ANATOLE
ANATOLE
All
the great civilised races tend to disillusion.
Disillusion is the mark of civilised eras as opposed to barbaric ones
and if the dream of the poets is ever realised and the Golden Age returns, such
an age will be the supreme age of happy, triumphant disillusion.
This
was seen long ago by Lucretius, who regarded the fear
of the gods as the last illusion of the human race, and looked for its removal as
the race's entrance into the earthly paradise.
Nietzsche's
noble and austere call to seriousness and spiritual conflict is the sign of a
temper quite opposed from this. Zarathustra frees himself from all other illusions, but he
does not free himself from the most deadly one of all - the illusion namely,
that the freeing oneself from illusion is a high and terrible duty.
The
real disillusioned spirit is not the fierce Nietzschean
one whose glacial laughter is an iconoclastic battle-cry and whose freedom is a
freedom achieved anew every day by strenuous and desperate struggle. The real disillusioned spirit plays with
illusions, puts them on and takes them off, lightly, gaily, indifferently, just as it happens, just as the moment demands.
One
feels that in spite of his cosmic persiflage and radiant attempt to Mediterraneanise into
"sunburnt mirth" the souls of the northern nations, Nietzsche was
still at heart an ingrained hyperborean, still at heart a splendid and savage
Goth.
As
in every other instance, we may take it for granted that any popular idea which
runs the gamut of the idealistic lecture-halls and pulpits of a modern
democracy is false through and through.
Among such false ideas is the almost universal one that what is called
the decadence of a nation is a sign of something regrettable and
deplorable. On the contrary, it is a
sign of something admirable and excellent.
Such "weakness", in a deeper than a popular sense, is
"strength"; such decadence is simply wisdom.
The
new cult of the "will to power" which Nietzsche originated is nothing
more than the old demiurgic life-illusion breaking loose again, as it broke
loose in the grace ecstasies of the early Christians and in the Lutheran
reformation. Nietzsche rent and tore at
the morality of Christendom, but he did so with the full intention of
substituting a morality of his own. One illusion for another illusion. A Roland for an Oliver!
Nietzsche
praised with desperate laudation a classical equanimity which he was never able
to reach. He would have us love fate and
laugh and dance; but there were drops of scorching tears upon the page of his
prophecy and the motif of his challenge was the terrible gravity of his own
nature; though the conclusion of his seriousness was that we must renounce all
seriousness. It is Nietzsche himself who
teaches us that in estimating the value of a philosopher we have to consider
the psychology of the motive-force which drove him.
The
motive-force that drove Nietzsche was the old savage life-instinct, penetrated
with illusion through and through, and praise as he might the classical
urbanity, no temper that has ever existed was less urbane than his own.
The
history of the human race upon this planet may be regarded - insofar as its
spiritual eruptions are concerned - as the pressure upwards, from the abysmal
depths, of one scoriac tempest after another, rending
and tearing their way from the dark centre fires where demogorgon
turns himself over in his sleep, and becoming as soon as they reach the surface
and harden into rock, the great monumental systems of human thought, the huge
fetters of our imaginations. The central
life-fire which thus forces its path at cataclysmic intervals to the devastated
surface is certainly no illusion. It is
the one terrific cosmic fact.
Where
illusion enters is where we, poor slaves of traditional ratiocination, seek to
turn these explosions of eternal lava into eternal systems. The lava of life pours forth forever, but the
systems break and crumble; each one overwhelmed in its allotted time by a new outrushing of abysmal energy.
The
reiterated eruptions from the fathomless depths make up the shifting material
with which human civilisations build themselves their illusive homes; but the
wisest civilisations are the ones that erect a hard, clear, bright wall of
sceptical "suspension of judgement", from the face of which the
raging flood of primordial energy may be flung back before it can petrify into
any further mischief.
Such
a protective wall from the eruptive madness of primordial barbarism, the
scepticism of classical civilisation is forever polishing and fortifying. Through the pearl-like glass of its
inviolable security we are able to mock the tempest-driven eagles and the
swirling glacial storms. We can amuse
ourselves with the illusions from which we are free. We can give the imagination unbounded scope
and the fancy unrestrained licence. We
have become happy children of our own self-created kingdom of heaven; the
kingdom of heaven which is the kingdom of disillusion.
And
of this kingdom, Anatole
This
is where he differs from Oscar Wilde, from Walter Pater,
from Stendhal, from Remy de Gourmont, from Gabriele d'Annunzio. This is where he differs from Montaigne. These
great men build up an egoism of grave subjectivity out
of their suspicion of other people's cults.
