The Ambassadors
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The Ambassadors
Henry James
Volume I
Preface
Nothing is more easy than to state the subject of "The
Ambassadors," which first appeared in twelve numbers ofThe North American Review(1903) and
was published as a whole the same year. The situation involved is
gathered up betimes, that is in the second chapter of Book Fifth,
for the reader's benefit, into as few words as possible—planted or
"sunk," stiffly and saliently, in the centre of the current, almost
perhaps to the obstruction of traffic. Never can a composition of
this sort have sprung straighter from a dropped grain of
suggestion, and never can that grain, developed, overgrown and
smothered, have yet lurked more in the mass as an independent
particle. The whole case, in fine, is in Lambert Strether's
irrepressible outbreak to little Bilham on the Sunday afternoon in
Gloriani's garden, the candour with which he yields, for his young
friend's enlightenment, to the charming admonition of that crisis.
The idea of the tale resides indeed in the very fact that an hour
of such unprecedented ease should have been felt by him AS a
crisis, and he is at pains to express it for us as neatly as we
could desire. The remarks to which he thus gives utterance contain
the essence of "The Ambassadors," his fingers close, before he has
done, round the stem of the full-blown flower; which, after that
fashion, he continues officiously to present to us. "Live all you
can; it's a mistake not to. It doesn't so much matter what you do
in particular so long as you have your life. If you haven't had
that what HAVE you had? I'm too old—too old at any rate for what I
see. What one loses one loses; make no mistake about that. Still,
we have the illusion of freedom; therefore don't, like me to-day,
be without the memory of that illusion. I was either, at the right
time, too stupid or too intelligent to have it, and now I'm a case
of reaction against the mistake. Do what you like so long as you
don't make it. For it WAS a mistake. Live, live!" Such is the gist
of Strether's appeal to the impressed youth, whom he likes and whom
he desires to befriend; the word "mistake" occurs several times, it
will be seen, in the course of his remarks—which gives the measure
of the signal warning he feels attached to his case. He has
accordingly missed too much, though perhaps after all
constitutionally qualified for a better part, and he wakes up to it
in conditions that press the spring of a terrible question. WOULD
there yet perhaps be time for reparation?—reparation, that is, for
the injury done his character; for the affront, he is quite ready
to say, so stupidly put upon it and in which he has even himself
had so clumsy a hand? The answer to which is that he now at all
events SEES; so that the business of my tale and the march of my
action, not to say the precious moral of everything, is just my
demonstration of this process of vision.Nothing can exceed the closeness with which the whole fits
again into its germ. That had been given me bodily, as usual, by
the spoken word, for I was to take the image over exactly as I
happened to have met it. A friend had repeated to me, with great
appreciation, a thing or two said to him by a man of distinction,
much his senior, and to which a sense akin to that of Strether's
melancholy eloquence might be imputed—said as chance would have,
and so easily might, in Paris, and in a charming old garden
attached to a house of art, and on a Sunday afternoon of summer,
many persons of great interest being present. The observation there
listened to and gathered up had contained part of the "note" that I
was to recognise on the spot as to my purpose—had contained in fact
the greater part; the rest was in the place and the time and the
scene they sketched: these constituents clustered and combined to
give me further support, to give me what I may call the note
absolute. There it stands, accordingly, full in the tideway; driven
in, with hard taps, like some strong stake for the noose of a
cable, the swirl of the current roundabout it. What amplified the
hint to more than the bulk of hints in general was the gift with it
of the old Paris garden, for in that token were sealed up values
infinitely precious. There was of course the seal to break and each
item of the packet to count over and handle and estimate; but
somehow, in the light of the hint, all the elements of a situation
of the sort most to my taste were there. I could even remember no
occasion on which, so confronted, I had found it of a livelier
interest to take stock, in this fashion, of suggested wealth. For I
think, verily, that there are degrees of merit in subjects—in spite
of the fact that to treat even one of the most ambiguous with due
decency we must for the time, for the feverish and prejudiced hour,
at least figure its merit and its dignity as POSSIBLY absolute.
What it comes to, doubtless, is that even among the supremely
good—since with such alone is it one's theory of one's honour to be
concerned—there is an ideal BEAUTY of goodness the invoked action
of which is to raise the artistic faith to its maximum. Then truly,
I hold, one's theme may be said to shine, and that of "The
Ambassadors," I confess, wore this glow for me from beginning to
end. Fortunately thus I am able to estimate this as, frankly, quite
the best, "all round," of all my productions; any failure of that
justification would have made such an extreme of complacency
publicly fatuous.I recall then in this connexion no moment of subjective
intermittence, never one of those alarms as for a suspected hollow
beneath one's feet, a felt ingratitude in the scheme adopted, under
which confidence fails and opportunity seems but to mock. If the
motive of "The Wings of the Dove," as I have noted, was to worry me
at moments by a sealing-up of its face—though without prejudice to
its again, of a sudden, fairly grimacing with expression—so in this
other business I had absolute conviction and constant clearness to
deal with; it had been a frank proposition, the whole bunch of
data, installed on my premises like a monotony of fine weather.
(The order of composition, in these things, I may mention, was
reversed by the order of publication; the earlier written of the
two books having appeared as the later.) Even under the weight of
my hero's years I could feel my postulate firm; even under the
strain of the difference between those of Madame de Vionnet and
those of Chad Newsome, a difference liable to be denounced as
shocking, I could still feel it serene. Nothing resisted, nothing
betrayed, I seem to make out, in this full and sound sense of the
matter; it shed from any side I could turn it to the same golden
glow. I rejoiced in the promise of a hero so mature, who would give
me thereby the more to bite into—since it's only into thickened
motive and accumulated character, I think, that the painter of life
bites more than a little. My poor friend should have accumulated
character, certainly; or rather would be quite naturally and
handsomely possessed of it, in the sense that he would have, and
would always have felt he had, imagination galore, and that this
yet wouldn't have wrecked him. It was immeasurable, the opportunity
to "do" a man of imagination, for if THERE mightn't be a chance to
"bite," where in the world might it be? This personage of course,
so enriched, wouldn't give me, for his type, imagination in
PREDOMINANCE or as his prime faculty, nor should I, in view of
other matters, have found that convenient. So particular a
luxury—some occasion, that is, for study of the high gift in
SUPREME command of a case or of a career—would still doubtless come
on the day I should be ready to pay for it; and till then might, as
from far back, remain hung up well in view and just out of reach.
