GUY
DE MAUPASSANT
A Study by Pol.
Neveux
“I entered
literary life as a meteor, and I shall leave it like a thunderbolt.” These
words of Maupassant to José Maria de Heredia on the occasion of a memorable
meeting are, in spite of their morbid solemnity, not an inexact summing up of
the brief career during which, for ten years, the writer, by turns undaunted
and sorrowful, with the fertility of a master hand produced poetry, novels,
romances and travels, only to sink prematurely into the abyss of madness and
death....
In the month of
April, 1880, an article appeared in the “Le Gaulois” announcing the publication
of the Soirées de Médan. It was signed by a name as yet unknown: Guy de
Maupassant. After a juvenile diatribe against romanticism and a passionate
attack on languorous literature, the writer extolled the study of real life,
and announced the publication of the new work. It was picturesque and charming.
In the quiet of evening, on an island in the Seine, beneath poplars instead of
the Neapolitan cypresses dear to the friends of Boccaccio, amid the continuous
murmur of the valley, and no longer to the sound of the Pyrennean streams that
murmured a faint accompaniment to the tales of Marguerite’s cavaliers, the
master and his disciples took turns in narrating some striking or pathetic
episode of the war. And the issue, in collaboration, of these tales in one volume,
in which the master jostled elbows with his pupils, took on the appearance of a
manifesto, the tone of a challenge, or the utterance of a creed.
In fact,
however, the beginnings had been much more simple, and they had confined
themselves, beneath the trees of Médan, to deciding on a general title for the
work. Zola had contributed the manuscript of the “Attaque du Moulin,” and it
was at Maupassant’s house that the five young men gave in their contributions. Each
one read his story, Maupassant being the last. When he had finished Boule de
Suif, with a spontaneous impulse, with an emotion they never forgot, filled
with enthusiasm at this revelation, they all rose and, without superfluous
words, acclaimed him as a master.
He undertook to
write the article for the Gaulois and, in coöperation with his friends, he
worded it in the terms with which we are familiar, amplifying and embellishing
it, yielding to an inborn taste for mystification which his youth rendered
excusable. The essential point, he said, is to “unmoor” criticism.
It was
unmoored. The following day Wolff wrote a polemical dissertation in the Figaro
and carried away his colleagues. The volume was a brilliant success, thanks to
Boule de Suif. Despite the novelty, the honesty of effort, on the part of all,
no mention was made of the other stories. Relegated to the second rank, they
passed without notice. From his first battle, Maupassant was master of the
field in literature.
At once the
entire press took him up and said what was appropriate regarding the budding
celebrity. Biographers and reporters sought information concerning his life. As
it was very simple and perfectly straightforward, they resorted to invention. And
thus it is that at the present day Maupassant appears to us like one of those
ancient heroes whose origin and death are veiled in mystery.
I will not
dwell on Guy de Maupassant’s younger days. His relatives, his old friends, he
himself, here and there in his works, have furnished us in their letters enough
valuable revelations and touching remembrances of the years preceding his
literary début. His worthy biographer, H. Édouard Maynial, after collecting
intelligently all the writings, condensing and comparing them, has been able to
give us some definite information regarding that early period.
I will simply
recall that he was born on the 5th of August, 1850, near Dieppe, in the castle
of Miromesnil which he describes in Une Vie....
Maupassant,
like Flaubert, was a Norman, through his mother, and through his place of birth
he belonged to that strange and adventurous race, whose heroic and long voyages
on tramp trading ships he liked to recall. And just as the author of “Éducation
sentimentale” seems to have inherited in the paternal line the shrewd realism
of Champagne, so de Maupassant appears to have inherited from his Lorraine
ancestors their indestructible discipline and cold lucidity.
His childhood
was passed at Étretat, his beautiful childhood; it was there that his instincts
were awakened in the unfoldment of his prehistoric soul. Years went by in an
ecstasy of physical happiness. The delight of running at full speed through
fields of gorse, the charm of voyages of discovery in hollows and ravines,
games beneath the dark hedges, a passion for going to sea with the fishermen
and, on nights when there was no moon, for dreaming on their boats of imaginary
voyages.
Mme. de
Maupassant, who had guided her son’s early reading, and had gazed with him at
the sublime spectacle of nature, put off as long as possible the hour of
separation. One day, however, she had to take the child to the little seminary
at Yvetot. Later, he became a student at the college at Rouen, and became a
literary correspondent of Louis Bouilhet. It was at the latter’s house on those
Sundays in winter when the Norman rain drowned the sound of the bells and
dashed against the window panes that the school boy learned to write poetry.
Vacation took
the rhetorician back to the north of Normandy. Now it was shooting at Saint
Julien-l’Hospitalier, across fields, bogs, and through the woods. From that
time on he sealed his pact with the earth, and those “deep and delicate roots”
which attached him to his native soil began to grow. It was of Normandy, broad,
fresh and virile, that he would presently demand his inspiration, fervent and
eager as a boy’s love; it was in her that he would take refuge when, weary of
life, he would implore a truce, or when he simply wished to work and revive his
energies in old-time joys. It was at this time that was born in him that
voluptuous love of the sea, which in later days could alone withdraw him from
the world, calm him, console him.
