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 on
The 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 of Sartor
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 has
now become
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
1The first man who has completely understood Balzac is Rodin,
and it has taken Rodin ten years to realise his own conception.
France has refused the statue in which a novelist is represented as
a dreamer, to whom Paris is not so much Paris as Patmos: "the most
Parisian of our novelists," Frenchmen assure you. It is more than a
hundred years since Balzac was born: a hundred years is a long time
in which to be misunderstood with admiration.In choosing the name of theHuman
Comedyfor a series of novels in which, as he
says, there is at once "the history and the criticism of society,
the analysis of its evils, and the discussion of its principles,"
Balzac proposed to do for the modern world what Dante, in
hisDivine Comedy,had done for
the world of the Middle Ages. Condemned to write in prose, and
finding his opportunity in that restriction, he created for himself
a form which is perhaps the nearest equivalent for the epic or the
poetic drama, and the only form in which, at all events, the epic
is now possible. The world of Dante was materially simple compared
with the world of the nineteenth century; the "visible world" had
not yet begun to "exist," in its tyrannical modern sense; the
complications of the soul interested only the Schoolmen, and were a
part of theology; poetry could still represent an age and yet be
poetry. But to-day poetry can no longer represent more than the
soul of things; it had taken refuge from the terrible improvements
of civilisation in a divine seclusion, where it sings, disregarding
the many voices of the street. Prose comes offering its infinite
capacity for detail; and it is by the infinity of its detail that
the novel, as Balzac created it, has become the modern
epic.There had been great novels, indeed, before Balzac, but no
great novelist; and the novels themselves are scarcely what we
should to-day call by that name. The interminableAstréeand its companions form a link
between thefabliauxand the
novel, and from them developed the characteristic
eighteenth-centuryconte,in
narrative, letters, or dialogue, as we see it in Marivaux, Laclos,
Crebillonfils,Crebillon's
longer works, includingLe Sopha,with their conventional paraphernalia of Eastern fable, are
extremely tedious; but in two short pieces,La
Nuit et le MomentandLe Hasard
du Coin du Feu,he created a model of witty,
naughty, deplorably natural comedy, which to this day is one of the
most characteristic French forms of fiction. Properly, however, it
is a form of the drama rather than of the novel. Laclos, inLes Liaisons Dangereuses,a masterpiece
which scandalised the society that adored Crebillon, because its
naked human truth left no room for sentimental excuses, comes much
nearer to prefiguring the novel (as Stendhal, for instance, is
afterward to conceive it), but still preserves the awkward
traditional form of letters. Marivaux had indeed already seemed to
suggest the novel of analysis, but in a style which has christened
a whole manner of writing that precisely which is least suited to
the writing of fiction. Voltaire'scontes, La
Religieuseof Diderot, are tracts or satires in
which the story is only an excuse for the purpose. Rousseau, too,
has his purpose, even inLa Nouvelle
Héloise,but it is a humanising purpose; and with
that book the novel of passion comes into existence, and along with
it the descriptive novel. Yet with Rousseau this result is an
accident of genius; we cannot call him a novelist; and we find him
abandoning the form he has found, for another, more closely
personal, which suits him better. Restif de la Bretonne, who
followed Rousseau at a distance, not altogether wisely, developed
the form of half-imaginary autobiography inMonsieur Nicolas,a book of which the
most significant part may be compared with Hazlitt'sLiber Amoris.Morbid and even mawkish
as it is, it has a certain uneasy, unwholesome humanity in its
confessions, which may seem to have set a fashion only too
scrupulously followed by modern French novelists. Meanwhile, the
Abbé Prévost's one great story,Manon
Lescaut,had brought for once a purely objective
study, of an incomparable simplicity, into the midst of these
analyses of difficult souls; and then we return to the confession,
in the works of others not novelists: Benjamin Constant, Mme. de
Staël, Chateaubriand, inAdolphe, Corinne,
René.At once we are in the Romantic movement, a
movement which begins lyrically among poets, and at first with a
curious disregard of the more human part of humanity.Balzac worked contemporaneously with the Romantic movement,
but he worked outside it, and its influence upon him is felt only
in an occasional pseudo-romanticism, like the episode of the pirate
inLa Femme de Trente Ans.His
vision of humanity was essentially a poetic vision, but he was a
poet whose dreams were facts. Knowing that, as Mme. Necker has
said, "the novel should be the better world," he knew also that
"the novel would be nothing if, in that august lie, it were not
true in details." And in theHuman
Comedyhe proposed to himself to do for society
more than Buffon had done for the animal world."There is but one animal," he declares, in hisAvant-Propos,with a confidence which
Darwin has not yet come to justify. But "there exists, there will
always exist, social species, as there are zoological species."
