The novels of Huysmans, however we
may regard them as novels, are, at all events, the
sincere and complete expression of a very remarkable
personality. From Marthe to La-Bas
every story, every volume, disengages the same atmosphere-the
atmosphere of a London November, when mere existence
is a sufficient burden, and the little miseries of
life loom up through the fog into a vague and formidable
grotesqueness. Here, for once, is a pessimist
whose philosophy is mere sensation-and
sensation, after all, is the one certainty in a world
which may be well or ill arranged, for ultimate purposes,
but which is certainly, for each of us, what each
of us feels it to be. To Huysmans the world appears
to be a profoundly uncomfortable, unpleasant, ridiculous
place, with a certain solace in various forms of art,
and certain possibilities of at least temporary escape.
Part of his work presents to us a picture of ordinary
life as he conceives it, in its uniform trivial wretchedness;
in another part he has made experiment in directions
which have seemed to promise escape, relief; in yet
other portions he has allowed himself the delight
of his sole enthusiasm, the enthusiasm of art.
He himself would be the first to acknowledge-indeed,
practically, he has acknowledged-that the
particular way in which he sees life is a matter of
personal temperament and constitution, a matter of
nerves. The Goncourts have never tired of insisting
on the fact of their névrose, of pointing out
its importance in connection with the form and structure
of their work, their touch on style, even. To
them the maladie fin de siecle has come delicately,
as to the chlorotic fine ladies of the Faubourg Saint-Germain:
it has sharpened their senses to a point of morbid
acuteness, it has given their work a certain feverish
beauty. To Huysmans it has given the exaggerated
horror of whatever is ugly and unpleasant, with the
fatal instinct of discovering, the fatal necessity
of contemplating, every flaw and every discomfort that
a somewhat imperfect world can offer for inspection.
It is the transposition of the ideal. Relative
values are lost, for it is the sense of the disagreeable
only that is heightened; and the world, in this strange
disorder of vision, assumes an aspect which can only
be compared with that of a drop of impure water under
the microscope. ’Nature seen through a
temperament’ is Zola’s definition of all
art. Nothing, certainly, could be more exact
and expressive as a definition of the art of Huysmans.
To realise how faithfully and how
completely Huysmans has revealed himself in all he
has written, it is necessary to know the man.
’He gave me the impression of a cat,’
some interviewer once wrote of him; ’courteous,
perfectly polite, almost amiable, but all nerves, ready
to shoot out his claws at the least word.’
And, indeed, there is something of his favourite animal
about him. The face is grey, wearily alert, with
a look of benevolent malice. At first sight it
is commonplace, the features are ordinary, one seems
to have seen it at the Bourse or the Stock Exchange.
But gradually that strange, unvarying expression, that
look of benevolent malice, grows upon you as the influence
of the man makes itself felt. I have seen Huysmans
in his office-he is an employe in the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, and a model employe; I have seen
him in a cafe, in various houses; but I always see
him in memory as I used to see him at the house of
the bizarre Madame X. He leans back on the sofa, rolling
a cigarette between his thin, expressive fingers, looking
at no one and at nothing, while Madame X. moves about
with solid vivacity in the midst of her extraordinary
menagerie of bric-a-brac. The spoils of
all the world are there, in that incredibly tiny salon;
they lie underfoot, they climb up walls, they cling
to screens, brackets, and tables; one of your elbows
menaces a Japanese toy, the other a Dresden china
shepherdess; all the colours of the rainbow clash
in a barbaric discord of notes. And in a corner
of this fantastic room, Huysmans lies back indifferently
on the sofa, with the air of one perfectly resigned
to the boredom of life. Something is said by my
learned friend who is to write for the new periodical,
or perhaps it is the young editor of the new periodical
who speaks, or (if that were not impossible) the taciturn
Englishman who accompanies me; and Huysmans, without
looking up, and without taking the trouble to speak
very distinctly, picks up the phrase, transforms it,
more likely transpierces it, in a perfectly turned
sentence, a phrase of impromptu elaboration.
