He had always been passionately fond
of flowers, but during his residence at Jutigny, that
love had been lavished upon flowers of all sorts;
he had never cultivated distinctions and discriminations
in regard to them. Now his taste in this direction
had grown refined and self-conscious.
For a long time he had scorned the
popular plants which grow in flat baskets, in watered
pots, under green awnings or under the red parasols
of Parisian markets.
Simultaneous with the refinement of
his literary taste and his preoccupations with art,
which permitted him to be content only in the presence
of choice creations, distilled by subtly troubled brains,
and simultaneous with the weariness he began to feel
in the presence of popular ideas, his love for flowers
had grown purged of all impurities and lees, and had
become clarified.
He compared a florist’s shop
to a microcosm wherein all the categories of society
are represented. Here are poor common flowers,
the kind found in hovels, which are truly at home
only when resting on ledges of garret windows, their
roots thrust into milk bottles and old pans, like
the gilly-flower for example.
And one also finds stupid and pretentious
flowers like the rose which belongs in the porcelain
flowerpots painted by young girls.
Then, there are flowers of noble lineage
like the orchid, so delicate and charming, at once
cold and palpitating, exotic flowers exiled in the
heated glass palaces of Paris, princesses of the vegetable
kingdom living in solitude, having absolutely nothing
in common with the street plants and other bourgeois
flora.
He permitted himself to feel a certain
interest and pity only for the popular flowers enfeebled
by their nearness to the odors of sinks and drains
in the poor quarters. In revenge he detested the
bouquets harmonizing with the cream and gold rooms
of pretentious houses. For the joy of his eyes
he reserved those distinguished, rare blooms which
had been brought from distant lands and whose lives
were sustained by artful devices under artificial
equators.
But this very choice, this predilection
for the conservatory plants had itself changed under
the influence of his mode of thought. Formerly,
during his Parisian days, his love for artificiality
had led him to abandon real flowers and to use in
their place replicas faithfully executed by means
of the miracles performed with India rubber and wire,
calico and taffeta, paper and silk. He was the
possessor of a marvelous collection of tropical plants,
the result of the labors of skilful artists who knew
how to follow nature and recreate her step by step,
taking the flower as a bud, leading it to its full
development, even imitating its decline, reaching such
a point of perfection as to convey every nuance the
most fugitive expressions of the flower when it opens
at dawn and closes at evening, observing the appearance
of the petals curled by the wind or rumpled by the
rain, applying dew drops of gum on its matutinal corollas;
shaping it in full bloom, when the branches bend under
the burden of their sap, or showing the dried stem
and shrivelled cupules, when calyxes are thrown
off and leaves fall to the ground.
This wonderful art had held him entranced
for a long while, but now he was dreaming of another
experiment.
He wished to go one step beyond.
Instead of artificial flowers imitating real flowers,
natural flowers should mimic the artificial ones.
He directed his ideas to this end
and had not to seek long or go far, since his house
lay in the very heart of a famous horticultural region.
He visited the conservatories of the Avenue de Chatillon
and of the Aunay valley, and returned exhausted, his
purse empty, astonished at the strange forms of vegetation
he had seen, thinking of nothing but the species he
had acquired and continually haunted by memories of
magnificent and fantastic plants.
The flowers came several days later.
Des Esseintes holding a list in his
hands, verified each one of his purchases. The
gardeners from their wagons brought a collection of
caladiums which sustained enormous heartshaped
leaves on turgid hairy stalks; while preserving an
air of relationship with its neighbor, no one leaf
repeated the same pattern.
Others were equally extraordinary.
The roses like the Virginale seemed cut out
of varnished cloth or oil-silks; the white ones, like
the Albano, appeared to have been cut out of
an ox’s transparent pleura, or the diaphanous
bladder of a pig. Some, particularly the Madame
Mame, imitated zinc and parodied pieces of stamped
metal having a hue of emperor green, stained by drops
of oil paint and by spots of white and red lead; others
like the Bosphorous, gave the illusion of a
starched calico in crimson and myrtle green; still
others, like the Aurora Borealis, displayed
leaves having the color of raw meat, streaked with
purple sides, violet fibrils, tumefied leaves from
which oozed blue wine and blood.
The Albano and the Aurora
sounded the two extreme notes of temperament, the
apoplexy and chlorosis of this plant.
The gardeners brought still other
varieties which had the appearance of artificial skin
ridged with false veins, and most of them looked as
though consumed by syphilis and leprosy, for they exhibited
livid surfaces of flesh veined with scarlet rash and
damasked with eruptions. Some had the deep red
hue of scars that have just closed or the dark tint
of incipient scabs. Others were marked with matter
raised by scaldings. There were forms which exhibited
shaggy skins hollowed by ulcers and relieved by cankers.