The comparative case meanwhile would serve—it was only on the minor
scale that I had treated myself even to comparative
cases.I was to hasten to add however that, happy stopgaps as the
minor scale had thus yielded, the instance in hand should enjoy the
advantage of the full range of the major; since most immediately to
the point was the question of that SUPPLEMENT of situation
logically involved in our gentleman's impulse to deliver himself in
the Paris garden on the Sunday afternoon—or if not involved by
strict logic then all ideally and enchantingly implied in it. (I
say "ideally," because I need scarce mention that for development,
for expression of its maximum, my glimmering story was, at the
earliest stage, to have nipped the thread of connexion with the
possibilities of the actual reported speaker. HE remains but the
happiest of accidents; his actualities, all too definite, precluded
any range of possibilities; it had only been his charming office to
project upon that wide field of the artist's vision—which hangs
there ever in place like the white sheet suspended for the figures
of a child's magic-lantern—a more fantastic and more moveable
shadow.) No privilege of the teller of tales and the handler of
puppets is more delightful, or has more of the suspense and the
thrill of a game of difficulty breathlessly played, than just this
business of looking for the unseen and the occult, in a scheme
half-grasped, by the light or, so to speak, by the clinging scent,
of the gage already in hand. No dreadful old pursuit of the hidden
slave with bloodhounds and the rag of association can ever, for
"excitement," I judge, have bettered it at its best. For the
dramatist always, by the very law of his genius, believes not only
in a possible right issue from the rightly-conceived tight place;
he does much more than this—he believes, irresistibly, in the
necessary, the precious "tightness" of the place (whatever the
issue) on the strength of any respectable hint. It being thus the
respectable hint that I had with such avidity picked up, what would
be the story to which it would most inevitably form the centre? It
is part of the charm attendant on such questions that the "story,"
with the omens true, as I say, puts on from this stage the
authenticity of concrete existence. It then is, essentially—it
begins to be, though it may more or less obscurely lurk, so that
the point is not in the least what to make of it, but only, very
delightfully and very damnably, where to put one's hand on
it.In which truth resides surely much of the interest of that
admirable mixture for salutary application which we know as art.
Art deals with what we see, it must first contribute full-handed
that ingredient; it plucks its material, otherwise expressed, in
the garden of life—which material elsewhere grown is stale and
uneatable. But it has no sooner done this than it has to take
account of a PROCESS—from which only when it's the basest of the
servants of man, incurring ignominious dismissal with no
"character," does it, and whether under some muddled pretext of
morality or on any other, pusillanimously edge away. The process,
that of the expression, the literal squeezing-out, of value is
another affair—with which the happy luck of mere finding has little
to do. The joys of finding, at this stage, are pretty well over;
that quest of the subject as a whole by "matching," as the ladies
say at the shops, the big piece with the snippet, having ended, we
assume, with a capture. The subject is found, and if the problem is
then transferred to the ground of what to do with it the field
opens out for any amount of doing. This is precisely the infusion
that, as I submit, completes the strong mixture. It is on the other
hand the part of the business that can least be likened to the
chase with horn and hound. It's all a sedentary part—involves as
much ciphering, of sorts, as would merit the highest salary paid to
a chief accountant. Not, however, that the chief accountant hasn't
HIS gleams of bliss; for the felicity, or at least the equilibrium
of the artist's state dwells less, surely, in the further
delightful complications he can smuggle in than in those he
succeeds in keeping out. He sows his seed at the risk of too thick
a crop; wherefore yet again, like the gentlemen who audit ledgers,
he must keep his head at any price. In consequence of all which,
for the interest of the matter, I might seem here to have my choice
of narrating my "hunt" for Lambert Strether, of describing the
capture of the shadow projected by my friend's anecdote, or of
reporting on the occurrences subsequent to that triumph. But I had
probably best attempt a little to glance in each direction; since
it comes to me again and again, over this licentious record, that
one's bag of adventures, conceived or conceivable, has been only
half-emptied by the mere telling of one's story. It depends so on
what one means by that equivocal quantity. There is the story of
one's hero, and then, thanks to the intimate connexion of things,
the story of one's story itself. I blush to confess it, but if
one's a dramatist one's a dramatist, and the latter imbroglio is
liable on occasion to strike me as really the more objective of the
two.The philosophy imputed to him in that beautiful outbreak, the
hour there, amid such happy provision, striking for him, would have
been then, on behalf of my man of imagination, to be logically and,
as the artless craft of comedy has it, "led up" to; the probable
course to such a goal, the goal of so conscious a predicament,
would have in short to be finely calculated. Where has he come from
and why has he come, what is he doing (as we Anglo-Saxons, and we
only, say, in our foredoomed clutch of exotic aids to expression)
in that galere? To answer these questions plausibly, to answer them
as under cross-examination in the witness-box by counsel for the
prosecution, in other words satisfactorily to account for Strether
and for his "peculiar tone," was to possess myself of the entire
fabric. At the same time the clue to its whereabouts would lie in a
certain principle of probability: he wouldn't have indulged in his
peculiar tone without a reason; it would take a felt predicament or
a false position to give him so ironic an accent. One hadn't been
noting "tones" all one's life without recognising when one heard it
the voice of the false position. The dear man in the Paris garden
was then admirably and unmistakeably IN one—which was no small
point gained; what next accordingly concerned us was the
determination of THIS identity. One could only go by probabilities,
but there was the advantage that the most general of the
probabilities were virtual certainties. Possessed of our friend's
nationality, to start with, there was a general probability in his
narrower localism; which, for that matter, one had really but to
keep under the lens for an hour to see it give up its secrets. He
would have issued, our rueful worthy, from the very heart of New
England—at the heels of which matter of course a perfect train of
secrets tumbled for me into the light. They had to be sifted and
sorted, and I shall not reproduce the detail of that process; but
unmistakeably they were all there, and it was but a question,
auspiciously, of picking among them. What the "position" would
infallibly be, and why, on his hands, it had turned "false"—these
inductive steps could only be as rapid as they were distinct. I
accounted for everything—and "everything" had by this time become
the most promising quantity—by the view that he had come to Paris
in some state of mind which was literally undergoing, as a result
of new and unexpected assaults and infusions, a change almost from
hour to hour. He had come with a view that might have been figured
by a clear green liquid, say, in a neat glass phial; and the
liquid, once poured into the open cup of APPLICATION, once exposed
to the action of another air, had begun to turn from green to red,
or whatever, and might, for all he knew, be on its way to purple,
to black, to yellow. At the still wilder extremes represented
perhaps, for all he could say to the contrary, by a variability so
violent, he would at first, naturally, but have gazed in surprise
and alarm; whereby the SITUATION clearly would spring from the play
of wildness and the development of extremes. I saw in a moment
that, should this development proceed both with force and logic, my
"story" would leave nothing to be desired. There is always, of
course, for the story-teller, the irresistible determinant and the
incalculable advantage of his interest in the story AS SUCH; it is
ever, obviously, overwhelmingly, the prime and precious thing (as
other than this I have never been able to see it); as to which what
makes for it, with whatever headlong energy, may be said to pale
before the energy with which it simply makes for itself. It
rejoices, none the less, at its best, to seem to offer itself in a
light, to seem to know, and with the very last knowledge, what it's
about—liable as it yet is at moments to be caught by us with its
tongue in its cheek and absolutely no warrant but its splendid
impudence. Let us grant then that the impudence is always
there—there, so to speak, for grace and effect and ALLURE; there,
above all, because the Story is just the spoiled child of art, and
because, as we are always disappointed when the pampered don't
"play up," we like it, to that extent, to look all its character.