They laugh at humanity but they do not laugh at themselves. With the help of metaphysics they destroy
metaphysics; only to substitute for the gravity of idealism the gravity of epicureanism.
But
Anatole
Sensations?
Well! We all know how subtle and
pleasant they can be; but this perpetual religion of them, this ponderous
worship of them, becomes at last something monstrous and inhuman, something
which makes us cry aloud for air and space.
Not only does it become inhuman and heavy - it becomes comic.
Every
religion, even the religion of sensation, becomes comic when the sharp salt
breath of intellectual sanity ceases to blow upon it. Its votaries seem to be going to and fro
wrapped in sheep's wool. The wool may be
stained in Tyrian dyes; but it is wool for all that,
and it tends ultimately to impede the steps of the wearer and to dull not a few
of his natural perceptions.
If
one imagines a symposium in the Elysian fields between
Wilde and Pater and d'Annunzio,
and the sudden entrance upon them of the great Voltaire, one cannot but believe
that after a very short time this religion of æstheticism
would prove as tiresome to the old ribald champion of a free humanity as any
other ritual.
And
in this respect Anatole
Sceptical
in other matters, egoists of the type I have mentioned are inclined to grow
unconscionably grave when questions of sex are brought forward. This illusion at any rate - the illusion of
sexual attraction - they would be most loth to
destroy.
But
Anatole
It
seems to his detached and speculative mind the most amusing and irresistible
jest in the world that men and women should behave as they do; that matters
should be arranged in just this manner.
What
we arrive at once more in Anatole France is that
humorous drawing back from the world, back into some high-pitched
observation-tower of the mind, from the philosophic seclusion of which the
world scene can be easily imagined as different from what it is. Nothing is more salutary in the midst of the
mad confusion of the world than these retirements. It is to no mere "ivory tower" of æsthetic superiority that we retreat. It is to a much higher and more spacious
eminence. So high indeed do we withdraw
that all the ivory towers of the world seem far beneath us; beneath us, and not
more or less sacred than other secular erections.
It
is from this point of observation that our humour is suddenly made aware of the
startling absurdity of human institution; and not only of human
institution; for it is made aware also of the absurdity of the whole fantastic
scheme of this portentous universe. We
regard the world in these high speculative moods much as children do when they
suddenly enquire of their bewildered parents why it is that human beings have
two legs and why it is that little girls are different from little boys.
It
is one result of these withdrawings to the translunar empyrean that the life of a man of action upon
this earth does not appear any more or any less remarkable or important than
the life of a man of letters. All human
activities from that celestial height are equal; and whether we plunge into
politics or into pleasure, into science or into theology, seems a mere
incidental chance, as indifferent in the great uncaring solar system as the
movements of the gnats around a lamp or midges around a candle.
The
great historic revolutions, the great social reformations, ancient or modern,
present themselves from this height as just as important - as just as
unimportant - as the visions of saintly fanatics or the amours of besotted
rakes.
Nothing
is important and anything may be important.
It is all a matter of the human point of view. It is all a matter of taste. Looking at the whole mad stream of things
from this altitude, we see the world as if we were peering through an inverted
telescope; or rather, shall we say, through an instrument called an "equiscope" - whose peculiarity it is to make all
things upon which it is turned little and equal.
The
mental temper of Anatole
Anatole
He
is more concerned with men and women as they actually live and move in the
commerce of the world than in the wayward play of their speculative fancies,
and it gives him an ironic satisfaction to show how the most heroic and ideal
thoughts are affected by the little wanton tricks of circumstances and
character.
This
predominant concern with the natural humours and normal animal instincts of the
human race, this refusal ever to leave the broad and beaten path of human
frailty, gives a tone to his writings, even when he is dealing with art and
literature, quite different from other æsthetes.
He
is not really an æsthete at all; he is too Voltairian for that.
As a critic he is learned, scholarly, clear-sighted and acute; but his
sense of the humorous inconsistencies of normal flesh and blood is too
habitually present with him to admit of that complete abandonment to the spirit
of his author, which, accompanied by interpretative subtlety, secures the most
striking results.