"Thus the work to be done will have a triple form: men, women, and
things; that is to say, human beings and the material
representation which they give to their thought; in short, man and
life." And, studying after nature, "French society will be the
historian, I shall need to be no more than the secretary." Thus
will be written "the history forgotten by so many historians, the
history of manners." But that is not all, for "passion is the whole
of humanity." "In realizing clearly the drift of the composition,
it will be seen that I assign to facts, constant, daily, open, or
secret, to the acts of individual life, to their causes and
principles, as much importance as historians had formerly attached
to the events of the public life of nations." "Facts gathered
together and painted as they are, with passion for element," is one
of his definitions of the task he has undertaken. And in a letter
to Mme. de Hanska, he summarises every detail of his
scheme."TheÉtudes des Mœurswill
represent social effects, without a single situation of life, or a
physiognomy, or a character of man or woman, or a manner of life,
or a profession, or a social zone, or a district of France, or
anything pertaining to childhood, old age, or maturity, politics,
justice, or war, having been forgotten."That laid down, the history of the human heart traced link
by link, the history of society made in all its details, we have
the base...."Then, the second stage is theÉtudes
philosophiques,for after theeffectscome thecauses.In theÉtudes
des MœursI shall have painted the sentiments and
their action, life and the fashion of life. In theÉtudes philosophiquesI shall
saywhy the sentiments, on what the
life...."Then, after theeffectsand thecauses,come
theÉtudes analytiques,to which
thePhysiologie du mariagebelongs, for, after theeffectsand thecauses,one should
seek theprinciples...."After having done the poetry, the demonstration, of a whole
system, I shall do the science in theEssai sur
les forces humaines.And, on the bases of this
palace I shall have traced the immense arabesque of theCent Contes drolatiques!"Quite all that, as we know, was not carried out; but there,
in its intention, is the plan; and after twenty years' work the
main part of it, certainly, was carried out. Stated with this
precise detail, it has something of a scientific air, as of a too
deliberate attempt upon the sources of life by one of those
systematic French minds which are so much more logical than facts.
But there is one little phrase to be noted: "La passion est toute
l'humanité." All Balzac is in that phrase.Another French novelist, following, as he thought, the
example of theHuman Comedy,has
endeavoured to build up a history of his own time with even greater
minuteness. ButLes Rougon-Macquartis no more than system; Zola has never understood that detail
without life is the wardrobe without the man. Trying to outdo
Balzac on his own ground, he has made the fatal mistake of taking
him only on his systematic side, which in Balzac is subordinate to
a great creative intellect, an incessant, burning thought about men
and women, a passionate human curiosity for which even his own
system has no limits. "The misfortunes of theBirotteaus,the priest and the
perfumer," he says, in hisAvant-Propos,taking an example at
random, "are, for me, those of humanity." To Balzac manners are but
the vestment of life; it is life that he seeks; and life, to him
(it is his own word) is but the vestment of thought. Thought is at
the root of all his work, a whole system of thought, in which
philosophy is but another form of poetry; and it is from this root
of idea that theHuman Comedysprings.2The two books into which Balzac has put his deepest thought,
the two books which he himself cared for the most, areSéraphitaandLouis
Lambert.OfLouis
Lamberthe said: "I write it for myself and a few
others"; ofSéraphita:"My life
is in it." "One could writeGoriotany day," he adds; "Séraphita only
oncein a lifetime." I have never been able to
feel thatSéraphitais
altogether a success. It lacks the breadth of life; it is glacial.