It probably does so, in truth, even when we most flatter ourselves
that we negotiate with it by treaty.All of which, again, is but to say that the STEPS, for my
fable, placed themselves with a prompt and, as it were, functional
assurance—an air quite as of readiness to have dispensed with logic
had I been in fact too stupid for my clue. Never, positively, none
the less, as the links multiplied, had I felt less stupid than for
the determination of poor Strether's errand and for the
apprehension of his issue. These things continued to fall together,
as by the neat action of their own weight and form, even while
their commentator scratched his head about them; he easily sees now
that they were always well in advance of him. As the case completed
itself he had in fact, from a good way behind, to catch up with
them, breathless and a little flurried, as he best could. THE false
position, for our belated man of the world—belated because he had
endeavoured so long to escape being one, and now at last had really
to face his doom—the false position for him, I say, was obviously
to have presented himself at the gate of that boundless menagerie
primed with a moral scheme of the most approved pattern which was
yet framed to break down on any approach to vivid facts; that is to
any at all liberal appreciation of them. There would have been of
course the case of the Strether prepared, wherever presenting
himself, only to judge and to feel meanly; but HE would have moved
for me, I confess, enveloped in no legend whatever. The actual
man's note, from the first of our seeing it struck, is the note of
discrimination, just as his drama is to become, under stress, the
drama of discrimination. It would have been his blest imagination,
we have seen, that had already helped him to discriminate; the
element that was for so much of the pleasure of my cutting thick,
as I have intimated, into his intellectual, into his moral
substance. Yet here it was, at the same time, just here, that a
shade for a moment fell across the scene.There was the dreadful little old tradition, one of the
platitudes of the human comedy, that people's moral scheme DOES
break down in Paris; that nothing is more frequently observed; that
hundreds of thousands of more or less hypocritical or more or less
cynical persons annually visit the place for the sake of the
probable catastrophe, and that I came late in the day to work
myself up about it. There was in fine the TRIVIAL association, one
of the vulgarest in the world; but which give me pause no longer, I
think, simply because its vulgarity is so advertised. The
revolution performed by Strether under the influence of the most
interesting of great cities was to have nothing to do with any
betise of the imputably "tempted" state; he was to be thrown
forward, rather, thrown quite with violence, upon his lifelong
trick of intense reflexion: which friendly test indeed was to bring
him out, through winding passages, through alternations of darkness
and light, very much IN Paris, but with the surrounding scene
itself a minor matter, a mere symbol for more things than had been
dreamt of in the philosophy of Woollett. Another surrounding scene
would have done as well for our show could it have represented a
place in which Strether's errand was likely to lie and his crisis
to await him. The LIKELY place had the great merit of sparing me
preparations; there would have been too many involved—not at all
impossibilities, only rather worrying and delaying difficulties—in
positing elsewhere Chad Newsome's interesting relation, his so
interesting complexity of relations. Strether's appointed stage, in
fine, could be but Chad's most luckily selected one. The young man
had gone in, as they say, for circumjacent charm; and where he
would have found it, by the turn of his mind, most "authentic," was
where his earnest friend's analysis would most find HIM; as well as
where, for that matter, the former's whole analytic faculty would
be led such a wonderful dance."The Ambassadors" had been, all conveniently, "arranged for";
its first appearance was from month to month, in theNorth American Reviewduring 1903, and
I had been open from far back to any pleasant provocation for
ingenuity that might reside in one's actively adopting—so as to
make it, in its way, a small compositional law—recurrent breaks and
resumptions. I had made up my mind here regularly to exploit and
enjoy these often rather rude jolts—having found, as I believed an
admirable way to it; yet every question of form and pressure, I
easily remember, paled in the light of the major propriety,
recognised as soon as really weighed; that of employing but one
centre and keeping it all within my hero's compass. The thing was
to be so much this worthy's intimate adventure that even the
projection of his consciousness upon it from beginning to end
without intermission or deviation would probably still leave a part
of its value for him, and a fortiori for ourselves, unexpressed. I
might, however, express every grain of it that there would be room
for—on condition of contriving a splendid particular economy. Other
persons in no small number were to people the scene, and each with
his or her axe to grind, his or her situation to treat, his or her
coherency not to fail of, his or her relation to my leading motive,
in a word, to establish and carry on. But Strether's sense of these
things, and Strether's only, should avail me for showing them; I
should know them but through his more or less groping knowledge of
them, since his very gropings would figure among his most
interesting motions, and a full observance of the rich rigour I
speak of would give me more of the effect I should be most "after"
than all other possible observances together. It would give me a
large unity, and that in turn would crown me with the grace to
which the enlightened story-teller will at any time, for his
interest, sacrifice if need be all other graces whatever. I refer
of course to the grace of intensity, which there are ways of
signally achieving and ways of signally missing—as we see it, all
round us, helplessly and woefully missed. Not that it isn't, on the
other hand, a virtue eminently subject to appreciation—there being
no strict, no absolute measure of it; so that one may hear it
acclaimed where it has quite escaped one's perception, and see it
unnoticed where one has gratefully hailed it. After all of which I
am not sure, either, that the immense amusement of the whole
cluster of difficulties so arrayed may not operate, for the fond
fabulist, when judicious not less than fond, as his best of
determinants. That charming principle is always there, at all
events, to keep interest fresh: it is a principle, we remember,
essentially ravenous, without scruple and without mercy, appeased
with no cheap nor easy nourishment. It enjoys the costly sacrifice
and rejoices thereby in the very odour of difficulty—even as ogres,
with their "Fee-faw-fum!" rejoice in the smell of the blood of
Englishmen.Thus it was, at all events, that the ultimate, though after
all so speedy, definition of my gentleman's job—his coming out, all
solemnly appointed and deputed, to "save" Chad, and his then
finding the young man so disobligingly and, at first, so
bewilderingly not lost that a new issue altogether, in the
connexion, prodigiously faces them, which has to be dealt with in a
new light—promised as many calls on ingenuity and on the higher
branches of the compositional art as one could possibly desire.