His
criticisms are wise and interesting, but they necessarily miss the sinuous
clairvoyance of a writer like Remy de Gourmont who is
able to give himself up completely and with no ironic reservation to the
abnormalities of the temperament he is discussing. Remy de Gourmont's
own temperament has something in it more receptive, more psychological, more supple than Anatole
Anatole
Man
for him is always an amorous and fantastic animal, using his reason to justify
his passions, and his imagination to justify his illusions. He is always the animal who can laugh, the
animal who can cry, the animal who can beget or bear
children. He is only in a quite
secondary sense the animal who can philosophise.
It
is because of his constant preoccupation with the normal eccentricities and
pathetic follies of our race that he lays so much stress upon outward action.
The
normal man is rather an animal who wills and acts than an animal who dreams and thinks; and it is with willing and acting,
rather than with dreaming and thinking, that Anatole
France is concerned. One of the main
ironic devices of his humour is to show the active animal led astray by his
illusions, and the contemplative animal driven into absurdity by his will.
With
his outward-looking gaze fixed upon the eternal and pathetic normalities of the
human situation, Anatole
In
this respect his temperament is most obstinately classical. Like Horace and all the ancient satirists, he
feels himself invincibly attracted to "affairs of state", even while
they excite his derision. One cannot
read a page of his writing without becoming aware that one is in the presence
of a mind cast in the true classic mould.
In
the manner of the great classical writers of
He
is un-modern in this and quite alone; for, in one form or another, the
Rousseau-type with its enthusiastic neurotic mania for self-revelation
dominates the entire literary field. One
gets the impression of something massive and self-possessed, something serenely
and almost inhumanly sane about him. One
feels always that he is the "Grand Gentleman" of literature with whom
no liberties may be taken. His tone is
quiet, his manner equable, his air smiling, urbane, superior. His reserve is the reserve of the great races
of antiquity. With a calm, inscrutable,
benevolent malice, he looks out upon the world.
There is a sense of much withheld, much unsaid, much that nothing would
ever induce him to say.
His
point of view is always objective. It
might be maintained, though the thing sounds like a paradox, that his very
temperament is objective. Certainly it
is a temperament averse to any outbursts of unbalanced enthusiasm.
His
attitude towards what we call Nature is more classical than the classics. Virgil shows more vibrant emotion in the
presence of the sublimities of the natural
elements. His manner when dealing with
the inanimate world is the manner of the Eighteenth Century touched with a
certain airiness and charm that is perhaps more Hellenic than Latin. As one
reads him one almost feels as though the human race detached itself from its
surroundings and put between itself and Nature a certain clear and airy space,
untroubled by any magnetic currents of spiritual reciprocity. One feels as though Nature were kept
decisively and formally in her place and not permitted to obtrude herself upon
the consciousness of civilised people except when they require some pleasant
lawn or noble trees or smiling garden of roses to serve as a background for
their metaphysical discussions or their wanton amorous play. What we have come to call the
"magic" of Nature is never for a moment allowed to interrupt these
self-possessed epicurean arguments of statesmen, politicians, amorists, theolgians, philosophers and proconsuls.
Individual
objects in Nature - a tree, a brook, the seashore, a bunch of flowers, a glade
in the forest, a terrace in a garden, - are described in that clear, laconic,
objective manner, which gives one the impression of being able to touch the
thing in question with one's bare hand.
The
plastic and tactile value of things is always indicated in Anatole
His
style is a thing over which the fastidious lovers of human language may ponder
long and deep. The art of it is so
restrained, so aristocratic, so exclusive, that even the smallest, simplest,
most unimportant words take to themselves an emphatic significance.
Anatole France is able to tell us that Monsieur Bergeret made some naïve remark, or the Abbé
Jérôme Coignard uttered
some unctuous sally, in so large and deliberate and courtly a way that the mere
"he said" or "he began" falls upon us like a papal
benediction or like the gesture of a benignant monarch.
There
is no style in the world so deeply penetrated with the odour and savour of its
author's philosophy. And this
philosophy, this atmosphere of mind, is so entirely French that every least
idiomatic peculiarity in his native tongue seems willing to lend itself, to the
last generous drop of the wine of its essential soul, to the tone and manner of
his speech. All the refinements of the
most consummate civilisation in the world, all its airy cynicism, all its
laughing urbanity, all its whimsical friendliness, seem to concentrate
themselves and reach their climax on every page of his books.
A
delicate odour of incense and mockery, an odour of consecrated wine and a
savour of heathen wit, rise up together from every sentence and disarm us with
the insidiousness of their pleasant contrast.
His style is so beautiful and characteristic that one cannot read the
simplest passage of easy narration from his pen without becoming penetrated
with his spirit, without feeling saner, wiser, kindlier, and more disenchanted
and more humane.
