and live. And so I rushed from the field; and so it has
- happened that the young men whom I don't know are going
- to their death and that I still live on at seventy-nine
- and will survive them all--all--all."
-
-The old soldier, however, is unduly sanguine as to the protraction of
-his life, for the same call of life which ordered him from the battle
-orders his daughter to pour poison into the water for which he now
-craves.
-
-It is outside the purpose of this essay to argue the ethics of this
-precipitation of the inevitable. Suffice it that it constitutes a most
-efficient curtain--a curtain, however, so efficient that there seems no
-compelling necessity for a continuation of the play. A continuation,
-however, there is, and in the rooms of Max, which are visited at night
-by Marie, who ensconces herself behind a curtain. She sees the major's
-wife come to urge a vain prayer that he should desert the army and
-elope with her. They are discovered by the major, who, shooting the
-wife, spares the lover. It is, however, when the major leaves that we
-understand the intense hypertrophy of life evoked by imminent death.
-Marie, knowing all, yet presents herself. Max can only realise that
-his life has but a few remaining hours, and that these remaining hours
-stand now before him. Another curtain, strong, if slightly crude, yet
-followed by a third act, which is nothing but an epilogue.
-
-This somewhat exaggerated scorn, however, of such of the more
-complicated effects of theatricalism as are manifested in the ingenious
-concatenation of the plot, or the representation of sensational
-incidents which have no justification but their own inherent dramatic
-force, fails absolutely to affect Schnitzler's position as a writer of
-one-act plays. Indeed, it is his subordination of plot to atmosphere
-that constitutes in this sphere his paramount excellence. As, moreover,
-Mr. Henry James in his _Embarrassments and Terminations_ wrote short
-stories independent in themselves yet harmonising with some permeating
-_motif_, so has Schnitzler in his _Anatol_, _Marionetten_, and
-_Lebendigen Stunden_ given us symmetrical one-act sequences.
-
-Let us deal first with the Anatol-Cyclus, a series of one-acters
-portraying the amoristic vicissitudes of a _fin de siècle_
-sentimentalist, flitting prettily from heart to heart, till he is
-eventually encompassed by the matrimonial net. Little action weighs
-down these delicate pieces. Anatol and the flame of the moment
-participate in a dialogue, or Anatol appeals to the worldly wisdom of
-his friend Max to rescue him from some dilemma in which he has been
-landed by his own weakness or his own folly. That is all. Yet each
-piece sheds a little more light upon the holy of holies of Anatol's
-heart, and illumines with equal clarity and colour the charm and
-individuality of each successive priestess of the temple. Though
-no doubt the chief effect of the cycle lies in its accumulative
-force, some idea of the general airiness and brilliance may perhaps
-be obtained by a short sketch of two of the most striking. In _The
-Question to Fate_ Anatol confides to Max his anxiety. Does the flame
-of the moment burn true and for him alone? By hypnotism he proposes
-to extract from his unconscious love that answer which will make him
-either the happiest or the most miserable of mankind. Cora enters, and
-is duly soothed into a hypnotic trance. Anatol, however, insists on
-being left alone with her at this critical moment of his fate, so Max
-retires into the adjoining room. And now, when the helpless girl is
-ready to answer every question, and, what is more, to answer it with
-automatic accuracy, and the book of truth lies ready in his trembling
-hand, the seeker of knowledge has not the courage to know. Waking her
-up with a kiss, he expresses complete reassurance to the re-entering
-Max. Cora, however, manifests a perhaps intelligible anxiety as to the
-nature of her answers.
-
-In the _Farewell Supper_, the scene of which is laid in the _cabinet
-particulier_ of a Viennese restaurant, Anatol describes to Max the
-ineffable woes of being on with the new love before he is off with the
-old. What a strain it is, moreover, to be compelled to eat two suppers
-every night! However, he and Anna (the old love) had at the initiation
-of their romance arranged to confide to each other the first symptom
-of approaching _ennui_. To-night at this supper he will tactfully
-intimate that she is no longer indispensable to his soul's happiness.
-He implores Max to stay as the helpful buffer in an inevitable scene.
-Enter Anna, fresh from the stage and hungry for oysters. The pangs of
-starvation temporarily appeased, Anna announces that she has something
-important to communicate. She has grown tired of Anatol and fallen in
-love with another. She hopes he will not mind, but better she should
-tell him now than when it was too late. Collapse of Max into uproarious
-laughter. With pique mingling with his relief, Anatol rises to the
-occasion, professing the righteous indignation of a wounded spirit. To
-vindicate his _amour-propre_, he contemptuously informs her that he
-too has fallen in love with another, but as far as he is concerned his
-confession does come too late. "Only a man could be so brutal," retorts
-Anna; "a woman would never be so tactless as to say anything so crude."
-And so the comedy ends with the girl carrying off the remains of the
-supper to her cavalier round the corner.
-
-The whole cycle, however, should be read to appreciate the racy ripple
-of the dialogue, the subtle malice of the characterisation, and the
-general verve and irony of these most sparkling of comedies.
-
-Perhaps at this moment it may be convenient just to mention the
-audacious psychology of the super-Boccacian _Reigen_. English decorum,
-no doubt, for-bids anything but the most casual allusion to this
-sequence of duologues, where all the members of the social hierarchy
-are linked together by participation in the same eternal plot.
-
-Yet in its way, this book, written originally for a select circle
-and subsequently published by universal request, is one of the most
-refined feats of intellectualism which Schnitzler has ever performed.
-For the delicacy of the style is in inverse ratio to the delicacy
-of the subject-matter, and the various nuances of social technique
-are described and differentiated with the masterly touch of combined
-experience and intuition. Scarcely suited, no doubt, as a Sunday School
-prize, the book will, none the less, well repay perusal by modern men
-and women of the modern world.
-
-The series _Marionetten_, to which allusion has already been made, has
-for its _motif_ the ironic tragedy of those who essay to manipulate
-the lives of others. The best of three plays is _The Puppet-player_.
-To the happy fireside of Eduard and Anna there is introduced an old
-friend, George Merklin, whom the husband had casually encountered.
-Merklin is a picturesque, if battered, Bohemian who encircles himself
-somewhat showily with a halo of alleged mysticism. The whole art of
-the dramatist, however, in this little piece is devoted to creating
-an atmosphere of light melancholy, in which the poetic isolation of
-the second-rate genius, Merklin, stands in vivid contrast to the
-prosaic happiness of his less gifted friend. The climax comes when it
-transpires that Merklin had loved Anna in the past and had brought the
-two together by way of a psychological experiment at a Bohemian supper.
-
- "The little girl who was so nice to you simply did what
- I wished. You two were the puppets in my hand. I pulled
- the strings. It was arranged that she should pretend to
- be in love with you. For you always roused my sympathy,
- my dear Eduard; I wanted to awake in you the illusion
- of happiness, so that you should be ready for true
- happiness when you found it."
-
-And so this shoddy superman goes out into this lonely world, having
-played with the fates of others only to have played away his own life's
-happiness.
-
-Perhaps, however, Schnitzler's most characteristic series of one-acters
-is the one headed _Lebendige Stunden_. Life should be weighed as
-much by quality as by quantity. One man can traverse more life in a
-few seconds than another in whole years. It is typical, however, of
-Schnitzler's method that he essays not merely to lead up to a violent
-climax by artifices of calculated stagecraft, but to set the vivid hour
-in an harmonious and poetic frame. The most striking of the series is
-the extraordinary fantasia, _The Woman with the Dagger_.
-
-Leonhardt, a seriously romantic youth, in apparently the full flush of
-his first grand passion, meets the wife of a dramatic author in the
-Renaissance saloon of a picture gallery. Pre-eminent among the pictures
-on the wall is that of a woman robed in white, holding a dagger in her
-uplifted hand, and gazing at the floor as if there lay someone whom
-she had murdered. It is then in this atmosphere that our gallant urges
-his suit to the unresponsive Pauline, who coolly informs him that she
-has confessed to her husband that she is in danger, and that they are
-travelling away to-morrow. And then, as she is on the point of saying
-farewell, she stands before the picture.
-
- PAULINE (_looking closer_). Who lies there in the shadow?
-
- LEONHARDT. Where?
-
- PAULINE. Do you not see?
-
- LEONHARDT. I see nothing.
-
- PAULINE. It is you.
-
- LEONHARDT. I? Pauline, what an extraordinary jest!
-
-And then, as they look and look, they fall into an hypnotic trance and
-the clock of the world goes back some five hundred years. Pauline has
-become Paola, and Leonhardt, Lionardo, while the racy Viennese idiom is
-turned to classical blank verse. It is early dawn in the studio of the
-Master Remigio, and Remigio is away on his travels. Lionardo arrogates
-the claims of love on the strength of the favours which he has just
-enjoyed. Paola spurns him as the mere mechanical toy of her passion.
-She loves and has always loved her husband. That this is no mere pose
-is apparent from the fact that on the sudden entrance of the husband
-she immediately elucidates the situation. Remigio, however, with a
-sublime tolerance, perhaps more typical of the husband in Mr. Shaw's
-_Irrational Knot_ than of a hot-blooded Italian, pardons Paola on the
-general principles of twentieth-century philosophy. Lionardo, however,
-piqued and insulted as being regarded as
-
- "The glass, the poor mean glass
- From which a child drank a forbidden draught,
- The merest pitiful tool of a chance and fate,"
-
-vows vengeance on Remigio. Paola anticipates this vengeance by killing
-Lionardo on the spot with a dagger, thus exemplifying the pose of the
-picture. Remigio rises to the occasion and seizes on this splendidly
-tragic attitude to complete an unfinished portrait of this loyalest of
-wives.
-
-And then they awaken from their trance. But the magnet of destiny draws
-them inexorably. Pauline grants the assignation, with an air, however,
-of mystic fatality, which shows only too well with what precision the
-present must once again mirror the past.
-
-But perhaps the most sustained and elaborated specimen of our author's
-method is the ironic tragedy of the French Revolution, _The Green
-Cockatoo._ The "Green Cockatoo" is an underground tavern where
-brilliant, if disreputable, actors give, for the edification of their
-aristocratic audiences, impromptu representations of crime and vice.
-
-Henri, the star-man, moreover, has just married the actress Léocadie,
-not for the sake of paradox, but in all seriousness. When his turn
-comes, he rushes on to the stage shouting out that he found his wife,
-Léocadie, with her lover the duke, and killed her. Such a calamity
-being not apparently _primâ facie_ improbable, even the manager is
-almost as alarmed as the audience, till he realises that the whole
-thing is but an histrionic _tour de force_. And then, as the play
-progresses, the atmosphere becomes more and more lurid with impending
-gloom. Jest and reality intermingle in the subtlest of ironies. It is
-part of the entertainment that the ragamuffins should lavish on their
-patrons the freest of insults. But is there not a paradox within the
-paradox, when one remembers that the Bastille has fallen that very
-day? The various types, moreover, of an aristocracy exhibiting the
-levity of people who are shortly going to be hanged are delightfully
-portrayed--the _viveur_, "for whom every day is lost in which he
-has not captured a woman or killed a man," the pretty young noble
-whose corrupt flirtation is so deftly adumbrated, and the lascivious
-_grande dame_, who, in spite of her husband's anxiety, is very far
-from shocked at these spectacular novelties. And then Henri snaps
-up the truth from the demeanour of the manager and his colleagues.
-The Duke comes on to the stage and the actor then gives yet another
-representation of the avenging husband--and this time he surpasses
-himself, for he is but acting the truth.
-
-Less sensational, but of equal psychological grimness, is the play
-_The Mate_, which is in the same series as the _Green Cockatoo_. The
-theme is the pathetic irony of the illusion of a middle-aged professor,
-who gives an almost paternal benediction to what he fondly imagines
-to be the grand passion of his young and temperamental wife. When,
-consequently, his wife dies suddenly, the husband is prepared quite
-honestly to condole with the lover, for after all has he not a right to
-be pitied even more than himself? When, therefore, he learns from his
-young colleague that he has just become engaged to another girl with
-whom he has been in love for some time his righteous indignation is
-unbounded.
-
- "I would have raised you from the ground if you had
- been broken by grief. I would have gone with you to her
- grave, if the woman who is lying over there had been
- your love; but you have turned her into your wanton,
- and you have filled this house with lies and foulness
- right up to the roof till it makes me sick--and that's
- why--that's why, yes, that's why I'm going to kick you
- out."
-
-But there is an anti-climax within an anti-climax, for the man learns
-from a mutual woman friend of the dead woman and of himself, that the
-imagined _grande passion_ had been even from the standpoint of the lady
-nothing more or less than a miserable trumpery adventure.
-
-Reverting now to Schnitzler's longer plays, some mention should be
-made of _Komtesse Mizzi_, _Der Junge Medardus_, and, above all, _Das
-Weites Land_.
-
-_Komtesse Mizzi_, entitled, appropriately enough, "A Family Day" is in
-form a one-acter, though of sufficient length and substance to have
-obtained separate publication. There is little, if any, action. The
-play is based on character, dialogue, and situation. Yet it possesses
-distinct psychological titillation in its presentation of a daughter
-who takes a filial interest in her father's "actress-mistress," and who
-is sensible enough, aristocrat though she is, to meet the lady herself
-with all friendliness, and chat with her as woman to woman without the
-slightest affectation. This feminine freemasonry, however, is perhaps
-explained by the fact that the countess herself has lived her own
-life, to such good effect that she is the mother of a grown-up boy by
-her father's best friend, Prince Egon. When, consequently, the prince
-introduces the boy as his own natural child by an unknown mother, the
-atmosphere becomes somewhat rare. At first highly irritated, she treats
-with frigid indifference the frank exuberant youth, who divines the
-truth with instinctive intuition, only, however, shortly afterwards to
-consent to marry the prince, and thus become the official stepmother
-of her own long-lost child. The racy worldly optimism of this play is
-particularly characteristic of the essentially benevolent malice of the
-Schnitzlerian cynicism.
-
-Of a totally different order is _Der Junge Medardus_, a long play
-of historical patriotism, specially written for the respectable and
-official Burg Theater of Vienna. It might seem indeed at first sight
-that Schnitzler, the refined, ultra-modern analyst, would be somewhat
-out of his element amid all the blood and thunder of the Napoleonic
-campaigns, which _primâ facie_ offer but small scope for psychological
-subtleties. The _tour de force_ consequently becomes all the more
-creditable when the author, in spite of all his trappings of patriotic
-melodrama, manages successfully to execute his own favourite tricks.
-The canvas on which this drama is portrayed is so vast as to render
-any synopsis necessarily inadequate. The idyll, however, and double
-suicide of the young French prince Franz and the bourgeois girl Agatha,
-is one of the purest and sweetest love episodes which Schnitzler
-has ever written. But it is Agatha's brother, the young, brave, and
-picturesque Medardus, who provides the most precious examples of
-recherche psychology. The suicide of the dead couple, Agatha and Franz,
-had been occasioned by the refusal of Franz's family to consent to
-the marriage. When, consequently, Franz's sister, Helene (a character
-somewhat analogous to Mathilde de la Môle in Stendhal's _Le Rouge et le
-Noir_) wishes to put flowers on the graves of the dead pair, Medardus
-refuses to allow her. Helene has him challenged by her suitor, but
-Medardus emerges triumphantly from the duel. Anxious to carry the
-war into the enemy's camp, and to redress the balance of the family
-account, he succeeds, by the dashing conquest of the most perilous
-difficulties, in becoming the lover of Helene, with the eventual object
-of rousing the whole household and flaunting to her own family the
-haughty girl's dishonour. Helene, however, is erratic in her favours.
-Medardus, like Julien, is scorched by his own fire. The ending,
-moreover, of the play, though extremely effective theatrically, strikes
-us from the psychological standpoint as distinctly false. Helene and
-Medardus both plot to assassinate Napoleon. Hearing that Helene is
-Napoleon's mistress, Medardus kills her instead of Napoleon. So far,
-so good. But when our quixotic hero, when offered a free pardon on the
-sole condition that he undertakes to make no further attempt against
-Napoleon's life, obstinately refuses to give the required word, one can
-only say that he is observing the etiquette neither of melodrama nor
-even of life, but solely of patriotic tragedy.
-
-But of all the longer plays of Schnitzler, the best and most
-distinctive in that erotic "General Post" entitled _Das Weite
-Land_ (The Wide Country). This drama, which is the only full-dress
-drawing-room comedy which Schnitzler has written, belongs to what we
-have already designated as the "slice of life" school. It depends for
-its convincingness neither on any particularly drastic situation nor
-on the disproportionate merit of any individual act. The author simply
-takes a group of representative modern people, rich, intellectual, and
-energetic, and shows the respective crossings and intertwinings of
-their various lives. The complexity of the intrigue is overwhelming,
-not to say bewildering, for practically every character, from the
-prolific Aigon to the virginal Erna, and from the active business man
-Friedrich to his polyandrous wife Genia, is subject to one or more
-erotic moods, with whose more or less simultaneous conjugation in the
-past, present, and future tenses the play specifically deals. Though,
-too, all the characters lead emotional lives, they deserve credit in
-that they none of them wear their souls upon their sleeves, or carry
-their temperaments in their pockets with the ostentatious affectation
-of those Sudermannic personages who never for a moment lose the
-consciousness that they are living in an atmosphere of "high problem."
-For the people with whom we have now to deal are so occupied with the
-concrete acts of their actual lives that they have little time to waste
-in mere airy generalities. When consequently they do philosophise,
-shortly, crisply, and in the light of personal experience, they are for
-that very reason all the more convincing. The whole _motif_ of this
-play, where the spirits of Congreve and Henry James seem to amalgamate
-in so strange but yet so harmonious a compound, is well crystallised
-in the following quotation: "Love and deception--faithfulness and
-unfaithfulness--adoration for one woman and desire for another woman or
-several others, yes, my good Hofreiter, the soul is a wide country."
-
-As can be seen from these tolerant words, which have all the greater
-force in that the man who speaks them is at any rate temporarily more
-or less in love with his friend's wife, the mood in which the problem
-of promiscuity is treated is less one of indignant satire than of
-an ironic charity, which, while finding the complications at once
-comic and tragic, yet assigns to every phase of love from the kiss
-Friedrich gave to Erna three thousand metres above the sea, to Otto's
-nocturnal escalades of Genia's room, its own specific emotional value,
-even though the final verdict is to be found in the words of the
-middle-aged Friedrich, refusing to elope with the twenty-year-old Erna:
-"Everything's an illusion!"
-
-From the point of view, also, of concentrated crispness of dialogue
-and characterisation, Schnitzler has never achieved anything better
-than this play. How telling in particular is the dialogue between
-the mutually unfaithful spouses, Genia and Friedrich. The husband is
-interrogating his wife about a young Russian virtuoso who had just
-blown out his brains.
-
- GENIA. He was not my lover. I'm sorry to say he was not
- my lover. Is that enough for you!
-
-Or take again the passage between Friedrich and Genia after Friedrich
-has just fought a fatal duel with the twenty-five year old naval
-officer, Otto.
-
- GENIA. But why? If you cared the least bit about
- me--if it had been a case of hate--if it had been
- jealousy--love--
-
- FRED. No--I feel at any rate damned little of all that.
- But no man likes to be made an ass of.
-
-In his new asexual play, _Professor Bernhardi_, Schnitzler strikes
-out an entirely new line, leaves that light, airy sphere which he had
-made so peculiarly his own, and embarks into the grim realms of pure
-problem. The play is an avowed and deliberate tract in the manner of
-Granville Barker, Galsworthy, or Brieux. Yet however devoid it may be
-of those qualities which one is accustomed to label Schnitzlerian, it
-is the most earnest, the most ethical, the most convincing of all his
-plays.
-
-Put shortly, the piece deals with an "affaire Dreyfus" in the medical
-profession. Professor Bernhardi, a great Jewish doctor, has in the
-face of numerous obstacles succeeded in building up the prosperity of
-a new hospital, the Elisabethinum, treating mainly Catholic patients,
-but supported mainly by Jewish funds. A substantial percentage of
-the staff are Jewish, and it is instructive to observe how almost
-instinctively the Jews and Catholics range themselves into two camps.
-In the first act a Catholic girl is dying of septic poisoning as the
-result of some outside doctor's clumsy attempt to help her to escape
-the consequences of her own indiscretion. The patient herself, however,
-in a state of blissful delirium, confident of recovery, and expecting
-the speedy advent of her lover, is deriving the maximum of enjoyment
-out of the few minutes she has yet to live. Under these circumstances
-there arrives a Catholic priest, sent for, not by the girl but by a
-nurse, with the object of administering the last sacrament. Out of
-sheer humanity and medical conscientiousness, Professor Bernhardi is
-reluctant to have his patient's last hours marred by the realisation of
-her death and the shattering of her happy dream. The Catholic priest
-is insistent. The Professor is politely firm. There is an animated
-dialogue in the course of which the Professor touches the priest very
-lightly on the shoulder, though there is nothing in the nature of an
-assault. In the meanwhile the patient dies comfortably. The Clerical
-and Anti-semitic parties exploit the incident with inaccurate though
-artistic journalistic embellishments. There is a tremendous uproar.
-The Governors of the hospital threaten to resign. Under pressure
-from his friends, the Professor is willing to tender, not indeed an
-abject apology, but a polite explanation. The Clerical party thereupon
-blackmail him by threatening to raise the question in Parliament, if he
-does not secure the election to a vacant post on the hospital staff of
-a Catholic candidate who is on the one hand the protégé of the cousin
-of their leader, and on the other hand incompetent. Refusing to be a
-party to the job, Bernhardi secures the election to the post of a man
-who is both competent and a Jew. Bernhardi, moreover, relies on the
-personal assurance of Flint, the Minister for Education and Public
-Worship, that he will help him by his support in Parliament. When,
-however, matters came to a head, Flint, scenting in the middle of his
-speech with the divine flair of the true politician the actual state
-of public opinion, throws Bernhardi to the wolves and himself suggests
-a prosecution for sacrilege. The Executive Board of the hospital are
-divided as to what course they shall pursue. Shall they pass a vote of
-confidence in their chief, or, on the other hand, suspend him until the
-determination of the proceedings. By a fine stroke of irony Bernhardi
-realises that he will be in a minority through the vote of the very
-Jew through the conscientious insistence on whose election to the
-Board he had lost the proffered opportunity of bribing the Clericals
-and squaring the whole matter. He consequently resigns from the Board.
-The trial takes place. The priest himself denies that there was any
-assault. Bernhardi, however, is defended by a converted Jew, who,
-sinking the advocate in the Catholic, conducts the case so lukewarmly
-that Bernhardi is convicted on the perjured evidence of a vindictive
-colleague and a hysterical lay sister. During the trial the priest
-is convinced that Bernhardi was morally right in the course which he
-adopted, but, as he feels subsequently driven as a matter of conscience
-to inform him, refrained out of sheer religious duty from telling the
-truth. Bernhardi serves his term and becomes, much to his disgust,
-a political hero and a popular martyr. The hysterical lay sister
-eventually confesses her perjury and Bernhardi is finally righted,
-though the final note in the play is that Bernhardi was really rather
-a fool to have involved himself in such grave consequences for the
-mere sake of a quixotic principle. Some portion possibly of the effect
-produced by this play depends on the full appreciation of its personal
-allusions and some knowledge of the circumstances on which it was
-substantially founded. Nevertheless, present symptoms would appear to
-indicate that this play will have especial interest, not only to Jews
-and Anti-Semites, but to impartial students of ethics and sociology.
-Though, moreover, "pure problem" and studded with long didactical
-speeches, the dramatic interest is well sustained, at any rate up
-to the fourth Act, while the different characters are distinguished
-with the sharpest precision. We would refer in particular to Flint,
-that delightfully bland opportunist, that benevolently unscrupulous
-politician, that perfectly conscientious hypocrite who honestly
-believes that there is a higher and larger duty both in politics and
-in life than the observance of one's own principles and the keeping of
-one's given word.
-
-Schnitzler, moreover, is not only a dramatist, but a writer of short
-stories and novels, which stand on practically as high a level as
-his plays. Like De Maupassant, Schnitzler has only one real _motif_.
-Unlike De Maupassant, however, it is the psychological complications in
-which he is chiefly interested. In further contrast, his short stories
-lack that inevitable precision of climax which is the chief mark of
-the French author. Yet perhaps it is for this very reason that, with
-their picturesque atmosphere and pathetic simplicity, they obtain an
-added reality. In the almost clinical minuteness of his psychology,
-explicable from the fact that he was once a doctor, he is reminiscent
-of Mr. Henry James, of a Mr. James, however, who writes without
-preciosity about individuals linked with ordinary human beings by very
-much more than just some shred of normality. Among his earlier short
-stories we would mention in particular _Die Frau der Weisen, Das neue
-Lied_, and the hypnotic fantasia at the beginning of _Dämmerseelen_.
-
-The more recent series, _Masken und Wunder_, also possesses a
-well-merited claim to recognition for its series of studies, some
-modern, some symbolical, yet all written with that almost intangible
-softness, combined at the same time with a certain neat strength,
-which is the essential mark of Schnitzler's literary style. One of the
-most striking is the telepathic romance, _Redegonda's Diary_; but in
-our view the best short story in the whole book is that Maupassantian
-_Death of the Bachelor_ where the three intimate friends of a dead man
-are summoned to his bedside, only to find their friend dead and to read
-in a letter addressed to them all, of the three separate yet identical
-domestic reasons which were responsible for their participation in this
-superb piece of posthumous buffoonery.
-
-Far more significant than any of his short stories is Schnitzler's
-comparatively recent novel, _Der Weg ins Freie_ (The Road to the Open),
-a novel which both by its actual success and its intrinsic merit,
-stands out conspicuously among modern German literature. This book is
-an admirable example of what one can perhaps call the "slice of life"
-novel. Actual plot in the stereotyped sense of the term it has none.
-Georg von Wergenthin, a young aristocratic Viennese dilettante, has,
-in the course of an active emotional life, a fairly serious _liaison_
-with Anna Rosner, a music-mistress belonging to a good Jewish set.
-The child to which Anna and Georg had both been looking forward,
-though in somewhat varying degrees, dies. Georg accepts a post of
-conductor in a German town. Anna reassumes the normal tenor of her
-spinster life. Finis. Neither conventional marriage nor even more
-conventional suicide, but just life, a slice of sheer probable real
-convincing life. But the book is far more than the history of Anna,
-and far more than the history of Georg, even though it would appear at
-first sight that the enumeration of Georg's emotions tends somewhat
-to swamp the four hundred and sixty pages of this novel which yet
-reads so shortly. For Georg's soul is a mirror which reflects not only
-itself but a considerable number of the more interesting characters
-of a specific modern Viennese set. And the lives of Anna and Georg
-touch the lives of numerous other persons, persons too who, at any
-rate, give the impression of being no mere characters in novels, but
-of having been honourably plagiarised, and without suffering either
-caricature or idealisation in the process, from the pages of the
-book of life itself. And all these various lives are followed up and
-adumbrated and described at greater or lesser detail. Of course they
-have nothing to do with the story of Georg von Wergenthin. But they
-play an important part in the life of Georg von Wergenthin, just as he
-plays a more or less important part in their existence. And though of
-course Georg is the nominal hero of the book, it is the modern Jewish
-set with, of course, its Gentile appanages which constitutes the real
-subject-matter. And how vivid and interesting on their merits are all
-these characters--old Ehrenberg, the Jewish millionaire, with his
-delightful habit of talking Yiddish before smart company, specially
-to annoy his snobbish son Oskar; Oskar himself, who, on being caught
-by his father in the flagrant act of posing as a Catholic in front
-of a church and given a box on the ears by way of reproof, makes an
-abortive attempt to commit hara-kiri with a revolver; Else Ehrenberg,
-the temperamental, but unmarried sister of Oskar; Heinrich Bermann, the
-brilliant self-centred author, with his grand passion for his faithless
-actress in the foreign town; Leo Golowski, the enthusiastic Zionist;
-Therese Golowski, the Socialist agitatress, with her temporary trip
-with that fascinating hussar-officer, Demeter Stanzides; Winternitz,
-the poet, with his not very _soigné_ hands and his naïf mania for
-reciting his own erotic verses; Dr. Stauber, the benevolent modern of
-the last generation; Anna herself, with her soft wistfulness and her
-essential dignity; Sissy Wyner, with her high wanton spirits and pretty
-English accent; and of course Georg himself, Georg the aristocrat,
-Georg the _grand amoureux_, Georg the composer, Georg the dilettante,
-Georg the drifter, Georg the ineffectual.
-
-In the technique of this novel Schnitzler marks what we suggest to be a
-new departure, by the insertion of substantial slabs of past life into
-the analysis of his hero's thoughts, a process which by a tremendous
-economy of space and time thus describes simultaneously the inner
-workings of Georg's mind, and simultaneously narrates important pieces
-of antecedent history which have no place in the official action of the
-novel.
-
-Some tribute, also, must be paid to the style, which is at times
-soft and sweet, at times light and crisp, yet always lucid, always
-individual, and always possessed of that gracefulness which is so rare
-a quality in German prose literature.
-
-To revert to Schnitzler the dramatist, what are his chief claims, his
-chief excellences, his chief defects? It seems to us that the essence
-of his merit lies in the fact that, speaking broadly, he handles
-problems neither as ends in themselves, as do the more advanced of our
-own dramatists, nor yet, like Sudermann, as mere pegs on which to hang
-violently theatrical stage effects. Some problem may constitute the
-centre of most of his plays; yet, with a few exceptions, this problem
-is not presented too nakedly or without sufficient relief. Each problem
-is bathed in an artistic atmosphere, and each character in the picture
-limned with the most subtle psychology. It is true that, as has already
-been pointed out, many of the acts in his early longer dramas exhibit
-too strong a tendency to form self-independent pictures; yet it is this
-defect which forms the chief charm of his one-acters. It is true that
-nearly all his characters are Bohemian--artists, flâneurs, actresses,
-journalists, doctors, painters--yet each author creates, as of right,
-the population of his own individual world; and is it not rather a
-claim to glory to have attained such heights of dramatic celebrity
-without having written more than one single play specifically devoted
-to fashionable life? It is true that the ethics of these plays, with
-their chronic and inevitable intrigues, may strike the English mind as
-somewhat unusual; yet Schnitzler enjoys the reputation of being the
-most brilliant and accurate portrayer of contemporary Viennese life.
-It is, moreover, in the nature of all problem plays that they should
-be pieces of special pleading, where the other side is allowed just so
-much of a hearing as will not permit of its convincing. After all, from
-the standpoint of dramatic art, that which counts is not the ethics,
-but the presentation of the problem.
-
-Yet, with all his subtlety and all his problems, he is never heavy.
-Vienna stands intellectually nearer to Paris than to Berlin, so that
-the Teutonic introspection and sentimentalism are touched with a Gallic
-sprightliness and a Gallic grace. No dramatist has written tragedy with
-so light a hand, or comedy with so ironically pathetic a smile, as has
-Arthur Schnitzler.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: "Der Freiwild" (sic); correct title is
-"Freiwild"--transcriber's note (M.D.)]
-
-[Footnote 2: "Rohring" is "Rönning" in the original play--transcriber's
-note (M.D.)]
-
-
-
-
-ÉMILE VERHAEREN
-
-
- "Mais les plus exaltés se dirent dans leur coeur,
- 'Partons quand même avec notre âme inassouvie
- Puisque la force et que la vie
- Sont au delà des vérités et des erreurs.'"
-
- "Vivre c'est prendre et donner avec liesse.
- Toute la vie est dans l'essor."
-
-
-The above principles, prefixed to the _Forces Tumultueuses_ of Émile
-Verhaeren, are well fitted to supply the key to a man who both in
-thought and in technique is indisputably the most modern and the
-most massive force in the whole of contemporary European poetry.
-For Verhaeren is no narrow specialist with an outlook limited to
-some particular sphere. He is the singer of the whole fulness of
-modern European life as a whole, with its clashes, its complexities,
-its agonies and its tensions, its deserted country-sides and its
-pullulating metropoles, its armaments and its Armageddons, its
-brothels, cathedrals, laboratories and Stock Exchanges, its sciences
-and its sensualities, its arts, philosophies and aspirations. His muse
-is no serene nymph piping delicately on some Parnassian slope, but
-an extremely tumultuous Amazon, at once primeval, and ultra-modern,
-chanting the pæan of battle, steeped in the wine of victory, and
-suckling the supermen of the future on her universal breasts. No muse
-in the whole of literature is more highly charged with vitality, and
-no reader is qualified to enjoy her unless he, too, is charged to the
-maximum with "the red tonic liquor of a harsh and formidable reality."
-
-Let us then glance first at the early _milieu_ of a man who
-combines the exultant fury of the lyric with the wide outlook of the
-cosmopolitan sociologist, and who can incidentally beat both Baudelaire
-and Wordsworth at their own respective game.
-
-Verhaeren was born on the 21st May 1855 at St. Amand in Belgium, one
-of the most strenuous countries in the modern world, which, it is
-interesting to remember, holds the European record for sensualism,
-alcoholism, and clericalism. St. Amand is situated on the broad plains
-of the Scheldt, and it is not unimportant to lay some stress on the
-Flemish ancestry and environment of a man who, though he wrote in the
-French language, is more Germanic than Gallic in his temperament, and
-who represents in the sphere of verse perhaps the nearest analogue
-to the crass majesty and red sensuality of Rubens. His early country
-upbringing, moreover, is responsible for that _joie de vivre_ in
-the fields, and, above all, the wind, the symbolisation of fury and
-rebellion which was to inspire those nature lyrics, many of which are
-nearly as great, though by no means as interesting, as his cosmic and
-metropolitan poems.
-
-Verhaeren was originally intended for the priest-hood, and was
-educated at the Jesuit school of St. Barbe in Ghent, where he had
-for his schoolfellows such men as Maeterlinck, Van Lenbergh, and
-Rodenbach. Leaving school, he went to Brussels, where he felt "his
-multiplied heart grow and become exalted" with the roaring intensity
-of metropolitan life. All thoughts of a holy life were now abandoned,
-and in 1881 the poet was called to the Bar. His chief interests,
-however, were literature, Socialism, and Brussels life. Joining the
-Young Belgian group under the leadership of Edmond Picard, he became
-a frequent contributor to _L'Art Moderne_ and _La Jeune Belgique_.
-Politically he was a Socialist, associated himself with the Socialist
-leader Vandervelde, and was one of the founders of the philanthropic
-_Maison des Peuples_.
-
-But it was in the poetic representation of "the monstrous scenery of
-the crass Flemish Kermesses" (_Les Flamands_, 1883) that Verhaeren gave
-the first vent to his violent virility. In this work a Rubensesque and
-Rabelaisian subject-matter is treated with poetic exaltation by a man
-who found in the great national festivals of past and present Flanders,
-with
-
- "Des chocs de corps, des heurts de chair et des bourrades,
- Des lèchements subis dans un etreignement,"
-
-the same patriotic inspiration which Mr. G. K. Chesterton has
-discovered in that beer; into which he has, as it were, so successfully
-transubstantiated the whole national spirit of our English
-body-politic. Thus our poet wallows defiantly in the black roughness of
-his Flemish peasants:
-
- "Les voici noirs, grossiers, bestiaux--ils sont tels,"
-
-or casts regretful glances towards the healthier grossness of the
-artists of old Flanders:
-
- "Vos pinceaux ignoraient le fard,
- Les indécences, les malices,
- Et les sous-entendus de vice
- Qui clignent l'oeil dans notre art,
- Vos femmes suaient la santé,
- Rouge de sang blanche de graisse,
- Elles menaient les ruts en laisse
- Avec des airs de royauté."
-
-But these poems are far more than mere erotic or gastronomic
-diversions. Somewhat turgid, no doubt, with red health, they yet
-possess the same sweep and the same impetus with which Aristophanes
-himself once gave expression to the riotous fecundity of the earth and
-the Dionysian forces of nature.
-
-In _Les Moines_ (_The Monks_, 1886), Verhaeren treats a subject-matter
-which _primâ facie_ would seem to denote the abandonment of the cult of
-the flesh for the cult of the spirit. Yet such veneration as the poet
-may ever have possessed for the Catholic creed was æsthetic rather than
-religious. He penetrates, it is true, into the "enormous shrine where
-the Middle Ages slumber," but it is less to worship than to describe
-in a rigid, but majestic prosody "the grand survivors of the Christian
-world"--the
-
- "Moines venus vers nous des horizons gothiques
- Mais dont l'âme mais dont l'esprit meurt de demain."
-
-Psychologically the interesting feature of this work is that, so far
-from being in any way obsessed by any Chestertonian nostalgia for a
-dead and mediæval past, the poet anticipates with all apparent serenity
-the day when "the final blasphemy will have transpierced God like to
-an immense sword." Even, moreover, in these, as it were, antiquarian
-descriptions the poet emphasizes the contrast between the visionary
-life of the cloister (a life, albeit, where occasionally
-
- "Un repas colossal souffle fourneaux béants
- Éructant vers l'azur sa flamme et sa fumée")
-
-and the real life of the outside world, and seems by no means
-unsympathetic to the rebellious monk who requires
-
- "Le ciel torride et le désert et l'air des monts
- Et les tentations en rut des vieux demons
- Agaçant de leurs doigts la chair enflée des gouges
- En lui brûlant la lèvre avec de grands seins rouges."
-
-Yet both _Les Flamands_ and _Les Moines_ seem quite innocent and
-playful in comparison with the great black trinity of _Les Soirs, Les
-Débâcles_, and _Les Flambeaux Noirs_ (1887-1891), in which Verhaeren
-gave expression to the mental and physical crisis which for a time
-seemed to imperil both his life and his reason. In these poems, many of
-which were written in London and its
-
- "Gares de suie et de fumée ou du gaz pleure
- Ses spleens d'argent lointain vers des chemins d'éclair,
- Où des bêtes d'ennui baillent à l'heure
- Dolente immensément qui tinte à Westminster,"
-
-Verhaeren leaves the objective mood of his earlier poems to clothe his
-soul in the Nessian shirt of the most poisonous subjectivity. But true
-tragic dignity stalks in the very extremity of his agony. Compared,
-indeed, with the gigantic bass of this unhappiness, black, definite,
-drastic, what is the grey wistfulness of Verlaine but the hysterical
-falsetto of a whining child? Verhaeren, on the other hand, with the
-ecstatic defiance of a kind of Nietzschean Prometheus sets himself to
-plumb the lowest abysses of despair, and himself eggs on the eagles
-of torment to devour every shred of his own soul. With "brutal teeth
-of fire and madness he bites and outrages his own heart within him,"
-lashes himself in his thought and in his blood, in his effort, in his
-hope, in his blasphemy:
-
- "Et quand lève le soir son calice de lie
- Je me le verse à boire insatiablement."
-
-Or take again the sinister gusto of the passage:
-
- "Aurai-j'enfin l'atroce joie
- De voir nuits après nuits comme une proie
- La démence attaquer mon cerveau,
- Et détraque, malade, sorti de la prison
- Et des travaux forcés de sa raison
- D'appareiller vers un lointain nouveau?"
-
-The technique of these poems is worthy of some study. Having little use
-for the orthodox alexandrine (except in a few instances like _Le Gel_,
-where the icy massiveness of the blocked couplets faithfully mirrors
-the polar desolation of his own soul), he fashions his own metres to
-incarnate his own moods. Such a refrain as "Ce minuit dallé d'ennui"
-will boom out again and again the dull monotonous clank of his own
-weary spirit. At other times the grinding engines of a disorganised
-mind whirr and jar with spasmodic feverishness:
-
- "C'est l'heure où les hallucinés,
- Les gueux, et les déracinés
- Dressent leur orgueil dans la vie."
-
-Note, too, the ghastly effectiveness of the internal rhymes. Is not,
-for instance, such a line as
-
- "Les chiens du noir espoir out aboyé ce soir"
-
-a triple series, as it were, of metrical mirrors, where the bitten mind
-barks savagely back at its own mad image. Or listen to the Titanic thud
-of such a line as
-
- "La Mer choque ses blocs de flots contre les rocs,"
-
-or the silent smash of
-
- "Dites suis-je seul avec mon âme,
- Mon âme hélas maison d'ébène
- Où s'est fendu sans bruit un soir
- Le grand miroir de mon espoir?"
-
-At times transcending the blank negativity of despair, the poet will
-coquet positively with his own madness, as he wanders "hallucinated
-in the forest of numbers," or wishes to march towards "madness and
-her suns, her white suns of moonlight in the great weird noon, and
-her distant echoes bitten by dins and barkings and full of vermilion
-hounds." Or abandoning the more specific formulation of his own
-emotions, he will give vent to his feelings by letting his brain dance
-upon the lurid boards of some _macabre_ theme. The little poem, _La
-Tête_, is dank with all the smooth bloodiness of the guillotine,
-while the _Dame en Noir_, with the ghastly rhymes and assurances of
-its refrain, is swathed in a black pathos, in comparison with which
-the most lurid horrors of Baudelaire appear the mere artificial
-extravagances of a perverse mind.
-
-As we have already seen, the blackness of the trilogy which we have
-just considered was no mere dabbling in morbidity, but the genuine
-expression of a genuine unhappiness. In, however, _Les Apparus dans
-Mes Chemins, Les Vignes de Ma Muraille_ the storm gradually exhausts
-itself, and is replaced by a more serene and confident mood. Contrast,
-for instance, with the drastic violence of _Les Débâcles_ the jaded
-weariness of such a lyric as _Celui de la Fatigue_, where the poet
-sings of an "ardour broken on the whirling staircase of the infinite,"
-or of such a passage as
-
- "Je m'habille des loques de mes jours
- Et le bâton de mon orgueil il plie,
- Mes pieds dites comme ils sont lourds
- De me porter de me trainer toujours
- Au long de siècle de ma vie."
-
-And as a complete antithesis, again, to the black bloodiness of such
-poems as _La Tête_ or _Un Meurtre,_ take the white suavity of _St.
-Georges_:
-
- "Il vient un bel ambassadeur
- Du pays blanc illuminé de marbres
- Où dans les pares au bords des mers sur l'arbre
- De la bonté suavement croit la douceur."
-
-But this serenity marked rather a respite in Verhaeren's development
-than a real abatement of his poetic fury. With the furnaces of his mind
-recharged to their maximum capacity with blazing health, he starts to
-race his muse over the main lines of the modern civilisation, which
-lead from _The Hallucinated Country-sides_ to _The Tentacular Towns_.
-Though written at different times, these two sets of poems constitute
-the contrasting halves of a complete whole, and were published together
-in 1895 with two prologues, _La Ville_ and _La Plaine_. The prologues,
-in particular, well illustrate the new rushing irregular prosody,
-specially forged for the purpose of hammering out that white-hot
-steel of the modern civilisation which enmeshes in its fabric all the
-helpless flotsam of the agricultural economy. The academic harmony
-of the alexandrine is here abandoned. The rhymes crash out at lesser
-and greater intervals as they march along on feet that range from the
-quick spasm of some dissyllabic line to the spondaic emphasis of a
-full-length alexandrine.
-
-In _Les Campagnes Hallucinés_ itself the prosody is no doubt simpler,
-as the poet describes the ruined and pestilential country with its
-fevers, its sins, its beggars, its pilgrims, its diseases, insanities
-and débauchés, and the immense monotony of its interminable plains.
-
- "C'est la plaine, la plaine blême
- Interminablement toujours la même,
- Par au-dessus, souvent
- Rage si forte le vent,
- Que l'on dirait le ciel fendu
- Au coup de boxe
- De l'équinoxe;
- Novembre hurle ainsi qu'un loup
- Lamentable par le soir fou."
-
-Perhaps, however, the most sinister poems in _Les Campagnes_ are the
-_Chansons de Fou_, with their naïf absurdities and their intuitive
-reason, where the rhymes laugh and clatter like rows of grinning teeth,
-and the almost Dureresque _Le Fléau_, from its exordium,
-
- "La Mort a bu du sang
- Au cabaret des Trois Cercueils
- La Mort a mis sur le comptoir
- Un écu noir,
- 'C'est pour les cierges, pour les deuils,'"
-
-down to its ghastly climax,
-
- "Et les foules suivaient vers n'importent où,
- Le grand squelette aimable et soûl
- Qui trimballait sur son cheval bonhomme
- L'épouvante de sa personne,
- Jusqu'aux lointains de peur et de panique,
- Sans éprouver l'horreur de son odeur,
- Ni voir danser, sous un repli de sa tunique,
- Le trousseau de vers blancs qui lui têtaient le coeur."
-
-The final significance of _Les Campagnes_ lies in its last poem, _Le
-Départ_, describing the desertion by the whole country-side of that
-dead mournful plain which is being eaten up by the town.
-
- "Tandis qu'au loin là-bas
- Sous les cieux lourds fuligineux et gras,
- Avec son front comme un Thabor,
- Avec ses sugoirs noirs et ses rouges haleines
- Hallucinant et attirant les gens des plaines,
- C'est la ville que le jour plombe et que la nuit éclaire
- La ville en plâtre, en stuc, en bois, en marbre, en fer, en or--
- Tentaculaire."
-
-It is, however, in _Les Villes Tentaculaires_, where the fever and
-indefatigable aspiration of the town are described with a Zolaesque
-exaltation, that the originality of the departure initiated by
-Verhaeren is more specifically manifested. For he now boldly stalks
-forward as the pioneer realist in European poetry. Disregarding alike
-the orthodox subject-matter and the orthodox terminology of official
-poesy, he seeks and finds his inspiration in the vast forces at work
-in actual modern life. The realism of Verhaeren, in somewhat pointed
-contrast to the realism of some of our own patriotic or fashionable
-poets, even though such expressions as "cabs" and "steamers" are to be
-found in his work in the original English, depends for its æsthetic
-value neither on the swing of its slang nor the egregiousness of
-its expletives. The hot blast of his sincerity sweeps away at once
-any impeachment of mere dabbling in the ultra-modern. His diction
-is frequently brusque, and even red, if we may borrow his favourite
-colour, if not his favourite adjective; yet it never loses the dignity
-of authentic poetry. For the poet would seem to have been personally
-susceptible, in the highest degree, to that peculiar multiplication of
-vitality and intensification of emotion which is the essential effect
-produced by big metropoles upon certain temperaments. And this cerebral
-ecstasy is increased by the consciousness of being on the threshold of
-a new age, "for the ancient dream is dead, and the new one is now being
-forged." Thus the poet will wander into _The Cathedrals_, take pity on
-the multitudinous misery of the praying hordes, and boom out again and
-again the refrain:
-
- "Ô ces foules, ces foules
- Et la misère et la détresse qui les foulent."
-
-But note the sociological symbolism of the climax:
-
- "Et les vitraux grands de siècles agenouillés
- Devant le Christ avec leurs papes immobiles
- Et leurs martyrs et leurs héros semblent trembler
- Au bruit d'un train lointain qui roule sur la ville."
-
-For refusing to bear the cross of Gothic ideas, the poet plunges
-deliberately into the inferno of modern life. And each fresh circle but
-kindles his ardour and inflames his Muse. For he will pass with growing
-exaltation from the muscled teeming life of the port to the garish
-ballet of a music hall where
-
- "Des bataillons de chair et de cuisses en marche
- Grouillent sur des rampes ou sous des arches,
- Jambes, hanches, gorges, maillots, jupes, dentelles,"
-
-and then, as midnight strikes and the crowd ebbs away, he will stalk
-into the "brilliant chemical atmosphere" where
-
- "Au long de promenoirs qui s'ouvrent sur la nuit
- --Balcons de fleurs, rampes de flammes--
- Des femmes en deuil de leur âme
- Entrecroisent leurs pas sans bruit."
-
-Nor does the poet disdain the grinding factories where
-
- "Entre des murs de fer et pierre
- Soudainement se lève altière
- La force en rut de la matière,"
-
-or even the Bourse itself, where he sings in feverish staccato rhythm
-the
-
- "Langues sèches, regards aigus, gestes inverses,
- Et cervelles qu'en tourbillons les millions traversent."
-
-But it is typical of Verhaeren's essential optimism that after
-describing with Zolaesque detail both a strike and a "shop of luxury,"
-he should find the ransom of the future in
-
- "La maison de la science au loin dardée
- Obstinément par à travers les faits jusqu'aux idées."
-
-In _Les Heures Claires_ (1896) the drastic violence of _Les Villes
-Tentaculaires_ abates for the time being into a mood of resigned, but
-yet robust melancholy, which immortalises the sweetness, deepness, and
-softness of the poet's love for his wife.
-
-In _Les Forces Tumultueuses_, however, the poet has got once again
-into the full swing of his drastic stride. The mood is to some extent
-the same as that of _Les Villes Tentaculaires_, though the Zolaesque
-concreteness of detail is merged in the broadness of a genuine
-Lucretian sweep. The book consists of a series of lyrical poems,
-lyrical, albeit, in the sense rather of Pindar than of Herrick, which
-exalt the various phases of human energy. Thus in the poem, _L'Art,_
-Verhaeren soars upwards with a tremendous rush:
-
- "D'un bond
- Son pied cassant le sol profond
- Son double aile dans la lumière
- Le cou tendu, le feu sous les paupières
- Partit, vers le soleil et vers l'extase,
- Ce dévoreur d'espace et de splendeur Pégase."
-
-In _Les Maîtres_ the poet describes the various types of superman, from
-"the monk" of the Middle Ages to the banker of the twentieth century,
-who dominates the world as he "binds sinister destiny to his bourgeois
-will," and sows in the distance his winged gold.
-
- "Son or aile qui s'enivre d'espace,
- Son or planant, son or rapace,
- Son or vivant,
- Son or dont s'éclairent et rayonnent les vents,
- Son or qui boit la terre
- Par les pores de son misère
- Son or ardent, son or furtif, son or retors.
- Morceau d'espoir et de soleil--son or!"
-
-
-Some mention must also be made of the poem, _Les Femmes_, which,
-subdivided into _L'Éternelle, L'Amante,_ _L'Amazone_, ranks in our view
-as the greatest sex poem of the century. In contrast, for instance,
-with Swinburne, who treats sex rather as a thing of beauty and of
-pleasure than as an underlying world-force, and who has both the
-advantage and the disadvantage of the specifically classical conception
-of life, Verhaeren, whether he rings his changes in _L'Amante_ on the
-soft refrain, "Mon rêve est embarqué dans une île flottante," shows in
-_L'Amazone_ that the New Woman can be something considerably more poetic
-than a Strindbergian monstrosity, or sings in _L'Éternelle_ her "who
-thinks she encloses the whole world within her flesh," will boom out
-again and again the cosmic and universal peal. The verse throughout is
-as beautiful as can be desired. But it has something more than beauty;
-it has stature, majesty, speed, force, that exaltation of reality which
-is the essence of the highest poetry.
-
-In the poems, _La Science_, _L'Erreur, La Folie_, _Les Cultes_,
-Verhaeren proceeds to formulate his own philosophy of life, and his
-prophetic enthusiasm for the new modern truths, under whose clear feet
-the old texts have crumbled, as he expounds
-
- "Comment la vie est une à travers tous les êtres
- Qu'ils soient matière instruit esprit ou volonté
- Forêt myriadaire et rouge où s'enchevêtrent
- Les débordements fous de la fécondité."
-
-Put shortly, his philosophy is a compound of those of Nietzsche and
-of Bergson. His soul, no doubt, swings in unison with the universal
-rhythm of the world, but, like Nietzsche, he finds in force and life
-realities transcending all errors, and after a historic survey of the
-more popular deities of humanity from Gog to Jehovah, and from Satan
-to Christ, enunciates his belief in humanity in stanzas of sublime
-blasphemy, far more truly religious than the ambiguous scrolls and
-rubrics of any antiquarian creed:
-
- "L'homme respire et sur la terre il marche, seul.
- Il vit pour s'exalter du monde et de lui-même,
- Sa langue oublie et la prière et le blasphême;
- Ses pieds foulent le drap de son ancien linceul.
- Il est l'heureuse audace au lieu d'être la crainte;
- Tout l'infini ne retentit que de ses bonds
- Vers l'avenir plus doux, plus clair et plus féconds
- Dont s'aggrave le chant et s'alentit la plainte.
- Penser, chercher, et découvrir sont ses exploits.
- Il emplit jusqu'aux bords son existence brêve;
- Il n'enfle aucun espoir, il ne fausse aucun rêve,
- Et s'il lui faut des Dieux encore--qu'il les soit!"
-
-In _La Multiple Splendeur_ and _Les Visages de la Vie_ the same
-insatiable gusto for an infinitude of life darts again and again its
-red tongue. It is impossible by mere quotation to do justice to the
-full vastness of Verhaeren's lyric sweep. We would, however, at any
-rate, refer to the majesty of _Le Monde_ with its combined crash and
-concord of incessant life and the Cyclopean weight of the adamantine
-line which buttresses at either end the flaming rivers of its verse,
-
- "Le monde est fait avec des astres et des hommes,"
-
-or to the sublimity of _Les Penseurs_ in which the poet tells how
-
- "Autour de la terre obsédée
- Circule au fond des nuits, au coeur des jours
- Toujours
- L'orage amoncelé des idées,"
-
-and how
-
- "Descartes et Spinoza, Leibniz, Kant et Hegel"
-
-"fixed the highest pinnacles of inaccessible problems for the goal of
-their silver arrows, and carried within themselves the grand obstinate
-dream of one day, imprisoning eternity in the white ice of immobile
-truth."
-
-The very names, too, of some of the poems may possibly reflect some
-of the facets of their multiplied splendour: _Le Verbe, Les Vieux
-Empires, La Louange du Corps Humain, A la Gloire des Cieux, A la Gloire
-du Vent, Les Rêves, L'Europe, La Conquête, Les Souffrances, La Joie,
-La Ferveur, Les Idées, La Vie, L'Effort, L'Action, Plus Loin que les
-Gares, Le Soir_. And again and again rings out in various keys the true
-Nietzschean note. For "vast hopes come from the unknown" has displaced
-the ancient balance whereof souls are now tired. But the only reality
-is life:
-
- "La vie en cris ou en silence,
- La vie en lutte ou en accord
- Avec la vie avec la mort
- La vie âpre, la vie intense,
- Elle est ici dans la fureur ou dans la haine
- De l'ascendant et rouge ardeur humaine."
-
-It is fine proof also of the vast vitality of Verhaeren that even in so
-recent a work as _Les Rhythmes Souveraines_ the muscled majesty of his
-verse, though possibly a trifle less violent, shows no abatement of its
-essential strength. We would mention in particular the poems _Michel
-Ange, Chant d'Hercule, Les Barbares_ with the swift crispness of its
-one-foot lines, and above all _Le Paradis_ with its almost Miltonic
-picture of
-
- "L'archange endormant Ève au creux de sa grande aile."
-
-But does not Verhaeren transcend Milton in the wideness of his humanity
-when he describes not with regret but with the maximum of exalted
-exultation how
-
- "Ève bondit soudain hors de son aile immense,
- Oh l'heureuse subite et féconde démence,
- Que l'ange avec son coeur trop pur ne comprit pas."
-
-In his latest volume, _Les Blés Mouvants_, Verhaeren sinks back no
-doubt to a quieter and serener mood, but who shall say that these
-eclogues do not simply represent the sage crouch for another leonine
-spring?
-
-We do not propose to make more than a passing reference to Verhaeren's
-plays, for it is the lyric rather than the drama which is his true
-medium of expression.
-
-_Hélène de Sparte_, with all its graceful Alexandrines, is inferior
-to any play by D'Annunzio, and even the socialist drama _Les Aubes_
-is, notwithstanding the fine verses with which it is sown, simply
-stiff and heavy when compared with Hauptmann's _Weavers_. It is by
-his lyrics that Verhaeren lives, and will continue to live beyond his
-mere death whenever it comes, as the greatest and most essentially
-European poet of our new age. For his lyrics are equally great, both
-in their message and the method of their expression. Disdaining alike
-the cowardice and the perversity of those who, refusing to face the red
-realities of the present century, fly for their comfort to the pale
-shadows of the Middle Ages, Verhaeren has plunged boldly into the very
-brazier of our modern existence. He affirms, he combats, he prophesies,
-but he rarely, if ever, rests. He hymns every phase of life, from the
-human brain to the human body, and from the winds and seas of nature
-to the towns and marts of man. And no message is more virile, more
-tonic, more essentially healthy, for is not his message the phoenix
-of a new humanitarian faith soaring aloft on its fiery wings out of
-the corpses of the decomposing dogmas? And his prosody has the supreme
-excellence that it is not a mere æsthetic end in itself, but a drastic
-instrument of expression. Your pure æsthete, no doubt, may cavil at
-his ruggedness. For he is the Rodin of poetical rhyme, the veritable
-Vulcan of verse, or rather a Siegfried forging the sword of the future
-on the anvil of the present, as he drives in the stubborn nails of his
-nouns with the hissing hammers of his adjectives. His lines no doubt
-at times will growl, grind and boom, hit the reader in the face with
-all the force of a clenched fist, and palpitate with a full-bloodedness
-somewhat overpowering for the jaded and the anæmic. But is not this the
-very seal of success in a man who specifically sets himself to sing
-not the mere beauty of beauty, but the beauty of force, the beauty of
-life, "life violent, prodigious, unsatiated, the universal spasm of all
-things"?
-
-
-
-
-THE FUTURE OF FUTURISM
-
-
- "Repose-toi!... Repose-toi!... il n'est doux que dormir!..."
-
- "Non, la vie est à brûler comme un falot de paille,
- Il faut l'ingurgiter d'une lampe hardie,
- Tels ces jongleurs de foire qui vont mangeant du feu
- D'un coup de langue, escamotant la Mort dans l'estomac."
-
-
-The above quotation from M. Marinetti's poem, _Le Démon de la Vitesse_,
-is well adapted to give some idea of the feverish but sustained energy
-of those pictures whose recent exhibition in the Sackville Gallery so
-successfully scandalised not only the _doyens_ of the Royal Academy but
-even the official champions of all that is new and progressive in our
-modern English art. But for a correct appreciation even of the Futurist
-pictures themselves, it is essential to realise that, so far from
-being the mere isolated extravagances and _tours de force_ of a new
-technique, they constitute an integral part of a living scheme, which
-with all its lavish use of the most ostentatious hyperbolism, has yet
-claims to be seriously considered as a substantial movement, artistic,
-literary, economic, sociological, and above all human.
-
-Let us then make some scrutiny of this "Rising City" of Futurism, as
-it rears with such vehement exaltation from out the trampled debris
-of a superseded and dishonoured past. For this purpose, having first
-examined those conditions of contemporary Italy which more immediately
-provoked this "Red Rebellion," we shall proceed to some analysis of
-the general character of the movement and of the aggressive and
-sensational works of M. Marinetti himself, the audacious Mercury of
-this new message.
-
-The direct cause of the Futurist movement is to be found in the fact
-that that modern current of electric energy, which has been galvanising
-the states of Northern and Central Europe to a more and more strenuous
-and a more and more complicated activity has, so far as Italy is
-concerned, not succeeded in flowing further south than Milan. In this
-connection it is not without its significance that, while Milan is
-indubitably the vital and commercial capital of the peninsula, the
-official capital should be merely Rome, aureoled with its hybrid halo
-of majesty and malaria, the centre of the tourist, the archæologist,
-and the Papacy, that august shadow of a once living empire.
-
-Even, moreover, the great heroes of the _Risorgimento Italiano_,
-the euphonious title by which Italians designate the unification of
-their country, suffered from an undue obsession with the democratic
-ideals of a mediæval past. Dissipating their energy in rushing reams
-of republican rhetoric or the purple pomp of patriotic platitudes,
-they remained sublimely oblivious to the crying economic needs of
-a country which, with all its natural richness and all its natural
-genius, still, so far as general material and intellectual progress
-is concerned, lags no inconsiderable distance behind the increasingly
-quick march of the European civilisation. Nor did matters improve
-when the régime of the naïf idealists was succeeded by that of the
-opportunist bureaucracy which has since governed Italy. A vast portion
-of the country still remains unforested, uncultivated, unirrigated,
-and above all uneducated. The taint of malaria still infects wide
-tracts of land, which with proper treatment might have been profitably
-developed by those masses of sturdy labourers who have emigrated to
-America with an almost Irish eagerness. Indeed with all respect to
-M. Marinetti, who has himself fought in the Tripolitan trenches, the
-Italo-Turkish war was occasioned (if we can rely on one of the most
-brilliant and responsible of the Parisian reviews) not so much by a
-_bonâ fide_ desire to find a place in the sun for the not yet surplus
-population of a not yet fully developed country, as by an indisputably
-authentic ambition to find a lucrative outlet for the money of the
-clique of clerical capitalists who control the Bank of Rome. So far,
-however, as no inconsiderable portion of Italy itself is concerned,
-we are confronted with a country of museums, ruins, and ciceroni
-which, exploiting the _Fremdenindustrie_ after the manner of some
-more perverse and inexcusable Switzerland, prostitutes with venal
-ostentation the faded beauties of its undoubtedly glorious past to the
-complete ruin of its only potentially splendid present.
-
-A certain pseudo-Nietzscheanism has no doubt been introduced into Italy
-beneath the auspices of D'Annunzio. Yet, with all his fanfaronnade of
-tense and exuberant virility, the atmosphere of D'Annunzio is, speaking
-broadly, moistly rank and exotically enervating. With the possible
-exception of his latest novel, his heroes are languidly feverish
-dilettantes whose lives are principally devoted to the literary and
-æsthetic cultivation of all the neurotic luxuriance of their own erotic
-morbidities. This brings us to the important sociological fact of that
-rigid obsession with sex, as the one paramount emotional, artistic,
-and vital value which, sapping the manhood not only of Italy but also
-indeed of France, tends to corrupt the whole social, political, and
-economic life of the two nations.
-
-It is this exaggerated preoccupation with the sexual aspect of life
-which has produced, by way of a vehement but deliberate _riposte_, the
-important Futurist maxim, "Méprisez la femme." With an enthusiasm in
-fact almost worthy of our own Young Men's Christian Association, these
-comparative Hippolyti of a young mother-country, only recently wedded
-in the bonds of political union, flaunt themselves as the unscrupulous
-iconoclasts of such firmly established national ideals as "the glorious
-conception of Don Juan and the grotesque conception of the cocu."
-Thus the Futurists would banish the nude from painting and adultery
-from the novel, so that they may be able to substitute the sublime
-male fury of creation of artistic and scientific masterpieces for all
-the sterile embraces of hedonistic eroticism, and, like some gallant
-band of twentieth-century Hercules, cleanse the Augean stables of the
-Latin civilisation of its vast surplus of malignant mud vomited forth
-by that stewing and pestiferous swamp of sex. As an antidote to that
-virulent plague of luxurious and diseased sexuality, which it is their
-self-imposed mission to eradicate, they pen the drastic prescription
-of "patriotism and war, the only hygiene of the world." So hot indeed
-is the ardour of these militant apostles of a new Latin civilisation,
-that they once incurred the displeasure of established authority by
-insisting on a war with Austria with such a maxim of vehemence that
-an Austrian journal actually demanded the intervention of the Italian
-Government.
-
-And whether this policy indicates the mere tetanic spasms of a
-delirious Chauvinism, or the lucid vision of an inspired if heretical
-diplomacy, it is certainly symptomatic of a tense, combative, and
-drastic energy which is, in the deepest sense of the word, essentially
-Nietzschean. In this connection the attitude of the Futurists towards
-Nietzsche is instructive. They have read his books, thrilled to his
-magic, and yet they repudiate him. For they cavil, and not altogether
-unreasonably, at the bigoted and hidebound dualism of Nietzsche's
-political philosophy, and his obstinate and obsolete division of the
-political world into the divine spirit of a few strong geniuses and the
-brute matter of a weak and numerous proletariate.