Again and yet again, as, from book to book, I proceed with my
survey, I find no source of interest equal to this verification
after the fact, as I may call it, and the more in detail the
better, of the scheme of consistency "gone in" for. As always—since
the charm never fails—the retracing of the process from point to
point brings back the old illusion. The old intentions bloom again
and flower—in spite of all the blossoms they were to have dropped
by the way. This is the charm, as I say, of adventure
TRANSPOSED—the thrilling ups and downs, the intricate ins and outs
of the compositional problem, made after such a fashion admirably
objective, becoming the question at issue and keeping the author's
heart in his mouth. Such an element, for instance, as his intention
that Mrs. Newsome, away off with her finger on the pulse of
Massachusetts, should yet be no less intensely than circuitously
present through the whole thing, should be no less felt as to be
reckoned with than the most direct exhibition, the finest portrayal
at first hand could make her, such a sign of artistic good faith, I
say, once it's unmistakeably there, takes on again an actuality not
too much impaired by the comparative dimness of the particular
success. Cherished intention too inevitably acts and operates, in
the book, about fifty times as little as I had fondly dreamt it
might; but that scarce spoils for me the pleasure of recognising
the fifty ways in which I had sought to provide for it. The mere
charm of seeing such an idea constituent, in its degree; the
fineness of the measures taken—a real extension, if successful, of
the very terms and possibilities of representation and
figuration—such things alone were, after this fashion, inspiring,
such things alone were a gage of the probable success of that
dissimulated calculation with which the whole effort was to square.
But oh the cares begotten, none the less, of that same "judicious"
sacrifice to a particular form of interest! One's work should have
composition, because composition alone is positive beauty; but all
the while—apart from one's inevitable consciousness too of the dire
paucity of readers ever recognising or ever missing positive
beauty—how, as to the cheap and easy, at every turn, how, as to
immediacy and facility, and even as to the commoner vivacity,
positive beauty might have to be sweated for and paid for! Once
achieved and installed it may always be trusted to make the poor
seeker feel he would have blushed to the roots of his hair for
failing of it; yet, how, as its virtue can be essentially but the
virtue of the whole, the wayside traps set in the interest of
muddlement and pleading but the cause of the moment, of the
particular bit in itself, have to be kicked out of the path! All
the sophistications in life, for example, might have appeared to
muster on behalf of the menace—the menace to a bright
variety—involved in Strether's having all the subjective "say," as
it were, to himself.Had I, meanwhile, made him at once hero and historian,
endowed him with the romantic privilege of the "first person"—the
darkest abyss of romance this, inveterately, when enjoyed on the
grand scale—variety, and many other queer matters as well, might
have been smuggled in by a back door. Suffice it, to be brief, that
the first person, in the long piece, is a form foredoomed to
looseness and that looseness, never much my affair, had never been
so little so as on this particular occasion. All of which
reflexions flocked to the standard from the moment—a very early
one—the question of how to keep my form amusing while sticking so
close to my central figure and constantly taking its pattern from
him had to be faced. He arrives (arrives at Chester) as for the
dreadful purpose of giving his creator "no end" to tell about
him—before which rigorous mission the serenest of creators might
well have quailed. I was far from the serenest; I was more than
agitated enough to reflect that, grimly deprived of one alternative
or one substitute for "telling," I must address myself tooth and
nail to another. I couldn't, save by implication, make other
persons tell EACH OTHER about him—blest resource, blest necessity,
of the drama, which reaches its effects of unity, all remarkably,
by paths absolutely opposite to the paths of the novel: with other
persons, save as they were primarily HIS persons (not he primarily
but one of theirs), I had simply nothing to do. I had relations for
him none the less, by the mercy of Providence, quite as much as if
my exhibition was to be a muddle; if I could only by implication
and a show of consequence make other persons tell each other about
him, I could at least make him tell THEM whatever in the world he
must; and could so, by the same token—which was a further luxury
thrown in—see straight into the deep differences between what that
could do for me, or at all events for HIM, and the large ease of
"autobiography." It may be asked why, if one so keeps to one's
hero, one shouldn't make a single mouthful of "method," shouldn't
throw the reins on his neck and, letting them flap there as free as
in "Gil Blas" or in "David Copperfield," equip him with the double
privilege of subject and object—a course that has at least the
merit of brushing away questions at a sweep. The answer to which
is, I think, that one makes that surrender only if one is prepared
NOT to make certain precious discriminations.The "first person" then, so employed, is addressed by the
author directly to ourselves, his possible readers, whom he has to
reckon with, at the best, by our English tradition, so loosely and
vaguely after all, so little respectfully, on so scant a
presumption of exposure to criticism. Strether, on the other hand,
encaged and provided for as "The Ambassadors" encages and provides,
has to keep in view proprieties much stiffer and more salutary than
any our straight and credulous gape are likely to bring home to
him, has exhibitional conditions to meet, in a word, that forbid
the terrible FLUIDITY of self-revelation. I may seem not to better
the case for my discrimination if I say that, for my first care, I
had thus inevitably to set him up a confidant or two, to wave away
with energy the custom of the seated mass of explanation after the
fact, the inserted block of merely referential narrative, which
flourishes so, to the shame of the modern impatience, on the
serried page of Balzac, but which seems simply to appal our actual,
our general weaker, digestion. "Harking back to make up" took at
any rate more doing, as the phrase is, not only than the reader of
to-day demands, but than he will tolerate at any price any call
upon him either to understand or remotely to measure; and for the
beauty of the thing when done the current editorial mind in
particular appears wholly without sense. It is not, however,
primarily for either of these reasons, whatever their weight, that
Strether's friend Waymarsh is so keenly clutched at, on the
threshold of the book, or that no less a pounce is made on Maria
Gostrey—without even the pretext, either, of HER being, in essence,
