The Symbolist Movement in Literature
The Symbolist Movement in LiteratureINTRODUCTIONBALZACPROSPER MÉRIMÉEGÉRARD DE NERVALTHÉOPHILE GAUTIERGUSTAVE FLAUBERTCHARLES BAUDELAIREEDMOND AND JULES DE GONCOURTVILLIERS DE L'ISLE-ADAMLÉON CLADELA NOTE ON ZOLA'S METHODSTÉPHANE MALLARMÉPAUL VERLAINEJORIS-KARL HUYSMANSARTHUR RIMBAUDJULES LAFORGUEMAETERLINCK AS A MYSTICCONCLUSIONBIBLIOGRAPHY AND NOTESTRANSLATIONSCopyright
The Symbolist Movement in Literature
Arthur Symons
INTRODUCTION
"It is in and through Symbols that man, consciously or
unconsciously, lives, works, and has his being: those ages,
moreover, are accounted the noblest which can the best recognise
symbolical worth, and prize it highest."
CarlyleWithout symbolism there can be no literature; indeed, not
even language. What are words themselves but symbols, almost as
arbitrary as the letters which compose them, mere sounds of the
voice to which we have agreed to give certain significations, as we
have agreed to translate these sounds by those combinations of
letters? Symbolism began with the first words uttered by the first
man, as he named every living thing; or before them, in heaven,
when God named the world into being. And we see, in these
beginnings, precisely what Symbolism in literature really is: a
form of expression, at the best but approximate, essentially but
arbitrary, until it has obtained the force of a convention, for an
unseen reality apprehended by the consciousness. It is sometimes
permitted to us to hope that our convention is indeed the
reflection rather than merely the sign of that unseen reality. We
have done much if we have found a recognisable sign."A symbol," says Comte Goblet d'Alviella, in his book
onThe Migration of Symbols,"might be
defined as a representation which does not aim at being a
reproduction." Originally, as he points out, used by the Greeks to
denote "the two halves of the tablet they divided between
themselves as a pledge of hospitality," it came to be used of every
sign, formula, or rite by which those initiated in any mystery made
themselves secretly known to one another. Gradually the word
extended its meaning, until it came to denote every conventional
representation of idea by form, of the unseen by the visible. "In a
Symbol," says Carlyle, "there is concealment and yet revelation:
hence, therefore, by Silence and by Speech acting together, comes a
double significance." And, in that fine chapter ofSartor Resartus,he goes further, vindicating
for the word its full value: "In the Symbol proper, what we can
call a Symbol, there is ever, more or less distinctly and directly,
some embodiment and revelation of the Infinite; the Infinite is
made to blend itself with the Finite, to stand visible, and as it
were, attainable there."It is in such a sense as this that the word Symbolism has
been used to describe a movement which, during the last generation,
has profoundly influenced the course of French literature. All such
words, used of anything so living, variable, and irresponsible as
literature, are, as symbols themselves must so often be, mere
compromises, mere indications. Symbolism, as seen in the writers of
our day, would have no value if it were not seen also, under one
disguise or another, in every great imaginative writer. What
distinguishes the Symbolism of our day from the Symbolism of the
past; is that it hasnowbecome conscious
of itself, in a sense in which it was unconscious even in Gérard de
Nerval, to whom I trace the particular origin of the literature
which I call Symbolist. The forces which mould the thought of men
change, or men's resistance to them slackens; with the change of
men's thought comes a change of literature, alike in its inmost
essence and in its outward form: after the world has starved its
soul long enough in the contemplation and the re-arrangement of
material things, comes the turn of the soul; and with it comes the
literature of which I write in this volume, a literature in which
the visible world is no longer a reality, and the unseen world no
longer a dream.The great epoch in French literature which preceded this
epoch was that of the offshoot of Romanticism which produced
Baudelaire, Flaubert, the Goncourts, Taine, Zola, Leconte de Lisle.
Taine was the philosopher both of what had gone before him and of
what came immediately after; so that he seems to explain at once
Flaubert and Zola. It was the age of Science, the age of material
things; and words, with that facile elasticity which there is in
them, did miracles in the exact representation of everything that
visibly existed, exactly as it existed. Even Baudelaire, in whom
the spirit is always an uneasy guest at the orgie of life, had a
certain theory of Realism which tortures many of his poems into
strange, metallic shapes, and fills them with imitative odours, and
disturbs them with a too deliberate rhetoric of the flesh?
