One of the most popular legends in
Brittany is that relating to an imaginary town called
Is, which is supposed to have been swallowed up by
the sea at some unknown time. There are several
places along the coast which are pointed out as the
site of this imaginary city, and the fishermen have
many strange tales to tell of it. According to
them, the tips of the spires of the churches may be
seen in the hollow of the waves when the sea is rough,
while during a calm the music of their bells, ringing
out the hymn appropriate to the day, rises above the
waters. I often fancy that I have at the bottom
of my heart a city of Is with its bells calling to
prayer a recalcitrant congregation. At times
I halt to listen to these gentle vibrations which seem
as if they came from immeasurable depths, like voices
from another world. Since old age began to steal
over me, I have loved more especially during the repose
which summer brings with it, to gather up these distant
echoes of a vanished Atlantis.
This it is which has given birth to
the six chapters which make up the present volume.
The recollections of my childhood do not pretend to
form a complete and continuous narrative. They
are merely the images which arose before me and the
reflections which suggested themselves to me while
I was calling up a past fifty years old, written down
in the order in which they came. Goethe selected
as the title for his memoirs “Truth and Poetry,”
thereby signifying that a man cannot write his own
biography in the same way that he would that of any
one else. What one says of oneself is always
poetical. To fancy that the small details of
one’s own life are worth recording is to be guilty
of very petty vanity. A man writes such things
in order to transmit to others the theory of the universe
which he carries within himself. The form of
the present work seemed to me a convenient one for
expressing certain shades of thought which my previous
writings did not convey. I had no desire to furnish
information about myself for the future use of those
who might wish to write essays or articles about me.
What in history is a recommendation
would here have been a drawback; the whole of this
small volume is true, but not true in the sense required-for
a “Biographical Dictionary.” I have
said several things with the intent to raise a smile,
and, if such a thing had been compatible with custom,
I might have used the expression cum grano salis
as a marginal note in many cases. I have been
obliged to be very careful in what I wrote. Many
of the persons to whom I refer may be still alive;
and those who are not accustomed to find themselves
in print have a sort of horror of publicity.
I have, therefore, altered several proper names.
In other cases, by means of a slight transposition
of date and place, I have rendered identification
impossible. The story of “the Flax-crusher”
is absolutely true, with the exception that the name
of the manor-house is a fictitious one. With
regard to “Good Master Système,” I
have been furnished by M. Duportal du Godasmeur with
further details which do not confirm certain ideas
entertained by my mother as to the mystery in which
this aged recluse enveloped his existence. I
have, however, made no change in the body of the work,
thinking that it would be better to leave M. Duportal
to publish the true story, known only to himself, of
this enigmatic character.
The chief defect for which I should
feel some apology necessary if this book had any pretension
to be considered a regular memoir of my life, is that
there are many gaps in it. The person who had
the greatest influence on my life, my sister Henriette,
is scarcely mentioned in it. In September 1862,
a year after the death of this invaluable friend,
I wrote for the few persons who had known her well,
a short notice of her life. Only a hundred copies
were printed. My sister was so unassuming, and
she was so averse from the stress and stir of the
world that I should have fancied I could hear her
reproaching me from her grave, if I had made this sketch
public property. I have more than once been tempted
to include it in this volume, but on second thoughts
I have felt that to do so would be an act of profanation.
The pamphlet in question was read and appreciated
by a few persons who were kindly disposed towards her
and towards myself. It would be wrong of me to
expose a memory so sacred in my eyes to the supercilious
criticisms which are part and parcel of the right
acquired by the purchaser of a book. It seemed
to me that in placing the lines referring to her in
a book for the trade I should be acting with as much
impropriety as if I sent a portrait of her for sale
to an auction room. The pamphlet in question will
not, therefore, be reprinted until after my death,
appended to it, very possibly being several of her
letters selected by me beforehand. The natural
sequence of this book, which is neither more nor less
than the sequence in the various periods of my life,
brings about a sort of contrast between the anecdotes
of Brittany and those of the Seminary, the latter
being the details of a darksome struggle, full of reasonings
and hard scholasticism, while the recollections of
my earlier years are instinct with the impressions
of childlike sensitiveness, of candour, of innocence,
and of affection. There is nothing surprising
about this contrast. Nearly all of us are double.