Strether's friend. She is the reader's friend much rather—in
consequence of dispositions that make him so eminently require one;
and she acts in that capacity, and REALLY in that capacity alone,
with exemplary devotion from beginning to and of the book. She is
an enrolled, a direct, aid to lucidity; she is in fine, to tear off
her mask, the most unmitigated and abandoned of ficelles. Half the
dramatist's art, as we well know—since if we don't it's not the
fault of the proofs that lie scattered about us—is in the use of
ficelles; by which I mean in a deep dissimulation of his dependence
on them. Waymarsh only to a slighter degree belongs, in the whole
business, less to my subject than to my treatment of it; the
interesting proof, in these connexions, being that one has but to
take one's subject for the stuff of drama to interweave with
enthusiasm as many Gostreys as need be.The material of "The Ambassadors," conforming in this respect
exactly to that of "The Wings of the Dove," published just before
it, is taken absolutely for the stuff of drama; so that, availing
myself of the opportunity given me by this edition for some
prefatory remarks on the latter work, I had mainly to make on its
behalf the point of its scenic consistency. It disguises that
virtue, in the oddest way in the world, by just LOOKING, as we turn
its pages, as little scenic as possible; but it sharply divides
itself, just as the composition before us does, into the parts that
prepare, that tend in fact to over-prepare, for scenes, and the
parts, or otherwise into the scenes, that justify and crown the
preparation. It may definitely be said, I think, that everything in
it that is not scene (not, I of course mean, complete and
functional scene, treating ALL the submitted matter, as by logical
start, logical turn, and logical finish) is discriminated
preparation, is the fusion and synthesis of picture. These
alternations propose themselves all recogniseably, I think, from an
early stage, as the very form and figure of "The Ambassadors"; so
that, to repeat, such an agent as Miss Gostrey pre-engaged at a
high salary, but waits in the draughty wing with her shawl and her
smelling-salts. Her function speaks at once for itself, and by the
time she has dined with Strether in London and gone to a play with
him her intervention as a ficelle is, I hold, expertly justified.
Thanks to it we have treated scenically, and scenically alone, the
whole lumpish question of Strether's "past," which has seen us more
happily on the way than anything else could have done; we have
strained to a high lucidity and vivacity (or at least we hope we
have) certain indispensable facts; we have seen our two or three
immediate friends all conveniently and profitably in "action"; to
say nothing of our beginning to descry others, of a remoter
intensity, getting into motion, even if a bit vaguely as yet, for
our further enrichment. Let my first point be here that the scene
in question, that in which the whole situation at Woollett and the
complex forces that have propelled my hero to where this lively
extractor of his value and distiller of his essence awaits him, is
normal and entire, is really an excellent STANDARD scene; copious,
comprehensive, and accordingly never short, but with its office as
definite as that of the hammer on the gong of the clock, the office
of expressing ALL THAT IS IN the hour.The "ficelle" character of the subordinate party is as
artfully dissimulated, throughout, as may be, and to that extent
that, with the seams or joints of Maria Gostrey's ostensible
connectedness taken particular care of, duly smoothed over, that
is, and anxiously kept from showing as "pieced on;" this figure
doubtless achieves, after a fashion, something of the dignity of a
prime idea: which circumstance but shows us afresh how many quite
incalculable but none the less clear sources of enjoyment for the
infatuated artist, how many copious springs of our
never-to-be-slighted "fun" for the reader and critic susceptible of
contagion, may sound their incidental plash as soon as an artistic
process begins to enjoy free development. Exquisite—in illustration
of this—the mere interest and amusement of such at once "creative"
and critical questions as how and where and why to make Miss
Gostrey's false connexion carry itself, under a due high polish, as
a real one. Nowhere is it more of an artful expedient for mere
consistency of form, to mention a case, than in the last "scene" of
the book, where its function is to give or to add nothing whatever,
but only to express as vividly as possible certain things quite
other than itself and that are of the already fixed and appointed
measure. Since, however, all art is EXPRESSION, and is thereby
vividness, one was to find the door open here to any amount of
delightful dissimulation. These verily are the refinements and
ecstasies of method—amid which, or certainly under the influence of
any exhilarated demonstration of which, one must keep one's head
and not lose one's way. To cultivate an adequate intelligence for
them and to make that sense operative is positively to find a charm
in any produced ambiguity of appearance that is not by the same
stroke, and all helplessly, an ambiguity of sense. To project
imaginatively, for my hero, a relation that has nothing to do with
the matter (the matter of my subject) but has everything to do with
the manner (the manner of my presentation of the same) and yet to
treat it, at close quarters and for fully economic expression's
possible sake, as if it were important and essential—to do that
sort of thing and yet muddle nothing may easily become, as one
goes, a signally attaching proposition; even though it all remains
but part and parcel, I hasten to recognise, of the merely general
and related question of expressional curiosity and expressional
decency.I am moved to add after so much insistence on the scenic side
of my labour that I have found the steps of re-perusal almost as
much waylaid here by quite another style of effort in the same
signal interest—or have in other words not failed to note how, even
so associated and so discriminated, the finest proprieties and
charms of the non-scenic may, under the right hand for them, still
keep their intelligibility and assert their office. Infinitely
suggestive such an observation as this last on the whole delightful
head, where representation is concerned, of possible variety, of
effective expressional change and contrast. One would like, at such
an hour as this, for critical licence, to go into the matter of the
noted inevitable deviation (from too fond an original vision) that
the exquisite treachery even of the straightest execution may ever
be trusted to inflict even on the most mature plan—the case being
that, though one's last reconsidered production always seems to
bristle with that particular evidence, "The Ambassadors" would
place a flood of such light at my service. I must attach to my
final remark here a different import; noting in the other connexion