True, he aimed at producing very much such an effect; and it is,
indeed, full of a strange, glittering beauty, the beauty of its own
snows. But I find in it at the same time something a little
factitious, a sort of romanesque, not altogether unlike the
sentimental romanesque of Novalis; it has not done the impossible,
in humanising abstract speculation, in fusing mysticism and the
novel. But for the student of Balzac it has extraordinary interest;
for it is at once the base and the summit of theHuman Comedy.In a letter to Mme. de
Hanska, written in 1837, four years afterSéraphitahad been begun, he writes: "I
am not orthodox, and I do not believe in the Roman Church.
Swedenborgianism, which is but a repetition, in the Christian
sense, of ancient ideas, is my religion, with this addition: that I
believe in the incomprehensibility of God."Séraphitais a prose poem in which the
most abstract part of that mystical system, which Swedenborg
perhaps materialised too crudely, is presented in a white light,
under a single, superhuman image. InLouis
Lambertthe same fundamental conceptions are
worked out in the study of a perfectly human intellect, "an
intelligent gulf," as he truly calls it; a sober and concise
history of ideas in their devouring action upon a feeble physical
nature. In these two books we see directly, and not through the
coloured veil of human life, the mind in the abstract of a thinker
whose power over humanity was the power of abstract thought. They
show this novelist, who has invented the description of society, by
whom the visible world has been more powerfully felt than by any
other novelist, striving to penetrate the correspondences which
exist between the human and the celestial existence. He would
pursue the soul to its last resting-place before it takes flight
from the body; further, on its disembodied flight; he would find
out God, as he comes nearer and nearer to finding out the secret of
life. And realising, as he does so profoundly, that there is but
one substance, but one ever-changing principle of life, "one
vegetable, one animal, but a continual intercourse," the world is
alive with meaning for him, a more intimate meaning than it has for
others. "The least flower is a thought, a life which corresponds to
some lineaments of the great whole, of which he has the constant
intuition." And so, in his concerns with the world, he will find
spirit everywhere; nothing for him will be inert matter, everything
will have its particle of the universal life. One of those divine
spies, for whom the world has no secrets, he will be neither
pessimist nor optimist; he will accept the world as a man accepts
the woman whom he loves, as much, for her defects as for her
virtues. Loving the world for its own sake, he will find it always
beautiful, equally beautiful in all its parts. Now let us look at
the programme which he traced for theHuman
Comedy,let us realise it in the light of this
philosophy, and we are at the beginning of a conception of what
theHuman Comedyreally
is.3This visionary, then, who had apprehended for himself an idea
of God, set himself to interpret human life more elaborately than
any one else. He has been praised for his patient observation;
people have thought they praised him in calling him a realist; it
has been discussed how far his imitation of life was the literal
truth of the photograph. But to Balzac the word realism was an
insult. Writing his novels at the rate of eighteen hours a day, in
a feverish solitude, he never had the time to observe patiently. It
is humanity seen in a mirror, the humanity which comes to the great
dreamers, the great poets, humanity as Shakespeare saw it. And so
in him, as in all the great artists, there is something more than
nature, a divine excess. This something more than nature should be
the aim of the artist, not merely the accident which happens to him
against his will. We require of him a world like our own, but a
world infinitely more vigorous, interesting, profound; more
beautiful with that kind of beauty which nature finds of itself for
art. It is the quality of great creative art to give us so much
life that we are almost overpowered by it, as by an air almost too
vigorous to breathe: the exuberance of creation which makes the
Sibyl of Michelangelo something more than human, which makes Lear
something more than human, in one kind or another of
divinity.Balzac's novels are full of strange problems and great
passions turned aside from nothing which presented itself in
nature; and his mind was always turbulent with the magnificent
contrasts and caprices of fate. A devouring passion of thought
burned on all the situations by which humanity expresses itself, in
its flight from the horror of immobility. To say that the
situations which he chose are often romantic is but to say that he
followed the soul and the senses faithfully on their strangest
errands. Our probable novelists of to-day are afraid of whatever
emotion might be misinterpreted in a gentleman. Believing, as we do
now, in nerves and a fatalistic heredity, we have left but little
room for the dignity and disturbance of violent emotion. To Balzac,
humanity had not changed since the days when Œdipus was blind and
Philoctetes cried in the cave; and equally great miseries were
still possible to mortals, though they were French and of the
nineteenth century.And thus he creates, like the poets, a humanity more logical
than average life; more typical, more sub-divided among the
passions, and having in its veins an energy almost more than human.