The more a man develops intellectually, the stronger
is his attraction to the opposite pole: that
is to say, to the irrational, to the repose of mind
in absolute ignorance, to the woman who is merely
a woman, the instinctive being who acts solely from
the impulse of an obscure conscience. The fierce
school of controversy, in which the mind of Europe
has been involved since the time of Abelard, induces
periods of mental drought and aridity. The brain,
parched by reasoning, thirsts for simplicity, like
the desert for spring water. When reflection has
brought us up to the last limit of doubt, the spontaneous
affirmation of the good and of the beautiful which
is to be found in the female conscience delights us
and settles the question for us. This is why religion
is preserved to the world by woman alone. A beautiful
and a virtuous woman is the mirage which peoples with
lakes and green avenues our great moral desert.
The superiority of modern science consists in the fact
that each step forward it takes is a step further in
the order of abstractions. We make chemistry
from chemistry, algebra from algebra; the very indefatigability
with which we fathom nature removes us further from
her. This is as it should be, and let no one fear
to prosecute his researches, for out of this merciless
dissection comes life. But we need not be surprised
at the feverish heat which, after these orgies of
dialectics, can only be calmed by the kisses of the
artless creature in whom nature lives and smiles.
Woman restores us to communication with the eternal
spring in which God reflects Himself. The candour
of a child, unconscious of its own beauty and seeing
God clear as the daylight, is the great revelation
of the ideal, just as the unconscious coquetry of
the flower is a proof that Nature adorns herself for
a husband.
One should never write except upon
that which one loves. Oblivion and silence are
the proper punishments to be inflicted upon all that
we meet with in the way of what is ungainly or vulgar
in the course of our journey through life. Referring
to a past which is dear to me, I have spoken of it
with kindly sympathy; but I should be sorry to create
any misapprehension, and to be taken for an uncompromising
reactionist. I love the past, but I envy the future.
It would have been very pleasant to have lived upon
this planet at as late a period as possible.
Descartes would be delighted if he could read some
trivial work on natural philosophy and cosmography
written in the present day. The fourth form school
boy of our age is acquainted with truths to know which
Archimedes would have laid down his life. What
would we not give to be able to get a glimpse of some
book which will be used as a school-primer a hundred
years hence?
We must not, because of our personal
tastes, our prejudices perhaps, set ourselves to oppose
the action of our time. This action goes on without
regard to us, and probably it is right. The world
is moving in the direction of what I may call a kind
of Americanism, which shocks our refined ideas, but
which, when once the crisis of the present hour is
over, may very possibly not be more inimical than the
ancient regime to the only thing which is of
any real importance; viz. the emancipation and
progress of the human mind. A society in which
personal distinction is of little account, in which
talent and wit are not marketable commodities, in
which exalted functions do not ennoble, in which politics
are left to men devoid of standing or ability, in
which the recompenses of life are accorded by preference
to intrigue, to vulgarity, to the charlatans who cultivate
the art of puffing, and to the smart people who just
keep without the clutches of the law, would never
suit us. We have been accustomed to a more protective
system, and to the government patronizing what is noble
and worthy. But we have not secured this patronage
for nothing. Richelieu and Louis XIV. looked
upon it as their duty to provide pensions for men of
merit all the world over; how much better it would
have been, if the spirit of the time had admitted
of it, that they should have left the men of merit
to themselves! The period of the Restoration has
the credit of being a liberal one; yet we should certainly
not like to live now under a regime which warped
such a genius as Cuvier, stifled with paltry compromises
the keen mind of M. Cousin, and retarded the growth
of criticism by half a century. The concessions
which had to be made to the court, to society, and
to the clergy, were far worse than the petty annoyances
which a democracy can inflict upon us.