I just glanced at that such passages as that of my hero's first
encounter with Chad Newsome, absolute attestations of the
non-scenic form though they be, yet lay the firmest hand too—so far
at least as intention goes—on representational effect. To report at
all closely and completely of what "passes" on a given occasion is
inevitably to become more or less scenic; and yet in the instance I
allude to, WITH the conveyance, expressional curiosity and
expressional decency are sought and arrived at under quite another
law. The true inwardness of this may be at bottom but that one of
the suffered treacheries has consisted precisely, for Chad's whole
figure and presence, of a direct presentability diminished and
compromised—despoiled, that is, of its PROPORTIONAL advantage; so
that, in a word, the whole economy of his author's relation to him
has at important points to be redetermined. The book, however,
critically viewed, is touchingly full of these disguised and
repaired losses, these insidious recoveries, these intensely
redemptive consistencies. The pages in which Mamie Pocock gives her
appointed and, I can't but think, duly felt lift to the whole
action by the so inscrutably-applied side-stroke or short-cut of
our just watching and as quite at an angle of vision as yet
untried, her single hour of suspense in the hotel salon, in our
partaking of her concentrated study of the sense of matters bearing
on her own case, all the bright warm Paris afternoon, from the
balcony that overlooks the Tuileries garden—these are as marked an
example of the representational virtue that insists here and there
on being, for the charm of opposition and renewal, other than the
scenic. It wouldn't take much to make me further argue that from an
equal play of such oppositions the book gathers an intensity that
fairly adds to the dramatic—though the latter is supposed to be the
sum of all intensities; or that has at any rate nothing to fear
from juxtaposition with it. I consciously fail to shrink in fact
from that extravagance—I risk it rather, for the sake of the moral
involved; which is not that the particular production before us
exhausts the interesting questions it raises, but that the Novel
remains still, under the right persuasion, the most independent,
most elastic, most prodigious of literary forms.HENRY JAMES.
Book First
IStrether's first question, when he reached the hotel, was
about his friend; yet on his learning that Waymarsh was apparently
not to arrive till evening he was not wholly disconcerted. A
telegram from him bespeaking a room "only if not noisy," reply
paid, was produced for the enquirer at the office, so that the
understanding they should meet at Chester rather than at Liverpool
remained to that extent sound. The same secret principle, however,
that had prompted Strether not absolutely to desire Waymarsh's
presence at the dock, that had led him thus to postpone for a few
hours his enjoyment of it, now operated to make him feel he could
still wait without disappointment. They would dine together at the
worst, and, with all respect to dear old Waymarsh—if not even, for
that matter, to himself—there was little fear that in the sequel
they shouldn't see enough of each other. The principle I have just
mentioned as operating had been, with the most newly disembarked of
the two men, wholly instinctive—the fruit of a sharp sense that,
delightful as it would be to find himself looking, after so much
separation, into his comrade's face, his business would be a trifle
bungled should he simply arrange for this countenance to present
itself to the nearing steamer as the first "note," of Europe. Mixed
with everything was the apprehension, already, on Strether's part,
that it would, at best, throughout, prove the note of Europe in
quite a sufficient degree.That note had been meanwhile—since the previous afternoon,
thanks to this happier device—such a consciousness of personal
freedom as he hadn't known for years; such a deep taste of change
and of having above all for the moment nobody and nothing to
consider, as promised already, if headlong hope were not too
foolish, to colour his adventure with cool success. There were
people on the ship with whom he had easily consorted—so far as ease
could up to now be imputed to him—and who for the most part plunged
straight into the current that set from the landing-stage to
London; there were others who had invited him to a tryst at the inn
and had even invoked his aid for a "look round" at the beauties of
Liverpool; but he had stolen away from every one alike, had kept no
appointment and renewed no acquaintance, had been indifferently
aware of the number of persons who esteemed themselves fortunate in
being, unlike himself, "met," and had even independently,
unsociably, alone, without encounter or relapse and by mere quiet
evasion, given his afternoon and evening to the immediate and the
sensible. They formed a qualified draught of Europe, an afternoon
and an evening on the banks of the Mersey, but such as it was he
took his potion at least undiluted. He winced a little, truly, at
the thought that Waymarsh might be already at Chester; he reflected
that, should he have to describe himself there as having "got in"
so early, it would be difficult to make the interval look
particularly eager; but he was like a man who, elatedly finding in
his pocket more money than usual, handles it a while and idly and
pleasantly chinks it before addressing himself to the business of
spending. That he was prepared to be vague to Waymarsh about the
hour of the ship's touching, and that he both wanted extremely to
see him and enjoyed extremely the duration of delay—these things,
it is to be conceived, were early signs in him that his relation to
his actual errand might prove none of the simplest. He was
burdened, poor Strether—it had better be confessed at the
outset—with the oddity of a double consciousness. There was
detachment in his zeal and curiosity in his
indifference.After the young woman in the glass cage had held up to him
across her counter the pale-pink leaflet bearing his friend's name,
which she neatly pronounced, he turned away to find himself, in the
hall, facing a lady who met his eyes as with an intention suddenly
determined, and whose features—not freshly young, not markedly
fine, but on happy terms with each other—came back to him as from a
recent vision. For a moment they stood confronted; then the moment
placed her: he had noticed her the day before, noticed her at his
previous inn, where—again in the hall—she had been briefly engaged
with some people of his own ship's company. Nothing had actually
passed between them, and he would as little have been able to say
what had been the sign of her face for him on the first occasion as
to name the ground of his present recognition. Recognition at any
rate appeared to prevail on her own side as well—which would only
have added to the mystery. All she now began by saying to him
nevertheless was that, having chanced to catch his enquiry, she was
moved to ask, by his leave, if it were possibly a question of Mr.