-
-Yet, taking the matter in its broad lines, M. Marinetti's programme
-for "the indefinite physiological and intellectual progress of man"
-expresses admirably the whole theory of the Nietzschean Superman.
-Nietzschean also are such phrases as, "the type inhuman, mechanical,
-cruel, omniscient and combative," or "the multiplied man who mingles
-with iron, nourishes himself on electricity, and only appreciates the
-delight of the danger and of the heroism of every single day." The
-real distinction lies in the fact that the Futurist Superman is more
-practical, more concrete, more up-to-date, and, above all, infinitely
-less dreamy than his elder and more pedantic brother.
-
-And in spite of M. Marinetti's analysis of Nietzscheanism as nothing
-but the artificial resurrection of a dead and past antiquity, the two
-ideals are harmonious in their denunciation of the facile and automatic
-reverence for "the good old days," and their savage exhortation to
-"sweep away the grey cinders of the Past with the incandescent lava of
-the Future."
-
-This announcement of a virile desire to improve and improve and
-improve, not only on the past but also on the present, constitutes
-the principal mark in the Futurist platform. Hence the leaders of
-the movement have coined the two words _passéisme_, the object of
-their onslaught, and _Futurism_, the watch-word of their faith. And
-truculently pushing their theories to the extreme limit of extravagant
-logic, M. Marinetti and his brothers in arms exhorted the assembled
-Venetians, in the 200,000 multicoloured manifestos which on a certain
-memorable day they flung down into the Piazza San Marco, "to cure
-and cicatrize this rotting town, magnificent wound of the Past, and
-to hasten to fill its small foetid canals with the ruins of its
-tumbling, leprous palaces." But the remedy is constructive as well as
-destructive.
-
-"Burn the gondolas, those swings for fools, and erect up to the sky
-the rigid geometry of large metallic bridges and factories with waving
-hair of smoke; abolish everywhere the languishing curve of the old
-architecture."
-
-We see at once how, in this more than Wellsian enthusiasm for all the
-romantic possibilities of a scientific civilisation, they declare
-the most sanguinary war _à l'outrance_ with that Ruskinian and
-Pre-Raphaelite sentimentalism which, sublimely burying its mediæval
-head in the immemorial sands of a crumbling past, is somewhat
-ill-adapted to confront the onrushing simoon of an increasingly
-definite and formidable future. And with the deliberate object of
-emphasizing his point with the maximum of provocative aggressiveness,
-the Futurist will fling at his enemies the insolent paradox that a
-motor-car in motion has a higher æsthetic value than the Victory of
-Samothrace, or announce with theatrical solemnity that the pain of
-a man is just about as interesting in their eyes as the pain of an
-electric lamp, suffering in convulsive spasms and crying out with the
-most agonising effects of colour.
-
-Yet if we strip this new "beauty of mechanism" and "æsthetic of speed"
-of its loud garb of ostentatious extravagance, the intrinsic theories
-themselves strike us as neither monstrous nor unreasonable. For if
-we may presume to put our own unauthorised gloss on M. Marinetti's
-vividly illuminated manuscript, what the Futurist really wishes is to
-break down the conventional divorce that is so often thought to exist
-between ideal Art and actual Life, so as to bring the two elements
-into the most drastic and immediate contact. Art, in fact, should not
-be an escape _from_ but an exaltation _of_ the red impetus of life.
-Art's function is not merely to titillate the dispassionate æsthetic
-feeling of the dilettante or connoisseur, but to thrill with a keen
-vital emotion the actual experiencer of life. Form is not an end in
-itself, its sole function is to extract the whole emotional quality
-of its content. And when confronted with the problem of what content
-is best fitted to be the proper subject of artistic representation,
-your Futurist would promptly retort that, inasmuch as the tumultuous
-twentieth-century emotions of "steel, pride, fever, and speed" are
-those to which the twentieth-century civilisation will naturally
-vibrate with the most authentic sympathy, those emotions and those
-alone are the proper subject-matter for twentieth-century art.
-
-Having thus obtained some rough idea of the broad lines of the new
-Futurism, let us proceed to examine its manifestation in the spheres
-of painting and literature. So far as their painting is concerned, the
-primary principle of the Futurists is their subordination of intrinsic
-æsthetic form to emotional content. This principle, though carried to a
-pitch far transcending anything which had ever been previously essayed,
-is by no means without its exemplifications, in the history both of
-past and contemporary art. Even indeed in the eighteenth century Blake
-had transferred on to the painted canvas his highly abstract ideas of
-esoteric mysticism. The content of the pictures of Blake is of course
-diametrically opposed to the content of the Futurists, yet an authentic
-analogy lies in the fact that a content at all should have been
-specifically painted. With a similar qualification we can remember with
-advantage how Rossetti and Burne-Jones, as indisputably modern in the
-fact that they had the courage to paint a content at all, as they were
-indisputably reactionary in the actual content which they felt inspired
-to portray, gave pictorial representation to the Pre-Raphaelite
-nostalgia for a præ-mediæval past. More analogous are the canvases of
-Franz von Stuck, the Munich Secessionist, who also sets out to paint
-ideas and to give æsthetic form to psychological contents. Thus his
-_Krieg_, with its grimly triumphant rider, steadfastly pursuing the
-goal of an ideal, future over the wallowing corpses of a transcended
-present, expresses perfectly in the sphere of paint the whole spirit of
-the Nietzschean Superman.
-
-Even better examples of the growing predominance of the content in the
-sphere of art are to be found in Rodin, who moulds even in immobile
-statuary something of the tumultuous sweep of the present age, or in
-Max Klinger the creator in concrete form of the most abstract and
-impalpable ideas.
-
-So also modern music, as represented at any rate by the tense
-restlessness of Richard Strauss with all his fine shades of crouching
-fear and exultant cruelty, or the mystical sensuousness of Debussy,
-ceases to be a mere meaningless euphony of pleasing melody, devoid of
-any vital significance except its own æsthetic beauty, sets itself more
-and more to travel, in the sphere of sound, over the whole vibrant
-gamut of the human emotions.
-
-To achieve the presentation of a content with the maximum of drastic
-effect, the Futurists have invented a new technique. Without embarking
-oh any elaborate technical discussion, we would say that their chief
-principle in the painting of apparently even the most objective
-phenomena is that it should be the aim of the artist to reproduce no
-mere picturesque copy of some stationary pose, but that whole sensorial
-or emotional quality inherent in all dynamic life which radiates to
-the mind of the spectator, or which again may be simply flashed into
-dynamic life by the mind of the spectator himself.
-
-And as, according to our latest and most fashionable metaphysical
-authority, the ego, whether of a man, an insect, or a cosmos, is merely
-a movement, it should not strike us as altogether unreasonable if
-the dynamic idea of movement should enter very prominently into the
-Futurist paintings. For, realising fully that consciousness is a stream
-and not a pond, and that both cerebral memories and visual impressions
-are but, as it were, the flying nets hastily created and re-created
-to catch a world that is perpetually on the run, the Futurists make
-boldly ingenious efforts to capture the jumping chameleon of truth, by
-portraying not one but several phases of the unending series of the
-human cinematograph.
-
-Thus in Severini's picture of the "Pan-Pan dance at the Monico," the
-artist sets himself to paint the whole moving, multicoloured soul of
-this by no means spiritual Montmartre tavern, with all its various
-subdivisions of male and female customers engaged in their mutual
-revels and their mutual dances, the deviltry of its _rigolo_ music, and
-all the hustling clash and clatter of its insolent carouse.--
-
-It is also significant of their general _Weltanschauung_ that the
-Futurists should frequently find their inspiration in the speed,
-stress, and creativity of a glorious modernity. Thus Russolo's
-"Rebellion," angular, aggressive, rampant, reproduces the whole red
-energy of an insurgent proletariate, while the same painter's "Train"
-essays, and not unsuccessfully, to paint the very lights and ridges of
-velocity itself.
-
-The feats of the new culture in the realm of literature are quite as
-impressive and as sensational as in that of painting. This brings us
-to some consideration of M. Marinetti himself, both the real and the
-official, chief of the new movement.
-
-To comprehend the true essence of this man, who certainly constitutes
-a European portent which, whether hated or loved, can scarcely be
-ignored, it is necessary to realise that while a poet he is above all a
-man of the world and of action. While, also, as would appear from his
-visit to the _Morning Post_ correspondent in Tripoli, he is a gentleman
-inflamed by a genuine if no doubt slightly truculent patriotism, he
-has all the advantages of being an almost perfect cosmopolitan. Born
-in Egypt of Italian parents, educated in France, and now directing the
-Futurist movement from Milan, M. Marinetti combines all the heat of an
-African temperament with all the mercurial dash and aggressiveness of
-the modern Latin civilisation. At present only in the early thirties,
-M. Marinetti founded in the years 1904--1905 his international review
-_Poesia_. To this journal he endeavoured to attract all that was
-strenuous, aspiring, and daring in the artistic youth of the Latin
-civilisation. Eventually the various tentative ideals and ideas which
-he and his colleagues entertained became crystallised in the word
-_Futurism_, which grew more and more a definite creed with a more and
-more definite catechism of literature, music, painting, politics, and
-life. Since the publication of the first Futurist manifesto in the
-_Figaro_ in 1909, M. Marinetti has devoted himself to waging with
-all his militant energy of tongue, sword, and pen the campaign of
-Futurism. Meeting after meeting, demonstration after demonstration has
-he addressed in Italy, and, carrying the war into the enemy's country,
-he has even had the audacity to hurl his defiance from Trieste itself.
-And if the deliberate provocativeness at which he has pitched his
-propaganda has brought upon him the venomous hatred of both numerous
-and powerful enemies, it has merely served to give but an additional
-fillip to the fury of his impetus.
-
-It is indeed not only amusing, but also an indication of the man's
-verve and defiance, to remember that when he had been hissed for
-a whole hour on end in the Theatre Mercadante of Naples, where he
-was delivering a lecture, and an apparently quite edible orange was
-eventually thrown at him, he should with fine _bravura_ take out
-his penknife and both peel and eat the orange. In Italy, at any
-rate, Futurism has swept the universities, and the disciples of the
-new faith number 50,000. Endeavouring to give to the campaign a
-cosmopolitan significance, the Futurists have carried their pictures,
-their manifestos, and their books to Madrid, to Berlin, to Paris
-(where they were enthusiastically toasted by the "Association Générale
-des Etudiants," the Parisian equivalent of the Oxford and Cambridge
-Unions), and even to England itself, which, with a surprising lack of
-its usual insularity, would actually appear to be taking an intelligent
-interest in a new movement without waiting, as was the case with
-Nietzscheanism, until it has first become the respectable if _passée_
-object of the devotion of Continental academicism.
-
-Before we proceed on our short survey of the chief works of M.
-Marinetti, which have been written in French and only subsequently
-translated into Italian, it is necessary to make some brief mention
-of the new technique which he employs. This new technique is Free
-Verse, first introduced into French literature in the _Palais Nomades_
-of M. Gustave Kahn. It should be remembered, of course, that French
-Free Verse is an article totally distinct from that mixture of rolling
-dithyramb and conversational slap-dash which characterises the work of
-Walt Whitman.
-
-So far indeed as M. Gustave Kahn is concerned, the innovation
-simply consisted not in any repudiation of rhyme in itself, but in
-the emancipation of French verse from the strait-waistcoat of the
-Alexandrine and the strict disciplinary rules of academic composition.
-
-M. Marinetti, on the other hand, in the three volumes which it is now
-proposed to consider, viz. _La Conquête des Étoiles_ (Sansot, 1902),
-_Destruction_ (Vanier, 1904), _La Ville Charnelle_ (Sansot, 1908),
-carries the metrical revolution considerably further. For while the
-essence of classicism itself when compared with the polyphonic though
-at times majestic ebullitions of Walt Whitman, they subserve no
-specific rule. Metre, genuine metre, is invariably present, but the
-precise shape which it happens to take is determined by the exigencies
-not of the particular metre in which the poet happens to be writing,
-but of the particular mood or emotion which clamours for expression
-in the form most specifically appropriate to its own particular
-idiosyncrasies. If, in fact, we may endeavour to crystallise the theory
-of this verse, which though free from mechanical restraint is always
-subordinate to the command of its own dynamic soul, we should say that
-it is simply the principle of onomatopoeia carried from the sphere of
-words to the sphere of metre.
-
-In the _Conquête des Étoiles_ the twenty-four-year-old Marinetti,
-with the characteristic verve of audacious adolescence, essays to open
-the oyster of the poetical world with the sword of a romantic epic.
-Bearing evidence at times, in its grandiose anthropomorphism of natural
-phenomena, of the influence of "his old masters the French Symbolists,"
-the poem of this future champion of a concrete modernity challenges,
-at any rate in the gigantic massing of its imagery, that grandiose
-if somewhat bourgeois romantic Victor Hugo. For here poetic Pelion
-is piled upon poetic Ossa with the most drastic vengeance. For the
-Sovereign Sea, chanting her inaugural battle-cry,
-
- "Hola-hé! Hola-ho! Stridionla, Stridionla, Stridionla!
- Stridionlaire!"
-
-to her ancient waves, puissant warriors with venerable beards of foam,
-lashes them to conquer Space and mount to the assault of the grinning
-Stars. And missiles are there in her Reservoir of Death--"petrified
-bodies, bodies of steel, embers and gold, harder than the diamond,
-the suicides whose courage failed beneath the weight of their heart,
-that furnace of stars, those who died for that they stoked within
-their blood the fire of the Ideal, the great flame of the Absolute
-that encompassed them." And for an army has she the legions of her
-amazon cavalry, the veterans of the Sea, the great waves, the riotous,
-prancing narwhals with their scaly rings, the typhoons, the cyclones
-and the haughty trombes (water-spouts), "draping around their loins
-their fuliginous veils, or lifting masses of darkness in their great
-open arms." And so this feud of the elements proceeds from climax to
-climax, from crescendo to crescendo, till the astral fortresses succumb
-to the shock of an infernal charge, and the last star expires "with her
-pupils of grey shadow imploring the Unknown, oh how sweetly."
-
-No doubt the poem almost reels at times as though intoxicated with
-the excesses of its own imagery. Yet making all due discount for this
-healthy turgidity of adolescence, it is impossible to dispute the
-authentic poetical value of this brilliant epic.
-
-By so masterly a grasp is the metre handled that the reader, quite
-oblivious of the immaterial question of whether he is perusing verse
-or prose, is only conscious of the ideas and emotions themselves.
-The following passage is typical not only of the poem's potency of
-expression, but of the intimate union which is effected between the
-meaning and the form.
-
- "C'est ainsi que passe le Simoun,
- aiguillonant sa furie de désert en désert,
- avec son escorte caracolante
- de sables soulevés tout ruisselants de feu;
- c'est ainsi que le Simoun galope
- sur l'océan figé des sables,
- en balangant son torse géant d'idole barbare
- sur des fuyantes croupes d'onagres affolés."
-
-In the series of poems, however, known as _Destruction_,
-
- "Since there is only splendour in this word of terror
- And of crushing force like a Cyclopæan hammer,"
-
-that boyish robustness which we have seen playing so naïvely in the
-romantic limbo, has attained the solidity of manhood. Finding it no
-longer necessary to have recourse for his subject-matter to some set
-theme of an Elemental War, the author reproduces the experiences of
-his own inner life in a new lyrical language, whose rhythm vibrates
-responsively to every thrill of its creator's spirit, and takes
-faithfully every colour of his chameleon soul.
-
-For the poet is now reverential:
-
- "Tu es infinie et divine, o Mer, et je le sais
- de par le jurement de tes lèvres, écumantes
- de par ton jurement que répercutent de plage en plage
- les echos attentifs ainsi que des guetteurs."
-
-now jocund:
-
- "O Mer, mon âme est puerile et demande un jouet";
-
-now, almost sensually, adoring:
-
- "O toi ballerina orientale au ventre sursautant,
- dont les seins sont rouges par le sang des naufrages";
-
-now sunk in the abject ecstasies of opium:
-
- "Derrière des vitres rouges des voix rauques criaient
- 'De la moelle et du sang pour les lampdes d'oubli
- C'est le prix des beaux rêves!... c'est le prix....'
- Et j'entrais avec eux au bouge de ma chair";
-
-now gentle:
-
- "C'est pour nous que le Vent las de voyages eternels,
- désabusé de sa vitesse de fantôme,
- froissant d'une main lasse, au tréfonds de l'espace,
- les velours somptueux d'un grand oreiller d'ombre
- tout diamantés de larmes siddrales";
-
-now bitterly conscious of the ironic raillery of the sea:
-
- "Vos caresses brûlantes, vos savantes caresses,
- sont pareilles à des tâtonnements d'aveugles
- qui vont ramant par les couloirs d'un labyrinthe!
- Vos baisers out toujours l'acharnement infatigable
- d'un dialogue enragé entre deux sourds
- emprisonnés au fond d'un cachot noir."
-
-Even more characteristic of the feverish, but not unhealthy ardour of
-the book is that series of ten poems entitled _Le Démon de la Vitesse_,
-a kind of railway journey of the modern soul. For now the poet, stoking
-the engines of his pounding brain with the monstrous coals of his own
-energy, drives his train of Æschylean images (well equipped with all
-the latest modern inventions) with all the record-breaking rapidity of
-some Trans-American express, from the "vermilion terraces of love,"
-across "Hindu evenings," "tyrannical rivers," "avenging forests,"
-"milleniar torrents," and "the dusky corpulence of mountains," to
-traverse "the delirium of Space," and "the supreme plateaux of an
-absurd Ideal," to end finally in the grinding shock of a collision and
-all the agony of a shipwrecked vessel. It is in this series of poems
-that the author's wealth of imagery, always superabundant, lavishes its
-most profound and incessant exuberance.
-
-For such phrases as "the drunken fulness of streaming stars in the
-great bed of heaven," "oh, folly, my folly, oh, Eternal Juggler," "O
-wind, crucified beneath the nails of the stars," "the flesh scorched in
-the burning tunic of a terrible desire," "the sad towns crucified on
-the great crossed arms of thewhite road" are not mere isolated flashes
-of poetical riches, but casual samples of an opulence displaying
-itself on this same grandiose scale throughout every line of every
-poem. Note, also, that the poet has completely fused himself with the
-whole scientific universe. He will thus portray a man in the terms of
-some dynamic entity of mechanical science, which as likely as not will
-itself be represented in terms of humanity. Contrast, for instance,
-such phrases as--
-
- "Les géantes pneumatiques de l'Orgueil," or "train
- fougueux de mon âme,"
-
-with--
-
- "Colonnes de fumée, immenses bras de nègre,
- annelés d'étincelles et de rubis sanglants."
-
-To sum up the essential character of _Destruction,_ we would say that
-releasing poetry from the shackles of the conventional subject-matter,
-the conventional language, and the conventional metres to which it
-had been so long confined, it lays the hitherto untravelled lines of
-the speed and beauty of the whole of modern civilisation, with its
-all-unexplored scientific and psychological regions, as it sings the
-rushing rhapsody of the whole spirit of the twentieth century.
-
- "I bid ye pant your fury and your spleen,
- I reck not the long roarings of your wrath,
- O galloping Simoons of my ambition,
- Who heavily the city's threshold paw,
- Nor ever shall ye cross her sensual walls,
- Ye neigh in vain in my stopped ears, already
- With rosy murmurs steeped and stupefied
- (And subterranean voices of the deep),
- Like spells of freshness full of the sea's song."
-
-The above quotation may perhaps give such readers as have not the
-luxury of the French language some faint shadow of the warm charm of
-_La Ville Charnelle_, which, at any rate from the conventional standard
-of ordinary æsthetic beauty, represents the zenith of M. Marinetti's
-poetical achievement. For in his second volume of verse, our author
-abandons the furious pace of his rushing modernity to sing the almost
-sensual beauty of a tropical town, with "the silky murmur of its
-African sea," its pointed "mosques of desire," and its "hills moulded
-like the knees of women, and swathed in the linen billows of its
-dazzling chalk." The swift piston rhythm of _Destruction_ is exchanged
-for a measure which, though untrammelled by any tight convention, is
-often clad in the Turkish trousers of some languorous rhyme, or slides
-with the voluptuous swish of some blank alexandrine. But if the flood
-of images has abated its turbulence to a serener beauty, it has not
-thereby suffered any loss of volume, as is evidenced by such phrases
-as "les molles éméraudes de prairies infinies," "la bouche éclatée des
-horizons engloutisseurs," or "jusqu'au volant trapeze de ce grand vent
-gymnaste."
-
-Or take the following passage from _The Banjoes of Despair and of
-Adventure_:
-
- "Elles chantent, les benjohs hystériques et sauvages,
- comme des chattes énervées par l'odeur de l'orage.
- Ce sont des nègres qui les tiennent
- empoignées violemment, comme on tient
- une amarre que secoue la bourrasque.
- Elles miaulent, les benjohs, sous leurs doigts frénétiques,
- et la mer, en bombant son dos d'hippopotame,
- acclame leurs chansons par des flic-flacs sonores
- et des renaclements."
-
-More aery and fantastic in their radiance are the _Little Dramas of
-Light_, which in the same volume play outside the walls of _La Ville
-Charnelle_. For pushing the pathetic fallacy to the extreme limit of
-pantheism, or anthropomorphism, as one cares to put it, our author
-constructs his miniature scenes out of the interplay of plants,
-elements, and the very fabrics of human invention, all participating in
-something of the mingled dash, despair, and desire which go to weave
-the somewhat complex tissue of our ultra-modern humanity.
-
-Even the titles of a few of these delicate poems give some idea of
-their darting beauty--"The Foolish Vines and the Greyhound of the
-Firmament" (the Moon), "The Life of the Sails," "The Death of the
-Fortresses," "The Folly of the Little Houses," "The Dying Vessels,"
-"The Japanese Dawn," "The Courtesans of Gold" (the Stars).
-
-Observe, also, the eminently twentieth-century temperament of the
-"coquettish vessels," who, "half-clothed in their ragged sails, and
-playing like urchins with the incandescent ball of the sun," have yet
-experienced "amid the disillusioned smile of the autumn evenings" the
-desire for a fuller and more tumultuous life than is afforded by the
-"ventriloquist soliloquies of the gurgling waters of the quays."
-
- "C'est ainsi, c'est ainsi que les jeunes Navires
- implorent affolées délivrance,
- en s'esclaffant de tous leurs linges bariolés,
- claquant au vent comme les lèvres brulées de fièvre.
- Leurs drisses et leurs haubans se raidissent
- tels des nerfs trop tendus qui grincent de désir,
- car ils veulent partir et s'en aller
- vers la tristesse affreuse (qu'importe?) inconsolable
- et (qu'importe?) infinie
- d'avoir tout savouré et tout maudit (qu'importe?)."
-
-We can perhaps best formulate the dynamic _élan de vie_, which pulses
-through every line of M. Marinetti's poems, by indulging in the
-perversion of the great line of Baudelaire, so that we can give to our
-poet for his motto:
-
- "Je haïs la ligne qui tue le mouvement."
-
-M. Marinetti's activity, however, is not limited to the sphere of
-verse. In 1905 he published _Le Roi Bombance_ (_Mercure de France_),
-a satyric tragedy, compound of the scarcely harmonious temperaments
-of Rabelais and Maeterlinck, a wild extravaganza of anthropophagy and
-resurrection, which satirises the prominent figures in contemporary
-Italian politics, including the recently dead Crispi, Ferri, and
-Tenatri, and contains withal a profound undercurrent of sociological
-truth. _Poupées Electriques_ (Sansot) followed in 1909, a play which,
-with all its brilliance and originality, somehow just misses the real
-dramatic pitch.
-
-Far more significant are the _belles lettres_ of _Les Dieux s'en vont
-D'Annunzio reste_ (Sansot, 1908), with its steely dash of style and its
-criticism at once singularly acute and delightfully malicious of the
-official protagonist of all Italian culture, and the recently published
-_Futurisme_ (Sansot, 1911).
-
-But of all the works of M. Marinetti, the most impressive is the great
-prose epic, _Mafarka Le Futuriste_. It is in the three hundred pages
-of this novel, which describes the destructive and creative exploits
-of a militant and intellectual African prince, that the Futurist
-leader has given the most complete expression to the vehement surge
-of his genius. In this book, the spirits of the East and of the West
-strangely combine. The gross heat of an African sun beats incessantly
-down upon these torrid pages, yet even the most oriental passages have
-such a Homeric freshness of epic sweep as to render them immeasurably
-cleaner than the sniggering indecencies of not a few of even the more
-fashionable and respectable of our lady novelists. Incident follows
-on incident, adventure on adventure, with the magic bewilderment of
-some Arabian Night, an Arabian night illumined by the galvanic current
-of some twentieth-century genie, as it flashes image after image on
-the multicoloured sheet of some dancing cinematograph. The style
-bounds with a lithe male crispness, in comparison with which even the
-luxuriant and self-complacent flowers of D'Annunzio himself seem at
-times to offer but rank and androgynous beauties.
-
-How admirable, for instance, is such a passage as--
-
- "And Mafarka-el-Bey bounded forward, with great elastic
- steps, sliding on the voluptuous springs of the wind and
- rolling--like a word of victory--in the very mouth of
- God";
-
-or such a perfect Homeric simile as--
-
- "All the beloved sweetness of his vanished youth mounted
- in his throat, even as from the courtyard of schools
- there mount the joyous cries of children towards their
- old masters, leaning over the parapet of the terrace
- from which they see the flight of the vessels upon the
- sea";
-
-or such a perfect description as--
-
- "Et d'en haut descendaient les rayons des étoiles des
- milliers de chainettes dorées tintinabulantes, qui
- balançaient au ras de l'eau leurs tremblants reflets,
- innombrables veilleuses."
-
-But the wondrous story of how Mafarka-el-Bey exhorted to the work of
-war the thousands of his wallowing soldiers from the putrescent bed
-of that dried-up lake; of how, disguising himself as an aged beggar,
-he visited the camp of the negroes; of the monstrous tale which he
-there told his Ethiopian foes; of the stratagem by which he drew the
-two pursuing wings of the infatuated army to the stupendous shock of
-an internecine collision; of how he annihilated the maddened hordes of
-the Hounds of the Sun with the stones flung by the mechanical Giraffes
-of War; of the Neronian banquet in the grotto of the Whale's Belly; of
-the agonised hydrophobic death of his brother Magamal, the light of his
-eyes; of the nocturnal journey in which he conveyed across the sea his
-brother's body in a sack to the land of the Hypogeans; of the Futurist
-Discourse which he there held; of his passing encounter with the
-fellahin Habbi and Luba; of how, disdaining the more banal method of
-filial creation, he compelled the weavers of Lagahourso and the smiths
-of Milmillah to make the body of that Airgod Gazourmeh, whose spirit he
-had fashioned out of the glory of his own unaided brain; and of how he
-died exultantly, brushed away beneath the gigantic wings of his son, as
-it flew like some hilarious parricide into the clear infinitude, is it
-not all written in the pages of _Mafarka Le Futuriste_? (E. Sansot &
-Cie, Paris, 3 fr. 50 c.)
-
-Note, also, the religious exultation of martial and intellectual
-energy, whose hoarse prayer is uttered on almost every page. For
-Mafarka is the prophet of that "new voluptuousness which shall have
-rid the world of love when he shall have founded the religion of the
-concrete will and of the heroism of every single day."
-
-And to still further exemplify his new religion of war and energy,
-and inspired, too, no doubt by the airy message of the Arab bullets,
-M. Marinetti finished on the 29th November 1911 in the trenches of
-Sidi-Missri, near Tripoli, the great free-verse epic of three hundred
-and fifty pages, entitled _The Popes Monoplane_. The function of this
-poem, which is certainly the most original epic known to literary
-history, is to serve as an anti-clerical, an anti-pacifist, and
-anti-Austrian polemic. And this function it accomplishes by a technique
-which in its successful audacity transcends even itself. For nowhere
-is the free verse of Marinetti more free. New harmonies and even new
-dissonances are conjured up according to the emotion to be expressed
-and the object to be described, while the terminology of mechanics
-and physiology is judiciously mingled with just a trace of the old
-romanticism. The whole epic quite literally flies with inordinate
-swiftness. For the poet is, on his monoplane, careering over the heart
-of Italy. He takes counsel of his father the volcano, and, flying back
-to Rome, fishes up by means of an iron chain with a spring-trap the
-great polished Seal, or, as he exultantly describes it,
-
- "Un pape, un vrai pape, le saint Pontif lui-même."
-
-And on he flies on his missionary career, with the miserable Vicar of
-God dangling helplessly beneath him, now present at the debates of
-_Les Moucherons Politiciens_, now assisting at the tumultuous congress
-of _Les Syndicate Pacifistes_, now side by side with the moon, now
-exhorting the Italian youth to shake off their execrable lethargy,
-and, finally, participating in the eventual overthrow of the Austrian
-enemy. This poem marks an immense advance on the earlier epic, _La
-Conquête des Étoiles_, to which we have already referred. It pullulates
-with an equal energy, but this energy is tenser and far less turgid. It
-is an energy, moreover, whose impetus is expended not on imaginative
-abstractions, but on the drastic attack of concrete political problems.
-As a sheer piece, too, of description, Marinetti's description of the
-_Battle of Monfalcone_ is in our view superior to any of the military
-verse even of Kipling himself. _The Pope's Monoplane_ is, of course, an
-aggressively specific example of realism in poetry. But it is a realism
-which, so far from clipping the wings of Pegasus, rather spurs him to
-higher and more strenuous flights. We may perhaps conclude our survey
-of this work by an endeavour to render into English a characteristic
-passage from the dialogue between the Poet and the Volcano.
-
-
- THE VOLCANO
-
- Ne'er have I slept; I labour endlessly,
- Enriching space with many a masterpiece
- That lives and dies in a day.
- Over the baking of the chiselled rocks
- Upon the vitrefaction of the many-coloured sands
- I keep my watch
- So well that the clay 'neath my fingers
- Will metamorphose
- To a porcelain of perfect rose,
- Which I shatter with the buffets of my steam.
-
- My accomplice is the Strait of Messina
- Which dozes in the dawn, couching white and glossy
- As an Angora cat...
- My accomplice is the Strait of Messina
- Lolling like a cushion of lazy turquoise silk,
- With soft Arabian words embroidered by the wake
- Of clouds and languorous sails,
- Words woven silently methinks
- With a fair silver thread upon the ocean's robe.
-
- The perfidious moon is my accomplice,
- The arch-courtesan of the painted stars,
- For nowhere are the moon's cajoleries
- So luring and persuasive.
-
- And nowhere does the moon cast such assiduous eyes
- To seduce the hard red funnels of the steamers,
- Those surly strollers South
- With a fat cigar in their mouth
- Whose smoke they spit against the azure sky.
-
- And nowhere does the moon throw such a tender shower
- Of soft and violet ashes,
- As that which lulls to sleep the lava petrified
- On the black houses hanging on my flanks.
- And nowhere has the moon such poignancy
- Of inundations of light and ecstasy,
- As on the gashed paths
- Carved by my surgical fire.
-
- But woe to those who follow the bleating light of the moon,
- And the plaintive bells of the flocks,
- And the bitter flutes of the shepherds whose world-weary notes
- Are long, long threads that vanish in the blue!
- Woe to those who refuse to make their galloping blood
- Keep step with the gallop of the blood of my devastation!
-
- And woe to those who wish to root their heads,
- To root their feet and houses
- In a craven hope of eternity!
- A truce to building, for ye must encamp!
- Nay, am I not shaped even as a tent
- Whose truncated top fanneth my wrath?
- I only love the acrobatic stars
- Who balance on the rolling balls of smoke
- Wherewith I juggle!
-
-
- MYSELF
- I can dance to them, and juggle in mid air,
- And shower my song on the reverberations
- Of thy storms that breed
- In subterranean depths!...
- And I descend
- To hear the diapasons of thy voice.
- So make a pause
- In the electrical discharges of thy tubes
- That tear from thy base the underlying rocks.
- Enjoin to silence all thy babbling grottoes,
- That all a-flutter quiver ceaselessly.
- Gag with thick cinders
- The basaltic echoes whose chorus rings thy praise.
-
- What good are thy volcanic bombs
- That serve as punctuations for the growlings of thy speech?
- And what care I for the ruddy jets
- Of thine aggressive foam?
- Thy deluges of mud have soiled my wings of white,
- But check me not, for proof against thine avalanche
- Of scoria I descend, gilded and aureoled
- By all the powdery shower of thy dumbfounded gold.
-
-It is also relevant to mention that M. Marinetti has been recently
-formulating new rules and principles for his new literary code. Among
-the more drastic phases of this stylistic revolution we would mention
-the employment of mathematical signs and symbols, the rebellion from
-too rigid and pedantic a syntax, the minimum use of the adjective and
-the infinitive, the opening up of new fields of images and metaphors,
-and the freer and more increased use of onomatopoeia. These ideas
-are succinctly, though no doubt extravagantly, set out in the two
-manifestos entitled _Wireless Imagination and Words at Liberty_ and
-_The Futurist Anti-Tradition_.
-
-Space vetoes more than the enumeration of the other Futurist
-poets--Luccini, Palazzescho, Folgore, and Altomare--though we may
-perhaps mention the recently published _Poesie Electrichie_ of Govoni,
-and the _A Claude Debussy_ of Paolo Buzzi, which won the first prize of
-the first international competition of "Poesia," and which transfers
-into a marvellously fluid Italian verse the at once ethereal and
-faunish emotions of the composer's music.
-
-But if, finally, we may speculate on the Future of Futurism, its real
-prospects and its real significance are to be found in the fact that,
-though extravagant and aggressive, it is in essence a concentrated
-manifestation of the whole vital impetus of the twentieth century. Its
-relationship to Nietzscheanism we have already examined. Almost equally
-close is its affinity to the standpoints of such representative spirits
-of the real genius of this particular age as Verhaeren and Mr. Wells;
-Verhaeren, the gazer on the _Multiple Splendour_ of the _Tumultuous
-Forces_ of the _Visages of Life_, with his motto, "Life is to be
-mounted and not to be descended; the whole of life is in the soaring
-upwards," who expresses in the strenuous majesty of his verse the whole
-raging complex of our psychological and material civilisation; Mr.
-Wells, too, the glorifier of all the new machinery of our scientific
-fabric; Mr. Wells, who, with all his intoxication for the "gigantic
-syntheses of life," expresses himself most effectually by the maxim,
-"The world exists for and by initiative, and the method of initiative
-is individuality."
-
-Even if we go to more concrete and more topical manifestations, there
-is not wanting evidence that the fiery blast of the Futurists is fanned
-by the huge bellows of our own labouring _Zeitgeist_.
-
-If indeed we may meddle with the very latest metaphysical terminology,
-we would suggest that it is by a singularly brilliant and apposite
-stroke of intuition on the part of, the newly discovered _élan de vie_
-that, at a time which is moving at an unprecedented rapidity, at a time
-when the two great brother nations of the Teutonic race are preparing
-their rival sacrifices for the God of War with all the mocking and
-drastic fraternity of a Cain and of an Abel; when the air is thick
-with the wings of a new and regenerated France; when the militant
-mænads of both the West and the East, under the inspiration of their
-dashing and elusive Pythoness, are waging with foaming fanaticism a
-Holy War of Sex; when even one of the most responsible of our lawyers
-is coquetting dangerously with both the theory and the practice of the
-superior ethical value of Active Resistance; when the most venerable
-of our Lord Justices recently interpolated a homily on the Law of
-Change into the middle of an otherwise purely legal judgment; when
-the two young, but patriotic _condottieri_ of either political party
-are fast leaping into a more and more aggressive prominence; when the
-insurgent masses of our industrial proletariat have made a vehement and
-not entirely unsuccessful charge against existing economic fabric of
-the country; when Mr. Thomas Hardy has attended, in the pages of even
-the _Fortnightly Review_, the funeral of the old God of pity, and when
-Bergsonism, judiciously advertised in the masquerade of a religious
-revival, has replaced the old Eternal Absolute with the creative
-activity of an endless Movement, the Futurists should now exalt the
-sublime vehemence of war, and the aggressive fury of youth, while M.
-Marinetti chants the strident hallelujahs of the new God of sweat and
-agony and tension, and Signor Russolo and his _confrères_ exhibit to us
-in the actual canvases of the Sackville Galleries the rampant hordes of
-rebellion and the painting of Movement itself.
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abel, 237
- _Advent_, 110
- Æschylus (_cf_. Corelli), 115
- Alcibiades, 61
- _Almansor_, 32
- _Alroy_, 55
- Altomare, 236
- _Amour, De l'_, 13, 14
- _Anatol_, 161, 176-9
- _Anne Veronica_, 120
- Anti-Semite, 115, 190
- Anti-Semitism, 115
- Antoine, 98
- _Aphrodite_, 129
- _Arabian Nights_, 144
- _Ardath_, 114, 115
- Aristotle, 74
- _Armance_, 15-16
- Athanasius, 89
- Attila, 117
- _Aubes, Les_, 210
- Austria, 215
- _Awkward Age, The_, 153
-
- BALFOUR, Mr., 123
- Balzac, 38, 201
- _Banti, Consultation de_, 9
- Barker, 162
- Barrie, J. M., 132
- _Baths of Lucca_, 35
- Baudelaire, 121, 144, 154
- Beaconsfield. _See_ Disraeli
- Beardsley, 144
- Belgium, 197
- Bergson, 208
- Bergsonism, 238
- Berlioz, 38, 44
- Beyle. _See_ Stendhal
- _Beyond the Rocks_, 128
- Bible, 89, 120
- Bigillon, 5
- Birrell, 64
- Björnsen, 98
- _Black Flags_, 95, 100, 111-13
- Blake, 219
- Blatchford, Robert, 132
- _Blés Mouvants, Les_, 210
- Bohair, 38
- _Bond, The_, 104
- _Book of Songs_, 30, 31, 35, 36, 49
- Borgia, 86
- Borne, 38, 39
- Bottomley, Horatio, 119
- Bourget, 24
- _Bovary, Madame_, 16
- _Boy_, 115
- Brandes, 71
- Brieux, 188
- Browning, 63
- Brummel, 61
- Bryce, 60
- _Büchse von Pandora_, 138, 145, 149, 150, 155
- Buddhism, 72
- Burne-Jones, 219
- Buzzi, 236
- Byron, 30, 52, 93
-
- CAIN, 81, 237
- _Call of Life_, 175-6
- _Campagnes Hallucinés_, 202-4
- Carlyle, 44, 66
- Carpani, 11
- Casanova, 64
- Catholicism, 39, 110
- Cervantes, 30
- Chant, Mrs. Ormiston, 133
- _Chartreuse de Parme_, 20, 21
- Chateaubriand, 6
- Chauvinism, 215
- Chesterton, G. K., 119, 198
- Christ, 71, 110, 118, 208
- _Childe Harold_, 52
- Christianity, 71, 72, 73, 76, 78, 79, 80, 88, 93;
- Electric Principle of, 114
- _Comédie Humaine_, 16
- _Confession of a Fool_, 95, 97, 105-8
- Congreve, 187
- _Conquête des Étoiles_, 223-5
- _Conrad_, 52
- Conservatism, 67
- _Contarini Fleming_, 55, 62
- Corelli, Miss Marie, 114-33
- _Countess Mizzi_, 161, 184
- Court Theatre, 139
- Craigie, Mrs., 69
- _Creditor, The_, 103
- Crispi, 230
- Crowley, Aleister, 114
- _Crown Bride_, ill
-
-
- _Damascus, To_, 110
- _Dämmerseelen_, 191
- D'Annunzio, 210, 214, 231
- Daru, 3, 4, 9, 12, 18
- Darwin, 84, 136
- _Death Dance_, 97, 110-11
- _Débâcles, Les_, 199
- Debussy, 219
- Dembowska, Countess, 12
- Democracy, 67
- _Démon de la Vitesse_, 212, 226
- _De Profundis_, 140
- _Destruction_, 223, 225
- _Deutschland_, 40
- Disraeli, 50-69
- Disraeli, Mrs., 62, 63, 68
- Don Juan, 19, 50, 97, 215
- _Dorian Gray_, 132
- D'Orsay, 61
- Dowie, Dr., 117
- _Dream Pictures_, 30, 32
- Drury Lane, 122
- Dugazon, 7
- Dumas, 38
-
- _Easter_, 110
- _Ehre, Die_, 136
- _Einsame Weg, Der_, 171, 172
- Eldon, 67
- _Elizabeth's Visits to America_, 128
- _Embarrassments_, 177
- _Endymion_, 52
- _Erdgeist_, 134, 135, 145-9
- Essen, Siri von, 95
- _Esther Waters_, 129
- Eugenics, 154
-
- FAGUET, 24
- Fakredeen, 52
- _Father, The_, 101, 102
- Faust, 158
- Ferri, 230
- _Feuerwerk_, 154
- Fichte, 74
-
- _Flamands, Les_, 198, 199
- _Flambeaux Noirs_, 199-202
- _Fleurs du Mal_, 121
- Foote, G. W., 119
- _Forces Tumultueuses_, 196
- _Foundations of Belief_, 123
- France, 214, 237
- _Franziska_, 155, 157-9
- _Frau Margit_, 95
- Free Love, 139, 154
- _Free Opinions_, 119
- Free Verse, 223
- _Freiwild_, 173-5
- Froude, 51
- _Frühlingserwachen_, 135, 145, 150-3, 159
- Futurism, 212-38
-
- GALSWORTHY, 157, 159, 162, 163
- Gambetta, 67
- Garvice, Charles, 116
- Gautier, 38
- _Geheimniss der Gilde_, 95
- _Genealogy of Morals_, 70-90
- Genesis, 119
- Germany, 72, 135-9
- Gladstone, 53, 54, 61, 65, 66, 68
- _Gluckspeter_, 95
- Glyn, Elinor, 126-30
- _God's Good Man_, 122
- Goethe, 74, 144
- Gog, 208
- Govoni, 236
- _Green Cockatoo_, 161, 182-3
- Guilbert, Mélanie, 7
- Gull, Ranger, 115
-
- HALEVY, Jehudah, 43
- _Hallucinated Country-sides_, 202-4
- _Hannele_, 137
- Hardy, 238
- Hart, Julius, 137
- _Harzreise_, 34
- Hauptmann, 137, 210
- _Haydn and Mozart, Lives of_, 11
- _Heimkehr_, 34
- Heine, 26-49, 60, 77, 89
- Heine, Amalie, 31, 32
- Heine, Samson, 29
- Heine, Solomon, 30
- _Hélène de Sparte_, 210
- Heliogabalus, 121
- Hermant, Abel, 122
- _Hidalla_, 154
- Higher Criticism (Corelli), 119
- _His Hour_, 128
- _History of Painting in Italy_, 12
- Hitchman, 50
- Hobbes, 83
- Hofmann, 28
- Hogarth, 150
- Holy Alliance, 27
- _Holy Orders_, 121
- Hugo, 38, 224
- Humboldt, 38
-
- IBSEN, 153
- Idealists, 87
- Ihering, 85
- _In Allen Satteln Gerecht_, 156
- _In Allen Wassern Gewaschen_, 156
- _Inferno_, 109
- Ingersoll, 119
- _Intoxication_, 110
- Isaiah, 72, 133
- Israel, 71, 78
- _Italian Travels_, 11
- _Italy_, 35, 213
-
- JACK the Ripper, 149
- James, Henry, 137, 153, 177, 187
- Jeremiah, 72
- Jesuits, 118
- Jesus, 71, 72
- Jew-Millionaires, 121
- Jews, 118
- Jezebels, Upper-Ten, 121, 127
- Job, 111
- _Johannes_, 137
- Josepha, 30
- _Journal, Le_, 24
- Judæa, 78
- _Julien_, 17-20
- _Junge Leiden_, 35
- Juvenal, 133
-
- KABLY, Mdlle., 3
- Kahn, Gustave, 223
- _Kammersänger, Der_, 140-142
- Kant, 40, 87
- Karl Moor, 19
- Key, Ellen, 88, 96
- Kipling, 110, 234
- Klinger, 219
-
- LAFAYETTE, 38
- _Lamiel_, 22-23
- _Lebendige Stunden_, 177, 180-182
- _Legends_, 109
- _Les Dieux s'en vont D'Annunzio reste_, 230
- Lesbos, 131
- _Liebelei_, 164-166, 169
- _Liebestrank, Der_, 153
- Life Force, 145
- "Little Mary," 132
- Longfellow, 153
- Louason, 7, 8
- Louis XVI, 2
- Louis Philippe, 21
- Louÿs, 115, 129
- Loyola, 117
- Luccini, 236
- _Lucien Leuwen_, 21-22
- _Lyrisches Intermezzo_, 32, 35, 36
-
- MADONNA, 96, 97
- Maeterlinck, 197, 230
- _Mafarka le Futuriste_, 129, 231, 232
- Maine, 81, 84
- _Märchen, Das_, 167, 168
- Marinetti, 129, 212-238
- _Marionetten_, 177, 179
- _Marius the Epicurean_, 124
- _Marquis von Keith_, 153
- _Marriage_, 98-100
- _Masken und Wunder_, 191
- _Mate, The_, 183
- Maupassant, 98, 191
- Maupin, Mademoiselle de, 157
- Meade, L. T., 116
- _Medardus, Der Junge_, 184-186
- Meissner, 38
- _Meister Olof_, 94
- _Meister, Wilhelm_, 55
- Melville, Walter, 115
- _Mighty Atom, The_, 115
- Milan, 4, 12, 13, 213
- Milton, 210
- _Minnehaha_, 153
- Mirbeau, Octave, 122
- Mirat, Matilde, 41
- _Miss Julie_, 102, 103
- _Mit Allen Hünden Gehetzt_, 156
- _Moines, Les_, 199
- Molière, 3, 121
- _Monna Vanna_, 140
- Moore, George, 106
- _Motherly Love_, 104
- Mouche, La, 48
- _Multiple Splendeur, Le_, 208-209
- _Murder of Delicia_, 115
- _Musik_, 155, 156, 157
-
- NAPOLEON, 29, 30, 69
- Nerval, Gérard de, 38
- New England, 67, 153
- _New Machiavelli_, 105, 120
- New Woman Movement, 96
- Nietzsche, 24, 70-90, 136, 144, 208, 216
- Nirvana, 73
- Nonconformity, 119
- _Nordsee Cyklus_, 33, 34
- Northcliffe, 86
- _Nouvelle Héloïse_, 3
-
- _Oaha_, 154
- O'Connell, 57
- O'Connor, T. P., 50
- _Open Sea, The_, 100, 108
- Opportunism, 67
- Orestes, 81
- Ovid, 144
-
- PALAZZESCHO, 236
- Papacy, 213
- Peel, 64
- Péladan, 131
- Pietragrua, Countess, 4, 10, 12
- Pinero, 145
- _Plain Dealer, The_, 141
- _Playing with Fire_, 97, 104-105
- Poe, 154
- _Poesia_, 221, 236
- _Poetische Nachlese_, 35, 47
- _Pope's Monoplane, The_, 233-236
- _Professor Bernhardi_, 188-190
- Przybyszewski, 109
- _Puppet-player_, 179-180
-
- QUEUX, Le, 116
-
- _Racine and Shakespeare_, 14, 15
- _Ratcliff_, 32
- _Raymond, Jack_, 119
- Realism, 138
- _Red Room_, 95
- _Reigen_, 179
- _Reisebilder_, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 49
- René, 19
- Restoration, French, 17
- Revolution, French, 27, 28, 53
- _Revolutionary Epicke_, 67
- _Rhythmes Souveraines, Les_, 210
- Richter, 38
- _Risorgimento Italiano_, 213
- _Road to the Open, The_, 192-194
- Robespierre, 40
- Rockefeller, 86
- Rodenbach, 197,
- Rodin, 211
- _Romance of Two Worlds_, 114
- _Romantic School, The_, 40
- Romanticism, 14, 27, 28, 138
- _Romanzero_, 35, 47, 48
- Rome, 79, 213
- _Rome, Naples, and Florence_, 11
- Roosevelt, President, 116
- Rossetti, 219
- _Rossini, Life of_, 15
- _Rouge et le Noir, Le_, 9, 16, 17-20, 56, 185
- Rousseau, 46, 83
- Rubens, 197
- Russolo, 220, 238
-
- _Salome_, 140
- Sand, 38
- Sappho, 131
- Satan, 208
- _Satan, Sorrows of_, 114
- Schiller, 144
- Schlegel, 38
- _Schloss von Wetterstein_, 155, 156
- Schnitzler, 161-195
- Schopenhauer, 72, 73, 74, 144
- Secessionists, 140
- Secessionsbühne, 137
- Sefchen, 30
- Selden, Camille, 48
- Self-and-Sex Series, 130
- Semites, 125
- _Serialese, Manual of_, 133
- Severini, 220
- Shaw, G. B., 126, 135, 155, 159, 162, 163
- Sichel, 51
- Sidonia, 52
- Smiles, Samuel, 115
- Smith, Adam, 7
- Socialists, 88
- Sorel, Julien, 16-20
- _Souvenirs d'Egotisme_, 24
- Spencer, 77
- _Spring's Awakening_, 115. See
- _Frühlingserwachen_
- St. Amand, 197
- St. Barbe, 197
- St. Beuve, 24
- Staël, Mme. de, 40
- Stage Society, 139, 161, 162
- Stendhal, 1-25, 74, 185
- Sterne, 30
- Stratford-on-Avon, 131
- Strauss, 219
- _Strife_, 163
- Strindberg, 91-113
- Stuck, 219
- Sudermann, 88, 137
- Suffragette, 96
- Superman, 75, 80 85, 87, 136, 163
- Sutro, 162
- Swan, Annie, 116
- _Swan White_, 111
- Sweden, 96
- Swedenborgianism, 110
- _Swedish Destinies_, 98
- _Swedish Miniatures_, 111
- Swift, 30, 44
- _Swiss Tales_, 100
- Switzerland, 215
- Symbolists, 224
-
- TAINE, 20, 24, 136
- Tamerlane, 86
- _Tancred_, 55, 60, 65
- Tanner, John, 97
- _Tartuffe_, 121
- Technique, 163
- _Temporal Power_, 120, 124
- Tenatri, 230
-
- _Tentacular Towns_, 202-205
- _Terminations_, 177
- _Thelma_, 119, 124
- Thorne, Guy, 115
- _Three Weeks_, 127, 130
- Thucydides, 132
- Tolstoi, 76, 126
- Tories, 65, 66, 67
- Torquemada, 117
- _Totentanz_, 126, 135, 142-4
- Tracy, 7
- _Turn of the Screw_, 137
-
- UHL, Frida, 109
- Ultramontanes, 21
- Ultramontanism, 115
-
- VAN Lenburgh, 197
- _Veil of Beatrice_, 169-171
- _Vendetta_, 115
- _Venetia_, 56
- Verhaeren, 196-211, 237
- Verlaine, 154, 200
- _Vermächtniss, Die_, 169
- _Versunkene Glocke, Die_, 137
- _Vie de Henri Brulard, La_, 24
- _Vier Jahrzeiten, Die_, 154
- _Ville Charnelle La_, 223, 228-230
- _Villes Tentaculaires, Les_, 202-205
- _Visages de la Vie_, _Les_, 208
- _Vivian Grey_, 19, 52, 55, 56, 59
- Voltaire, 42, 46, 77, 89
- Voynich, Mrs., 119
-
- WAGNER, 73
- Ward, Mrs., 126
- _Waste_, 163
- _Weber, Die_, 136, 210
- Wedekind, 98, 126, 134-160
- _Weg ins Freie, Der_, 192-194
- _Weites Land, Das_, 184, 186-188
- Wells, 237
- Werther, 19
- Westermarck, 84
- Whigs, 65, 66, 67
- Whitman, Walt, 223
- Wilde, 89, 139, 140
- Will to Live, 73
- Williams, Mrs. Brydges, 63
- _Woman with the Dagger_, 180-182
- Women atheists, 118
- _Wormwood_, 115
- Wycherley, 141
-
- YOUNG Men's Christian Association, 215
-
- _Zarathustra_, 70, 80-3, 88
- _Zensur_, 155, 156
- _Zwischenspiel_, 172, 173
- Zola, 118, 136, 145
-
-
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44916 ***</div>
<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Modernities, by Horace Barnett Samuel</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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-<p>Title: Modernities</p>
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-<p>Release Date: February 15, 2014 [eBook #44916]</p>
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Modernities, by Horace Barnett Samuel
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-
-
-Title: Modernities
-
-
-Author: Horace Barnett Samuel
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 15, 2014 [eBook #44916]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MODERNITIES***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Marc D'Hooghe (http://www.freeliterature.org) from page
-images generously made available by HathiTrust Digital Library
-(http://www.hathitrust.org/digital_library)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- HathiTrust Digital Library. See
- http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t9d50kh4d
-
-
-
-
-
-MODERNITIES
-
-by
-
-HORACE B. SAMUEL
-
-Author of "The Land and Yourself," "The Insurance Act
-and Yourself," etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-E. P. Dutton and Co.
-681, Fifth Avenue
-1914
-
-
-
-
-DEDICATED
-
-TO
-
-MRS. GEORGE JOSEPH
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The ten studies which constitute this volume are devoted to individuals
-who are held out as being reasonably characteristic of that modern
-movement of the last and present century which started with the French
-Revolution. At any rate, they were all modern once. For the spirit of
-modernity enjoys, like the priest-god of the ancient grove, only a
-temporary reign, and is speedily killed by its inevitable successor.
-
-It is somewhat difficult to find any common denominator for the
-subjects of these studies. The essays must be left largely to speak for
-themselves. If, however, an attempt were to be made to pronounce of
-what the spirit of modernity really consists, one might suggest that it
-is a spirit of energy, of fearlessness in analysis, whose sole _raison
-d'etre_ and whose sole ideal is actual life itself.
-
-The studies on Miss Marie Corelli and Herr Wedekind are here published
-for the first time. Those on Disraeli, Heine, Stendhal, Schnitzler,
-Strindberg, the Futurists, and Verhaeren have appeared as articles in
-the _Fortnightly Review_; while the essay on Nietzsche's "Genealogy
-of Morals" was first published in the _English Review_. I have
-consequently pleasure in expressing my thanks and acknowledgments
-to Mr. W. L. Courtney and Mr. Austin Harrison for their courtesy in
-allowing these articles to be reproduced in their present form. I have
-also to thank the editor of the _New Statesman_ for permission to
-republish my translation from Marinetti's, "The Pope's Monoplane."
-
-I have made additions to the essays on Schnitzler and the Futurists
-with a view to incorporating some reference to the more recent works of
-Dr. Schnitzler and M. Marinetti.
-
- HORACE B. SAMUEL.
-
- Temple, _October_ 1913.
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- STENDHAL: THE COMPLEAT INTELLECTUAL
- HEINRICH HEINE
- THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DISRAELI
- NIETZSCHE'S "GENEALOGY OF MORALS"
- AUGUST STRINDBERG
- THE WELTANSCHAUUNG OF MISS MARIE CORELLI
- FRANK WEDEKIND
- ARTHUR SCHNITZLER
- EMILE VERHAEREN
- THE FUTURE OF FUTURISM
-
- INDEX
-
-
-
-
-MODERNITIES
-
-STENDHAL
-
-THE COMPLEAT INTELLECTUAL
-
-
-"I only write for a hundred readers, and of those unhappy, amiable,
-charming creatures without either hypocrisy or morality whom I should
-like to please, I only know one or two."
-
-On the assumption that with the natural growth of the population, "the
-happy few" for whom Stendhal wrote have sufficiently multiplied in this
-country to render it likely that a reasonable number of readers will
-possess these requisite qualifications, it becomes relevant to give
-both some analysis and some appreciation of a man who is perhaps the
-most perfect type of the "intellectual" that Europe has yet produced.
-
-For Stendhal was an intellectual in the fullest sense of the term.
-Neither a recluse scholar nor a rabid doctrinaire, but a man of the
-world and of action, of brain, heart, and sensibility, he sought and to
-a large extent found in the intellect an energetic servant, by whose
-faithful escort he could sally forth on that "hunt of happiness," which
-led him in his variegated career from the field of battle to the bowers
-of love, and from the high plateaux of reverie to the meticulous _terre
-a terre_ observations of psychological science.
-
-Henri Beyle was born in 1783, in Grenoble in Dauphine, a town whose
-hidebound provincialism he hated consistently from his childhood to his
-death.
-
-"His childhood," to quote from his own autobiography, "was a continual
-period of unhappiness and of hate and of the sweets of a vengeance
-which was always helpless." Loving his mother, according to his
-somewhat pathetic boast, with a man's passion, he lost her at the age
-of seven. On being told that God had taken her away, he conceived
-with immediate logic an implacable hatred against that Deity who had
-deprived him of the being whom he loved most in the world, a hatred
-which, turning into momentary gratitude on the occasion of the death
-of his _bete noire_, his Aunt Seraphie, was finally merged in the
-chilly negation of the honest atheist. Inasmuch as to the quality
-of logic Stendhal added those of rebelliousness and imagination, it
-is not surprising that even in childhood his relations should have
-been inharmonious with his father, a royalist lawyer situated on the
-borderland between the bourgeoisie and the gentry. The royalism of
-his father immediately sufficed to turn Henri into the reddest of
-republicans. The execution of Louis XVI filled his childish heart with
-holy glee, and the guillotining of two royalist priests at Grenoble
-affected him with an elation which, if solitary, was for that very
-reason all the more genuine. So hot indeed was his republican ardour
-that he even forged an official order requiring his enlistment in a
-body of cadets. But although he was unappreciative of his father,
-whom he would refer to in his diaries and letters by the almost
-equally offensive synonyms of "bastard" and "Jesuit," he none the
-less manifested the deepest affection for his maternal grandfather,
-M. Gagnon, a Voltairean doctor of lively intellect and genial
-disposition, and for the cook and the butler of the paternal house.
-
-The child soon began to stimulate by books his naturally precocious
-imagination, stealing in his thirst for knowledge those volumes which
-the solicitude or conventionalism of his father deemed it inexpedient
-for him to read. From _La Nouvelle Heloise_ in particular he would
-appear to have derived imaginative transports far transcending the
-joys of a prosaic reality. But he had conceived an early aversion to
-poetry by reason of an awful poem by some Jesuit about a fly that got
-drowned in a cup of milk. The reading of Moliere, however, dispelled
-the unpleasant association, and his early ambition became crystallised
-into going to Paris and writing a comedy. For apart from the magnetic
-attraction of the metropolis itself, Grenoble exacerbated his nerves.
-Unappreciated at home, he found himself, with the exception of one or
-two genuine friendships, solitary and unpopular at school among those
-masters and schoolfellows whom he already despised. It is interesting
-to remember, parenthetically, that even when a schoolboy he fought a
-duel, and boldly faced the fire of what subsequently turned out to
-have been an unloaded pistol by concentrating his gaze on a distant
-rock. His intellectual ability carried all before him, and he found in
-mathematics a loophole of escape from his provincial prison. Coming out
-top in the examinations he obtained a bourse at the Ecole Polytechnique
-at the age of sixteen, and was sent to Paris with instructions to place
-himself under the protection of M. Daru, a relative of the family
-and the holder of a ministerial appointment. By this time his erotic
-ambitions were beginning to formulate themselves with comparative
-definiteness. He had already experienced a passion for a Mdlle. Kably,
-a local actress, which while never attaining a more advanced stage
-than that of inquiring the way to her lodgings, was none the less
-violent. Anyway, when the boy went to Paris he had finally decided to
-live up to the best of his ability to the Don Juan ideal.
-
-His first sojourn at Paris, however, surprised both himself and
-his parents. With considerable obstinacy he refused to attend the
-Polytechnique and set himself to study privately in his own rooms. But
-the first essay at the single life proved a fiasco. No dashing romances
-coloured his solitary existence, while he was either too nervous or
-too refined to sully his soul with mere mercenary pleasure. He became
-dreamy and ill, and was eventually taken charge of by the Darus. In the
-pompous officialdom of this family his health recovered, but his spirit
-rebelled. He complains bitterly that he not only had to sleep in the
-house but also to dine with the family. He none the less knit a firm
-friendship with his cousin Martial Daru, a brainless and amiable youth
-who subsequently at Milan and at Brunswick taught him the elementary
-rules of amoristic etiquette.
-
-The Marengo campaign gave him an opportunity of practising that
-Napoleonic worship which was his one and only religion. The influence
-of the Darus procured him a commission, and the passage of the St.
-Bernard was one of the landmarks of his life. He drank to the full
-the intoxication of victory which attended the entry into Milan of
-the youthful army, and conceived for the Countess Angela Pietragrua,
-"a sublime wanton a la Lucrezia Borgia," a passion which ten years
-subsequently was duly rewarded. The Milan period was, according to that
-epitaph which he penned himself, "the finest in his life." "He adored
-music and literary renown, set great store by the art of giving a good
-blow with the sabre and was wounded in the foot by a thrust received
-in a duel. He was aide-de-camp to Lieutenant-General Michaud. He
-distinguished himself. He was the happiest and probably the maddest of
-men when on the conclusion of the peace the minister of war ordered the
-subaltern aides-de-camp to return to their regiments."
-
-Returning to Grenoble on furlough, he fell in love with Mdlle.
-Victorine Bigillon, the sister of one of his best friends, whom he
-suddenly followed to Paris, although his leave would appear to have
-been limited to Grenoble. Reprimanded by the authorities he sent in
-his resignation, and "madder than ever started to study with the view
-of becoming a great man." His experiences, subjective and objective,
-during this period are described in his journal with a detail, a
-lucidity, an honesty which are worthy of some mention. For we see now
-officially scheduled and officially annotated all those heterogeneous
-qualities which made up the sum of this man's psychology; his rigid
-intellectualism, his sentimentality, his ambition, his artistic
-enthusiasm, his constant flow of analytical energy (directed now
-against the external world, now against himself, yet scarcely for
-a single moment losing itself in a complete abandon), his love of
-witty conversation, whether his own or that of others, the sweep of
-his intellectual ideals, his intolerance of bores and fools, that
-apprehensive self-consciousness which so often made him the dupe of the
-fear of being duped, his exuberant _joie de vivre_, and "that love of
-glory and sensibility which are only for the _intimes_ friends."
-
-And extraordinarily stimulating are the reflections, charmingly
-interspersed with English phrases, in this breviary of intellectual
-egoism, where the _I_ and the _Me_ enter into a Holy Alliance in their
-heroic conspiracy against the rest of the world. It was mainly this
-self-consciousness which induced Beyle deliberately to set himself to
-become a psychologist. "Nearly all the misfortunes of life," writes
-our twenty-year-old philosopher, "come from the false notions we have
-concerning that which happens to us. Must know men thoroughly." And how
-he scolds himself when he fails to live up to his ideal, and when "his
-accursed mania for being brilliant results in his being more occupied
-in making a deep impression than in guessing others." And so it is that
-he reflects, "what a fool I am not to have the knack of drawing out
-each man to tell his story, which might prove so useful to me," and
-that the man, who was subsequently to style himself by profession "an
-observer of the human heart" developed that "universal desire to know
-all that passes within a man." Though, however, his love of psychology
-was thus, as we have seen, to some extent a case of reaction from his
-own nervousness and of externalised introspection, it is impossible to
-deny the purity of his intellectual enthusiasm. At an age when even the
-chastest of prose writers may well be pardoned for wallowing in the
-debauchery of purple patches, he inscribes in his journal that the sole
-quality in style is lucidity. It was this deeply rooted abhorrence of
-floridity and ostentation that on a subsequent occasion nearly induced
-him to fight a duel with a man who had praised unduly the well known
-"la cime indeterminable des arbres" of Chateaubriand, that _bete noire_
-of Stendhal's of whom he prophesies in English, "This man shall not
-outlive his century." In the sphere of philosophy, characteristically
-enough his logical and mathematical turn of mind embraced with natural
-love and facility the materialism of the French sceptics.