In 1870 he
lived in the country, then he came to Paris to live; for, the family fortunes
having dwindled, he had to look for a position. For several years he was a
clerk in the Ministry of Marine, where he turned over musty papers, in the
uninteresting company of the clerks of the admiralty.
Then he went
into the department of Public Instruction, where bureaucratic servility is less
intolerable. The daily duties are certainly scarcely more onerous and he had as
chiefs, or colleagues, Xavier Charmes and Leon Dierx, Henry Roujon and René
Billotte, but his office looked out on a beautiful melancholy garden with
immense plane trees around which black circles of crows gathered in winter.
Maupassant made
two divisions of his spare hours, one for boating, and the other for
literature. Every evening in spring, every free day, he ran down to the river
whose mysterious current veiled in fog or sparkling in the sun called to him
and bewitched him. In the islands in the Seine between Chatou and Port-Marly,
on the banks of Sartrouville and Triel he was long noted among the population
of boatmen, who have now vanished, for his unwearying biceps, his cynical
gaiety of goodfellowship, his unfailing practical jokes, his broad witticisms. Sometimes
he would row with frantic speed, free and joyous, through the glowing sunlight
on the stream; sometimes, he would wander along the coast, questioning the
sailors, chatting with the ravageurs, or junk gatherers, or stretched at full
length amid the irises and tansy he would lie for hours watching the frail
insects that play on the surface of the stream, water spiders, or white
butterflies, dragon flies, chasing each other amid the willow leaves, or frogs
asleep on the lily-pads.
The rest of his
life was taken up by his work. Without ever becoming despondent, silent and
persistent, he accumulated manuscripts, poetry, criticisms, plays, romances and
novels. Every week he docilely submitted his work to the great Flaubert, the
childhood friend of his mother and his uncle Alfred Le Poittevin. The master
had consented to assist the young man, to reveal to him the secrets that make
chefs-d’oeuvre immortal. It was he who compelled him to make copious research
and to use direct observation and who inculcated in him a horror of vulgarity
and a contempt for facility.
Maupassant
himself tells us of those severe initiations in the Rue Murillo, or in the tent
at Croisset; he has recalled the implacable didactics of his old master, his
tender brutality, the paternal advice of his generous and candid heart. For
seven years Flaubert slashed, pulverized, the awkward attempts of his pupil
whose success remained uncertain.
Suddenly, in a
flight of spontaneous perfection, he wrote Boule de Suif. His master’s joy was
great and overwhelming. He died two months later.
Until the end
Maupassant remained illuminated by the reflection of the good, vanished giant,
by that touching reflection that comes from the dead to those souls they have
so profoundly stirred. The worship of Flaubert was a religion from which
nothing could distract him, neither work, nor glory, nor slow moving waves, nor
balmy nights.
At the end of
his short life, while his mind was still clear, he wrote to a friend: “I am
always thinking of my poor Flaubert, and I say to myself that I should like to
die if I were sure that anyone would think of me in the same manner.”
During these
long years of his novitiate Maupassant had entered the social literary circles.
He would remain silent, preoccupied; and if anyone, astonished at his silence,
asked him about his plans he answered simply: “I am learning my trade.” However,
under the pseudonym of Guy de Valmont, he had sent some articles to the
newspapers, and, later, with the approval and by the advice of Flaubert, he
published, in the “République des Lettres,” poems signed by his name.
These poems,
overflowing with sensuality, where the hymn to the Earth describes the
transports of physical possession, where the impatience of love expresses
itself in loud melancholy appeals like the calls of animals in the spring
nights, are valuable chiefly inasmuch as they reveal the creature of instinct,
the fawn escaped from his native forests, that Maupassant was in his early
youth. But they add nothing to his glory. They are the “rhymes of a prose
writer” as Jules Lemaitre said. To mould the expression of his thought
according to the strictest laws, and to “narrow it down” to some extent, such
was his aim. Following the example of one of his comrades of Médan, being
readily carried away by precision of style and the rhythm of sentences, by the
imperious rule of the ballad, of the pantoum or the chant royal, Maupassant
also desired to write in metrical lines. However, he never liked this
collection that he often regretted having published. His encounters with
prosody had left him with that monotonous weariness that the horseman and the
fencer feel after a period in the riding school, or a bout with the foils.
Such, in very
broad lines, is the story of Maupassant’s literary apprenticeship.
The day
following the publication of “Boule de Suif,” his reputation began to grow
rapidly. The quality of his story was unrivalled, but at the same time it must
be acknowledged that there were some who, for the sake of discussion, desired
to place a young reputation in opposition to the triumphant brutality of Zola.