He realised, as the Greeks did, that human life is made up of
elemental passions and necessity; but he was the first to realise
that in the modern world the pseudonym of necessity is money. Money
and the passions rule the world of hisHuman
Comedy.And, at the root of the passions, determining their action,
he saw "those nervous fluids, or that unknown substance which, in
default of another term, we must call the will." No word returns
oftener to his pen. For him the problem is invariable. Man has a
given quantity of energy; each man a different quantity: how will
he spend it? A novel is the determination in action of that
problem. And he is equally interested in every form of energy, in
every egoism, so long as it is fiercely itself. This pre-occupation
with the force, rather than with any of its manifestations, gives
him his singular impartiality, his absolute lack of prejudice; for
it gives him the advantage of an abstract point of view, the
unchanging fulcrum for a lever which turns in every direction; and
as nothing once set vividly in motion by any form of human activity
is without interest for him, he makes every point of his vast
chronicle of human affairs equally interesting to his
readers.Baudelaire has observed profoundly that every character in
theHuman Comedyhas something
of Balzac, has genius. To himself, his own genius was entirely
expressed in that word "will." It recurs constantly in his letters.
"Men of will are rare!" he cries. And, at a time when he had turned
night into day for his labour: "I rise every night with a keener
will than that of yesterday." "Nothing wearies me," he says,
"neither waiting nor happiness." He exhausts the printers, whose
fingers can hardly keep pace with his brain; they call him, he
reports proudly, "a man-slayer." And he tries to express himself:
"I have always had in me something, I know not what, which made me
do differently from others; and, with me, fidelity is perhaps no
more than pride. Having only myself to rely upon, I have had to
strengthen, to build up that self." There is a scene inLa Cousine Bettewhich gives precisely
Balzac's own sentiment of the supreme value of energy. The Baron
Hulot, ruined on every side, and by his own fault, goes to Josépha,
a mistress who had cast him off in the time of his prosperity, and
asks her to lodge him for a few days in a garret. She laughs,
pities, and then questions him."'Est-ce vrai, vieux,' reprit-elle, 'que tu as tué ton frère
et ton oncle, ruiné ta famille, surhypothéqué la maison de tes
enfants et mangé la grenouille du gouvernement en Afrique avec la
princesse?'"Le Baron inclina tristement la tête."'Eh bien, j'aime cela!' s'écria Josépha, qui se leva pleine
d'enthousiasme. 'C'est unbrûlagegénéral! c'est sardanapale! c'est grand! c'est complet! On
est une canaille, mais on a du cœur.'"The cry is Balzac's, and it is a characteristic part of his
genius to have given it that ironical force by uttering it through
the mouth of a Josépha. The joy of the human organism at its
highest point of activity: that is what interests him supremely.
How passionate, how moving he becomes whenever he has to speak of a
real passion, a mania, whether of a lover for his mistress, of a
philosopher for his idea, of a miser for his gold, of a Jew dealer
for masterpieces! His style clarifies, his words become flesh and
blood; he is the lyric poet. And for him every idealism is equal:
the gourmandise of Pons is not less serious, nor less sympathetic,
not less perfectly realised, than the search of Claës after the
Absolute. "The great and terrible clamour of egoism" is the voice
to which he is always attentive; "those eloquent faces, proclaiming
a soul abandoned to an idea as to a remorse," are the faces with
whose history he concerns himself. He drags to light the hidden
joys of theamateur,and with
especial delight those that are hidden deepest, under the most
deceptive coverings. He deifies them for their energy, he fashions
the world of hisHuman Comedyin
their service, as the real world exists, all but passive, to be the
pasture of these supreme egoists.4In all that he writes of life, Balzac seeks the soul; but it
is the soul as nervous fluid, the executive soul, not the
contemplative soul, that, with rare exceptions, he seeks. He would
surprise the motive force of life: that is hisrecherche de l'Absolu;he figures it to
himself as almost a substance, and he is the alchemist on its
track. "Can man by thinking find out God?" Or life, he would have
added; and he would have answered the question with at least a
Perhaps.And of this visionary, this abstract thinker, it must be said
that his thought translates itself always into terms of life. Pose
before him a purely mental problem, and he will resolve it by a
scene in which the problem literally works itself out. It is the
quality proper to the novelist, but no novelist ever employed this