Perhaps it is only a stupid book that some one has
mentioned, or a stupid woman; as he speaks, the book
looms up before one, becomes monstrous in its dulness,
a masterpiece and miracle of imbecility; the unimportant
little woman grows into a slow horror before your eyes.
It is always the unpleasant aspect of things that
he seizes, but the intensity of his revolt from that
unpleasantness brings a touch of the sublime into
the very expression of his disgust. Every sentence
is an epigram, and every epigram slaughters a reputation
or an idea. He speaks with an accent as of pained
surprise, an amused look of contempt, so profound
that it becomes almost pity, for human imbecility.
Yes, that is the true Huysmans, the
Huysmans of A Rebours, and it is just such
surroundings that seem to bring out his peculiar quality.
With this contempt for humanity, this hatred of mediocrity,
this passion for a somewhat exotic kind of modernity,
an artist who is so exclusively an artist was sure,
one day or another, to produce a work which, being
produced to please himself, and being entirely typical
of himself, would be, in a way, the quintessence of
contemporary Decadence. And it is precisely such
a book that Huysmans has written, in the extravagant,
astonishing A Rebours. All his other books
are a sort of unconscious preparation for this one
book, a sort of inevitable and scarcely necessary
sequel to it. They range themselves along the
line of a somewhat erratic development, from Baudelaire,
through Goncourt, by way of Zola, to the surprising
originality of so disconcerting an exception to any
and every order of things.
The descendant of a long line of Dutch
painters-one of whom, Cornelius Huysmans,
has a certain fame among the lesser landscape men of
the great period-Joris-Karl Huysmans was
born at Paris, February 5, 1848. His first book,
Le Drageoir a Épices, published at the age of
twenty-six, is a pasticcio of prose poems,
done after Baudelaire, of little sketches, done after
Dutch artists, together with a few studies of Parisian
landscape, done after nature. It shows us the
careful, laboured work of a really artistic temperament;
it betrays, here and there, the spirit of acrimonious
observation which is to count for so much with Huysmans-in
the crude malice of ‘L’Extase,’ for
example, in the notation of the ‘richness of
tone,’ the ‘superb colouring,’ of
an old drunkard. And one sees already something
of the novelty and the precision of his description,
the novelty and the unpleasantness of the subjects
which he chooses to describe, in this vividly exact
picture of the carcass of a cow hung up outside a
butcher’s shop: ’As in a hothouse,
a marvellous vegetation flourished in the carcass.
Veins shot out on every side like trails of bind-weed;
dishevelled branch-work extended itself along the
body, an efflorescence of entrails unfurled their
violet-tinted corollas, and big clusters of fat stood
out, a sharp white, against the red medley of quivering
flesh.’
In Marthe: histoire d’une
fille, which followed in 1876, two years later,
Huysmans is almost as far from actual achievement as
in Le Drageoir a Épices, but the book, in its
crude attempt to deal realistically, and somewhat
after the manner of Goncourt, with the life of a prostitute
of the lowest depths, marks a considerable advance
upon the somewhat casual experiments of his earlier
manner. It is important to remember that Marthe
preceded La Fille Elisa and Nana.
’I write what I see, what I feel, and what I
have experienced,’ says the brief and defiant
preface, ’and I write it as well as I can:
that is all. This explanation is not an excuse,
it is simply the statement of the aim that I pursue
in art.’ Explanation or excuse notwithstanding,
the book was forbidden to be sold in France.
It is Naturalism in its earliest and most pitiless
stage-Naturalism which commits the error
of evoking no sort of interest in this unhappy creature
who rises a little from her native gutter, only to
fall back more woefully into the gutter again.
Goncourt’s Elisa at least interests us; Zola’s
Nana at all events appeals to our senses. But
Marthe is a mere document, like her story. Notes
have been taken-no doubt sur lé vif-they
have been strung together, and here they are, with
only an interesting brutality, a curious sordidness
to note, in these descriptions that do duty for psychology
and incident alike, in the general flatness of character,
the general dislocation of episode.
Les Soeurs Vatard, published
in 1879, and the short story Sac au Dos, which
appeared in 1880 in the famous Zolaist manifesto, Les
Soirees de Medan, show the influence of Les
Rougon-Macquart rather than of Germinie Lacerteux.