-
-"Helvetius opened wide to him the doors of the world," and he became
-on terms of affectionate friendship with the aged philosopher Destutt
-Tracy. So radical indeed was Stendhal's philosophic bias, that on one
-occasion, feeling presumably more studious than amorous, he neglects
-an assignation with the lady whom he was pursuing, to plunge with even
-greater gusto into a hundred pages of Adam Smith. Though, too, he
-habitually worked twelve hours a day, he would appear to have cut a
-frequent figure in both those formal and Bohemian sets of the capital
-which offered such refreshing contrasts and facilities to artistic
-young men.
-
-His love for Victorine proved unreciprocated. There followed innocuous
-passages with a respectable demi-vierge, referred to in the journal as
-Adele of the Gate. But Stendhal found his chief distraction in that
-society of authors, men of the world, and actresses whom he met at the
-house of Dugazon, a celebrated teacher of theatrical elocution. In this
-variegated set, where the mutual relations and complications of the
-various members provided a chronic source of interest and speculation,
-Stendhal met a young mother, named Melanie Guilbert (the Louason of
-the journal), "a charming actress who had the most refined sentiments
-and to whom I never gave a son." To this lady Stendhal set himself to
-lay a siege, which was eventually successful after a quite unnecessary
-duration.
-
-The demeanour of Stendhal in society is highly instructive. A man of
-such abnormal sensitiveness that "the least thing moved him and made
-the tears come to his eyes," he encased himself in an "irony which
-was imperceptible to the vulgar," and, posing with marked success as
-both a cynic and a roue, notes with interest "the terrifying effect
-which his particular kind of wit produced on society." But if his
-deliberate brilliancies won him respect rather than popularity, they
-certainly consolidated his own selfestimation. "Maximum of wit in my
-life--Je me suis toujours vu aller mais sans gene pour cela," runs
-one of these honest confidences which he made to himself, "without
-lying, without deceiving himself, with pleasure, like a letter to
-a friend." He needed, however, the audience of a salon to put him
-on his mettle, and would appear, at any rate during this period, to
-have been somewhat ineffective in _tete-a-tete_. His journal records
-a lamentable succession of muddled opportunities, of occasions when
-he was too natural to observe his companion with sufficient acumen,
-and of occasions when he was not natural enough. It was the latter
-characteristic, however, which predominated, and even though the
-emotion of his love was genuine, its expression was a bookish and
-theatrical formulation of an already rehearsed ideal, directed quite
-as much to the critical approbation of his own consciousness as to
-the actual object of his wooing. Yet the full gusto of a rich _joie
-de vivre_ palpitates in this incessant cerebration. Time after time
-do we come upon the entry that such and such a day was the happiest
-in his life. And if at times "his only distraction was to observe his
-own state, it was none the less a great one." His very sensibility
-becomes a source of gratification, and he will congratulate himself
-that he has perhaps lived more in a day than many of his more stolid
-friends will live in the whole of their life. The financial problem
-pressed irksomely upon him at this period, and, combining business
-and sentiment, he obtained a position in a house at Marseilles, in
-which town Louason had obtained an engagement. Whether however because
-of parental pressure or because the distractions of business had
-cured him of his passion, he soon left Marseilles for Grenoble, and
-subsequently returned to Paris.
-
-The campaigns of 1806 to 1809 offered new scope to the ambition of
-Beyle, who always rose successfully to practical emergencies and was,
-as he tells us himself, "most simple and most natural in the greatest
-dangers." He was present at the battle of Jena, came several times into
-personal contact with Napoleon, and discharged with singular efficiency
-the fiscal administration of the state of Brunswick.
-
-The next landmark in his life, however, is his passion for the wife of
-his relative, the punctilious but aged M. Daru, a passion the various
-nuances of which are faithfully recorded in those sections of his
-journal headed "The Life and Sentiments of Silencious Harry," "Memoirs
-of my life during my amour for the Graefin P----y," the narrative of
-the intrigue between Julien and Mathilde in _Le Rouge et le Noir,_
-and the posthumous fragment entitled "Le Consultation de Banti," a
-piece of methodical deliberation on the pressing question, "_Dois-je
-ou ne dois-je pas avoir la duchesse?_" which, it is believed, is quite
-unparalleled in the whole history of eroticism. For with his peculiar
-faculty of driving his intellect and his heart in double harness,
-he analyses the pros and cons of the erotic and ethical situation,
-the qualifications and defects of the lady with all the documentary
-coldness of a Government report. His diary during this period is so
-delightfully honest as to justify quotations: "Tuesday, 18th April
-1810, 1st day of Longchamps. On the whole I think that I love the
-Countess P----y a little." "10th August, I have proved by an evidence
-the truth of my principles about rousing love in the heart of a woman."
-"The 4th August. I was reading the excellent essay of Hume upon the
-feudal government from two till half-past four o'clock; during this
-time she wanted my presence; _au retour_ she cannot say a word without
-speaking of me or to me. J'eus le tort de ne pas hasarder quelque
-entreprise. Mais je le repete j'ai trop de sensibility pour avoir
-jamais du talent dans l'art de Lovelace!"
-
-Stendhal would appear to have treated this particular liaison rather
-as a polite routine of social amenities than as a serious passion. How
-refreshing is his account of the tedium of the relationship: "At Paris
-I have no time for working to Letellier [a mediocre comedy in verse
-which was never finished], I have here nothing but my passion for C.
-Palfy; 'tis a month that I reproach to myself the money that I spent
-without pleasure of mind into those walls."
-
-Towards the autumn of 1811 Stendhal journeyed to Milan, his favourite
-town in Europe whose citizenship he arrogated in his self-written
-epitaph. Renewing his acquaintance with the Countess Pietragrua, for
-whom he had languished in dumb nervousness on his first visit to
-Milan ten years past, he took an especial joy in compensating for his
-previous clumsiness by displaying the easy brilliancy of the man of
-the world. And then on the eve of his departure from Milan he writes
-in English--"I was, I believe, in love." "Apres un combat moral fort
-serieux ou j'ai joue le malheur et jusque le desespoir, elle est a
-moi onze heures et demi. Je pars de Milan a une heure et demie le 22
-septembre 1811."
-
-In 1812 Beyle served in the Moscow campaign, having obtained a position
-in the commissariat department. It is characteristic that he should
-have kept his nerve during the whole of that panic-stricken retreat,
-shaving every day, and repelling with considerable sangfroid and
-bravery an attack by the enemy on a hospital of wounded. Disgusted by
-the Restoration, he settled in Milan in 1814, resumed his relationship
-with Mme. Angelina Pietragrua, who would appear to have systematically
-deceived him, and lived generally the life of the dilettante and the
-man of letters.
-
-In 1814 he published his first work, _The Lives of Haydn and Mozart_
-par Louis Alexander Bombet. This pseudonym is partly due to Beyle's
-habitual mania for anonymity and partly to the consciousness that
-the substantial portion of the work had been coolly plagiarised from
-Carpani. Nor do any morbid pangs of conscience appear to have ruffled
-the serenity of the author, who found a precedent for his action in the
-plagiarisms of Moliere and a subsequent justification in the money that
-he obtained. Emboldened indeed by his success he published in London,
-in 1817, a series of travel sketches, _Rome, Naples, and Florence_,
-which owed in some places an unacknowledged debt to the _Italian
-Travels_ of Goethe. Yet even so, viewed as a whole the book possesses a
-richness of material, a raciness of observation, a joy of journeying,
-a spontaneity of verve which give it a high rank among travel
-literature and make it eminently readable even at the present day.
-Less a guide-book than a personal narrative, it describes the actual
-life of the period as actually lived by a man who plumed himself at
-thirty on still retaining all the folly of his youth. The author was an
-enthusiast for the theatre, a devotee of the ballet, and a keen wagerer
-of those exquisite ices which formed one of the chief allurements of
-the Scala Theatre. An enthusiastic anti-clerical and an eager reader
-of forbidden political plays at midnight coteries, he yet feels on
-visiting the Church of the Jesuits "a little of that respect which even
-the most criminal power inspires when it has done great things." And
-how simply natural is the following confession of a traveller's faith:
-"I experience a sensation of happiness on my journeys which I have
-found nowhere else, even in the most happy days of my ambition." In the
-same year, 1817, Stendhal published his _History of Painting in Italy_.
-This book is remarkable, not so much by its purely aesthetic criticism
-as by the application to the sphere of artistic criticism of those
-theories of heredity, climate, and environment which were afterwards to
-be so brilliantly exploited at the hands of Taine. Some mention should
-also be made of that simplicity of lyric fervour which distinguishes
-the extremely fine dedication to Napoleon.
-
-In 1821 much to his disgust, Stendhal, accused, and apparently quite
-unjustly, of being a French spy, was forced to leave Milan. This exile
-was all the more irksome as Stendhal's amoristic history had now
-reached its great climax. If Louason had constituted the initiation
-of his youth, Mme. Daru the acme of his social achievement, and the
-Countess Pietragrua the incarnate realisation of his adventurous search
-for ideal beauty, it was in Methilde, Countess Dembowska, that his
-mature heart found a passion which though always ungratified remained
-none the less grand. It is instructive to observe how honest was the
-love, how deep the devotion of this official rake for "une femme
-que j'adorais, qui m'aimait et qui ne s'est jamais donnee a moi."
-Particularly significant is it that this man, whose cynicism had gained
-for him the sobriquet of Don Juan, should have condemned himself to a
-three years' fidelity that thereby he might become more worthy of that
-"ame angelique cachee dans un si beau corps qui quittait la vie en
-1825." But it is even more interesting to notice how there mingles with
-this perfectly genuine attachment the most morbid self-consciousness
-and fear of ridicule:
-
- "Le pire des malheurs, m'ecriais-je, serait que ces
- hommes si secs, mes amis au milieu desquels je vais
- vivre, devinissent ma passion pour une femme que je n'ai
- pas eue. Cette peur mille fois repetee a ete dans le
- fait la principe dirigeante de ma vie pendant dix ans.
- C'est par la que je suis venu a avoir de l'esprit, chose
- qui etait la butte de mes mepris a Milan en 1818 quand
- j'aimais Methilde."
-
-In 1822 Stendhal published in Paris that book _De l'Amour_ which he had
-composed at odd moments during his sojourn at Milan. Thought by the
-author to be his most important work, and deemed worthy by the public
-of a total purchase of seventeen copies, the work possesses even at the
-present day considerable claims upon the attention. For it possesses
-the unique characteristic of being a treatise on the sexual emotion
-written by an author who was at the same time an acute psychologist
-and a brilliant man of the world, who could test abstract theories by
-concrete practice, and could co-ordinate what he had felt in himself
-and observed in others into broad general principles. While we do not
-propose to enter into a detailed analysis of this work, which occupies
-more than four hundred pages of close print, we may perhaps mention the
-author's fourfold division of love into "amour-passion, amour-gout,
-amour physique, amour de vanite."
-
-We would also refer to just a few of the innumerable maxims with which
-the book is studded, as typical of that naively subtle simplicity which
-is so characteristic of our author:
-
-"L'amour c'est avoir du plaisir a voir, toucher, sentir par tous
-les sens et d'aussi pres que possible un objet aimable et qui nous
-aime"--"l'amant erre sans cesse entre ces idees: 1. Elle a toutes les
-perfections. 2. Elle m'aime. 3. Comment faire pour obtenir d'elle la
-plus grande preuve d'amour possible?" "Tout l'art d'aimer se reduit,
-ca me semble, a dire exactement a quels degres d'ivresse le moment
-comporte, c'est-a-dire en d'autres termes a ecouter son ame."
-
-And how curious is the following phrase where the point of view of
-this cynical roue seems for once quite in accord with that of the more
-ladylike of our lady novelists: "Le plus grand bonheur qui puisse
-donner l'amour c'est le premier serrement de main d'une femme qu'on
-aime."
-
-But the philosophical breadth of the author is perhaps best manifested
-by that spirit of comparative erotology, which induces him to analyse
-the various nuances of love all over the world from Boston to
-Constantinople, while he traces the connection between each particular
-variation and the climate of the country and the character of the
-people.
-
-With the habitual cleverness of his tongue exacerbated by the
-misfortune of his love affair, Stendhal became a distinguished but
-unpopular figure with the Parisians. Most in his element "in a salon
-of eight or ten persons where all the women have had lovers, where the
-conversation is gay and flavoured with anecdote, and when light punch
-is served at half-past twelve," he was merciless to the philistine and
-the bore, would rally with tactless truth a highly respectable lady
-on her liaison with the Archbishop of Paris, and would snub unwelcome
-declarations with artistic repartee.
-
-Plunging vigorously into the controversy between the Classicism and
-the Romanticists, Stendhal published in 1825 his celebrated pamphlet
-_Racine and Shakespeare_, which denounced the Alexandrine as a
-_cache-sottise_ and vindicated the live modernity of a present age
-against the dead orthodoxy of a past generation. This little work,
-rushed off in a few hours, is one of Stendhal's happiest efforts. The
-style is bright with a lucid enthusiasm and sharp with a malicious
-logic. How crisp for instance is the truth of the following:
-
-"Le Viellard--'Continuons.'"
-
-"Le jeune Homme--'Examinons.'"
-
-"Voila tout le dix-neuvieme siecle."
-
-_Shakespeare and Racine_ was followed by the _Life of Rossini_, whom
-Stendhal had known personally at Milan, and by _Armance_ (1827), the
-first of that series of novels on which the literary fame of Stendhal
-substantially rests. This work possesses all the essential Stendhalian
-qualities; the vein of Byronism, the contempt for the bourgeois, the
-lucid style, and above all the detailed description of what takes place
-in the interior of the mind. The plot consists of the sentimental
-complications resultant on the consciousness of the hero, who is one of
-those souls made to feel with energy, of his natural disqualification
-for efficient marriage. Yet with a subtlety which is Jamesian in
-everything but the clearness of the style, the actual difficulty is
-never explicitly mentioned, though every nuance of sensitiveness is
-delicately delineated. And with what delicate simplicity does Stendhal
-narrate the suicide of Octave, who has simply married his adored cousin
-in order to leave her the prestige of a rich and honourable widowhood.
-Shortly after the marriage Octave has left his wife and set sail for
-Greece.
-
-"Never had Octave been so under the spell of the most tender love as
-in this supreme moment. He granted to himself the luxury of telling
-everything to Armance except the nature of his death. A cabin boy from
-the top of the mast cried out 'land.' It was the soil of Greece and
-the mountains of the Morea which were to be perceived on the horizon.
-A fresh wind carried on the vessel rapidly. The name of Greece
-reawakened the courage of Octave. I salute you, he said to himself,
-oh land of heroes. And at midnight on the third of March, as the moon
-was rising behind Mount Kalos, a self-prepared mixture of opium and
-digitalis softly delivered Octave from that life of his which had been
-so agitated. He was found at dawn motionless on the bridge, resting on
-some cordage. A smile was on his lips, and his rare beauty struck even
-the sailors charged with his burial."
-
-Stendhal's next work was the well-known _Promenades en Rome_, an
-admirable book entirely free from the taint of the conscientious
-sightseer, but replete with the original observations of an acute
-cosmopolitan who never shrinks from following his fancy along some
-amiable digression. It was however in _Le Rouge et le Noir_, 1830,
-that Stendhal gave to the world his real masterpiece. This work, which
-has become since the end of the last century the revered object of the
-cult of the Rougistes, among whom it is a point of honour to know the
-whole book by heart, and which occupies an equal rank with that of the
-_Comedie Humaine_ or _Madame Bovary_, is remarkable both by reason of
-the intrinsic character of the hero and the psychological technique
-with which the story is told.
-
-The hero, like Stendhal himself, possesses a subjective and sensitive
-mind, rendered tough and virile by the savage energy of the Revolution.
-In fact some previous knowledge both of Stendhal's life and Stendhal's
-character are requisite for the full appreciation of a book which,
-in spite of the fact that the hero is not only a seducer but also an
-attempted murderer, has yet some claim to be regarded as the dignified
-confession of a robust faith.
-
-Julien Sorel is the son of a carpenter in a small provincial town.
-Proved guilty from his infancy of the unpardonable crime of being
-different from the average child, he is harshly treated by his father.
-The Napoleonic legend inflames his imagination, but he lives in the
-time of the Restoration, when it is the Church and not the Army which
-opens a career to the ambitious parvenu. By a stroke of fortune Julien
-obtains when nineteen the post of tutor to the children of the local
-mayor, M. de Renal. Feeling acutely the degradation of his menial
-position, he violently rebels against his own sensitiveness, as he
-deliberately forges the natural softness of his heart into the most
-brutal iron. Formulating the ideals of pride and success, he determines
-to live up to them at whatever cost either to himself or others. When
-consequently the charming though ordinary Mme. de Renal begins to
-manifest towards him a somewhat personal interest, he sets himself
-to force the pace, as a matter neither of sensuality nor even of
-politeness, but of sheer self-respect. What for instance are Julien's
-feelings during the first assignation?
-
-"Instead of being attentive to the transports which he was bringing
-into existence, and to those feelings of remorse which somewhat dulled
-their vivacity, the idea of his duty never ceased to be present
-to his eyes. He was afraid of an awful remorse and of an eternal
-stultification if he should deviate from that ideal model which he
-proposed to follow." From being, however, the mere instrument of his
-ethical self-discipline, Mme. de Renal becomes the sincere object of
-his romantic devotion. But the intrigue is discovered and Julien is
-packed off to a theological seminary. Though a devout freethinker,
-he sacrifices his beliefs to his ambition. His deviation from the
-mediocre pattern renders him unpopular, but his very unpopularity
-only serves to stiffen his perverse obstinacy for success. After
-an agonising struggle he succeeds in winning the due of abilities,
-and goes to Paris to become secretary to the Marquis de la Mole, an
-influential nobleman, drawn after the model of the author's relative,
-Comte Daru. He gains the confidence of his employer, which he rewards
-by an intrigue with his daughter Mathilde (Mme. Daru). Here again it
-is stern devotion to principle, not natural love, which is the motive.
-It is in fact on purely ethical and idealistic considerations that he
-goes to the nocturnal rendezvous in the same spirit that a soldier
-goes to the field of battle or a martyr to the stake. And as Banti in
-that variation of Hamlet's soliloquy of "To be or not to be," which we
-have already considered, clinched the question by the consideration
-that if he did not embrace the opportunity he would regret it all his
-life, so did Julien exclaim: "Au fond il y a de la lachete a ne pas y
-aller, ce mot decide tout." Note also the masterly delineation of the
-girl herself, who, yielding originally by reason neither of her love
-nor her weakness, but simply through her romantic desire to emulate
-an illustrious ancestress, falls completely in love and manifests a
-courage which in spite of some affectation is none the less genuine.
-The Marquis de la Mole is compelled to promise to recognise Julien as
-his son-in-law and procures for him a commission in the army. But now
-just when the hero's ambitions are beginning to realise themselves,
-Mme. de Renal writes, under priestly instigation, a slanderous letter
-to his prospective father-in-law, who withdraws his consent to the
-marriage. Julien in a fit of rage shoots at Mme. de Renal, gives
-himself up, and dies "poetically" on the scaffold.
-
-It is not surprising that in view of these facts critics lacking
-in subtlety have found the character of Julien the wildest of
-impossibilities, the most monstrous of distortions. It is, however, a
-reasonably safe maxim to assume that those characters in novels which
-are thought to be too bizarre to exist are taken from actual life. In
-this case the actual framework of fact is drawn from the history of
-a young student of Besancon named Berthet, while as we have already
-seen his mental attitude is that of Stendhal himself. While no doubt a
-villain from the ethical standpoint of a modern serial, Julien is none
-the less, viewed more deeply, the Nietzschean knight-errant of energy
-and efficiency, the successful pursuer of a subjective ideal, and a
-perfect example of the Aristotelian virtue of [Greek: _engkrateia_].
-Of all the discontented young idealists of the literature of the late
-eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, who find themselves thrown
-into collision with conventional society, the Werthers, the Renes, the
-Don Juans, the Karl Moors, and the Vivian Greys, Julien Sorel is by far
-the most interesting and intellectually by far the most respectable. He
-has no hysterical and visionary aspirations, no mawkish Weltschmerz.
-A phenomenal power of analysis renders his aim direct and simple.
-He proposes to open the oyster of the world with the sword of his
-intellect. _Le Rouge et le Noir_ is the tragedy of energy and ambition,
-the epic of the struggle for existence.
-
-Reverting from the emotional content of the book to its more technical
-characteristics, it may be claimed that it was the first novel in the
-history of European literature to portray with successful consistency
-a series of characters alternately complex and simple, in a style
-which, whatever might be the personal sympathies and aversions of the
-author, subordinated all picturesque flourishes to his cardinal aim
-of psychological truth. For on the principle that the external life
-is but the mere mechanical expression of the life carried on within
-the mind, Stendhal portrays his characters by describing their mental
-processes. This method is of course most palpable in Julien, who lives
-in a chronic state of soliloquy which fails, however, to blunt the edge
-of his drastic action, and who keeps inside his brain a register which
-tickets every process with the most copious annotations. But even such
-comparatively simple characters as M. Renal, the purse-proud mayor of
-a petty provincial town; Mme. de Renal, the conventionally adulterous
-wife; abbe Pirard, the Jansenist priest, all think too according to
-their dimmer lights and their limited intelligences, and their thoughts
-also are duly recorded with scientific precision.
-
-The same year in which _Le Rouge et le Noir_ was published, Stendhal
-wrote his other great work _La Chartreuse de Parme_, which while
-thought by Taine and Balzac, though not by Goethe, to have been his
-masterpiece, certainly lacks the original outlook and concentrated
-force of the earlier work. In this book, which describes all the
-ramifying intrigues of that Italian court life which Stendhal knew and
-loved so well, the rich tapestry of romance is successfully embroidered
-by the needle of the psychologist. The rapid succession of adventure
-is not an end in itself, but simply a means to the setting in motion
-of this numerous array of characters whose cerebral interiors are so
-faithfully portrayed; Fabrice del Dougo, the hero, no Ishmael of the
-intellect like Julien, but a _jeune premier_ with a soul, who runs a
-wild career of military ardour, amoristic extravagance, justifiable
-homicide, and political persecution, only finally to fall in love with
-his gaoler's daughter and die in the self-chosen exile of a Trappist
-monastery; the Duchess of Sanseverina (a reincarnation of Stendhal's
-mistress, Countess Pietragrua), his dashing and magnanimous aunt who
-loves him with an ardour which the reader thinks must at any rate have
-needed a papal dispensation; Count Mosca, the hardened minister and
-man of the world who is yet capable of all the devotion of a grand
-passion; his enemy, the grotesque and plebeian Raversi; the loyal
-and sonneteering coachman, Ludovici; the pretty and amiable little
-actress Marietta with her obstreperous lover and her avaricious duenna;
-Ranuce Ernest of Parma studiously living up to his majestic role; and
-most romantic if not most interesting of all, Clelia Conti, with her
-pathetic clash of amoristic devotion and filial duty.
-
-In 1830 the monetary embarrassments of Stendhal forced him to leave
-Paris and take up the post of consul at Trieste. The Ultramontanes,
-however, with a not unnatural desire to be revenged on a man whose
-attitude to the Church is well crystallised in the phrase that "the
-priests were the true enemies of all civilisation," drove him from
-his position, and he was transferred to Civita Vecchia where he
-remained till 1835, solacing his ennui by the compilation of his
-autobiography and thinking seriously of marriage with the rich and
-highly respectable daughter of his laundress. Returning to Paris,
-Stendhal completed _Lucien Leuwen_, that long posthumous romance of the
-financial, literary, and political life of the age of Louis Philippe,
-a work which, though lacking something of the high vital quality of
-_La Chartreuse_ and _Le Rouge et le Noir_, does ample justice to the
-encyclopaedic powers of the author's observation. For here too we
-trace the personal Stendhalian characteristics, the sympathy with
-the isolated intellectual, the contempt for the bourgeois and the
-philistine, the idealisation of an efficiency that is not always
-achieved. We may perhaps give a quotation which well illustrates the
-friendly malice with which this detached novelist treats even his most
-favoured heroes:
-
-"He talked for the sake of talking, he bandied the pro and the con, he
-exaggerated and altered the circumstances of every story which he told,
-and he told a great many and at great length. In a word he talked like
-a young man of parts from the provinces; and consequently his success
-was immense."
-
-And how neat in the subtle simplicity of its irony is the following:
-
-"He was received in this house with that stiffness resulting from
-baulked hopes of matrimony which has the knack of making itself felt in
-such a variety of ways and in so amiable a manner in a family composed
-of six young ladies who are particularly pretty."
-
-Returning to Paris, Stendhal commenced in 1838 the last of his novels,
-the posthumous and unfinished _Lamiel_. Influenced, though by no means
-discouraged by the lack of success of his other novels, he determined
-to write "in a wittier style on a more intelligible subject," and
-with regard to each incident to ask himself the question, "Should it
-be described philosophically or described narratively according to
-the doctrine of Ariosto?" Hence Lamiel, the most fascinating feminine
-character in the whole of the Stendhalian literature. For Lamiel is a
-young woman possessed simultaneously of a brisk intellectual honesty,
-a lively humour, a charming _naivete,_ and a Nietzschean outlook on
-a tumultuous world. "Her character was based on a profound disgust
-for pusillanimity," and "where there was no danger there she found no
-pleasure." The whole book is crisp with the true comic spirit. The
-scene in particular in which Lamiel purchases her first lesson in the
-essential element of human knowledge, as a mere matter of intellectual
-curiosity, is a masterpiece of racy delicacy. Yet acuteness of
-psychology is never sacrificed to airiness of style. Sansfin the
-malicious hump-backed doctor, Comte D'Aubigne Nerwinde the snob, "a
-serious, prudent, and melancholy paragon always preoccupied with public
-opinion," the plebeian parents of Lamiel, the pompous duchess, the
-conventional young lord, are all portrayed with a delightful malice
-whose satire is never too extravagant to be otherwise than convincing.
-
-But it is Lamiel herself who dominates the book, Lamiel with that
-mixture of high flippancy and deep seriousness which is so essentially
-attractive, ever developing fresh phases in response to her repeated
-change of environment, yet ever retaining a fundamental consistency
-with her original character. It can only be regretted that Stendhal
-should have left unfinished what might well have been possibly the
-greatest, and certainly the most amusing of all his novels, and that
-having traced the adventures of his heroine from her plebeian origin to
-the aristocratic chateau, and from the aristocratic chateau to Paris,
-he should finally leave her floating jauntily amid all the rich welter
-of Parisian life with only a synopsis of those subsequent experiences
-which if undergone would have entitled her to rank as one of the most
-truly romantic characters in the whole of fiction.
-
-In 1842, Stendhal, with his physical and intellectual faculties still
-unimpaired, died suddenly at the age of fifty-nine. Like his hero
-Julien, he was "game" to the last, and "I have struck nothingness" was
-his self-given substitute for the more orthodox viaticum.
-
-In endeavouring to adjudicate finally the value of Stendhal, it is
-difficult not to yield to the fascination of his cock-sure prophecy of
-his eventual fame. For as Stendhal the man, in his autobiographical
-writings, _La Vie de Henri Brulard, Le Journal_, and _Souvenirs
-d'Egotisme_, would project his ego some years forward and as it
-were shake hands with himself across the gulf of time, so, one can
-almost say, Stendhal, the incarnation of the early nineteenth-century
-Zeitgeist, with his genial greeting, "Je serai compris vers 1880,"
-shakes hands with those modern men of the world who rightly or wrongly
-have imagined themselves to be incarnations of the Zeitgeist of the
-late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as they look back with
-appreciative camaraderie at this earlier manifestation of their own
-selves. And this no doubt is why Stendhal, viewed of course with a not
-unnatural Ultramontane frigidity by such critics as Sainte-Beuve or
-Emile Faguet, has become the spoilt darling of Nietzsche, Taine, and
-Bourget, and indeed all the more intellectual spirits in modern French
-and German literature.
-
-The life of Stendhal no doubt may not have been as ideally satisfactory
-as his theories may have warranted. A man, who professed to find his
-chief interest in life in the erotic emotion, he played as often as
-not the role of the unhappy lover. His spasmodic fits of political and
-military ambition spluttered out in the self-complacent consciousness
-of their own intensity. He suffered throughout his life from being a
-dilettante with a financial competence. Yet it is no small achievement
-to have chased happiness so consistently and with so male an energy, to
-have kept unjaded to the last his intellectual gusto and the appetite
-of his _joie de vivre_, and to have been the first man in European
-literature to have put into efficient practice, without thereby in
-any way detracting from the clearness of his own personal note, the
-important principle that the elaborate delineation of character is even
-more the function of the novel than adventurous action or picturesque
-description. And so it is that we entitle Stendhal the patentee of
-psychology, the inventor of introspection, and take our leave of him
-with his own epitaph:
-
- Qui giace
- ARRIGO BEYLE MILANESE
- isse, scrisse, amo.
-
-
-
-
-HEINRICH HEINE
-
-
-Heine seems, viewed superficially, the most baffling, elusive, and
-inconsistent of all writers, the veritable Proteus of poetry. He has
-so many shapes, that at the first blush it seems almost impossible to
-grasp finally and definitely the one genuine Heine. What is really
-this man who is now a gamin and now an angel, whose face seems almost
-simultaneously to wear the sardonic grin of a Mephistopheles and the
-wistful smile of a Christ, this flaunting Bohemian who has written
-some of the tenderest love songs in literature, this cosmopolitan who
-cherished the deepest feelings for his fatherland, this incarnate
-paradox who almost at one and the same moment is swashbuckler and
-martyr, French and German, Hebrew and Greek, revolutionary and
-aristocrat, optimist and pessimist, idealist and mocker, believer and
-infidel?
-
-Yet it is even because of this surface inconsistency, this
-psychological many-sidedness that Heine is a great poet and the one
-who, mirroring in his own mind the complexity that he saw without, is
-typically representative of the varied phases of the early nineteenth
-century. Heine looks at life from every conceivable aspect: he sees
-the gladness of life and rejoices therein; he sees the tears of life
-and weeps; he sees the tragedy of life and cannot control his sobs; he
-sees the farce of life and finds equal difficulty in controlling his
-laughter. "Ah, dear reader," says Heine, "if you want to complain that
-the poet is torn both ways, complain rather that the world is torn in
-two. The poet's heart is the core of the world, and in this present
-time it must of necessity be grievously rent. The great world-rift
-clove right through my heart, and even thereby do I know that the great
-gods have given me of their grace and preference and deemed me worthy
-of the poet's martyrdom."
-
-The first half of the nineteenth century, in fact, in which Heine
-lived, is, like any transition period, disturbed, unsettled,
-paradoxical. The most diverse tendencies boil and bubble together
-in the crucible; the Revolution and the Reaction, Romanticism and
-Hellenism, materialism and mysticism, democracy and aristocracy, poetry
-and science, all ferment apace in the psychological Witches' Cauldron
-of the age.
-
-Heine simply represented the illusions and disillusions of this age, or
-to put it with greater precision, he represented the clash and contrast
-between these illusions and disillusions. To arrive then at a correct
-appreciation of Heine it will be necessary to glance first at the main
-currents of the contemporary events, the political movements of the
-Revolution and the Reaction, and the literary movements of Romanticism
-and Aestheticism.
-
-All these currents flow either directly or indirectly from the French
-Revolution. To the more sanguine and poetical minds of the time the
-Revolution had manifested itself as a species of Armageddon, a gigantic
-cataclysm, which, sweeping away all existing institutions with one
-great shock, was to leave to mankind an untrammelled existence of
-natural and idyllic perfection. These dreamers were destined to be
-rudely disappointed. The Holy Alliance temporarily suppressed the
-Revolution at Waterloo, and an efficient Reaction reigned both in
-France and in Germany. A great religious revival set in in Prussia,
-culminating in the Concordat with the Pope in 1821. The Press was
-gagged by a rigid censorship, while the students at the universities
-were subjected to the most rigorous police espionage. From the point of
-view of the German idealists who hoped for liberty and progress, the
-Revolution had ended in the most dismal of fiascos.
-
-Parallel with the Revolution ran Romanticism, which eventually
-merged in orthodoxy, or, to put it more accurately, in a mystical
-Catholicism. The cardinal characteristic of Romanticism was the
-revolt of the individual against the stereotyped prosaic life of the
-classical eighteenth century. This revolt manifested itself in the
-most untrammelled freedom of the ego, which either took to rioting in
-an elaborate self-analysis, as did Hofmann and Jean Paul Richter, or
-else simply abandoning ordinary life gave itself up to the cult of
-the bizarre, the mystic, the mediaeval, and the exotic, and fell in
-love with the Infinite, or, to use the terminology of the school, the
-Blue Flower. Though, however, Heine was in his poetic youth largely
-influenced by the Romanticists (he was, in fact, dubbed by a Frenchman
-with tolerable reason an "unfrocked Romantic"), the essence of his
-maturer outlook on life is far from being romantic. The life-outlook of
-the Romanticists consisted in a vague yearning for the ideal without
-any reference to this earthly life; the life-outlook of Heine on the
-other hand was made up largely of the almost brutal contrast between
-the ideal and the real, between life as it was dreamed and life as it
-actually was.
-
-Another current of thought which it is necessary to mention, though
-of course it exercised rather less influence on Heine than did
-Romanticism, was the aesthetic neo-Hellenic movement represented by
-Winckelmann, Lessing, and to a certain extent by Goethe.
-
-Heine, however, though a lover of the beautiful, lacked almost entirely
-the plastic genius and marble serenity of Hellas, and is, as will be
-shown later, only a Greek in the exuberance of his _joie de vivre._
-To summarise then the main tendencies of the age in which Heine was
-born, we can see these four distinct currents--the glorious ideals of
-the French Revolution, the official reaction against these ideals, the
-cult of the bizarre and the infinite yearning of Romanticism, and the
-Hellenism of the aesthetic movement. Let us now turn to the poet's life,
-and examine the part played by environment, race, and parentage in
-moulding his character.
-
-Heine was born in Duesseldorf on December 1797, and not as is currently
-supposed in 1799.
-
-The Catholic Rhineland, in which Duesseldorf is situated, rebelled more
-than almost any other district in Germany against the despotism of the
-Prussian bureaucracy; it possessed an almost southern _joie de vivre_,
-and only naturally exhibited a distinct inclination to the Catholicism
-of the Romanticists, all of which characteristics in a greater or less
-degree are to be found in Heine.
-
-Further, Heine was a Jew, possessing, in consequence, an hereditary
-tendency to gravitate to the extreme left wing both of thought and of
-politics, while the inborn _Judenschmerz_ in his heart was aggravated
-by the anti-Semitic reaction which followed the benevolent tolerance of
-Napoleon.
-
-The poet's father, Samson Heine, was an easy-going, aesthetic nonentity
-in moderate circumstances, who does not appear to have exercised any
-serious influence on the child's development. This was accomplished by
-the mother, _nee_ von Geldern, a cultured and strong-minded woman, and
-a Voltairean by belief, who did her best to foster and stimulate her
-son's youthful intelligence. The favourite authors of the young Heine
-were Cervantes, Sterne, and Swift. Of contemporaries, the two men who
-exercised any real influence were the Emperor Napoleon, and Byron, "the
-kingly man" and the aristocratic revolutionary. Napoleon in particular
-was the god of his boyish adoration. This Napoleonic enthusiasm was
-largely fostered by Heine's friendship with a grenadier drummer of the
-French army named Le Grand, while it reached its climax when he beheld
-with his own eyes the beatific vision of the Emperor himself riding on
-his beautiful white palfrey through the Hofgarten Allee at Duesseldorf,
-in splendid defiance of the police regulations, which forbade such
-riding under a penalty of five thalers.
-
-This worship of the Emperor, moreover, resulted in the wonderful poem
-called "The Grenadiers," written at the age of eighteen. The swing and
-power of the poem have made it classic, especially the great final
-stanza beginning:
-
- "Denn reitet mein Kaiser wohl ueber mein Grab."
-
-Heine received his early education at a Jesuit monastery. The first
-event of any moment in his life, however, is his calf-love for Josepha,
-or Sefchen, the executioner's daughter, a weird fantastic beauty of
-fifteen, with large dark eyes and blood-red hair. Josepha was the
-inspiration of the juvenile _Dream Pictures_ incorporated subsequently
-in the _Book of Songs_, and exhibiting a genuine power and an even more
-genuine promise.
-
-In 1816 Heine was sent into the office of Solomon Heine, his
-millionaire uncle of Hamburg.
-
-He seems to have been singularly destitute of the financial genius of
-his race, and the business career proved from the outset a fiasco. The
-real key, however, to the three years spent in Hamburg is supplied not
-by Money, but by Love. Having served his apprenticeship in Duesseldorf
-with his calf-attachment to the executioner's daughter, Heine proceeded
-straightway to a _grande passion_ for his uncle's pretty daughter
-Amalie. His love was not reciprocated, and in 1821 the beauteous Amalie
-married a wealthy landowner of Koenigsberg. This Amalie incident was one
-of the most important in Heine's life, and is largely responsible for
-his early cynicism. He was disillusioned with a vengeance, and could
-now with his own eyes inspect the flimsy material of which "Love's
-Young Dream" is wove. Though, however, a great personal blow, this
-abortive passion is also to be regarded as an invaluable aesthetic
-asset. The poet of necessity is bound to write of his own personal
-impressions and experiences; and it is obvious that the intenser are
-these experiences, the more vital will be his poetry. If Heine's love
-for Amalie was the accursed flame that seared his soul, it was also the
-sacred fire that kindled his inspiration, and it is to Amalie that we
-owe not only a great part of the _Book of Songs_, but also much which
-is characteristic of Heine's subsequent life-outlook.
-
-In 1819, probably because Heine had given convincing proofs of his
-business inefficiency, it was decided that he should go to Bonn to
-study law. He neglected his studies, and it was not long before he fell
-foul of the authorities, owing to his anticipation in the proceedings
-of the Burschenschaften or student political unions.
-
-In 1820 Heine left Bonn for Goettingen. At Goettingen his career was
-brief but thrilling, and he was rusticated after a few months on
-account of a proposed duel with an impertinent _junker_.
-
-Transferring his quarters to Berlin, he now spent by far the most
-enjoyable period of his university career. The intellectual atmosphere
-of Berlin was quicker and less pedantic than that of Goettingen, and he
-plunged into his studies with considerable energy.
-
-In 1821 Heine published the first volume of his poems, containing the
-_Dream Pictures_, some miscellaneous juvenile poems, and the _Lyrisches
-Intermezzo,_ which was inspired by the banker's, in the same way that
-the _Dream Pictures_ had been inspired by the executioner's, daughter.
-
-The book was an immediate success, how great may be gauged by the
-numerous parodies and imitations which it almost instantaneously
-evoked. It was at this period that he wrote the two romantic tragedies
-of _Ratcliff_ and _Almansor_. Both failures and devoid of much merit,
-they served none the less useful purpose of advertising his fame.
-
-In 1823 we see an echo of his passion for Amalie in his love for his
-younger cousin Therese, who seems in many respects to have been a
-replica of her elder sister. Therese, however, refused to be anything
-more than a cousin to him, and his heart was still further embittered
-as is shown by the poem:
-
- "Wer zum erstenmale liebt
- Sei's auch gluecklos ist ein Gott
- Aber wer zum zweitenmale
- Gluecklos liebt, er ist ein Narr
- Ich, ein solcher Narr, ich liebe
- Wieder ohne Gegenliebe;
- Sonne, Mond und Sterne lachen
- Und ich lache mit und sterbe."
-
-In 1824 he decided to prosecute his studies for his doctorial degree
-with greater seriousness, and leaving behind him the distractions
-of the capital, went back once more to the more staid and prosaic
-Gottingen.
-
-Heine intended not merely to take a degree for the sake of ornament,
-but also to practise seriously as a lawyer. How serious were these
-intentions may be seen from the fact that he went to the length of
-paying in advance the heavy entrance fee which the legal profession
-then exacted from Jews, and became baptized "as a Protestant and a
-Lutheran to boot" on June 28, 1825.
-
-Heine's conversion has frequently been criticised with superfluous
-harshness. Let him, however, explain his position for himself:
-
- "At that time I myself was still a god, and none of the
- positive religions had more value for me than another; I
- could only wear their uniforms as a matter of courtesy,
- on the same principle that the Emperor of Russia dresses
- himself up as an officer of the Prussian Guard when he
- honours his imperial cousin with a visit to Potsdam."
-
-After all, his apostasy brought with it its own punishment, not only
-in its deep-felt shame, but in the fact that he eventually threw up
-law for literature, and thus rendered so great a sacrifice of racial
-loyalty and his own self-respect consummately futile. After selling
-his birthright he found that he had absolutely no use for the mess of
-pottage which he had purchased.
-
-In the summer of 1825, Heine, having just succeeded in passing his
-degree, proceeded to the little island of Norderney, off the coast of
-Holland, to recuperate. Living ardently the simple life and indulging
-to the full his passion for the sea, he now wrote not only the second
-part of the _Reisebilder,_ entitled _Norderney_, but the far greater
-_Nordsee Cyklus,_ which in its irregular swinging metre expresses with
-such marvellous efficiency the whole roar and grandeur of the ocean.
-Speaking generally, of course, Heine was too subjective to be a real
-nature poet. No writer, it is true, fills up so freely and with so
-fantastic an elegance the blank cheques of nightingales and violets,
-lilies and roses, stars and moonshine, yet none the less these rather
-served to grace his measure than as his real flame. His one genuine
-love was the sea. With the sea he felt a deep psychological affinity.
-The sea was the symbol of his own infinite restlessness, of his own
-divine discontent, and mirrored in the sea's ever-changing waters he
-beheld the incessant smiles and storms of his own soul.
-
- "I love the sea, even as my own soul," he writes. "Often
- do I fancy that the sea is in truth my very soul; and
- as in the sea there are hidden water-plants that only
- swim up to the surface at the moment of their bloom and
- sink down again at the moment of their decay, even so
- do wondrous flower-pictures swim up out of the depths
- of my soul, spread their light and fragrance, and again
- vanish."
-
-In 1826 Heine published the _Heimkehr_, the _Nordsee Cyklus_, the airy
-and sparkling _Harzreise_, and the first part of the _Reisebilder_.
-
-From Norderney Heine moved to Hamburg, avowedly to practise, though
-it does not appear that he took his profession with much seriousness.
-At any rate, until 1831, when he migrated to Paris, his career is
-excessively erratic. At one moment he is paying a flying visit to
-England, "the land of roast beef and Yorkshire plum-pudding, where
-the machines behave like men and the men like machines"; at another
-he is on the staff of the _Allgemeinen Politischen Annalen_ and the
-_Morgenblatt_ of Munich; he is now in Hamburg, now in Frankfurt, and
-now in Italy, where his sojourn inspired the racy and brilliant _Italy_
-and _Baths of Lucca_, both of which works obtained the gratuitous and
-well-merited state advertisement of prohibition, and achieved a most
-undeniable _succes de scandale_.
-
-The departure to Paris marks an entirely new epoch in Heine's life, and
-offers a convenient stopping-place at which to give some account of his
-early poetry and prose, as exemplified in the _Book of Songs_, which
-was published in 1827, and the _Reisebilder_, the last part of which,
-the _Baths of Lucca_, was published in 1831.
-
-Though neither the _Book of Songs_ nor the _Reisebilder_ is as great
-or as characteristic as the _Romanzero_ and _Poetische Nachlese_ on
-the one hand, or the _Salon_ on the other, they are yet by far the
-most popular of his works and contain some of his most delightful
-writing. One of the first traits that strikes us in the _Book of
-Songs_ is the Romantic tendency to bizarre and exotic themes. In the
-_Junge Leiden_ and _Lyrisches Intermezzo_ in particular we move in a
-ghostly atmosphere of apparitions, sea-maidens, skeletons, and midnight
-churchyards. Another interesting characteristic of these poems is his
-deep love of the East, a love which is to be probably ascribed more to
-the general eastward gravitation of the Romantic school than to the
-poet's Oriental blood. This tendency is responsible for two of the most
-charming poems in the book, the exquisite lyric starting:
-
- "Auf Fluegeln des Gesanges
- Herzliebchen trag ich dich fort
- Fort nach den Fluren des Ganges
- Dort weiss ich den schoensten Ort."
-
- "Dort liegt ein rotbluehender Garten
- Im stillen Mondenschein;
- Die Lotosblumen erwarten
- Ihr trautes Schwesterlein."
-
-And--
-
- "Ein Fichtenbaum steht einsam
- Im Norden auf kabler Hoeh',
- Ihn schlaefert; mit weisser Decke
- Umhuellen ihn Eis und Schnee.
- Er traumt von einer Palme,
- Die fern im Morgenland
- Einsam und schweigend trauert
- Auf brennender Felsenwand."
-
-This latter poem in particular illustrates admirably the vague melting,
-infinite yearning which Heine at first experienced as deeply as did any
-of the Romanticists. There are not wanting, however, and especially
-towards the end of the book, examples of his later manner, of that note
-of rebellion which he was afterwards to strike with such inimitable
-precision. Occasionally his wistful pessimism suddenly changes into
-cynicism, and in reaction from his morbid sensitiveness he derives a
-sardonic satisfaction from probing his own wounds as in the already
-quoted "Wer zum erstenmale liebt," while in the mock-heroic _Donna
-Clara_ and in the _Frieden_ we see that artistic use of the anti-climax
-of which he was afterwards to acquire an even greater mastery. Even in
-the comparatively early _Lyrisches Intermezzo_ we see him constantly
-playing on that contrast between the Real and the Ideal, between Dream
-Life and Waking Life, which formed so integral a part of his subsequent
-life-outlook. Speaking generally, however, the _Book of Songs_ exhibits
-the sentimental rather than the cynical side of Heine's mind. It
-possesses moreover those qualities which remained in Heine throughout
-his life, the light, airy touch, the intimate personal note, the
-delicate lyric sweetness, and that concision which is found in poetry
-with such extreme rarity.
-
-Let us turn now to the _Reisebilder_. Its most dominant characteristics
-are its inimitable swing and the absolute irresponsibility of its
-transitions. The grave, the gay; the lively, the severe; the sublime,
-the ridiculous; the reverent, the frivolous; the refined, the crude;
-the poetic, the obscene, all jostle pell-mell against each other
-in this most fascinating of literary kaleidoscopes. It is no mere
-guide-book, this record of his wanderings in the Harz, in Norderney, in
-England, and in Italy, but rather a description of those reflections
-on men and things which were suggested by his various adventures. In
-style the _Reisebilder_ marks a new epoch in German prose, or, as has
-been said, showed for the first time since Lessing and Goethe that such
-a thing as German prose really did exist. Heine was the first to show
-convincingly that a Gallic grace and flexibility could be imparted into
-the cumbrous and heavy-footed Teutonic language.
-
-Psychologically the most interesting part of the _Reisebilder_ is the
-fervent Napoleonic worship which, combined with his love of liberty and
-revolt against reaction, largely contributed to mould his life. The
-general tone, moreover, of political, sexual, and religious freedom
-that characterises the latter part of the _Reisebilder_ rendered
-Heine not a little obnoxious to official Germany, not only because of
-the intrinsic heresy of the sentiments themselves, but of the joyous
-rollicking insolence with which they were paraded.
-
-It is small wonder, then, that the Paris July Revolution of 1830 made
-the poet feel "as if he could set the whole ocean up to the very North
-Pole on fire with the red-heat of enthusiasm and mad joy that worked in
-him," and that in the spring of 1831 he migrated finally and definitely
-from Germany to Paris.
-
-This migration to Paris marks the turning-point in Heine's life. His
-career in Germany had throughout been erratic, unsatisfactory, and
-hampered by political restrictions. In Paris he settled down, felt
-that now at last he was in a congenial element, and--found himself.
-It was at Paris that he wrote his most brilliant prose and found
-inspiration for his highest poetry, that he experienced his wildest
-joys and his intensest sufferings. The first ten years of his sojourn
-were probably the happiest in his life. His increased literary and
-journalistic earnings helped to solve the financial problem, while
-socially he was, as always, a pronounced success. He soon found his
-way into the centre of the artistic set of the capital, and was on a
-footing of intimacy with such writers as Lafayette, Balzac, Victor
-Hugo, Georges Sand, Theophile Gautier, Michelet, Dumas, Gerard de
-Nerval, Hector Berlioz, Ludwig Borne, Schlegel, and Humboldt. In
-social life Heine's most characteristic feature was wit--a wit so
-irrepressible as to burst forth impartially on practically all
-occasions, and to resemble that of the Romans of the early Empire,
-who preferred to lose their heads rather than their epigrams. Yet
-in private life he was a devoted son and brother, an ideal husband.
-The correspondence which he maintained up to his death with his
-sister Lotte and his mother show conclusively what stores of German
-_Gemut_ he treasured in his heart. Particularly significant is the
-fact that during the whole eight years in which he languished in his
-mattress-grave he assiduously concealed from his mother the real state
-of his health. Yet none the less "he could hate deeply and grimly
-with an energy which I have never yet met in any other man, but only
-because he could love with equal intensity," writes the poet's friend,
-Meissner. Heine disapproved on principle of swallowing an injury; when
-he was hit, he hit back. Not infrequently, as in his rather scandalous
-attack on Boerne, he would _riposte_ with somewhat superfluous
-efficiency, though according to his own theories it must have been
-after all only a mistake on the safe side.
-
-"Yes," writes Heine, "one must forgive one's enemies, but not until
-they have been hanged."
-
-Heine's quarrel with Boerne originally arose out of the abomination with
-which Boerne, who was Radical to the point of fanaticism, regarded the
-somewhat poetic and elastic Liberalism of his fellow-Jew, and it is
-instructive to enter into an examination of the depth and strength of
-those views which supplied the real motive power which drove him from
-Germany to France. There can be no doubt that Heine himself took his
-Liberalism with perfect seriousness. "In truth I know not," he writes,
-"if I merit that my coffin should be decorated with a laurel wreath.
-However much I loved Poesy, she was ever to me only a holy toy or a
-consecrated means for heavenly ends. It is rather a sword that they
-should lay on my coffin, for I was a brave soldier in the Liberation
-War of Humanity." It should be observed, however, that this Liberal had
-the most aristocratic contempt for the uncultured [Greek: _deimos_],
-as is shown by passages such as the following: "The horny hands of the
-Socialists who will unpityingly break all the marble statues which are
-so dear to my heart"; and, "If Democracy really triumphs, it is all up
-with poetry."
-
-Yet there can be no gainsaying that Heine's political orthodoxy was
-perfectly unimpeachable on that anti-clericalism which has always been
-one of the most cardinal points of Continental Liberalism.
-
-He is rarely tired of tilting at Catholicism, and while he regarded
-ascetic mediaeval Catholicism as the vampire which sucked the blood
-and light out of the hearts of men, he dubbed the modern Catholic
-reactionaries in Germany "the Party of lies, the ruffians of
-Despotism, the restorers of all the folly and abomination of the Past."
-
-Yet, if his beliefs were too wide to admit of the narrowness of a
-consistent partisanship, his enthusiasm was deep and sincere for the
-joy, light, and liberty of a new era that was to sweep away all the
-unhealthy and plaguy humours of that blind, delirious, and anaemic
-mediaevaldom, which, to use his own phrase, has spread over the
-countries like an infectious disease, till Europe was but one huge
-hospital. Politically, in fine, Heine is a brilliant freelance, who,
-too proud to wear the uniform of party, none the less fought valiantly
-for the army of Progress and Humanity, a forlorn outpost in the War of
-Freedom.[1]
-
-Heine's polemical modernity manifested itself most efficiently in
-the _Deutschland_, which, together with its sequel, _The Romantic
-School_, was issued as a counter-blast to Madame de Stael's work of the
-same name. This history of the religion, literature, and philosophy
-of Germany is the masterpiece of Heine's extant prose. An academic
-philosophic treatise, of course, it neither is nor professes to be.
-As a description half-serious, half-flippant, however, of the main
-currents of modern and mediaeval Germany by a writer who sees life from
-the bird's-eye view of the combined poet, journalist, thinker, and man
-of the world, it is unrivalled. It contains some of Heine's loftiest
-and most sublime flights, some of his most brilliant and trenchant
-epigrams.
-
-Particularly happy is the comparison drawn between the furious
-onslaughts made by the French Revolutionists under Robespierre and the
-German philosophers under Kant on respectively the divine rights of
-kings and the divine rights of God.
-
-How delicious is the conclusion of the parallel between the two men:
-"Each eminently represents the ideal middle-class type--Nature had
-decreed that they should weigh out coffee and sugar, but Fate willed
-that they should weigh out other things, and in the scales of the one
-did she lay a King and in the scales of the other a God....
-
-"And they both gave exact weight."
-
-As, however, has been previously pointed out, Heine's chief
-characteristic as a prose writer is that marvellous elasticity which
-can rebound from the frivolous to the sublime with the most consummate
-ease and celerity. Interspersed with the bright flash-light of the
-epigrammatic pyrotechnics lie really great passages, and pieces in
-particular like those on Luther and Goethe possess the clear golden
-ring of the grand style.
-
-Heine's political ideals were subjected to the inevitable
-disillusionment. The Revolution of July, which he had fondly hoped
-would complete the work of the great movement of 1793, merely resulted
-in the anti-climax of the establishment of a bourgeois constitution
-under a bourgeois monarch. He tended to become generally embittered.
-Money matters, too, began to irritate him, and his health to give
-him trouble, and though he found a devoted sick-nurse in Matilde
-Crescenzia Mirat, a grisette whom he married in 1841, the lady with
-whom "he quarrelled daily for six years in that life-long duel at
-the termination of which only one of the combatants would be left
-alive," yet none the less his condition began to deteriorate. "The
-damp cold days and black long nights of his exile" oppressed him, and
-he began to yearn for the old German soil. He gratified his _Heimweh_
-by a flying and surreptitious visit to Germany that inspired the
-well-known _Germany_ or a _Winter Tale_, which, together with the
-somewhat similar _Atta Troll_, constitutes his most sustained poetic
-achievement. These two poems are about as characteristic as anything
-which he wrote. They represent admirably his wild classic Dionysiac
-fantasy, his sudden dips from the most extravagant Romanticism to the
-harsh, crude facts of reality, the marvellous swing and sweep of his
-Aristophanic humour.
-
-Very typical is the following satire on the intimate relation between
-anthropo- and arctomorphism.
-
- "Up above in star-pavilion,
- On his golden throne of lordship,
- Ruling worlds with sway majestic,
- Sits a Polar bear colossal."
-
- "Stainless, snow-white shines the glamour
- Of his skin, his head is wreathed
- With a diadem of diamonds,
- Flashing light through all the heavens."
-
- "Harmony rests in his visage,
- And the silent deeds of thought,
- Just a whit he bends his sceptre,
- And the spheres they ring and sing."
-
-The above quotation shows excellently the essentially poetic quality
-by which Heine's wit is illumined. A satirist as keen and vivid as
-Voltaire, he possesses all the logical aptness of the Frenchman without
-his dryness. His chief characteristic, in fact, is the method by which
-in his imaginative flights he combines the maximum of this logical
-aptness with the maximum of humorous incongruity. No humorist dives
-for his metaphors into stranger water or brings up from the deep more
-bizarre and fantastic gems. A charming example of Heinean humour is
-the following passage from one of his prefaces: "A pious Quaker once
-sacrificed his whole fortune in buying up the most beautiful of the
-mythological pictures of Giulio Romano in order to consign them to the
-flames--verily he merits thereby to go to heaven and be whipped with
-birches regularly every day."
-
-One of the most cardinal traits of Heine's wit and humour is a
-phenomenal freedom of tone and language, a freedom that is occasionally
-not always in the most unimpeachable taste. Heine, in fact, is a
-writer who admits the public gratis to his psychological toilette,
-where he exposes with studied recklessness his most private thoughts.
-This question cuts too deep into Heine's life-outlook to be lightly
-passed over, and necessitates some examination. In the first place
-even Heine's most enthusiastic admirer will admit that a great deal of
-this licence is sheer gaminerie; Heine is the mischievous schoolboy
-of literature who thoroughly revels in being naughty, grimacing by an
-almost mechanical instinct, so soon as he catches a glimpse of the
-sacred figures of religion and sex. Like Baudelaire, he loves, almost
-indeed as a matter of conscientious principle, to make the hairs of
-the philistines stand on end. His one excuse, however, is that even
-when he causes the hairs of the philistines almost to spring from their
-roots, as indeed he does not infrequently, he conducts the operation
-with so light a touch, so exquisite a grace, that the offence is almost
-redeemed. Let him speak in his own defence, in the lines from the great
-Jewish poem, "Jehudah Halevy":
-
- "As in Life so too in poetry
- Grace is aye Man's highest Good;
- Who has grace, he never sinneth
- Not in verse nor e'en in prose."
-
- "And by God's grace such a poet
- Genius we do entitle,
- King supreme and uncontrolled
- In the great desmesne of thought."
-
-Not unnaturally his coarseness grew apace with the virulence of his
-disease, and he himself explains his cause to his friend "La Mouche":
-"Vois-tu c'est la faute de la mort qui arrive a grands pas, et quand
-je la sens ainsi tout pres de moi comme a present j'ai besoin de me
-cramponner la vie ne fut ce par une poutre pourrie." This final phase
-in fact was simply a reaction against his fate, and is not altogether
-without analogy to that same psychological principle which dictated
-much of the crude buffoonery of Swift and Carlyle by way of an heroic
-protest against their own helplessness.
-
-Far more important, however, is the fact that this particular trait
-of Heine is profoundly symbolic of his outlook on life, especially
-where an obscene jest marks the climax of a genuinely poetical flight.
-Circumstance turned him into a cynic, who saw frequently in Liberty but
-the uprising of a squalid proletariate, who heard in the "sweet lies
-of the nightingale, the flatterer of spring," merely the "harbingers
-of the decay of its queenliness," and who beheld in love but a mere
-illusion of the senses that vanishes so soon as the beloved one utters
-a syllable. Held fast in the grip of the great World-paradox, Heine
-is forced to look at life as a glaring phantasmagoria of blacks and
-whites, in which the sublime and the ridiculous, the pathetic and the
-grotesque, the refined and the crude, dance along hand in hand till
-they become so confused that it is impossible for the observer to
-distinguish the individual partners, and he is reduced to describing,
-in pairs, the giddy, whirling couples that make up the fantastic medley.
-
-This incessant antithesis makes Heine one of the most complete of
-modern writers.
-
-The poet's world is composed of two hemispheres: one is the abode of
-the beautiful, the grand, the tragic; the other of the ugly, the petty,
-the comic. Most poets confine their efforts to only a small portion
-of one of these hemispheres. Heine, however, is the Atlas of poetry,
-who supports both of the half-spheres of the world, and who, by way of
-proving how easily his burden sits upon him, suddenly turns juggler,
-and after showing his audience one side of the magic globe, will, _hey
-presto_! whisk the whole world round, and before they know where they
-are smilingly confront them with the other.
-
-In 1848 the spinal affection from which he suffered became so acute
-that Heine was compelled to take to that mattress-grave where,
-paralytic and half-blind and racked intermittently by the most
-agonising spasms, he dragged out the eight most ghastly years of his
-life. At first the death-chamber was one of the favourite rendezvous
-of fashionable Paris, but as the novelty wore off, his circle of
-friends grew narrower and narrower, until eventually a visit from
-Berlioz seemed only the crowning proof of the musician's inveterate
-eccentricity.
-
-Heine, however, rose manfully to the occasion, and did all that
-he could under the circumstances. Always a passionate lover of
-the paradoxical, he now began to appreciate with an intense and
-unprecedented relish the infinite humour of the great Life-farce, one
-of the most effective scenes of which was even now being enacted in the
-person of the poet of _joie de vivre_, who, enduring all the agonies of
-the damned, lay dying in La Rue d'Amsterdam to the quick music of the
-piano on the story underneath, while only a few feet away shone all the
-glow and glitter of Parisian life.
-
-The chief occupation and solace of the dying man was the writing of his
-Memoirs, the great _Apologia pro vita sua_ which was to square his
-accounts with the world, and win for him the future as his own.
-
-Yet at times the greatness of his sufferings would soften his heart.
-He would find in the Bible the magic book which had power to dispel
-his earthly torments; the "_Heimweh_ for heaven" would fall upon him,
-and again would he know his God. It would seem, however, that Heine's
-death-bed reconversion is simply to be regarded as one of the numerous
-instances of the Prince of Darkness exhibiting monastic proclivities
-under the stress of severe physical _malaise_. For eight years Heine
-lay a-dying, and with the skeleton of Death assiduously serving the
-few bitter crumbs that yet remained of his feast of life, he was, as a
-simple matter of pathology, almost bound to believe once more, even if
-he had been the most hardened infidel in existence. Heine, however, was
-no cynical atheist. The current religions, it is true, he considered
-pretty poetry, but bad logic, yet none the less he was genuinely imbued
-with the ethical idea.
-
-"I am too proud," he writes, "to be influenced by greed for the
-heavenly wages of virtue or by fear of hellish torments. I strive after
-the good because it is beautiful and attracts me irresistibly, and I
-abominate the bad because it is hateful and repugnant to me."
-
-What, in fact, served Heine in the stead of a theology was his fervid
-enthusiasm for Progress and Humanity. His real religion was the
-religion of Freedom, the religion of the poor people, the new creed
-of which Jean Rousseau was the John the Baptist and Voltaire the
-chief apostle; Heine's Madonna was the red goddess of Revolution, who
-exacted from her worshippers innumerable hecatombs of human victims;
-the Man-god whom he revered as the Saviour of Society was Napoleon,
-the Son of the Revolution, the drastic reorganiser of the world, who,
-unappreciated by the pharisees and reactionaries of his time, and
-finding his Golgotha on the "martyr-cliffs of St. Helena," endured for
-more than five years all the agonies of a moral crucifixion; while to
-complete our version of the Heinesque theology, his _Heilige Geist_
-was the Holy Spirit of the Human Intellect which he says "is seen in
-its greatest glory in Light and Laughter," and the Revelation which
-inspired him most deeply was, to use once more his own phrase, "the
-sacred mystic Revelation that we name poesy."
-
-It is interesting to trace the influence of these last ghastly years
-on Heine's writings. His almost complete physical prostration brought
-with it its own compensation in the shape of a marvellous psychic
-exaltation, and the _Romanzero_ and the _Poetische Nachlese_ contain
-some of his greatest and most moving poems. Nowhere do we see more
-clearly his most characteristic excellences, his delicacy, his power of
-antithesis, his concision.