I
cannot resist quoting from the prologue to "Le Puits
de Sainte Claire", a certain passage which seems to me peculiarly adapted
to the illustration of what I have just said.
The writer is, or imagines himself to be, in the city of
"Sur la voie blanche,
dans ces nuits transparentes, la seule recontre que je faisais
était
"Il causait voluntiers. Je goûtais son parler suave, son
beau langage, sa pensée docte et näive, son air de vieux Silène purifié par les eaux baptismales, son instinct de
mime accompli, le jeu de ses
passions vives et fines, le génie
étrange et charmant dont il etait
possédé.
"Assidu
à la bibliothèque, il fréquentait
aussi le marché, s'arrêtant de préférence devant les contadines, qui vendent des pommes d'or, et prêtant l'oreille à leur
libres propos.
"Il
apprenait d'elles, disait-il, la belle langue toscane....
Je crus m'aperçevoir en effet qu'il inclinait
aux opinions singulières. Il avait de la religion et de la science, main non sans bizarreries.... C'est sur le diable qu'il professait des opinions singulières. Il pensait que
le diable était mauvais sans l'être absolument et que son
imperfection naturelle l'empêcherait
toujours d'atteindre à la perfection du mal. Il croyait aperçevoir quelques signes de bonté dans les actions obscures
de Satan, et, sans trop l'oser dire, il en augurait la rédemption finale de l'archange méditatif, après la consommation
des siècles.... Assis sur la margelle, les mains dans les manches de sa robe, il
contemplait avec un paisible
étonnement les choses de la
nuit.
"Et l'ombre qui l'enveloppait
laissait deviner encore dans ses yeux
clairs et sur sa face camuse l'expressions d'audace craintive et de grâce moqueuse qui y était profondement empreinte. Nous échangions d'abord des souhaits solennels de bonne santé, de paix et de contentement....
"Tandis qu'il
parlait, la lumière de la lune coulait sur
sa barbe en ruisseau d'argent. Le grillon accompagnait du bruissement de ses élytres la voix du conteur, et parfois, aux sons de cette bouche, d'où sortait
le plus doux des langages humains, répondait la plainte flutée du crapaud, qui, de l'autre côté de la route, écoutait, amical et craintif."
The
beautiful delicacy of that single touch "sur la voie blanche, dans
ces nuits transparents" is characteristic of a thousand others
of a similar kind sprinkled among his books, where gentle and whimsical spirits
discourse upon God and the Universe.
He
has a most exquisite genius for these little chance-accompaniments of such
human scenes. "L'Orme du
Mail" is full of them; and so is "Les Opinions de M. Jérôme Coignard".
In
"Sur la Pierre Blanche" the impish humour
of accidental encounter brings forward nothing less than the death of Stephen
the Proto-Martyr, as an irrelevant interruption to the amorous pleasures of one
of his least attractive philosophers.
Full
of malicious interest as he is in all the outward events of nations and
societies, it is always evident that what Anatole
France really regards as worthy of tender consideration is the conversation of
quaint minds and the "Humeur riante
et facile" of wayward and fantastic souls.
His
sense of the fundamental futility of the whole scheme of things is so absolute
that what most modern writers would regard as the illogical dreams of
superannuated eccentrics he is inclined to treat with smiling reverence and
infinite sympathy. Where the whole
terrestrial business is only a meaningless blur upon the face of nothingness,
why should we not linger by the way, under elm trees, or upon broken fragments
of old temples, or on sunny benches in cloistered gardens, and listen to the
arbitrary fancies of unpractical and incompetent persons whose countenances
express an "audace craintive"
and a "grâce moqueuse",
and who look with mild wonder and peaceful astonishment at "les choses de la nuit"?
After
perusing many volumes of Anatole
One
always rises from the savouring of his excellent genius with a conviction that
it is only the conversation of one's friends, varied by such innocent pleasures
of the senses as may be in harmony with the custom of one's country, which
renders in the last resort the madness of the world endurable.
He
alone, of all modern writers, creates that leisurely atmosphere of noble and
humorous dignity - familiar enough to lovers of the old masters - according to
which every gesture and word of the most simple human
being comes to be endowed with a kind of royal distinction. By the very presence in his thought of the
essential meaninglessness of the world, he is enabled to throw into stronger
relief the "quips and cranks and wanton wiles" of our pathetic
humanity.