Flaubert, the one impeccable novelist who has ever lived, was
resolute to be the novelist of a world in which art, formal art,
was the only escape from the burden of reality, and in which the
soul was of use mainly as the agent of fine literature. The
Goncourts caught at Impressionism to render the fugitive aspects of
a world which existed only as a thing of flat spaces, and angles,
and coloured movement, in which sun and shadow were the artists; as
moods, no less flitting, were the artists of the merely receptive
consciousnesses of men and women. Zola has tried to build in brick
and mortar inside the covers of a book; he is quite sure that the
soul is a nervous fluid, which he is quite sure some man of science
is about to catch for us, as a man of science has bottled the air,
a pretty, blue liquid. Leconte de Lisle turned the world to stone,
but saw, beyond the world, only a pause from misery in a Nirvana
never subtilised to the Eastern ecstasy. And, with all these
writers, form aimed above all things at being precise, at saying
rather than suggesting, at saying what they had to say so
completely that nothing remained over, which it might be the
business of the reader to divine. And so they have expressed,
finally, a certain aspect of the world; and some of them have
carried style to a point beyond which the style that says, rather
than suggests, cannot go. The whole of that movement comes to a
splendid funeral in M. de Heredia's sonnets, in which the
literature of form says its last word, and dies.Meanwhile, something which is vaguely called Decadence had
come into being. That name, rarely used with any precise meaning,
was usually either hurled as a reproach or hurled back as a
defiance. It pleased some young men in various countries to call
themselves Decadents, with all the thrill of unsatisfied virtue
masquerading as uncomprehended vice. As a matter of fact, the term
is in its place only when applied to style; to that ingenious
deformation of the language, in Mallarmé for instance, which can be
compared I with what we are accustomed to call the Greek and Latin
of the Decadence. No doubt perversity of form and perversity often
found together, and, among the lesser men especially, experiment
was carried far, not only in the direction of style. But a movement
which in this sense might be called Decadent could but have been a
straying aside from the main road of literature. Nothing, not even
conventional virtue, is so provincial as conventional vice and the
desire to "bewilder the middle-classes" is itself middle-class. The
interlude, half a mock-interlude, of Decadence, diverted the
attention of the critics while something more serious was in
preparation. That something more serious has crystallised, for the
time, under the form of Symbolism, in which art returns to the one
pathway, leading through beautiful things to the eternal
beauty.In most of the writers whom I have dealt with as summing up
in themselves all that is best in Symbolism, it will be noticed
that the form is very carefully elaborated, and seems to count for
at least as much as in those writers of whose over-possession by
form I have complained. Here, however, all this elaboration comes
from a very different motive and leads to other ends. There is such
a thing as perfecting form that form may be annihilated. All the
art of Verlaine is in bringing verse to a bird's song, the art of
Mallarmé in bringing verse to the song of an orchestra. In Villiers
de l'Isle-Adam drama becomes an embodiment of spiritual forces, in
Maeterlinck not even their embodiment, but the remote sound of,
their voices. It is all an attempt to spiritualise literature, to
evade the old bondage of rhetoric, the old bondage of exteriority.
Description is banished that beautiful things may be evoked,
magically; the regular beat of verse is broken in order that words
may fly, upon subtler wings. Mystery is no longer feared, as the
great mystery in whose midst we are islanded was feared by those to
whom that unknown sea was only a great void. We are coming closer
to nature, as we seem to shrink from it with something of horror,
disdaining to catalogue the trees of the forest. And as we brush
aside the accidents of daily life, in which men and women imagine
that they are alone touching reality, we come closer to humanity,
to everything in humanity that may have begun before the world and
may outlast it.Here, then, in this
revolt against exteriority, against rhetoric, against a
materialistic tradition; in this endeavour to disengage the
ultimate essence, the soul, of whatever, exists and can be realized
by the consciousness; in this dutiful waiting upon every symbol by
which the soul of things can be made visible, literature, bowed
down by so many burdens, may at last attain liberty, and its
authentic speech. In attaining this liberty, it accepts a heavier
burden; for in speaking to us so intimately, so solemnly, as only
religion had hitherto spoken to us, it becomes itself a kind of
religion, with all the duties and responsibilities of the sacred
ritual.
BALZAC