From this time
on, Maupassant, at the solicitation of the entire press, set to work and wrote
story after story. His talent, free from all influences, his individuality, are
not disputed for a moment. With a quick step, steady and alert, he advanced to
fame, a fame of which he himself was not aware, but which was so universal,
that no contemporary author during his life ever experienced the same. The
“meteor” sent out its light and its rays were prolonged without limit, in
article after article, volume on volume.
He was now rich
and famous.... He is esteemed all the more as they believe him to be rich and
happy. But they do not know that this young fellow with the sunburnt face,
thick neck and salient muscles whom they invariably compare to a young bull at
liberty, and whose love affairs they whisper, is ill, very ill. At the very
moment that success came to him, the malady that never afterwards left him came
also, and, seated motionless at his side, gazed at him with its threatening
countenance. He suffered from terrible headaches, followed by nights of
insomnia. He had nervous attacks, which he soothed with narcotics and
anesthetics, which he used freely. His sight, which had troubled him at
intervals, became affected, and a celebrated oculist spoke of abnormality,
asymetry of the pupils. The famous young man trembled in secret and was haunted
by all kinds of terrors.
The reader is
charmed at the saneness of this revived art and yet, here and there, he is
surprised to discover, amid descriptions of nature that are full of humanity,
disquieting flights towards the supernatural, distressing conjurations, veiled at
first, of the most commonplace, the most vertiginous shuddering fits of fear,
as old as the world and as eternal as the unknown. But, instead of being
alarmed, he thinks that the author must be gifted with infallible intuition to
follow out thus the taints in his characters, even through their most dangerous
mazes. The reader does not know that these hallucinations which he describes so
minutely were experienced by Maupassant himself; he does not know that the fear
is in himself, the anguish of fear “which is not caused by the presence of
danger, or of inevitable death, but by certain abnormal conditions, by certain
mysterious influences in presence of vague dangers,” the “fear of fear, the
dread of that horrible sensation of incomprehensible terror.”
How can one
explain these physical sufferings and this morbid distress that were known for
some time to his intimates alone? Alas! the explanation is only too simple. All
his life, consciously or unconsciously, Maupassant fought this malady, hidden
as yet, which was latent in him.
Those who first
saw Maupassant when the Contes de la Bécasse and Bel Ami were published were
somewhat astonished at his appearance. He was solidly built, rather short and
had a resolute, determined air, rather unpolished and without those
distinguishing marks of intellect and social position. But his hands were
delicate and supple, and beautiful shadows encircled his eyes.
He received
visitors with the graciousness of the courteous head of a department, who
resigns himself to listen to demands, allowing them to talk as he smiled
faintly, and nonplussing them by his calmness.
How chilling
was this first interview to young enthusiasts who had listened to Zola
unfolding in lyric formula audacious methods, or to the soothing words of Daudet,
who scattered with prodigality striking, thrilling ideas, picturesque outlines
and brilliant synopses. Maupassant’s remarks, in têtes-à-têtes, as in general
conversation, were usually current commonplaces and on ordinary time-worn
topics. Convinced of the superfluousness of words, perhaps he confounded them
all in the same category, placing the same estimate on a thought nobly
expressed as on a sally of coarse wit. One would have thought so, to see the
indifference with which he treated alike the chatter of the most decided
mediocrities and the conversation of the noblest minds of the day. Not an
avowal, not a confidence, that shed light on his life work. Parsimonious of all
he observed, he never related a typical anecdote, or offered a suggestive
remark. Praise, even, did not move him, and if by chance he became animated it
was to tell some practical joke, some atelier hoaxes, as if he had given
himself up to the pleasure of hoaxing and mystifying people.
He appeared
besides to look upon art as a pastime, literature as an occupation useless at
best, while he willingly relegated love to the performance of a function, and
suspected the motives of the most meritorious actions.
Some say that
this was the inborn basis of his personal psychology. I do not believe it. That
he may have had a low estimate of humanity, that he may have mistrusted its
disinterestedness, contested the quality of its virtue, is possible, even
certain. But that he was not personally superior to his heroes I am unwilling
to admit. And if I see in his attitude, as in his language, an evidence of his
inveterate pessimism, I see in it also a method of protecting his secret
thoughts from the curiosity of the vulgar.
Perhaps he
overshot the mark. By dint of hearing morality, art and literature depreciated,
and seeing him preoccupied with boating, and listening to his own accounts of
love affairs which he did not always carry on in the highest class, many ended
by seeing in him one of those terrible Normans who, all through his novels and
stories, carouse and commit social crimes with such commanding assurance and
such calm unmorality.
He was
undoubtedly a Norman, and, according to those who knew him best, many of his
traits of character show that atavism is not always an idle word....
To identify
Maupassant with his characters is a gross error, but is not without precedent. We
always like to trace the author in the hero of a romance, and to seek the actor
beneath the disguise. No doubt, as Taine has said, “the works of an
intelligence have not the intelligence alone for father and mother, but the
whole personality of the man helps to produce them....”