For the time the ‘formula’ of Zola has
been accepted: the result is, a remarkable piece
of work, but a story without a story, a frame without
a picture. With Zola, there is at all events
a beginning and an end, a chain of events, a play of
character upon incident. But in Les Soeurs
Vatard there is no reason for the narrative ever
beginning or ending; there are miracles of description-the
workroom, the rue de Sèvres, the locomotives, the
Foire du pain d’epice-which
lead to nothing; there are interiors, there are interviews,
there are the two work-girls, Celine and Desiree,
and their lovers; there is what Zola himself described
as tout ce milieu ouvrier, ce coin de misère et
d’ignorance, de tranquille ordure et d’air
naturellement empeste. And with it all there
is a heavy sense of stagnancy, a dreary lifelessness.
All that is good in the book reappears, in vastly
better company, in En Ménage (1881), a novel
which is, perhaps, more in the direct line of heritage
from L’Education Sentimentale-the
starting-point of the Naturalistic novel-than
any other novel of the Naturalists.
En Ménage is the story of ’Monsieur
Tout-lé-monde, an insignificant personality, one
of those poor creatures who have not even the supreme
consolation of being able to complain of any injustice
in their fate, for an injustice supposes at all events
a misunderstood merit, a force.’ Andre
is the reduction to the bourgeois formula of the invariable
hero of Huysmans. He is just enough removed from
the commonplace to suffer from it with acuteness.
He cannot get on either with or without a woman in
his establishment. Betrayed by his wife, he consoles
himself with a mistress, and finally goes back to
the wife. And the moral of it all is: ’Let
us be stupidly comfortable, if we can, in any way we
can: but it is almost certain that we cannot.’
In A Vau-l’Eau, a less interesting story
which followed En Ménage, the daily misery of
the respectable M. Folantin, the government employe,
consists in the impossible search for a decent restaurant,
a satisfactory dinner: for M. Folantin, too,
there is only the same counsel of a desperate, an
inevitable resignation. Never has the intolerable
monotony of small inconveniences been so scrupulously,
so unsparingly chronicled, as in these two studies
in the heroic degree of the commonplace. It happens
to Andre, at a certain epoch in his life, to take
back an old servant who had left him many years before.
He finds that she has exactly the same defects as
before, and ‘to find them there again,’
comments the author, ’did not displease him.
He had been expecting them all the time, he saluted
them as old acquaintances, yet with a certain surprise,
notwithstanding, to see them neither grown nor diminished.
He noted for himself with satisfaction that the stupidity
of his servant had remained stationary.’
On another page, referring to the inventor of cards,
Huysmans defines him as one who ’did something
towards suppressing the free exchange of human imbecility.’
Having to say in passing that a girl has returned
from a ball, ‘she was at home again,’ he
observes, ’after the half-dried sweat of the
waltzes.’ In this invariably sarcastic turn
of the phrase, this absoluteness of contempt, this
insistence on the disagreeable, we find the note of
Huysmans, particularly at this point in his career,
when, like Flaubert, he forced himself to contemplate
and to analyse the more mediocre manifestations of
la bêtise humaine.
There is a certain perversity in this
furious contemplation of stupidity, this fanatical
insistence on the exasperating attraction of the sordid
and the disagreeable; and it is by such stages that
we come to A Rebours. But on the way we
have to note a volume of Croquis Parisiens
(1880), in which the virtuoso who is a part of the
artist in Huysmans has executed some of his most astonishing
feats; and a volume on L’Art Moderne
(1883), in which the most modern of artists in literature
has applied himself to the criticism-the
revelation, rather-of modernity in art.
In the latter, Huysmans was the first to declare the
supremacy of Degas-’the greatest artist
that we possess to-day in France’-while
announcing with no less fervour the remote, reactionary,
and intricate genius of Gustave Moreau. He was
the first to discover Raffaelli, ’the painter
of poor people and the open sky-a sort
of Parisian Millet,’ as he called him; the first
to discover Forain, ’lé veritable
peintre de la fille’; the first to discover
Odilon Redon, to do justice to Pissaro and Paul Gauguin.