quality with such persistent activity, and at the same time
subordinated faction so constantly to the idea. With him action has
always a mental basis, is never suffered to intrude for its own
sake. He prefers that an episode should seem in itself tedious
rather than it should have an illogical interest.It may be, for he is a Frenchman, that his episodes are
sometimes too logical. There are moments when he becomes unreal
because he wishes to be too systematic, that is, to be real by
measure. He would never have understood the method of Tolstoi, a
very stealthy method of surprising life. To Tolstoi life is always
the cunning enemy whom one must lull asleep, or noose by an
unexpected lasso. He brings in little detail after little detail,
seeming to insist on the insignificance of each, in order that it
may pass almost unobserved, and be realised only after it has
passed. It is his way of disarming the suspiciousness of
life.But Balzac will make no circuit, aims at an open and an
unconditional triumph over nature. Thus, when he triumphs, he
triumphs signally; and action, in his books, is perpetually
crystallising into some phrase, like the single lines of Dante, or
some brief scene, in which a whole entanglement comes sharply and
suddenly to a luminous point. I will give no instance, for I should
have to quote from every volume. I wish rather to remind myself
that there are times when the last fine shade of a situation seems
to have escaped. Even then, the failure is often more apparent than
real, a slight bungling in the machinery of illusion. Look through
the phrase, and you will find the truth there, perfectly explicit
on the other side of it.For it cannot be denied, Balzac's style, as style, is
imperfect. It has life, and it has an idea, and it has variety;
there are moments when it attains a rare and perfectly individual
beauty; as when, inLe Cousin Pons,we read of "cette prédisposition aux recherches qui fait
faire à un savant germanique cent lieues dans ses guêtres pour
trouver une vérité qui le regard en riant, assise à la marge du
puits, sous le jasmin de la cour." But I am far less sure that a
student of Balzac would recognise him in this sentence than that he
would recognise the writer of this other: "Des larmes de pudeur,
qui roulèrent entre les beaux cils de Madame Hulot, arrêtèrent net
le garde national." It is in such passages that the failure in
style is equivalent to a failure in psychology. That his style
should lack symmetry, subordination, the formal virtues of form,
is, in my eyes, a less serious fault. I have often considered
whether, in the novel, perfect form is a good, or even a possible
thing, if the novel is to be what Balzac made it, history added to
poetry. A novelist with style will not look at life with an
entirely naked vision. He sees through coloured glasses. Human life
and human manners are too various, too moving, to be brought into
the fixity of a quite formal order. There will come a moment,
constantly, when style must suffer, or the closeness and clearness
of narration must be sacrificed, some minute exception of action or
psychology must lose its natural place, or its full emphasis.
Balzac, with his rapid and accumulating mind, without the patience
oft selection, and without the desire to select where selection
means leaving out something good in itself, if not good in its
place, never hesitates, and his parenthesis comes in. And often it
is into these parentheses that he puts the profoundest part of his
thought.Yet, ready as Balzac is to neglect the story for the
philosophy, whenever it seems to him necessary to do so, he would
never have admitted that a form of the novel is possible in which
the story shall be no more than an excuse for the philosophy. That
was because he was a great creator, and not merely a philosophical
thinker; because he dealt in flesh and blood, and knew that the
passions in action can teach more to the philosopher, and can
justify the artist more fully, than all the unacting intellect in
the world. He knew that though life without thought was no more
than the portion of a dog, yet thoughtful life was more than
lifeless thought, and the dramatist more than the commentator. And
I cannot help feeling assured that the latest novelists without a
story, whatever other merits they certainly have, are lacking in
the power to create characters, to express a philosophy in action;
and that the form which they have found, however valuable it may
be, is the result of this failure, and not either a great refusal
or a new vision.5The novel as Balzac conceived it has created the modern
novel, but no modern novelist has followed, for none has been able
to follow, Balzac on his own lines. Even those who have tried to
follow him most closely have, sooner or later, branched off in one
direction or another, most in the direction indicated by Stendhal.