Waymarsh of Milrose Connecticut—Mr. Waymarsh the American
lawyer."Oh yes," he replied, "my very well-known friend. He's to
meet me here, coming up from Malvern, and I supposed he'd already
have arrived. But he doesn't come till later, and I'm relieved not
to have kept him. Do you know him?" Strether wound up.It wasn't till after he had spoken that he became aware of
how much there had been in him of response; when the tone of her
own rejoinder, as well as the play of something more in her
face—something more, that is, than its apparently usual restless
light—seemed to notify him. "I've met him at Milrose—where I used
sometimes, a good while ago, to stay; I had friends there who were
friends of his, and I've been at his house. I won't answer for it
that he would know me," Strether's new acquaintance pursued; "but I
should be delighted to see him. Perhaps," she added, "I shall—for
I'm staying over." She paused while our friend took in these
things, and it was as if a good deal of talk had already passed.
They even vaguely smiled at it, and Strether presently observed
that Mr. Waymarsh would, no doubt, be easily to be seen. This,
however, appeared to affect the lady as if she might have advanced
too far. She appeared to have no reserves about anything. "Oh," she
said, "he won't care!"—and she immediately thereupon remarked that
she believed Strether knew the Munsters; the Munsters being the
people he had seen her with at Liverpool.But he didn't, it happened, know the Munsters well enough to
give the case much of a lift; so that they were left together as if
over the mere laid table of conversation. Her qualification of the
mentioned connexion had rather removed than placed a dish, and
there seemed nothing else to serve. Their attitude remained, none
the less, that of not forsaking the board; and the effect of this
in turn was to give them the appearance of having accepted each
other with an absence of preliminaries practically complete. They
moved along the hall together, and Strether's companion threw off
that the hotel had the advantage of a garden. He was aware by this
time of his strange inconsequence: he had shirked the intimacies of
the steamer and had muffled the shock of Waymarsh only to find
himself forsaken, in this sudden case, both of avoidance and of
caution. He passed, under this unsought protection and before he
had so much as gone up to his room, into the garden of the hotel,
and at the end of ten minutes had agreed to meet there again, as
soon as he should have made himself tidy, the dispenser of such
good assurances. He wanted to look at the town, and they would
forthwith look together. It was almost as if she had been in
possession and received him as a guest. Her acquaintance with the
place presented her in a manner as a hostess, and Strether had a
rueful glance for the lady in the glass cage. It was as if this
personage had seen herself instantly superseded.When in a quarter of an hour he came down, what his hostess
saw, what she might have taken in with a vision kindly adjusted,
was the lean, the slightly loose figure of a man of the middle
height and something more perhaps than the middle age—a man of
five-and-fifty, whose most immediate signs were a marked bloodless
brownness of face, a thick dark moustache, of characteristically
American cut, growing strong and falling low, a head of hair still
abundant but irregularly streaked with grey, and a nose of bold
free prominence, the even line, the high finish, as it might have
been called, of which, had a certain effect of mitigation. A
perpetual pair of glasses astride of this fine ridge, and a line,
unusually deep and drawn, the prolonged pen-stroke of time,
accompanying the curve of the moustache from nostril to chin, did
something to complete the facial furniture that an attentive
observer would have seen catalogued, on the spot, in the vision of
the other party to Strether's appointment. She waited for him in
the garden, the other party, drawing on a pair of singularly fresh
soft and elastic light gloves and presenting herself with a
superficial readiness which, as he approached her over the small
smooth lawn and in the watery English sunshine, he might, with his
rougher preparation, have marked as the model for such an occasion.
She had, this lady, a perfect plain propriety, an expensive subdued
suitability, that her companion was not free to analyse, but that
struck him, so that his consciousness of it was instantly acute, as
a quality quite new to him. Before reaching her he stopped on the
grass and went through the form of feeling for something, possibly
forgotten, in the light overcoat he carried on his arm; yet the
essence of the act was no more than the impulse to gain time.
Nothing could have been odder than Strether's sense of himself as
at that moment launched in something of which the sense would be
quite disconnected from the sense of his past and which was
literally beginning there and then. It had begun in fact already
upstairs and before the dressing glass that struck him as blocking
further, so strangely, the dimness of the window of his dull
bedroom; begun with a sharper survey of the elements of Appearance
than he had for a long time been moved to make. He had during those
moments felt these elements to be not so much to his hand as he
should have liked, and then had fallen back on the thought that
they were precisely a matter as to which help was supposed to come
from what he was about to do. He was about to go up to London, so
that hat and necktie might wait. What had come as straight to him
as a ball in a well-played game—and caught moreover not less
neatly—was just the air, in the person of his friend, of having
seen and chosen, the air of achieved possession of those vague
qualities and quantities that collectively figured to him as the
advantage snatched from lucky chances. Without pomp or
circumstance, certainly, as her original address to him, equally
with his own response, had been, he would have sketched to himself
his impression of her as: "Well, she's more thoroughly civilized—!"
