OSCAR
WILDE
THE words he once used about himself -
"I am a symbolic figure" - remain to this day the most significant
thing that can be said of Oscar Wilde.
It
is given to very few men of talent, this peculiar privilege - this privilege of
being greater in what might be called the shadow of the personality than
in any actual literary or artistic achievement - and Wilde possesses it in a
degree second to none.
"My
genius is in my life," he said on another occasion, and the words are
literally and most fatally true.
In
the confused controversies of the present age it is difficult to disentangle
the main issues; but it seems certain that side by side with political and
economic divisions, there is a gulf growing wider and wider every day between
the adherents of what might be called the Hellenic Renaissance and the inert,
suspicious, unintelligent mob; that mob the mud of whose heavy traditions is
capable of breeding, at one and the same time, the most crafty hypocrisy and
the most stupid brutality.
It
would be hardly a true statement to say that the Renaissance referred to - this
modern Renaissance, not less formidable than the historic revolt which bears
that mane - is an insurrection of free spirits against Christianity. It is much rather a reversion to a humane and
classic reasonableness as opposed to mob-stupidity and middle-class
philistinism - things which only the blundering of centuries of popular
misapprehension could associate with the sublime and the imaginative figure of
Christ.
It
is altogether a mistake to assume that in "De Profundis"
Wilde retracted his classic protest and bowed his head once more in the house
of Rimmon.
What
he did was to salute, in the name of the æsthetic
freedom he represented, those enduring elements of human loveliness and beauty
in that figure which three hundred years of hypocritical puritanism
have proved unable to tarnish. What
creates the peculiar savagery of hatred which his name has still the power to
conjure up among the enemies of civilisation has little to do with the
ambiguous causes of his final downfall.
These, of course, gave him up, bound hand and foot, into their
hands. But these, though the overt
excuse of their rancour, are far from being its real motive-force. To reach that we must look to the nature of
the formidable weapon which it was his habit, in season and out of season, to
use against this mob-rule - I mean his sense of humour.
The
stupid middle-class obscurantism, so alien to all humane reasonableness, which,
in our Anglo-Saxon communities, masquerades under the cloak of a passionate and
imaginative religion, is more sensitive to ridicule than to any other form of
attack, and Wilde attacked it mercilessly with a ridicule that cut to the bone.
They
are not by any means of equal value, these epigrams of his, with which he
defended intelligence against stupidity and classical light against Gothic
darkness.
They
are not as humorous as Voltaire's. They
are not as philosophical as Goethe's.
Compared with the aphorisms of these masters they are light and
frivolous. But for this very reason
perhaps, they serve the great cause - the cause of humane and enlightened
civilisation - better in our age of vulgar mob-rule than more recondite "logoi".
They
pierce the hide of the thickest and dullest; they startle and bewilder the
brains of the most crass and the most insensitive. And it is just because they do this that
Wilde is so cordially feared and hated.
It was, one cannot help feeling, the presence in him of a shrewd vein of
sheer boyish bravado, mingled - one might go even as far as that - with a dash
of incorrigible worldliness in his own temper, that made his hits so effective
and wounding.
It
is interesting, with this in mind, to compare Wilde's witticisms with those of
Matthew Arnold or Bernard Shaw. The reason that Wilde's lash cuts deeper than either of these other
champions of rational humanism, is that he goes, with more classical clearness,
straight to the root of the matter.
The
author of "Thyrsis" was not himself free
from a certain melancholy hankering after "categorical imperatives",
and beneath the cap and bells of his theological fooling Shaw is, of course, as
gravely moralistic as any puritan could wish.
Neither
of these - neither the ironical schoolmaster nor the farcical clown of our Renaissance
of intelligence - could exchange ideas with Pericles,
say, or Cæsar, without betraying a puritanical
fussiness that would grievously bewilder the lucid minds of those great men.
The
philosophy of Wilde's æsthetic revolt against our
degraded mob-ridden conscience was borrowed from Walter Pater,
but whereas that shy and subtle spirit moved darkly and mysteriously aside from
all contact with the vulgar herd, Wilde, full of gay and wanton pride in his
sacred mission, lost no opportunity of flaunting his classic orthodoxy in the
face of the heretical mob.