That is why
Maupassant himself says to us, “No, I have not the soul of a decadent, I cannot
look within myself, and the effort I make to understand unknown souls is
incessant, involuntary and dominant. It is not an effort; I experience a sort
of overpowering sense of insight into all that surrounds me. I am impregnated
with it, I yield to it, I submerge myself in these surrounding influences.”
That is,
properly speaking, the peculiarity of all great novelists. Who experiences this
insight, this influence more than Balzac, or Flaubert, in Madame Bovary? And so
with Maupassant, who, pen in hand, is the character he describes, with his
passions, his hatreds, his vices and his virtues. He so incorporates himself in
him that the author disappears, and we ask ourselves in vain what his own
opinion is of what he has just told us. He has none possibly, or if he has he
does not tell it.
This agrees
admirably with the theory of impassivity in literature, so much in vogue when
Maupassant became known. But despite that theory he is, if one understands him,
quite other than
“A
being without pity who contemplated suffering.”
He has the
deepest sympathy for the weak, for the victims of the deceptions of society,
for the sufferings of the obscure. If the successful adventurer, Lesable, and
the handsome Maze are the objects of his veiled irony, he maintains, or feels a
sorrowful, though somewhat disdainful tenderness, for poor old Savon, the old
copying clerk of the Ministry of Marine, who is the drudge of the office and
whose colleagues laugh at him because his wife deceived him, sans espoir
d’“heritage.”
Why did
Maupassant at the start win universal favor? It is because he had direct
genius, the clear vision of a “primitive” (an artist of the pre-Renaissance). His
materials were just those of a graduate who, having left college, has satisfied
his curiosity. Grasping the simple and ingenious, but strong and appropriate
tools that he himself has forged, he starts out in the forest of romance, and
instead of being overcome by the enchantment of its mystery, he walks through
it unfalteringly with a joyful step....
He was a minstrel.
Offspring of a race, and not the inheritor of a formula, he narrated to his
contemporaries, bewildered by the lyrical deformities of romanticism, stories
of human beings, simple and logical, like those which formerly delighted our
parents.
The French reader
who wished to be amused was at once at home, on the same footing with him.... More
spontaneous than the first troubadours, he banished from his writings abstract
and general types, “romanticized” life itself, and not myths, those eternal
legends that stray through the highways of the world.
Study closely
these minstrels in recent works; read M. Joseph Bédier’s beautiful work, Les
Fabliaux, and you will see how, in Maupassant’s prose, ancestors, whom he
doubtless never knew, are brought to life.
The Minstrel
feels neither anger nor sympathy; he neither censures, nor moralizes; for the
self-satisfied Middle Ages cannot conceive the possibility of a different
world. Brief, quick, he despises aims and methods, his only object is to
entertain his auditors. Amusing and witty, he cares only for laughter and
ridicule....
But
Maupassant’s stories are singularly different in character. In the nineteenth
century the Gallic intellect had long since foundered amid vileness and
debauchery. In the provinces the ancient humor had disappeared; one chattered
still about nothing, but without point, without wit; “trifling” was over, as
they call it in Champagne. The nauseating pabulum of the newspapers and low
political intrigue had withered the French intellect, that delicate, rare
intellect, the last traces of which fade away in the Alsatian stories of
Erckman-Chatrian, in the Provençal tales of Alphonse Daudet, in the novels of
Emile Pouvillon. Maupassant is not one of them. He knows nothing about humor,
for he never found it in Life....
His ambition
was not to make one laugh; he writes for the pleasure of recalling, without
bias, what, to him, seems a halfway and dangerous truth.... In his pessimism,
Maupassant despises the race, society, civilization and the world....
If Maupassant
draws from anyone it is Schopenhauer and Herbert Spencer, of whom he often
speaks, although one does not know if he studied them very deeply. In all his
books, excepting, of course, in the case of lines from the great tragic poets,
one finds only one credited reference, which in to Sir John Lubbock’s work on
ants, an extract from which is introduced into Yvette.
No one was less
bookish than himself. He was a designer, and one of the greatest in literature.
His heroes, little folk, artisans or rustics, bureaucrats or shopkeepers,
prostitutes or rakes, he places them in faintly colored, but well-defined
surroundings. And, immediately, the simplified landscape gives the keynote of
the story.
In his
descriptions he resists the temptation of asserting his personal view. He will
not allow himself to see more of his landscape than his characters themselves
see. He is also careful to avoid all refined terms and expressions, to
introduce no element superior to the characters of his heroes.
He never makes inanimate
nature intervene directly in human tribulations; she laughs at our joys and our
sorrows.... Once, only, in one of his works, the trees join in the universal
mourning—the great, sad beeches weep in autumn for the soul, the little soul,
of la petite Roque.
And yet
Maupassant adores this nature, the one thing that moves him.... But, in spite
of this, he can control himself; the artist is aware of the danger to his
narration should he indulge in the transports of a lover.