-
-It is Heine's compression, in fact, which is one of the most pronounced
-features of his poetic style. The whole quintessence of joy and pain,
-of love and sorrow, is frequently distilled into one short poem. This
-Heinesque condensation is a variant of the same theory that can be
-traced in the old Impressionist school of painters which is concerned
-with the outline and the proper light and shading of the outline to the
-exclusion of minor details, and in the journalistic cult of the "story"
-in which the ideal aimed at is "the point, the whole point, and nothing
-but the point." Heine, in fact, is unique among the poets for narrating
-a tale with the minimum of space and the maximum of effect, for
-narrating it in such a way that each line serves to heighten the level
-of intensity, till at length the edifice is crowned by the climax. This
-feature of his style is well illustrated by the end of the frequently
-quoted poem, "The Asra," in the _Romanzero_:
-
- "And the slave spake, I am called
- Mohammed, I am from Yemen,
- And my stock is from those Asras,
- _They who die whene'er they love_."
-
-Though, moreover, he protested to the last against his fate, his tone
-in the _Romanzero_ and the earlier _Poetische Nachlese_ is more mellow
-than in his earlier writings. His cry from the heart is not the cry
-of defiance but rather of the pathetic wistfulness of impotence. Yet
-before the candle of his life became extinguished it leapt up in one
-final flicker, the most marvellous of all. A characteristic caprice
-of fate made him acquainted during the last months of his life with
-his one true soul-affinity, the charming woman who is known under the
-pseudonym of Camille Selden or La Mouche.
-
-Is it then to be wondered at that when the rich feast of a perfect
-love, for which he had craved Tantalus-like all his life, was offered
-to him almost at the very minute that his lips were being sealed
-by the cold kiss of death, the whole soul of the man should leap
-up in indignant protest, and that such poems as "Lass die heiligen
-Parabolen," and the even more wonderful series of stanzas with the
-refrain, "O schoene Welt du bist abscheulich," should exhibit the cold
-insolent shrug of the man convinced of the righteousness of his plea
-that of all the places in the universe this human earth "where the just
-man drags himself along beneath the blood-stained burden of his cross,
-while the wicked man rides in triumph on his high steed," is the most
-iniquitous?
-
-Heine died at four o'clock in the morning of February 17, 1856. He was
-buried by his own directions in Montmartre, "in order to avoid being
-disturbed by the crowd and bustle of Pere Lachaise."
-
-His writings form an incessant stream of paradoxes, but his life is the
-greatest paradox of all. The prophet of the new religion of liberty, he
-was repudiated by his country, and his happiest days were spent in the
-land of exile; throughout his life he sought for love, to live years
-of the most healthy prosaic domesticity with his mistress, and to find
-his one true romance on his death-bed; he imagined that he was a great
-political force, but it is rather as a poet that he survives; as a poet
-his chief theme was the Joy and Light of Life, and he drew his truest
-inspiration from the darkest depths of his agony; even as a great
-writer he has been chiefly known by the comparatively inferior _Book
-of Songs_ and _Reisebilder,_ while his masterpiece, the _Memoirs_, the
-great highly barbed Parthian arrow shot from the grave to transfix his
-enemies for all eternity, lay mouldering for many years amid the dusty
-archives of the Vienna Library.
-
-His message, too, the core and kernel of his philosophy, is again
-a paradox. To the sphinx-like riddle with which every thinker is
-confronted, "Is Life poetry or prose, tragedy or farce?" Heine made
-answer that the pathos and poetry of life were contained in the fact
-that life was so essentially grim and unpoetical, and that the real
-tragedy of the world lay in the ghastly farce of it all.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: _Cf._ the poem "Enfant perdu," beginning "Verlorner Posten
-in dem Freiheits Kriege."]
-
-
-
-
-THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DISRAELI
-
-
-The recent centenary of the birth of Benjamin Disraeli renewed our
-interest in the most striking figure in the English history of the last
-century. Throughout his life Disraeli made it an important part of his
-_metier_ to be interesting, and it is certainly a convincing proof
-both of his great natural fascination and of the adroitness with which
-he worked his pose, that even beyond the grave his character should
-still exercise our curiosity and blind us with the various facets of
-its brilliancy. He fairly bristles with paradoxes, this cynic, who
-was also a sentimentalist, this Oriental mystic, who was one of the
-most finished dandies in London, this shameless adventurer, with his
-pathetic and chivalrous devotion to his sovereign, this political
-Don Juan, who provided a classic example of conjugal affection.
-Many have essayed to solve the riddle of the "Primrose Sphinx"; but
-the best testimony to their almost universal failure is that nearly
-every biographer has produced a completely different version of his
-character. Mr. Hitchman, "one of the helpless, somnambulised cattle
-whom he led by the nose," to use Carlyle's phrase, portrays him
-(in _The Public Life of the late Lord Beaconsfield_) with charming
-_naivete_ as the "disinterested and patriotic statesman." Mr. T. P.
-O'Connor, on the other hand, who, when still sowing his literary
-wild oats, painted Disraeli even blacker than the Prince of Darkness
-himself, in a book unworthy of any serious biographer, simply
-overshoots the mark. Froude, in his _Life_, comes nearer to the truth,
-but is hampered by being forced to compress the history of a crowded
-life and the psychology of a complex character into a narrow and
-inadequate compass. Both Froude, however, and Mr. Sichel, who has given
-us an interesting volume on Disraeli's personality, lay too much stress
-on his imaginative and idealistic features.
-
-The reason for this inability to comprehend a character, in many
-respects singularly typical of his age, lies not so much in the
-alleged inadequacy of the materials as in the incapacity of most
-English writers for handling general ideas. The English mind is too
-concrete for social psychology; it delights in the almost mechanical
-work of classifying animals, but fails to produce any classification
-of characters worth the name. The Disraeli problem is admittedly
-difficult; the secrecy which until recently kept us from all knowledge
-of the greater portion of his papers and correspondence is undoubtedly
-a handicap, but the difficulty is by no means insuperable, nor the
-material so scanty as is usually supposed. Let us take Disraeli in
-relation to his age, his environment, his ancestry, then what would
-otherwise have struck us as strange, not to say impossible, stands out
-clear and inevitable. Another valuable source of information is to be
-found in his novels, though it is always difficult to discriminate
-between what is and what is not autobiographical in these works.
-
-A vigorous and imaginative mind, when writing about its own history,
-will naturally not stint itself in its licences; it will abandon
-itself to all kinds of hypotheses; it will take a certain phase of
-itself, frame circumstances to suit its development, and proceed on the
-fictitious assumption; it will indulge freely both in caricature and
-idealisation. In _Vivian Grey_, for instance, Disraeli has slightly
-exaggerated the more cynical side of his nature; _Sidonia_, on the
-other hand, is an idealised version of Disraeli; it is Disraeli raised
-to a higher power; it is what he would have liked to have been, but
-was not, any more than the actual Byron was as brave, as romantic, and
-as fascinating as the ideal Byron who is portrayed in _Conrad, Childe
-Harold_, and _Don Juan_.
-
-Yet, none the less, _Sidonia, Fakredeen, Vivian Grey,_ and _Contarini
-Fleming_ possess a strong family likeness, and strike a genuine
-autobiographical note. With regard to the two latter, Mr. Sichel, in
-his study of Disraeli, is unwarranted in his attempted depreciation of
-their evidence, on the theory that they represent merely a distorted
-and transient phase of Disraeli's development, to be ascribed to
-ill-health and immaturity. On the contrary, the contortions of great
-men in adolescence are peculiarly instructive. It is then that the
-very elements of the future man are fermenting in the crucible; and
-is not growth more significant than maturity? It is not a paradox,
-but a fundamental truth, to say that a man is never more himself than
-when he is not himself; it is in periods of violent upheaval that the
-conventional superstructure is destroyed and the innermost foundations
-of character are laid bare. It is far easier to tone down than to touch
-up, and the unrestrained sincerity of these early novels, written under
-the impetus of intense emotion, throws far more light on Disraeli's
-real character than a book like _Endymion_, the official pronouncement
-of his maturer years. A prudent use, then, of the novels, and an
-examination of his relations to his age, environment, and ancestry
-should enable us to construct a psychology of Disraeli that should be
-at once convincing and consistent, and adequate to shed light on many
-of the obscure points of his character.
-
-The _Sturm und Drang_ age of the Revolution in which Disraeli was
-born marked the passing of Europe from childhood to manhood, from
-mediaevalism to modernity. Like all transition periods, it was
-peculiarly complex; the tendencies being so varied, and were so
-frequently accompanied by the reactions against themselves, that it
-requires considerable care to disentangle the principal threads.
-
-It was an age of progress where reaction was frequently to be seen at
-work; it was an age significant for a violent outburst of scientific
-materialism, and the consequently inevitable mysticism of a religious
-revival. It was an age at once scientific and romantic, individual
-and cosmopolitan. It was an age where circumstances produced strange
-mixtures, so that in England we are brought face to face with the
-paradox that Gladstone, the founder of democratic idealism, obtained
-his seat under the old system of close boroughs, while Disraeli, the
-most brilliant example of the new democratic theory of _la carriere
-ouverte aux talentes_, found his way to power as the head of the
-aristocratic and conservative party. The predominant note, however, was
-one of democratic individualism. With the French Revolution the yoke
-of responsibility, political and religious, was violently thrown off;
-new and wide fields had been opened out to commerce by the extended
-communications and the new mechanical inventions. A quickened life
-broke in upon the lethargy of the previous century. The struggle for
-existence entered on a sharper and intenser phase. Ambitious men
-vehemently dashed themselves against the social barrier, which day by
-day became more easy to climb. In every department it was the age of
-the clever and ambitious parvenu. In war and in politics Napoleon, in
-poetry Burns, in fiction Balzac, give convincing testimony to the power
-of the new regime. It was the age of the French Revolution and of the
-Holy Alliance, of Condillac and of Chateaubriand, of Laplace and of
-Shelley, of Godwin and of Tom Paine.
-
-But equality is a medal with two faces: on the one side is written,
-"I am as good as, if not better than, everyone else"; on the other,
-"Everyone else is as good as, if not better than, myself." The first
-was the motto of the rampant individualism and vigorous national
-policy of Disraeli, the latter of the hesitating Christian spirit
-and sentimental cosmopolitanism of Gladstone. Gladstone, indeed, is
-such an excellent foil to Disraeli that we may well be permitted the
-following quotations, where the rift in Gladstone's lute, between
-the churchman and the politician, stands in pointed contrast to the
-unity of purpose that from his earliest years actuated his rival.
-Gladstone, torn between his missionary impulse and yearning for
-apostolic destination on the one hand, and healthy ambition on the
-other, writes to his father: "I am willing to persuade myself that in
-spite of other longings, which I often feel, my heart is prepared to
-yield other hopes and other desires for this: of being permitted to
-be the humblest of those who may be commissioned to set before the
-eyes of man the magnanimity and glory of Christian truth. Politics are
-fascinating to me, perhaps too fascinating. My temper is so excitable
-that I should fear giving up my mind to other subjects, which have ever
-proved sufficiently alluring to me, and which I fear would make my life
-a series of unsatisfied longings and expectations." Disraeli is less
-undecided, as is clear from the following quotation from _Contarini
-Fleming_: "I should have killed myself if I had not been supported by
-my ambition, which now each day became more quickening, so that the
-desire of distinction and of astounding action raged in my soul, and
-when I realised that so many years must elapse before I could realise
-my ideal, I gnashed my teeth in silent rage and cursed my existence,"
-Disraeli will give up anything rather than his chance of being a great
-man. At a time when most clever young men of his age were thinking of a
-scholarship he had finally decided to go in for a premiership. He has
-planned his campaign, he will fool the world to the top of its bent.
-When yet a boy Disraeli says, as Vivian Grey: "We must mix with the
-herd, we must sympathise with the sorrow that we do not feel and share
-the merriment of fools. To rule men we must be men, to prove that we
-are strong we must be weak. Our wisdom must be concealed under folly,
-our constancy under caprice."
-
-None the less, Disraeli had too vivid an imagination, too keen a
-sense of the picturesque, not to be affected to a certain extent
-by the current Romanticism. We see this in the Eastern novels of
-_Tancred_ and _Alroy_, also in _Contarini Fleming_, the English
-Wilhelm Meister, which exhibits the weaker and more morbid side of the
-author's character, and is a useful supplement to Vivian Grey. But it
-is the latter, however, who represents most accurately the ideals and
-aspirations of the young Disraeli, and, taken generally, is a broad
-adumbration of his subsequent career. But the Disraeli of Vivian Grey
-was not so unique as is usually considered, and an analogy between
-him and the celebrated Frenchman, who wrote a novel about the same
-period, and one, moreover, singularly typical of his age, proves
-instructive. Benjamin Disraeli and Henri Beyle were in all superficial
-details so absolutely different that one might well hesitate before
-making the comparison, yet they were radically similar in many of their
-larger outlines, and in particular their characters, as revealed in
-the heroes of two novels, _Vivian Grey_ and _Le Rouge et le Noir_,
-show an extraordinary resemblance. Both Julien Sorel and Vivian Grey
-are impelled by a violent and overwhelming ambition; both, originally
-excluded by their status from participation in the great prizes of the
-world, set out undaunted to conquer, the one as a priest, the other as
-a politician. Cynical, with that extreme and savage species of cynicism
-which is the reaction from intense sensitiveness, they both wage war
-on society in their passion for success, while the nobler and more
-generous instincts with which nature had endowed them perish in the
-struggle.
-
-But this Time-Spirit of individualism was no mere cold-blooded
-philosophy of egoism. It was, after all, an age of genuine poetry, of
-fresh ideals. The halo of romance played around the most abandoned
-sinners. Individualism found, in addition, an aesthetic sanction, as
-was seen in the prodigious vogue of Byron, where the picturesque pose
-of the one man pitted against society appealed strongly to the popular
-imagination. How deeply Disraeli was imbued with Byronism is evidenced
-not only by the whole tone and manner of his early life, but by his
-resuscitation of the Byronic legend in _Venetia_.
-
-This spirit of combined idealism and intense practical energy is met
-with again in Disraeli's race and ancestry. The Jewish race is a
-compound of materialism and idealism. The Jew is the dreamer in action,
-combining fluid imagination with adamantine purpose. These two phases
-of the Jewish character are seen excellently in Disraeli's father and
-paternal grandfather. The latter, an Italian Jew, came over to England
-about the middle of the eighteenth century, and quickly made a fortune
-by dint of his shrewd business talent and fixity. His son Isaac was
-gifted with an unfortunate superfluity of the poetic temperament. His
-youth was erratic and unhappy, but when close on thirty he found a
-secure refuge in the quiet waters of literature. To his Semitic blood
-is also to be traced Disraeli's prodigious tenacity of purpose. He
-came of a stiff-necked people, so that opposition stimulated him, and
-his early failures served but to render sweeter his eventual success.
-He had, too, the calculating foresight of the Jew, and could pierce
-the future, if not with prophetic vision, at any rate, with marvellous
-intuition. His Oriental strain of mysticism served him in good stead.
-He never forgot that he was a scion of the Chosen People, and came of
-a race which had never sullied its purity of lineage by changing its
-blood. Was he not the chosen man of the chosen race? Could he not read
-his future, if not in the stars, "which are the brain of heaven," yet
-in his own brilliant and meteoric brain? He had a full measure of the
-pride of race, and plumed himself to the last on what he may well have
-called "the Oriental ichor in his veins." If his enemies dubbed him a
-parvenu he would fling the wretched taunt back in their faces, bidding
-them realise that they came from a parvenu and hybrid race, while he
-himself was sprung from the purest blood in Europe. How keen was this
-genealogical Judaism we can see from the classic letter to O'Connell,
-where he wrote that "the hereditary bondsman had forgotten the clank of
-his fetters," and from his masterpiece of character-drawing, Sidonia,
-who, with wealth, intellect, and power at his command, yet found his
-chief "source of interest in his descent and in the fortunes of his
-race." Disraeli's Judaism, however, did not extend to the religious
-tenets of the creed. Few, no doubt, are the instances of a converted
-Jew proving a genuine Christian, but Disraeli had too much of the
-mystic in him to be an atheist, and if we take into account the
-elasticity of his imagination, there is little reason to doubt that he
-was at any rate reasonably sincere in his belief that Christianity was
-merely completed Judaism, Calvary but the logical corollary of Sinai;
-he would also, no doubt, find a malicious joy in reminding those who
-taunted him with his origin, that "one half of Christendom worships
-a Jew and the other half a Jewess." Anyway, the Christian religion
-played nothing approaching an integral part in his life; while an
-amiable acquiescence in its dogmas was, at the best, as it has been
-with so many, but an intellectual habit. His Jewish origin helped him,
-moreover, in that he approached the problems of politics with a mind
-free from conventional British prejudices. He was never a thorough
-Englishman, and was proud of the fact, instead of thanking God "that he
-was born an Englishman," as do many of his race, who betray in their
-every word and action their Jewish nationality. His admirable expert
-knowledge of the English character was throughout professional, not
-sympathetic.
-
-When we turn to Disraeli's early environment, we find that it was one
-calculated to foster both ambition and a literary imagination. He
-breathed from his earliest days the atmosphere of books, and almost
-from the cradle imbibed avidly the many volumes of Voltaire. Nothing
-is so stimulating to the youthful mind as the unchecked run of a
-library, with its delightful excursions into the unexplored country of
-literature. His natural sensitiveness was hardened by his experiences
-at school, where his nationality and cleverness rendered him unpopular.
-The reaction intensified his already precocious ambition, and gave him
-that consciousness of semi-isolation which formed one of the chief
-parts of his strength. His ambition was further heightened by the smart
-literary set which he met constantly at his father's house, and his
-early glimpses of the great world. Disraeli is palpably exaggerating
-when he says, _apropos_ of Vivian Grey, that "he was a tender plant in
-a moral hot-house," but the following passage is significant:
-
- "He became habituated to the idea that everything could
- be achieved by dexterity, that there was no test of
- conduct except success; to be ready to advance any
- opinion, to possess none; to look upon every man as a
- tool, and never to do anything which had not a definite
- though circuitous purpose."
-
-It is this trait of doing things with an object which supplied the true
-clue to Disraeli as a man of letters. We admit, of course, the _verve_
-and brilliancy of the novels, their claim to rank as classic, but it is
-impossible to arrive at a correct appreciation of them unless they be
-taken in the closest conjunction with their author's political career.
-_Vivian Grey_, for instance, no doubt afforded an excellent outlet for
-the fermenting passion of Disraeli's youth; it was itself one of the
-best society novels ever written, but it was something more. Before
-that time the future Premier had been hiding his light. How could
-he obtain a free field for the exercise of his gifts? His father's
-Bohemian clique scarcely answered his purpose. How could he burst open
-the doors of society? The bombshell was supplied by _Vivian Grey_. It
-was a case of self-advertisement raised to the level of a fine art, and
-Disraeli introduced himself to the public with a bow of most elaborate
-flourishes. _Contarini Fleming_ strikes a slightly different note,
-exhibiting the more poetic side of its author's character; but we must
-not forget that at the time when it was published Disraeli's long
-absence in the East had temporarily obscured his fame in London, and
-that it was the success of _Contarini Fleming_ which secured for him
-once more the _entree_ into society. Similarly, _Coningsby, Sybil_,
-and _Tancred_ were, in the main, but the gospels in which, in the role
-of a political saviour, he propagated the new creed of Young England.
-_Lothair_ and _Endymion_ were partly written to replenish his empty
-exchequer. The protagonists, moreover, in all his chief novels were
-fashioned in the image of himself, and even Lord Cadurcis in _Venetia_,
-who is theoretically Byron, is portrayed with the physical features of
-the author, so as to ensure a vivid impression on the public mind of
-his own personality. Not that Disraeli did not experience a genuine
-joy in the wielding of the pen. He could soar high in his flights of
-mysticism and romance; could describe the picturesque and the beautiful
-in passages of inspired rhetoric, though it was in the dash and
-brilliancy of his satire which at its best equalled that of Heine, or
-Voltaire, or Byron, that he was most himself. His style is redolent of
-his race. It possesses the genuine Oriental glamour, the Oriental love
-of gorgeous and grandiose magnificence, the Oriental lack of symmetry
-and proportion. His prodigious genius for sarcasm was also Semitic,
-if we are to believe Mr. Bryce, who considers that gift a peculiar
-property of the race, instancing, as examples, Lucian and Heine, the
-greatest satirists of ancient and modern times.
-
-This same combination of temperament and policy which explains
-Disraeli, the man of letters, explains Disraeli, the dandy. Living
-as he did in an age which revolted, under the leadership of Count
-D'Orsay, against the chaste and classic traditions of Brummel,
-and which offered in the elaborate picturesqueness of its dress an
-excellent medium for the expression of personality, is it to be
-wondered at that so ambitious a nature as Disraeli's should, apart
-from other reasons, enter gaily into the sartorial arena? These early
-years remind us of Alcibiades, who, in his youth, his genius, his
-precocious political ambitions, his aristocratic lineage and superb
-insolence, his extravagance and irresponsibility, offers a fairly close
-analogy. Disraeli, however, was an Alcibiades with ballast, and his
-most erratic phases were governed by a consistent purpose. He had,
-it is true, the regular Hebrew love for the picturesque, the racial
-craving for flamboyant display; but the unique characteristic of the
-man was the ingenious method by which he exploited even his weaknesses
-to advance his purpose. Realising that nothing was more fatal to his
-career than the indifference of the public, that to be hated was better
-than to be ignored, and that notoriety was a passable substitute for
-fame, he was determined to bulk largely in the public eye. Living,
-fortunately, in an age when dandyism, if not an art, was at any rate
-a career, and when "wild, melancholy men" were still the rage among
-the ladies, he manipulated the dandy and Byronic pose with phenomenal
-success. But his social career was not all pose. Though political
-ambition was to him always the main point of existence, he was far too
-healthy to lose sight of the small change of life. He had, moreover,
-a genuine love of society. His remark _apropos_ of Gladstone, "What
-can we do with a leader who is not even in society?" was sincere in
-spite of being an epigram, and the hosts of great ladies who crowd his
-novels attest conclusively to his social fastidiousness. But the most
-convincing proof of this lighter side of his nature is to be found in
-his correspondence with his sister. Those letters, dashed off hurriedly
-to his "dearest Sa," written with that complete lack of ceremony which
-is the sign of a perfect intimacy, show with what zest he frequented
-balls and water-parties, dinners and _soirees_. Yet his ambition is
-never far in the background. He goes to the House of Commons, hears the
-big man speak, and then writes to his sister, "But between ourselves I
-could floor them all." His genius for conversation is historic, and we
-are not surprised that he considered that the one unforgivable sin was
-to be a bore. He had not, it is true, Gladstone's habit of unburdening
-himself freely to the most casual of acquaintances. How many, indeed,
-were there of his intimates who had penetrated into the secret places
-of his heart? But over-much sincerity is a hindrance to the art of
-conversation; and many of his most brilliant paradoxes were thrown off
-as an evasive retort to an impertinent question. When, however, we come
-to Disraeli's social and private life, the most interesting question
-that presents itself is that of his relation to his wife. Even though
-he had discoursed in _Contarini Fleming_ of the grand passion with all
-the high-flown sentimentalism of the age, it was obviously impossible
-for him, considering the disparity of their ages, to be seriously in
-love with Mrs. Disraeli; and it must have seemed that he had been
-forced to exchange the poetry of the mistress for the prose of the
-wife. Had he not, about ten years before his marriage, written to his
-sister, "How would you like Lady B---- for a sister-in-law? Clever,
-L25,000, and domestic. As for love, all my friends who have married for
-love either beat their wives or live apart from them. This is literally
-true. I may commit many follies, but never that of marrying for love,
-which, I am convinced, cannot but be a guarantee of infelicity." Yet
-this union, based originally on mere policy and camaraderie, was
-eventually crowned with the most faithful of loves. It was his wife's
-absorbing interest in his career that supplied the link. He has himself
-written that the most exquisite moment in a man's life was when he
-surprised his lady-love reading the manuscript of his first speech, and
-the sympathy of Mrs. Disraeli in his successes may well have given them
-a yet further charm. The situation is well expressed in the remark of
-Mrs. Disraeli's: "You know you married me for money, and I know that if
-you had to do it again you would do it for love."
-
-In fact the warm and constant affection Disraeli lavished on his wife
-during her lifetime, and the poignant grief that he evinced at her
-death, furnish a more than sufficient refutation to those who persist
-in regarding him as a mere cynical fortune-hunter. Disraeli, like
-Browning, had
-
- "Two soul sides, one to face the world with,
- One to show a woman when he loves her."
-
-In the other departments of private life he was likewise exemplary.
-His hardness was limited to politics; he was the most dutiful of sons,
-the most affectionate of brothers, the most faithful of friends. His
-debts, for the most part, were incurred by backing the bills of other
-men. His touching and romantic friendship for Mrs. Brydges Williams,
-the eccentric old Cornish lady who gave him pecuniary assistance at a
-critical period of his career, is well known. The story, again, of the
-Premier and his wife dancing a Highland jig in their night apparel on
-hearing of the success of an old friend, shows how little the bitter
-struggles of politics had hardened his heart. Particularly touching,
-also, is the mutual affection between him and the Queen, that
-sweetened his last years. She was, as we read in a letter of Disraeli's
-to the Marchioness of Ely, "the best friend he had in the world."
-
-But Disraeli, though he fulfilled himself in many ways, was first
-of all a politician, and it is Disraeli the politician rather than
-Disraeli the man of letters, the dandy, or the human being, that
-principally provokes our interest. What were his real views on
-politics? How far can we distinguish between the official edition of
-himself which he displayed for public inspection and the original that
-he alone could read? Given his policy, how far was it justifiable, how
-far rational? The view of his most devoted, but yet in reality, quite
-unappreciative, admirers, that throughout a political career of over
-half a century he remained consistently and absolutely faithful to his
-original ideals, and that he introduced into politics an integrity and
-disinterestedness that Parliament had rarely witnessed, is even more
-absurd than the opinion of his blind and malignant enemies that he
-was a mere charlatan who juggled with parties and the people without
-possessing a single genuine political faith of his own. Disraeli, as
-was inevitable in a man of so detached and unprejudiced a nature,
-simply took the then party system at its true worth, and, of course,
-realised from the outset that before he could do anything worth
-doing he must first obtain that power which alone could give him the
-opportunity of doing it. His attack on Peel was, _prima facie_, an
-occasion that it would have been the depth of folly to have missed, and
-Mr. Birrell's statement that Disraeli "ate his peck of dirt," and his
-comparison of him to Casanova, is mere petulance. For these preliminary
-stages of the higher politics Disraeli was admirably fitted, and the
-following autobiographic passages from _Tancred_ show how congenial
-were his Herculean labours: "To be the centre of a maze of manoeuvres
-was his empyrean, and while he recognised in them the best means of
-success he found in their exercise a means of constant delight"; and
-again, "'Intrigue,' cried the young prince, using, as was his custom, a
-superfluity of expression both of voice and hand and eyes, 'intrigue,
-it is life, it is the only thing. If you wish to produce a result
-you must make a combination, and you call combination intrigue.'"
-Disraeli viewed party politics from the dispassionate standpoint of
-a chess-player, "playing off the proud peers like pawns," skilfully
-manoeuvring his knights and bishops beneath the shadow of the old
-mediaeval castles, though it was "in his masterly manipulation of his
-queen" that he really surpassed himself. What a contrast to Gladstone's
-youthful frame of mind, who entered politics because he felt a strong
-moral duty to defend that Church which he was afterwards partly to
-disestablish against the insidious attacks of philosophic Radicalism.
-But Disraeli's point of view was, after all, merely that which was
-obvious and rational. It is well known that in Disraeli's day the whole
-efficiency of the party system as a means of carrying on the government
-was based on that sagacious inconsistency, so characteristic of this
-country, which, cheerfully accommodating the most untractable of facts
-to the most docile of theories, drew between the two parties no clear
-dividing line either of principle or of class. Those genuine lines
-of cleavage both of policy and interest that now tend to become more
-and more clearly marked did not then exist. The only vital political
-distinction then existing in England was that between the Ins and the
-Outs. Whigs and Tories were, in their origin, merely the names for the
-two rival organisations for the pursuit of political power into which
-the oligarchy of the time had divided itself, and the party catch-words
-then indicated as much essential difference as the badges by which the
-two sides of a "scratch" game symbolise a fictitious distinction.
-
-Particularly interesting is the following quotation from a letter of
-Gladstone, written comparatively early in his career, which shows
-convincingly that the subsequent democratic idealist fully realised
-the intrinsic farce of the then party system: "Each of them, the Whig
-and the Tory Party, comprises within itself far greater divergencies
-than can be noticed as dividing the more moderate portion of the one
-from the more moderate portion of the other. The great English parties
-differ no more in their general outlines than by a somewhat different
-distribution of the same elements in each." It is impossible for
-the opportunist position to be more cogently stated. It is, indeed,
-a strange paradox that political integrity should be traditionally
-associated with the name of Gladstone, who accomplished more than any
-other of our statesmen in changing statesmanship into demagogy. His
-pronouncedly religious temperament, however, led to extraordinary
-results, and his psychological condition was best expressed in the
-well-known epigram that "he followed his conscience in the same manner
-that the driver of a gig follows the horse." It was not that he was
-deliberately insincere. He could deceive himself as well as others
-with his ingenious sophisms. His sincerity was merely so elastic,
-his enthusiasm so adaptable, that he found it easy to be sincere and
-enthusiastic, _inter alia_, about those things which coincided with his
-interests.
-
-Carlyle hits the mark in dubbing Gladstone a deeper and unconscious
-juggler as contrasted with Disraeli, the clever, conscious juggler. The
-latter, at any rate, played the game straight with himself. He did not,
-like his rival, have recourse to super-natural inspiration for every
-argument that dropped from his specious lips, or degrade his deity into
-a veritable _deus ex machina_, whose function it was to sanction the
-most elementary dictates of Parliamentary tactics.
-
-Yet, though he exhibited a prudent elasticity in his handling of the
-minor details of party politics, in the main outlines of his policy
-he remained consistent and true to himself throughout his career. The
-romantic strain in his temperament rendered him congenitally opposed to
-the cut and dried utilitarianism of the Whigs. The renovated Toryism
-of New England, for which he was largely responsible, though to a
-great extent merely a move in the game, is deeply stamped with the
-impress of his own nature. That his bias was naturally aristocratic no
-one can doubt who has read the passage in _The Revolutionary Epicke_
-on Equality, or has appreciated the tone of personal superiority
-and contempt for the mediocre that pervades all his writings. His
-Conservatism, however, was not the orthodox Conservatism of the Eldon
-school, "the barren mule of politics which engenders nothing," to
-use his own phrase, but a more picturesque and practical policy. He
-poured successfully the new wine of Democracy into the old bottles
-of Toryism, and thus, while no doubt indulging the more romantic
-side of his nature, placed, his party on a more modern and workable
-basis. Disraeli's policy, in fact, was always one of sane and rational
-opportunism. In the same way that Gambetta, the exponent of French
-Opportunism, opposed "a policy of results to the policy of chimeras"
-of the reactionaries, Disraeli opposed to Gladstone's dangerous and
-visionary ideals a policy that was at once feasible and salutary.
-Disraeli invariably treated England as a definite country with a
-definite personality of its own, requiring individual attention and
-delicate handling, while Gladstone regarded her as a mere _tabula rasa_
-on which the latest new-fangled doctrines could be easily imprinted.
-Precisely the same spirit induced Gladstone to treat the Queen as a
-department of State and Disraeli to treat her as a woman. In home
-politics he has grasped well that transition from feudal to federal
-principles which was the keynote of the last century politics. His
-detractors object that no great measures stand identified with his
-name; but here the fates were against him. It was a cruel paradox
-that when at last he obtained an untrammelled power he was too old
-and jaded to initiate any new creative measure in domestic affairs.
-I quote Mrs. Disraeli: "You don't know my Dizzy; what great plans he
-has long matured for the good and greatness of England. But they have
-made him wait and drudge so long, and now time is against him." In his
-foreign policy, however, he displayed his characteristic combination
-of practical and imaginative strength. In the same spirit in which
-he himself had obtained the foremost place in England, he desired
-that England should acquire the foremost rank among the nations;
-while, as is shown by his Imperial policy, he infused something of
-his own picturesqueness into the policy of the most prosaic Power in
-Europe. His Indian policy, in particular, proves with what practical
-imagination he had divined how much lay in a name, and that to the
-feudatory princes it meant all the difference whether they paid their
-allegiance to the Queen of England or to the Empress of India.
-
-Disraeli's master-passion was ambition. But he was no monomaniac like
-Napoleon. In the same way that Sidonia, the complete and perfect man,
-according to Disraeli, played with a master-hand on the whole gamut
-of life, so did Disraeli, though in a lesser scale, live largely and
-fully. He lived in the solitudes of the Arabian deserts and in the
-crowded drawing-rooms of St. James's; in the halls of Westminster and
-the shady quietude of Bradenham; in the privacy of his own study, and
-in the historic chambers of Downing Street. To few men has it been
-given to express themselves in so many different ways. What matter if
-his feats of statesmanship were restricted by the limitations of the
-Parliamentary system and the handicap of his own failing health? To
-such a nature the joy of life lay rather in the winning than in the
-using of the prize. It is the romance and character of the man that
-perpetuate his memory rather than his political achievements. He lives
-as a great career. When yet a boy he had mapped out his future, and he
-realised his ambition in every detail. By sheer force of intellect and
-determination he lifted himself from the Ghetto to the highest position
-in England. As he himself said, in one of Mrs. Craigie's novels: "Many
-men have talent; few have genius; fewer still have character."
-
-
-
-
-THE GENEALOGY OF MORALS
-
-
-I
-
-_The Genealogy of Morals: a Polemic_! Nietzsche was well advised to
-append the word "polemic" to his title, for it supplies the key to
-his whole position. To some extent, no doubt, the "Genealogy" may be
-the expression in more philosophic language of those ideas, which
-find in Zarathustra their poetic and almost biblical formulation. Yet
-philosopher though he may be, Nietzsche is no abstract thinker sitting
-down stolidly on some icy height to solve the riddle of the universe,
-whatever it may be, by the rigid rules of abstract logic, so that he
-may placidly present the solution to such members of the public as
-happen to be interested in metaphysics. On the contrary his mind, and
-even more truly his temperament, are made up from the outset. Certain
-ideas grip him so tensely, and for him, at any rate, constitute so
-fiery and omnipresent a reality, as to be from his standpoint things
-transcending the mere cavillings of logicians and scientists.
-
-"You ask me why," says Zarathustra, "but I say unto you I am not one of
-those whom one may ask their why."
-
-The same idea is more technically expressed in the preface to the
-Genealogy--"that new immoral, or at least, 'amoral' _a priori_, and
-that 'categorical imperative,' which was its voice (but, oh I how
-hostile to the Kantian article, and how pregnant with problems), to
-which since then I have given more and more obedience (and, indeed,
-what is more than obedience)." For, startling though it may seem to
-the orthodox, albeit acceptable enough to the acolytes of the new
-faith, the fact stands out irresistibly, that all the later writings of
-Nietzsche are saturated through and through with the religious spirit.
-
-For Nietzsche was inspired with as supreme a consciousness of the
-infallibility and paramount necessity of his message, as rigid a belief
-in exclusive salvation through his own teachings, as has overwhelmed
-the brain of any prophet or Messiah known to human history. "I have
-given mankind the deepest book it possesses," writes Nietzsche to
-Brandes, and means it quite deliberately and quite literally. The
-content, indeed, of the religion of this converse Christ may be
-diametrically opposed to that of the original, but the machinery is the
-same. With the same exalted spirit in which Jesus preached the kingdom
-of heaven, so did Nietzsche preach the kingdom of this earth, while it
-may be noted incidentally that both kingdoms were the perquisites of
-a select few; and as the spurned god of Israel taught self-abasement
-to the weak with an intensity that, rightly or wrongly, seems a little
-extravagant to our modern taste, so does Nietzsche, and with every whit
-as honest a fanaticism, thunder forth to the strong the sublime dogma
-of self-expression and self-glorification. Turn, in fact, the doctrines
-of Christianity upside down, but leave constant the missionary
-enthusiasm of its founder, his chronic fits of extreme depression and
-extreme exaltation, and you have the quintessence of Nietzsche.
-
-As, however, it is the boast of all religions that they are beyond the
-realms of exact logic and empirical science, it would be as unfair
-to look in our prophet's polemic for the mathematical accuracy of a
-Euclidian proposition, as it would be to search for such accuracy amid
-the many grandiose and tragic thoughts that loom over the invectives of
-Isaiah, Jesus, and Jeremiah.
-
-Not, indeed, but what there are many new, swift, and illuminating
-truths in our philosopher's gospel, just as there were in the
-pronouncements of his afore-said Hebrew brethren. But the essence, the
-_raison d'etre_ of the whole book is purely polemical. Nietzsche is out
-to kill, and so long as his weapons effectually subserve that object,
-he is, and quite logically, indifferent to aught else.
-
-Before, however, we analyse in detail the philosophy of this book, it
-is advisable to adjust our sights to those particular targets on which
-Nietzsche trained his gigantic and murderous artillery. We shall also
-have a better prospect of getting really into touch with "the very
-inner pulse of the machine," the real core of this philosophy, if we
-take a necessarily short, but it is to be hoped none the less vivid,
-glance at those reasons which induced Nietzsche to envisage the objects
-of his attack with so tense and implacable a hatred.
-
-Now Nietzsche found his intellectual jumping-off ground in that
-hybrid of Christianity and Buddhism stuck on a pedestal of sex, which
-constituted the philosophy of Schopenhauer and the essence of the
-fashionable pessimism of mid-century Germany. To endeavour to condense
-one of the most brilliant and elaborate systems of the last century
-into a few words is at best a delicate and hazardous task, yet perhaps
-we may adumbrate tentatively the radical elements which spurred
-Nietzsche to so sanguinary a revolt.
-
-Life according to Schopenhauer was a sorry failure, a thing not worth
-living on its merits, but kept going by the driving impetus of a blind
-life-force and knit with a mutual pity. Life then being intrinsically
-evil, the remedy for the evil was to live as little as possible--"Draw
-your desire back from the world so that there may be an end of that
-phenomenal life which is nothing but grief." Apart from general
-asceticism, there were two specific anodynes prescribed by Schopenhauer
-for the disease called life--art which transcended life, and lifted
-the spectator or listener on to another plane, and philosophy which,
-as it were, blunted the sting of life by the contemplation of the
-essentially unreal nature of the phenomenal universe. But the greatest
-good was Nirvana, a kind of Pantheistic Absolute of negativity, into
-which one eventually merged, to enjoy the supreme paradox of a peaceful
-self-consciousness of one's own nothingness.
-
-It is easy for us to sneer, nowadays, at this bilious and suicidal
-system, and to explain the whole theory of the Will to Live by the
-keen and chronic tyranny which the sexual instinct exercised over
-the philosopher himself; the fact remained, Schopenhauer was the
-dominant influence of the day--how dominant, can be seen from the
-fact that the whole of later Wagnerian music is merely a translation
-of his philosophy into the language of sound. It is easy to see the
-extent to which Schopenhauer and Wagner were saturated with the whole
-spirit of primitive and mediaeval Christianity. Human life, forsooth,
-is essentially bad and essentially unreal; salvation only lies in
-the mortification and annihilation of the self. Apart, however,
-from philosophical and theological technicalities, the profound
-psychological import of this nihilistic pessimism and neo-Christian
-romanticism is patent. Man looks at man's life on earth, and gives it
-up as a bad job, or at best makes some fantastic effort to create a
-new world to redress the balance of the old. "They wanted to run away
-from their misery, and the stars were too far away. Then they sighed,
-Oh, that there were heavenly ways, forsooth, to slink into another
-Being and Happiness."
-
-It has, in fact, been well put that, as the motto of Goethe was
-"_Memento vivere_," so was the motto of Schopenhauer, "_Memento mori_."
-
-Now, Nietzsche voiced the revolt of those temperaments whose ears
-were attuned rather to "_Memento vivere_" than "_Memento mori_." We
-must remember, moreover, that that Christian romanticism which finds
-its best metaphysical formulation in Schopenhauer was in itself but
-a reaction from the real spirit of the century, that ebullience and
-exuberance of the human ego of which Stendhal is perhaps the most
-typical manifestation. It might well indeed be instructive to trace the
-intellectual descent of Nietzsche from Stendhal, and, applying again
-the sociological method, to speculate as to how far he derived some of
-the impetus for his philosophy of egoism from the aggressive wars of
-Prussia, as exemplified in the Sadowa campaign and the Franco-German
-war. It is time, however, that we came to the temperament of the
-philosopher himself. It is indeed a platitude, that as man makes his
-gods in his own image, so does the philosopher create his systems.
-What is Aristotle's ideal of the _bios theokritikos_, and
-his conception of the self-contemplative god but the erection into
-a universal norm of the thinker's natural philosophic idiosyncrasy?
-What is the elaborate "I and Me" of the cosmology of Fichte but the
-attribution to the universe of the personal idiosyncrasies of Fichte,
-the self-conscious Doppelgaenger? And how Schopenhauer promoted sex
-into the devil, whose heat animates this earthly hell, we have
-already seen. What, then, was the impetus which impelled Nietzsche
-to batter down the walls of the contemporary moral and philosophic
-universe? The theory of an innate _joie de vivre_, a system highly if
-not over-charged with vitality, supplies but half the answer. The real
-explanation lies in the stiffening of this natural exuberance beneath
-the tension of a grim incessant struggle with a nervous malady.
-
-It is not actually necessary to go as far as the Swedish writer,
-M. Bjerre, who finds in Nietzsche's deliberate and revolutionary
-transvaluation of values that break up of the cerebral system from
-its previous condition which signalises the earlier stages of general
-paralysis. Yet Nietzsche's own writings, particularly his letters,
-reveal how potent was the stimulus exercised on his ego by those
-nervous headaches which hounded him over the Continent. To prevent
-defeat his will had to be perpetually strained to the maximum pitch of
-tension. The sweets of comfort being denied him, the only alternative
-left was to find a kind of super-happiness in the ecstasies and
-exultations of that Titanic contest which was perpetually fought on
-the battlefield of his own person. Let him speak for himself: "I made
-of my wish to get well, to live, my philosophy--it should, in fact, be
-noted--the years when my vitality descended to its minimum were those
-when I ceased to be a pessimist."
-
-We have not, however, at this juncture space to elaborate further
-the theory of the superman. Let it be enough to say that it is the
-raising to the _n_th power of the spirit of struggling and aggressive
-efficiency, and the venting of an over-full vitality by the creation of
-new values out of the wealth of the individual ego. As, however, the
-glorification of strength involves, and logically so, the degradation
-of weakness, and "to build up a sanctuary it is necessary for a
-sanctuary to be destroyed," it is not surprising that Nietzsche should
-clear the ground for his new creations by a ferocious bombardment of
-the crumbling ruins that still encumbered the site. Schopenhauer,
-who had been the fount from which Nietzsche's philosophic youth had
-drawn its inspiration before, as it were, he had found him out, is
-always treated with a certain amount of respect. But the arch-enemy
-was the, to him, poisonous system of altruism, self-annihilation, and
-world-renouncement which was called Christianity.
-
-The cynical may smile at the inordinate and concentrated frenzy of this
-attack. "Is not your wildly militant prophet simply wasting his powder
-and shot? Who in his senses ever heard of Christianity being taken _au
-pied de la lettre_, even by the most orthodox of modern bishops? What
-is it, to use another metaphor, but flogging a dead horse?" To which
-Nietzsche's answer would be that it is by removing the foundations
-that you remove also the superstructure, or to translate our metaphor,
-"Let me kill Christianity, and I kill at the same time all that system
-of altruism for altruism's sake, of abstract truth for the sake of
-abstract truth, which is built on that hateful foundation." It may also
-be observed that, even apart from the poetic and prophetic licence to
-which a man writing under such circumstances would be legitimately
-entitled, there are even now not wanting people who do in point of fact
-take Christianity with all the implicit seriousness of the mediaeval
-monks or the early Fathers. It is, indeed, a phenomenon not without a
-certain intrinsic humour, that almost at the very moment when Tolstoi
-was making his pathetic efforts to resuscitate literal Christianity
-with the abortive tears of pity, Nietzsche should swing along to
-flagellate the semi-inanimate ghost of the bleeding God, in no monkish
-spirit, forsooth, but with all the grim and scientific energy of the
-most enthusiastic of executioners, compared to whom Voltaire was but
-the most urbane of wits, and Heine the most innocuous of schoolboys.
-Having thus taken a brief view of the targets, and of the implacable
-and very serious spirit that animates the assailant, let us glance
-briefly at the chief lines of attack.
-
-
-II
-
-The first essay of the Genealogy consists of an essay on "Good and
-Evil, Good and Bad." The line of attack is double, being first
-etymological, and secondly historical.
-
-Without going into philological exactitudes, it is, we think, fairly
-safe to follow Nietzsche in his theory that the word "good" and its
-analogues were originally applied to designate those qualities which
-were peculiar to the governing aristocratic classes, albeit qualities
-by no means susceptible of the title of "ethical" goodness. Physical
-valour being in primitive times the most valuable asset of the
-community, it is not unnatural that that quality should be held in
-universal esteem. We would remark, however, in passing, that though
-Nietzsche professes to make a flying expedition into the domain of
-early Greek ethics, which would appear, according to his teachings, to
-be represented as an ideal system worthy of modern imitation, he is
-apparently oblivious to the fact that the spirit of cunning prudence,
-of which he so emphatically disapproves, was one of the most admired
-qualities of primitive Greece.
-
-On the general question, however, we may perhaps supplement Nietzsche's
-by Spencer's argument on the meaning of the English word "good,"
-which, as is notorious, has the double meaning of "ethical" and
-"efficient." Instructive, however, though this argument is, it cannot
-be said to clinch the question, since, even in the times of ancient
-Greece, there were not wanting words such as [Greek: _kalos, aichros,
-osios_ to denote, albeit mostly in aesthetic terminology, that ethical
-meaning, of which the word _agathos_] fell so signally short.
-In other words, to use Nietzschean terminology, the ethical taint even
-then existed, though in a less virulent form.
-
-The other line of attack, however, is more serious, and penetrates to
-the very core of the modern moral system with its savage onslaught on
-Christianity. What is Christianity, says Nietzsche, but the revolt
-of the slaves in the sphere of morals? Our philosopher's suggestion,
-of course, that Christianity was a deliberate stratagem on the part
-of a revengeful Israel to square accounts with the conqueror, has,
-on the face of it, no claim to serious consideration as anything
-but a poetic thought. The fact, however, that Christianity from its
-beginning catered avowedly for the poor, the weak, the oppressed, the
-inefficient, is admittedly true, whatever disputes may range as to the
-inferences to be drawn from this fact. And that the accusation of being
-a slave-morality is something more than empty abuse, is substantiated
-by the numerous slaves who did, in fact, subscribe to the infant
-creed. It is, moreover, not without its interest to watch nowadays a
-recurrence of the same phenomenon. Just, indeed, as at present the
-proletariate are _ipso facto_ ready to believe, quite apart from any
-question of any economic justification of the doctrine, in the genuine
-iniquity of the rich capitalist, so in the early Christian era the
-proletariate were not reluctant to put their faith in the saying, that,
-"it was as easy for a camel to go through the eye of a needle as for
-a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven." The difference, however,
-between modern and ancient Christianity stands out clearly from the
-fact that though this identical creed is invoked with something
-approaching equal facility on the sides both of the angels and the
-devils, it is, on the whole, now identified with the richer and more
-prosperous classes.
-
-It must, however, be frankly admitted that Nietzsche somewhat
-overshoots the mark, both in dubbing the history of the world a
-conflict between the two ideals, of Rome and Judaea, the egoistic and
-altruistic ideals, and in asseverating that the primitive "beast of
-prey prowling avidly after booty and victory" was the only type of the
-human species worthy of admiration, and that the tamed modern species
-is but a diseased distortion. We will deal later with the lacuna
-caused in Nietzsche's philosophy by his refusal to recognise the true
-significance of the Aristotelian doctrine that man is a [Greek: _zoon
-politikon_] when we show that even from his own standpoint the modern
-state of man is preferable to the primal. Suffice it for the present
-to say that, however large a part of the truth Nietzsche captured with
-this potent theory, there remains a not inconsiderable part which still
-eluded him.
-
-
-III
-
-Having endeavoured thus to dispose of the "ethically good" and
-"ethically bad" by the theory that such ideas are merely distortions
-of the ideas of "practically good and practically bad," Nietzsche in
-the second essay of the Genealogy makes a similar effort to take the
-sting out of the ideas of "Schuld" (guilt, debt), and "schlechtes
-Gewissen" (bad conscience). But here, again, difficulties beset our
-revolutionary. He approves of responsibility and the sacredness of the
-promise, but disapproves of the bad conscience by which the individual
-would enforce these things on himself. He blesses justice, but damns
-the social system. We shall find it hard to follow him in his attempted
-reconciliation of these divergent standpoints. When, for instance,
-he alludes with almost paternal approbation to the savage mnemonics
-by which the "conscience" (_per se_) was produced, and then proceeds
-to an envenomed, if none the less brilliant polemic against the "bad
-conscience," we see that in reality it is not so much the existence of
-a conscience _qua_ conscience, to which he objects, but the existence
-of a conscience functioning on what he conceives to be a vicious
-basis. Indeed, even the most faithful of our prophet's disciples would
-admit that the Nietzschean teaching lays down as thorny and toilsome
-a path for the "bold, bad man," or _uebermensch_, as Christianity ever
-decreed for the good man or weakling. The only difference, in fact,
-between Nietzschean and Christian ethics is that between excessive
-self-affirmation and excessive self-negation. But one has only to read
-_Zarathustra_ to realise immediately that this self-affirmation is no
-heedless hedonism, but a tense and chronic struggle of the ego against
-the world, subject to as rigid rules and braving as intense martyrdoms
-as does the Christian struggle of the spirit against the flesh. We may
-say, in fact, that on an officially Nietzschean basis the "bad" man who
-fails in being thoroughly and perfectly bad is, and apparently properly
-so, subject to as poignant pangs as is the "good" man who fails in
-being thoroughly and perfectly good.
-
-Granted, however, that it is the content of the bad conscience rather
-than the existence of a bad conscience _per se_, which provokes his
-righteous indignation, let us make some attempt to see how far
-Nietzsche is logical in condemning, as he does, existing ethics as the
-bastard child of contract and revenge, thriving amid a civilisation
-which has no real right to exist. Nietzsche starts off in fine
-feather to prove that the word "Schuld" (guilt) is the same as the
-word "Schuld" (debt), as though that momentous piece of philological
-research crushed all ethics once and for all. We do not for a moment
-dispute the philology. Moreover, as far as the general principle is
-concerned, it had been previously pointed out by Maine that all crimes
-were in their origin torts--that is to say, private wrongs against the
-individual (though doubts as to how far this theory is to be carried
-are raised by the universal execration which even in the most primitive
-societies was visited on murderers like Cain or Orestes).
-
-It may, moreover, be true that in many cases the local god is simply
-a deceased ancestor promoted to a heavenly status, who requires
-payment for protecting his descendants. But such arguments can at the
-best merely have effect on the theological conception of morality
-as a divine ordinance descending immediately from heaven. From the
-sociological standpoint, indeed, to derive "ethics" from "contract"
-is simply to consolidate one phase of the social instinct by deriving
-it from another. As, however, has been hinted before, it was the
-theological conception that was Nietzsche's main objective. So long
-as he could kill that, he was indifferent to the price, if, indeed,
-his morbidly classic and aristocratic standpoint did not hold that
-the taint of the bourgeois and the [Greek: _banausos_] attached
-automatically to everything commercial.
-
-The shifts, however, to which Nietzsche is driven are well illustrated
-when we come to that further stage in his evolution of the moral idea,
-which consists in deriving modern ethics or the "bad conscience" from
-the principle of "resentment" or "revenge," which is alleged to be
-a totally distinct thing from the "active feeling" by which Justice
-enforces its sanctions. But with all due respect to Nietzsche and his
-official expounders, we find it hard to appreciate any real difference
-in principle between the various drastic measures by which the social
-organism enforces its decree. The punishment for murder, we suggest,
-would be equally death both in a Nietzschean and in a non-Nietzschean
-state, and how anything more than the merest verbal distinction is
-achieved by labelling one sanction the "active emotion of justice" and
-the other "the principle of resentment" we are frankly at a loss to
-conceive. We can only say that the basing of the "bad conscience" on
-the spirit of revenge is true in the sense that from one aspect the
-function of the social organism is to protect the many against the few
-by the enforcements of drastic punishments against its transgressors.
-That, moreover, the strong are unduly restricted to pamper the weak is
-an arguable proposition, how arguable, can be seen from the present
-volubility of the financially strong when menaced nowadays with
-taxation for the benefit of the financially weak. But to go to the
-length of saying that the whole social fabric is a morbid distortion,
-a thing intrinsically bad, a kind of quasi-theological fall from an
-ideal state of primitive anarchy, is, at the most charitable estimate,
-a mere piece of poetic extravagance. Yet to this length Nietzsche goes
-when he pictures his blonde primaeval beast swung into "new situations
-and conditions of existence"; in other words, into the "pale of society
-with a spring and rush." The apparent suddenness of the transition
-strikes us, indeed, as naif as the philosophy of Rousseau or of Hobbes,
-who actually conceived the social contract as a specific bargain
-entered into at a specific time.
-
-One of the most interesting parts, however, of the whole essay is
-Nietzsche's explanation of the "bad conscience" as the result of
-the primitive energy of the savage venting itself in psychological
-self-torture when debarred from its natural outlet of physical
-violence. "All instincts which do not vent themselves without vent
-themselves within," so runs the dictum of the prophet, a dictum
-no doubt of great psychological truth, and capable of concrete
-illustration when applied to nuns, monks, and other ascetics, or to
-definite cases of neurotic introspection, but clearly not deserving to
-be treated as the key to the whole social fabric.
-
-We have already remarked that the real weakness of the Nietzschean
-philosophy lay in the neglect of the Aristotelian theory that man was a
-_zoon politikon_ or a social animal. Let us resume this line
-of inquiry. Nietzsche does, it is true, refer to the "herd instinct"
-of the weak, but only to exhibit his very palpable contempt against
-the weak who herd together so as to be able effectually to combat the
-strong. A yet further proof of Nietzsche's bitter hatred of the social
-organism is supplied by the celebrated phrases in _Zarathustra_, "as
-little state as possible," and "the slow suicide which we call the
-state." In our view, however, the real test of Nietzsche's position
-is touched when we come to the position of the aristocratic strong
-man. "Are they," one wonders, "tainted or untainted with the herd
-instinct?" Nietzsche's answer to this question seems to be that, so
-far as concerns the vast bulk of the herd, they are inimical to the
-social instinct, but that none the less they find social organisation
-(apparently that identical state which we have seen spoken of as
-"slow suicide") necessary, not only for keeping the herd in proper
-order, but for the purpose of "their own fight with other complexes
-of power." Viewed impartially, however, it does not seem to us that
-Nietzsche pays sufficient importance to the universality and value of
-the social instinct. Perhaps the root of the whole matter lies in the
-fact that Nietzsche fixes apparently the human unit as the individual,
-whereas, in point of fact, it is that state in miniature, the family.
-The origin of the family may no doubt be found in the primaeval
-instincts of sex and parentship. None the less, it is an indisputed
-sociological fact that the family, or its larger manifestation the
-tribe, is, as is evident from the slightest perusal of the works of
-Darwin, Maine, or Westermarck, the primitive form of human life. It
-would obviously be outside the scope of this preface to go in detail
-into the whole question of the origin of society, but it would also
-appear an indisputable platitude that man, _qua_ man, thrives by
-co-operation and association. In economical terminology this truth is
-known as the division of labour, in sociology by our frequently quoted
-Aristotelian dictum that man is a social animal. Nietzsche, it is
-true, tries to evade, or at any rate minimise, the force of this fact
-by treating law as the concrete exemplification of might is right.
-This, of course, is true as far as it goes, but it is only one side
-of the medal. All law is based on sovereignty, and all sovereignty is
-in the last resort based on force. It is possible, no doubt, for this
-force, this ultimate sanction to be exercised on approved Nietzschean
-principles by the few against the many. To quote the words of Ihering,
-the great Austrian jurist: "And so force, when it allies itself with
-insight and self-control, produces law. It is the origin of law out
-of the power of the stronger who stands in opposition to another,
-of which we now begin to get a glimpse." Yet, even though for the
-moment we confine ourselves to this aspect, it is obvious that while
-such a law subjugates the weak to the strong, it also regulates and
-curtails the rights of the strong among themselves, creating, as it
-were, a state within a state, or, to use once again the language of
-Ihering, "the self-limitation of force in its own interest." Equally
-important, however, is the obverse side of the medal, on which appears
-the exercise of the ultimate sanction by the many against the few.
-To quote Ihering for the last time: "The crucial point in the whole
-organisation of law is the preponderance of the common interests of
-all over the particular interests of the individuals." The vice, then,
-of Nietzsche's theory is that he bisects law into its two constituent
-phases, ignores one phase and confines himself to the other, apparently
-in blissful oblivion of the fact that even in the most aristocratic of
-aristocracies there exists, even though in miniature, the "slow suicide
-of the state."
-
-There is a further criticism which seems to arise properly out of
-Nietzsche's vehement denunciation of civilisation. The state and
-civilisation are bad according to Nietzsche, because they take the
-sting out of this struggle for existence, and cut the fangs of the
-superman. But, according to Nietzschean principles, are they not
-equally good in so far as they enable the superman to refine and
-elaborate his scale of combat? It is, indeed, obvious that the
-intellectualisation of the blonde beast of primitive times into the
-newspaper proprietor, American financier, or revolutionary philosopher
-of modernity would have been impossible but for the intervention of
-a very highly developed social organism. Yet even the most confirmed
-Nietzschean would admit that Mr. Rockefeller is, in spite of his
-evangelistic proclivities, a more highly developed specimen of the
-superman than Tamerlane, and Lord Northcliffe than, say, Caesar Borgia.
-
-One final observation: according to Nietzsche the test of merit is
-efficiency and the test of efficiency is success. Supposing, however,
-that a large number of individuals comparatively weak overpower through
-sheer force of combination a small number of individuals comparatively
-strong. Are not the weak changed into the strong, and conversely? We do
-not say that this is necessarily so: we merely adduce the argument to
-show how easily Nietzschean principles lend themselves to exploitation
-at the hands of the Socialists.
-
-Nietzsche's philosophy, however, was above all didactic, missionary.
-He analysed contemporary morality, not by way of an academic or
-scientific exercise, but with a view to striking, and striking hard,
-at that aspect of it which he quite honestly believed to be vicious
-and deleterious. Hence it is that having in his first two essays
-dealt with the etymological and legal aspects of the question, he now
-goes straight to the root of the whole matter. What is the practical
-application of all these tendencies which he has analysed? The ascetic
-ideal--and against this ideal our teacher proceeds to deliver as
-tense and concentrated a sermon as ever fell from the lips of any
-denouncer of the luxurious or non-ascetic ideal. We have not space,
-unfortunately, to follow Nietzsche through his elaborate analysis both
-of the ascetic ideal in its origin and in its eventual distortion and
-corruption at the hands of the ascetic priest. We will only observe
-that to grasp properly Nietzsche's position, stress should be laid
-on the fact that in the same way in which it was not the conscience
-_per se_, but the current content of the conscience, so it was not
-asceticism _per se_, but the current content of asceticism to which
-Nietzsche objected.
-
-As he explains in drastic and elaborate style, the philosopher, like
-the jockey or the athlete, would, through the simple exigencies of his
-_metier_, live the ascetic life. In such cases asceticism is simply the
-mechanical condition precedent of complete concentration. Similarly,
-the _uebermensch_ (superman) would no doubt be compelled to live the
-ascetic life in his strenuous struggle with subsisting values. The
-asceticism, however, to which Nietzsche in fact did object, was the
-asceticism which was not like the philosopher's asceticism, a means to
-creating or promoting actual human life, but was a means to destroying
-and minimising actual human life, the asceticism which denied the right
-to happiness, and which found in sin the solution to the riddle of the
-human world.
-
-Indeed, it is thoroughly characteristic of Nietzsche's whole attitude
-that he demurs vigorously to almost any solution of the riddle of the
-world. According to his reasoning, the need for any solution at all,
-whether transcendental, after the pattern of Kant and the Idealists, or
-quasi-transcendental, after the pattern of the pseudo-metaphysics of
-the scientists, argues an inability to take life on its own merits and
-on its own valuation.
-
-Let us finally glance briefly at the practical application of the
-Nietzschean philosophy, a course thoroughly consistent with the
-intensely practical spirit of our prophet. We are at first almost
-overwhelmed by the heterogeneous character of those who profess to be
-the true disciples of the great master, a character so heterogeneous,
-forsooth, that Nietzsche seems occasionally to be nothing but a
-catch-word mouthed by every conceivable school of thought with
-the rankest impunity. The Socialists, conveniently forgetting the
-opprobrious designation by the sage as "spiders," and their apostolic
-"Man is not equal," which he had thundered forth, find a bond of
-sympathy in their common disapproval of Christianity, though even
-here their standpoints are radically different, since while the
-"tarantulae" rebelled against it as being too narrow a prison, Nietzsche
-scorns it as being too comfortable a lounge. Zarathustra, moreover,
-showed himself truly Persian in his repudiation of the claims of
-the child-bearing machine called woman to equal rights with the
-warrior-man: "When thou goest with women," quoth the prophet, "forget
-not the whip." Nothing daunted, however, the shrieking hordes of
-the ultra-modern sisterhood, from the "Free Lover" to the "Ethical
-Lifer," find in Nietzsche the most emphatic justification for alike
-their theories and their practices. Does not _Es Lebe das Leben_, the
-well-known drama of Sudermann, portray the philosophical dogma of
-self-expression leading to highly unphilosophic applications? Does not
-the Scandinavian writer and woman with a mission, Ella[1] Key, start
-her book _Personality and Beauty_ with the following quotations from
-Nietzsche: "Follow after thyself--what says thy conscience?--thou shalt
-be that which thou art--let the highest self-expression be thy highest
-expression." Truly the Nietzschean aphorisms seem caps guaranteed
-to fit the most diverse heads so, but they show the slightest
-disposition to tumidity. Young men and nations in a hurry, Socialists
-and aristocrats, aesthetes and "woman's righters," all combine in a
-cacophonous chorus well calculated to make the shade of Zarathustra,
-should he visit Europe, hasten back in disgust to the mountain peaks of
-his solitude.
-
-Yet, however susceptible to abuse the Nietzschean philosophy may be,
-such a multifarious exploitation, though repudiated from the official
-standpoint, does not strike us as necessarily illogical. The doctrine
-of the superman, indeed, has in Nietzsche two distinct meanings--the
-evolution of generic man to his extreme limit, as exemplified in the
-aphorism, "Man is a bridge between beast and superman," and secondly
-the idealisation of the clash between the individual and society, the
-apotheosis of the aggressive combatant element in man, the [Greek:
-_to thumoeides_] of the Platonic trinity. Yet, whatever meaning may
-be chosen, it is well-nigh impossible to prevent individuals from
-cherishing the honest and sincere belief that in developing themselves
-(whether with or without the rigid discipline incumbent upon the
-orthodox superman), they are either helping the development of the
-race, or providing a picturesque expression of a considerably altered,
-but still authentic, "Athanasius contra mundum." With the present boom
-no doubt Nietzscheanism may become a craze (in Germany, of course, it
-is already _passe_ and has become academic and respectable), like the
-aestheticism of the Wilde period and grown liable to equal if dissimilar
-perversions.
