In one sense this book stands by itself.
It is like nothing else I have written, and if one
should seek to give it the name of a class, it might
be called an historical fantasy.
It followed The Trail of the Sword
and preceded The Seats of the Mighty, and appeared
in the summer of 1895. The critics gave it a reception
which was extremely gratifying, because, as it seemed
to me, they realised what I was trying to do; and
that is a great deal. One great journal said
it read as though it had been written at a sitting;
another called it a tour de force, and the grave Athenaeum
lauded it in a key which was likely to make me nervous,
since it seemed to set a standard which I should find
it hard to preserve in the future. But in truth
the newspaper was right which said that the book read
as though it was written at a sitting, and that it
was a tour de force. The facts are that the book
was written, printed, revised, and ready for press
in five weeks.
The manuscript of the book was complete
within four weeks. It possessed me. I wrote
night and day. There were times when I went to
bed and, unable to sleep, I would get up at two o’clock
or three o’clock in the morning and write till
breakfast time. A couple of hours’ walk
after breakfast, and I would write again until nearly
two o’clock. Then luncheon; afterwards
a couple of hours in the open air, and I would again
write till eight o’clock in the evening.
The world was shut out. I moved in a dream.
The book was begun at Hot Springs, in Virginia, in
the annex to the old Hot Springs Hotel. I could
not write in the hotel itself, so I went to the annex,
and in the big building in the early spring-time I
worked night and day. There was no one else in
the place except the old negro caretaker and his wife.
Four-fifths of the book was written in three weeks
there. Then I went to New York, and at the Lotus
Club, where I had a room, I finished it but
not quite. There were a few pages of the book
to do when I went for my walk in Fifth Avenue one
afternoon. I could not shake the thing off, the
last pages demanded to be written. The sermon
which the old Cure was preaching on Valmond’s
death was running in my head. I could not continue
my walk. Then and there I stepped into the Windsor
Hotel, which I was passing, and asked if there was
a stenographer at liberty. There was. In
the stenographer’s office of the Windsor Hotel,
with the life of a caravanserai buzzing around me,
I dictated the last few pages of When Valmond Came
to Pontiac. It was practically my only experience
of dictation of fiction. I had never been able
to do it, and have not been able to do it since, and
I am glad that it is so, for I should have a fear of
being led into mere rhetoric. It did not, however,
seem to matter with this book. It wrote itself
anywhere. The proofs of the first quarter of the
book were in my hands before I had finished writing
the last quarter.
It took me a long time to recover
from the great effort of that five weeks, but I never
regretted those consuming fires which burned up sleep
and energy and ravaged the vitality of my imagination.
The story was founded on the incident described in
the first pages of the book, which was practically
as I experienced it when I was a little child.
The picture there drawn of Valmond was the memory
of just such a man as stood at the four corners in
front of the little hotel and scattered his hot pennies
to the children of the village. Also, my father
used to tell me as a child a story of Napoleon, whose
history he knew as well as any man living, and something
of that story may be found in the fifth chapter of
the book where Valmond promotes Sergeant Lagroin from
non-commissioned rank, first to be captain, then to
be colonel, and then to be general, all in a moment,
as it were.
I cannot tell the original story as
my father told it to me here, but it was the tale
of how a sergeant in the Old Guard, having shared
his bivouac supper of roasted potatoes with the Emperor,
was told by Napoleon that he should sup with his Emperor
when they returned to Versailles. The old sergeant
appeared at Versailles in course of time and demanded
admittance to the Emperor, saying that he had been
asked to supper. When Napoleon was informed,
he had the veteran shown in and, recognising his comrade
of the baked potatoes, said at once that the sergeant
should sup with him. The sergeant’s reply
was: “Sire, how can a non-commissioned
officer dine with a general?” It was then, Napoleon,
delighted with the humour and the boldness of his grenadier,
summoned the Old Guard, and had the sergeant promoted
to the rank of captain on the spot.
It was these apparently incongruous
things, together with legends that I had heard and
read of Napoleon, which gave me the idea of Valmond.
First, a sketch of about five thousand words was written,
and it looked as though I were going to publish it
as a short story; but one day, sitting in a drawing-room
in front of a grand piano, on the back of which were
a series of miniatures of the noted women who had played
their part in Napoleon’s life, the incident of
the Countess of Carnstadt (I do not use the real name)
at St. Helena associated itself with the picture in
my memory of the philanthropist of the street corner.
Thereupon the whole story of a son of Napoleon, ignorant
of his own birth, but knowing that a son had been
born to Napoleon at St. Helena, flitted through my
imagination; and the story spread out before me all
in an hour, like an army with banners.
The next night for this
happened in New York I went down to Hot
Springs, Virginia, and began a piece of work which
enthralled me as I had never before been enthralled,
and as I have never been enthralled in the same way
since; for it was perilous to health and mental peace.
Fantasy as it is, the book has pictures
of French-Canadian life which are as true as though
the story itself was all true. Characters are
in it like Medallion, the little chemist, the avocat,
Lajeunesse the blacksmith, and Madeleinette, his daughter,
which were in some of the first sketches I ever wrote
of French Canada, and subsequently appearing in the
novelette entitled The Lane That Had No Turning.
Indeed, ’When Valmond Came to Pontiac’,
historical fantasy as it is, has elements both of
romance and realism.
Of all the books which I have written,
perhaps because it cost me so much, because it demanded
so much of me at the time of its writing, I care for
it the most. It was as good work as I could do.
This much may at least be said: that no one has
done anything quite in the same way or used the same
subject, or given it the same treatment. Also
it may be said, as the Saturday Review remarked, that
it contained one whole, new idea, and that was the
pathetic unutterably pathetic incident
of a man driven by the truth in his blood to impersonate
himself.
“Oh,
withered is the garland of the war,
The
Soldier’s pole is fallen.”