Since
the death of Wilde, the brunt of the battle for the spiritual liberties of the
race has been borne by the sterner and more formidable figure of Nietzsche; but
the vein of high and terrible imagination in this great poet of the Superman
sets him much closer to the company of the saints and mystics than to that of
the instinctive children of the pagan ideal.
Oscar
Wilde's name has become a sort of rallying cry to all those writers and artists
who suffer, in one degree or another, from the persecution of the mob - of the
mob goaded on to blind brutality by the crafty incentives of those conspirators
of reaction whose interest lies in keeping the people enslaved. This has come about, in a large measure, as
much by the renown of his defects as by reason of his fine quality.
The
majority of men of talent lack the spirit and the gall to defy the enemy on
equal terms. But Wilde while possessing
nobler faculties had an undeniable vein in him of sheer youthful
insolence. To the impertinence of
society he could oppose the impertinence of the artist, and to the effrontery
of the world he could offer the effrontery of genius.
The
power of personality, transcending any actual literary achievement, is what remains
in the mind when one has done reading him, and this very faculty - of
communicating to us, who never saw him or heard him speak, the vivid impact of
his overbearing presence - is itself evidence of a rare kind of genius. It is even a little ironical that he, above
all men the punctilious and precious literary craftsman, should ultimately
dominate us not so much by the magic of his art as by the spell of his wilful
and wanton individuality, and the situation is heightened still further by the
extraordinary variety of his works and their amazing perfection in their
different spheres.
One
might easily conceive an artist capable of producing so clean-cut and
crystalline a comedy as "The Importance of Being Earnest", and so
finished and flawless a tragedy as "Salome", disappearing quite out
of sight, in the manner so commended by Flaubert, behind the shining
objectivity of his flawless creations.
But so far from disappearing, Oscar Wilde manages to emphasise himself
and his imposing presence only the more startlingly and flagrantly, the more
the gem-like images he projects harden and glitter.
Astoundingly
versatile as he was - capable of producing in the "Ballad of Reading
Gaol" the best tragic ballad since "The Ancient Mariner", and in
"Intentions" one of the best critical expositions of the open secret
of art ever written at all - he never permits us for a second to lose touch
with the wayward and resplendent figure, so full, for all its bravado, of a
certain disarming childishness, of his own defiant personality.
And
the fact remains that, perfect in their various kinds though these works of his
are, they would never appeal to us as they do, and Oscar Wilde would never be
to us what he is, if it were not for the predominance of this personal touch.
I
sometimes catch myself wondering what my own feeling would be as to the value
of these things - of the "Soul of Man Under
Socialism", for instance, of "Intentions", or the Comedies, or
the Poems - if the unthinkable thing could be done, and the emergence of this
irresistible figure from behind it all could be drastically eliminated. I find myself conscious, at these times, of a
faint disturbing doubt; as though after all, in spite of their jewel-like
perfection, these wonderful and varied achievements were not quite the real
thing, were not altogether in the "supreme manner". There seems to me - at the moments when this
doubt arises - something too self-consciously (how shall I put it?) artistic
about these performances, something strained and forced and farfetched, which
separates them from the large inevitable utterances of classic genius.
I
am ready to confess that I am not sure that this feeling is a matter of
personal predilection or whether it has the larger and graver weight behind it
of the traditional instincts of humanity, instincts out of which spring our
only permanent judgements. What I feel
at any rate is this: that there is an absence in Wilde's writings of that large
cool spaciousness, produced by the magical influence of earth and sky and sea,
of which one is always conscious in the greater masters.
"No
gentleman," he is said to have remarked once, "ever looks out of the
window"; and it is precisely this "never looking out of the
window" that produces his most serious limitations.
In
one respect I must acknowledge myself grateful to Wilde, even for this very
avoidance of what might be called the "magical" element in
things. His clear-cut palpable images,
carved, as one so often feels, in ebony or ivory or gold, offer an admirable
relief, like the laying of one's hand upon pieces of Hellenic statuary, after
wandering among the vague mists and "beachéd
margents".