-
-Yet none the less, if taken very broadly and very sanely, Nietzsche
-is capable of constituting a valuable modern bible for the
-twentieth-century man who proposes to live vastly and to play for grand
-stakes. It may no doubt be true that while Heine and Voltaire merely
-shot poisoned arrows at Christianity, Nietzsche blew it clean away with
-the giant salvos of his artillery; yet on the tremendous space that he
-cleared he built a temple to Energy and Efficiency. And note, that he
-worships these deities not for any ulterior advantage, but for their
-own sake solely. His frenzy for life precludes him at once from being
-a pessimist; it does not follow, however, that he is an optimist (in
-the hedonistic sense of the word), for neither in his own life, nor in
-his conception of that of others, do we find it clearly expressed that
-the pleasures of life outweigh the pains. More accurate is it to say
-that he is a philosophy transcending optimism. "On! On!! On!!! Live!
-Live!! Live!!! whatever the result and whatever your fate. Fight life
-and chance everything, for the fight's the thing rather than the mere
-trumpery guerdon." So we would venture to phrase the true Nietzschean
-spirit, or if an actual quotation is required, "_I say unto you it is
-not the good cause which sanctifies the war, but the good war which
-sanctifies the cause_."
-
-The most marvellous thing, however, about this grim lust of life is
-that it is absolutely insatiate, absolutely infinite. According to
-the theory of the Eternal Return, the events of this life will repeat
-and repeat with the tireless inevitability of a recurring decimal.
-Taken literally, no doubt this theory is simply the mystical dance
-of a Titanic mind striving to scale infinity. But the psychological
-significance is none the less profound. Is it not turning the tables
-with a vengeance on the Christian idea of a prospective non-earthly
-existence, compared with which this existence is a mere shadowy
-preparation, to pile future life on future life on future life, and
-every one of them a repetition of man's life on earth? It is impossible
-for the affirmation of human existence to be carried further. And
-this human existence, what is its solution, None, or rather itself!
-Existence is its own sanction, its own _raison d'etre_, and he who
-coldly ravishes the sphinx of life has found a drastic solution far
-excelling that of any Oedipus.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: transcriber's note: "Ella" (sic). Should be "Ellen" Key.
-(M.D.)]
-
-
-
-
-AUGUST STRINDBERG
-
- "I seek God and find the Devil."
-
- "My hate is boundless as the wastes, burning as the sun,
- and stronger than my love."
-
-
-The above quotations give some idea of that black pessimism which is,
-at any rate, the most patent characteristic of Strindberg. Yet neither
-quotation, motto, nor catch-word can do justice to the multifarious
-life and character of this man. For Strindberg, more than any other
-European author of our age, has boxed the whole compass of our
-modernity with its tumults, its aspirations, its perversities; its
-glaring searchlights of science, its pallid flames of mysticism, and
-its needle ever pointing to the two opposite though connected poles
-of sex. He is in turns the most rabid of atheists, the most devout of
-Catholics, the most esoteric of occultists; now the most Utopian of
-Socialists, now the most uncompromising of individualists. Running the
-gauntlet of three unhappy and dissolved marriages, he has become the
-European specialist in conjugal infelicity, to say nothing of being
-credited with innumerable conquests, which he himself would doubtless
-have designated as captures. His novels, his autobiographies, and his
-equally subjective dramas all exhale the most sulphurous hate against
-the distorted anomaly of the new woman, yet he is an Orpheus who,
-scorning the prosaic joys of some normal and uninteresting Eurydice,
-surrenders himself with almost pathological gusto to be torn to
-pieces by the monstrous maenads of modernity. The paroxysms of his hate
-alternate with moods of the most sentimental idealism, and the harsh
-impetus of his onslaught is only equalled by the, at times, abject
-meekness of his romantic devotion.
-
-Before, consequently, we embark on some slight survey of Strindberg's
-life and of the more characteristic of his numerous works, let us
-endeavour to lay hold of the clues of one or two primary features
-which will serve as a guide in the, at first sight, extremely tangled
-labyrinth of his psychology.
-
-Now the dominant emotion in Strindberg's temperament is fear. It is
-this fear which, at times assuming the dimensions of _paranoia_ or
-systematised delusion and persecution mania, largely supplies the
-explanation to his whole attitude towards Man, Woman, and God. He
-possessed also a vehemently explosive egoism and a gigantic intellect,
-at times dominating his fear and functioning with the most powerful
-precision, but as often as not interpreting the whole external world in
-the terms of some preconceived subjective emotion. Add also a morbidly
-hypertrophied sexual sensibility, together with a distinct strain of
-genuine idealism, and one may perhaps be able to envisage with some
-accuracy the cardinal points of our author's brain.
-
-August Strindberg was born in 1849, the son of a _mesalliance_ between
-a shipping agent and a servant girl. The circumstances of his childhood
-tended to magnify that morbid sense of fear which, according to our
-most eminent psychologists, is always innate and never altogether
-acquired. The two parents, the seven children, and the two servants
-lived in two rooms, and the family always appeared to him like "a
-prison in which two prisoners watched each other, a place where
-children were tortured and maids brawled." His mother died when he was
-thirteen, to be succeeded by the inevitable stepmother. His school life
-also was unhappy, but his description of it, though no doubt perfectly
-consistent with actual hardship, exhibits at the same time the
-reactions of a morbid sensibility to the hard facts of external life.
-"Life was a penitentiary for crimes which one had committed before one
-was born, so that the child always went about with a bad conscience."
-
-Note also, at the same time, the presence of the combative aggressive
-element in the boy who would lose nearly every game of chess by the
-inconsidered vehemence of his attack, or would break open chests of
-drawers in the fury of his desire to obtain their contents. And observe
-the early manifestations of that fundamental emotion which was to
-obtain throughout his life alternative outlets in the two parallel
-channels of religion and sex. Thus, like Byron, he experienced a
-violent passion for a girl before the age of puberty. So far, again,
-as religion was concerned, he had a great horror of darkness and the
-unknown, and his deity would appear to have been a god rather of fear
-than of love. And though Scandinavians as a race take Christianity far
-more seriously than the inhabitants of any other European country, he
-would appear to have possessed, even for a Scandinavian, the religious
-temperament to an unusual degree. Thus, he said his prayers on his way
-to school, and evinced a precocious desire to become a priest. But
-the religious element became dormant amid the chequered vicissitudes
-which signalised his youth and his adolescence. He started to study
-medicine at the University of Upsala, but his lack of funds broke into
-his college career and compelled him to earn his own living. He is by
-turns telegraph clerk, editor of an insurance paper (for which purpose
-he specially learns the higher mathematics), tutor in the family of a
-rich Jewish physician, actor in the Karl Moor of Schiller's _Robbers_,
-journalist on a daily paper (where the drastic offensiveness of his
-criticisms made his position on the staff intolerable), and librarian
-in the Royal Library of Stockholm (when he specially learns Chinese
-for the purpose of compiling a catalogue). His struggles were bitter
-and continued, and the acuteness of his privations manifests itself in
-a deep consciousness of class hatred against the prosperous and not
-infrequently dishonest philistinism of the day.
-
-Note, also, the occurrence of combined religious and persecution mania
-in the crises of his illness and despondency. For at such times he
-takes the Devil himself as seriously as the Deity, believes in an
-"Evil God to whom the Creator had handed over the world," and "has the
-consciousness of being personally persecuted by personal powers of
-evil." These emotional outbursts are all the more interesting because
-intellectually he had become the most fanatical of freethinkers, had
-read with profit Buckle's _History of Civilisation in England_, and
-was a fervent disciple of the new naturalism. During this period he
-had already begun to write dramas, none of which, however, have any
-substantial significance with the possible exception of the historical
-drama _Meister Olof_, which was unsuccessfully performed in 1877-8, and
-into which the already misogynous author had introduced the character
-of the prostitute, "in order to show that the difference between her
-and the ordinary woman is not so enormously great."
-
-In 1879, however, Strindberg achieved a _succes de scandale_ with
-his novel _The Red Room_. The satire of this book (written, it will
-be remembered, during his freethought years), may, no doubt, be the
-milk of Christian charity when compared with the concentrated vitriol
-of the _Black Flags_ of his Catholic period, and the various scenes
-and pictures may, no doubt, strike the critic as episodic and lacking
-in systematic cohesion, yet the work has some claim to recognition
-by reason of the vivid force of its description of contemporaneous
-life. The naively idealistic hero, the shady actress passing from
-seduction to seduction with all the facility of the experienced
-_ingenue_, the respectable director of the shoddy insurance company,
-the insidious Jewish financial broker, the cynical journalist, the
-grim but benevolent doctor, are all portrayed in a style which at once
-shines and chills with all the brightness of the coldest steel. Viewed
-psychologically, the book is significant as exhibiting the Socialistic
-fury of an embittered man "whose class-hatred lay in his blood and in
-his nerves," and who revenges himself on the system which had conspired
-against him, by exposing with sinister precision its most repulsive
-truths.
-
-The cynicism of _The Red Room_ was succeeded by the Utopian
-romanticism of the dramas, _Das Geheimniss der Gilde_, _Frau Margit_,
-_Gluckspeter_. The change in mood is probably to be ascribed to the
-vogue of _The Red Room_, and to the initial success of his alliance
-with his first wife, Siri von Essen, the actress, whom he had married
-in 1878, and who was subsequently to enjoy the ambiguous blessing of
-being officially immortalised in _The Confession of a Fool_.
-
-This mood, in its turn, was soon replaced by a concentrated and
-fanatical misogynism which was to dominate practically every book
-which Strindberg was subsequently to write. The fundamental cause
-was, no doubt, the morbidly irritable and suspicious nature of the
-man himself. Strindberg's whole attitude towards woman, however, is
-only fully understood by some appreciation of the New Woman Movement,
-which under the auspices of Ellen Key flourished vigorously in Sweden
-in the "eighties." Like, for instance, our own Suffragette agitation,
-or indeed, any popular craze, however intrinsically meritorious, this
-movement, which was, above all, a crusade for sexual equality, was
-attended by wild and perverse extravagances. Not merely the genuinely
-masculine woman, but every little doll of a woman in every little
-doll's house, became obsessed with the imperative necessity of the
-emancipation of her own body and the self-development of her own soul.
-A holy war of the sexes was proclaimed, and the sacred shibboleth of
-the New Thought, the New Ethics, and the New Love was soon in the mouth
-of every woman possessed of the true feminine _esprit de corps._ And
-with the praiseworthy object of adjusting the balance of nature, and of
-arriving so far as possible at the ideal harmony of an almost perfect
-equation, in some cases even the little boys would be brought up as
-girls, while, conversely, the little girls would be educated as boys.
-
-But the misogynism of Strindberg was something far more than a merely
-intellectual appreciation of the Anti-Feminist standpoint. Even making
-allowance for the considerable impetus doubtless given to his attack
-by reason of his personal matrimonial complications, the cause lay far
-more deeply ingrained in his own constitution. For the arrogation by
-the female of equal rights to the male would of itself tend to provoke
-the violent apprehensiveness of a man always morbidly alarmed at the
-slightest suggestion of any interference with his own personal rights,
-and always scenting a grievance with all the superhuman _flair_ of
-the true maniac of persecution. Strindberg's hatred of woman is thus
-to a large extent the hatred self-begotten of fear out of its own
-spirit, and without the superfluous aid of a concrete reality. If,
-too, we identify Strindberg himself with some of his men characters
-(_e.g._ Kurt in _The Death Dance_, Axel in _Playing with Fire_, or the
-narrator of _The Confession of a Fool_), who render to the objects
-of their passion acts of the most abject servility, and who kiss the
-feet of women almost as frequently as their lips, we would hazard the
-suggestion that he himself (who owns to having found in his reverence
-for woman a substitute for his reverence for God) would in certain
-moods welcome with morbid alacrity this new feminine domination, while
-his reaction from this inverted attitude would but lash his misogynism
-to even more hysterical paroxysms.
-
-These considerations may perhaps explain why in so many of his works
-the Strindberg woman and the Strindberg man are so highly specialised.
-The typical Strindberg woman is a fiend with the physique of a Madonna
-and the soul of a vampire, who sucks dry the life-blood of her heroic
-victim. The typical Strindberg man is a Samson shorn of his strength,
-writhing in the toils of some Delilah, protesting vociferously, and
-yet taking a morbid delight in his own bondage. English readers
-will remember the not altogether unanalogous case of John Tanner,
-that converse Don Juan of Mr. Shaw, who, with all his fanfaronnade
-of masculine independence, is, as he has from the beginning feared,
-anticipated and desired, successfully hunted down by his sly and
-dashing _Donna Juana_.
-
-After the publication of _The Red Room_, Strindberg visited both
-Switzerland and Paris, where he was invited to meet Bjornsen, entered
-into relations with the Theatre Libre of M. Antoine, had one or two of
-his plays produced, and meditated an unfortunately written satire on
-the French capital. In 1883 he produced _Swedish Destinies_, a volume
-of essays on contemporary problems, whose romantic masquerade would
-seem to have effectively concealed its underlying satire.
-
-The most significant work, however, which he published at this period
-was the volume of twelve (subsequently expanded to twenty) short
-stories, entitled _Marriage_. These tales all treat of the various
-phases, economic, social, psychological, and physiological, of the
-sexual problem, which he observed either in his own life or in the
-couples whom he saw in a Swiss _pension._ The characteristic of this
-work is its extraordinary seriousness. For to Strindberg the sexual
-problem provides neither the excuse for the philosophic flippancy
-of the cynic, nor for the priggish modernity of the ethical or
-intellectual snob, but is the one obsessing reality of actual life.
-
-Compared with the black pessimism of this work (relieved though it may
-be at times by a ray of tender sentiment or deep paternal feeling), the
-grimmest stories of Wedekind are benignly jovial and the most scabrous
-tales of De Maupassant but innocently sportive. Neither smile, nor
-even leer, ever breaks the set visage of this stern irony, which seems
-indistinguishable from life itself. There are no artificial climaxes
-or ostentatious flourishes of style to prick the senses of the reader.
-Described in a language of the most brutal phlegm and the most forceful
-simplicity, the facts of reality do their own unaided work. Each story
-is no mere dexterously elaborated incident, but a condensed life. How
-powerful, for instance, is such a story as _Asra,_ the history of the
-pious youth afflicted with anaemia by reason of his own continence,
-and dying two years after his marriage with that superabundantly
-healthy ethical worker who subsequently married twice again, had eight
-children, and wrote articles on over-population and immorality. And how
-genuinely awful is _Autumn_, that frigid anti-climax of a stale and
-re-hashed honeymoon:
-
- "And she sang, 'What is the name of the land in which
- my darling dwells?' But, alas, the voice was thin and
- sharp. It was at times like a shriek from the depths of
- the soul that fears that the noon is passed, and that
- the evening is approaching. When the song was over, she
- did not at first dare to turn round, as though she was
- expecting that he would come to her and say something.
- But he did not come; and there was silence in the room.
- When at last she turned round on her chair, he sat on
- the sofa and cried. She wanted to get up, take his head
- in her hands, and kiss him as before; but she remained
- seated, motionless, with her gaze turned to the floor....
-
- "They drank coffee, and spoke about the coolness of the
- summer weather, and where they would spend the summer
- next year. But the conversation began to dry up; and
- they repeated themselves. At last he said, after a long,
- undisguised yawn, 'I'm going to bed now.' 'So will I,'
- she said, and got up, 'but I will go first and have a
- look on the balcony.'
-
- "When she came back, she remained standing and listening
- at the door of the bedroom. All was quiet inside, and
- the boots were outside the door. She knocked, but there
- was no answer. Then she opened the door, and went in. He
- slept! He slept!"
-
-Though, moreover, the characters in _Marriage_ are more normal and
-average than in any other of Strindberg's works, the author airs again
-and again his pet sexual grievances. _Corinna_, in particular, and
-_The Duel_, are savage attacks respectively on the ethical amazon and
-the womanly woman who makes her very womanliness an engine of tyranny,
-while the _Breadwinner_ narrates how an apparently quite impeccable
-husband and father, writing himself to death to support his family,
-was driven to suicide by the naggings and exactions of a querulous and
-discontented wife.
-
-_Marriage_ was succeeded by the Utopian _Swiss Tales_; but the
-strenuous economic struggles to which Strindberg was now subjected
-forced him to discard as insipid the vague compromise of free-thought
-and to drink the bracing tonic of a Nietzschean and self-reliant
-atheism. "God, Heaven, and Eternity had to be thrown overboard if the
-ship was to be kept afloat; and it had to be kept afloat because I was
-not alone ... I became an atheist as a matter of duty and necessity."
-
-Yet it is interesting to observe that, taking the solution of the
-World-Riddle as a matter of acute personal importance, he studies the
-whole history of mankind to satisfy himself that he is right in his
-conclusion, and that the element of superstition is still so strong
-that when his child is ill he prays, atheist that he is, with all the
-fervour of a Christian Scientist. To the period of his atheism are to
-be ascribed, with the exception of _Black Flags_, his most powerful,
-most drastic work, his two packed volumes of one-act plays, the
-autobiographic _Confession of a Fool_, and the Nietzschean novel, _The
-Open Sea_.
-
-Note also that his matrimonial misery and his divorce from his first
-wife had given an additional poison to a sting which was always
-morbidly eager to inject its venom.
-
-The plays of Strindberg belong to the naturalistic school of
-problem-play which was in full vogue during the period of their
-composition. Technically their originality lies in the intensity of
-their concentration. Though many of them are one-acters and they nearly
-all observe the unity of place, they resemble less the ordinary
-curtain-raiser than the one solitary act round which the ordinary
-modern play is usually written. Each play is nothing but climax. Though
-in some cases they are nearly as long as ordinary drama, it is rare
-that they have any subsidiary characters. Even the protagonists are too
-occupied with the urgencies of their own immediate crises, and with
-exposing the nakedness of their own souls, to have time for either the
-artificial jewels of the Pinerovian epigram or the flying rockets of
-the Shavian dialectic. The problem is stuck too deep into their lives
-to require any artificial flourishing. Observe, too, that nearly every
-play is a variation on one theme, the mutual hate, fear, and war of a
-malevolent humanity. Their very love but sharpens their enmity, and
-they draw blood with nearly every word.
-
-The three-act play, _The Father_, ventilates the author's chronic
-grievance of the ruin of the man by the woman. The plot is cruel
-in its simplicity. The husband, though in a state of acute nervous
-disorder, is not certifiable. The wife, anxious for a freer life,
-smuggles a doctor into the house, plays adroitly on the man's pet
-mania that he is not the father of his own daughter, forges in his
-handwriting a letter branded with insanity, goads him into throwing
-a burning lamp at her, and with the aid of his old nurse gets him by
-a ruse into a strait-jacket, in which he succumbs to a stroke. Yet
-with all its concentrated sensationalism, and work though it may be
-of a constitutional maniac of persecution, the play is too deep, too
-sincere, too fundamentally convincing to be ever near that line which
-separates the realm of tragedy from the pandemonium of melodrama. With
-what ghastly irony does the daughter innocently prick the sensitive
-sore in her father's brain:
-
- [Rittmeister _sits huddled up on the settee_.
-
- BERTHA. Do you know what you've done? Do you know you've
- thrown the lamp at Mamma?
-
- RITTMEISTER. Have I?
-
- BERTHA. Yes, you have. Just think if she'd been hurt?
-
- RITTMEISTER. What would that have mattered?
-
- BERTHA. You are not my father if you can talk like that.
-
- Rittmeister (_gets up_). What do you say? Am I not your
- father? How do you know that? Who told you so? And who
- is your father, then? Who?
-
-But of all Strindberg's plays, indisputably the most powerful is _Miss
-Julie_, that gripping tragedy of the over-sexed young woman who on an
-oppressive mid-summer evening insists on being seduced by her father's
-butler. The girl is of noble birth, and the duel of sex is intensified
-by the duel of class. In the fifty pages of this play, with its three
-characters of the woman, the butler, and the cook, which observes
-rigorously the Aristotelian unities, every element of the highest
-and gravest tragedy is introduced with the most accurate and natural
-psychology--the exaggerated dancing of the daughter of the house, who
-competes with her own cook for the favours of her own butler-lover; the
-ribald grins and songs of the servants; the mingled insolence, common
-sense, and respectfulness of the domestic; the hysterical reaction
-of the _declassee_ and dishonoured girl. The following passages may
-perhaps give some faint idea of this work's sustained and infernal
-power:
-
- [John _opens the cupboard, takes a bottle of wine out,
- and fills two used glasses_.
-
- THE YOUNG LADY. Where do you get the wine from?
-
- JOHN. From the cellar.
-
- THE YOUNG LADY. My father's burgundy.
-
- JOHN. Ain't it good enough for his son-in-law?
-
- THE WOMAN. Thief!
-
- JOHN. Are you going to blab?
-
- THE LADY. Oh--oh--the accomplice of a thief....
-
- JOHN. You hate men-folk, miss?
-
- THE LADY. Yes, as a rule!... But at times, when I feel
- weak--ugh!
-
- JOHN. You hate me, too?
-
- THE LADY. Infinitely! I could have killed you like an
- animal....
-
-And how clutching is the climax, when the girl, a simultaneous prey
-to nausea with life and to fear of death, persuades her domestic to
-hypnotise her into suicide at almost the precise minute when her father
-is ringing for his boots:
-
- THE YOUNG LADY. Have you never been in a theatre and
- seen the mesmerist? He says to the subject: "Take the
- broom"; he takes it. He says "Sweep"; and he sweeps....
-
- JOHN (_takes his razor and puts it into her hand_). Here
- is the broom--go now where there's plenty of light--into
- the barn--and--(_whispers into her ear_).
-
-_Miss Julie_ is remarkable as being the only one of Strindberg's
-works in which the man comes off victorious with the exception of the
-four-act _Comrades,_ that sombre comedy of Parisian artist life, where
-the crowing wife bullies her self-sacrificing husband on the score of
-having ousted him from the Salon by her own successful picture, only
-to be told that he had simply changed the numbers, and to be finally
-ejected from her perverted home by that reasserted man whose efficiency
-she had despised and exploited, but whose virile despotism she now
-begins to love.
-
-In _The Creditor_, Strindberg treats again his favourite theme of the
-vampire woman and the spoliated man. Thekla, the usual worthless,
-demoniac female, having dissolved her marriage with the schoolmaster
-Gustav, has married the artist Adolph. The scene is the sea-side.
-Thekla has gone off on some jaunt. Her new husband, who is apparently
-even more miserable without than with his wife, is a nervous wreck.
-He makes the acquaintance of the old husband, who presents himself
-incognito to readjust the balance of his matrimonial account. Gustav
-plays with masterly hypnotism on the suggestibility of his colleague,
-making him doubt himself, his vocation, his health, and at last his
-wife. And then when his wife returns, and the enfeebled husband has
-made an abortive attempt at asserting his theoretic virile superiority,
-he makes love to the wife, is detected by the visitors, and goes
-back to his own solitary misery, to leave his wife stranded and his
-new confrere dead. Note, too, that here again the human triangle is
-complete in itself, and that the agony is protracted to the last shred
-of its passion without ever flagging for one single moment.
-
-Space prohibits any complete discussion of the remaining plays in
-the cycle of Strindberg's _Eleven One-acters_. Yet we would mention
-_Motherly Love,_ a variation on the theme of Mrs. Warren. The
-_souteneuse_ mother, with all her loathsome affectation of wounded
-parental feeling, plays judiciously on the morbidly filial conscience
-of a clean-minded but weak-willed actress-daughter, prevents her from
-obtaining respectable friends or advancement on the stage, in order to
-preserve for herself her sole professional stock-in-trade.
-
-Equally impressive is _The Bond_, which expresses in one divorce-court
-scene the whole mordant tragedy of wrangling matrimony and authentic
-parental affection.
-
-In a lighter vein is _Playing with Fire_, the one real comedy which
-Strindberg ever wrote. In this the delightful _menage_ of a young son,
-a young wife, a young friend of the family, a young charity cousin,
-and a philistine but by no means senile father, everybody is flirting
-with everybody else. Particularly admirable in its mixture of the comic
-and the ironic is the character and attitude of the conceited and
-ultra-modern artist-husband, genuinely jealous of that friend and of
-that wife whom he loves so sincerely, and yet throwing them into each
-other's arms in a compounded mood of priggish bravado and authentic
-affection. The friend, apprehensive lest he may have a bad conscience,
-is anxious to take a room in the village.
-
- THE WIFE. Why don't you stay with us? Out with it.
-
- THE FRIEND. I don't know. I think you ought to be left
- quiet. Besides it might happen that we should get fed up
- with each other.
-
- THE WIFE. Are you fed up with us already? I tell you, it
- won't do. I tell you that if you stay out there in the
- village, people will begin to talk.
-
- THE FRIEND. Talk? What will they talk about?
-
- THE WIFE. Oh, you know perfectly well how stories get
- put together.
-
- THE SON. You stay here--there's an end of it. Let them
- talk. If you stay here, it goes without saying that
- you're my wife's lover, and if you stay in the village,
- it goes without saying that you've broken with each
- other, or that I've kicked you out. Consequently, I
- think it more honourable for you to be regarded as her
- lover--eh, what?
-
- THE FRIEND. You certainly express yourself with
- considerable lucidity; but in a case like this, I'd
- rather prefer to consider which is honourable for you
- two.
-
-As we have already hinted, an additional bitterness had been introduced
-into Strindberg's misogynism by the unhappiness of his own first
-marriage, which was dissolved in 1889. It is this marriage which
-Strindberg celebrates in that phenomenal piece of official sexual
-autobiography, _The Confession of a Fool_, which has successfully
-scandalised the whole Continent of Europe. In comparison with this book
-the _New Machiavelli_ is but the tamest Sunday-school reading, and
-the romantic confessions of Mr. George Moore the merest healthy pranks
-of robustious youth. This work throughout has the real spontaneity of
-the genuine diary rather than the studied frankness of the elaborate
-literary artificer. The young librarian is in Stockholm. A young lady
-makes advances to him. "She has an adventurous appearance, hovering
-between the artist, the blue-stocking, the daughter of the house,
-the _fille de joie_, the new woman, and the coquette." She presses
-her suit, looks at him in an unambiguous manner, and "he only owes
-his virtue to her extraordinary ugliness." He is introduced to her
-friends, the Baron and Baroness X. He becomes the _ami de famille_.
-But the demon of sex is at work, and simply through keeping step with
-her in walking he will experience a unification of their whole nervous
-systems. Honourable man that he is, he runs away from danger, starts
-for Paris in a steamship, and is seen off amid the combined tears
-of the married pair. The ship sails. His nerves break down; and in
-an hysterical paroxysm he insists on being disembarked, is attended
-by a priest and doctor at a small hotel, and returns post-haste to
-Stockholm. The Baroness runs away to a watering-place. But matters only
-progress with even greater rapidity on her return. The Baron is largely
-occupied with a cousin; and an official declaration takes place between
-the wife and the lover. With ultra-modern honesty they immediately
-apprise the husband, who while giving them the widest margin within
-which to exercise their platonic affections, yet reposes implicit trust
-in their combined honour. A financial crash, however, disposes of the
-Baron; and the gentleman is landed with his lady. There ensue all the
-joys and agonies of a ten-years' union. The couple are linked in the
-burning bonds of a mutual love and a mutual hate. The author has to
-sacrifice his own well-being and career to push forward his wife in
-her amateurish efforts in journalism and acting. From that time "legal
-prostitution enters into the marriage...." She belongs to the public,
-she makes up and dresses for the public, and she consequently becomes
-"a prostitute who will finally send in her bill for such and such
-services."
-
-The moods alternate with the regularity of a pendulum. If at one moment
-"the nest of love has become transformed into a dog-kennel," and the
-author is morbidly jealous of nearly every man and every woman with
-whom his wife has the slightest acquaintance, strikes his wife, and
-endeavours to drown her; it is only subsequently, in the last stages of
-servile uxoriousness, to idolise her again as a martyr and as a saint.
-Six times does he leave her (expending on one occasion in debauchery
-the proceeds of his pawned wedding-ring), and six times does he return,
-only to draw up at last this monstrous dossier of his conjugal life:
-"The story is at an end, my beloved one; I have revenged myself; the
-account is squared."
-
-Not altogether inexplicably, Strindberg has been much attacked on the
-score of this book. He has been charged with wickedly defaming an
-innocent and deserving woman. Yet even though the book be objectively
-false, it is subjectively true. It is impossible to doubt its
-prodigious sincerity, even though this merely be the implicit sincerity
-of persecution mania. Every single nuance of the emotions of a man who
-honestly thinks that he is being unscrupulously exploited is faithfully
-described. The book may shock by its vehement coldness, its abnormal
-callousness, its matter-of-fact explicitness; yet from the literary
-standpoint, its entire absence of affectation, the drastic ease of
-its simplicity, the swift naturalness of its diction, cannot fail to
-convince. It stands out from the whole of European literature as the
-superlative masterpiece of suspicious love and monstrous morbid hate.
-
-In the great novel, _By the Open Sea_ (1890), Strindberg's Nietzschean
-mood achieves its grand zenith. The hero, Axel Borg (whom we may
-already remember from _The Red Room_), "instead of, like the weak
-Christians, embracing a God outside himself, took what he could seize
-with his own hands and in his own self, and sought to make his own
-personality into a complete type of humanity." Borg, who combines with
-the ideals of the superman the hyper-sensitiveness of the neurotic,
-lives the single life as an inspector of fishery in a little village on
-the Swedish coast, where the sea "frightens not like the forest with
-its dark mystery, but brings quietude like an open great big true eye."
-He is pursued and caught by an over-sexed young woman, realises her
-worthlessness, and sails out to commit suicide.
-
- "Out toward the new Star of Christmas, ran his voyage,
- out over the Sea, the All-Mother, from whose bosom the
- first spark of life was kindled, the inexhaustible
- source of fertility and love, life's origin and life's
- foe."
-
-This book, with its splendid nature-descriptions, the tragic dignity
-of its hero, and the azure swiftness of its limpid style, is one
-of Strindberg's most impressive feats. Yet even here the author's
-characteristic traits can be distinctly traced. The noble male is
-ruined by a despicable woman; while here, too, the cosmic mysticism of
-the professed atheist (whose mood can perhaps be best expressed by the
-worn _cliche_ of "being in tune with the infinite"), reveals only too
-clearly the emotional bias of a fundamentally religious temperament.
-
-This temperament was soon to manifest itself in the most tragic form.
-Jaded with literature, and unhappy again in his second marriage with
-the Austrian authoress, Frida Uhl, in 1893, Strindberg embarked on
-the study of chemistry, took rooms in the Latin quarter, attended the
-Sorbonne laboratories, and imagined that he had revolutionised science
-by the discovery of a new element in sulphur. He had by now attained
-the, to him, crucial period of the late "forties," and the chronic
-excesses of his emotionalism now assumed a religious form, to the
-accompaniment of the most acute mania of persecution.
-
-His experiences in these years, 1895-8, are described in the _Inferno_
-and the _Legends_, works which the mystic and the psychologist can read
-with equal if heterogeneous edification. In these books, which are
-based on Strindberg's diaries during the actual time, the aberrations
-of a disorganised brain are set out with the most unconscious literary
-art. His delusions became systematised with all the ingenuity of the
-_paranoiac_. Every casual suggestion thrown up by his memory, or the
-events and associations of every-day life, every bit of science that
-he had ever studied or of mysticism that he had ever felt, are all
-utilised to build the infernal scheme of his mania. He is "the innocent
-sacrifice of an unjust persecution," the prey of unknown powers, the
-conducting-point of electrical streams from unknown agencies. He asks
-for a miracle and sees in the heavens the ten commandments and the name
-of Jehovah. His friend Popoffski (in point of fact, the Polish-German
-novelist Przybeszewski) has come to Paris; it is with the sole object
-of killing him by poison. His usual seat at his usual cafe is occupied;
-he is the victim of a universal conspiracy. Eventually the hells of
-his torment burn themselves out in an abject ecstasy of atonement, in
-Catholicism, Swedenborgianism, and the bastard hybrid of a scientific
-occultism.
-
-From this time the religious obsession sits upon most, if not
-all, of his subsequent work. To this mood are due the officially
-religious dramas _To Damascus, Midsummer_, the extremely weak
-_Advent and Easter_, his new-found theory of _The Conscious Will in
-the World-History_, his historical dramas (where the characters,
-particularly Luther, were too subjectively conceived to be historically
-convincing), and his _Dream-Play_ (where telephones, lawyers, theatres,
-enchanted woods, Indra's daughter, military officers, married
-couples, casinos, poets, and ballet-dancers all combine to weave the
-filmy phantasmagoria of a Buddhistic reality). We may also mention
-in this connection the _Blue Books_, the official synthesis of his
-life (a series of miniature essays on such apparently heterogeneous
-subjects as, _inter alia_, Troy, Christ, electro-chemistry, botany,
-surds, Assyriology, optics, geology, Hammurabi, astrology, morphium,
-Swedenborgianism, spermatozoic analysis, mystic numbers, Kipling, and
-Jehovah).
-
-Although, speaking generally, Strindberg achieved his masterpieces
-during the period of his atheism, many of his later works have
-indisputable value. The play _Intoxication_ (1900), for instance
-(though the killing through sheer unconscious force of will, by the
-hero, of the child of one mistress, in order to gratify the caprice of
-another, may strike the unimaginative critic as slightly melodramatic,
-and his eventual retirement into a Catholic monastery as somewhat of an
-anti-climax), is a work of extraordinary power.
-
-So also is the _Death Dance_ (1900), in which the middle-aged captain
-and his _passee_ wife grind each other to ruin and despair beneath
-the mutual mill-stones of their hate, "that most unreasonable hate,
-without ground, without object, but also without end." Does not the
-author plumb the extreme depths of human malevolence in the passage in
-which the wife in company with her cousin is expecting her paralytic
-husband to fall down dead?
-
- KARL. What are you looking at over there, dear, by the
- wall?
-
- ALICE. I'm seeing if he's tumbled down.
-
- KARL. Has he tumbled down?
-
- ALICE. NO, more's the pity. He deceives me in everything.
-
-We would also mention the Maeterlinckian beauty of the _Crown Bride_
-and _Swan White_ (1900), the heroine of which is an idealisation of
-the author's third wife, the actress, Harriet Bosse; the delicate
-fantasy of _Tales_ (1908); and the _Swedish Miniatures_, of which the
-_Sacrifice Dance_ in particular is a positive masterpiece of swift
-bloodiness.
-
-Cruelty, moreover, is an integral element in at any rate primitive
-religion. This may conceivably explain why, faithfully fulfilling
-what he personally professed to have found a joyless duty, Strindberg
-successfully performed in _Black Flags_, his celebrated _roman a clef,_
-the intellectual flaying and dismemberment of all Stockholm Bohemia.
-It is amusing to remember that he successfully consulted the oracle
-of the Book of Job before he published the work in 1905, to face the
-protesting shrieks of his victims with all the devout conscience of
-some early priest of Thor who gravely officiates at some blood-stained
-human sacrifice.
-
-It is outside the purpose of this essay to discuss whether these
-descriptions of the intellectual and sexual clique of the Swedish
-capital constitute a fair portrait or a monstrous defamation, or
-whether, for instance, Hanna Paj is a malignant travesty or a
-euphemistic delineation of that lady whom all who have the slightest
-acquaintance with the Continental Feminist Movement will immediately
-recognise.
-
-As a sheer piece of satire the book waves its black flag unchallenged
-amid all the fluttering multicoloured pennons of modern European
-literature. What matter if the characterisation be true or false? So
-far, at any rate, as the non-Swedish reader is concerned, the illusion
-is complete. Kilo, "the little bookseller, with the suffering eyes
-of a sick dog"; Falkenstrom, the idealist, whose wife is induced by
-her bosom friend to join some alleged monstrous cosmopolitan masonic
-sisterhood; Hanna Paj, the feminist lecturer, the fury with the flag
-of hate on which was written the device, "Revenge on Man"; Smartman,
-the debonair intriguing editor with his two sets of rooms--all these
-pictures of "the galley-slaves of ambition linked together in the
-fetters of interest, these murderers and thieves who steal each other's
-thoughts, addresses, friends, and personalities," are perfectly
-convincing. Above all there stands out the delineation of Lars Peter
-Zachrisson, "the intellectual cannibal," the "broker of literature, the
-promoter of mutual admiration societies, the speculator in reputations,
-the founder of syndicates for the manufacture of celebrities," the
-morphia maniac, the tippler "who laughs humorously in his moustache and
-weeps tears of whisky from his eyes," the father of "that resurrected
-corpse, that wandering shame, whose face was known to all, and who was
-branded with his own name." And how devilish is the description of this
-domestic hell of human hate, where he mocks his wife on her failing
-charms and encourages her gluttony with the specific object of spoiling
-her figure, where the mother in her turn brings up her children like a
-breed of dachshunds whom she sets to bait their father, and where the
-two spouses yet feel some inexplicable need of being together in the
-same room for the purpose of that mutual nagging and mutual reviling
-which constituted the chief interest in their miserable existence.
-
-To sum up, we have seen how throughout his life the persecution mania
-of Strindberg expressed itself in his attitude to sex, religion, and
-society, as like at once some veritable Rhadamanthine recorder, and
-some cowering victim of divine vengeance, he dispenses and fears those
-words of doom in his black adamant of diction. Yet it is impossible
-casually to brush the man aside as some mere _paranoiac_. The very
-torments of his soul fructified in the stupendous genius of his
-intellectual production. With all his perversities, with all his
-aberrations, Strindberg remains the blackest, and in his own particular
-spheres the most drastic, intelligence in the whole of our European
-literature.
-
-
-
-
-THE WELTANSCHAUUNG OF MISS MARIE CORELLI
-
-
- "By my faith I would as soon listen to the gabbling of
- geese in a farmyard as to the silly glibness of such
- inflated twaddling, such mawkish sentiment, such turgid
- garrulity, such ranting verbosity."
-
- "Clearness of thought, brilliancy of style, beauty of
- diction, all these were hers united to consummate ease
- of expression and artistic skill."
-
-
-The above quotations, extracted from _Ardath_ and from the
-autobiographical if unofficial description of Mavis Clair in _The
-Sorrows of Satan_, are well adapted to express the two extreme views
-concerning the merits and the demerits of the lady who, rightly or
-wrongly, certainly occupies the most conspicuous position among our
-English women-novelists. It is not surprising that such divergent views
-should be provoked by a character who, however simple she may be in her
-own personal psychology, is from the literary standpoint essentially
-complex.
-
-In _The Romance of Two Worlds_, for instance, the first fruits of
-her literary genius, the novelist's theory of the "Soul Germ" and
-her conception of the "Electric Principle of Christianity" running
-through the whole cosmology would seem unmistakably to foreshadow the
-Bergsonian theory of the _elan de vie,_ while the subtly delineated
-character of the twentieth-century Chaldaean magician, Heliobas, "who
-never promises to effect a cure unless he sees that the person who
-comes to be cured has a certain connection with himself," bears a
-distinct analogy to the cabalistic mysticism of Mr. Aleister Crowley.
-On the other hand, that grim tragedy entitled _Vendetta_ is in almost
-equal degrees reminiscent of the stark inexorableness of Aeschylus,
-and of the human, all-too-human, humanity of Mr. Walter Melville. In
-_Ardathy_ that "tale of beauty, of horror, and of extraordinary amours"
-(if we may quote from the authorised biography of our novelist), a
-subject-matter that might well have emanated from the pen of a Pierre
-Louys, is handled with the unimpeachable correctness of a Samuel
-Smiles. So, too, the great _Tendenzroman_ "Wormwood" is a dexterous
-combination of the _macabre_ phantasy of Mr. Ranger Gull and the
-ethical "uplift" of Mr. Guy Thorne. She is, moreover, an authoress who
-is keenly alive to the social problems of the day, treating in _Boy_
-and _The Mighty Atom_ of the Wedekindian problem of the influence
-of free-thought on the mind of puberty (though it must be confessed
-that her solution of that exceedingly thorny problem is by no means
-identical with that of the slightly cynical author of _Spring's
-Awakening_), and handling in _The Murder of Delicia_ the almost equally
-delicate subject of the modern _maquereau_.
-
-While, too, Miss Corelli has enriched the literature of Anti-Semitism
-with such novel and crushing phrases as "Jew-speculator,"
-"Jew-proprietor of a stock-jobbing newspaper," "the fat Jew-spider
-of several newspaper webs," her denunciation of certain phases of
-Continental Christianity as "the sickening and barbarous superstition
-everywhere offered as the representation of sublime Deity" indicates
-some cleavage between her own Protestant theology and that rigid
-Ultramontanism which would appear nowadays to be one of the essential
-qualifications for the really full-fledged Anti-Semite. And if at
-times with the thyrsus of her ecstatic style she is frequently the
-Juvenalian flagellant of that "brilliant fashionable dress-loving crowd
-of women who spend most of their time in caring for their complexions
-and counting their lovers," her features exhibit not so much the sadic
-grin of the maenad as the seraphic loving-kindness of some mediaeval
-saint dumped down by a caprice of a fantastic Providence amid all the
-howling welter of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. While too
-such phrases as "retrospective and introspective repentance" show
-an almost Jamesian preciosity in the fine-drawn distinction between
-the repentance for the sins that have been already committed in the
-past and for those which are about to be committed in the future,
-and between the repentance which takes place within the four corners
-of the human soul, and that which occurs within some other sphere of
-psychological activity, our lady's entire lack, generally speaking, of
-all the affectations of our ultra-modern subtlety are more reminiscent
-of the downright horse-sense of President Roosevelt or the transparent
-but by no means necessarily shallow simplicity of such writers as Mrs.
-L. T. Meade, Mrs. Annie Swan, Mr. Charles Garvice, and Mr. William Le
-Queux.
-
-It is then in view of the fundamentally complex problem constituted by
-Miss Corelli that, disregarding alike the convention of her admirers
-that she is above criticism, and the convention of her detractors that
-she is beneath it, we propose to examine our authoress with the maximum
-of seriousness at our command, and to await with sanguine interest the
-result of what from the point of view at any rate of the critic is so
-revolutionary a procedure. The contents of at any rate the majority of
-the volumes of Miss Corelli being necessarily familiar to all readers
-of culture, we propose to confine our analysis to a survey of the
-cardinal points in our lady's _Weltanschauung_. Strange though it may
-seem to "the fashionable atheism of the day" (if we may quote one
-of our authoress's favourite and most persistent phrases), it is the
-religious instinct which supplies the key of the Corellian psychology.
-In this connection it is interesting to remember parenthetically the
-pretty anecdote of how when the future novelist, then quite a little
-girl, was rejoicing in the sobriquet of "The Rosebud," she would always
-have the nocturnal consciousness that angels were present in her
-bedroom, and that Dr. Mackay, the mid-Victorian litterateur who had
-adopted the child at the early age of three months, is reported to have
-made the gentle but not inapposite remark, "Never mind, Dearie! It is
-there, you may be sure, and if you behave just as if you saw it, you
-will certainly see it some day."
-
-It was perhaps a few years later that the little girl dreamt of
-founding a new religious order, and that an education at a French
-convent left on her virgin soul that white cachet which even the
-corruptness of Edwardian society, "when the infidelity of wives is
-most unhappily becoming common--far too common for the peace and good
-repute of society," has signally failed to in any way pollute (if as
-a mere matter of grammatical conviviality we may venture to split an
-infinitive with our distinguished _consoeur_). When, however, Miss
-Corelli attained the ripeness of complete womanhood, the voice of the
-angels would appear to have whispered in her ear the great injunction
-"to leave the world a little better than she found it," and the
-sacred odour of her exceedingly important mission is to be detected
-practically in every work that has issued from her pen. Holding,
-like Torquemada, Mr. Torrie, Attila, Loyola, and the late Dr. Elijah
-Dowie and many other great religious enthusiasts of all epochs, that
-conversion is the most efficient method of spiritual improvement, she
-concentrates her fire with especial vehemence on the "women-atheists,
-who had voluntarily crushed out the sweetness of the sex within them,
-the unnatural product of an unnatural age," who have "as haughty a
-scorn of Christ and His teaching as any unbelieving Jew," and on
-"the common boor who, reading his penny Radical paper, thinks he can
-dispense with God and talks of the carpenter's son of Judaea with the
-same easy flippancy and scant reverence as his companion in sin."
-
-Thus it comes that Miss Corelli, with her full share of that
-intolerance which is the classical concomitant of all true religion,
-would close the harbour of England to the exiled Jesuits of France,
-and exclude the Jews from their prominent position in contemporary
-society and finance. So far from shedding a single tear over the
-tragic death of Zola, she gloats with righteous gusto over his
-asphyxiation, which she ascribes to a specific piece of theological
-revengefulness on the part of an orthodox and insulted Providence. At
-times her strictures come nearer home, and more frequently perhaps
-than any other woman-novelist of the day does she castigate those
-Episcopalian clergymen who indulge in the mental and physical enjoyment
-of illicit sex in wilful disregard of the most fundamental elements
-of their professional etiquette, "the vicious and worldly clerical
-bon-vivants ... talking society scandal with as much easy glibness
-as any dissolute lay decadent that ever cozened another man's wife
-away from honour in the tricky disguise of a soul." In _Thelma_, for
-instance, the lascivious minister of Christ intent on compassing the
-almost compulsory seduction of the prettiest of his own parishioners,
-while his "conscience was enveloped in a moral leather casing of
-hypocrisy and arrogance," is a piece of characterisation which in its
-own particular line of vice forms a fitting analogue to the monstrous
-clergyman in Mrs. Voynich's _Jack Raymond_.
-
-So far, moreover, as the nuances of dogma are concerned our teacher
-takes the delicate and middle course, being as deeply shocked by the
-ritualistic excesses of the High Church as by what Mr. G. K. Chesterton
-has epigrammatically described as the "tea-leaves of Nonconformity." In
-fact her theology may perhaps be crystallised in the following formula,
-which however difficult in actual practice is from the stylistic
-standpoint of perfect simplicity:
-
- "Why should we be followers of Luther, Wesley, or
- any other human teacher or preacher when all that is
- necessary is that we should be followers of Christ?"
-
-But Miss Corelli is no credulous bigot. She is as sceptical of the
-historical trustworthiness of part of the initial chapters of Genesis
-as Colonel Ingersoll, Mr. G. W. Foote, or Mr. Horatio Bottomley. Let
-us quote from _Free Opinions_ the following eloquent parenthesis: "A
-legend, which, like that of the Tree of Good and Evil itself requires
-stronger confirmation than history as yet witnesseth, which, by the
-way, was evidently invented by man himself for his own convenience."
-
-Let us, however, now turn from Miss Corelli's solitary excursion into
-the sphere of the Higher Criticism to some brief survey of her more
-positive and constructive philosophy.
-
-The Corellian cosmology is most fully expounded in _The Romance of Two
-Worlds_. This novel is the story of a young girl who, sick in body and
-mind, visits the Continent. She makes the acquaintance of a Chaldsean
-_mage_ of magnetic personality called Heliobas. Heliobas, realising at
-the first sight of the young girl "that her state of health precludes
-her from the enjoyment of life natural to her sex and age," gives her
-to drink of some rare and special potion with the result that her
-soul, dissociated for the time being from her body, takes a flying
-trip through space and purgatory, and the lady awakens to a more
-complete spiritual harmony. In this book the authoress's individual
-theories of the Soul Germ and the Electric Circle are expressed in
-voluminous digressions and dialogues whose inexhaustible opulence
-might well be called a Platonic Dialectic brought up to the date of
-nineteenth-century science.
-
-This fusion of science and mysticism, which at first sight seem as far
-apart as the poles or the sexes, into a harmonious if heterogeneous
-unity, can also be traced in the Corellian physiology. Thus in _Thelma_
-we meet the unfortunate creature Sigurd, "an infant abortion, the evil
-fruit of an evil deed," destined to so tragic and well-described a
-death, while in _Temporal Power_ we are confronted with the strange
-character of Paul Zouche, "the human eccentricity, the result of an
-amour between a fiend and an angel."
-
-In the sphere of ethics, Miss Corelli is careful to avoid that
-misplaced originality which is so often the gaudy masquerade for a
-pallid and degenerate licentiousness. Our authoress finds sufficient
-both for her own personal requirements and the spiritual health of her
-reader in those good old maxims enshrined in the Bible, the _Family
-Herald_, and the copy-books of all self-respecting seminaries. Good
-is Good, she says, and Right is Right. We may note also the Corellian
-principle of the inevitable triumph of the hero or heroine and the
-inevitable damnation of the villain or villainess, a principle which
-bears a distinct affinity to the Jewish and Christian doctrines of
-Recompense, the Aeschylean doctrine of _nemesis_, and the
-dramaturgy of the Transpontine Theatre. It may perhaps be urged by the
-ultra-modern critic that novels of the stamp of _Anne Veronica, The New
-Machiavelli_, or _Esther Waters_, where sin emerges from its slough,
-sometimes in triumph, yet always in dignity and comfort, have a closer
-correspondence with the actual facts of our modern civilisation. But
-our authoress would no doubt confidently retort that it is the pious
-duty of the moral missionary to censor ruthlessly such pernicious
-intelligence, and that she is proud to prefer the higher if not always
-accepted truths of ethics to the lower and degrading truths of a sordid
-reality.
-
-This sublime principle of Divine Justice is perhaps best exemplified
-in _Holy Orders_. In this extraordinary book, Jacqueline, the local
-prostitute of a picturesque English village, marries a man named
-Nordheim, "one of the smartest Jew-millionaires that ever played with
-the money-markets of the world." But the wages of sin, though for a few
-years a motor car and a Rockefellerian income, turn out in the long
-run to be death in a balloon in the illicit company of an aristocratic
-drunkard. For sheer psychology and for sheer English the following
-portrayal of the villain which represents the cream of two or three
-separate passages merits quotation.
-
- "Claude Ferrers? Why, he is a famous aeronaut; a man
- who spends fabulous sums of money in the construction
- of balloons and aeroplanes and airships. He is the
- owner of a gorgeous steerable balloon in which all the
- pretty 'smart' women take trips with him for change of
- air. He is an atheist, a degenerate, and--one of the
- most popular 'Souls' in decadent English society--just
- to have a look at the fat smooth-faced sensualist and
- voluptuary whose reputation for shameless vice makes him
- the pride and joy of Upper-Ten Jezebels will help you
- along like a gale of wind. Claude Ferrers is a modern
- Heliogabalus in his very modern way, and by dint of
- learning a few salacious witticisms out of Moliere and
- Baudelaire he almost persuades people to think him a wit
- and a poet."
-
-In view, no doubt, of the high moral tendency of most of the comedies
-of Moliere, who in _Tartuffe,_ for instance, satirises hypocrisy almost
-as effectively, if with a less palpable directness than does Miss
-Corelli herself, and in view of the essentially religious or at any
-rate mystical spirit that animates so many of the poems of the author
-of _Les Fleurs de Mai,_ it must be reluctantly confessed that Miss
-Corelli is more impressive as a moralist and as a psychologist than as
-a woman of letters and an expert in French literature. It is possible,
-however, that this slight error may be explained by the fact that her
-acquaintance with these authors may only be second-hand, that she
-was involuntarily misled by the rhyme in the two names, and that her
-unimpeachable principles have debarred her from even hearing the names
-of such refined exponents of the Gallic spirit as M. Abel Hermant and
-M. Octave Mirbeau.
-
-It is, of course, highly characteristic of our authoress's simplicity
-of vision that all her characters are either very, very, very good
-or very, very, very bad. Realising that complexity of temperament
-is but too frequently the mere euphemism for dissoluteness of life,
-she is content that her young heroes should be immaculate with all
-the immaculacy of the _jeune premier_, that her middle-aged heroes
-should be those strong silent men who have contributed so largely
-to make England what she is, and that her heroines should be all
-equally typical and equally sweet flowers of our English womanhood.
-Her villains invariably smile with all the depraved and diabolical
-cynicism of Drury Lane, and her villainesses are branded as degenerate
-super-women of intrigue and lust. And if the authoress by thus
-delineating her characters in the two primary colours of black and
-white thus denies herself the intellectual pleasure of minutely
-analysing some ultra-modern soul torn a myriad ways by unnumbered and
-unmentionable emotions, she has the consolation that she certainly
-points her moral with a more obvious precision.
-
-The only character who in any way suffers from a complex temperament
-is Maryllia, the sweet-named heroine of _God's Good Man_. By nature
-as white and pure a specimen of Anglo-Saxon girlhood as ever spent to
-some good moral purpose her fragrance in the pages of the prettiest
-novelette, Maryllia is so corrupted by the fashionable whirl of smart
-society, "where without mincing matters it can be fairly stated that
-the aristocratic Jezebel is the fashionable woman of the hour, while
-the men vie with one another as to who shall best screen her from
-their amours with themselves," that she becomes addicted to the vice
-of smoking. God's Good Man, however, in the person of that high-minded
-clergyman the Rev. John Walden, has the courage to rebuke her at a
-dinner-party with an incivility which is, fortunately, more than
-counterbalanced by the fundamental kindness of his intention:
-
- "I have always been under the impression that English
- ladies never smoke."
-
-Maryllia, it is true, at first bridles at this essentially well-meant
-reprimand, only, however, to return finally repentant and converted to
-her prospective husband.
-
-It is, consequently, not surprising to find that Miss Corelli's
-attitude to modern problems is one of a rugged and uncompromising
-conservatism. Thus she disapproves not merely of smoking but also of
-the bridge-party and the motor-car and of the _decollete_ dress which
-she so severely satirises in the phrase, "the brief shoulder-strap
-called by courtesy a sleeve which keeps her ladyship's bodice in place."
-
-Consistently enough, also, in the sphere of philosophy she chaffs
-the agnostic dilettantism of Mr. Balfour with the most delicate of
-badinage: "His study of these volumes is almost as profound as that of
-Mr. Balfour must have been when writing _The Foundations of Belief_,"
-and flicks with a deadly though gentle irony the "sort of cliquey
-reputation and public failure attending a certain novel entitled
-_Marius the Epicurean_."
-
-True Englishwoman that she is, Miss Corelli yields to none in her
-reverence for established institutions, and does not shrink from
-attacking boldly the complex questions of contemporary royal and
-political life. Thus, in the 600-page romance, _Temporal Power_,
-apparently disapproving of that democratic shuffling of the classes
-which is so marked a feature of our ultra-modern age, she treats with
-exquisite taste of the problems of the sinister Semitic capitalist,
-the intriguing politician who was once a manufacturer, and of the
-morganatic marriage of a sailor-prince.
-
-For our authoress has at bottom a true respect for the social order
-of England. What though the monarch masquerade as an anarchist in
-_Temporal Power_ and sign his name in the red letters of a woman's
-blood? Does not the repeated insistence on the title "Sir Philip," in
-referring to the virile and delectable hero of _Thelma_, show that it
-is less society _per se_ than the abuses and perversions of society
-which constitute the target of the Corellian invective? Does not
-again the following passage show the bias of a soul which inclines
-with the sincerest sympathy to that innate munificence which forms
-the chief petal in the "fine flower" of the English gentry: "They got
-their overcoats from the officious Briggs, tipped him handsomely, and
-departed arm in arm?" Does not similarly such a phrase as "a dignified
-_grande dame_ clad in richest black silk" show that most generous of
-loyalties which will not allow the true majesty of the aristocracy to
-be imperilled through the stinting of an extra adjective or the lack of
-a superlatively appropriate dress.
-
-Unfortunately many passages in Miss Corelli's novels may occasion
-her admirers some heart-searchings as to the reliability of her
-social psychology. In such a sentence, for instance, as "Why does
-an English earl marry a music-hall singer? Because he has seen her
-in tights," it would appear that the real heart of the matter is
-tactfully adumbrated rather than specifically described. When again
-that lecherous Jew, David Jost, the chief villain in _Temporal Power_,
-is sitting at home in his study a few minutes before midnight, after
-he had already "supped in private with two or three painted heroines
-of the foot-lights," does not our authoress attribute to the horrible
-Hebrew a capacity for concentrating an amount of pleasure into a
-brief period, more consistent with the powers of some hustling and
-record-breaking American than with the more protracted languors of
-the Oriental? Similarly, when she writes that "the public are getting
-sick of having the discarded mistresses of wealthy Semites put forward
-for their delectation in 'leading' histrionic parts," Miss Corelli is
-either inverting the more natural and logical order of events, or is
-attributing to such isolated members of the Jewish race as happen to be
-licentious a retrospective generosity in respect of past kindness which
-however gratifying to their co-religionists seems somewhat inconsistent
-with the general trend of her attitude.
-
-The Corellian dialogue also frequently gives the psychologist food
-for thought. "O God" (cried impetuously the heroine of _Thelma_ after
-she had listened virtuously to the illicit overtures of the villain,
-a "lascivious dandy and disciple of no creed and self-worship"), a
-magnificent glory of disdain flashing in her jewel-like eyes, "what
-thing is this that calls itself a man--this thief of honour--this
-pretended friend of me, the wife of the noblest gentleman in the land!"
-
-Or take again so characteristic a specimen as the following:
-
- "You will be made the subject for the coarse jests of
- witticisms at your expense--your dearest friends will
- tear your name to shreds--the newspapers will reek of
- your doings, and honest housemaids reading of your fall
- from your high estate will thank God that their souls
- and bodies are more clean than yours."
-
-If, however, Miss Corelli disdains the more gramophonic accuracy of
-Mrs. Humphry Ward, she is none the less perfectly entitled to answer
-that her characters like those of Mr. G. Bernard Shaw, being something
-more than mere mechanical and objective copies of humanity, subserve
-the far higher function of being the mouthpieces of the subjective
-philosophy of their creator.
-
-Our last quotation, however, brings us to the burning question of Miss
-Corelli's attitude towards the sexual problem. In this connection it
-will not be without its interest to draw some slight analogy between
-Miss Corelli and her equally distinguished if not equally popular
-sister-in-letters, Mrs. Elinor Glyn.
-
-We would remark in the first place that the sexual problem clutches
-Miss Corelli hotly in its drastic grip. Her religious temperament
-may no doubt occasion a profound and genuine abhorrence for physical
-sin, but as was the case with the even more religious Tolstoi, or
-that strangely interesting character Elfrida (the ethical sexual
-reformer in Herr Frank Wedekind's _Totentanz_), her abhorrence merely
-supplies an added vehemence to the unflinching nature of her treatment
-and the drastic audacities of her missionary work, while the proud
-consciousness of her own personal virtue may conceivably entitle her to
-find at once a duty and a recompense in the sanguinary flagellation of
-her less immaculate sisters. Though, moreover, a moral teacher, Miss
-Corelli is also a psychologist, and her aphorism "Men never fall in
-love with a woman's mind, only with her body," can be well compared
-for its bold but delicate cynicism with Mrs. Glyn's maxim, "Love is a
-purely physical emotion."
-
-But Miss Corelli with all her unimpeachable correctness is by no means
-blind to the temperamental significance of a _grande passion_, though
-of course she does not specialise on this subject to the same extent
-as her distinguished colleague. It is none the less instructive to
-compare Miss Corelli's saving grace of a _grande passion_, "the one of
-those faithful passions which sometimes make the greatness of both man
-and woman concerned and adorn the pages of history with the brilliancy
-of deathless romance," with the following fine passage from Mrs. Glyn
-in which she admonishes those philistine readers "who have no eye to
-see God's world with the stars in it and to whom Three Weeks will be
-but the sensual record of a passion" with a dignified apologia for the
-life of her heroine--"Now some of you who read will think her death was
-just, in that she was not a moral woman, but others will hold with Paul
-that she was the noblest lady who ever wore a crown."
-
-The latter quotation, however, brings us to an important distinction
-in the sexual ethics of our two novelists. For while Miss Corelli
-on the one hand is no respecter of persons and would be prepared to
-treat an "Upper-Ten Jezebel" or a "soiled dove of the town" (if we may
-borrow two typically Corellian phrases) with scrupulous impartiality
-according to their respective deserts, the novels of Mrs. Elinor Glyn
-constitute a valuable sexual hierarchy by which the degree of license
-to be enjoyed and condoned is in direct proportion to the social rank
-of the lady or her paramour. Thus the continued adultery on the part
-of the Princess throughout a period of three weeks in the novel of
-that name is freed from any taint of offensiveness or indignity by the
-exalted rank of that royal personage who is decorated in this one book
-with several sets of stars. The ordinary untitled gentlewoman, however
-(if we except Agnes the lady in _Elizabeth's Visits to America_, who
-"had an affair with her chauffeur," and the Mildred in _Beyond the
-Rocks_, whose lovers, however, were "so well chosen and so thoroughly
-of the right sort"), though she may frequently infringe the spirit
-of the seventh commandment, is usually far too prudent to break the
-letter. Thus the romantic young wife in _Beyond the Rocks_, in spite
-of the assiduous attentions of an extremely fascinating peer, "an
-ordinary Englishman of the world who had lived and loved and seen many
-lands," succeeds by the most heroic self-control in preserving the
-technical chastity of a Prevostian _demi-vierge_. Note, however, by way
-of contrast the extremely wide margin which is allowed to the hale and
-energetic duchess: "Her path was strewn with lovers and protected by a
-proud and complacent husband who had realised early he never would be
-master of the situation and had preferred peace to open scandal. She
-was a woman of sixty and, report said, still had her lapses."
-
-But the paramount importance of social etiquette in sexual relationship
-is most effectively illustrated in _His Hour_. This novel deals with
-the mutual physical passion between a barbaric and dissolute Russian
-prince and a typical and refined modern Englishwoman. Matters reach a
-crisis when the prince lures the lady by night to the sinister solitude
-of a deserted hut. "His splendid eyes blazed with the passion of a
-wild beast"; the lady faints, and when she wakes up in the morning of
-course assumes that she has been ravished. Not unnaturally she is quite
-upset that she should have been the victim of such insulting behaviour,
-"she, a lady, a proud English lady." The commands of society, however,
-are inexorable in such matters and she consequently writes proposing
-marriage with dignified irony to that bestial nobleman, who had,
-according to her own theory, put her own status as a gentlewoman into
-such delicate jeopardy: "I consent--I have no choice--I consent. Yours
-truly, Tamara Lorane."
-
-So far as mere erotic description and dialogue is concerned, there is
-very little to choose between our authoresses. The following passages
-are fair examples of Mrs. Glyn's conception of romantic love-making:
-
- "Then, sweet Paul, I shall teach you many things, and
- among them I shall teach you how to LIVE."
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- "Beloved, beloved," he cried, "let us waste no more
- precious moments. I want you, I want you, my sweet."
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- "My darling one," the lady whispered in his ear, as she
- lay in his arms on the couch of roses, crushed deep and
- half-buried in their velvet leaves, "this is our soul's
- wedding, in life and in death they can never part us more."