The eighteen years of the monarchy
of July were in reality a period of liberty, but the
official direction given to things of the mind was
often superficial and no better than would be expected
of the average shopkeeper. With regard to the
second empire, if the ten last years of its duration
in some measure repaired the mischief done in the first
eight, it must never be forgotten how strong this government
was when it was a question of crushing the intelligence,
and how feeble when it came to raising it up.
The present hour is a gloomy one, and the immediate
outlook is not cheerful. Our unfortunate country
is ever threatened with heart disease, and all Europe
is a prey to some deep-rooted malady. But by
way of consolation, let us reflect upon what we have
suffered. The evil to come must be grevious indeed
if we cannot say:
“O passi graviora, dabit deus
his quoque finem.”
The one object in life is the development
of the mind, and the first condition for the development
of the mind is that it should have liberty. The
worst social state, from this point of view, is the
theocratic state, like Islamism or the ancient Pontifical
state, in which dogma reigns supreme. Nations
with an exclusive state religion, like Spain, are
not much better off. Nations in which a religion
of the majority is recognized are also exposed to
serious drawbacks. In behalf of the real or assumed
beliefs of the greatest number, the state considers
itself bound to impose upon thought terms which it
cannot accept. The belief or the opinion of the
one side should not be a fetter upon the other side.
As long as the masses were believers, that is to say,
as long as the same sentiments were almost universally
professed by a people, freedom of research and discussion
was impossible. A colossal weight of stupidity
pressed down upon the human mind. The terrible
catastrophe of the middle ages, that break of a thousand
years in the history of civilization, is due less to
the barbarians than to the triumph of the dogmatic
spirit among the masses.
This is a state of things which is
coming to an end in our time, and we cannot be surprised
if some disturbance ensues. There are no longer
masses which believe; a great number of the people
decline to recognise the supernatural, and the day
is not far distant, when beliefs of this kind will
die out altogether in the masses, just as the belief
in familiar spirits and ghosts have disappeared.
Even if, as is probable, we are to have a temporary
Catholic reaction, the people will not revert to the
Church. Religion has become for once and all
a matter of personal taste. Now beliefs are only
dangerous when they represent something like unanimity,
or an unquestionable majority. When they are
merely individual, there is not a word to be said
against them, and it is our duty to treat them with
the respect which they do not always exhibit for their
adversaries, when they feel that they have force at
their back.
There can be no denying that it will
take time for the liberty, which is the aim and object
of human society, to take root in France as it has
in America. French democracy has several essential
principles to acquire, before it can become a liberal
regime. It will be above all things necessary
that we should have laws as to associations, charitable
foundations, and the right of legacy, analogous to
those which are in force in England and America.
Supposing this progress to be effected (if it is Utopian
to count upon it in France, it is not so for the rest
of Europe, in which the aspirations for English liberty
become every day more intense), we should really not
have much cause to look regretfully upon the favours
conferred by the ancient regime upon things
of the mind. I quite think that if democratic
ideas were to secure a definitive triumph, science
and scientific teaching would soon find the modest
subsidies now accorded them cut off. This is an
eventuality which would have to be accepted as philosophically
as may be. The free foundations would take the
place of the state institutes, the slight drawbacks
being more than compensated for by the advantage of
having no longer to make to the supposed prejudices
of the majority concessions which the state exacted
in return for its pittance. The waste of power
in state institutes is enormous. It may safely
be said that not 50 per cent of a credit voted in
favour of science, art, or literature, is expended
to any effect. Private foundations would not
be exposed to nearly so much waste. It is true
that spurious science would, in these conditions,
flourish side by side with real science, enjoying
the same privileges, and that there would be no official
criterion, as there still is to a certain extent now,
to distinguish the one from the other. But this
criterion becomes every day less reliable. Reason
has to submit to the indignity of taking second place
behind those who have a loud voice, and who speak with
a tone of command. The plaudits and favour of
the public will, for a long time to come, be at the
service of what is false. But the true has great
power, when it is free; the true endures; the false
is ever changing and decays. Thus it is that
the true, though only understood by a select few,
always rises to the surface, and in the end prevails.