Certainly
if all that one saw when one "looked out of the window" were Irish
fairies with dim hair drifting down pallid rivers, there would be some reason
for drawing the curtains close and toying in the lamplight with cameo-carved
profiles of Antinous and Cleopatra!
But
nature has more to give us than the elfish fantasies, charming as these may be,
of Celtic legend - more to give us than those "brown fauns" and
"hoofed Centaurs" and milk-white peacocks, which Wilde loves to paint
with his Tiepolo-like brush. The dew of the morning does not fall less
lightly because real autumns bring it, nor does the "wide aerial
landscape" of our human wayfaring show less fair, or its ancient
antagonist the "salt estranging sea" less terrible, because these
require no legendary art to endow them with mystery.
Plausible
and full of significance as these honeyed arguments in "Intentions"
are - and fruitful as they are in affording us weapons wherewith to defend
ourselves from the mob - it is still well, it is still necessary, to place
against them the great Da Vinci saying, "Nature
is the Mistress of the higher intelligence."
While
must be held responsible - along with others of his epoch - for the
encouragement of that deplorable modern heresy which finds in bric-a-brac and
what are called "objects d'art" a disproportionate monopoly of the
beauty and wonder of the world. One
turns a little wearily at last from the silver mirrors and purple masks. One turns to the great winds that issue forth
out of the caverns of the night. One
turns to the sun and to the rain, which fall upon the common grass.
However! It is not a wise procedure to demand from a
writer virtues and qualities completely out of his rôle. In our particular race there is far more
danger of the beauty and significance of art - together with all its subtler
and less normal symbols - perishing under crude and sentimental Nature-worship,
than of their being granted too large a place in our crowded house of thought.
After
all, the art which Wilde assures us adds so richly to Nature, "is an art
which Nature makes." They are not
lovers of what is rarest and finest in our human civilisation who would
suppress everything which deviates from the common track.
Who
has given these people - these middle-class minds with their dull intelligences
- the right to decide what is natural or unnatural in the presence of the vast
tumultuous forces, wonderful and terrible, of the life-stream which surrounds
us?
The
mad smouldering lust which gives a sort of under-song of surging passion to the
sophisticated sensuality of "Salome" is as much an evocation of
Nature as the sad sweet wisdom of that sentence in "De Profundis"
- "Behind joy and laughter there may be a temperament, coarse, hard and
callous. But behind sorrow there is
always sorrow."
What,
beneath all his bravado and his paradoxes, Wilde really sought, was the
enjoyment of passionate and absorbing emotion, and no-one who hungers and
thirsts after this - be he "as sensual as the brutish sting itself" -
can fail in the end to touch, if only fleetingly with his lips, the waters of
that river of passion which, by a miracle of faith if not by a supreme creation
of art, Humanity has caused to issue forth from the wounded flesh of the ideal.
It
is in his "Soul of Man Under Socialism" - perhaps the wisest and most
eloquent revolutionary tract ever written - that Wilde frees himself most
completely from the superficial eccentricities of his æsthetic
pose, and indicates his recognition of a beauty in life, far transcending Tyrian dyes and carved cameos and frankincense and
satinwood and moonstones and "Silks from Samarcand".
It
is impossible to read this noble defence of the natural distinction and high
dignity of our human days when freed from the slavery of what is called
"working for a living", without feeling that the boyish bravado of
his insolent wit is based upon a deep and universal emotion. What we note here is an affiliation in revolt
between the artist and the masses. And
this affiliation indicates that the hideousness of our industrial system is far
more offensive than any ancient despotism or slave-owning tyranny to the
natural passion for light and air and leisure and freedom in the heart of man.
That
Oscar Wilde, the most extreme of individualists, the most unscrupulous of
self-asserters, the pampered darling of every kind of sophisticated luxury,
should thus lift up his voice on behalf of the wage-earners, is an indication
that a state of society which seems proper and inevitable to dull and narrow
minds is, when confronted, not with any mere abstract theory of Justice or
Political rights, but with the natural human craving for life and beauty, found
to be an outrage and an insult.