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
-If, however, we would make any distinction between the respective
-techniques of the two ladies, we would say that while Mrs. Glyn tends
-to exhibit the practical modernity of Mayfair or Continental society,
-Miss Corelli is at times more exotic and luxuriant, at times more
-explicit and direct, for blunt, plain woman that she is, she never even
-once dabbles in those mystic messages of the stars which Mrs. Glyn
-interprets with so facile and consummate a felicity. We search in vain,
-for instance, in the works of Mrs. Elinor Glyn for a passage like the
-following, which but for the pendent nominative might quite well have
-come out of the _Aphrodite_ of M. Pierre Louys or the _Mafarka le
-Futuriste_ of M. Marinetti:
-
- "This done, they rose and began to undo the fastenings
- of her golden domino-like garment; but either they were
- too slow, or the fair priestess was impatient, for
- she suddenly shook herself free of their hands, and
- loosening the gorgeous mantle herself from its jewelled
- clasps it fell slowly from her symmetrical form on the
- perfumed floor with a rustle as of fallen leaves."
-
-Again, the delicious sachets of Mrs. Elinor Glyn's diction never
-somehow exhale such whiffs of unadulterated English as the following:
-
- "With the seduction of your nude limbs and lying eyes
- you make fools, cowards, and beasts of men."
-
-We may, perhaps, conclude this portion of our comparative analysis by
-suggesting for the erotic crest of Mrs. Elinor Glyn a Debrett and an
-Almanach de Gotha enveloped in a silk and scented "nightie"; for that
-of Miss Marie Corelli, a volume of the Self-and-Sex series lying open
-between a doffed domino and a crinoline.
-
-It is also noticeable that while Miss Corelli, with whatever detail she
-may feel it her duty to portray their erotic sins, is always primarily
-concerned with her characters' ethical significance for good or for
-evil, Mrs. Glyn devotes herself more specifically to their physical
-qualifications. Miss Corelli's typical hero, for instance, is the
-Rev. John Walden, that middle-aged God's Good Man whose ripe dignity
-of manhood is subordinated to the description of his more spiritual
-qualities. Mrs. Glyn's typical hero is the Paul of _Three Weeks_, "a
-splendid young English animal of the best class."
-
-We thus find that the space which Mrs. Elinor Glyn will devote to
-telling us that her heroine's skin "seemed good to eat," or that her
-hero had "fine lines" and "velvet eyelids," will be devoted by Miss
-Corelli to the description of the corresponding attributes of her
-hero or heroine's soul. Miss Corelli, however, is by no means obtuse
-to the baleful effect on the spiritual life exercised by physical
-blandishments. She will thus explain the precocious corruption by
-senile perversity of a young girl in a remarkable passage whose stark
-realism certainly succeeds in portraying fully an important ethical and
-physiological truth:
-
- "Old roues smelling of wine and tobacco were eager to
- take me on their knees and pinch my soft flesh;--they
- would press my innocent lips with their withered
- ones--withered and contaminated by the kisses of
- cocottes and soiled doves of the town."
-
-As showing the comprehensive ultra-modernity of Miss Corelli's outlook
-on the sexual question, we would refer finally to her frequent
-allusions to "the unnatural and strutting embryos of a new sex which
-will be neither male nor female." Though, however, she is in one of
-her maxims apparently of opinion that "true beauty is sexless," we
-would infer from the following passages that she does not go so far as
-Peladan in ascribing an important ethical and sociological significance
-to this new type:
-
- "Men's hearts are not enthralled or captured by a
- something appearing to be neither man nor woman. And
- there are a great many of these Somethings about just
- now.... Beauty remains intrinsically where it was first
- born and first admitted into the annals of Art and
- Literature. Its home is still in the Isles of Greece
- where burning Sappho loved and sang."
-
-Returning, however, from Lesbos to Stratford-on-Avon, let us make some
-brief survey of Miss Corelli's style. To condense into a few phrases
-so delicate and baffling a phenomenon is difficult. At one moment her
-weighty nouns, guarded not infrequently by a triple escort of epithets,
-possess the pomp and luxuriance of the true Asiatic style, at another
-the brisk horsiness of her diction has all the spontaneous force of
-English as it is actually spoken. At times such passages as "A moisture
-as of tears glistened on the silky fringe of his eyelids--his lips
-quivered--he had the look of a Narcissus regretfully bewailing his own
-perishable loveliness. On a swift impulse of affection Theos threw one
-arm round his neck in the fashion of a confiding schoolboy walking
-with his favourite companion.... Sah-luma looked up with a pleased yet
-wondering glance. 'Thou hast a silvery and persuasive tongue,' he said
-gently," are reminiscent of the mellifluous cadences of _Dorian Gray_.
-Anon she will indulge in a vein of frank but militant simplicity that
-bears a greater resemblance to the style of Mr. Robert Blatchford, the
-celebrated atheist:
-
- "A small private dinner-party at which the company are
- some six or eight persons at most is sometimes (though
- not by any means always) quite a pleasant affair; but a
- 'big' dinner in the 'big' sense of the word is generally
- the most painful and dismal of functions except to
- those for whom silent gorging and after-repletion are
- the essence of all mental and physical joys. I remember
- --and of a truth it would be impossible to forget--one
- of those dinners which took place one season at a very
- 'swagger' house--the house of a member of the old
- British nobility, whose ancestors and titles always
- excite a gentle flow of saliva in the mouths of snobs."
-
-We would incidentally mention that Miss Corelli is above all a purist
-in her diction, and that she has registered her emphatic protest
-against the use of the expression "Little Mary," "a phrase which,
-although invented by Mr. J. M. Barrie, is not without considerable
-vulgarity and offence." Though, moreover, her language is on the whole
-essentially English, Miss Corelli by no means disdains the use of
-classical figures. For instance in the phrase "after-repletion" from
-our last quotation we meet an interesting survival of the Greek use
-of a preposition to qualify a noun. The occasional anacoluthon also
-(or lack of orthodox syntax) which is found in her works points to a
-by no means unprofitable study of Thucydides, unless indeed it is
-simply in order to emphasize her lack of any literary snobbery that our
-authoress so frequently declines to curtsey to the affected rigidities
-of pedantic grammar. Her frequent use, again, of compound words such
-as "socially-popular," "brilliantly-appointed," "Jew-spider" betrays
-the distinct influence of the Teutonic idiom, while such a phrase as
-"braced with the golden shield of Courage" shows what unique results
-can be obtained by a metaphor simultaneously fashioned out of the
-defensive article of war of the ancient Spartan and the preservative
-article of attire of the modern European.
-
-Finally, what is the real secret of Miss Corelli's success? It is
-that she is sincere and that she means well. Whether her invective
-rises to the lofty scorn of an Isaiah, a Mrs. Ormiston Chant, or a
-Juvenal, or whether the smooth current of her hate meanders along
-with all the tepid benevolence of a grandmotherly facetiousness, it
-is impossible to doubt her portentous sincerity. It is this quality
-which distinguishes her most effectively from the merely journalistic
-authors of the "big" serials. These ladies and gentlemen, it is true,
-effect their object and succeed in presenting the outlook on life of
-the typical man or woman in the typical street or alley. But their
-most brilliant productions but produce the effect of an intellectual
-_tour de force_, as though achieved in despite of the natural bias
-of their temperaments, by dint of a diligent study of the well-known
-Manual of Serialese. Miss Marie Corelli needs no such manual. Her
-_Weltanschauung_, broad, plain, simple, touched at once with a high
-consciousness of her ethical mission and a ruthless observation for
-all the sins and follies of the age, is the authentic and spontaneous
-outcome of her own unique psychology.
-
-
-
-
-FRANK WEDEKIND
-
-
- "Alike in the comedies and dream-plays too You see but
- a domesticated Zoo, Their blood so thin that in that
- hot-house air They batten on a vegetable fare, And revel
- chronically in chat and calls, Sitting like our friends
- yonder in the stalls, _One's_ stomach of liqueurs will
- disapprove, Another wonders if he really love, Another
- hero starts with threats to pass From this foul world to
- one perhaps more divine, But through five mortal acts
- behold him whine, Yet no kind friend supplies the _coup
- de grace_, But the real thing, the wild and beauteous
- beast, I, ladies, only I provide that feast."
-
-
-These lines, delivered by a lion-tamer in the due professional
-panoply of riding-coat, top-boots, and a revolver, are extracted
-from the prologue of Frank Wedekind's tragedy, _Die Erdgeist_, and
-illustrate efficiently the bizarre and Mephistophelian genius of a
-German dramatist alike in his qualities and his defects indisputably
-unique. Buccaneering no small way in front of the very left wing of
-the aesthetic movement, Wedekind is at once the _bete noire_ of the
-reactionaries and the spoilt darling of the ultra-moderns. To his
-enemies he is a mere shoddy Anti-Christ, to his friends a dramatic
-Messiah leading back the inner circles of the chosen intellects into
-the promised land of vice and crime. It cannot be denied that his
-subject-matter gives considerable colour to both these theories. Life,
-as seen through the medium of his plays, is but a torrent of sex
-foaming over the jagged rocks of crime and insanity. Take examples
-from his three most powerful plays. In _Die Erdgeist_, the theme
-of which is the baleful glamour of the "Evil Woman," three of the
-four acts are punctuated with almost complete regularity by a death;
-_Fruehlingserwachen_, again, deals with hoydens and hobbledehoys, whose
-only occupation appears to be the creation, discussion, and destruction
-of life: In _Die Totentanz_, on the other hand, the scene is laid in
-a "private hotel" (if one may borrow the highly convenient euphemism
-of Mr. Shaw), while a charming interlude in lyrics is provided by one
-of the boarders and a temporary visitor, and the hero and proprietor
-is a "marquis," who psychologically is much more closely related to
-Hamlet than to Sir George Crofts. Add to this choice of subject-matter
-a violently impressionist technique and a hangman humour, whose grin is
-at its broadest amid the sharpest agonies of the victims, and one can
-form an approximately accurate idea of an author, conceivably somewhat
-poisonous to anaemic constitutions, but certainly both piquant and
-stimulating to the hardened and the adventurous. To arrive, however,
-at a correct appreciation of so monstrous a phenomenon, it will be
-advisable to investigate first the literary and social tendencies by
-which it has been produced, together with the character of the audience
-for whose edification it disports itself, and then by the light of such
-investigations to proceed to an analysis of his individual works.
-
-For the ten or fifteen years following 1880, both the novel and the
-drama in Germany were transformed into a Zolaesque laboratory, where
-interesting human experiments were conducted by skilled operators
-with scientific precision. There were three chief causes for this:
-firstly, a healthy reaction against the colourless and conventional
-school which had held the stage for so many years, a school somewhat
-analogous to that of our own Mid-Victorians with their strong silent
-men and sweet insipid women; secondly, a dogmatic and uncompromising
-materialism was the creed of the most ambitious and efficient
-intellects who found their chief mental diet in Zola, Taine, Darwin,
-and Haeckel; thirdly, the abstract theory of the struggle for
-existence had received an excessively concrete exemplification in the
-Franco-German war and the colossal commercial impetus that followed
-in the wake of a united Germany. Naturalism, however, was destined by
-the very character of the nation to be but a passing phase. Even apart
-from the inevitable swing of the pendulum and the powerful Catholic and
-religious reaction, whose force is seen at a glance in the numerical
-majority of the Centrum, the German temperament is in its essence as
-romantic as the French is logical. The nation, moreover, being at
-bottom religious, "the death of God," to use the classic phrase of
-Nietzsche, left a most crying lacuna. The philosopher of the Superman
-adroitly filled the vacancy by the deification of Man. Human life
-became an end in itself embraced with the most poetic exaltation and
-pursued with all the zeal of religious martyrdom. The struggle for
-existence, ceasing to be a bare scientific formula, was metamorphosed
-into a classic arena in which the "life-artist" battled for the crown
-of his Dionysiac agonies, finding the most delicious music in the
-perpetual clash of brain with brain, and experiencing a sweetness in
-the very bitterness of the conflict.[1]
-
-Crushed then by the force of these tendencies, pure realism died. _Die
-Ehre_ and _Die Weber_, it is true, still hold the German stage, but in
-_Johannes_ and in _Die Versunkene Glocke_ respectively both Sudermann
-and Hauptmann have deserted to the Romantic camp, taking with them,
-however, a good proportion of the Realistic equipment. Particularly
-typical of this amalgamation of the two forces is _Hannele_, where the
-pathological and mystical explanations are to be accepted concurrently
-and not as alternatives, as in Mr. Henry James's _Turn of the Screw_.
-As was, however, only natural, there was a considerable reaction, and
-orthodox naturalism was deliberately flouted by the Secessionsbuehne in
-1899 with their penchant for fairy-dramas and their genuinely aesthetic
-project of stretching between the stage and the audience a veil of
-transparent gauze intended to draw the scene into a misty distance. The
-rankest idealism seemed for a time the order of the day. "All that the
-young and the moderns have fought against with such animosity between
-1880 and 1890, pseudo-idealism, bookish dialogue, false and artificial
-characterisation, clap-trap stagecraft, all this celebrates in this
-drama a joyous resurrection; let us acknowledge it; we have lost the
-battle against falsehood and stupidity, conventionalism, and the
-public, lost it absolutely," writes Julius Hart in the _Tag_ of 1902.
-
-But the most interesting direction was given to this neo-romanticism by
-the aesthetic movement and _Kunstschwarmerei_ which began to sweep over
-music, literature, painting, and the drama with an almost Nietzschean
-intensity. Pure realism and pure romanticism, then, both being extinct,
-and an agressive horde of exuberant and heretical artists being alive,
-the solution for the artistic problem was found in the aesthetic and
-romantic treatment of realistic themes. The prose of the human document
-became illuminated with the poesy of the human imagination. Realism
-and Romanticism went into partnership in the freest of unions, and
-Wedekind is one of the most interesting fruits of this drastic alliance.
-
-The realistic method might be worse than useless for aesthetic purposes,
-but the realistic stock-in-trade was invaluable material for spirits
-bursting with an almost morbid healthiness, spirits for whom no subject
-was too terrible, no sensation too violent. Let us, however, turn to
-the official pronouncement of Wedekind's preface to his revised and
-expurgated edition of _Die Buechse von Pandora_, in which he states his
-defence to the prosecution which the first edition of that interesting
-book had brought upon his martyred head: "Wedekind is an apostle
-of the modern movement. It is the motto of this movement to effect
-a transvaluation of aesthetic values in style and stagecraft. The
-followers of this movement have for over fifteen years repudiated the
-claims of the so-called 'aesthetic-content' and of mere formal beauty;
-they hold it permissible to depict artistically and to represent on
-the stage the ugly, the crude, the repulsive, and even the vulgar,
-provided always that such characteristics are not treated as ends in
-themselves--that is to say, when the work is not created by love of the
-abhorrent for its own sake but is merely the medium for the expression
-of an artistic idea. Wedekind, accordingly, as the disciple of these
-authors, chooses to shed a light upon the darkest crannies of vice, and
-in particular to surround with a poetic framework those sexual subjects
-which have been the peculiar subject of medical science. The end and
-goal of his writings is to awaken fear and pity."
-
-Such an apologia can scarcely be said to be superfluous when one of the
-sub-plots of the play in question deals with the heroic, if somewhat
-nauseating, rebellion of a woman in the determination of whose lot
-nature has made a somewhat unfortunate mistake.
-
-Before, however, we proceed to gaze upon the black and lurid pictures
-of our dramatic artist, it is advisable to turn very briefly to the
-audience for whose particular benefit they exercise their hellish
-fascination. Wedekind's audience, in a word, is the extreme left
-wing. The German left wing, however, is considerably more numerous,
-more advanced, and more dangerous than the English. Our own aesthetic
-movement was killed almost instantaneously by the Wilde debacle. We
-still, of course, have our ultra-modern movement, such as it is, but
-for practical purposes no one could be more amiable or innocuous
-than the ladies and gentlemen who used to constitute the highly
-respectable audiences of the Court Theatre, or who find in the Stage
-Society a mildly audacious means of spending their Sabbath evenings.
-Germany, however, with its vastly superior education, and its horde
-of professional men and women, schoolmasters and piano-mistresses,
-lawyers, doctors, poets, and litterateurs, has the disease of modernity
-with a vengeance, carrying through each symptom to its logical
-conclusion with a violence and intensity to which our own fluttering
-unconventionalism affords but the faintest and most shadowy parallel.
-Free-love, which, with the possible exception of a certain ephemeral
-incident successfully immortalised in three or four recent novels,
-is in England little more than a name, the mythical bogey with which
-the halfpenny press pretend to frighten their delighted readers, or
-is at best among the smart and the semi-educated rich the philosophic
-sanction for highly unphilosophic impulses, is in Germany a theoretic
-dogma almost as sacred as that of woman suffrage and demanding almost
-as devout sacrifices on the shrine of its philosophic altar. When again
-the subtle souls of Great Britain will so far break the ice of their
-insular reserve as to discourse about the tragedy of existence, the
-far more heroic spirits of German modernity will have recourse to all
-the aesthetic delights of a fine and artistic suicide, which indeed
-in the most advanced circles is almost a fashionable analogue to our
-own appendicitis, or will find in the modern dogma of "living their
-own life" the substantial though possibly slightly less exhausting
-equivalent to our English hunger-strike. How strong is the neo-aesthetic
-movement may be gauged by the phenomenal success in Berlin of _Salome_
-and _Monna Vanna,_ the great scenes of which were followed avidly
-by young girls with an enthusiasm which was more than aesthetic. It
-may also be mentioned incidentally that Wilde's _De Profundis_ was
-published in German before it appeared in England, a circumstance
-due quite as much to a keener intellectual enthusiasm as to superior
-commercial enterprise.
-
-Realising, then, that while it is orthodox in England to be ashamed of
-one's passions and emotions, the German ambition is to plume oneself on
-taking everything _an grand serieux_, let us turn to a consideration
-of those plays in which, on a large canvas and in big bold splashes
-reminiscent of the not unanalogous methods of the Secessionist
-painters, Wedekind is pleased to present framed in gigantic irony:
-
- "Les immondes chacals, les pantheres, les lices,
- Les singes, les scorpions, les vautours, les serpents,
- Les monstres glapissants, hurlants, grognants, rampants,
- Dans la menagerie infame de nos vices."
-
-It will, perhaps, be well to start with that little masterpiece of
-a dramatic caricature, _Der Kammersaenger_. A fashionable singer,
-having completed his engagements in a provincial town, is snatching
-at last a few minutes' well-earned repose prior to catching his
-train. He has given strict orders that he is at home to no one. But
-there is no repose for the famed. An English school miss, who has
-waited two hours in the rain, smuggles herself into the room: she
-prattles her enthusiasm with pretty infantile gush: a few deft words
-of paternal advice and she is summarily dismissed. But again the great
-man's seclusion is desecrated by the entrance of a brother artist, a
-pathetically grotesque figure of a megalomaniac failure whose publisher
-complains that he spoils his one chance of success by refusing to die
-and thus afford an opportunity for posthumous discovery. But the genial
-tolerance of the illustrious one is considerably harshened when his
-colleague insists on playing his own compositions in a scene every whit
-as racy and delightful as the classic episode in Wycherley's _Plain
-Dealer_, where Major Oldfox, having tied down the Widow Blackacre,
-discharges at her helpless person the most deadly poetical fusillade.
-Exit, however, the composer, after an interesting philosophic lecture
-by his victim on the singer's life and of the contempt which as
-a practical man (for at an early period in his career he was "in
-carpets") he has for his fashionable bourgeois audience for whom he is
-a mere article of luxury as much in request as a motor-car or a new
-dress. Then, as the climax of this crescendo of invaders, enter Helene:
-a formal invitation to elope: the artist, however, has his contracts
-to fulfil and his train to catch, and the favour is declined with
-thanks: tears and threats of suicide: he endeavours to pacify her, and
-she promises to be good: he will miss his train if he is not quick.
-The romantic woman, however, unable to bear the final parting, shoots
-herself on the spot. The remorseful lover follows her example? Not a
-bit of it. He is politely regretful for the contretemps, but after all
-business is business, and he must catch his train. It is impossible
-without copious quotations to give a full idea of the piquant irony
-with which the comedy is salted; the truth and reality of the theme
-stand out all the more brilliant from their garb of romantic travesty,
-while the superb impudence of utilising death as an essentially comic
-climax is without parallel in European literature.
-
-Let us, however, now turn from light comedy to serious tragedy in
-the shape of _Der Totentanz_. The scene, as already mentioned, is
-laid in a "private hotel." Where Shaw, however, sees but the problem,
-Wedekind has only eyes for the poetry. To Shaw the irony is a weapon,
-to Wedekind an end in itself. Elfrida, a young lady in Reformkleid,
-one of the most militant members of a suppression society, interviews
-the proprietor, the Marquis Casti Piani, on the subject of a former
-maid of hers, for whom she has been searching for some years. The girl
-is identified, and the whole question philosophically discussed. The
-proprietor, moreover, who is an extremely well-dressed gentleman with
-a first-class education, polished manners, and all the introspective
-subtlety of the most modern of decadents, neatly turns the tables
-by announcing that the real impetus which made the girl change her
-calling was the "suppression literature" which the puritanical young
-woman had with unpardonable carelessness left lying about. The ice
-being thus broken, he proceeds in his capacity of sexual expert to
-diagnose the respective psychologies of his _tete-a-tete_ and himself.
-Why, they are both tarred with the same brush. If he, the trafficker,
-pursues his unpopular vocation even more as a matter of sexual mania
-than of commercial enterprise, so does she, the philanthropist, ply
-her good work out of an equally morbid craving to move in a congenial
-atmosphere. Are they not both but the obverse and reverse of the same
-medal? Paradoxical and super-Shavian dissertations on the theory of
-woman are then followed by blandishments and caresses, in respect of
-which with a marvellous genius for brutality he chaffs her on the
-crudity and inexperience of her technique. Then comes the most _outre_
-scene of the play when Casti Piani and Elfrida watch from behind
-a screen the courtship of Lisiska, the missing servant-girl, by a
-young man in a check knickerbocker suit; the bizarre paradox is but
-accentuated by the swing and beauty of the lyrics in which this wooing
-is conducted, and the distorted idealism of the girl, who, as the
-martyr-priestess of the _joie de vivre_, is almost genuinely convinced
-of the sanctity of her mission. The interlude over, the audience come
-from behind the curtain. Stung to the wildest pitch of emulation, the
-extreme limit of self-sacrificing ecstasy, the neurotic woman completes
-the cycle of her psychic revolution by the supplication, "Verkaufen Sie
-mich." The marquis, who has thus succeeded beyond his most sanguine
-expectations, in a fit of nervous revulsion shoots himself before the
-girl's eyes. Three of the inmates rush from three distinct doors,
-and the over-civilised satyr expires with their kisses on his lips,
-kisses savoured and criticised with all the frenzy of the moribund
-connoisseur--"Kuesse mich--nein, das war nicht--Kuesse--kuesse mich
-anders."
-
-It is impossible to express more cogently the whole tragedy of the
-dying sensualist.
-
-No normal Englishman can be expected to enjoy such a play; in justice,
-however, to the author, this freny is aesthetic as well as sexual. New
-worlds, in fact, have been needed to regale the insatiate appetites of
-the dramatist and his hearers; "Heaven has been blown to pieces by the
-artillery of science; earth is cold, stale and unpalatable; perforce
-let us batten on the fires of hell," would run his motto. As Baudelaire
-in verse, and Beardsley in painting, found their theme in the vicious
-and the abhorrent, so does Wedekind in the drama. As an ordinary play,
-_Der Totentanz_ falls outside judgment; as a sheer literary curiosity,
-a dramatic fantasia on the sex-motif, a deliberate essay in the art of
-the ironical and the brutal, the piece achieves its own and peculiar
-ambition.
-
-_Die Junge Welt_, on the other hand, flows in a current which, in
-spite of the eventual madness of the principal male character, is
-limpid and playful by comparison with the Phlegethontian course of the
-_Totentanz._ The theme of the comedy is the woman movement. In the
-prologue, one of his most aery and delicious pieces of work, Wedekind
-shows us a bevy of schoolgirls at lessons, chattering, fooling, and
-"ragging" their master with the most delightful _naivete_. They have a
-pretty taste in literature, forsooth, reading surreptitious copies of
-_The Arabian Nights_, talking gravely of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche,
-and quoting with the prettiest of pedantry Schiller, Goethe, and even
-Ovid. No mere prattlers, however. Glorying in their grievance, they
-found a league, the solemn oath of whose members is never to marry
-until the most glaring outrages in the education of the young are
-remedied. Towards the end of the scene some youthful figures of the
-opposite sex enter. How long will the league last?
-
-Then we come to the actual play where the sacred circle has been
-already cut by a marriage of one of the members. The whole comedy, in
-fact, shows how irresistibly the Life Force claims its own. The brisk
-racy dialogue and the satiric character drawing of the ultra-moderns
-are equally delicious. Particularly charming are Anna, masking the
-temperament of her Shavian namesake beneath the pose of the new woman;
-Karl, the picturesque scamp, who has married a seamstress on abstract
-socialistic principles; and Meyer, the modern poet, who, when his
-fiancee presents herself to recite a poem which he has written, in
-the most faithful of Cupid costumes, is most righteously indignant
-because--the dress fails to harmonise with the subtle spirit of his
-masterpiece.
-
-A masterly little piece of irony, again, is the celebrated
-stage-direction, when, at the climax of an intense passage, a
-baby squalls, and is carried off the stage by its mother, to the
-accompaniment of music. Perhaps, however, the deftest touch of
-satire is the analysis of the decline of the _detraque litterateur,_
-accustomed to transcribe each kiss fresh from the lips of his beloved
-into his artistic note-book.--"When I made my psychological studies on
-Anna, then Anna becomes unnatural--on some other specimen--she became
-jealous--there was no other alternative but to make them on myself."
-
-Wedekind's dramatic masterpieces, however, are _Die Erdgeist_. and
-_Fruehlingserwachen_, which merit, consequently, a somewhat more
-detailed analysis. _Die Erdgeist_, as has been already remarked,
-deals with the theme of the modern Lilith, not from the point of view
-of orthodox dramatic technique like Mr. Pinero, not scientifically
-like Zola, but aesthetically. No show of esoteric detail, no orthodox
-_denouement_; simply atmosphere. The play, together with its sequel,
-_Die Buechse von Pandora_, constitutes the epic of the courtesan. In the
-first act, Schwarz, a painter, is at work on the portrait, in pierrot
-costume, of the wife of a Dr. Goll, a lady rejoicing in the various
-Christian names of Nellie, Eva, and Lulu. A middle-aged journalist,
-named Schoen, who is in the studio, is on old and friendly terms with
-Frau Goll. The fact that female beauty is the _raison etre_ of the
-creature's existence is soon made apparent by the following dialogue:
-
- LULU. Here I am.
-
- SCHOEN. Splendid.
-
- LULU. Well?
-
- SCHOEN. You put the wildest imagination to the blush.
-
- LULU. Do you find me nice?
-
- SCHOEN. You're a picture that makes artists despair.
-
-The pompous conventionalism of the doctor is seen almost immediately,
-when he suggests with heavy gravity that she is not wearing her costume
-with sufficient reserve. The artist proceeds to work, and the mere
-mechanism of posing brings out at once the sheer sexuality of the
-animal which he is painting. Goll is carried off by Schoen, and the
-artist and the pierrot are left alone. The young painter proves more
-attractive than the old professor, who arrives towards the climax of a
-wild scene. In the scuffle, Goll is killed. Death, however, is a pet
-theme of Wedekind, who proceeds to batten thereon with abnormal gusto.
-
- SCHWARZ. The doctor is bound to be here in a minute.
-
- LULU. Doctoring won't help him.
-
- SCHWARZ. Still, in a case like this, one does what one
- can.
-
- LULU. He doesn't believe in doctors.
-
- SCHWARZ. Won't you, at any rate, change?
-
- LULU. Yes, at once.
-
- SCHWARZ. Why are you waiting?
-
- LULU. I say--
-
- SCHWARZ. What?
-
- LULU. Please close his eyes.
-
- SCHWARZ. They are awful.
-
- LULU. Nothing like as awful as you.
-
- SCHWARZ. As I?
-
- LULU. You're a depraved character.
-
- SCHWARZ. Doesn't all this affect you?
-
- LULU. Yes, I too am as well moved.
-
- SCHWARZ. Then I ask you not to say anything.
-
- LULU. You are moved as well.
-
-Shocked by her comparative callousness, Schwarz subjects her to a
-catechism--does she believe in a Creator, a soul, or anything--only to
-find himself beating against an eternal "I don't know."
-
-So ends the first act, and this creature, whose hair is a net of
-murder, whose lips are poisoned fruit, and whose eyes are pits of hell,
-has already one death to her credit.
-
-The second act discloses Schwarz married to Lulu, and in the heyday of
-artistic fame and fortune. A fleeting light is cast on the swamp, from
-which the fiend has emerged, by the entry and departure of Schigolch,
-her old ragamuffin of a sire. Then follows a _tete-a-tete_ between Lulu
-and Schoen. Combining, as she does, the soul of an Ibsen woman with
-the body of a Phryne, she complains of her husband's obtusity: "He
-is not a child--he is commonplace--he has no education--he realises
-nothing--he realises neither me nor himself--he is blind, blind--he
-doesn't know me, but he loves me; that is an unbridgeable gulf." The
-painter returns, and is given by Schoen the outlines of his wife's past.
-Schoen had picked her out of the gutter at the age of twelve, and had
-had her educated; her antecedents were ghastly; after the death of
-Schoen's wife, Lulu wished to marry him; to obviate that, he made her
-marry Dr. Goll with his half a million. Lulu is anxious to be good,
-but must be taken seriously. The painter then commits suicide, and the
-author feasts again on the carnage in a scene which, for sheer horror,
-challenges even _Macbeth_.
-
-"After you," says Lulu, after they have heard the body fall, and Schoen
-has opened the door.
-
- SCHOEN. There's the end of my engagement. Ten minutes ago
- he lay here.[2]
-
- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-
- SCHOEN. That is your husband's blood.
-
- LULU. It leaves no stain.
-
- SCHOEN. Monster!
-
- LULU. Of course you will marry me.
-
-Then, by way of a really strong curtain, they send for a reporter, and
-dictate the official version of the thrilling story. The third act is
-the dressing-room of Lulu; she has gone on the music-hall stage as a
-barefoot dancer of classical measure; Schoen, having temporarily freed
-himself from the spell, is about to marry a charming, "innocent child,"
-whom he has brought to witness the spectacle. The insult stimulates
-the girl to a supernormal fascination. Having refused the proposals
-of a prince, she deliberately sets herself to cast her wand over the
-journalist. She mocks him brazenly, with her magic potency over him, in
-a scene of the most subtle cruelty.
-
- SCHOEN. Don't look at me so shamelessly.
-
- LULU. No one is keeping you here.
-
-The Circaean witchery is complete, and the man, transformed, writes, at
-the dictation of the enchantress, a letter breaking off his engagement.
-
-In the fourth act, nemesis is at hand. His marriage with Lulu shatters
-the constitution of the aging journalist, who falls a victim to
-persecution-mania. Lulu, though genuinely in love with him, surrenders
-herself almost mechanically to the kisses of his son. The journalist
-can stand no more--such a creature is not fit to live--she must commit
-suicide with the revolver which he produces. Simply as a matter of
-self-preservation, she turns the weapon against the man himself. Then
-ensues the most devilish scene of all. Fearing the prison-cage, the
-brute turns for help to the child of its prey: "I shot him because he
-wanted to shoot me. I loved no man in the world like I did him. Alwa,
-demand what you will. Look at me, Alwa; look at me, man, look at me."
-
-Those anxious for the further history of Lulu should turn to the livid
-pages of _Die Buechse von Pandora._ There, in flaming characters, they
-will read of her imprisonment, of how, being deprived of a mirror,
-she at last found relief by seeing her reflection in a new spoon, of
-her rescue therefrom by her inamorata, the Countess Geschwitz, and of
-her flight to Paris with Alwa Schoen; they will read of her life there
-among _souteneurs_, blackmailers, and millionaires, of her migration
-from Paris to London, of her degradation to the streets, and her final
-assassination at the hands of Jack the Ripper.
-
-Wedekind, who to the _metier_ of the artist joins that of the
-_enfant terrible_, strains in this play every nerve to shock. As the
-susceptibilities of the left wing of most of the English intellects
-are about on a par with those of the right wing of the German aesthetic
-movement, from our own point of view he more than overshoots the mark.
-None the less, the English reader, though stifled amid the fumes of the
-monstrous debauch, is forced to admire here and there passages of a
-potency truly infernal. The final scene in the wet and noisome garret
-is indisputably tragic, when the squalid thing gazes at Schwarz's
-pierrot picture of her dead beauty, only to throw it in revulsion out
-of the window, or where Alwa and Schigolch analyse the melancholy past.
-
- ALWA. She should have been a Catherine of Russia.
-
- SCHIGOLCH. That beast!
-
- ALWA. Although her development was precocious, she
- once had the expression of a gay and healthy child of
- five years old. She was then only three years younger
- than I. In spite of her marvellous superiority to me
- in practical matters, she let me explain to her the
- meaning of _Tristan and Isolde_, and how fascinating
- she was when I read it to her and she grasped its
- meaning. From the little sister that felt herself like
- a schoolgirl in her first marriage, she became the wife
- of an unfortunate and hysterical artist; from being
- the wife of the artist, she became the wife of my late
- father; from being the wife of my father, she became my
- mistress; so flows the stream of the world. Who can swim
- against it?
-
-So ends a play not without some resemblance to Hogarth's _Harlot's
-Progress_, if one can imagine the fanatical moralist treating such
-a subject with the artistic irony of a very much Germanised Aubrey
-Beardsley.
-
-But Wedekind's most serious contribution to dramatic literature is to
-be found in _Fruehlingserwachen._ The orthodox stage-conventions, it
-is true, are sweepingly ignored; the scene is changed with more than
-Shakespearean frequency; the characters indulge in prolonged romantic
-soliloquies; none the less, the night of genuine tragedy broods over
-the whole piece.
-
-The first act opens with a conversation between Frau Bergman and her
-daughter Wendla. The girl is growing up, fit to wear longer dresses,
-and exhibiting the morbidity appropriate to her years. In the next
-scene we see schoolboys at talk; with intense gravity they travel
-from their work to religion, and from religion to sex, discussing the
-Platonic and American systems of education, remarking that Superstition
-is the Charybdis into which one flies out of the Scylla of religious
-mania, or comparing notes on the growth of their respective manhoods.
-Melchior, the leading spirit of the knot, promises to provide his less
-experienced friend, Moritz, with a written synopsis of the mechanism
-of life. In the third scene, we get the other side of the medal, when
-a bevy of girls discuss life. How shall we dress our children? Which
-is it better to be--a girl, or a man? Then, again, the scene is filled
-with schoolboys, and we see the academic enthusiasm of young Germany.
-
-"I've got my move," cried Melchior. "I've got my move--now the world
-can go to pot--if I hadn't got my move, I'd have shot myself." A
-British youth with his cricket or football "colours" fresh on his
-victorious head could not possibly have manifested a more sacred joy,
-and one thinks incidentally of the Viennese student who shot the
-professor who had ploughed him in his viva voce.
-
-Scene V, after a short philosophic exposition by Melchior of the
-universality of egoism, contains an episode between himself and Wendla,
-when at her own request he hits and beats her, so that, forsooth, she
-may realise the sufferings of a friend of hers similarly handled by her
-parents. After we have paid a visit to Melchior's study, where Melchior
-and Moritz are reading _Faust_ together, we are transported once again
-to the house of Wendla and her mother. This scene is the most pathetic
-in the first act. The old fairy tales about the stork cease to obtain
-credence, but the birthright of knowledge claimed by the child is
-refused by the mother.
-
- "Why can't you tell me, Mother dear--see, I kneel at
- your feet and lay my head upon your lap--you put your
- skirt over my head and tell me, and tell me as if you
- were alone in the room. I promise not to move--I promise
- not to shriek."
-
-Could the dim forebodings of innocence, the harrowing consciousness of
-mystery, be more poignantly delineated?
-
-In the third act, events move apace. A poetic nemesis befalls the
-prudish mother, for the child surrenders all unwitting to the ardour
-of Melchior. Spring has indeed awakened. Moritz, however, has been
-unsuccessful at school; he wanders into the forest to make the end.
-Four pages of soliloquy; a dramatic device, no doubt, but none the less
-indicative of the exaggerated introspective pedantry of the average
-German schoolboy. "I wander to the altar like the youth in old Etruria,
-whose death-rattle purchased deliverance for his brothers in the coming
-year." Then, when his thoughts are at their darkest, a pretty little
-artist's model comes tripping along barefoot; gay and sparkling is her
-careless life. "Come home with me." But the schoolboy has his lessons
-to do, and he hies himself to his final task. Act III.--Apprehensive of
-a suicide epidemic, the masters hold a meeting in which the question
-of whether the window shall be open or shut is apparently of as much
-importance as the expulsion of Melchior. Then comes the funeral of
-Moritz; the father repudiates the paternity of so prodigal a son, while
-the classical professor sapiently remarks, "If he had only learnt his
-history of Greek literature, he would have had no occasion to hang
-himself." Melchior, however, is still at large, and after a harrowing
-dialogue between his father and mother, is packed off to a reformatory.
-
-But the transformation scene goes merrily on, and we behold first the
-reformatory, from which Melchior effects an escape, and then Wendla's
-sick-room. Amid the most trenchant satire on the pompous fashionable
-doctor, it becomes apparent that the child has brought home to her
-mother the full wages of innocence.
-
- FRAU BERGMANN. You have a child.
-
- WENDLA. But that is not possible, Mother. I am not
- married. Oh, Mother, why did you not tell me everything?
-
-The finale of the play is laid in the churchyard, over whose wall there
-clambers the escaped Melchior; he walks past the tombstone of Wendla,
-dead from her mother's heroic efforts to save her reputation; after an
-interview with Moritz, out for a nocturnal stroll, with his head tucked
-under his arm, he meets a mysterious stranger, who launches him in the
-world.
-
-Such is a synopsis of a play produced in Germany amid the wildest
-acclamation and disparagement. Its success is largely due to the fact
-that it is pregnant with a problem which, in Germany, at any rate, is
-of peculiar moment. "Is such a subject capable of artistic treatment?"
-demands the man of the old school. If, however, the treatment is
-somewhat more drastic than in Longfellow's
-
- "Standing with reluctant feet
- Where the brook and river meet,"
-
-the subject is the same, the reason for the difference being that
-German blood flows with a swifter current and a fuller volume than the
-thin New England trickle of the early nineteenth century. As a sheer
-piece of psychology, the work is as great as James's _The Awkward Age_,
-if one may compare a Vulcanic forge with a Daedalean web. That, indeed,
-the theme is unfit for tragic treatment, let those maintain whose
-ideally balanced temperaments have never experienced the throes and
-travails that attend the birth of manhood or womanhood.
-
-Some reference should be made to Wedekind's less important works--to
-the somewhat inferior farce, _Der Liebestrank_; to the highly
-serious _So ist das Leben_, a work whose psychology and symbolism
-are analogous to Ibsen's _Volksfiend_[3]; to the amusing, but not
-particularly significant _Marquis von Keith_, with its mixture of
-the problem, the extravaganza, and the character study, and its
-delightful comedy passage, when a boy wins his way with his father
-by blackmailing him with suicide; to _Minnehaha_, the prose-poem,
-compounded of the spirits of the classics and the coulisses; to the
-satiric grotesque, _Oaha_, an elaborate skit on the celebrated Munich
-journal with its chronic confiscations by the police and its special
-"prison-editor"; and to _Hidalla_, that rollicking burlesque tragedy
-of Free Love and Eugenics. On a higher plane, however, are the volume
-of short stories, _Feuerwerk_, and the collection of poems entitled
-_Die Vier Jahrzeiten_. Like Guy de Maupassant, Wedekind treats only
-the one subject. His technique, however, is different, and while the
-Frenchman crowns each tale with a climax, the German clothes it with an
-atmosphere. _Feuerwerk,_ moreover, is worth reading, if only for the
-style, with its noble simplicity and its majestic roll. The masterpiece
-of the series is _Der Greise Freier_, where, set in the background of
-an Italian honeymoon, lies painted the grey romance of a young girl
-realising her love in the very arms of death. Matchless, again, as a
-mock heroic _tour de force_ is _Rabbi von Ezra_, a philosophic sermon
-by an aged Hebrew, delivered in the grandiose style of the prophets,
-on his comparative experiences with the wife of his bosom and the
-strange woman. The poems, also, are, with a few exceptions, innumerable
-variations of the eternal theme. With all its fantastic bizarrerie,
-reminiscent of Baudelaire, Poe, or Verlaine, the mood is throughout
-more masculine, not to say more brutal. No lover has yet set his
-enamoured features to a grin of such tigerish ferocity; no writer of
-songs has yet refined melodious lyrics with such Nietzschean gusto,
-such Satanic exultation. _Keuscheit_, in particular, is truly the
-apotheosis of the super-brutal. In a more normal vein, making quite a
-new departure in the art of light verse, is the charming poem beginning:
-
- "Ich habe meine Tante geschlachtet,
- Meine Tante war alt und schwach."
-
-Of course it is inevitable that, like the Secessionist painters,
-seeking, as he does, such drastic effects by such drastic means, when
-he falls, he should fall with overwhelming heaviness. Occasionally,
-instead of being powerful, he is merely crude. At his best, however,
-his poems exhibit the swing and ripple of the authentic lyric. Typical
-of him at his best are _Heimweh_ and _Der Blinde Knabe_. Yet now and
-again the cry of the sufferer pierces the cynic's mask.
-
- "Ich stehe schuldlos vor meinem Verstand,
- Und fuehle des Schicksals zermalmende Hand."
-
-Among Wedekind's more recent works we would mention _Zensur_ and
-_Schloss von Wetterstein_ and, far more particularly, _Musik_ and
-_Franziska_.
-
-_Zensur_, with its sub-title _a Theodicy_, is an _apologia pro vita
-sua_, arising more particularly out of the fact that the play, _Die
-Buechse von Pandora_, was actually censored even in Munich. The
-protagonist of this work, _Walter Buridan_, is without disguise
-Frank Wedekind, for the postulate of the Wedekindian personality,
-as a fundamental element in contemporary national culture, is as
-important in Germany as was some years ago the postulate of the Shavian
-personality in England. And, indeed, with all his clownings and
-buffooneries, Wedekind is frequently as serious as Mr. Shaw himself. It
-will therefore be appreciated that the passage which we are now going
-to quote out of the dialogue between Buridan and the Court official
-is meant deliberately, not as a mere piece of impudence but in all
-earnestness.
-
- BURIDAN. But can you adduce anything out of my writings
- which hasn't for its ultimate object to glorify and
- represent artistically that eternal justice before which
- we all bend the knee with all humility?
-
- DR. PRANTL. What do you mean by eternal justice?
-
- BURIDAN. I understand by eternal justice the same thing
- as that which John the Evangelist called the Logos. I
- understand by it the same thing as that which the whole
- of Christendom worships as the Holy Ghost. In no one
- of my works have I put forward the good as bad or the
- bad as good. I have never falsified the consequences
- which accrue to a man as the result of his actions. I
- have simply portrayed those consequences in all their
- inexorable necessity.
-
-In a somewhat different vein is the weird trilogy, _In Allen Satteln
-Gerecht_ (_Ready for Everything_), _Mit Allen Hueden Gehetzt_ (_Up
-to Everything_), and _In Allen Wassern Gewaschen_, which have
-been recently published together, under the title of _Schloss von
-Wetterstein._ In these three plays the lascivious and the intellectual,
-the monstrous and the real, the comic and the tragic, are linked
-together in a union which, though to some extent burlesque, is on
-the whole successful. The dialogue, in particular, in this hybrid
-of tragedy and extravaganza, with its ingenious twists, its lusty
-thwackings, its shrewd, violent thrusts, not merely home, but, as it
-were, right through the body, is in its own way packed with genius.
-Effie, in particular, with her insatiable appetite in the erotic
-sphere, is the greatest _enfant terrible_ in the whole of modern
-European literature. And truly tragic is her dismay when she discovers
-that that _Unersaettlichkeit in Liebe_, on which she has built her whole
-philosophy of life, is simply to be attributed to chronic indigestion,
-and that the instantaneous effect which she produces upon males is
-simply due to a diseased liver.
-
-More serious, though with the usual Wedekindian sardonic undercurrent,
-is _Musik_. This play consists of four "pictures" from the life of
-a young singing student, Klara Huhnerwadel, studying her art in the
-household of a professor who is married to another woman. Events take
-their normal course, but there is a great uproar owing to the arrest
-and trial of the woman, through whose illegal assistance Klara had
-successfully escaped the natural corollary of her rash romanticism.
-Klara is consequently packed off across the frontier to avoid arrest
-herself. She returns, however, is duly arrested, and the second
-"picture" shows her in prison. In the third "picture," she is once
-more back at the professor's house, and once more does history repeat
-itself, though in this case the legal ordinances are not infringed. In
-the fourth "picture," Klara has given birth to a son, of whom she is
-devotedly fond. With true Wedekindian irony, however, the child dies on
-the stage. Such is the skeleton of the plot, squalid, though no doubt
-highly plausible. But the play must be read itself to appreciate the
-sheer force of its sinister realism. The characters in this piece are
-among the most convincing that ever walked the boards of a Wedekind
-play, painted too in colours far more sober than those fantastic
-luridities with which this author is accustomed to disport himself.
-It is, in fact, if we may draw a slightly startling analogy, a "slice
-of life" play of the Galsworthian genre. Before passing from _Musik_,
-we would like to quote the passage describing the child's death as
-typically characteristic of the author's brutal pathos.
-
- ELSE. The bath will do him good (_with her bare arm in
- the water_)--it's all cooking salt--the salt won't hurt
- him, will it, doctor?
-
- DR. SCHWARZKOPF (_by the cot, dully_). There is nothing
- more to be done. The child is dead.
-
- KLARA (_gives an agonised shriek_).
-
- [_The_ Landlady _picks up the tub of water from the
- floor and carries it out_.
-
-In _Franziska_ (1912), Wedekind has given fresh rein to his fantastic
-exuberance. This weird drama deals with the experiences of an
-ultra-modern Mademoiselle de Maupin, who, having sold herself to the
-devil in the shape of an impresario, who holds her strictly to her
-bargain, proceeds to see life like a veritable twentieth-century female
-Faust. And life, forsooth, she sees with a vengeance, playing the smart
-"blood" in a gay _Weinstube_; marrying a rich heiress, so naive and
-so unsophisticated as to put everything down to sheer frigidity on
-the part of her imagined husband; successfully masquerading in silk
-knee-breeches to a silly old monarch as a genuine spirit, only finally,
-like a contemporary
-
- "In veterem Caeneus revoluta figuram,"
-
-to subside both purified and enlightened byher kaleidoscopic
-experiences into the healthy bliss of the quasi-domestic life with a
-new, honest, and well-meaning lover.
-
-The wild, rollicking humour of this play will perhaps appeal in vain
-to the more stolid of our English minds. Some help may perhaps be
-found for the due appreciation of this, and, indeed, of all Wedekind's
-plays, if it be borne in mind that for a modern woman to live her own
-life in Southern Germany (_sich auszuleben_, to employ the technical
-and official phrase) is not revolutionary but elementary, and is far
-more of a cliche than a new departure. Further, the play claims to be
-treated not by the standards of the ordinary drama, but as a problem
-farce, an Aristophanic modernity, a philosophic extravaganza, a
-dramatic anomaly, very much _sui generis_, and consequently requiring
-very special critical standards. Judging it by these standards, it is
-impossible not to be swept away by the high spirits of this strange
-piece of art. Who, too, can gainsay the practical up-to-dateness of a
-play where maidens insure against children, wives against infidelity,
-monarchs against madness? And who will not admire the almost morbid
-conscientiousness of Franziska, who, having had one lover of the
-name of Veit, and another lover of the name of Ralph, and becoming
-subsequently a mother, determines, out of comprehensive precaution
-and sheer sense of fairness, to call the little boy by the impartial
-designation of Veitralph? It is, however, only fair to state, as we
-have already hinted, that the play finishes up on a note of genuine
-pathos and semi-conjugal affection.
-
-What, then, is Wedekind's final claim? As a play-wright in the ordinary
-sense of the word, his pretensions are negligible. One of the most
-marked features, however, of the last decade and a half has been the
-evolution of fresh species in the genus drama. Thus, apart from the
-drama or play of action, with its orthodox _denouement_ and climax, we
-have the "idea" play, as in Mr. Shaw; the "slice of life" play, as in
-Mr. Galsworthy; or the "aesthetic atmosphere" play, as in Maeterlinck.
-Whether we call such work drama, or quasi-drama, is as immaterial
-from the larger standpoint as the surname we choose to give to the
-individual who did, or who did not, write _Hamlet_. Even, however,
-with this extended classification, it is difficult to docket into any
-definite pigeon-hole so idiosyncratic a temperament. If we have to
-commit ourselves, we would say that the Wedekind play is the lyric play
-of irony--irony both comic and tragic. Even making all due allowances
-for defects, for the superfluous thickness with which sometimes he
-places his harsh and violent colours, or for occasional amorphous
-construction, as in _Fruehlingserwachen_, as a master of irony he is
-indisputably a genius. No _soeva indignatio_, it is true, lends its
-ethical sanction, no Hellenic [Greek: _eironeia_] its delicate grace:
-it is for his own fiendish delectation that he plies his knout on that
-world of abnormalities called into existence for this express purpose,
-and writhing prettily in the most ingenious of dances. Yet with what
-art and dexterity does he operate, finding with unerring aim the raw
-place of his victims, and drawing from these apparent grotesques the
-blood of genuine humanity. Your specialist will no doubt diagnose him a
-decadent, yet he is tense with a frenzied virility. It is, as we have
-said before, the very exuberance and violence of his energy that leads
-him plumb the abyss. He has himself well expressed his whole outlook
-on life, and indeed the whole Nietzschean standpoint, in the following
-lines:
-
- "For them your kind and gracious face,
- For me the sword smiles sweet,
- For me the savage bear's embrace,
- For them old Bruin's meat.
- The brutal foe's own strife I choose,
- They the humanities of truce."
-
-
-[Footnote 1: _Cf._ the lines of Ricarda Huch to life: "Denn du bist
-suss in deinen Bitternessen."]
-
-[Footnote 2: It is curious to notice that almost identical words were
-used in _Irene Wycherley_.]
-
-[Footnote 3: "Volksfiend" (sic); German is "Volksfeind", Norwegian is
-"Folkefiende"--transcriber's note--M.D.]
-
-
-
-
-ARTHUR SCHNITZLER
-
-
- "My dear friend, as far as that grotesque realism is
- concerned, which considers it its duty to get along
- without stage management or prompter, that realism in
- which a fifth act frequently fails to be reached because
- a tile has fallen upon the hero's head in the second
- act--I am not interested. As for myself, I let the
- curtain go up when it begins to be amusing, and I let it
- go down at the moment which I consider fit."
-
-
-In these words, touched with a delicate flippancy which is thoroughly
-characteristic, Arthur Schnitzler endeavours to summarise that
-technique which, though it has lifted him to the summit of the Austrian
-drama, is as yet comparatively unknown to the English public, if one
-excepts the recent performance by the Stage Society of _The Green
-Cockatoo_ and _Countess Mizzi_, and the production of _Anatol_ at the
-Palace Music Hall.
-
-It is, in fact, because Schnitzler's plays combining, and on the whole
-combining efficiently, the psychological interest of pure "problem"
-with the emotional interest of pure "drama," afford specimens of a
-type novel to, at any rate, the majority of our theatre-goers, that
-they provoke something more than a cursory examination, not only of
-themselves, but of the standpoint and method of the man who wrote
-them. Above all is this the case in a country like England, where
-the problem play is hampered by so many handicaps. The exaggerated
-officialdom of our English propriety, beneficial though it may be
-from the moral aspect, produces artistically unfortunate results.
-Many first-class problem plays are exiled from the stage, but that is
-not where the mischief ends. Even when they are produced, it is only
-to be looked on with suspicion as eccentric symptoms of dangerous,
-not to say anarchistic tendencies. When, however, official and
-"respectable" dramatists (_i.e._ dramatists of the stamp of Mr. Pinero
-or of Mr. Sutro) produce so-called problem plays before official and
-"respectable" audiences (_i.e._ audiences of a calibre other than
-that of those who patronise the Little Theatre and Stage Society
-performances), it will be usually found (if, indeed, the play is not
-an innocuous family drama, or simply a comedy of intrigue, for in many
-cases the word "problem" has degenerated into a mere euphemism for some
-slight forgetfulness of the Seventh Commandment) that the dramatist
-has sacrificed the duty of working out his problems logically and
-artistically to the still more paramount duty of appeasing the moral
-consciousness of his audience.
-
-Further, it is one of the precepts of our dramatic technique, most
-honoured in the observance, that the action should take place among
-people of high social position; as, however, it so happens that it is
-rather among the more intellectual and introspective of the middle
-classes that genuine problems tend to arise, the scope of the dramatist
-becomes automatically narrowed. Of course we have our dramatic left
-wing, Mr. Shaw, Mr. Galsworthy, Mr. Barker, our ultra-modern exponents
-of the drama of ideas and the drama of psychology. But here, again,
-our revolutionaries overshoot the mark in their reaction from the
-orthodox. Mr. Shaw will bombard us with ideas till we can hardly
-stand. When, however, we have recovered our balance, we observe that,
-however indisputable may be his pre-eminence as a thaumaturgic apostle
-of a successfully dechristianised Christianity, his characters are
-marked by comparatively few traits of individual psychology, and
-participate in comparatively little dramatic action. It is, indeed,
-with profound appreciation of his weakness that "talking" is set by
-Mr. Shaw as a final seal on the _Superman_. Mr. Galsworthy and Mr.
-Barker, it is true, do give us not only elaborate discussion of social
-problems (though not infrequently an airy discussion of things in
-general is dragged in forcibly with no, or little, reference to the
-action of the play), but also refined and delicate delineations of
-individual character. But with the possible exception of the grandiose
-and monstrous _Waste_ and the statuesque thesis and antithesis of the
-sociological _Strife_, their plays are not dramatic. To express it with
-almost childish implicity, their plays are not "exciting." With a few
-exceptions, they are charged with no atmosphere and abut at no climax.
-
-Mere ideas, however, will not make the dramatic world go round, and
-mere psychology often only makes it go flat. Few words are mouthed with
-such fluent irresponsibility as "technique," but it may be said--and
-said, we think, truly, and without affectation--that no play can be
-a success without a certain minimum of "technique"; that is to say,
-either one continuous thread of dramatic interest on which successive
-acts are strung, or some particular arch-effect to which (especially if
-a one-acter) the whole play abuts, and to the atmosphere of which all
-the elements are harmoniously toned.
-
-The vice of the English drama, then, is this: plays of good technical
-mechanism possess little or no "problem" interest; plays of "problem"
-or psychological interest possess little or no technical mechanism.
-
-Let us, consequently, glancing first at his plays, and perhaps later
-at those short stories which stand in the most intimate relation
-to his one-acters, ascertain to what extent Schnitzler has solved
-successfully the great "problem of the problem."
-
-_Liebelei_, which was produced first in 1895, is an excellent example
-both of Schnitzler's powers and of Schnitzler's limitations. The
-_motif_ of the play is the problem of the refined middle-class girl,
-who stands, if we may borrow the terminology of popular melodrama, at
-the cross-roads. Which turning is it better for her to take--the right
-turning, or the wrong turning?
-
-Fritz, a sentimental young Viennese student, is discussing in his rooms
-the affairs of his heart with the saner and more practical Theodor.
-Fritz is melancholy. He has been sustaining a grand passion for a
-married woman, but the looming shadow of the husband obsesses him. Are
-his nerves playing him tricks, or has the husband ascertained?
-
-Theodor advises him to sail in shallower and less troubled waters. "You
-must go for your happiness where I did--and found it, too--where there
-are no great scenes, no dangers, and no tragic developments, where
-the first steps are not particularly hard and the last, again, are
-not painful, where one receives the first kiss with a smile and parts
-finally with the softest feeling."
-
-Scruples are out of place on the principle, "Better myself than someone
-else, and the someone else is as inevitable as Fate."
-
-Theodor, moreover, has not only prescribed the cure, but has ordered
-the medicine. Enter Mizzi, the actual "happiness" of Theodor,
-and Christine, the prospective "happiness" of Fritz. Mizzi the
-practical prepares supper, while the sweet _naivete_ of the genuinely
-unsophisticated Christine captivates the jaded soul of our _fin de
-siecle_ romantic. There ensues a scene of the most delicate gaiety
-and camaraderie. All is health and goodwill. Even Mizzi the prosaic
-shows her passion for the picturesque on learning that Fritz is in the
-Dragoons:
-
- MIZZI. Are you in the yellow or the black?
-
- FRITZ. I'm in the yellow.
-
- MIZZI. (_dreamily_). In the yellow.
-
-Could there be a more subtle probing into the soul of the
-novelette-reading shopgirl?
-
-Then, at the zenith of the feast, when glasses are clinking and souls
-are flowing, enter the skeleton. The company is packed into the next
-room, and Fritz is left to arrange a duel with the man whom he has
-wronged. Exit the skeleton, re-enter the revellers; yet the shadow of
-the looming death casts a gloom even over the unconscious minds of
-the others. The girls bid a gay farewell to the young men, but the
-aftermath of the old love is already poisoning the sweets of the new.
-
-The next scene is in the lodgings of Christine on the eve of that duel
-of which the love-stricken girl is in blissful ignorance. Christine,
-_bien entendu_, in contradistinction to the casual and heart-whole
-Mizzi, is taking her love-affair with the maximum of seriousness.
-Katherine, a benevolent busybody of a neighbour, puts Weiring, the
-musician father of Christine, on his guard. Weiring, however, having
-been the uncomplaisant brother of his sister, is determined, on the
-strength of his experience, to be the complaisant father of his
-daughter.
-
- WEIRING. I became, Heaven knows, proud, and gloried in
- my conduct--and then, little by little, the grey hairs
- came and the wrinkles, and one day went by another
- till her whole youth was gone--and gradually, so that
- one could scarcely notice it, the young girl became an
- old maid, and then I first began to suspect what I had
- really done.
-
- KATHERINE. But, Herr Weiring....
-
- WEIRING. I can see how she often used to sit with me in
- the evening by this lamp in this room, with her silent
- smile, with a strange kind of devotion, as if she still
- wished to thank me for something, and I--the one thing
- I wanted most to do was to throw myself on my knees and
- ask for her forgiveness for guarding her so well from
- all dangers and from all happiness.
-
-The act ends with a love-scene between Christine and Fritz, poignant in
-its irony. He is all-in-all to her, she is just something to him; but
-he goes off to fight a duel on account of another woman without so much
-as bidding her a real farewell.
-
-In the third act the news of Fritz's death is broken to Christine,
-and here comes the most subtle and delicate touch of all. Poignant as
-is her grief at his death, her grief at the casual flippancy of his
-treatment is even more poignant. Our _fin de siecle_ Ophelia rushes
-madly out of the house to commit suicide in the nearest brook, or
-perhaps more probably under the nearest train, to point the philosophic
-moral, "_A bas la grande passion! Vive l'Amourette!_"
-
-The play, however, should be read or seen to obtain an adequate
-appreciation of the precision with which each character is drawn, the
-spontaneity with which the dialogue flows, and the lyric pathos with
-which the whole is invested. The limitations, such as they are, simply
-lie in the fact that each act is self-complete in itself. However
-good they may be, three consecutive one-acters never made a drama.
-To compare great things with low, each act of a drama, like each
-instalment of a _feuilleton_, should leave, as it were, the hanging
-tag of some vital interrogation. The dramatic banquet should not only
-regale the mind of the spectator during, but titillate it with the
-aftermath between the acts.
-
-As we shall see later, when he comes to dramatise on the larger
-scale, Schnitzler not infrequently exhibits the defects of those very
-qualities which make him so supreme in the sphere of the one-acter.
-
-In _Maerchen_ (the Fairy Tale), on the other hand, the problem is
-brought more officially into the foreground of the play, while each
-act is more closely connected with those which follow or precede it.
-Fedor Denner, a romantic young journalist (nearly all Schnitzler's
-young men are highly romantic), is in love with Fanny, a young actress
-on the threshold of theatrical success, and of those dangers which
-follow so closely in the wake of theatrical success. Fedor, moreover,
-is not only romantic, he is modern--ultra-modern. And so, in the
-inspiring atmosphere of Fanny's home circle, where the mother bustles
-about with the refreshments and the "good" piano-teacher of a sister
-discourses music for the edification of the journalists, painters, and
-students who frequent the house, he gives an impassioned little lecture
-on the "Fairy Tale of the Fallen Woman" and on the "washed-out views
-and dead-beat ideas" of which the fairy tale is composed. The little
-lecture, however, goes off just a little too successfully. In a climax,
-marvellous in its tacit concentration, Fanny takes an opportunity
-of kissing his hand. Fedor is revolted, however, by the revelation
-implied in this pathetic gratitude. He had contemplated marriage, but
-now----. For the time being he nurses in solitary misery all the pangs
-of retrospective jealousy. Then Fanny, unable to bear the separation,
-rushes headlong into his arms. Then comes the great act of the play. We
-are back once more in the house of Fanny's mother. The young actress,
-having scored a brilliant success on the Vienna stage, has been offered
-a splendid contract in St. Petersburg by Moritzki, the agent. If,
-however, she goes to St. Petersburg, she will have to face the pains
-and pleasures of life unsheltered by the respectability of a family.
-The problem is acute. Fanny, however, places the Fate of her life on
-the knees of--Fedor. And Fedor shuffles and vacillates.
-
- FANNY. Come, and you--what do you say yourself?
-
- FEDOR. After you have received Herr Moritzki at the
- house you can scarcely seriously mean to refuse him.
-
- FANNY. Herr Denner, I consider you an exceptionally
- shrewd man, I ask you for your advice.
-
- FEDOR. Yes, I think ... I would accept.
-
- Fanny. Good! [_To_ Moritzki.] Herr Moritzki.
-
-Woman-like, however, having signed the contract, she craves time to
-reconsider. Fedor looks at it again.
-
- FANNY. Fedor--you gave me the contract back.
-
- FEDOR. Well, yes.
-
- FANNY. You should have torn it up, dear. Why didn't you
- do it?
-
- FEDOR. You should not have signed it, Fanny.
-
- FANNY. Fedor! It is unbearable--you're driving me out of
- my senses.
-
- FEDOR. But you yourself don't quite know your own mind.
- There's something in you which craves for adventures.
-
- FANNY. Fedor--if you would only put me to the test--I
- will do anything you want--only tell me.
-
-And then, eventually, Fedor owns up.
-
- FEDOR. Would I not still have to kiss away from your
- lips the kisses of other men?
-
-And so Fanny forsakes the life of domesticity for the life of the
-actress.
-
-The chief defect, however, in this play is that, in spite of all its
-dramatic compound of psychology, pathos, and problem, the problem is
-not fairly presented, in that Fanny, being of inferior social status
-to Fedor, the question of whether he shall marry her must inevitably
-be influenced by purely snobbish considerations. It is only when the
-woman is of equal, if not slightly superior, rank to the man that the
-real problem of her ante-nuptial chastity can be discussed with real
-sociological fairness.