No literary artist since Baudelaire has made so valuable
a contribution to art criticism, and the Curiosités
Esthétiques are, after all, less exact in their
actual study, less revolutionary, and less really
significant in their critical judgments, than L’Art
Moderne. The Croquis Parisiens, which,
in its first edition, was illustrated by etchings
of Forain and Raffaelli, is simply the attempt to
do in words what those artists have done in aquafortis
or in pastel. There are the same Parisian types-the
omnibus-conductor, the washerwoman, the man who sells
hot chestnuts-the same impressions of a
sick and sorry landscape, La Bièvre, for
preference, in all its desolate and lamentable attraction;
there is a marvellously minute series of studies of
that typically Parisian music-hall, the Folies-Bergère.
Huysmans’ faculty of description is here seen
at its fullest stretch of agility; precise, suggestive,
with all the outline and colour of actual brush-work,
it might even be compared with the art of Degas, only
there is just that last touch wanting, that breath
of palpitating life, which is what we always get in
Degas, what we never get in Huysmans.
In L’Art Moderne, speaking
of the water-colours of Forain, Huysmans attributes
to them ’a specious and cherche art, demanding,
for its appreciation, a certain initiation, a certain
special sense.’ To realise the full value,
the real charm, of A Rebours, some such initiation
might be deemed necessary. In its fantastic unreality,
its exquisite artificiality, it is the natural sequel
of En Ménage and A Vau-l’Eau,
which are so much more acutely sordid than the most
sordid kind of real life; it is the logical outcome
of that hatred and horror of human mediocrity, of
the mediocrity of daily existence, which we have seen
to be the special form of Huysmans’ névrose.
The motto, taken from a thirteenth-century mystic,
Rusbroeck the Admirable, is a cry for escape, for
the ’something in the world that is there in
no satisfying measure, or not at all’:
Il faut que je me rejouisse au-dessus du temps
... quoique lé monde ait horreur de ma joie et que
sa grossièreté ne sache pas ce que je veux dire.
And the book is the history of a Thébaïde raffinee-a
voluntary exile from the world in a new kind of ‘Palace
of Art.’ Des Esseintes, the vague but
typical hero, is one of those half-pathological cases
which help us to understand the full meaning of the
word decadence, which they partly represent.
The last descendant of an ancient family, his impoverished
blood tainted by all sorts of excesses, Des Esseintes
finds himself at thirty sur lé chemin, dégrise,
seul, abominablement lasse. He has already
realised that ’the world is divided, in great
part, into swaggerers and simpletons.’ His
one desire is to ’hide himself away, far from
the world, in some retreat, where he might deaden
the sound of the loud rumbling of inflexible life,
as one covers the street with straw, for sick people.’
This retreat he discovers, just far enough from Paris
to be safe from disturbance, just near enough to be
saved from the nostalgia of the unattainable.
He succeeds in making his house a paradise of the
artificial, choosing the tones of colour that go best
with candle-light, for it need scarcely be said that
Des Esseintes has effected a simple transposition
of night and day. His disappearance from the world
has been complete; it seems to him that the ‘comfortable
desert’ of his exile need never cease to be
just such a luxurious solitude; it seems to him that
he has attained his desire, that he has attained to
happiness.
Disturbing physical symptoms harass
him from time to time, but they pass. It is an
effect of nerves that now and again he is haunted by
remembrance; the recurrence of a perfume, the reading
of a book, brings back a period of life when his deliberate
perversity was exercised actively in matters of the
senses. There are his fantastic banquets, his
fantastic amours: the repas de deuil, Miss
Urania the acrobat, the episode of the ventriloquist-woman
and the reincarnation of the Sphinx and the Chimaera
of Flaubert, the episode of the boy chez Madame
Laure. A casual recollection brings up the schooldays
of his childhood with the Jesuits, and with that the
beliefs of childhood, the fantasies of the Church,
the Catholic abnegation of the Imitatio joining
so strangely with the final philosophy of Schopenhauer.