Oscar
Wilde by pointing his derisive finger at what the gross intelligence of our
commercial mob calls the "honourableness of
work" has done more to clear our minds of cant than many revolutionary
speeches.
An
age which breeds a world of uninteresting people whose only purpose in life is
working for their living is condemned on the face of it. And it is just here that the association
between your artist and your "labouring man" becomes physiologically
evident. The labourer shows quite
clearly that he regards his labour as a degradation, a
burden, an interruption to life, a necessary evil.
The
rôle of the capitalist-hired preacher is to condemn
him for this and to regret the departure from the scene of that imaginary and
extremely ridiculous figure, the worker who "took pleasure in his
work". If there ever have been such
people, they ought, as Wilde says, to be thoroughly
ashamed of themselves. Any person who
enjoys being turned into a machine for the best part of his days and regards it
with pride, is no better than a blackleg or a scab - not a "scab" in
regard to a little company of strikers, but a "scab" in regard to the
human race; for he is one who denies that life in itself, life with all its
emotional, intellectual and imaginative possibilities, can be endured without
the gross, coarsening, dulling "anæsthetic"
of money-making toil.
This
is the word that the social revolution wanted - the word so much more to the
point than discourses upon justice and equality and charity. And it is precisely here that the
wage-earners of our present system are in harmony with the
"intellectuals".
The
"wage-earners", or those among them who have in them something more
than the souls of scabs, despise and loathe their enforced labour. The artist also despises the second-rate
tasks set him by the stupidity and bad taste of his middle-class masters.
The
only persons in the community who are really happy in
their life's work, as they fantastically call it, are those commercial ruffians
whose brutal, self-righteous, puritanical countenances one is swamped by - as
if by a flood of suffocating mediocrity - in the streets of all our modern
cities.
Oscar
Wilde is perfectly right. We are living
in an age when the world for the first time in its history is literally under
the rule of the stupidest, dullest, least intelligent and least admirable of
all the classes in the community.
Wilde's "Soul of Man Under Socialism"
is the condemnation - let us hope the effective condemnation - of this epoch in
the journey of the race.
The
odium which France - always the protector of civilisation - has stamped upon
the word "bourgeois" is no mere passing levity of an irresponsible
Oscar
Wilde must be forgiven everything in his gay impertinence which may jar upon our
more sensitive moments, when one considers what he has done in dragging this
great issue into the light and making it clear.
He shows that what we have against us is not so much a system of society
or a set of laws, as a definite and contemptible type of human character.
Democracy
may well appear the most hopeless and lamentable failure in the government of
men that history has ever known - but this is only due to the fact that the
working classes have until now meekly and mildly received from the commercial
classes their notions as to what democracy means.
No-one
could suppose for a moment that such a thing as the puritanical censorship of
art and letters which now hangs, like a leaden weight, round the neck of every
writer of original power, would be thrust upon us by the victims of sweatshops
and factories. It is thrust upon us,
like everything else which is degrading and uncivilised in our present system,
by the obstinate stupidity and silly sentiment of the self-righteous middle
class, the opponents of everything that is joyous and interesting and subtle
and imaginative. It is devoutly to be
hoped that, when the revolution arrives, the human persons who force their way
to the top and guide the vulcanic eruption will be
such persons as are absolutely free from every kind of middle-class scruple.
There
are among us today vigorous and indignant minds who find in the ugliness and
moral squalor of our situation, the unhappy influence of Christ and his
saints. They are wrong. The history of Oscar Wilde's writings shows
that they are wrong.
It
is the self-satisfied moralist who stands in the way, not the mystic or the
visionary. They spoil everything they
touch, these people. They turn religion
into a set of sentimental inhibitions that would make Marcus Aurelius
blush. They turn faith in pietism,
sanctity into morality, and righteousness into a reeking prurience.
After
all, it is not on the strength of his opinions, wise and sound as these may be,
that Wilde's reputation rests. It rests
on the beauty, in its own way never equalled, of the style in which he
wrote. His style, as he himself points
out, is one which seems to compel its readers to utter its syllables
aloud. Of that deeper and more recondite
charm which lies, in a sense, outside the sphere of vocal articulation, of that
rhythm of the very movements of thought itself which lovers of Walter Pater catch, or dream they catch, in those elaborate
delicately modulated sentences, Wilde has little or nothing.