-
-In _Die Vermaechtniss_ (produced in Berlin in 1898), the problem which
-our dramatist has made the centre of his play is the relation to the
-family of the mistress and child of the dead son of the house. The
-dashing young cavalry officer is brought home fatally wounded from
-a fall from his horse. Realising his approaching death, he informs
-his parents of his responsibilities. Death raises the home circle to
-a pitch of more than ordinary humanity. In spite of their poignant
-jealousy at the existence of other affections and another home life,
-they send for their son's household, and accede to his dying request to
-incorporate it into the family.
-
-Act II shows the mistress installed in the bosom of her lover's family.
-Modernity, however, though satisfying to the heroic pose, has its
-penalties. Our ultra-modern family finds itself confronted with social
-ostracism. Still, they love their grandchild, and the mother of the
-grandchild is the price that they must pay. But the grandchild dies.
-The semi-official daughter-in-law consequently becomes a somewhat
-unprofitable luxury, and in the final act is given her _conge_. Even
-more than in _Liebelei_, however, the claim to merit lies almost
-exclusively in the precision with which each successive phase of
-the problem is portrayed. As a series of family pictures, the play
-succeeds, and succeeds brilliantly; as a drama of continuous interest,
-it fails, and fails hopelessly.
-
-The next play of Schnitzler is _The Veil of Beatrice._ This "tragedy
-of sensualism" has qualities too arresting to be lightly disregarded.
-The dramatist has forsaken his problems to portray how the fatal
-temperament of a young girl of the Italian Renaissance works out its
-own destruction.
-
-In the first act, we are shown the garden of Filippo, a poet of
-Bologna, which is on the eve of being plundered by the enemy. The
-heads on Bolognese shoulders are worth little purchase, and who leaves
-not the town to-night will never leave the town at all. The Duke
-invites Filippo to the palace to recite his poems. Filippo refuses,
-so that he may leave the city of doom with his beloved Beatrice,
-a daughter of the people. On learning, however, that Beatrice has
-dreamt of the Duke, he spurns her in an egoistic paroxysm of refined
-jealousy, typical in its subtlety more of the twentieth century than
-the Renaissance.
-
- "So much I give thee, more than thou canst dream,
- So much that to be worthy of my love,
- Loathing should fasten on thee at the thought
- This earth is trod by other men than I."
-
-Beatrice leaves him with the vague intimation--
-
- "Feel I that without thee I cannot live
- And have desire for death, I come again
- To take thee with me."
-
-In the second act, Beatrice is on the point of marrying her legitimate
-suitor, Vittorino, and escaping from the town, when the Duke appears
-and proposes to exercise the _jus ultimae nodis_. Owing to the
-remonstrances of her brother Francesco, he generously offers to
-relinquish his intentions. Beatrice is bidden to go on her way, but
-stands riveted to the spot by a fatalistic impulse to realise her
-dream. And what is more, she insists on being the wife of the Duke.
-Her wish is granted. The nuptials are celebrated by a gigantic _fete_
-in the palace, whose doors are thrown open to rich and poor. Beatrice,
-however, with the placid _naivete_ of her will-less temperament, flies
-to Filippo.
-
- "What boots it,
- Were I this eve an empress to whom worlds
- Bowed, or the callat of a fool? For I
- Am with thee now to die by thine own side."
-
-Filippo pretends to poison both her and himself, and on her discovering
-the ruse, commits suicide in earnest. Beatrice rushes back to the
-palace, but discovering that she has left behind that priceless veil
-which was the wedding-gift of her husband, leads back the Duke to the
-chamber of love and death. The living is confronted with the dead
-rival, and the indignant Francesco slays his sister.
-
-The power of this tragedy, however, lies not so much in the actual
-plot or even in the marvellous delineation of Beatrice, gracefully and
-innocently childish in the very irresponsibility of her fated sin,
-as in the rich tints of the picture and the gorgeous frame in which
-the picture is set. All the multicoloured elements of the Renaissance
-take their place in the vivid scheme--poets, sculptors, courtiers,
-courtesans, soldiers, and populace. Annihilation and vitality grow each
-more grandiose from their mutual juxtaposition, and the red blood of
-life flows but the quicker and the warmer beneath the black shadow of
-doom. Few more eloquent tragedies have been written on the great twin
-themes: "In the midst of life we are in death; in the midst of death we
-are in life."
-
-Reverting back to prose, we come to _Der Einsame Weg_ (_The Lonely
-Way_, 1903). If, however, the tendency to import the methods of
-the short story and the long novel were apparent in _Liebelei_ and
-_Vermaechtniss_, it is even more marked in this play. A son, finding
-a sire in the shape of the middle-aged lover of his now dead mother,
-repudiates the natural for the putative father; a neurotic and
-over-sexed young girl, finding that her lover, unknown to himself, is
-suffering from an incurable disease, dies by her own act. These are the
-two _motifs_, knit together by no shred of logical connection, which
-form the threads on which the drama is hung. Yet, if here we have
-Schnitzler at his worst, the many excellences even of this play attest
-by implication the merits of Schnitzler at his best. The scene between
-father and son is a sheer masterpiece. How delicately does the father
-intimate that "mothers also have their destinies like other women." And
-how complete is his rejection.
-
- JULIAN. It is now absolutely impossible for you to
- forget that you are my son.
-
- FELIX. Your son--it is nothing but a word--it is a mere
- empty sound--I know it, but I don't realise it.
-
- JULIAN. Felix!
-
- FELIX. You are further away from me since I know it.
-
-Interesting, again, is the Nietzschean sanction for intrigue: "One has
-the right to exploit to the completest extent all one's life with all
-the ecstasy and all the shame which is involved."
-
-Far superior, however, to _Der Einsame Weg_, with its heavy Ibsenite
-atmosphere, is _Zwischenspiel_ (1905), where that problem of the
-quadrangle, compared to which that of the triangle is from the more
-advanced standpoint but _vieux jeu_, is treated with the most delicate
-and biting raillery. Victor Amadeus, the pianist, and his wife
-Cecilie, the singer, love each other with as much genuine constancy
-as can be expected from normal persons of the artistic temperament.
-Victor Amadeus, however, philanders with a countess, and his wife
-with a prince. Mutual jealousy! Too civilised, however, to interfere
-by any display of primitive emotion with the sacred love of the
-new modernity, they grant each other, on general principles, _carte
-blanche_. And so, at the end of Act I, they separate for their mutual
-holiday. Henceforward the husband and wife are to be the most Platonic
-of comrades. The necessities of their professional engagements,
-however, bring about their meeting in their old home. But the
-affair with the countess is dead, and the affair with the prince has
-apparently not yet matured. Then do Victor Amadeus and Cecilie forget
-the ultra-modern theories which they are bound in duty to exemplify,
-and only realise that they are man and woman. Bursting with his new
-humanity, Victor Amadeus begins in the third act to be quite jealous
-of the prince. His astonishment can consequently be imagined when his
-Serene Highness presents himself to ask the husband formally for the
-hand of the wife. On the situation being explained to him, the prince
-gracefully retires, gallant gentleman that he is. But the reunited pair
-cannot live happily ever after. Cecilie, it is true, had been faithful,
-but faithful, she explains, by the narrowest of margins. She cannot
-guarantee the future; and does not history repeat itself? True, they
-had loved each other, but what love can be proof against the theories
-of the newer sexual ethics?
-
-"If we had only before," says Cecilie, "shrieked into each other's
-faces our rage, our bitterness, our despair, instead of posing as
-superior people who never lost their heads, then we should have been
-true to ourselves--and that we never were."
-
-And so that parting, taking place, as it does, when all barriers but
-their two selves have disappeared, rings down the curtain on this most
-brilliant of satires on the ultra-modern.
-
-On almost as high a level is _Freiwild_[1], a piece which gains an
-added interest from the fact that it has not only been censored because
-an army officer is given a box on the ears, but that the actors on one
-occasion refused to play it till solemnly assured by the author that
-the apparent realism of the portrayal of the _procurer-impresario_
-was, after all, merely poetic licence. The play is a vehement satire
-on the duel. In a scene marvellous in its ingenious stagecraft
-and airy atmosphere, we are shown the picturesque gardens of an
-Austrian pleasure resort. Close by is the local theatre, where
-musical comedy is performed for the entertainment of officers. One
-of the actresses, however, Anna, shocks all orthodox traditions by
-refusing to participate in that social life which, according to the
-manager, is the sacred duty of the efficient chorus girl. For Anna,
-Paul Rohring, an analytical painter, entertains feelings which are
-quixotic, and Karinski, a heavy bully of a fire-eater, feelings typical
-of a less exalted Don. But the overtures of Karinski are rebuffed
-ignominiously. Rohring[2] cannot repress the smile of sarcastic
-triumph. The discomfited lady-killer, aspersing the name of Anna
-with an insolent _gaucherie_, has his ears boxed for his pains. The
-inevitable challenge is brought to Rohring by one Poldi, the complete
-exponent of punctilious aristocracy, the past-master in all the
-intricacies of the _duelli codex_, the super-gentleman. But Rohring,
-who is anxious to marry Anna and live a long and happy life, rejects
-the inevitable challenge. Genuine consternation on the part of Poldi,
-who explains that the unpurged shame of the box on the ears spells
-ruin to Karinski's military career. Poldi proposes a compromise--the
-solemn farce of a bloodless duel. Rohring, however, disdains playing
-dummy parts in solemn farces. It is all madness. It is in vain that the
-incarnation of military honour expostulates.
-
-"For you it is madness, but others have grown up in this madness; what
-is madness to you is for others the very element in which they live."
-
-Finally, Rohring is given to understand that, unless he flees, the
-outraged Karinski will shoot him at sight. But with a somewhat human
-perversity our heroic painter refuses to run away. An encounter _a
-l'Americaine_ takes place in the gardens, but Rohring, drawing just
-a second too late, is shot dead. And now, as orthodox applause to the
-red-handed, cold-blooded murderer, comes from the mouth of Karinski's
-own friend in six words the indictment of the duel, irrevocably damning
-in the cold subtlety of its satire: "And now you have won back your
-honour."
-
-If, however, in this play Schnitzler proved his ability to write a
-problem drama which should be something more than a mere series of
-isolated phases, we find again in his next play, _The Call of Life_, in
-spite of its many excellences, the old taint of the one-acter.
-
-The _motif_ of the play is the claim of the desire for life to ride
-rough-shod over all other claims. A beautiful daughter is wasting the
-best years of her life in the care of a querulous father, incurably
-ill, but never dying. The little garrison town is agog with the
-excitement of a newly declared war. This war, moreover, has a special
-interest, in that the local regiment, the Blue Cuirassiers, had in
-the last war, by ignominious flight, branded itself with shame.
-Though this episode took place over thirty years ago and none of the
-actual renegades are now in the regiment, the Blue Hussars, with that
-inflated idea of honour only found in Teutonic countries, resolve
-to purge the disgrace by dying gloriously in the front of the fray.
-Among the officers is Lieutenant Max, who has cast on Marie, the
-beautiful daughter, eyes of admiration. Irony, moreover, sharpens the
-situation when the bedridden father, who was once a member of the Blue
-Cuirassiers, explains he himself was responsible for the historic
-flight.
-
- "What was the good of it? Who would have thanked me?
- They would have put me in a grave with a thousand others
- and piled the earth on top, and that would have been the
- end of it. And I wouldn't have it. I wanted to live--to
- live like others. I wanted to have a wife and children
- and live. And so I rushed from the field; and so it has
- happened that the young men whom I don't know are going
- to their death and that I still live on at seventy-nine
- and will survive them all--all--all."
-
-The old soldier, however, is unduly sanguine as to the protraction of
-his life, for the same call of life which ordered him from the battle
-orders his daughter to pour poison into the water for which he now
-craves.
-
-It is outside the purpose of this essay to argue the ethics of this
-precipitation of the inevitable. Suffice it that it constitutes a most
-efficient curtain--a curtain, however, so efficient that there seems no
-compelling necessity for a continuation of the play. A continuation,
-however, there is, and in the rooms of Max, which are visited at night
-by Marie, who ensconces herself behind a curtain. She sees the major's
-wife come to urge a vain prayer that he should desert the army and
-elope with her. They are discovered by the major, who, shooting the
-wife, spares the lover. It is, however, when the major leaves that we
-understand the intense hypertrophy of life evoked by imminent death.
-Marie, knowing all, yet presents herself. Max can only realise that
-his life has but a few remaining hours, and that these remaining hours
-stand now before him. Another curtain, strong, if slightly crude, yet
-followed by a third act, which is nothing but an epilogue.
-
-This somewhat exaggerated scorn, however, of such of the more
-complicated effects of theatricalism as are manifested in the ingenious
-concatenation of the plot, or the representation of sensational
-incidents which have no justification but their own inherent dramatic
-force, fails absolutely to affect Schnitzler's position as a writer of
-one-act plays. Indeed, it is his subordination of plot to atmosphere
-that constitutes in this sphere his paramount excellence. As, moreover,
-Mr. Henry James in his _Embarrassments and Terminations_ wrote short
-stories independent in themselves yet harmonising with some permeating
-_motif_, so has Schnitzler in his _Anatol_, _Marionetten_, and
-_Lebendigen Stunden_ given us symmetrical one-act sequences.
-
-Let us deal first with the Anatol-Cyclus, a series of one-acters
-portraying the amoristic vicissitudes of a _fin de siecle_
-sentimentalist, flitting prettily from heart to heart, till he is
-eventually encompassed by the matrimonial net. Little action weighs
-down these delicate pieces. Anatol and the flame of the moment
-participate in a dialogue, or Anatol appeals to the worldly wisdom of
-his friend Max to rescue him from some dilemma in which he has been
-landed by his own weakness or his own folly. That is all. Yet each
-piece sheds a little more light upon the holy of holies of Anatol's
-heart, and illumines with equal clarity and colour the charm and
-individuality of each successive priestess of the temple. Though
-no doubt the chief effect of the cycle lies in its accumulative
-force, some idea of the general airiness and brilliance may perhaps
-be obtained by a short sketch of two of the most striking. In _The
-Question to Fate_ Anatol confides to Max his anxiety. Does the flame
-of the moment burn true and for him alone? By hypnotism he proposes
-to extract from his unconscious love that answer which will make him
-either the happiest or the most miserable of mankind. Cora enters, and
-is duly soothed into a hypnotic trance. Anatol, however, insists on
-being left alone with her at this critical moment of his fate, so Max
-retires into the adjoining room. And now, when the helpless girl is
-ready to answer every question, and, what is more, to answer it with
-automatic accuracy, and the book of truth lies ready in his trembling
-hand, the seeker of knowledge has not the courage to know. Waking her
-up with a kiss, he expresses complete reassurance to the re-entering
-Max. Cora, however, manifests a perhaps intelligible anxiety as to the
-nature of her answers.
-
-In the _Farewell Supper_, the scene of which is laid in the _cabinet
-particulier_ of a Viennese restaurant, Anatol describes to Max the
-ineffable woes of being on with the new love before he is off with the
-old. What a strain it is, moreover, to be compelled to eat two suppers
-every night! However, he and Anna (the old love) had at the initiation
-of their romance arranged to confide to each other the first symptom
-of approaching _ennui_. To-night at this supper he will tactfully
-intimate that she is no longer indispensable to his soul's happiness.
-He implores Max to stay as the helpful buffer in an inevitable scene.
-Enter Anna, fresh from the stage and hungry for oysters. The pangs of
-starvation temporarily appeased, Anna announces that she has something
-important to communicate. She has grown tired of Anatol and fallen in
-love with another. She hopes he will not mind, but better she should
-tell him now than when it was too late. Collapse of Max into uproarious
-laughter. With pique mingling with his relief, Anatol rises to the
-occasion, professing the righteous indignation of a wounded spirit. To
-vindicate his _amour-propre_, he contemptuously informs her that he
-too has fallen in love with another, but as far as he is concerned his
-confession does come too late. "Only a man could be so brutal," retorts
-Anna; "a woman would never be so tactless as to say anything so crude."
-And so the comedy ends with the girl carrying off the remains of the
-supper to her cavalier round the corner.
-
-The whole cycle, however, should be read to appreciate the racy ripple
-of the dialogue, the subtle malice of the characterisation, and the
-general verve and irony of these most sparkling of comedies.
-
-Perhaps at this moment it may be convenient just to mention the
-audacious psychology of the super-Boccacian _Reigen_. English decorum,
-no doubt, for-bids anything but the most casual allusion to this
-sequence of duologues, where all the members of the social hierarchy
-are linked together by participation in the same eternal plot.
-
-Yet in its way, this book, written originally for a select circle
-and subsequently published by universal request, is one of the most
-refined feats of intellectualism which Schnitzler has ever performed.
-For the delicacy of the style is in inverse ratio to the delicacy
-of the subject-matter, and the various nuances of social technique
-are described and differentiated with the masterly touch of combined
-experience and intuition. Scarcely suited, no doubt, as a Sunday School
-prize, the book will, none the less, well repay perusal by modern men
-and women of the modern world.
-
-The series _Marionetten_, to which allusion has already been made, has
-for its _motif_ the ironic tragedy of those who essay to manipulate
-the lives of others. The best of three plays is _The Puppet-player_.
-To the happy fireside of Eduard and Anna there is introduced an old
-friend, George Merklin, whom the husband had casually encountered.
-Merklin is a picturesque, if battered, Bohemian who encircles himself
-somewhat showily with a halo of alleged mysticism. The whole art of
-the dramatist, however, in this little piece is devoted to creating
-an atmosphere of light melancholy, in which the poetic isolation of
-the second-rate genius, Merklin, stands in vivid contrast to the
-prosaic happiness of his less gifted friend. The climax comes when it
-transpires that Merklin had loved Anna in the past and had brought the
-two together by way of a psychological experiment at a Bohemian supper.
-
- "The little girl who was so nice to you simply did what
- I wished. You two were the puppets in my hand. I pulled
- the strings. It was arranged that she should pretend to
- be in love with you. For you always roused my sympathy,
- my dear Eduard; I wanted to awake in you the illusion
- of happiness, so that you should be ready for true
- happiness when you found it."
-
-And so this shoddy superman goes out into this lonely world, having
-played with the fates of others only to have played away his own life's
-happiness.
-
-Perhaps, however, Schnitzler's most characteristic series of one-acters
-is the one headed _Lebendige Stunden_. Life should be weighed as
-much by quality as by quantity. One man can traverse more life in a
-few seconds than another in whole years. It is typical, however, of
-Schnitzler's method that he essays not merely to lead up to a violent
-climax by artifices of calculated stagecraft, but to set the vivid hour
-in an harmonious and poetic frame. The most striking of the series is
-the extraordinary fantasia, _The Woman with the Dagger_.
-
-Leonhardt, a seriously romantic youth, in apparently the full flush of
-his first grand passion, meets the wife of a dramatic author in the
-Renaissance saloon of a picture gallery. Pre-eminent among the pictures
-on the wall is that of a woman robed in white, holding a dagger in her
-uplifted hand, and gazing at the floor as if there lay someone whom
-she had murdered. It is then in this atmosphere that our gallant urges
-his suit to the unresponsive Pauline, who coolly informs him that she
-has confessed to her husband that she is in danger, and that they are
-travelling away to-morrow. And then, as she is on the point of saying
-farewell, she stands before the picture.
-
- PAULINE (_looking closer_). Who lies there in the shadow?
-
- LEONHARDT. Where?
-
- PAULINE. Do you not see?
-
- LEONHARDT. I see nothing.
-
- PAULINE. It is you.
-
- LEONHARDT. I? Pauline, what an extraordinary jest!
-
-And then, as they look and look, they fall into an hypnotic trance and
-the clock of the world goes back some five hundred years. Pauline has
-become Paola, and Leonhardt, Lionardo, while the racy Viennese idiom is
-turned to classical blank verse. It is early dawn in the studio of the
-Master Remigio, and Remigio is away on his travels. Lionardo arrogates
-the claims of love on the strength of the favours which he has just
-enjoyed. Paola spurns him as the mere mechanical toy of her passion.
-She loves and has always loved her husband. That this is no mere pose
-is apparent from the fact that on the sudden entrance of the husband
-she immediately elucidates the situation. Remigio, however, with a
-sublime tolerance, perhaps more typical of the husband in Mr. Shaw's
-_Irrational Knot_ than of a hot-blooded Italian, pardons Paola on the
-general principles of twentieth-century philosophy. Lionardo, however,
-piqued and insulted as being regarded as
-
- "The glass, the poor mean glass
- From which a child drank a forbidden draught,
- The merest pitiful tool of a chance and fate,"
-
-vows vengeance on Remigio. Paola anticipates this vengeance by killing
-Lionardo on the spot with a dagger, thus exemplifying the pose of the
-picture. Remigio rises to the occasion and seizes on this splendidly
-tragic attitude to complete an unfinished portrait of this loyalest of
-wives.
-
-And then they awaken from their trance. But the magnet of destiny draws
-them inexorably. Pauline grants the assignation, with an air, however,
-of mystic fatality, which shows only too well with what precision the
-present must once again mirror the past.
-
-But perhaps the most sustained and elaborated specimen of our author's
-method is the ironic tragedy of the French Revolution, _The Green
-Cockatoo._ The "Green Cockatoo" is an underground tavern where
-brilliant, if disreputable, actors give, for the edification of their
-aristocratic audiences, impromptu representations of crime and vice.
-
-Henri, the star-man, moreover, has just married the actress Leocadie,
-not for the sake of paradox, but in all seriousness. When his turn
-comes, he rushes on to the stage shouting out that he found his wife,
-Leocadie, with her lover the duke, and killed her. Such a calamity
-being not apparently _prima facie_ improbable, even the manager is
-almost as alarmed as the audience, till he realises that the whole
-thing is but an histrionic _tour de force_. And then, as the play
-progresses, the atmosphere becomes more and more lurid with impending
-gloom. Jest and reality intermingle in the subtlest of ironies. It is
-part of the entertainment that the ragamuffins should lavish on their
-patrons the freest of insults. But is there not a paradox within the
-paradox, when one remembers that the Bastille has fallen that very
-day? The various types, moreover, of an aristocracy exhibiting the
-levity of people who are shortly going to be hanged are delightfully
-portrayed--the _viveur_, "for whom every day is lost in which he
-has not captured a woman or killed a man," the pretty young noble
-whose corrupt flirtation is so deftly adumbrated, and the lascivious
-_grande dame_, who, in spite of her husband's anxiety, is very far
-from shocked at these spectacular novelties. And then Henri snaps
-up the truth from the demeanour of the manager and his colleagues.
-The Duke comes on to the stage and the actor then gives yet another
-representation of the avenging husband--and this time he surpasses
-himself, for he is but acting the truth.
-
-Less sensational, but of equal psychological grimness, is the play
-_The Mate_, which is in the same series as the _Green Cockatoo_. The
-theme is the pathetic irony of the illusion of a middle-aged professor,
-who gives an almost paternal benediction to what he fondly imagines
-to be the grand passion of his young and temperamental wife. When,
-consequently, his wife dies suddenly, the husband is prepared quite
-honestly to condole with the lover, for after all has he not a right to
-be pitied even more than himself? When, therefore, he learns from his
-young colleague that he has just become engaged to another girl with
-whom he has been in love for some time his righteous indignation is
-unbounded.
-
- "I would have raised you from the ground if you had
- been broken by grief. I would have gone with you to her
- grave, if the woman who is lying over there had been
- your love; but you have turned her into your wanton,
- and you have filled this house with lies and foulness
- right up to the roof till it makes me sick--and that's
- why--that's why, yes, that's why I'm going to kick you
- out."
-
-But there is an anti-climax within an anti-climax, for the man learns
-from a mutual woman friend of the dead woman and of himself, that the
-imagined _grande passion_ had been even from the standpoint of the lady
-nothing more or less than a miserable trumpery adventure.
-
-Reverting now to Schnitzler's longer plays, some mention should be
-made of _Komtesse Mizzi_, _Der Junge Medardus_, and, above all, _Das
-Weites Land_.
-
-_Komtesse Mizzi_, entitled, appropriately enough, "A Family Day" is in
-form a one-acter, though of sufficient length and substance to have
-obtained separate publication. There is little, if any, action. The
-play is based on character, dialogue, and situation. Yet it possesses
-distinct psychological titillation in its presentation of a daughter
-who takes a filial interest in her father's "actress-mistress," and who
-is sensible enough, aristocrat though she is, to meet the lady herself
-with all friendliness, and chat with her as woman to woman without the
-slightest affectation. This feminine freemasonry, however, is perhaps
-explained by the fact that the countess herself has lived her own
-life, to such good effect that she is the mother of a grown-up boy by
-her father's best friend, Prince Egon. When, consequently, the prince
-introduces the boy as his own natural child by an unknown mother, the
-atmosphere becomes somewhat rare. At first highly irritated, she treats
-with frigid indifference the frank exuberant youth, who divines the
-truth with instinctive intuition, only, however, shortly afterwards to
-consent to marry the prince, and thus become the official stepmother
-of her own long-lost child. The racy worldly optimism of this play is
-particularly characteristic of the essentially benevolent malice of the
-Schnitzlerian cynicism.
-
-Of a totally different order is _Der Junge Medardus_, a long play
-of historical patriotism, specially written for the respectable and
-official Burg Theater of Vienna. It might seem indeed at first sight
-that Schnitzler, the refined, ultra-modern analyst, would be somewhat
-out of his element amid all the blood and thunder of the Napoleonic
-campaigns, which _prima facie_ offer but small scope for psychological
-subtleties. The _tour de force_ consequently becomes all the more
-creditable when the author, in spite of all his trappings of patriotic
-melodrama, manages successfully to execute his own favourite tricks.
-The canvas on which this drama is portrayed is so vast as to render
-any synopsis necessarily inadequate. The idyll, however, and double
-suicide of the young French prince Franz and the bourgeois girl Agatha,
-is one of the purest and sweetest love episodes which Schnitzler
-has ever written. But it is Agatha's brother, the young, brave, and
-picturesque Medardus, who provides the most precious examples of
-recherche psychology. The suicide of the dead couple, Agatha and Franz,
-had been occasioned by the refusal of Franz's family to consent to
-the marriage. When, consequently, Franz's sister, Helene (a character
-somewhat analogous to Mathilde de la Mole in Stendhal's _Le Rouge et le
-Noir_) wishes to put flowers on the graves of the dead pair, Medardus
-refuses to allow her. Helene has him challenged by her suitor, but
-Medardus emerges triumphantly from the duel. Anxious to carry the
-war into the enemy's camp, and to redress the balance of the family
-account, he succeeds, by the dashing conquest of the most perilous
-difficulties, in becoming the lover of Helene, with the eventual object
-of rousing the whole household and flaunting to her own family the
-haughty girl's dishonour. Helene, however, is erratic in her favours.
-Medardus, like Julien, is scorched by his own fire. The ending,
-moreover, of the play, though extremely effective theatrically, strikes
-us from the psychological standpoint as distinctly false. Helene and
-Medardus both plot to assassinate Napoleon. Hearing that Helene is
-Napoleon's mistress, Medardus kills her instead of Napoleon. So far,
-so good. But when our quixotic hero, when offered a free pardon on the
-sole condition that he undertakes to make no further attempt against
-Napoleon's life, obstinately refuses to give the required word, one can
-only say that he is observing the etiquette neither of melodrama nor
-even of life, but solely of patriotic tragedy.
-
-But of all the longer plays of Schnitzler, the best and most
-distinctive in that erotic "General Post" entitled _Das Weite
-Land_ (The Wide Country). This drama, which is the only full-dress
-drawing-room comedy which Schnitzler has written, belongs to what we
-have already designated as the "slice of life" school. It depends for
-its convincingness neither on any particularly drastic situation nor
-on the disproportionate merit of any individual act. The author simply
-takes a group of representative modern people, rich, intellectual, and
-energetic, and shows the respective crossings and intertwinings of
-their various lives. The complexity of the intrigue is overwhelming,
-not to say bewildering, for practically every character, from the
-prolific Aigon to the virginal Erna, and from the active business man
-Friedrich to his polyandrous wife Genia, is subject to one or more
-erotic moods, with whose more or less simultaneous conjugation in the
-past, present, and future tenses the play specifically deals. Though,
-too, all the characters lead emotional lives, they deserve credit in
-that they none of them wear their souls upon their sleeves, or carry
-their temperaments in their pockets with the ostentatious affectation
-of those Sudermannic personages who never for a moment lose the
-consciousness that they are living in an atmosphere of "high problem."
-For the people with whom we have now to deal are so occupied with the
-concrete acts of their actual lives that they have little time to waste
-in mere airy generalities. When consequently they do philosophise,
-shortly, crisply, and in the light of personal experience, they are for
-that very reason all the more convincing. The whole _motif_ of this
-play, where the spirits of Congreve and Henry James seem to amalgamate
-in so strange but yet so harmonious a compound, is well crystallised
-in the following quotation: "Love and deception--faithfulness and
-unfaithfulness--adoration for one woman and desire for another woman or
-several others, yes, my good Hofreiter, the soul is a wide country."
-
-As can be seen from these tolerant words, which have all the greater
-force in that the man who speaks them is at any rate temporarily more
-or less in love with his friend's wife, the mood in which the problem
-of promiscuity is treated is less one of indignant satire than of
-an ironic charity, which, while finding the complications at once
-comic and tragic, yet assigns to every phase of love from the kiss
-Friedrich gave to Erna three thousand metres above the sea, to Otto's
-nocturnal escalades of Genia's room, its own specific emotional value,
-even though the final verdict is to be found in the words of the
-middle-aged Friedrich, refusing to elope with the twenty-year-old Erna:
-"Everything's an illusion!"
-
-From the point of view, also, of concentrated crispness of dialogue
-and characterisation, Schnitzler has never achieved anything better
-than this play. How telling in particular is the dialogue between
-the mutually unfaithful spouses, Genia and Friedrich. The husband is
-interrogating his wife about a young Russian virtuoso who had just
-blown out his brains.
-
- GENIA. He was not my lover. I'm sorry to say he was not
- my lover. Is that enough for you!
-
-Or take again the passage between Friedrich and Genia after Friedrich
-has just fought a fatal duel with the twenty-five year old naval
-officer, Otto.
-
- GENIA. But why? If you cared the least bit about
- me--if it had been a case of hate--if it had been
- jealousy--love--
-
- FRED. No--I feel at any rate damned little of all that.
- But no man likes to be made an ass of.
-
-In his new asexual play, _Professor Bernhardi_, Schnitzler strikes
-out an entirely new line, leaves that light, airy sphere which he had
-made so peculiarly his own, and embarks into the grim realms of pure
-problem. The play is an avowed and deliberate tract in the manner of
-Granville Barker, Galsworthy, or Brieux. Yet however devoid it may be
-of those qualities which one is accustomed to label Schnitzlerian, it
-is the most earnest, the most ethical, the most convincing of all his
-plays.
-
-Put shortly, the piece deals with an "affaire Dreyfus" in the medical
-profession. Professor Bernhardi, a great Jewish doctor, has in the
-face of numerous obstacles succeeded in building up the prosperity of
-a new hospital, the Elisabethinum, treating mainly Catholic patients,
-but supported mainly by Jewish funds. A substantial percentage of
-the staff are Jewish, and it is instructive to observe how almost
-instinctively the Jews and Catholics range themselves into two camps.
-In the first act a Catholic girl is dying of septic poisoning as the
-result of some outside doctor's clumsy attempt to help her to escape
-the consequences of her own indiscretion. The patient herself, however,
-in a state of blissful delirium, confident of recovery, and expecting
-the speedy advent of her lover, is deriving the maximum of enjoyment
-out of the few minutes she has yet to live. Under these circumstances
-there arrives a Catholic priest, sent for, not by the girl but by a
-nurse, with the object of administering the last sacrament. Out of
-sheer humanity and medical conscientiousness, Professor Bernhardi is
-reluctant to have his patient's last hours marred by the realisation of
-her death and the shattering of her happy dream. The Catholic priest
-is insistent. The Professor is politely firm. There is an animated
-dialogue in the course of which the Professor touches the priest very
-lightly on the shoulder, though there is nothing in the nature of an
-assault. In the meanwhile the patient dies comfortably. The Clerical
-and Anti-semitic parties exploit the incident with inaccurate though
-artistic journalistic embellishments. There is a tremendous uproar.
-The Governors of the hospital threaten to resign. Under pressure
-from his friends, the Professor is willing to tender, not indeed an
-abject apology, but a polite explanation. The Clerical party thereupon
-blackmail him by threatening to raise the question in Parliament, if he
-does not secure the election to a vacant post on the hospital staff of
-a Catholic candidate who is on the one hand the protege of the cousin
-of their leader, and on the other hand incompetent. Refusing to be a
-party to the job, Bernhardi secures the election to the post of a man
-who is both competent and a Jew. Bernhardi, moreover, relies on the
-personal assurance of Flint, the Minister for Education and Public
-Worship, that he will help him by his support in Parliament. When,
-however, matters came to a head, Flint, scenting in the middle of his
-speech with the divine flair of the true politician the actual state
-of public opinion, throws Bernhardi to the wolves and himself suggests
-a prosecution for sacrilege. The Executive Board of the hospital are
-divided as to what course they shall pursue. Shall they pass a vote of
-confidence in their chief, or, on the other hand, suspend him until the
-determination of the proceedings. By a fine stroke of irony Bernhardi
-realises that he will be in a minority through the vote of the very
-Jew through the conscientious insistence on whose election to the
-Board he had lost the proffered opportunity of bribing the Clericals
-and squaring the whole matter. He consequently resigns from the Board.
-The trial takes place. The priest himself denies that there was any
-assault. Bernhardi, however, is defended by a converted Jew, who,
-sinking the advocate in the Catholic, conducts the case so lukewarmly
-that Bernhardi is convicted on the perjured evidence of a vindictive
-colleague and a hysterical lay sister. During the trial the priest
-is convinced that Bernhardi was morally right in the course which he
-adopted, but, as he feels subsequently driven as a matter of conscience
-to inform him, refrained out of sheer religious duty from telling the
-truth. Bernhardi serves his term and becomes, much to his disgust,
-a political hero and a popular martyr. The hysterical lay sister
-eventually confesses her perjury and Bernhardi is finally righted,
-though the final note in the play is that Bernhardi was really rather
-a fool to have involved himself in such grave consequences for the
-mere sake of a quixotic principle. Some portion possibly of the effect
-produced by this play depends on the full appreciation of its personal
-allusions and some knowledge of the circumstances on which it was
-substantially founded. Nevertheless, present symptoms would appear to
-indicate that this play will have especial interest, not only to Jews
-and Anti-Semites, but to impartial students of ethics and sociology.
-Though, moreover, "pure problem" and studded with long didactical
-speeches, the dramatic interest is well sustained, at any rate up
-to the fourth Act, while the different characters are distinguished
-with the sharpest precision. We would refer in particular to Flint,
-that delightfully bland opportunist, that benevolently unscrupulous
-politician, that perfectly conscientious hypocrite who honestly
-believes that there is a higher and larger duty both in politics and
-in life than the observance of one's own principles and the keeping of
-one's given word.
-
-Schnitzler, moreover, is not only a dramatist, but a writer of short
-stories and novels, which stand on practically as high a level as
-his plays. Like De Maupassant, Schnitzler has only one real _motif_.
-Unlike De Maupassant, however, it is the psychological complications in
-which he is chiefly interested. In further contrast, his short stories
-lack that inevitable precision of climax which is the chief mark of
-the French author. Yet perhaps it is for this very reason that, with
-their picturesque atmosphere and pathetic simplicity, they obtain an
-added reality. In the almost clinical minuteness of his psychology,
-explicable from the fact that he was once a doctor, he is reminiscent
-of Mr. Henry James, of a Mr. James, however, who writes without
-preciosity about individuals linked with ordinary human beings by very
-much more than just some shred of normality. Among his earlier short
-stories we would mention in particular _Die Frau der Weisen, Das neue
-Lied_, and the hypnotic fantasia at the beginning of _Daemmerseelen_.
-
-The more recent series, _Masken und Wunder_, also possesses a
-well-merited claim to recognition for its series of studies, some
-modern, some symbolical, yet all written with that almost intangible
-softness, combined at the same time with a certain neat strength,
-which is the essential mark of Schnitzler's literary style. One of the
-most striking is the telepathic romance, _Redegonda's Diary_; but in
-our view the best short story in the whole book is that Maupassantian
-_Death of the Bachelor_ where the three intimate friends of a dead man
-are summoned to his bedside, only to find their friend dead and to read
-in a letter addressed to them all, of the three separate yet identical
-domestic reasons which were responsible for their participation in this
-superb piece of posthumous buffoonery.
-
-Far more significant than any of his short stories is Schnitzler's
-comparatively recent novel, _Der Weg ins Freie_ (The Road to the Open),
-a novel which both by its actual success and its intrinsic merit,
-stands out conspicuously among modern German literature. This book is
-an admirable example of what one can perhaps call the "slice of life"
-novel. Actual plot in the stereotyped sense of the term it has none.
-Georg von Wergenthin, a young aristocratic Viennese dilettante, has,
-in the course of an active emotional life, a fairly serious _liaison_
-with Anna Rosner, a music-mistress belonging to a good Jewish set.
-The child to which Anna and Georg had both been looking forward,
-though in somewhat varying degrees, dies. Georg accepts a post of
-conductor in a German town. Anna reassumes the normal tenor of her
-spinster life. Finis. Neither conventional marriage nor even more
-conventional suicide, but just life, a slice of sheer probable real
-convincing life. But the book is far more than the history of Anna,
-and far more than the history of Georg, even though it would appear at
-first sight that the enumeration of Georg's emotions tends somewhat
-to swamp the four hundred and sixty pages of this novel which yet
-reads so shortly. For Georg's soul is a mirror which reflects not only
-itself but a considerable number of the more interesting characters
-of a specific modern Viennese set. And the lives of Anna and Georg
-touch the lives of numerous other persons, persons too who, at any
-rate, give the impression of being no mere characters in novels, but
-of having been honourably plagiarised, and without suffering either
-caricature or idealisation in the process, from the pages of the
-book of life itself. And all these various lives are followed up and
-adumbrated and described at greater or lesser detail. Of course they
-have nothing to do with the story of Georg von Wergenthin. But they
-play an important part in the life of Georg von Wergenthin, just as he
-plays a more or less important part in their existence. And though of
-course Georg is the nominal hero of the book, it is the modern Jewish
-set with, of course, its Gentile appanages which constitutes the real
-subject-matter. And how vivid and interesting on their merits are all
-these characters--old Ehrenberg, the Jewish millionaire, with his
-delightful habit of talking Yiddish before smart company, specially
-to annoy his snobbish son Oskar; Oskar himself, who, on being caught
-by his father in the flagrant act of posing as a Catholic in front
-of a church and given a box on the ears by way of reproof, makes an
-abortive attempt to commit hara-kiri with a revolver; Else Ehrenberg,
-the temperamental, but unmarried sister of Oskar; Heinrich Bermann, the
-brilliant self-centred author, with his grand passion for his faithless
-actress in the foreign town; Leo Golowski, the enthusiastic Zionist;
-Therese Golowski, the Socialist agitatress, with her temporary trip
-with that fascinating hussar-officer, Demeter Stanzides; Winternitz,
-the poet, with his not very _soigne_ hands and his naif mania for
-reciting his own erotic verses; Dr. Stauber, the benevolent modern of
-the last generation; Anna herself, with her soft wistfulness and her
-essential dignity; Sissy Wyner, with her high wanton spirits and pretty
-English accent; and of course Georg himself, Georg the aristocrat,
-Georg the _grand amoureux_, Georg the composer, Georg the dilettante,
-Georg the drifter, Georg the ineffectual.
-
-In the technique of this novel Schnitzler marks what we suggest to be a
-new departure, by the insertion of substantial slabs of past life into
-the analysis of his hero's thoughts, a process which by a tremendous
-economy of space and time thus describes simultaneously the inner
-workings of Georg's mind, and simultaneously narrates important pieces
-of antecedent history which have no place in the official action of the
-novel.
-
-Some tribute, also, must be paid to the style, which is at times
-soft and sweet, at times light and crisp, yet always lucid, always
-individual, and always possessed of that gracefulness which is so rare
-a quality in German prose literature.
-
-To revert to Schnitzler the dramatist, what are his chief claims, his
-chief excellences, his chief defects? It seems to us that the essence
-of his merit lies in the fact that, speaking broadly, he handles
-problems neither as ends in themselves, as do the more advanced of our
-own dramatists, nor yet, like Sudermann, as mere pegs on which to hang
-violently theatrical stage effects. Some problem may constitute the
-centre of most of his plays; yet, with a few exceptions, this problem
-is not presented too nakedly or without sufficient relief. Each problem
-is bathed in an artistic atmosphere, and each character in the picture
-limned with the most subtle psychology. It is true that, as has already
-been pointed out, many of the acts in his early longer dramas exhibit
-too strong a tendency to form self-independent pictures; yet it is this
-defect which forms the chief charm of his one-acters. It is true that
-nearly all his characters are Bohemian--artists, flaneurs, actresses,
-journalists, doctors, painters--yet each author creates, as of right,
-the population of his own individual world; and is it not rather a
-claim to glory to have attained such heights of dramatic celebrity
-without having written more than one single play specifically devoted
-to fashionable life? It is true that the ethics of these plays, with
-their chronic and inevitable intrigues, may strike the English mind as
-somewhat unusual; yet Schnitzler enjoys the reputation of being the
-most brilliant and accurate portrayer of contemporary Viennese life.
-It is, moreover, in the nature of all problem plays that they should
-be pieces of special pleading, where the other side is allowed just so
-much of a hearing as will not permit of its convincing. After all, from
-the standpoint of dramatic art, that which counts is not the ethics,
-but the presentation of the problem.
-
-Yet, with all his subtlety and all his problems, he is never heavy.
-Vienna stands intellectually nearer to Paris than to Berlin, so that
-the Teutonic introspection and sentimentalism are touched with a Gallic
-sprightliness and a Gallic grace. No dramatist has written tragedy with
-so light a hand, or comedy with so ironically pathetic a smile, as has
-Arthur Schnitzler.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: "Der Freiwild" (sic); correct title is
-"Freiwild"--transcriber's note (M.D.)]
-
-[Footnote 2: "Rohring" is "Roenning" in the original play--transcriber's
-note (M.D.)]
-
-
-
-
-EMILE VERHAEREN
-
-
- "Mais les plus exaltes se dirent dans leur coeur,
- 'Partons quand meme avec notre ame inassouvie
- Puisque la force et que la vie
- Sont au dela des verites et des erreurs.'"
-
- "Vivre c'est prendre et donner avec liesse.
- Toute la vie est dans l'essor."
-
-
-The above principles, prefixed to the _Forces Tumultueuses_ of Emile
-Verhaeren, are well fitted to supply the key to a man who both in
-thought and in technique is indisputably the most modern and the
-most massive force in the whole of contemporary European poetry.
-For Verhaeren is no narrow specialist with an outlook limited to
-some particular sphere. He is the singer of the whole fulness of
-modern European life as a whole, with its clashes, its complexities,
-its agonies and its tensions, its deserted country-sides and its
-pullulating metropoles, its armaments and its Armageddons, its
-brothels, cathedrals, laboratories and Stock Exchanges, its sciences
-and its sensualities, its arts, philosophies and aspirations. His muse
-is no serene nymph piping delicately on some Parnassian slope, but
-an extremely tumultuous Amazon, at once primeval, and ultra-modern,
-chanting the paean of battle, steeped in the wine of victory, and
-suckling the supermen of the future on her universal breasts. No muse
-in the whole of literature is more highly charged with vitality, and
-no reader is qualified to enjoy her unless he, too, is charged to the
-maximum with "the red tonic liquor of a harsh and formidable reality."
-
-Let us then glance first at the early _milieu_ of a man who
-combines the exultant fury of the lyric with the wide outlook of the
-cosmopolitan sociologist, and who can incidentally beat both Baudelaire
-and Wordsworth at their own respective game.
-
-Verhaeren was born on the 21st May 1855 at St. Amand in Belgium, one
-of the most strenuous countries in the modern world, which, it is
-interesting to remember, holds the European record for sensualism,
-alcoholism, and clericalism. St. Amand is situated on the broad plains
-of the Scheldt, and it is not unimportant to lay some stress on the
-Flemish ancestry and environment of a man who, though he wrote in the
-French language, is more Germanic than Gallic in his temperament, and
-who represents in the sphere of verse perhaps the nearest analogue
-to the crass majesty and red sensuality of Rubens. His early country
-upbringing, moreover, is responsible for that _joie de vivre_ in
-the fields, and, above all, the wind, the symbolisation of fury and
-rebellion which was to inspire those nature lyrics, many of which are
-nearly as great, though by no means as interesting, as his cosmic and
-metropolitan poems.
-
-Verhaeren was originally intended for the priest-hood, and was
-educated at the Jesuit school of St. Barbe in Ghent, where he had
-for his schoolfellows such men as Maeterlinck, Van Lenbergh, and
-Rodenbach. Leaving school, he went to Brussels, where he felt "his
-multiplied heart grow and become exalted" with the roaring intensity
-of metropolitan life. All thoughts of a holy life were now abandoned,
-and in 1881 the poet was called to the Bar. His chief interests,
-however, were literature, Socialism, and Brussels life. Joining the
-Young Belgian group under the leadership of Edmond Picard, he became
-a frequent contributor to _L'Art Moderne_ and _La Jeune Belgique_.
-Politically he was a Socialist, associated himself with the Socialist
-leader Vandervelde, and was one of the founders of the philanthropic
-_Maison des Peuples_.
-
-But it was in the poetic representation of "the monstrous scenery of
-the crass Flemish Kermesses" (_Les Flamands_, 1883) that Verhaeren gave
-the first vent to his violent virility. In this work a Rubensesque and
-Rabelaisian subject-matter is treated with poetic exaltation by a man
-who found in the great national festivals of past and present Flanders,
-with
-
- "Des chocs de corps, des heurts de chair et des bourrades,
- Des lechements subis dans un etreignement,"
-
-the same patriotic inspiration which Mr. G. K. Chesterton has
-discovered in that beer; into which he has, as it were, so successfully
-transubstantiated the whole national spirit of our English
-body-politic. Thus our poet wallows defiantly in the black roughness of
-his Flemish peasants:
-
- "Les voici noirs, grossiers, bestiaux--ils sont tels,"
-
-or casts regretful glances towards the healthier grossness of the
-artists of old Flanders:
-
- "Vos pinceaux ignoraient le fard,
- Les indecences, les malices,
- Et les sous-entendus de vice
- Qui clignent l'oeil dans notre art,
- Vos femmes suaient la sante,
- Rouge de sang blanche de graisse,
- Elles menaient les ruts en laisse
- Avec des airs de royaute."
-
-But these poems are far more than mere erotic or gastronomic
-diversions. Somewhat turgid, no doubt, with red health, they yet
-possess the same sweep and the same impetus with which Aristophanes
-himself once gave expression to the riotous fecundity of the earth and
-the Dionysian forces of nature.
-
-In _Les Moines_ (_The Monks_, 1886), Verhaeren treats a subject-matter
-which _prima facie_ would seem to denote the abandonment of the cult of
-the flesh for the cult of the spirit. Yet such veneration as the poet
-may ever have possessed for the Catholic creed was aesthetic rather than
-religious. He penetrates, it is true, into the "enormous shrine where
-the Middle Ages slumber," but it is less to worship than to describe
-in a rigid, but majestic prosody "the grand survivors of the Christian
-world"--the
-
- "Moines venus vers nous des horizons gothiques
- Mais dont l'ame mais dont l'esprit meurt de demain."
-
-Psychologically the interesting feature of this work is that, so far
-from being in any way obsessed by any Chestertonian nostalgia for a
-dead and mediaeval past, the poet anticipates with all apparent serenity
-the day when "the final blasphemy will have transpierced God like to
-an immense sword." Even, moreover, in these, as it were, antiquarian
-descriptions the poet emphasizes the contrast between the visionary
-life of the cloister (a life, albeit, where occasionally
-
- "Un repas colossal souffle fourneaux beants
- Eructant vers l'azur sa flamme et sa fumee")
-
-and the real life of the outside world, and seems by no means
-unsympathetic to the rebellious monk who requires
-
- "Le ciel torride et le desert et l'air des monts
- Et les tentations en rut des vieux demons
- Agacant de leurs doigts la chair enflee des gouges
- En lui brulant la levre avec de grands seins rouges."
-
-Yet both _Les Flamands_ and _Les Moines_ seem quite innocent and
-playful in comparison with the great black trinity of _Les Soirs, Les
-Debacles_, and _Les Flambeaux Noirs_ (1887-1891), in which Verhaeren
-gave expression to the mental and physical crisis which for a time
-seemed to imperil both his life and his reason. In these poems, many of
-which were written in London and its
-
- "Gares de suie et de fumee ou du gaz pleure
- Ses spleens d'argent lointain vers des chemins d'eclair,
- Ou des betes d'ennui baillent a l'heure
- Dolente immensement qui tinte a Westminster,"
-
-Verhaeren leaves the objective mood of his earlier poems to clothe his
-soul in the Nessian shirt of the most poisonous subjectivity. But true
-tragic dignity stalks in the very extremity of his agony. Compared,
-indeed, with the gigantic bass of this unhappiness, black, definite,
-drastic, what is the grey wistfulness of Verlaine but the hysterical
-falsetto of a whining child? Verhaeren, on the other hand, with the
-ecstatic defiance of a kind of Nietzschean Prometheus sets himself to
-plumb the lowest abysses of despair, and himself eggs on the eagles
-of torment to devour every shred of his own soul. With "brutal teeth
-of fire and madness he bites and outrages his own heart within him,"
-lashes himself in his thought and in his blood, in his effort, in his
-hope, in his blasphemy:
-
- "Et quand leve le soir son calice de lie
- Je me le verse a boire insatiablement."
-
-Or take again the sinister gusto of the passage:
-
- "Aurai-j'enfin l'atroce joie
- De voir nuits apres nuits comme une proie
- La demence attaquer mon cerveau,
- Et detraque, malade, sorti de la prison
- Et des travaux forces de sa raison
- D'appareiller vers un lointain nouveau?"
-
-The technique of these poems is worthy of some study. Having little use
-for the orthodox alexandrine (except in a few instances like _Le Gel_,
-where the icy massiveness of the blocked couplets faithfully mirrors
-the polar desolation of his own soul), he fashions his own metres to
-incarnate his own moods. Such a refrain as "Ce minuit dalle d'ennui"
-will boom out again and again the dull monotonous clank of his own
-weary spirit. At other times the grinding engines of a disorganised
-mind whirr and jar with spasmodic feverishness:
-
- "C'est l'heure ou les hallucines,
- Les gueux, et les deracines
- Dressent leur orgueil dans la vie."
-
-Note, too, the ghastly effectiveness of the internal rhymes. Is not,
-for instance, such a line as
-
- "Les chiens du noir espoir out aboye ce soir"
-
-a triple series, as it were, of metrical mirrors, where the bitten mind
-barks savagely back at its own mad image. Or listen to the Titanic thud
-of such a line as
-
- "La Mer choque ses blocs de flots contre les rocs,"
-
-or the silent smash of
-
- "Dites suis-je seul avec mon ame,
- Mon ame helas maison d'ebene
- Ou s'est fendu sans bruit un soir
- Le grand miroir de mon espoir?"
-
-At times transcending the blank negativity of despair, the poet will
-coquet positively with his own madness, as he wanders "hallucinated
-in the forest of numbers," or wishes to march towards "madness and
-her suns, her white suns of moonlight in the great weird noon, and
-her distant echoes bitten by dins and barkings and full of vermilion
-hounds." Or abandoning the more specific formulation of his own
-emotions, he will give vent to his feelings by letting his brain dance
-upon the lurid boards of some _macabre_ theme. The little poem, _La
-Tete_, is dank with all the smooth bloodiness of the guillotine,
-while the _Dame en Noir_, with the ghastly rhymes and assurances of
-its refrain, is swathed in a black pathos, in comparison with which
-the most lurid horrors of Baudelaire appear the mere artificial
-extravagances of a perverse mind.
-
-As we have already seen, the blackness of the trilogy which we have
-just considered was no mere dabbling in morbidity, but the genuine
-expression of a genuine unhappiness. In, however, _Les Apparus dans
-Mes Chemins, Les Vignes de Ma Muraille_ the storm gradually exhausts
-itself, and is replaced by a more serene and confident mood. Contrast,
-for instance, with the drastic violence of _Les Debacles_ the jaded
-weariness of such a lyric as _Celui de la Fatigue_, where the poet
-sings of an "ardour broken on the whirling staircase of the infinite,"
-or of such a passage as
-
- "Je m'habille des loques de mes jours
- Et le baton de mon orgueil il plie,
- Mes pieds dites comme ils sont lourds
- De me porter de me trainer toujours
- Au long de siecle de ma vie."
-
-And as a complete antithesis, again, to the black bloodiness of such
-poems as _La Tete_ or _Un Meurtre,_ take the white suavity of _St.
-Georges_:
-
- "Il vient un bel ambassadeur
- Du pays blanc illumine de marbres
- Ou dans les pares au bords des mers sur l'arbre
- De la bonte suavement croit la douceur."
-
-But this serenity marked rather a respite in Verhaeren's development
-than a real abatement of his poetic fury. With the furnaces of his mind
-recharged to their maximum capacity with blazing health, he starts to
-race his muse over the main lines of the modern civilisation, which
-lead from _The Hallucinated Country-sides_ to _The Tentacular Towns_.
-Though written at different times, these two sets of poems constitute
-the contrasting halves of a complete whole, and were published together
-in 1895 with two prologues, _La Ville_ and _La Plaine_. The prologues,
-in particular, well illustrate the new rushing irregular prosody,
-specially forged for the purpose of hammering out that white-hot
-steel of the modern civilisation which enmeshes in its fabric all the
-helpless flotsam of the agricultural economy. The academic harmony
-of the alexandrine is here abandoned. The rhymes crash out at lesser
-and greater intervals as they march along on feet that range from the
-quick spasm of some dissyllabic line to the spondaic emphasis of a
-full-length alexandrine.
-
-In _Les Campagnes Hallucines_ itself the prosody is no doubt simpler,
-as the poet describes the ruined and pestilential country with its
-fevers, its sins, its beggars, its pilgrims, its diseases, insanities
-and debauches, and the immense monotony of its interminable plains.
-
- "C'est la plaine, la plaine bleme
- Interminablement toujours la meme,
- Par au-dessus, souvent
- Rage si forte le vent,
- Que l'on dirait le ciel fendu
- Au coup de boxe
- De l'equinoxe;
- Novembre hurle ainsi qu'un loup
- Lamentable par le soir fou."
-
-Perhaps, however, the most sinister poems in _Les Campagnes_ are the
-_Chansons de Fou_, with their naif absurdities and their intuitive
-reason, where the rhymes laugh and clatter like rows of grinning teeth,
-and the almost Dureresque _Le Fleau_, from its exordium,
-
- "La Mort a bu du sang
- Au cabaret des Trois Cercueils
- La Mort a mis sur le comptoir
- Un ecu noir,
- 'C'est pour les cierges, pour les deuils,'"
-
-down to its ghastly climax,
-
- "Et les foules suivaient vers n'importent ou,
- Le grand squelette aimable et soul
- Qui trimballait sur son cheval bonhomme
- L'epouvante de sa personne,
- Jusqu'aux lointains de peur et de panique,
- Sans eprouver l'horreur de son odeur,
- Ni voir danser, sous un repli de sa tunique,
- Le trousseau de vers blancs qui lui tetaient le coeur."
-
-The final significance of _Les Campagnes_ lies in its last poem, _Le
-Depart_, describing the desertion by the whole country-side of that
-dead mournful plain which is being eaten up by the town.
-
- "Tandis qu'au loin la-bas
- Sous les cieux lourds fuligineux et gras,
- Avec son front comme un Thabor,
- Avec ses sugoirs noirs et ses rouges haleines
- Hallucinant et attirant les gens des plaines,
- C'est la ville que le jour plombe et que la nuit eclaire
- La ville en platre, en stuc, en bois, en marbre, en fer, en or--
- Tentaculaire."
-
-It is, however, in _Les Villes Tentaculaires_, where the fever and
-indefatigable aspiration of the town are described with a Zolaesque
-exaltation, that the originality of the departure initiated by
-Verhaeren is more specifically manifested. For he now boldly stalks
-forward as the pioneer realist in European poetry. Disregarding alike
-the orthodox subject-matter and the orthodox terminology of official
-poesy, he seeks and finds his inspiration in the vast forces at work
-in actual modern life. The realism of Verhaeren, in somewhat pointed
-contrast to the realism of some of our own patriotic or fashionable
-poets, even though such expressions as "cabs" and "steamers" are to be
-found in his work in the original English, depends for its aesthetic
-value neither on the swing of its slang nor the egregiousness of
-its expletives. The hot blast of his sincerity sweeps away at once
-any impeachment of mere dabbling in the ultra-modern. His diction
-is frequently brusque, and even red, if we may borrow his favourite
-colour, if not his favourite adjective; yet it never loses the dignity
-of authentic poetry. For the poet would seem to have been personally
-susceptible, in the highest degree, to that peculiar multiplication of
-vitality and intensification of emotion which is the essential effect
-produced by big metropoles upon certain temperaments. And this cerebral
-ecstasy is increased by the consciousness of being on the threshold of
-a new age, "for the ancient dream is dead, and the new one is now being
-forged." Thus the poet will wander into _The Cathedrals_, take pity on
-the multitudinous misery of the praying hordes, and boom out again and
-again the refrain:
-
- "O ces foules, ces foules
- Et la misere et la detresse qui les foulent."
-
-But note the sociological symbolism of the climax:
-
- "Et les vitraux grands de siecles agenouilles
- Devant le Christ avec leurs papes immobiles
- Et leurs martyrs et leurs heros semblent trembler
- Au bruit d'un train lointain qui roule sur la ville."
-
-For refusing to bear the cross of Gothic ideas, the poet plunges
-deliberately into the inferno of modern life. And each fresh circle but
-kindles his ardour and inflames his Muse. For he will pass with growing
-exaltation from the muscled teeming life of the port to the garish
-ballet of a music hall where
-
- "Des bataillons de chair et de cuisses en marche
- Grouillent sur des rampes ou sous des arches,
- Jambes, hanches, gorges, maillots, jupes, dentelles,"
-
-and then, as midnight strikes and the crowd ebbs away, he will stalk
-into the "brilliant chemical atmosphere" where
-
- "Au long de promenoirs qui s'ouvrent sur la nuit
- --Balcons de fleurs, rampes de flammes--
- Des femmes en deuil de leur ame
- Entrecroisent leurs pas sans bruit."
-
-Nor does the poet disdain the grinding factories where
-
- "Entre des murs de fer et pierre
- Soudainement se leve altiere
- La force en rut de la matiere,"
-
-or even the Bourse itself, where he sings in feverish staccato rhythm
-the
-
- "Langues seches, regards aigus, gestes inverses,
- Et cervelles qu'en tourbillons les millions traversent."
-
-But it is typical of Verhaeren's essential optimism that after
-describing with Zolaesque detail both a strike and a "shop of luxury,"
-he should find the ransom of the future in
-
- "La maison de la science au loin dardee
- Obstinement par a travers les faits jusqu'aux idees."
-
-In _Les Heures Claires_ (1896) the drastic violence of _Les Villes
-Tentaculaires_ abates for the time being into a mood of resigned, but
-yet robust melancholy, which immortalises the sweetness, deepness, and
-softness of the poet's love for his wife.
-
-In _Les Forces Tumultueuses_, however, the poet has got once again
-into the full swing of his drastic stride. The mood is to some extent
-the same as that of _Les Villes Tentaculaires_, though the Zolaesque
-concreteness of detail is merged in the broadness of a genuine
-Lucretian sweep. The book consists of a series of lyrical poems,
-lyrical, albeit, in the sense rather of Pindar than of Herrick, which
-exalt the various phases of human energy. Thus in the poem, _L'Art,_
-Verhaeren soars upwards with a tremendous rush:
-
- "D'un bond
- Son pied cassant le sol profond
- Son double aile dans la lumiere
- Le cou tendu, le feu sous les paupieres
- Partit, vers le soleil et vers l'extase,
- Ce devoreur d'espace et de splendeur Pegase."
-
-In _Les Maitres_ the poet describes the various types of superman, from
-"the monk" of the Middle Ages to the banker of the twentieth century,
-who dominates the world as he "binds sinister destiny to his bourgeois
-will," and sows in the distance his winged gold.
-
- "Son or aile qui s'enivre d'espace,
- Son or planant, son or rapace,
- Son or vivant,
- Son or dont s'eclairent et rayonnent les vents,
- Son or qui boit la terre
- Par les pores de son misere
- Son or ardent, son or furtif, son or retors.
- Morceau d'espoir et de soleil--son or!"
-
-
-Some mention must also be made of the poem, _Les Femmes_, which,
-subdivided into _L'Eternelle, L'Amante,_ _L'Amazone_, ranks in our view
-as the greatest sex poem of the century. In contrast, for instance,
-with Swinburne, who treats sex rather as a thing of beauty and of
-pleasure than as an underlying world-force, and who has both the
-advantage and the disadvantage of the specifically classical conception
-of life, Verhaeren, whether he rings his changes in _L'Amante_ on the
-soft refrain, "Mon reve est embarque dans une ile flottante," shows in
-_L'Amazone_ that the New Woman can be something considerably more poetic
-than a Strindbergian monstrosity, or sings in _L'Eternelle_ her "who
-thinks she encloses the whole world within her flesh," will boom out
-again and again the cosmic and universal peal. The verse throughout is
-as beautiful as can be desired. But it has something more than beauty;
-it has stature, majesty, speed, force, that exaltation of reality which
-is the essence of the highest poetry.
-
-In the poems, _La Science_, _L'Erreur, La Folie_, _Les Cultes_,
-Verhaeren proceeds to formulate his own philosophy of life, and his
-prophetic enthusiasm for the new modern truths, under whose clear feet
-the old texts have crumbled, as he expounds
-
- "Comment la vie est une a travers tous les etres
- Qu'ils soient matiere instruit esprit ou volonte
- Foret myriadaire et rouge ou s'enchevetrent
- Les debordements fous de la fecondite."
-
-Put shortly, his philosophy is a compound of those of Nietzsche and
-of Bergson. His soul, no doubt, swings in unison with the universal
-rhythm of the world, but, like Nietzsche, he finds in force and life
-realities transcending all errors, and after a historic survey of the
-more popular deities of humanity from Gog to Jehovah, and from Satan
-to Christ, enunciates his belief in humanity in stanzas of sublime
-blasphemy, far more truly religious than the ambiguous scrolls and
-rubrics of any antiquarian creed:
-
- "L'homme respire et sur la terre il marche, seul.
- Il vit pour s'exalter du monde et de lui-meme,
- Sa langue oublie et la priere et le blaspheme;
- Ses pieds foulent le drap de son ancien linceul.
- Il est l'heureuse audace au lieu d'etre la crainte;
- Tout l'infini ne retentit que de ses bonds
- Vers l'avenir plus doux, plus clair et plus feconds
- Dont s'aggrave le chant et s'alentit la plainte.
- Penser, chercher, et decouvrir sont ses exploits.
- Il emplit jusqu'aux bords son existence breve;
- Il n'enfle aucun espoir, il ne fausse aucun reve,
- Et s'il lui faut des Dieux encore--qu'il les soit!"