In short, it is very possible that
the American-like social condition towards which we
are advancing, independently of any particular form
of government, will not be more intolerable for persons
of intelligence than the better guaranteed social
conditions which we have already been subject to.
In such a world as this will be, it will be no difficult
matter to create very quiet and snug retreats for
oneself. “The era of mediocrity in all things
is about to begin,” remarked a short time ago
that distinguished thinker, M. Arniel of Geneva.
“Equality begets uniformity, and it is by the
sacrifice of the excellent, the remarkable, the extraordinary
that we extirpate what is bad. The whole becomes
less coarse; but the whole becomes more vulgar.”
We may at least hope that vulgarity will not yet a
while persecute freedom of mind. Descartes, living
in the brilliant seventeenth century, was nowhere
so well off as at Amsterdam, because, as “every
one was engaged in trade there,” no one paid
any heed to him. It may be that general vulgarity
will one day be the condition of happiness, for the
worst American vulgarity would not send Giordano Bruno
to the stake or persecute Galileo. We have no
right to be very fastidious. In the past we were
never more than tolerated. This tolerance, if
nothing more, we are assured of in the future.
A narrow-minded, democratic regime is often,
as we know, very troublesome. But for all that
men of intelligence find that they can live in America,
as long as they are not too exacting. Noli me tangere
is the most one can ask for from democracy.
We shall pass through several alternatives of anarchy
and despotism before we find repose in this happy
medium. But liberty is like truth; scarcely any
one loves it on its own account, and yet, owing to
the impossibility of extremes, one always comes back
to it.
We may as well, therefore, allow the
destinies of this planet to work themselves out without
undue concern. We should gain nothing by exclaiming
against them, and a display of temper would be very
much out of place. It is by no means certain
that the earth is not falling short of its destiny,
as has probably happened to countless worlds; it is
even possible that our age may one day be regarded
as the culminating point since which humanity has
been steadily deteriorating; but the universe does
not know the meaning of the word discouragement; it
will commence anew the work which has come to naught;
each fresh check leaves it young, alert, and full of
illusions. Be of good cheer, Nature! Pursue,
like the deaf and blind star-fish which vegetates
in the bed of the ocean, thy obscure task of life;
persevere; mend for the millionth time the broken meshes
of the net; repair the boring-machine which sinks
to the last limits of the attainable the well from
which living water will spring up. Sight and
sight again the aim which thou hast failed to hit throughout
the ages; try to struggle through the scarcely perceptible
opening which leads to another firmament. Thou
hast the infinity of time and space to try the experiment.
He who can commit blunders with impunity is always
certain to succeed.
Happy they who shall have had a part
in this great final triumph which will be the complete
advent of God! A Paradise lost is always, for
him who wills it so, a Paradise regained. Often
as Adam must have mourned the loss of Eden, I fancy
that if he lived, as we are told, 930 years after
his fall, he must often have exclaimed: Felix
culpa! Truth is, whatever may be said to the contrary,
superior to all fictions. One ought never to
regret seeing clearer into the depths. By endeavouring
to increase the treasure of the truths which form the
paid-up capital of humanity, we shall be carrying
on the work of our pious ancestors, who loved the
good and the true as it was understood in their time.
The most fatal error is to believe that one serves
one’s country by calumniating those who founded
it. All ages of a nation are leaves of the self-same
book. The true men of progress are those who profess
as their starting-point a profound respect for the
past. All that we do, all that we are, is the
outcome of ages of labour. For my own part, I
never feel my liberal faith more firmly rooted in me
than when I ponder over the miracles of the ancient
creed, nor more ardent for the work of the future
than when I have been listening for hours to the bells
of the city of Is.