At times his brain is haunted by social theories-his
dull hatred of the ordinary in life taking form in
the region of ideas. But in the main he feeds
himself, with something of the satisfaction of success,
on the strange food for the sensations with which
he has so laboriously furnished himself. There
are his books, and among these a special library of
the Latin writers of the Decadence. Exasperated
by Virgil, profoundly contemptuous of Horace, he tolerates
Lucan (which is surprising), adores Petronius (as well
he might), and delights in the neologisms and the
exotic novelty of Apuleius. His curiosity extends
to the later Christian poets-from the coloured
verse of Claudian down to the verse which is scarcely
verse of the incoherent ninth century. He is,
of course, an amateur of exquisite printing, of beautiful
bindings, and possesses an incomparable Baudelaire
(edition tiree a un exemplaire), a unique Mallarme.
Catholicism being the adopted religion of the Decadence-for
its venerable age, valuable in such matters as the
age of an old wine, its vague excitation of the senses,
its mystical picturesqueness-Des Esseintes
has a curious collection of the later Catholic literature,
where Lacordaire and the Comte de Falloux, Veuillot
and Ozanam, find their place side by side with the
half-prophetic, half-ingenious Hello, the amalgam
of a monstrous mysticism and a casuistical sensuality,
Barbey d’Aurevilly. His collection of ‘profane’
writers is small, but it is selected for the qualities
of exotic charm that have come to be his only care
in art-for the somewhat diseased, or the
somewhat artificial beauty that alone can strike a
responsive thrill from his exacting nerves. ’Considering
within himself, he realised that a work of art, in
order to attract him, must come to him with that quality
of strangeness demanded by Edgar Poe; but he fared
yet further along this route, and sought for all the
Byzantine flora of the brain, for complicated déliquescences
of style; he required a troubling indecision over which
he could muse, fashioning it after his will to more
of vagueness or of solid form, according to the state
of his mind at the moment. He delighted in a
work of art, both for what it was in itself and for
what it could lend him; he would fain go along with
it, thanks to it, as though sustained by an adjuvant,
as though borne in a vehicle, into a sphere where
his sublimated sensations would wake in him an unaccustomed
stir, the cause of which he would long and vainly seek
to determine.’ So he comes to care supremely
for Baudelaire, ’who, more than any other, possessed
the marvellous power of rendering, with a strange sanity
of expression, the most fleeting, the most wavering
morbid states of exhausted minds, of desolate souls.’
In Flaubert he prefers La Tentation de Saint-Antoine;
in Goncourt, La Faustin; in Zola, La Faute
de l’Abbe Mouret-the exceptional,
the most remote and recherche outcome of each
temperament. And of the three it is the novel
of Goncourt that appeals to him with special intimacy-that
novel which, more than any other, seems to express,
in its exquisitely perverse charm, all that decadent
civilisation of which Des Esseintes is the type
and symbol. In poetry he has discovered the fine
perfume, the evanescent charm, of Paul Verlaine, and
near that great poet (forgetting, strangely, Arthur
Rimbaud) he places two poets who are curious-the
disconcerting, tumultuous Tristan Corbiere, and the
painted and bejewelled Theodore Hannon. With
Edgar Poe he has the instinctive sympathy which drew
Baudelaire to the enigmatically perverse Decadent of
America; he delights, sooner than all the world, in
the astonishing, unbalanced, unachieved genius of
Villiers de l’Isle-Adam. Finally, it is
in Stephane Mallarme that he finds the incarnation
of ’the decadence of a literature, irreparably
affected in its organism, weakened in its ideas by
age, exhausted by the excesses of syntax, sensitive
only to the curiosity which fevers sick people, and
yet hastening to say everything, now at the end, torn
by the wish to atone for all its omissions of enjoyment,
to bequeath its subtlest memories of sorrow on its
death-bed.’
But it is not on books alone that
Des Esseintes nurses his sick and craving fancy.
He pushes his delight in the artificial to the last
limits, and diverts himself with a bouquet of jewels,
a concert of flowers, an orchestra of liqueurs,
an orchestra of perfumes. In flowers he prefers
the real flowers that imitate artificial ones.