-
-In _La Multiple Splendeur_ and _Les Visages de la Vie_ the same
-insatiable gusto for an infinitude of life darts again and again its
-red tongue. It is impossible by mere quotation to do justice to the
-full vastness of Verhaeren's lyric sweep. We would, however, at any
-rate, refer to the majesty of _Le Monde_ with its combined crash and
-concord of incessant life and the Cyclopean weight of the adamantine
-line which buttresses at either end the flaming rivers of its verse,
-
- "Le monde est fait avec des astres et des hommes,"
-
-or to the sublimity of _Les Penseurs_ in which the poet tells how
-
- "Autour de la terre obsedee
- Circule au fond des nuits, au coeur des jours
- Toujours
- L'orage amoncele des idees,"
-
-and how
-
- "Descartes et Spinoza, Leibniz, Kant et Hegel"
-
-"fixed the highest pinnacles of inaccessible problems for the goal of
-their silver arrows, and carried within themselves the grand obstinate
-dream of one day, imprisoning eternity in the white ice of immobile
-truth."
-
-The very names, too, of some of the poems may possibly reflect some
-of the facets of their multiplied splendour: _Le Verbe, Les Vieux
-Empires, La Louange du Corps Humain, A la Gloire des Cieux, A la Gloire
-du Vent, Les Reves, L'Europe, La Conquete, Les Souffrances, La Joie,
-La Ferveur, Les Idees, La Vie, L'Effort, L'Action, Plus Loin que les
-Gares, Le Soir_. And again and again rings out in various keys the true
-Nietzschean note. For "vast hopes come from the unknown" has displaced
-the ancient balance whereof souls are now tired. But the only reality
-is life:
-
- "La vie en cris ou en silence,
- La vie en lutte ou en accord
- Avec la vie avec la mort
- La vie apre, la vie intense,
- Elle est ici dans la fureur ou dans la haine
- De l'ascendant et rouge ardeur humaine."
-
-It is fine proof also of the vast vitality of Verhaeren that even in so
-recent a work as _Les Rhythmes Souveraines_ the muscled majesty of his
-verse, though possibly a trifle less violent, shows no abatement of its
-essential strength. We would mention in particular the poems _Michel
-Ange, Chant d'Hercule, Les Barbares_ with the swift crispness of its
-one-foot lines, and above all _Le Paradis_ with its almost Miltonic
-picture of
-
- "L'archange endormant Eve au creux de sa grande aile."
-
-But does not Verhaeren transcend Milton in the wideness of his humanity
-when he describes not with regret but with the maximum of exalted
-exultation how
-
- "Eve bondit soudain hors de son aile immense,
- Oh l'heureuse subite et feconde demence,
- Que l'ange avec son coeur trop pur ne comprit pas."
-
-In his latest volume, _Les Bles Mouvants_, Verhaeren sinks back no
-doubt to a quieter and serener mood, but who shall say that these
-eclogues do not simply represent the sage crouch for another leonine
-spring?
-
-We do not propose to make more than a passing reference to Verhaeren's
-plays, for it is the lyric rather than the drama which is his true
-medium of expression.
-
-_Helene de Sparte_, with all its graceful Alexandrines, is inferior
-to any play by D'Annunzio, and even the socialist drama _Les Aubes_
-is, notwithstanding the fine verses with which it is sown, simply
-stiff and heavy when compared with Hauptmann's _Weavers_. It is by
-his lyrics that Verhaeren lives, and will continue to live beyond his
-mere death whenever it comes, as the greatest and most essentially
-European poet of our new age. For his lyrics are equally great, both
-in their message and the method of their expression. Disdaining alike
-the cowardice and the perversity of those who, refusing to face the red
-realities of the present century, fly for their comfort to the pale
-shadows of the Middle Ages, Verhaeren has plunged boldly into the very
-brazier of our modern existence. He affirms, he combats, he prophesies,
-but he rarely, if ever, rests. He hymns every phase of life, from the
-human brain to the human body, and from the winds and seas of nature
-to the towns and marts of man. And no message is more virile, more
-tonic, more essentially healthy, for is not his message the phoenix
-of a new humanitarian faith soaring aloft on its fiery wings out of
-the corpses of the decomposing dogmas? And his prosody has the supreme
-excellence that it is not a mere aesthetic end in itself, but a drastic
-instrument of expression. Your pure aesthete, no doubt, may cavil at
-his ruggedness. For he is the Rodin of poetical rhyme, the veritable
-Vulcan of verse, or rather a Siegfried forging the sword of the future
-on the anvil of the present, as he drives in the stubborn nails of his
-nouns with the hissing hammers of his adjectives. His lines no doubt
-at times will growl, grind and boom, hit the reader in the face with
-all the force of a clenched fist, and palpitate with a full-bloodedness
-somewhat overpowering for the jaded and the anaemic. But is not this the
-very seal of success in a man who specifically sets himself to sing
-not the mere beauty of beauty, but the beauty of force, the beauty of
-life, "life violent, prodigious, unsatiated, the universal spasm of all
-things"?
-
-
-
-
-THE FUTURE OF FUTURISM
-
-
- "Repose-toi!... Repose-toi!... il n'est doux que dormir!..."
-
- "Non, la vie est a bruler comme un falot de paille,
- Il faut l'ingurgiter d'une lampe hardie,
- Tels ces jongleurs de foire qui vont mangeant du feu
- D'un coup de langue, escamotant la Mort dans l'estomac."
-
-
-The above quotation from M. Marinetti's poem, _Le Demon de la Vitesse_,
-is well adapted to give some idea of the feverish but sustained energy
-of those pictures whose recent exhibition in the Sackville Gallery so
-successfully scandalised not only the _doyens_ of the Royal Academy but
-even the official champions of all that is new and progressive in our
-modern English art. But for a correct appreciation even of the Futurist
-pictures themselves, it is essential to realise that, so far from
-being the mere isolated extravagances and _tours de force_ of a new
-technique, they constitute an integral part of a living scheme, which
-with all its lavish use of the most ostentatious hyperbolism, has yet
-claims to be seriously considered as a substantial movement, artistic,
-literary, economic, sociological, and above all human.
-
-Let us then make some scrutiny of this "Rising City" of Futurism, as
-it rears with such vehement exaltation from out the trampled debris
-of a superseded and dishonoured past. For this purpose, having first
-examined those conditions of contemporary Italy which more immediately
-provoked this "Red Rebellion," we shall proceed to some analysis of
-the general character of the movement and of the aggressive and
-sensational works of M. Marinetti himself, the audacious Mercury of
-this new message.
-
-The direct cause of the Futurist movement is to be found in the fact
-that that modern current of electric energy, which has been galvanising
-the states of Northern and Central Europe to a more and more strenuous
-and a more and more complicated activity has, so far as Italy is
-concerned, not succeeded in flowing further south than Milan. In this
-connection it is not without its significance that, while Milan is
-indubitably the vital and commercial capital of the peninsula, the
-official capital should be merely Rome, aureoled with its hybrid halo
-of majesty and malaria, the centre of the tourist, the archaeologist,
-and the Papacy, that august shadow of a once living empire.
-
-Even, moreover, the great heroes of the _Risorgimento Italiano_,
-the euphonious title by which Italians designate the unification of
-their country, suffered from an undue obsession with the democratic
-ideals of a mediaeval past. Dissipating their energy in rushing reams
-of republican rhetoric or the purple pomp of patriotic platitudes,
-they remained sublimely oblivious to the crying economic needs of
-a country which, with all its natural richness and all its natural
-genius, still, so far as general material and intellectual progress
-is concerned, lags no inconsiderable distance behind the increasingly
-quick march of the European civilisation. Nor did matters improve
-when the regime of the naif idealists was succeeded by that of the
-opportunist bureaucracy which has since governed Italy. A vast portion
-of the country still remains unforested, uncultivated, unirrigated,
-and above all uneducated. The taint of malaria still infects wide
-tracts of land, which with proper treatment might have been profitably
-developed by those masses of sturdy labourers who have emigrated to
-America with an almost Irish eagerness. Indeed with all respect to
-M. Marinetti, who has himself fought in the Tripolitan trenches, the
-Italo-Turkish war was occasioned (if we can rely on one of the most
-brilliant and responsible of the Parisian reviews) not so much by a
-_bona fide_ desire to find a place in the sun for the not yet surplus
-population of a not yet fully developed country, as by an indisputably
-authentic ambition to find a lucrative outlet for the money of the
-clique of clerical capitalists who control the Bank of Rome. So far,
-however, as no inconsiderable portion of Italy itself is concerned,
-we are confronted with a country of museums, ruins, and ciceroni
-which, exploiting the _Fremdenindustrie_ after the manner of some
-more perverse and inexcusable Switzerland, prostitutes with venal
-ostentation the faded beauties of its undoubtedly glorious past to the
-complete ruin of its only potentially splendid present.
-
-A certain pseudo-Nietzscheanism has no doubt been introduced into Italy
-beneath the auspices of D'Annunzio. Yet, with all his fanfaronnade of
-tense and exuberant virility, the atmosphere of D'Annunzio is, speaking
-broadly, moistly rank and exotically enervating. With the possible
-exception of his latest novel, his heroes are languidly feverish
-dilettantes whose lives are principally devoted to the literary and
-aesthetic cultivation of all the neurotic luxuriance of their own erotic
-morbidities. This brings us to the important sociological fact of that
-rigid obsession with sex, as the one paramount emotional, artistic,
-and vital value which, sapping the manhood not only of Italy but also
-indeed of France, tends to corrupt the whole social, political, and
-economic life of the two nations.
-
-It is this exaggerated preoccupation with the sexual aspect of life
-which has produced, by way of a vehement but deliberate _riposte_, the
-important Futurist maxim, "Meprisez la femme." With an enthusiasm in
-fact almost worthy of our own Young Men's Christian Association, these
-comparative Hippolyti of a young mother-country, only recently wedded
-in the bonds of political union, flaunt themselves as the unscrupulous
-iconoclasts of such firmly established national ideals as "the glorious
-conception of Don Juan and the grotesque conception of the cocu."
-Thus the Futurists would banish the nude from painting and adultery
-from the novel, so that they may be able to substitute the sublime
-male fury of creation of artistic and scientific masterpieces for all
-the sterile embraces of hedonistic eroticism, and, like some gallant
-band of twentieth-century Hercules, cleanse the Augean stables of the
-Latin civilisation of its vast surplus of malignant mud vomited forth
-by that stewing and pestiferous swamp of sex. As an antidote to that
-virulent plague of luxurious and diseased sexuality, which it is their
-self-imposed mission to eradicate, they pen the drastic prescription
-of "patriotism and war, the only hygiene of the world." So hot indeed
-is the ardour of these militant apostles of a new Latin civilisation,
-that they once incurred the displeasure of established authority by
-insisting on a war with Austria with such a maxim of vehemence that
-an Austrian journal actually demanded the intervention of the Italian
-Government.
-
-And whether this policy indicates the mere tetanic spasms of a
-delirious Chauvinism, or the lucid vision of an inspired if heretical
-diplomacy, it is certainly symptomatic of a tense, combative, and
-drastic energy which is, in the deepest sense of the word, essentially
-Nietzschean. In this connection the attitude of the Futurists towards
-Nietzsche is instructive. They have read his books, thrilled to his
-magic, and yet they repudiate him. For they cavil, and not altogether
-unreasonably, at the bigoted and hidebound dualism of Nietzsche's
-political philosophy, and his obstinate and obsolete division of the
-political world into the divine spirit of a few strong geniuses and the
-brute matter of a weak and numerous proletariate.
-
-Yet, taking the matter in its broad lines, M. Marinetti's programme
-for "the indefinite physiological and intellectual progress of man"
-expresses admirably the whole theory of the Nietzschean Superman.
-Nietzschean also are such phrases as, "the type inhuman, mechanical,
-cruel, omniscient and combative," or "the multiplied man who mingles
-with iron, nourishes himself on electricity, and only appreciates the
-delight of the danger and of the heroism of every single day." The
-real distinction lies in the fact that the Futurist Superman is more
-practical, more concrete, more up-to-date, and, above all, infinitely
-less dreamy than his elder and more pedantic brother.
-
-And in spite of M. Marinetti's analysis of Nietzscheanism as nothing
-but the artificial resurrection of a dead and past antiquity, the two
-ideals are harmonious in their denunciation of the facile and automatic
-reverence for "the good old days," and their savage exhortation to
-"sweep away the grey cinders of the Past with the incandescent lava of
-the Future."
-
-This announcement of a virile desire to improve and improve and
-improve, not only on the past but also on the present, constitutes
-the principal mark in the Futurist platform. Hence the leaders of
-the movement have coined the two words _passeisme_, the object of
-their onslaught, and _Futurism_, the watch-word of their faith. And
-truculently pushing their theories to the extreme limit of extravagant
-logic, M. Marinetti and his brothers in arms exhorted the assembled
-Venetians, in the 200,000 multicoloured manifestos which on a certain
-memorable day they flung down into the Piazza San Marco, "to cure
-and cicatrize this rotting town, magnificent wound of the Past, and
-to hasten to fill its small foetid canals with the ruins of its
-tumbling, leprous palaces." But the remedy is constructive as well as
-destructive.
-
-"Burn the gondolas, those swings for fools, and erect up to the sky
-the rigid geometry of large metallic bridges and factories with waving
-hair of smoke; abolish everywhere the languishing curve of the old
-architecture."
-
-We see at once how, in this more than Wellsian enthusiasm for all the
-romantic possibilities of a scientific civilisation, they declare
-the most sanguinary war _a l'outrance_ with that Ruskinian and
-Pre-Raphaelite sentimentalism which, sublimely burying its mediaeval
-head in the immemorial sands of a crumbling past, is somewhat
-ill-adapted to confront the onrushing simoon of an increasingly
-definite and formidable future. And with the deliberate object of
-emphasizing his point with the maximum of provocative aggressiveness,
-the Futurist will fling at his enemies the insolent paradox that a
-motor-car in motion has a higher aesthetic value than the Victory of
-Samothrace, or announce with theatrical solemnity that the pain of
-a man is just about as interesting in their eyes as the pain of an
-electric lamp, suffering in convulsive spasms and crying out with the
-most agonising effects of colour.
-
-Yet if we strip this new "beauty of mechanism" and "aesthetic of speed"
-of its loud garb of ostentatious extravagance, the intrinsic theories
-themselves strike us as neither monstrous nor unreasonable. For if
-we may presume to put our own unauthorised gloss on M. Marinetti's
-vividly illuminated manuscript, what the Futurist really wishes is to
-break down the conventional divorce that is so often thought to exist
-between ideal Art and actual Life, so as to bring the two elements
-into the most drastic and immediate contact. Art, in fact, should not
-be an escape _from_ but an exaltation _of_ the red impetus of life.
-Art's function is not merely to titillate the dispassionate aesthetic
-feeling of the dilettante or connoisseur, but to thrill with a keen
-vital emotion the actual experiencer of life. Form is not an end in
-itself, its sole function is to extract the whole emotional quality
-of its content. And when confronted with the problem of what content
-is best fitted to be the proper subject of artistic representation,
-your Futurist would promptly retort that, inasmuch as the tumultuous
-twentieth-century emotions of "steel, pride, fever, and speed" are
-those to which the twentieth-century civilisation will naturally
-vibrate with the most authentic sympathy, those emotions and those
-alone are the proper subject-matter for twentieth-century art.
-
-Having thus obtained some rough idea of the broad lines of the new
-Futurism, let us proceed to examine its manifestation in the spheres
-of painting and literature. So far as their painting is concerned, the
-primary principle of the Futurists is their subordination of intrinsic
-aesthetic form to emotional content. This principle, though carried to a
-pitch far transcending anything which had ever been previously essayed,
-is by no means without its exemplifications, in the history both of
-past and contemporary art. Even indeed in the eighteenth century Blake
-had transferred on to the painted canvas his highly abstract ideas of
-esoteric mysticism. The content of the pictures of Blake is of course
-diametrically opposed to the content of the Futurists, yet an authentic
-analogy lies in the fact that a content at all should have been
-specifically painted. With a similar qualification we can remember with
-advantage how Rossetti and Burne-Jones, as indisputably modern in the
-fact that they had the courage to paint a content at all, as they were
-indisputably reactionary in the actual content which they felt inspired
-to portray, gave pictorial representation to the Pre-Raphaelite
-nostalgia for a prae-mediaeval past. More analogous are the canvases of
-Franz von Stuck, the Munich Secessionist, who also sets out to paint
-ideas and to give aesthetic form to psychological contents. Thus his
-_Krieg_, with its grimly triumphant rider, steadfastly pursuing the
-goal of an ideal, future over the wallowing corpses of a transcended
-present, expresses perfectly in the sphere of paint the whole spirit of
-the Nietzschean Superman.
-
-Even better examples of the growing predominance of the content in the
-sphere of art are to be found in Rodin, who moulds even in immobile
-statuary something of the tumultuous sweep of the present age, or in
-Max Klinger the creator in concrete form of the most abstract and
-impalpable ideas.
-
-So also modern music, as represented at any rate by the tense
-restlessness of Richard Strauss with all his fine shades of crouching
-fear and exultant cruelty, or the mystical sensuousness of Debussy,
-ceases to be a mere meaningless euphony of pleasing melody, devoid of
-any vital significance except its own aesthetic beauty, sets itself more
-and more to travel, in the sphere of sound, over the whole vibrant
-gamut of the human emotions.
-
-To achieve the presentation of a content with the maximum of drastic
-effect, the Futurists have invented a new technique. Without embarking
-oh any elaborate technical discussion, we would say that their chief
-principle in the painting of apparently even the most objective
-phenomena is that it should be the aim of the artist to reproduce no
-mere picturesque copy of some stationary pose, but that whole sensorial
-or emotional quality inherent in all dynamic life which radiates to
-the mind of the spectator, or which again may be simply flashed into
-dynamic life by the mind of the spectator himself.
-
-And as, according to our latest and most fashionable metaphysical
-authority, the ego, whether of a man, an insect, or a cosmos, is merely
-a movement, it should not strike us as altogether unreasonable if
-the dynamic idea of movement should enter very prominently into the
-Futurist paintings. For, realising fully that consciousness is a stream
-and not a pond, and that both cerebral memories and visual impressions
-are but, as it were, the flying nets hastily created and re-created
-to catch a world that is perpetually on the run, the Futurists make
-boldly ingenious efforts to capture the jumping chameleon of truth, by
-portraying not one but several phases of the unending series of the
-human cinematograph.
-
-Thus in Severini's picture of the "Pan-Pan dance at the Monico," the
-artist sets himself to paint the whole moving, multicoloured soul of
-this by no means spiritual Montmartre tavern, with all its various
-subdivisions of male and female customers engaged in their mutual
-revels and their mutual dances, the deviltry of its _rigolo_ music, and
-all the hustling clash and clatter of its insolent carouse.--
-
-It is also significant of their general _Weltanschauung_ that the
-Futurists should frequently find their inspiration in the speed,
-stress, and creativity of a glorious modernity. Thus Russolo's
-"Rebellion," angular, aggressive, rampant, reproduces the whole red
-energy of an insurgent proletariate, while the same painter's "Train"
-essays, and not unsuccessfully, to paint the very lights and ridges of
-velocity itself.
-
-The feats of the new culture in the realm of literature are quite as
-impressive and as sensational as in that of painting. This brings us
-to some consideration of M. Marinetti himself, both the real and the
-official, chief of the new movement.
-
-To comprehend the true essence of this man, who certainly constitutes
-a European portent which, whether hated or loved, can scarcely be
-ignored, it is necessary to realise that while a poet he is above all a
-man of the world and of action. While, also, as would appear from his
-visit to the _Morning Post_ correspondent in Tripoli, he is a gentleman
-inflamed by a genuine if no doubt slightly truculent patriotism, he
-has all the advantages of being an almost perfect cosmopolitan. Born
-in Egypt of Italian parents, educated in France, and now directing the
-Futurist movement from Milan, M. Marinetti combines all the heat of an
-African temperament with all the mercurial dash and aggressiveness of
-the modern Latin civilisation. At present only in the early thirties,
-M. Marinetti founded in the years 1904--1905 his international review
-_Poesia_. To this journal he endeavoured to attract all that was
-strenuous, aspiring, and daring in the artistic youth of the Latin
-civilisation. Eventually the various tentative ideals and ideas which
-he and his colleagues entertained became crystallised in the word
-_Futurism_, which grew more and more a definite creed with a more and
-more definite catechism of literature, music, painting, politics, and
-life. Since the publication of the first Futurist manifesto in the
-_Figaro_ in 1909, M. Marinetti has devoted himself to waging with
-all his militant energy of tongue, sword, and pen the campaign of
-Futurism. Meeting after meeting, demonstration after demonstration has
-he addressed in Italy, and, carrying the war into the enemy's country,
-he has even had the audacity to hurl his defiance from Trieste itself.
-And if the deliberate provocativeness at which he has pitched his
-propaganda has brought upon him the venomous hatred of both numerous
-and powerful enemies, it has merely served to give but an additional
-fillip to the fury of his impetus.
-
-It is indeed not only amusing, but also an indication of the man's
-verve and defiance, to remember that when he had been hissed for
-a whole hour on end in the Theatre Mercadante of Naples, where he
-was delivering a lecture, and an apparently quite edible orange was
-eventually thrown at him, he should with fine _bravura_ take out
-his penknife and both peel and eat the orange. In Italy, at any
-rate, Futurism has swept the universities, and the disciples of the
-new faith number 50,000. Endeavouring to give to the campaign a
-cosmopolitan significance, the Futurists have carried their pictures,
-their manifestos, and their books to Madrid, to Berlin, to Paris
-(where they were enthusiastically toasted by the "Association Generale
-des Etudiants," the Parisian equivalent of the Oxford and Cambridge
-Unions), and even to England itself, which, with a surprising lack of
-its usual insularity, would actually appear to be taking an intelligent
-interest in a new movement without waiting, as was the case with
-Nietzscheanism, until it has first become the respectable if _passee_
-object of the devotion of Continental academicism.
-
-Before we proceed on our short survey of the chief works of M.
-Marinetti, which have been written in French and only subsequently
-translated into Italian, it is necessary to make some brief mention
-of the new technique which he employs. This new technique is Free
-Verse, first introduced into French literature in the _Palais Nomades_
-of M. Gustave Kahn. It should be remembered, of course, that French
-Free Verse is an article totally distinct from that mixture of rolling
-dithyramb and conversational slap-dash which characterises the work of
-Walt Whitman.
-
-So far indeed as M. Gustave Kahn is concerned, the innovation
-simply consisted not in any repudiation of rhyme in itself, but in
-the emancipation of French verse from the strait-waistcoat of the
-Alexandrine and the strict disciplinary rules of academic composition.
-
-M. Marinetti, on the other hand, in the three volumes which it is now
-proposed to consider, viz. _La Conquete des Etoiles_ (Sansot, 1902),
-_Destruction_ (Vanier, 1904), _La Ville Charnelle_ (Sansot, 1908),
-carries the metrical revolution considerably further. For while the
-essence of classicism itself when compared with the polyphonic though
-at times majestic ebullitions of Walt Whitman, they subserve no
-specific rule. Metre, genuine metre, is invariably present, but the
-precise shape which it happens to take is determined by the exigencies
-not of the particular metre in which the poet happens to be writing,
-but of the particular mood or emotion which clamours for expression
-in the form most specifically appropriate to its own particular
-idiosyncrasies. If, in fact, we may endeavour to crystallise the theory
-of this verse, which though free from mechanical restraint is always
-subordinate to the command of its own dynamic soul, we should say that
-it is simply the principle of onomatopoeia carried from the sphere of
-words to the sphere of metre.
-
-In the _Conquete des Etoiles_ the twenty-four-year-old Marinetti,
-with the characteristic verve of audacious adolescence, essays to open
-the oyster of the poetical world with the sword of a romantic epic.
-Bearing evidence at times, in its grandiose anthropomorphism of natural
-phenomena, of the influence of "his old masters the French Symbolists,"
-the poem of this future champion of a concrete modernity challenges,
-at any rate in the gigantic massing of its imagery, that grandiose
-if somewhat bourgeois romantic Victor Hugo. For here poetic Pelion
-is piled upon poetic Ossa with the most drastic vengeance. For the
-Sovereign Sea, chanting her inaugural battle-cry,
-
- "Hola-he! Hola-ho! Stridionla, Stridionla, Stridionla!
- Stridionlaire!"
-
-to her ancient waves, puissant warriors with venerable beards of foam,
-lashes them to conquer Space and mount to the assault of the grinning
-Stars. And missiles are there in her Reservoir of Death--"petrified
-bodies, bodies of steel, embers and gold, harder than the diamond,
-the suicides whose courage failed beneath the weight of their heart,
-that furnace of stars, those who died for that they stoked within
-their blood the fire of the Ideal, the great flame of the Absolute
-that encompassed them." And for an army has she the legions of her
-amazon cavalry, the veterans of the Sea, the great waves, the riotous,
-prancing narwhals with their scaly rings, the typhoons, the cyclones
-and the haughty trombes (water-spouts), "draping around their loins
-their fuliginous veils, or lifting masses of darkness in their great
-open arms." And so this feud of the elements proceeds from climax to
-climax, from crescendo to crescendo, till the astral fortresses succumb
-to the shock of an infernal charge, and the last star expires "with her
-pupils of grey shadow imploring the Unknown, oh how sweetly."
-
-No doubt the poem almost reels at times as though intoxicated with
-the excesses of its own imagery. Yet making all due discount for this
-healthy turgidity of adolescence, it is impossible to dispute the
-authentic poetical value of this brilliant epic.
-
-By so masterly a grasp is the metre handled that the reader, quite
-oblivious of the immaterial question of whether he is perusing verse
-or prose, is only conscious of the ideas and emotions themselves.
-The following passage is typical not only of the poem's potency of
-expression, but of the intimate union which is effected between the
-meaning and the form.
-
- "C'est ainsi que passe le Simoun,
- aiguillonant sa furie de desert en desert,
- avec son escorte caracolante
- de sables souleves tout ruisselants de feu;
- c'est ainsi que le Simoun galope
- sur l'ocean fige des sables,
- en balangant son torse geant d'idole barbare
- sur des fuyantes croupes d'onagres affoles."
-
-In the series of poems, however, known as _Destruction_,
-
- "Since there is only splendour in this word of terror
- And of crushing force like a Cyclopaean hammer,"
-
-that boyish robustness which we have seen playing so naively in the
-romantic limbo, has attained the solidity of manhood. Finding it no
-longer necessary to have recourse for his subject-matter to some set
-theme of an Elemental War, the author reproduces the experiences of
-his own inner life in a new lyrical language, whose rhythm vibrates
-responsively to every thrill of its creator's spirit, and takes
-faithfully every colour of his chameleon soul.
-
-For the poet is now reverential:
-
- "Tu es infinie et divine, o Mer, et je le sais
- de par le jurement de tes levres, ecumantes
- de par ton jurement que repercutent de plage en plage
- les echos attentifs ainsi que des guetteurs."
-
-now jocund:
-
- "O Mer, mon ame est puerile et demande un jouet";
-
-now, almost sensually, adoring:
-
- "O toi ballerina orientale au ventre sursautant,
- dont les seins sont rouges par le sang des naufrages";
-
-now sunk in the abject ecstasies of opium:
-
- "Derriere des vitres rouges des voix rauques criaient
- 'De la moelle et du sang pour les lampdes d'oubli
- C'est le prix des beaux reves!... c'est le prix....'
- Et j'entrais avec eux au bouge de ma chair";
-
-now gentle:
-
- "C'est pour nous que le Vent las de voyages eternels,
- desabuse de sa vitesse de fantome,
- froissant d'une main lasse, au trefonds de l'espace,
- les velours somptueux d'un grand oreiller d'ombre
- tout diamantes de larmes siddrales";
-
-now bitterly conscious of the ironic raillery of the sea:
-
- "Vos caresses brulantes, vos savantes caresses,
- sont pareilles a des tatonnements d'aveugles
- qui vont ramant par les couloirs d'un labyrinthe!
- Vos baisers out toujours l'acharnement infatigable
- d'un dialogue enrage entre deux sourds
- emprisonnes au fond d'un cachot noir."
-
-Even more characteristic of the feverish, but not unhealthy ardour of
-the book is that series of ten poems entitled _Le Demon de la Vitesse_,
-a kind of railway journey of the modern soul. For now the poet, stoking
-the engines of his pounding brain with the monstrous coals of his own
-energy, drives his train of Aeschylean images (well equipped with all
-the latest modern inventions) with all the record-breaking rapidity of
-some Trans-American express, from the "vermilion terraces of love,"
-across "Hindu evenings," "tyrannical rivers," "avenging forests,"
-"milleniar torrents," and "the dusky corpulence of mountains," to
-traverse "the delirium of Space," and "the supreme plateaux of an
-absurd Ideal," to end finally in the grinding shock of a collision and
-all the agony of a shipwrecked vessel. It is in this series of poems
-that the author's wealth of imagery, always superabundant, lavishes its
-most profound and incessant exuberance.
-
-For such phrases as "the drunken fulness of streaming stars in the
-great bed of heaven," "oh, folly, my folly, oh, Eternal Juggler," "O
-wind, crucified beneath the nails of the stars," "the flesh scorched in
-the burning tunic of a terrible desire," "the sad towns crucified on
-the great crossed arms of thewhite road" are not mere isolated flashes
-of poetical riches, but casual samples of an opulence displaying
-itself on this same grandiose scale throughout every line of every
-poem. Note, also, that the poet has completely fused himself with the
-whole scientific universe. He will thus portray a man in the terms of
-some dynamic entity of mechanical science, which as likely as not will
-itself be represented in terms of humanity. Contrast, for instance,
-such phrases as--
-
- "Les geantes pneumatiques de l'Orgueil," or "train
- fougueux de mon ame,"
-
-with--
-
- "Colonnes de fumee, immenses bras de negre,
- anneles d'etincelles et de rubis sanglants."
-
-To sum up the essential character of _Destruction,_ we would say that
-releasing poetry from the shackles of the conventional subject-matter,
-the conventional language, and the conventional metres to which it
-had been so long confined, it lays the hitherto untravelled lines of
-the speed and beauty of the whole of modern civilisation, with its
-all-unexplored scientific and psychological regions, as it sings the
-rushing rhapsody of the whole spirit of the twentieth century.
-
- "I bid ye pant your fury and your spleen,
- I reck not the long roarings of your wrath,
- O galloping Simoons of my ambition,
- Who heavily the city's threshold paw,
- Nor ever shall ye cross her sensual walls,
- Ye neigh in vain in my stopped ears, already
- With rosy murmurs steeped and stupefied
- (And subterranean voices of the deep),
- Like spells of freshness full of the sea's song."
-
-The above quotation may perhaps give such readers as have not the
-luxury of the French language some faint shadow of the warm charm of
-_La Ville Charnelle_, which, at any rate from the conventional standard
-of ordinary aesthetic beauty, represents the zenith of M. Marinetti's
-poetical achievement. For in his second volume of verse, our author
-abandons the furious pace of his rushing modernity to sing the almost
-sensual beauty of a tropical town, with "the silky murmur of its
-African sea," its pointed "mosques of desire," and its "hills moulded
-like the knees of women, and swathed in the linen billows of its
-dazzling chalk." The swift piston rhythm of _Destruction_ is exchanged
-for a measure which, though untrammelled by any tight convention, is
-often clad in the Turkish trousers of some languorous rhyme, or slides
-with the voluptuous swish of some blank alexandrine. But if the flood
-of images has abated its turbulence to a serener beauty, it has not
-thereby suffered any loss of volume, as is evidenced by such phrases
-as "les molles emeraudes de prairies infinies," "la bouche eclatee des
-horizons engloutisseurs," or "jusqu'au volant trapeze de ce grand vent
-gymnaste."
-
-Or take the following passage from _The Banjoes of Despair and of
-Adventure_:
-
- "Elles chantent, les benjohs hysteriques et sauvages,
- comme des chattes enervees par l'odeur de l'orage.
- Ce sont des negres qui les tiennent
- empoignees violemment, comme on tient
- une amarre que secoue la bourrasque.
- Elles miaulent, les benjohs, sous leurs doigts frenetiques,
- et la mer, en bombant son dos d'hippopotame,
- acclame leurs chansons par des flic-flacs sonores
- et des renaclements."
-
-More aery and fantastic in their radiance are the _Little Dramas of
-Light_, which in the same volume play outside the walls of _La Ville
-Charnelle_. For pushing the pathetic fallacy to the extreme limit of
-pantheism, or anthropomorphism, as one cares to put it, our author
-constructs his miniature scenes out of the interplay of plants,
-elements, and the very fabrics of human invention, all participating in
-something of the mingled dash, despair, and desire which go to weave
-the somewhat complex tissue of our ultra-modern humanity.
-
-Even the titles of a few of these delicate poems give some idea of
-their darting beauty--"The Foolish Vines and the Greyhound of the
-Firmament" (the Moon), "The Life of the Sails," "The Death of the
-Fortresses," "The Folly of the Little Houses," "The Dying Vessels,"
-"The Japanese Dawn," "The Courtesans of Gold" (the Stars).
-
-Observe, also, the eminently twentieth-century temperament of the
-"coquettish vessels," who, "half-clothed in their ragged sails, and
-playing like urchins with the incandescent ball of the sun," have yet
-experienced "amid the disillusioned smile of the autumn evenings" the
-desire for a fuller and more tumultuous life than is afforded by the
-"ventriloquist soliloquies of the gurgling waters of the quays."
-
- "C'est ainsi, c'est ainsi que les jeunes Navires
- implorent affolees delivrance,
- en s'esclaffant de tous leurs linges barioles,
- claquant au vent comme les levres brulees de fievre.
- Leurs drisses et leurs haubans se raidissent
- tels des nerfs trop tendus qui grincent de desir,
- car ils veulent partir et s'en aller
- vers la tristesse affreuse (qu'importe?) inconsolable
- et (qu'importe?) infinie
- d'avoir tout savoure et tout maudit (qu'importe?)."
-
-We can perhaps best formulate the dynamic _elan de vie_, which pulses
-through every line of M. Marinetti's poems, by indulging in the
-perversion of the great line of Baudelaire, so that we can give to our
-poet for his motto:
-
- "Je hais la ligne qui tue le mouvement."
-
-M. Marinetti's activity, however, is not limited to the sphere of
-verse. In 1905 he published _Le Roi Bombance_ (_Mercure de France_),
-a satyric tragedy, compound of the scarcely harmonious temperaments
-of Rabelais and Maeterlinck, a wild extravaganza of anthropophagy and
-resurrection, which satirises the prominent figures in contemporary
-Italian politics, including the recently dead Crispi, Ferri, and
-Tenatri, and contains withal a profound undercurrent of sociological
-truth. _Poupees Electriques_ (Sansot) followed in 1909, a play which,
-with all its brilliance and originality, somehow just misses the real
-dramatic pitch.
-
-Far more significant are the _belles lettres_ of _Les Dieux s'en vont
-D'Annunzio reste_ (Sansot, 1908), with its steely dash of style and its
-criticism at once singularly acute and delightfully malicious of the
-official protagonist of all Italian culture, and the recently published
-_Futurisme_ (Sansot, 1911).
-
-But of all the works of M. Marinetti, the most impressive is the great
-prose epic, _Mafarka Le Futuriste_. It is in the three hundred pages
-of this novel, which describes the destructive and creative exploits
-of a militant and intellectual African prince, that the Futurist
-leader has given the most complete expression to the vehement surge
-of his genius. In this book, the spirits of the East and of the West
-strangely combine. The gross heat of an African sun beats incessantly
-down upon these torrid pages, yet even the most oriental passages have
-such a Homeric freshness of epic sweep as to render them immeasurably
-cleaner than the sniggering indecencies of not a few of even the more
-fashionable and respectable of our lady novelists. Incident follows
-on incident, adventure on adventure, with the magic bewilderment of
-some Arabian Night, an Arabian night illumined by the galvanic current
-of some twentieth-century genie, as it flashes image after image on
-the multicoloured sheet of some dancing cinematograph. The style
-bounds with a lithe male crispness, in comparison with which even the
-luxuriant and self-complacent flowers of D'Annunzio himself seem at
-times to offer but rank and androgynous beauties.
-
-How admirable, for instance, is such a passage as--
-
- "And Mafarka-el-Bey bounded forward, with great elastic
- steps, sliding on the voluptuous springs of the wind and
- rolling--like a word of victory--in the very mouth of
- God";
-
-or such a perfect Homeric simile as--
-
- "All the beloved sweetness of his vanished youth mounted
- in his throat, even as from the courtyard of schools
- there mount the joyous cries of children towards their
- old masters, leaning over the parapet of the terrace
- from which they see the flight of the vessels upon the
- sea";
-
-or such a perfect description as--
-
- "Et d'en haut descendaient les rayons des etoiles des
- milliers de chainettes dorees tintinabulantes, qui
- balancaient au ras de l'eau leurs tremblants reflets,
- innombrables veilleuses."
-
-But the wondrous story of how Mafarka-el-Bey exhorted to the work of
-war the thousands of his wallowing soldiers from the putrescent bed
-of that dried-up lake; of how, disguising himself as an aged beggar,
-he visited the camp of the negroes; of the monstrous tale which he
-there told his Ethiopian foes; of the stratagem by which he drew the
-two pursuing wings of the infatuated army to the stupendous shock of
-an internecine collision; of how he annihilated the maddened hordes of
-the Hounds of the Sun with the stones flung by the mechanical Giraffes
-of War; of the Neronian banquet in the grotto of the Whale's Belly; of
-the agonised hydrophobic death of his brother Magamal, the light of his
-eyes; of the nocturnal journey in which he conveyed across the sea his
-brother's body in a sack to the land of the Hypogeans; of the Futurist
-Discourse which he there held; of his passing encounter with the
-fellahin Habbi and Luba; of how, disdaining the more banal method of
-filial creation, he compelled the weavers of Lagahourso and the smiths
-of Milmillah to make the body of that Airgod Gazourmeh, whose spirit he
-had fashioned out of the glory of his own unaided brain; and of how he
-died exultantly, brushed away beneath the gigantic wings of his son, as
-it flew like some hilarious parricide into the clear infinitude, is it
-not all written in the pages of _Mafarka Le Futuriste_? (E. Sansot &
-Cie, Paris, 3 fr. 50 c.)
-
-Note, also, the religious exultation of martial and intellectual
-energy, whose hoarse prayer is uttered on almost every page. For
-Mafarka is the prophet of that "new voluptuousness which shall have
-rid the world of love when he shall have founded the religion of the
-concrete will and of the heroism of every single day."
-
-And to still further exemplify his new religion of war and energy,
-and inspired, too, no doubt by the airy message of the Arab bullets,
-M. Marinetti finished on the 29th November 1911 in the trenches of
-Sidi-Missri, near Tripoli, the great free-verse epic of three hundred
-and fifty pages, entitled _The Popes Monoplane_. The function of this
-poem, which is certainly the most original epic known to literary
-history, is to serve as an anti-clerical, an anti-pacifist, and
-anti-Austrian polemic. And this function it accomplishes by a technique
-which in its successful audacity transcends even itself. For nowhere
-is the free verse of Marinetti more free. New harmonies and even new
-dissonances are conjured up according to the emotion to be expressed
-and the object to be described, while the terminology of mechanics
-and physiology is judiciously mingled with just a trace of the old
-romanticism. The whole epic quite literally flies with inordinate
-swiftness. For the poet is, on his monoplane, careering over the heart
-of Italy. He takes counsel of his father the volcano, and, flying back
-to Rome, fishes up by means of an iron chain with a spring-trap the
-great polished Seal, or, as he exultantly describes it,
-
- "Un pape, un vrai pape, le saint Pontif lui-meme."
-
-And on he flies on his missionary career, with the miserable Vicar of
-God dangling helplessly beneath him, now present at the debates of
-_Les Moucherons Politiciens_, now assisting at the tumultuous congress
-of _Les Syndicate Pacifistes_, now side by side with the moon, now
-exhorting the Italian youth to shake off their execrable lethargy,
-and, finally, participating in the eventual overthrow of the Austrian
-enemy. This poem marks an immense advance on the earlier epic, _La
-Conquete des Etoiles_, to which we have already referred. It pullulates
-with an equal energy, but this energy is tenser and far less turgid. It
-is an energy, moreover, whose impetus is expended not on imaginative
-abstractions, but on the drastic attack of concrete political problems.
-As a sheer piece, too, of description, Marinetti's description of the
-_Battle of Monfalcone_ is in our view superior to any of the military
-verse even of Kipling himself. _The Pope's Monoplane_ is, of course, an
-aggressively specific example of realism in poetry. But it is a realism
-which, so far from clipping the wings of Pegasus, rather spurs him to
-higher and more strenuous flights. We may perhaps conclude our survey
-of this work by an endeavour to render into English a characteristic
-passage from the dialogue between the Poet and the Volcano.
-
-
- THE VOLCANO
-
- Ne'er have I slept; I labour endlessly,
- Enriching space with many a masterpiece
- That lives and dies in a day.
- Over the baking of the chiselled rocks
- Upon the vitrefaction of the many-coloured sands
- I keep my watch
- So well that the clay 'neath my fingers
- Will metamorphose
- To a porcelain of perfect rose,
- Which I shatter with the buffets of my steam.
-
- My accomplice is the Strait of Messina
- Which dozes in the dawn, couching white and glossy
- As an Angora cat...
- My accomplice is the Strait of Messina
- Lolling like a cushion of lazy turquoise silk,
- With soft Arabian words embroidered by the wake
- Of clouds and languorous sails,
- Words woven silently methinks
- With a fair silver thread upon the ocean's robe.
-
- The perfidious moon is my accomplice,
- The arch-courtesan of the painted stars,
- For nowhere are the moon's cajoleries
- So luring and persuasive.
-
- And nowhere does the moon cast such assiduous eyes
- To seduce the hard red funnels of the steamers,
- Those surly strollers South
- With a fat cigar in their mouth
- Whose smoke they spit against the azure sky.
-
- And nowhere does the moon throw such a tender shower
- Of soft and violet ashes,
- As that which lulls to sleep the lava petrified
- On the black houses hanging on my flanks.
- And nowhere has the moon such poignancy
- Of inundations of light and ecstasy,
- As on the gashed paths
- Carved by my surgical fire.
-
- But woe to those who follow the bleating light of the moon,
- And the plaintive bells of the flocks,
- And the bitter flutes of the shepherds whose world-weary notes
- Are long, long threads that vanish in the blue!
- Woe to those who refuse to make their galloping blood
- Keep step with the gallop of the blood of my devastation!
-
- And woe to those who wish to root their heads,
- To root their feet and houses
- In a craven hope of eternity!
- A truce to building, for ye must encamp!
- Nay, am I not shaped even as a tent
- Whose truncated top fanneth my wrath?
- I only love the acrobatic stars
- Who balance on the rolling balls of smoke
- Wherewith I juggle!
-
-
- MYSELF
- I can dance to them, and juggle in mid air,
- And shower my song on the reverberations
- Of thy storms that breed
- In subterranean depths!...
- And I descend
- To hear the diapasons of thy voice.
- So make a pause
- In the electrical discharges of thy tubes
- That tear from thy base the underlying rocks.
- Enjoin to silence all thy babbling grottoes,
- That all a-flutter quiver ceaselessly.
- Gag with thick cinders
- The basaltic echoes whose chorus rings thy praise.
-
- What good are thy volcanic bombs
- That serve as punctuations for the growlings of thy speech?
- And what care I for the ruddy jets
- Of thine aggressive foam?
- Thy deluges of mud have soiled my wings of white,
- But check me not, for proof against thine avalanche
- Of scoria I descend, gilded and aureoled
- By all the powdery shower of thy dumbfounded gold.
-
-It is also relevant to mention that M. Marinetti has been recently
-formulating new rules and principles for his new literary code. Among
-the more drastic phases of this stylistic revolution we would mention
-the employment of mathematical signs and symbols, the rebellion from
-too rigid and pedantic a syntax, the minimum use of the adjective and
-the infinitive, the opening up of new fields of images and metaphors,
-and the freer and more increased use of onomatopoeia. These ideas
-are succinctly, though no doubt extravagantly, set out in the two
-manifestos entitled _Wireless Imagination and Words at Liberty_ and
-_The Futurist Anti-Tradition_.
-
-Space vetoes more than the enumeration of the other Futurist
-poets--Luccini, Palazzescho, Folgore, and Altomare--though we may
-perhaps mention the recently published _Poesie Electrichie_ of Govoni,
-and the _A Claude Debussy_ of Paolo Buzzi, which won the first prize of
-the first international competition of "Poesia," and which transfers
-into a marvellously fluid Italian verse the at once ethereal and
-faunish emotions of the composer's music.
-
-But if, finally, we may speculate on the Future of Futurism, its real
-prospects and its real significance are to be found in the fact that,
-though extravagant and aggressive, it is in essence a concentrated
-manifestation of the whole vital impetus of the twentieth century. Its
-relationship to Nietzscheanism we have already examined. Almost equally
-close is its affinity to the standpoints of such representative spirits
-of the real genius of this particular age as Verhaeren and Mr. Wells;
-Verhaeren, the gazer on the _Multiple Splendour_ of the _Tumultuous
-Forces_ of the _Visages of Life_, with his motto, "Life is to be
-mounted and not to be descended; the whole of life is in the soaring
-upwards," who expresses in the strenuous majesty of his verse the whole
-raging complex of our psychological and material civilisation; Mr.
-Wells, too, the glorifier of all the new machinery of our scientific
-fabric; Mr. Wells, who, with all his intoxication for the "gigantic
-syntheses of life," expresses himself most effectually by the maxim,
-"The world exists for and by initiative, and the method of initiative
-is individuality."
-
-Even if we go to more concrete and more topical manifestations, there
-is not wanting evidence that the fiery blast of the Futurists is fanned
-by the huge bellows of our own labouring _Zeitgeist_.
-
-If indeed we may meddle with the very latest metaphysical terminology,
-we would suggest that it is by a singularly brilliant and apposite
-stroke of intuition on the part of, the newly discovered _elan de vie_
-that, at a time which is moving at an unprecedented rapidity, at a time
-when the two great brother nations of the Teutonic race are preparing
-their rival sacrifices for the God of War with all the mocking and
-drastic fraternity of a Cain and of an Abel; when the air is thick
-with the wings of a new and regenerated France; when the militant
-maenads of both the West and the East, under the inspiration of their
-dashing and elusive Pythoness, are waging with foaming fanaticism a
-Holy War of Sex; when even one of the most responsible of our lawyers
-is coquetting dangerously with both the theory and the practice of the
-superior ethical value of Active Resistance; when the most venerable
-of our Lord Justices recently interpolated a homily on the Law of
-Change into the middle of an otherwise purely legal judgment; when
-the two young, but patriotic _condottieri_ of either political party
-are fast leaping into a more and more aggressive prominence; when the
-insurgent masses of our industrial proletariat have made a vehement and
-not entirely unsuccessful charge against existing economic fabric of
-the country; when Mr. Thomas Hardy has attended, in the pages of even
-the _Fortnightly Review_, the funeral of the old God of pity, and when
-Bergsonism, judiciously advertised in the masquerade of a religious
-revival, has replaced the old Eternal Absolute with the creative
-activity of an endless Movement, the Futurists should now exalt the
-sublime vehemence of war, and the aggressive fury of youth, while M.
-Marinetti chants the strident hallelujahs of the new God of sweat and
-agony and tension, and Signor Russolo and his _confreres_ exhibit to us
-in the actual canvases of the Sackville Galleries the rampant hordes of
-rebellion and the painting of Movement itself.
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abel, 237
- _Advent_, 110
- Aeschylus (_cf_. Corelli), 115
- Alcibiades, 61
- _Almansor_, 32
- _Alroy_, 55
- Altomare, 236
- _Amour, De l'_, 13, 14
- _Anatol_, 161, 176-9
- _Anne Veronica_, 120
- Anti-Semite, 115, 190
- Anti-Semitism, 115
- Antoine, 98
- _Aphrodite_, 129
- _Arabian Nights_, 144
- _Ardath_, 114, 115
- Aristotle, 74
- _Armance_, 15-16
- Athanasius, 89
- Attila, 117
- _Aubes, Les_, 210
- Austria, 215
- _Awkward Age, The_, 153
-
- BALFOUR, Mr., 123
- Balzac, 38, 201
- _Banti, Consultation de_, 9
- Barker, 162
- Barrie, J. M., 132
- _Baths of Lucca_, 35
- Baudelaire, 121, 144, 154
- Beaconsfield. _See_ Disraeli
- Beardsley, 144
- Belgium, 197
- Bergson, 208
- Bergsonism, 238
- Berlioz, 38, 44
- Beyle. _See_ Stendhal
- _Beyond the Rocks_, 128
- Bible, 89, 120
- Bigillon, 5
- Birrell, 64
- Bjornsen, 98
- _Black Flags_, 95, 100, 111-13
- Blake, 219
- Blatchford, Robert, 132
- _Bles Mouvants, Les_, 210
- Bohair, 38
- _Bond, The_, 104
- _Book of Songs_, 30, 31, 35, 36, 49
- Borgia, 86
- Borne, 38, 39
- Bottomley, Horatio, 119
- Bourget, 24
- _Bovary, Madame_, 16
- _Boy_, 115
- Brandes, 71
- Brieux, 188
- Browning, 63
- Brummel, 61
- Bryce, 60
- _Buechse von Pandora_, 138, 145, 149, 150, 155
- Buddhism, 72
- Burne-Jones, 219
- Buzzi, 236
- Byron, 30, 52, 93
-
- CAIN, 81, 237
- _Call of Life_, 175-6
- _Campagnes Hallucines_, 202-4
- Carlyle, 44, 66
- Carpani, 11
- Casanova, 64
- Catholicism, 39, 110
- Cervantes, 30
- Chant, Mrs. Ormiston, 133
- _Chartreuse de Parme_, 20, 21
- Chateaubriand, 6
- Chauvinism, 215
- Chesterton, G. K., 119, 198
- Christ, 71, 110, 118, 208
- _Childe Harold_, 52
- Christianity, 71, 72, 73, 76, 78, 79, 80, 88, 93;
- Electric Principle of, 114
- _Comedie Humaine_, 16
- _Confession of a Fool_, 95, 97, 105-8
- Congreve, 187
- _Conquete des Etoiles_, 223-5
- _Conrad_, 52
- Conservatism, 67
- _Contarini Fleming_, 55, 62
- Corelli, Miss Marie, 114-33
- _Countess Mizzi_, 161, 184
- Court Theatre, 139
- Craigie, Mrs., 69
- _Creditor, The_, 103
- Crispi, 230
- Crowley, Aleister, 114
- _Crown Bride_, ill
-
-
- _Damascus, To_, 110
- _Daemmerseelen_, 191
- D'Annunzio, 210, 214, 231
- Daru, 3, 4, 9, 12, 18
- Darwin, 84, 136
- _Death Dance_, 97, 110-11
- _Debacles, Les_, 199
- Debussy, 219
- Dembowska, Countess, 12
- Democracy, 67
- _Demon de la Vitesse_, 212, 226
- _De Profundis_, 140
- _Destruction_, 223, 225
- _Deutschland_, 40
- Disraeli, 50-69
- Disraeli, Mrs., 62, 63, 68
- Don Juan, 19, 50, 97, 215
- _Dorian Gray_, 132
- D'Orsay, 61
- Dowie, Dr., 117
- _Dream Pictures_, 30, 32
- Drury Lane, 122
- Dugazon, 7
- Dumas, 38
-
- _Easter_, 110
- _Ehre, Die_, 136
- _Einsame Weg, Der_, 171, 172
- Eldon, 67
- _Elizabeth's Visits to America_, 128
- _Embarrassments_, 177
- _Endymion_, 52
- _Erdgeist_, 134, 135, 145-9
- Essen, Siri von, 95
- _Esther Waters_, 129
- Eugenics, 154
-
- FAGUET, 24
- Fakredeen, 52
- _Father, The_, 101, 102
- Faust, 158
- Ferri, 230
- _Feuerwerk_, 154
- Fichte, 74
-
- _Flamands, Les_, 198, 199
- _Flambeaux Noirs_, 199-202
- _Fleurs du Mal_, 121
- Foote, G. W., 119
- _Forces Tumultueuses_, 196
- _Foundations of Belief_, 123
- France, 214, 237
- _Franziska_, 155, 157-9
- _Frau Margit_, 95
- Free Love, 139, 154
- _Free Opinions_, 119
- Free Verse, 223
- _Freiwild_, 173-5
- Froude, 51
- _Fruehlingserwachen_, 135, 145, 150-3, 159
- Futurism, 212-38
-
- GALSWORTHY, 157, 159, 162, 163
- Gambetta, 67
- Garvice, Charles, 116
- Gautier, 38
- _Geheimniss der Gilde_, 95
- _Genealogy of Morals_, 70-90
- Genesis, 119
- Germany, 72, 135-9
- Gladstone, 53, 54, 61, 65, 66, 68
- _Gluckspeter_, 95
- Glyn, Elinor, 126-30
- _God's Good Man_, 122
- Goethe, 74, 144
- Gog, 208
- Govoni, 236
- _Green Cockatoo_, 161, 182-3
- Guilbert, Melanie, 7
- Gull, Ranger, 115
-
- HALEVY, Jehudah, 43
- _Hallucinated Country-sides_, 202-4
- _Hannele_, 137
- Hardy, 238
- Hart, Julius, 137
- _Harzreise_, 34
- Hauptmann, 137, 210
- _Haydn and Mozart, Lives of_, 11
- _Heimkehr_, 34
- Heine, 26-49, 60, 77, 89
- Heine, Amalie, 31, 32
- Heine, Samson, 29
- Heine, Solomon, 30
- _Helene de Sparte_, 210
- Heliogabalus, 121
- Hermant, Abel, 122
- _Hidalla_, 154
- Higher Criticism (Corelli), 119
- _His Hour_, 128
- _History of Painting in Italy_, 12
- Hitchman, 50
- Hobbes, 83
- Hofmann, 28
- Hogarth, 150
- Holy Alliance, 27
- _Holy Orders_, 121
- Hugo, 38, 224
- Humboldt, 38
-
- IBSEN, 153
- Idealists, 87
- Ihering, 85
- _In Allen Satteln Gerecht_, 156
- _In Allen Wassern Gewaschen_, 156
- _Inferno_, 109
- Ingersoll, 119
- _Intoxication_, 110
- Isaiah, 72, 133
- Israel, 71, 78
- _Italian Travels_, 11
- _Italy_, 35, 213
-
- JACK the Ripper, 149
- James, Henry, 137, 153, 177, 187
- Jeremiah, 72
- Jesuits, 118
- Jesus, 71, 72
- Jew-Millionaires, 121
- Jews, 118
- Jezebels, Upper-Ten, 121, 127
- Job, 111
- _Johannes_, 137
- Josepha, 30
- _Journal, Le_, 24
- Judaea, 78
- _Julien_, 17-20
- _Junge Leiden_, 35
- Juvenal, 133
-
- KABLY, Mdlle., 3
- Kahn, Gustave, 223
- _Kammersaenger, Der_, 140-142
- Kant, 40, 87
- Karl Moor, 19
- Key, Ellen, 88, 96
- Kipling, 110, 234
- Klinger, 219
-
- LAFAYETTE, 38
- _Lamiel_, 22-23
- _Lebendige Stunden_, 177, 180-182
- _Legends_, 109
- _Les Dieux s'en vont D'Annunzio reste_, 230
- Lesbos, 131
- _Liebelei_, 164-166, 169
- _Liebestrank, Der_, 153
- Life Force, 145
- "Little Mary," 132
- Longfellow, 153
- Louason, 7, 8
- Louis XVI, 2
- Louis Philippe, 21
- Louys, 115, 129
- Loyola, 117
- Luccini, 236
- _Lucien Leuwen_, 21-22
- _Lyrisches Intermezzo_, 32, 35, 36
-
- MADONNA, 96, 97
- Maeterlinck, 197, 230
- _Mafarka le Futuriste_, 129, 231, 232
- Maine, 81, 84
- _Maerchen, Das_, 167, 168
- Marinetti, 129, 212-238
- _Marionetten_, 177, 179
- _Marius the Epicurean_, 124
- _Marquis von Keith_, 153
- _Marriage_, 98-100
- _Masken und Wunder_, 191
- _Mate, The_, 183
- Maupassant, 98, 191
- Maupin, Mademoiselle de, 157
- Meade, L. T., 116
- _Medardus, Der Junge_, 184-186
- Meissner, 38
- _Meister Olof_, 94
- _Meister, Wilhelm_, 55
- Melville, Walter, 115
- _Mighty Atom, The_, 115
- Milan, 4, 12, 13, 213
- Milton, 210
- _Minnehaha_, 153
- Mirbeau, Octave, 122
- Mirat, Matilde, 41
- _Miss Julie_, 102, 103
- _Mit Allen Huenden Gehetzt_, 156
- _Moines, Les_, 199
- Moliere, 3, 121
- _Monna Vanna_, 140
- Moore, George, 106
- _Motherly Love_, 104
- Mouche, La, 48
- _Multiple Splendeur, Le_, 208-209
- _Murder of Delicia_, 115
- _Musik_, 155, 156, 157
-
- NAPOLEON, 29, 30, 69
- Nerval, Gerard de, 38
- New England, 67, 153
- _New Machiavelli_, 105, 120
- New Woman Movement, 96
- Nietzsche, 24, 70-90, 136, 144, 208, 216
- Nirvana, 73
- Nonconformity, 119
- _Nordsee Cyklus_, 33, 34
- Northcliffe, 86
- _Nouvelle Heloise_, 3
-
- _Oaha_, 154
- O'Connell, 57
- O'Connor, T. P., 50
- _Open Sea, The_, 100, 108
- Opportunism, 67
- Orestes, 81
- Ovid, 144
-
- PALAZZESCHO, 236
- Papacy, 213
- Peel, 64
- Peladan, 131
- Pietragrua, Countess, 4, 10, 12
- Pinero, 145
- _Plain Dealer, The_, 141
- _Playing with Fire_, 97, 104-105
- Poe, 154
- _Poesia_, 221, 236
- _Poetische Nachlese_, 35, 47
- _Pope's Monoplane, The_, 233-236
- _Professor Bernhardi_, 188-190
- Przybyszewski, 109
- _Puppet-player_, 179-180
-
- QUEUX, Le, 116
-
- _Racine and Shakespeare_, 14, 15
- _Ratcliff_, 32
- _Raymond, Jack_, 119
- Realism, 138
- _Red Room_, 95
- _Reigen_, 179
- _Reisebilder_, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 49
- Rene, 19
- Restoration, French, 17
- Revolution, French, 27, 28, 53
- _Revolutionary Epicke_, 67
- _Rhythmes Souveraines, Les_, 210
- Richter, 38
- _Risorgimento Italiano_, 213
- _Road to the Open, The_, 192-194
- Robespierre, 40
- Rockefeller, 86
- Rodenbach, 197,
- Rodin, 211
- _Romance of Two Worlds_, 114
- _Romantic School, The_, 40
- Romanticism, 14, 27, 28, 138
- _Romanzero_, 35, 47, 48
- Rome, 79, 213
- _Rome, Naples, and Florence_, 11
- Roosevelt, President, 116
- Rossetti, 219
- _Rossini, Life of_, 15
- _Rouge et le Noir, Le_, 9, 16, 17-20, 56, 185
- Rousseau, 46, 83
- Rubens, 197
- Russolo, 220, 238
-
- _Salome_, 140
- Sand, 38
- Sappho, 131
- Satan, 208
- _Satan, Sorrows of_, 114
- Schiller, 144
- Schlegel, 38
- _Schloss von Wetterstein_, 155, 156
- Schnitzler, 161-195
- Schopenhauer, 72, 73, 74, 144
- Secessionists, 140
- Secessionsbuehne, 137
- Sefchen, 30
- Selden, Camille, 48
- Self-and-Sex Series, 130
- Semites, 125
- _Serialese, Manual of_, 133
- Severini, 220
- Shaw, G. B., 126, 135, 155, 159, 162, 163
- Sichel, 51
- Sidonia, 52
- Smiles, Samuel, 115
- Smith, Adam, 7
- Socialists, 88
- Sorel, Julien, 16-20
- _Souvenirs d'Egotisme_, 24
- Spencer, 77
- _Spring's Awakening_, 115. See
- _Fruehlingserwachen_
- St. Amand, 197
- St. Barbe, 197
- St. Beuve, 24
- Stael, Mme. de, 40
- Stage Society, 139, 161, 162
- Stendhal, 1-25, 74, 185
- Sterne, 30
- Stratford-on-Avon, 131
- Strauss, 219
- _Strife_, 163
- Strindberg, 91-113
- Stuck, 219
- Sudermann, 88, 137
- Suffragette, 96
- Superman, 75, 80 85, 87, 136, 163
- Sutro, 162
- Swan, Annie, 116
- _Swan White_, 111
- Sweden, 96
- Swedenborgianism, 110
- _Swedish Destinies_, 98
- _Swedish Miniatures_, 111
- Swift, 30, 44
- _Swiss Tales_, 100
- Switzerland, 215
- Symbolists, 224
-
- TAINE, 20, 24, 136
- Tamerlane, 86
- _Tancred_, 55, 60, 65
- Tanner, John, 97
- _Tartuffe_, 121
- Technique, 163
- _Temporal Power_, 120, 124
- Tenatri, 230
-
- _Tentacular Towns_, 202-205
- _Terminations_, 177
- _Thelma_, 119, 124
- Thorne, Guy, 115
- _Three Weeks_, 127, 130
- Thucydides, 132
- Tolstoi, 76, 126
- Tories, 65, 66, 67
- Torquemada, 117
- _Totentanz_, 126, 135, 142-4
- Tracy, 7
- _Turn of the Screw_, 137
-
- UHL, Frida, 109
- Ultramontanes, 21
- Ultramontanism, 115
-
- VAN Lenburgh, 197
- _Veil of Beatrice_, 169-171
- _Vendetta_, 115
- _Venetia_, 56
- Verhaeren, 196-211, 237
- Verlaine, 154, 200
- _Vermaechtniss, Die_, 169
- _Versunkene Glocke, Die_, 137
- _Vie de Henri Brulard, La_, 24
- _Vier Jahrzeiten, Die_, 154
- _Ville Charnelle La_, 223, 228-230
- _Villes Tentaculaires, Les_, 202-205
- _Visages de la Vie_, _Les_, 208
- _Vivian Grey_, 19, 52, 55, 56, 59
- Voltaire, 42, 46, 77, 89
- Voynich, Mrs., 119
-
- WAGNER, 73
- Ward, Mrs., 126
- _Waste_, 163
- _Weber, Die_, 136, 210
- Wedekind, 98, 126, 134-160
- _Weg ins Freie, Der_, 192-194
- _Weites Land, Das_, 184, 186-188
- Wells, 237
- Werther, 19
- Westermarck, 84
- Whigs, 65, 66, 67
- Whitman, Walt, 223
- Wilde, 89, 139, 140
- Will to Live, 73
- Williams, Mrs. Brydges, 63
- _Woman with the Dagger_, 180-182
- Women atheists, 118
- _Wormwood_, 115
- Wycherley, 141
-
- YOUNG Men's Christian Association, 215
-
- _Zarathustra_, 70, 80-3, 88
- _Zensur_, 155, 156
- _Zwischenspiel_, 172, 173
- Zola, 118, 136, 145
-
-
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