Stendhal has written one book which is a masterpiece, unique in its
kind,Le Rouge et le Noir;a
second, which is full of admirable things,Le
Chartreuse de Parme;a book of profound
criticism,Racine et Shakspeare;and a cold and penetrating study of the physiology of
love,De l'Amour,by the side of
which Balzac'sPhysiologie du Mariageis a merejeu d'esprit.He
discovered for himself, and for others after him, a method of
unemotional, minute, slightly ironical analysis, which has
fascinated modern minds, partly because it has seemed to dispense
with those difficulties of creation, of creation in the block,
which the triumphs of Balzac have only accentuated. Goriot, Valérie
Marneffe, Pons, Grandet, Madame de Mortsauf even, are called up
before us after the same manner as Othello or Don Quixote; their
actions express them so significantly that they seem to be
independent of their creator; Balzac stakes all upon each creation,
and leaves us no choice but to accept or reject each as a whole,
precisely as we should a human being. We do not know all the
secrets of their consciousness, any more than we know all the
secrets of the consciousness of our friends. But we have only so
say "Valérie!" and the woman is before us. Stendhal, on the
contrary, undresses Julien's soul in public with a deliberate and
fascinating effrontery. There is not a vein of which he does not
trace the course, not a wrinkle to which he does not point, not a
nerve which he does not touch to the quick. We know everything that
passed through his mind, to result probably in some significant
inaction. And at the end of the book we know as much about that
particular intelligence as the anatomist knows about the body which
he has dissected. But mean-while the life has gone out of the body;
and have we, after all, captured a living soul?I should be the last to say that Julien Sorel is not a
creation, but he is not a creation after the order of Balzac; it is
a difference of kind; and if we look carefully at Frédéric Moreau,
and Madame Gervaisais, and the Abbé Mouret, we shall see that these
also, profoundly different as Flaubert and Goncourt and Zola are
from Stendhal, are yet more profoundly, more radically, different
from the creations of Balzac. Balzac takes a primary passion, puts
it into a human body, and sets it to work itself out in visible
action. But since Stendhal, novelists have persuaded themselves
that the primary passions are a little common, or noisy, or a
little heavy to handle, and they have concerned themselves with
passions tempered by reflection, and the sensations of elaborate
brains. It was Stendhal who substituted the brain for the heart, as
the battle-place of the novel; not the brain as Balzac conceived
it, a motive-force of action, the mainspring of passion, the force
by which a nature directs its accumulated energy; but a sterile
sort of brain, set at a great distance from the heart, whose rhythm
is too faint to disturb it. We have been intellectualising upon
Stendhal ever since, until the persons of the modern novel have
come to resemble those diaphanous jelly-fish, with balloon-like
heads and the merest tufts of bodies, which float up and down in
the Aquarium at Naples.Thus, coming closer, as it seems, to what is called reality,
in this banishment of great emotions, and this attention upon the
sensations, modern analytic novelists are really getting further
and further from that life which is the one certain thing in the
world. Balzac employs all his detail to call up a tangible world
about his men and women, not, perhaps, understanding the full power
of detail as psychology, as Flaubert is to understand it; but,
after all, his detail is only the background of the picture; and
there, stepping out of the canvas, as the sombre people of
Velazquez step out of their canvases at the Prado, is the living
figure, looking into your eyes with eyes that respond to you like a
mirror.The novels of Balzac are full of electric fluid. To take up
one of them is to feel the shock of life, as one feels it on
touching certain magnetic hands. To turn over volume after volume
is like wandering through the streets of a great city, at that hour
of the night when human activity is at its full. There is a
particular kind of excitement inherent in the very aspect of a
modern city, of London or Paris; in the mere sensation of being in
its midst, in the sight of all those active and fatigued faces
which pass so rapidly; of those long and endless streets, full of
houses, each of which is like the body of a multiform soul, looking
out through the eyes of many windows. There is something
intoxicating in the lights, the movement of shadows under the
lights, the vast and billowy sound of that shadowy movement. And
there is something more than this mere unconscious action upon the
nerves. Every step in a great city is a step into an unknown world.