What
he achieves is a certain crystalline lucidity, clear and pure as the ring of
glass upon glass, and with a mellifluous after-tone or echo of vibration, which
dies away upon the ear in a lingering fall - melancholy and voluptuous, or
light and tender as the hour and the moment lead.
He
is at his best, or at any rate his style shows itself at its best, not in the
utterances of those golden epigrams, the gold of which, as days pass, comes in
certain cases to look lamentably like gilt, but in his use of those
far-descended legendary images gathered up into poetry and art again and again
till they have acquired the very tone of time itself, and a lovely magic,
sudden, swift and arresting, like the odour of "myrrh, aloes, and
cassia."
The
style of Wilde is one of the simplest in existence, but its simplicity is the
very apex and consummation of the artificial.
He uses Biblical language with that self-conscious preciosity
- like the movements of a person walking on tiptoe in the presence of the dead
- which is so different from the sturdy directness of Bunyan or the restrained
rhetoric of the Church of England prayers.
There come moments when this premeditated innocence of tone - this
lisping in liturgical monosyllables - irritates and annoys one. At such times the delicate unction of his naïveté
strikes one, in despite of its gravity, as something a little comic; as though
some very sophisticated and experienced person suddenly joined in a children's
game and began singing in a plaintive tenderly pitched voice -
"This
is the way we wash our hands, wash our hands,
wash
our hands -
This
is the way we wash our hands,
On a cold and frosty morning!"
But
it were absurd to press this point too far. Sophisticated though the simplicity of Wilde is,
it does actually spring with all its ritualistic tiptoeing straight out of his
natural character. He was born
artificial, and he was born with more childishness than the great majority of
children.
I
like to picture him as a great Uranian baby, full of querulousness and peevishness, and eating greedily, with a
sort of guileless wonder that anyone should scold him for it, every species of
forbidden fruit that grows in the garden of life! How infantile really, when one thinks of it,
and how humorously solemn the man's inordinate gravity over the touch of soft
fabrics and the odour of rare perfumes!
One seems to see him, a languid-limbed "revenant", with
heavy-lidded drowsy eyes and voluptuous lips, emerging all swathed and wrapped
in costly cerements out of the tomb of some Babylonian king.
After
all, it remains a tremendous triumph of personality, the manner in which this
portly modern Antinous has taken captive our
imagination. His influence is
everywhere, like an odour, like an atmosphere, like a diffused flame. We cannot escape from him.
In
those ridiculous wit-contests with Whistler, from which he always emerged
defeated, how much more generous and careless and noble he appears than the
wasp-like artist who could rap out so smartly the appropriate retort! He seems like a great lazy king, at such
times, caught off his guard by some skipping and clever knave of his spoilt
retinue. Perhaps even now no small a
portion of the amused and astonished wonder he excites is due to the fact that
he really had, what so few of us have, a veritable passion for precious stuffs
and woven fabrics and ivory and cedar wood and beads of amber and orchid-petals
and pearl-tinted shells and lapis-lazuli and attar of roses.
It
is open to doubt whether even among artists, there are many who share Wilde's
Hellenic ecstasy in these things. This
at any rate was no pose. He poses as a
man of the world. He posed as an immoralist. He posed
as a paradoxist.
He posed in a thousand perverse directions. But when it comes to the colour and texture
and odour and shape of beautiful and rare things - there, in his voluptuous
delight in these, he was undeniably sincere.
He
was of course no learned virtuoso. But
what does that matter? The real artist
is seldom a patient collector or an encyclopedic
authority. That is the rôle of Museum people and of compilers of handbooks. Many thoroughly uninteresting minds know more
about Assyrian pottery and Chinese pictures than Oscar Wilde knew about wild
flowers.
Knowledge,
as he teaches us himself, and it is one of the profoundest of his doctrines, is
nothing. Knowledge is external and
incidental. The important thing is that
one's senses should be passionately alive and one's imagination fearlessly
far-reaching.