It is the monstrosities of nature, the offspring of
unnatural adulteries, that he cherishes in the barbarically
coloured flowers, the plants with barbaric names,
the carnivorous plants of the Antilles-morbid
horrors of vegetation, chosen, not for their beauty,
but for their strangeness. And his imagination
plays harmonies on the sense of taste, like combinations
of music, from the flute-like sweetness of anisette,
the trumpet-note of kirsch, the eager yet velvety
sharpness of curaçao, the clarionet. He
combines scents, weaving them into odorous melodies,
with effects like those of the refrains of certain
poems, employing, for example, the method of Baudelaire
in L’Irreparable and Le Balcon,
where the last line of the stanza is the echo of the
first, in the languorous progression of the melody.
And above all he has his few, carefully chosen pictures,
with their diverse notes of strange beauty and strange
terror-the two Salomes of Gustave Moreau,
the ‘Religious Persécutions’ of Jan
Luyken, the opium-dreams of Odilon Redon. His
favourite artist is Gustave Moreau, and it is on this
superb and disquieting picture that he cares chiefly
to dwell.
A throne, like the high altar of a
cathedral, rose beneath innumerable arches springing
from columns, thick-set as Roman pillars, enamelled
with vari-coloured bricks, set with mosaics,
incrusted with lapis lazuli and sardonyx, in a
palace like the basilica of an architecture at
once Mussulman and Byzantine. In the centre
of the tabernacle surmounting the altar, fronted with
rows of circular steps, sat the Tetrarch Herod,
the tiara on his head, his legs pressed together,
his hands on his knees. His face was yellow,
parchment-like, annulated with wrinkles, withered with
age; his long beard floated like a white cloud
on the jewelled stars that constellated the robe
of netted gold across his breast. Around this
statue, motionless, frozen in the sacred pose of a
Hindu god, perfumes burned, throwing out clouds
of vapour, pierced, as by the phosphorescent
eyes of animals, by the fire of precious stones set
in the sides of the throne; then the vapour mounted,
unrolling itself beneath arches where the blue
smoke mingled with the powdered gold of great
sunrays, fallen from the domes.
In the perverse odour of perfumes,
in the overheated atmosphere of this church,
Salome, her left arm extended in a gesture of command,
her bent right arm holding at the level of the
face a great lotus, advances slowly to the sound
of a guitar, thrummed by a woman who crouches
on the floor.
With collected, solemn, almost august
countenance, she begins the lascivious dance
that should waken the sleeping senses of the aged
Herod; her breasts undulate, become rigid at the
contact of the whirling necklets; diamonds sparkle
on the dead whiteness of her skin, her bracelets,
girdles, rings, shoot sparks; on her triumphal robe,
sewn with pearls, flowered with silver, sheeted with
gold, the jewelled breast-plate, whose every
stitch is a precious stone, bursts into flame,
scatters in snakes of fire, swarms on the ivory-toned,
tea-rose flesh, like splendid insects with dazzling
wings, marbled with carmine, dotted with morning
gold, diapered with steel-blue, streaked with
peacock-green.
In the work of Gustave Moreau, conceived
on no Scriptural data, Des Esseintes saw
at last the realisation of the strange, superhuman
Salome that he had dreamed. She was no more
the mere dancing-girl who, with the corrupt torsion
of her limbs, tears a cry of desire from an old
man; who, with her eddying breasts, her palpitating
body, her quivering thighs, breaks the energy,
melts the will, of a king; she has become the
symbolic deity of indestructible Lust, the goddess
of immortal Hysteria, the accursed Beauty, chosen among
many by the catalepsy that has stiffened her limbs,
that has hardened her muscles; the monstrous,
indifferent, irresponsible, insensible Beast,
poisoning, like Helen of old, all that go near to
her, all that look upon her, all that she touches.