With an inborn
perception, Maupassant at once seizes on the principal detail, the essential
peculiarity that distinguishes a character and builds round it. He also, in the
presentation of his character, assumes an authority that no writer, not even
Balzac, ever equalled....
He traces what
he sees with rapid strokes. His work is a vast collection of powerful sketches,
synthetic draftings. Like all great artists, he was a simplifier; he knew how
to “sacrifice” like the Egyptians and Greeks....
Thanks to his
rapid methods the master “cinematographed,” if I may use the word,
inexhaustible stories. Among them, each person may find himself represented,
the artist, the clerk, the thinker, and the non-commissioned officer.
Maupassant was
always impatient to “realize” his observations. He might forget, and above all,
the flower of the sensation might lose its perfume. In Une Vie he hastens to
sum up his childhood’s recollections. As for Bel Ami, he wrote it from day to
day as he haunted the offices of Editors.
As for his
style, it is limpid, accurate, easy and strongly marked, with a sound framework
and having the suppleness of a living organism.
Very
industrious and very careful at first, Maupassant, in the fever of production,
became less careful. He early accustomed himself to composing in his mind.
“Composition amuses me,” he said, “when I am thinking it out, and not when I am
writing it.” ... Once he had thought out his novels or romances, he transcribed
them hurriedly, almost mechanically. In his manuscripts, long pages follow each
other without an erasure.
His language
appears natural, easy, and at first sight seems spontaneous. But at the price
of what effort was it not acquired! ...
In reality, in
the writer, his sense of sight and smell were perfected, to the detriment of
the sense of hearing which is not very musical. Repetitions, assonances, do not
always shock Maupassant, who is sometimes insensible to quantity as he is to
harmony. He does not “orchestrate,” he has not inherited the “organ pipes” of
Flaubert.
In his
vocabulary there is no research; he never even requires a rare word....
Those whom
Flaubert’s great organ tones delighted, those whom Theophile Gautier’s frescoes
enchanted, were not satisfied, and accused Maupassant, somewhat harshly, of not
being a “writer” in the highest sense of the term. The reproach is unmerited,
for there is but one style.
But, on the
other hand, it is difficult to admit, with an eminent academician that
Maupassant must be a great writer, a classical writer, in fact, simply because
he “had no style,” a condition of perfection “in that form of literary art in
which the personality of the author should not appear, in the romance, the
story, and the drama.”
A classic,
Maupassant undoubtedly is, as the critic to whom I alluded has said, “through
the simple aptness of his terms and his contempt for frivolous ornamentation.”
He remains a
great writer because, like Molière, La Bruyère, and La Fontaine, he is always
close to nature, disdaining all studied rhetorical effect and all literary
verbosity.
For applause
and fame Maupassant cared nothing, and his proud contempt for Orders and
Academies is well known.
In a letter to
Marie Bashkirtseff he writes as follows:
“Everything in
life is almost alike to me, men, women, events. This is my true confession of
faith, and I may add what you may not believe, which is that I do not care any
more for myself than I do for the rest. All is divided into ennui, comedy and
misery. I am indifferent to everything. I pass two-thirds of my time in being
terribly bored. I pass the third portion in writing sentences which I sell as
dear as I can, regretting that I have to ply this abominable trade.”
And in a later
letter:
“I have no
taste that I cannot get rid of at my pleasure, not a desire that I do not scoff
at, not a hope that does not make me smile or laugh. I ask myself why I stir,
why I go hither or thither, why I give myself the odious trouble of earning
money, since it does not amuse me to spend it.”
And again:
“As for me, I
am incapable of really loving my art. I am too critical, I analyze it too much.
I feel strongly how relative is the value of ideas, words, and even of the
loftiest intelligences. I cannot help despising thought, it is so weak; and
form, it is so imperfect. I really have, in an acute, incurable form, the sense
of human impotence, and of effort which results in wretched approximations.”
For nature,
Maupassant had an ardent passion.... His whole being quivered when she bathed
his forehead with her light ocean breeze. She, alone, knew how to rock and
soothe him with her waves.
Never
satisfied, he wished to see her under all aspects, and travelled incessantly,
first in his native province, amid the meadows and waters of Normandy, then on
the banks of the Seine along which he coasted, bending to the oar. Then
Brittany with its beaches, where high waves rolled in beneath low and dreary
skies, then Auvergne, with its scattered huts amid the sour grass, beneath
rocks of basalt; and, finally, Corsica, Italy, Sicily, not with artistic enthusiasm,
but simply to enjoy the delight of grand, pure outlines. Africa, the country of
Salammbô, the desert, finally call him, and he breathes those distant odors
borne on the slow winds; the sunlight inundates his body, “laves the dark
corners of his soul.” And he retains a troubled memory of the evenings in those
warm climes, where the fragrance of plants and trees seems to take the place of
air.