We
can embrace all the treasures of the Herods and all
the riches of the Cæsars as we lay our fingers upon a
little silver coin, if the divine flame is within us, and, if not, we may
excavate a thousand buried cities and return learned and lean and empty. Well, people must make their own choice and
go their own way. The world is wide,
and Nature has at least this in common with Heaven, that it has many mansions.
The
feverish passion for fair things which obsessed Oscar
Wilde and carried him so far is not for all the sons of men; nor even, in every
hour of their lives, for those who most ardently answer to it. That feverishness burns itself out; that
smouldering fire turns to cold ashes.
Life flows on, though Salome, daughter of Herodias,
lies crushed under the piled-up shields, and though in all the prisons of the
world "the damned grotesques make arabesques, like the wind upon the
sand."
Life
flows on, and the quips and merry jests of Oscar Wilde, his artful artlessness,
his insolence, his self-pity, his loyalty and fickleness, his sensuality and
tenderness, only fill after all a small space in the heart's chamber of those
who read him and stare at his plays and let him go.
But
there are a few for whom the tragic wantonness of that strange countenance,
with the heavy eyelids and pouting mouth, means something not easily forgotten,
not easily put by.
To
have seen Oscar Wilde and talked with him gives to such persons a strange
significance, an almost religious value.
One looks long at them, as if to catch some far-off reflection from the
wit of the dead man. They do not seem to
us quite like the rest. They have seen
Oscar Wilde, and "They know what they have seen." For when all has been said against him that
can be said it remains that Oscar Wilde, for good and for evil, in innocence
and in excess, in orthodoxy and in rebellion, is a "symbolic figure".
It
is indeed easy enough, when one is under the spell of the golden gaiety of his
wit, to forget the essential and irresistible truth of so many of his
utterances.
That
profound association between the "Sorrow that endureth
forever" and the "Pleasure that abideth for
a moment", which he symbolises under the parable of the Image of Bronze,
has its place throughout all his work.
It
is a mistake to regard De Profundis as a recantation. It is a fulfilment, a completion, a rounding
off. Like a black and a scarlet thread
running through the whole tapestry of his tragic story are the two parallel "motifs",
the passion of the beauty which leads to destruction and the passion of the
beauty which leads to life.
It
matters little whether he was or was not received into the Church before he
died. In the larger sense he was always
within those unexcluding walls, those spacious courts
of the Ecclesia of humanity. There was
no trace in him, for all his caprices, of that puritanism
of denial which breaks the altars and shatters the idols at the bidding of
scientific iconoclasm.
What
the anonymous instinct of humanity has rendered beautiful by building into it
the golden monuments of forlorn hopes and washing it with the salt tears of
desperate chances remained beautiful to him.
From the narcissus-flowers growing on the marble ledges of Parnassus,
where Apollo still weeps for the death of Hyacinth and Pan still mourns the
vanishing of Syrinx, to the passion-flowers growing
on the slopes of Calvary, he, this lover of eidola and images, worships the
white feet of the bearers of dead beauty, and finds in the tears of all the
lovers of all the lost a revivifying rain that even in the midst of the dust of
our degeneracy makes bloom once more, full of freshness and promise, the
mystical red rose of the world's desire.
The
wit of his "Golden lads and girls" in those superb comedies may soon
fall a little faint and thin upon our ears.
To the next generation it may seem as faded and old-fashioned as the wit
of Congreve or Sheridan. Fashions of
humour change more quickly than the fashions of manner or of dress. The only thing that gives immortality to
human writing is the "eternal bronze" of a noble and imaginative
style. Out of such divine material, with
all his petulances and perversities, Oscar Wilde's
style was hammered and beaten. For there
is only one quarry of this most precious metal, and the same hand that shapes
from it the "Sorrow that endureth forever"
must shape from it the "Pleasure that abideth
for a moment", and the identity of these two with that immortal bronze is
the symbol of the mystery of our life.
The
senses that are quickened by the knowledge of this mystery are not far from the
ultimate secret. As with the thing sculptured, so with the sculptor.
Oscar
Wilde is a symbolic figure.