If "More thoroughly than WHOM?" would not have been for him a
sequel to this remark, that was just by reason of his deep
consciousness of the bearing of his comparison.The amusement, at all events, of a civilisation intenser was
what—familiar compatriot as she was, with the full tone of the
compatriot and the rattling link not with mystery but only with
dear dyspeptic Waymarsh—she appeared distinctly to promise. His
pause while he felt in his overcoat was positively the pause of
confidence, and it enabled his eyes to make out as much of a case
for her, in proportion, as her own made out for himself. She
affected him as almost insolently young; but an easily carried
five-and-thirty could still do that. She was, however, like himself
marked and wan; only it naturally couldn't have been known to him
how much a spectator looking from one to the other might have
discerned that they had in common. It wouldn't for such a spectator
have been altogether insupposable that, each so finely brown and so
sharply spare, each confessing so to dents of surface and aids to
sight, to a disproportionate nose and a head delicately or grossly
grizzled, they might have been brother and sister. On this ground
indeed there would have been a residuum of difference; such a
sister having surely known in respect to such a brother the
extremity of separation, and such a brother now feeling in respect
to such a sister the extremity of surprise. Surprise, it was true,
was not on the other hand what the eyes of Strether's friend most
showed him while she gave him, stroking her gloves smoother, the
time he appreciated. They had taken hold of him straightway
measuring him up and down as if they knew how; as if he were human
material they had already in some sort handled. Their possessor was
in truth, it may be communicated, the mistress of a hundred cases
or categories, receptacles of the mind, subdivisions for
convenience, in which, from a full experience, she pigeon-holed her
fellow mortals with a hand as free as that of a compositor
scattering type. She was as equipped in this particular as Strether
was the reverse, and it made an opposition between them which he
might well have shrunk from submitting to if he had fully suspected
it. So far as he did suspect it he was on the contrary, after a
short shake of his consciousness, as pleasantly passive as might
be. He really had a sort of sense of what she knew. He had quite
the sense that she knew things he didn't, and though this was a
concession that in general he found not easy to make to women, he
made it now as good-humouredly as if it lifted a burden. His eyes
were so quiet behind his eternal nippers that they might almost
have been absent without changing his face, which took its
expression mainly, and not least its stamp of sensibility, from
other sources, surface and grain and form. He joined his guide in
an instant, and then felt she had profited still better than he by
his having been for the moments just mentioned, so at the disposal
of her intelligence. She knew even intimate things about him that
he hadn't yet told her and perhaps never would. He wasn't unaware
that he had told her rather remarkably many for the time, but these
were not the real ones. Some of the real ones, however, precisely,
were what she knew.They were to pass again through the hall of the inn to get
into the street, and it was here she presently checked him with a
question. "Have you looked up my name?"He could only stop with a laugh. "Have you looked up
mine?""Oh dear, yes—as soon as you left me. I went to the office
and asked. Hadn't YOU better do the same?"He wondered. "Find out who you are?—after the uplifted young
woman there has seen us thus scrape acquaintance!"She laughed on her side now at the shade of alarm in his
amusement. "Isn't it a reason the more? If what you're afraid of is
the injury for me—my being seen to walk off with a gentleman who
has to ask who I am—I assure you I don't in the least mind. Here,
however," she continued, "is my card, and as I find there's
something else again I have to say at the office, you can just
study it during the moment I leave you."She left him after he had taken from her the small pasteboard
she had extracted from her pocket-book, and he had extracted
another from his own, to exchange with it, before she came back. He
read thus the simple designation "Maria Gostrey," to which was
attached, in a corner of the card, with a number, the name of a
street, presumably in Paris, without other appreciable identity
than its foreignness. He put the card into his waistcoat pocket,
keeping his own meanwhile in evidence; and as he leaned against the
door-post he met with the smile of a straying thought what the
expanse before the hotel offered to his view. It was positively
droll to him that he should already have Maria Gostrey, whoever she
was—of which he hadn't really the least idea—in a place of safe
keeping. He had somehow an assurance that he should carefully
preserve the little token he had just tucked in. He gazed with
unseeing lingering eyes as he followed some of the implications of
his act, asking himself if he really felt admonished to qualify it
as disloyal. It was prompt, it was possibly even premature, and
there was little doubt of the expression of face the sight of it
would have produced in a certain person. But if it was "wrong"—why
then he had better not have come out at all. At this, poor man, had
he already—and even before meeting Waymarsh—arrived. He had
believed he had a limit, but the limit had been transcended within
thirty-six hours. By how long a space on the plane of manners or
even of morals, moreover, he felt still more sharply after Maria
Gostrey had come back to him and with a gay decisive "So now—!" led
him forth into the world. This counted, it struck him as he walked
beside her with his overcoat on an arm, his umbrella under another
and his personal pasteboard a little stiffly retained between
forefinger and thumb, this struck him as really, in comparison his
introduction to things. It hadn't been "Europe" at Liverpool no—not
even in the dreadful delightful impressive streets the night
before—to the extent his present companion made it so. She hadn't
yet done that so much as when, after their walk had lasted a few
minutes and he had had time to wonder if a couple of sidelong
glances from her meant that he had best have put on gloves she
almost pulled him up with an amused challenge. "But why—fondly as
it's so easy to imagine your clinging to it—don't you put it away?
Or if it's an inconvenience to you to carry it, one's often glad to
have one's card back. The fortune one spends in them!"Then he saw both that his way of marching with his own
prepared tribute had affected her as a deviation in one of those
directions he couldn't yet measure, and that she supposed this
emblem to be still the one he had received from her. He accordingly
handed her the card as if in restitution, but as soon as she had it
she felt the difference and, with her eyes on it, stopped short for
apology. "I like," she observed, "your name.""Oh," he answered, "you won't have heard of it!" Yet he had
his reasons for not being sure but that she perhaps
might.Ah it was but too visible! She read it over again as one who
had never seen it. "'Mr. Lewis Lambert Strether'"—she sounded it
almost as freely as for any stranger. She repeated however that she
liked it—"particularly the Lewis Lambert. It's the name of a novel
of Balzac's.""Oh I know that!" said Strether."But the novel's an awfully bad one.""I know that too," Strether smiled. To which he added with an
irrelevance that was only superficial: "I come from Woollett
Massachusetts." It made her for some reason—the irrelevance or
whatever—laugh. Balzac had described many cities, but hadn't
described Woollett Massachusetts. "You say that," she returned, "as
if you wanted one immediately to know the worst.""Oh I think it's a thing," he said, "that you must already
have made out. I feel it so that I certainly must look it, speak
it, and, as people say there, 'act' it. It sticks out of me, and
you knew surely for yourself as soon as you looked at
me.""The worst, you mean?""Well, the fact of where I come from. There at any rate it
IS; so that you won't be able, if anything happens, to say I've not
been straight with you.""I see"—and Miss Gostrey looked really interested in the
point he had made. "But what do you think of as
happening?"