Maupassant’s
philosophy is as little complicated as his vision of humanity. His pessimism
exceeds in its simplicity and depth that of all other realistic writers.
Still there are
contradictions and not unimportant ones in him. The most striking is certainly
his fear of Death. He sees it everywhere, it haunts him. He sees it on the
horizon of landscapes, and it crosses his path on lonely roads. When it is not
hovering over his head, it is circling round him as around Gustave Moreau’s
pale youth.... Can he, the determined materialist, really fear the stupor of
eternal sleep, or the dispersion of the transient individuality? ...
Another
contradiction. He who says that contact with the crowd “tortures his nerves,”
and who professes such contempt for mankind, yet considers solitude as one of
the bitterest torments of existence. And he bewails the fact that he cannot live
just for himself, “keep within himself that secret place of the ego, where none
can enter.”
“Alas!” said
his master, “we are all in a desert.” Nobody understands anyone else and
“whatever we attempt, whatever be the impulse of our heart and the appeal of
our lips, we shall always be alone!”
In this gehenna
of death, in these nostalgias of the past, in these trances of eternal
isolation, may we not find some relinquishing of his philosophy? Certainly not,
for these contradictions accentuate all the more the pain of existence and
become a new source of suffering.
In any case,
Maupassant’s pessimism becomes logical in terminating in pity, like that of
Schopenhauer. I know that I am running foul of certain admirers of the author
who do not see any pity in his work, and it is understood that he is pitiless. But
examine his stories more closely and you will find it revealed in every page,
provided you go to the very bottom of the subject. That is where it exists
naturally, almost against the desire of the writer, who does not arouse pity,
nor teach it.
And, again, if
it remains concealed from so many readers, it is because it has nothing to do
with the humanitarian pity retailed by rhetoricians. It is philosophical and
haughty, detached from any “anthropocentric” characteristics. It is universal
suffering that it covers. And to tell the truth, it is man, the hypocritical
and cunning biped who has the least share in it. Maupassant is helpful to all
those of his fellows who are tortured by physical suffering, social cruelty and
the criminal dangers of life, but he pities them without caring for them, and
his kindness makes distinctions.
On the other
hand, the pessimist has all the tenderness of a Buddhist for animals, whom the
gospels despise. When he pities the animals, who are worth more than ourselves,
their executioners, when he pities the elementary existences, the plants and
trees, those exquisite creations, he unbends and pours out his heart. The
humbler the victim, the more generously does he espouse its suffering. His
compassion is unbounded for all that lives in misery, that is buffeted about
without understanding why, that “suffers and dies without a word.” And if he
mourned Miss Harriet, in this unaccustomed outburst of enthusiasm, it is
because, like himself, the poor outcast cherished a similar love for “all
things, all living beings.”
Such appears to
me to be Maupassant, the novelist, a story-teller, a writer, and a philosopher
by turns. I will add one more trait; he was devoid of all spirit of criticism. When
he essays to demolish a theory, one is amazed to find in this great, clear
writer such lack of precision of thought, and such weak argument. He wrote the
least eloquent and the most diffuse study of Flaubert, of “that old, dead
master who had won his heart in a manner he could not explain.” And, later, he
shows the same weakness in setting forth, as in proving his theory, in his
essay on the “Evolution of the Novel,” in the introduction to Pierre et Jean.
On the other
hand, he possesses, above many others, a power of creating, hidden and inborn,
which he exercises almost unconsciously. Living, spontaneous and yet impassive
he is the glorious agent of a mysterious function, through which he dominated
literature and will continue to dominate it until the day when he desires to
become literary.
He is as big as
a tree. The author of “Contemporains” has written that Maupassant produced
novels as an apple-tree yields apples. Never was a criticism more irrefutable.
On various
occasions he was pleased with himself at the fertility that had developed in
him amid those rich soils where a frenzy mounts to your brain through the
senses of smell and sight. He even feels the influence of the seasons, and
writes from Provence: “The sap is rising in me, it is true. The spring that I
find just awakening here stirs all my plant nature, and causes me to produce
those literary fruits that ripen in me, I know not how.”
The “meteor” is
at its apogee. All admire and glorify him. It is the period when Alexandre
Dumas, fils, wrote to him thrice: “You are the only author whose books I await
with impatience.”
The day came,
however, when this dominant impassivity became stirred, when the marble became
flesh by contact with life and suffering. And the work of the romancer, begun
by the novelist, became warm with a tenderness that is found for the first time
in Mont Oriol....
But this
sentimental outburst that astonished his admirers quickly dies down, for the
following year, there appeared the sober Pierre et Jean, that admirable masterpiece
of typical reality constructed with “human leaven,” without any admixture of
literary seasoning, or romantic combinations. The reader finds once more in his
splendid integrity the master of yore.
But his heart
has been touched, nevertheless. In the books that follow, his impassivity gives
way like an edifice that has been slowly undermined. With an ever-growing
emotion he relates under slight disguises all his physical distress, all the
terrors of his mind and heart.