A new future is possible at every street corner. I never know, when
I go out into one of those crowded streets, but that the whole
course of my life may be changed before I return to the house I
have quitted.I am writing these lines in Madrid, to which I have come
suddenly, after a long quiet in Andalusia; and I feel already a new
pulse in my blood, a keener consciousness of life, and a sharper
human curiosity. Even in Seville I, knew that I should see
to-morrow, in the same streets, hardly changed since the Middle
Ages, the same people that I had seen to-day. But here there are
new possibilities, all the exciting accidents of the modern world,
of a population always changing, of a city into which civilisation
has brought all its unrest. And as I walk in these broad, windy
streets and see these people, whom I hardly recognise for
Spaniards, so awake and so hybrid are they, I have felt the sense
of Balzac coming back into my veins. At Cordova he was unthinkable;
at Cadiz I could realise only his large, universal outlines, vague
as the murmur of the sea; here I feel him, he speaks the language I
am talking, he sums up the life in whose midst I find
myself.For Balzac is the equivalent of great cities. He is bad
reading for solitude, for he fills the mind with the nostalgia of
cities. When a man speaks to me familiarly of Balzac I know already
something of the man with whom I have to do. "The physiognomy of
women does not begin before the age of thirty," he has said; and
perhaps before that age no one can really understand Balzac. Few
young people care for him, for there is nothing in him that appeals
to the senses except through the intellect. Not many women care for
him supremely, for it is part of his method to express sentiments
through facts, and not facts through sentiments. But it is natural
that he should be the favourite reading of men of the world, of
those men of the world who have the distinction of their kind; for
he supplies the key of the enigma which they are
studying.6The life of Balzac was one long labour, in which time, money,
and circumstances were all against him. In 1835 he writes: "I have
lately spent twenty-six days in my study without leaving it. I took
the air only at that window which dominates Paris, which I mean to
dominate." And he exults in the labour: "If there is any glory in
that, I alone could accomplish such a feat." He symbolises the
course of his life in comparing it to the sea beating against a
rock: "To-day one flood, to-morrow another, bears me along with it.
I am dashed against a rock, I recover myself and go on to another
reef." "Sometimes it seems to me that my brain is on fire. I shall
die in the trenches of the intellect."Balzac, like Scott, died under the weight of his debts; and
it would seem, if one took him at his word, that the whole of
theHuman Comedywas written for
money. In the modern world, as he himself realised more clearly
than any one, money is more often a symbol than an entity, and it
can be the symbol of every desire. For Balzac money was the key of
his earthly paradise. It meant leisure to visit the woman whom he
loved, and at the end it meant the possibility of marrying
her.There were only two women in Balzac's life: one, a woman much
older than himself, of whom he wrote, on her death, to the other:
"She was a mother, a friend, a family, a companion, a counsel, she
made the writer, she consoled the young man, she formed his taste,
she wept like a sister, she laughed, she came every day, like a
healing slumber, to put sorrow to sleep." The other was Mme. de
Hanska, whom he married in 1850, three months before his death. He
had loved her for twenty years; she was married, and lived in
Poland; it was only at rare intervals that he was able to see her,
and then very briefly; but his letters to her, published since his
death, are a simple, perfectly individual, daily record of a great
passion. For twenty years he existed on a divine certainty without
a future, and almost without a present. But we see the force of
that sentiment passing into his work;Séraphitais its ecstasy, everywhere is
its human shadow; it refines his strength, it gives him surprising
intuitions, it gives him all that was wanting to his genius. Mme.
de Hanska is the heroine of theHuman
Comedy,as Beatrice is the heroine of theDivine Comedy.A great lover, to whom love, as well as every other passion
and the whole visible world, was an idea, a flaming spiritual
perception, Balzac enjoyed the vast happiness of the idealist.
Contentedly, joyously, he sacrificed every petty enjoyment to the
idea of love, the idea of fame, and to that need of the organism to
exercise its forces, which is the only definition of genius. I do
not know, among the lives of men of letters, a life better filled,
or more appropriate. A young man who, for a short time, was his
secretary, declared: "I would not live your life for the fame of
Napoleon and of Byron combined!" The Comte de Gramont did not
realise, as the world in general does not realise, that, to the man
of creative energy, creation is at once a necessity and a joy, and
to the lover, hope in absence is the elixir of life. Balzac tasted
more than all earthly pleasures as he sat there in his attic,
creatin [...]