It is in such a ‘Palace of Art’
that Des Esseintes would recreate his already
over-wrought body and brain, and the monotony of its
seclusion is only once broken by a single excursion
into the world without. This one episode of action,
this one touch of realism, in a book given over to
the artificial, confined to a record of sensation,
is a projected voyage to London, a voyage that never
occurs. Des Esseintes has been reading Dickens,
idly, to quiet his nerves, and the violent colours
of those ultra-British scenes and characters have
imposed themselves upon his imagination. Days
of rain and fog complete the picture of that pays
de brume et de boue, and suddenly, stung by the
unwonted desire for change, he takes the train to
Paris, resolved to distract himself by a visit to
London. Arrived in Paris before his time, he takes
a cab to the office of Galignani’s Messenger,
fancying himself, as the rain-drops rattle on the
roof and the mud splashes against the windows, already
in the midst of the immense city, its smoke and dirt.
He reaches Galignani’s Messenger, and
there, turning over Baedekers and Murrays, loses himself
in dreams of an imagined London. He buys a Baedeker,
and, to pass the time, enters the ‘Bodega’
at the corner of the Rue de Rivoli and the Rue Castiglione.
The wine-cellar is crowded with Englishmen: he
sees, as he drinks his port, and listens to the unfamiliar
accents, all the characters of Dickens-a
whole England of caricature; as he drinks his Amontillado,
the recollection of Poe puts a new horror into the
good-humoured faces about him. Leaving the ‘Bodega,’
he steps out again into the rain-swept street, regains
his cab, and drives to the English tavern of the Rue
d’Amsterdam. He has just time for dinner,
and he finds a place beside the insulaires,
with ’their porcelain eyes, their crimson cheeks,’
and orders a heavy English dinner, which he washes
down with ale and porter, seasoning his coffee, as
he imagines we do in England, with gin. As time
passes, and the hour of the train draws near, he begins
to reflect vaguely on his project; he recalls the disillusion
of the visit he had once paid to Holland. Does
not a similar disillusion await him in London?
’Why travel, when one can travel so splendidly
in a chair? Was he not at London already, since
its odours, its atmosphere, its inhabitants, its food,
its utensils, were all about him?’ The train
is due, but he does not stir. ‘I have felt
and seen,’ he says to himself, ’what I
wanted to feel and see. I have been saturated
with English life all this time; it would be madness
to lose, by a clumsy change of place, these imperishable
sensations.’ So he gathers together his
luggage, and goes home again, resolving never to abandon
the ’docile phantasmagoria of the brain’
for the mere realities of the actual world. But
his nervous malady, one of whose symptoms had driven
him forth and brought him back so spasmodically, is
on the increase. He is seized by hallucinations,
haunted by sounds: the hysteria of Schumann, the
morbid exaltation of Berlioz, communicate themselves
to him in the music that besieges his brain.
Obliged at last to send for a doctor, we find him,
at the end of the book, ordered back to Paris, to the
normal life, the normal conditions, with just that
chance of escape from death or madness. So suggestively,
so instructively, closes the record of a strange,
attractive folly-in itself partly a serious
ideal (which indeed is Huysmans’ own), partly
the caricature of that ideal. Des Esseintes,
though studied from a real man, who is known to those
who know a certain kind of society in Paris, is a
type rather than a man: he is the offspring of
the Decadent art that he adores, and this book a sort
of breviary for its worshippers. It has a place
of its own in the literature of the day, for it sums
up, not only a talent, but a spiritual epoch.
A Rebours is a book that can
only be written once, and since that date Huysmans
has published a short story, Un Dilemme (1887),
which is merely a somewhat lengthy anecdote; two novels,
En Rade (1887) and La-Bas (1891), both
of which are interesting experiments, but neither
of them an entire success; and a volume of art criticism,
Certains (1890), notable for a single splendid
essay, that on Felicien Rops, the etcher of the fantastically
erotic. En Rade is a sort of deliberately exaggerated
record-vision rather than record-of
the disillusions of a country sojourn, as they affect
the disordered nerves of a town névrose.
The narrative is punctuated by nightmares, marvellously
woven out of nothing, and with no psychological value-the
human part of the book being a sort of picturesque
pathology at best, the representation of a series
of states of nerves, sharpened by the tragic ennui
of the country. There is a cat which becomes
interesting in its agonies; but the long boredom of
the man and woman is only too faithfully shared with
the reader. La-Bas is a more artistic creation,
on a more solid foundation. It is a study of
Satanism, a dexterous interweaving of the history
of Gilles de Retz (the traditional Bluebeard) with
the contemporary manifestations of the Black Art.