What is the
secret of this evolution? The perusal of his works gives us a sufficient
insight into it.
The Minstrel
has been received in country houses; has been admitted to “the ladies’
apartments.” He has given up composing those hurried tales which made his fame,
in order to construct beautiful romances of love and death.... The story teller
has forsaken rustics and peasants, the comrades of the “Repues franches,” for
the nobility and the wealthy. He who formerly frequented Mme. Tellier’s
establishment now praises Michèle de Burne.
Ysolde replaces
Macette. In “l’Ostel de Courtoisie,” Maupassant cultivates the usual
abstractions of the modern Round Table: Distinction and Moderation; Fervor and
Delicacy. We see him inditing love sonnets and becoming a knight of chivalry. The
apologist of brutal pleasures has become a devotee of the “culte de la Dame.”
Everywhere he
was sought after, fêted, petted.... But Maupassant never let himself be carried
away by the tinsel of his prestige, nor the puerility of his enchantment. He
despised at heart the puppets that moved about him as he had formerly despised
his short stories and his petit bourgeois. “Ah,” he cries, “I see them, their
heads, their types, their hearts and their souls! What a clinic for a maker of
books! The disgust with which this humanity inspires me makes me regret still
more that I could not become what I should most have preferred—an Aristophanes,
or a Rabelais.” And he adds: “The world makes failures of all scientists, all
artists, all intelligences that it monopolizes. It aborts all sincere sentiment
by its manner of scattering our taste, our curiosity, our desire, the little
spark of genius that burns in us.”
Maupassant had
to bend to the conditions of his new life. Being well bred, he respected,
outwardly at least, the laws of artificiality and conventionality, and bowed
before the idols of the cave he had entered....
If Maupassant
never became the slave of worldly ideas, the creature of instinct that was part
of his being acquired the refined tastes of the salons, and the manners of the
highest civilization.
The novelist
lived for some time in these enchanted and artificial surroundings, when,
suddenly, his malady became aggravated. He was tortured by neuralgia, and by
new mysterious darting pains. His suffering was so great that he longed to
scream. At the same time, his unhappy heart became softened and he became
singularly emotional. His early faculties were intensified and refined, and in
the overtension of his nerves through suffering his perceptions broadened, and
he gained new ideas of things. This nobler personality Maupassant owes to those
sufferings dear to great souls of whom Daudet speaks. This is what he says:
“If I could
ever tell all, I should utter all the unexplored, repressed and sad thoughts
that I feel in the depths of my being. I feel them swelling and poisoning me as
bile does some people. But if I could one day give them utterance they would
perhaps evaporate, and I might no longer have anything but a light, joyful
heart. Who can say? Thinking becomes an abominable torture when the brain is an
open wound. I have so many wounds in my head that my ideas cannot stir without
making me long to cry out. Why is it? Why is it? Dumas would say that my
stomach is out of order. I believe, rather, that I have a poor, proud, shameful
heart, that old human heart that people laugh at, but which is touched, and
causes me suffering, and in my head as well; I have the mind of the Latin race,
which is very worn out. And, again, there are days when I do not think thus,
but when I suffer just the same; for I belong to the family of the
thin-skinned. But then I do not tell it, I do not show it; I conceal it very
well, I think. Without any doubt, I am thought to be one of the most
indifferent men in the world. I am sceptical, which is not the same thing,
sceptical because I am clear-sighted. And my eyes say to my heart, Hide
yourself, old fellow, you are grotesque, and it hides itself.”
This describes,
in spite of reservation, the struggle between two conflicting minds, that of
yesterday, and that of to-day. But this sensitiveness that Maupassant seeks to
hide, is plain to all clear-seeing people.
He soon begins
to be filled with regrets and forebodings. He has a desire to look into the
unknown, and to search for the inexplicable. He feels in himself that something
is undergoing destruction; he is at times haunted by the idea of a double. He
divines that his malady is on guard, ready to pounce on him. He seeks to escape
it, but on the mountains, as beside the sea, nature, formerly his refuge, now
terrifies him.
Then his heart
expands. All the sentiments that he once reviled, he now desires to experience.
He now exalts in his books the passion of love, the passion of sacrifice, the
passion of suffering; he extols self-sacrifice, devotion, the irresistible joy
of ever giving oneself up more and more. The hour is late, the night is at
hand; weary of suffering any longer, he hurriedly begs for tenderness and
remembrance.
Occasionally,
the Maupassant of former days protests against the bondage of his new
personality; he complains that he no longer feels absolutely as formerly that
he has no contact with anything in the world, that sweet, strong sensation that
gives one strength. “How sensible I was,” he says, “to wall myself round with
indifference! If one did not feel, but only understand, without giving
fragments of oneself to other beings! ... It is strange to suffer from the
emptiness, the nothingness, of this life, when one is resigned, as I am, to
nothingness. But, there, I cannot live without recollections, and recollections
sadden me. I can have no hope, I know, but I feel obscurely and unceasingly the
harm of this statement, and the regret that it should be so. And the
attachments that I have in life act on my sensibility, which is too human, and
not literary enough.”