Human
words - the words of the most crackbrained among us - take to themselves a
weight and dignity from the presence behind them of this cosmic
purposelessness. The
less the universe matters, the more humanity matters. The less meaning there is in the macrocosm
the more tenderly and humorously must every microcosm be treated.
It
thus comes about that Anatole France, the most
disillusioned and sceptical of writers, is also the writer whose books throw
over the fancies and caprices of humanity the most large and liberal
benediction.
To
realise how essentially provincial English and American writers are, one has
only to consider for a moment the absolute impossibility of such books s "L'Orme du Mail", "Le
Mannequin" or "Monsieur Bergeret à
This
amiable and smiling scepticism, this profound scholarship, this subtle interest
in theological problems, this ironical interest in political problems, this
detachment of tone, this urbane humanism, make up an "ensemble" which
one feels could only possibly appear in the land of Rabelais and Voltaire.
Think
of the emergence of a book in
The
chapter headed "Saint Satyre" is prefaced
by a beautiful hymn from the "Breviarum Romanum"; while the story named "Guido Cavalcanti" begins with a long quotation from "Il
Decameron di Messer Giovannit Boccaccio". I take the first instance that comes to my
hand; but all his books are the same.
And one who reads Anatole
What
he will find will be the old, sweet, laughing, mellow world of rich antique
wisdom; a world where the poetry of the ancients blends harmoniously with the
mystical learning of the fathers of the church; a world where books are loved
better than theories and persons better than books; a world where the humours
of the pathetic flesh and blood of the human race are given their true value,
as more amusing than any philosophy and as the cause and origin of all the
philosophies that have ever been!
Anatole
I
suppose that no author that ever lived is so irritating to strong-minded
idealists. He does not give these people
"the ghost of a chance". He
serenely assumes that all ideals are of human, too human, origin, and that no
ideas can stand up long against the shocks of life's ironic caprices.
And
yet while so maliciously introducing, with laconic Voltairian
gibes, the wanton pricking of human sensuality, he never forgets the
church. In nothing is he more French; in
nothing is he more civilised, than in his perpetual preoccupation with two
things - the beauty and frailty of women and the beauty and inconsistency of
Christianity.
The
clever young men who write books in
That
sort of earnest-minded attempt to establish some kind of mystical substitute
for the religion of our fathers, which one is continually meeting in modern
books and which has so withering an effect both upon imagination and humour, is
never encountered in Anatole France. He is interested in old tradition and he
loves to mock at it. He is interested in
human sensuality and he loves to mock at it; but apart from traditional piety
struggling with natural passion, he finds nothing in the human soul that
arrests him very deeply.
Man,
to Anatole
In
a world where men propagated themselves like plants or trees and where there
was no organised religious tradition, the humour of Anatole
The
root of this great writer's genius is irony. His whole philosophy is summed up in that
word, and all the magic of his unequalled style depends upon it.
Sometimes
as we read him, we are stirred by a dim sense of indignation against his
perpetual tone of smiling, patronising, disenchanted, Olympian pity. The word "pity" is one of his
favourite words, and a certain kind of pity is certainly a profound element in
his mocking heart.
But
it is the pity of an Olympian god, a pity that cares little for what we call
justice, a pity that refuses to take seriously the objects of his
commiseration. His clear-sighted
intelligence is often pleased to toy very plausibly with a
certain species of revolutionary socialism.
But, I suppose few socialists derive much satisfaction from that
devastating piece of irony, the Isle of the Penguins; where everything moves in
circles and all ends as it began.
The
glacial smile of the yawning gulf of eternal futility flickers through all his
pages. Everything is amusing. Nothing is important. Let us eat and drink; let us be urbane and
tolerant; let us walk on the sunny side of the road; let us smell the roses on
the sepulchres of the dead gods; let us pluck the violets from the sepulchres
of our dead loves. All is equal -
nothing matters. The wisest are they who
play with illusions which no longer deceive them and with the pity that no
longer hurts them. The wisest are they
who answer the brutality of Nature with the irony of Humanity. The wisest are they who read old books, drink
old wine, converse with old friends, and let the rest go.
And yet - and yet -
There
is a poem of Paul Verlaine dedicated to Anatole
Ah, les Voix, mourez
donc, mourantes que vous êtes
Sentences,
mots en vain, metaphores
mal faites,
Toute la rhétorique en fuite des péchés,
Ah,
les Voix, mourez donc, mourantes que vous êtes.
.
. . .
. . .
. .
Mourez parmi la voix terrible de l'Amour!
.
. . .
. . .
. .