’The execration of impotence, the hate of the
mediocre-that is perhaps one of the most
indulgent definitions of Diabolism,’ says Huysmans,
somewhere in the book, and it is on this side that
one finds the link of connection with the others of
that series of pessimist studies in life. Un naturalisme
spiritualiste, he defines his own art at this point
in its development; and it is in somewhat the ‘documentary’
manner that he applies himself to the study of these
strange problems, half of hysteria, half of a real
mystical corruption that does actually exist in our
midst. I do not know whether the monstrous tableau
of the Black Mass-so marvellously, so revoltingly
described in the central episode of the book-is
still enacted in our days, but I do know that all
but the most horrible practices of the sacrilegious
magic of the Middle Ages are yet performed, from time
to time, in a secrecy which is all but absolute.
The character of Madame Chantelouve is an attempt,
probably the first in literature, to diagnose a case
of Sadism in a woman. To say that it is successful
would be to assume that the thing is possible, which
one hesitates to do. The book is even more disquieting,
to the normal mind, than A Rebours. But
it is not, like that, the study of an exception which
has become a type. It is the study of an exception
which does not profess to be anything but a disease.
Huysmans’ place in contemporary
literature is not quite easy to estimate. There
is a danger of being too much attracted, or too much
repelled, by those qualities of deliberate singularity
which make his work, sincere expression as it is of
his own personality, so artificial and recherche
in itself. With his pronounced, exceptional characteristics,
it would have been impossible for him to write fiction
impersonally, or to range himself, for long, in any
school, under any master. Interrogated one day
as to his opinion of Naturalism, he had but to say
in reply: Au fond, il y a des écrivains qui
ont du talent et d’autres qui n’en ont
pas, qu’ils soient naturalistes, romantiques,
decadents, tout ce que vous voudrez, ca m’est
egal! il s’agit pour moi d’avoir du talent,
et voila tout! But, as we have seen, he has undergone
various influences, he has had his periods. From
the first he has had a style of singular pungency,
novelty, and colour; and, even in Le Drageoir a
Épices, we find such daring combinations as this
(Camaïeu Rouge)-Cette fanfare
de rouge m’etourdissait; cette gamme d’une
intensité furieuse, d’une violence inouïe, m’aveuglait.
Working upon the foundation of Flaubert and of Goncourt,
the two great modern stylists, he has developed an
intensely personal style of his own, in which the
sense of rhythm is entirely dominated by the sense
of colour. He manipulates the French language
with a freedom sometimes barbarous, ‘dragging
his images by the heels or the hair’ (in the
admirable phrase of Leon Bloy) ’up and down
the worm-eaten staircase of terrified syntax,’
gaining, certainly, the effects at which he aims.
He possesses, in the highest degree, that style
tachete et faisande-high-flavoured
and spotted with corruption-that he attributes
to Goncourt and Verlaine. And with this audacious
and barbaric profusion of words-chosen
always for their colour and their vividly expressive
quality-he is able to describe the essentially
modern aspects of things as no one had ever described
them before. No one before him had ever so realised
the perverse charm of the sordid, the perverse charm
of the artificial. Exceptional always, it is
for such qualities as these, rather than for the ordinary
qualities of the novelist, that he is remarkable.
His stories are without incident, they are constructed
to go on until they stop, they are almost without
characters. His psychology is a matter of the
sensations, and chiefly the visual sensations.
The moral nature is ignored, the emotions resolve
themselves for the most part into a sordid ennui,
rising at times into a rage at existence. The
protagonist of every book is not so much a character
as a bundle of impressions and sensations-the
vague outline of a single consciousness, his own.
But it is that single consciousness-in this
morbidly personal writer-with which we
are concerned. For Huysmans’ novels, with
all their strangeness, their charm, their repulsion,
typical too, as they are, of much beside himself,
are certainly the expression of a personality as remarkable
as that of any contemporary writer.
1892.