Maupassant’s
pity now takes a pathetic turn. He no longer despises, but holds out his hand
to those unfortunates who, like himself, are tormented on the pathway without
hope. The tears that he sees flow make him sad, and his heart bleeds at all the
wounds he discovers. He does not inquire into the quality or origin of the
misfortune. He sympathizes with all suffering; physical suffering, moral
suffering, the suffering caused by treachery, the bitter twilight of wasted
lives....
His mind has
also become active. He desires to dabble in science. One day he studies the
Arab mystics, Oriental legends, and the next, he studies the marine fauna, etc.
His perceptions have never been so clear. His brain is in continual activity. “It
is strange,” he acknowledges, “what a different man I am becoming mentally from
what I was formerly. I can see it as I watch myself thinking, discovering, and
developing stories, weighing and analyzing the imaginary beings that float
through my imagination. I take the same enjoyment in certain dreams, certain
exaltations of mind, as I formerly took in rowing like mad in the sunlight.”
For the first
time, his assurance as a writer wavers. As his last volumes show, he is
endeavoring to transform, to renew himself. He acquires a desire to learn the
secrets of obscure and precious hearts, to visit unknown races. He has lost his
magnificent serenity....
* * * * *
As his malady
began to take a more definite form, he turned his steps towards the south, only
visiting Paris to see his physicians and publishers. In the old port of Antibes
beyond the causeway of Cannes, his yacht, Bel Ami, which he cherished as a
brother, lay at anchor and awaited him. He took it to the white cities of the
Genoese Gulf, towards the palm trees of Hyères, or the red bay trees of
Anthéor.
It was during
one of these idle cruises on the open sea, outside of Agay and Saint-Raphael
that he wrote “Sur l’Eau.”
It was on the
sacred sea of the old poets and philosophers, on the sea whose voice has rocked
the thought of the world, that he cast into the shadow that long lament, so
heartrending and sublime, that posterity will long shudder at the remembrance
of it. The bitter strophes of this lament seem to be cadenced by the
Mediterranean itself and to be in rhythm, like its melopoeia.
“Sur l’Eau” is
the last Will and Testament, the general confession of Maupassant. To those who
come after him he leaves the legacy of his highest thought; then he says
farewell to all that he loved, to dreams, to starlit nights, and to the breath
of roses. “Sur l’Eau” is the book of modern disenchantment, the faithful mirror
of the latest pessimism. The journal written on board ship, disconnected and
hasty, but so noble in its disorder, has taken a place forever beside Werther
and René, Manfred and Oberman.
He had for a
long time, to his sorrow, seen his health failing under the attacks of an
obscure malady which left him with a sense of the diminution of his powers and
a gradual clouding of his intellect. Symptoms of general paralysis set in, at
first mistaken for neurotic disturbances. He changed greatly. Those who met him
as I did, thin and shivering, on that rainy Sunday when they were celebrating
the inauguration of Flaubert’s monument at Rouen would scarcely have recognized
him. I shall never forget, as long as I live, his face wasted by suffering, his
large eyes with a distressed expression, which emitted dying gleams of protest
against a cruel fate....
Maupassant
retired to Cannes not far from his mother. He read medical books and, in spite
of what they taught, persisted in attributing his sufferings to “rheumatism
localized in the brain,” contracted amid the fogs on the Seine....
Vainly he
endeavored to work, he became gloomy and the idea of suicide impressed him more
and more....
The months
passed, however, and in June he was able to go to Divonne to take a cure. After
a very characteristic attack of optimism, he suddenly appeared at Champel and
astonished everyone by his frightful eccentricities. One evening, however, he
felt better, and read to the poet Dorchain the beginning of his novel “The
Angelus,” which he declared would be his masterpiece. When he had finished, he
wept. “And we wept also,” writes Dorchain, “at seeing all that now remained of
genius, of tenderness and pity in this soul that would never again be capable
of expressing itself so as to impress other minds.... In his accent, in his
language, in his tears, Maupassant had, I know not what, of a religious
character, which exceeded his horror of life, and his sombre terror of
annihilation.”
At the end of
September he again visited Cannes, but the fatal day predicted by the physician
was at hand.
After several
tragic weeks in which, from instinct, he made a desperate fight, on the 1st of
January, 1892, he felt he was hopelessly vanquished, and in a moment of supreme
clearness of intellect, like Gerard de Nerval, he attempted suicide. Less
fortunate than the author of Sylvia, he was unsuccessful. But his mind,
henceforth “indifferent to all unhappiness,” had entered into eternal darkness.
He was taken
back to Paris and placed in Dr. Meuriot’s sanatorium, where, after eighteen
months of mechanical existence, the “meteor” quietly passed away.
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