And a few appeared embossed with wounds, covered with
black mercurial hog lard, with green unguents of belladonna
smeared with grains of dust and the yellow micas
of iodoforme.
Collected in his home, these flowers
seemed to Des Esseintes more monstrous than when he
had beheld them, confused with others among the glass
rooms of the conservatory.
“Sapristi!” he exclaimed enthusiastically.
A new plant, modelled like the Caladiums,
the Alocasia Metallica, excited him even more.
It was coated with a layer of bronze green on which
glanced silver reflections. It was the masterpiece
of artificiality. It could be called a piece
of stove pipe, cut by a chimney-maker into the form
of a pike head.
The men next brought clusters of leaves,
lozenge-like in shape and bottle-green in color.
In the center rose a rod at whose end a varnished
ace of hearts swayed. As though meaning to defy
all conceivable forms of plants, a fleshy stalk climbed
through the heart of this intense vermilion ace a
stalk that in some specimens was straight, in others
showed ringlets like a pig’s tail.
It was the Anthurium, an aroid
recently imported into France from Columbia; a variety
of that family to which also belonged an Amorphophallus,
a Cochin China plant with leaves shaped like fish-knives,
with long dark stems seamed with gashes, like lambs
flecked with black.
Des Esseintes exulted.
They brought a new batch of monstrosities
from the wagon: Echinopses, issuing from
padded compresses with rose-colored flowers that looked
like the pitiful stumps; gaping Nidularia revealing
skinless foundations in steel plates; Tillandsia
Lindeni, the color of wine must, with jagged scrapers;
Cypripedia, with complicated contours, a crazy
piece of work seemingly designed by a crazy inventor.
They looked like sabots or like a lady’s
work-table on which lies a human tongue with taut
filaments, such as one sees designed on the illustrated
pages of works treating of the diseases of the throat
and mouth; two little side-pieces, of a red jujube
color, which appeared to have been borrowed from a
child’s toy mill completed this singular collection
of a tongue’s underside with the color of slate
and wine lees, and of a glossy pocket from whose lining
oozed a viscous glue.
He could not remove his eyes from
this unnatural orchid which had been brought from
India. Then the gardeners, impatient at his procrastinations,
themselves began to read the labels fastened to the
pots they were carrying in.
Bewildered, Des Esseintes looked on
and listened to the cacophonous sounds of the names:
the Encephalartos horridus, a gigantic iron
rust-colored artichoke, like those put on portals of
chateaux to foil wall climbers; the Cocos Micania,
a sort of notched and slender palm surrounded by tall
leaves resembling paddles and oars; the Zamia Lehmanni,
an immense pineapple, a wondrous Chester leaf, planted
in sweet-heather soil, its top bristling with barbed
javelins and jagged arrows; the Cibotium Spectabile,
surpassing the others by the craziness of its structure,
hurling a defiance to revery, as it darted, through
the palmated foliage, an enormous orang-outang tail,
a hairy dark tail whose end was twisted into the shape
of a bishop’s cross.
But he gave little heed, for he was
impatiently awaiting the series of plants which most
bewitched him, the vegetable ghouls, the carnivorous
plants; the Antilles Fly-Trap, with its shaggy
border, secreting a digestive liquid, armed with crooked
prickles coiling around each other, forming a grating
about the imprisoned insect; the Drosera of
the peat-bogs, provided with glandular hair; the Sarracena
and the Cephalothus, opening greedy horns capable
of digesting and absorbing real meat; lastly, the
Népenthès, whose capricious appearance transcends
all limits of eccentric forms.
He never wearied of turning in his
hands the pot in which this floral extravagance stirred.
It imitated the gum-tree whose long leaf of dark metallic
green it possessed, but it differed in that a green
string hung from the end of its leaf, an umbilic cord
supporting a greenish urn, streaked with jasper, a
sort of German porcelain pipe, a strange bird’s
nest which tranquilly swung about, revealing an interior
covered with hair.
“This is really something worth
while,” Des Esseintes murmured.
He was forced to tear himself away,
for the gardeners, anxious to leave, were emptying
the wagons of their contents and depositing, without
any semblance of order, the tuberous Bégonias
and black Crotons stained like sheet iron with
Saturn red.
Then he perceived that one name still
remained on his list. It was the Cattleya
of New Granada. On it was designed a little winged
bell of a faded lilac, an almost dead mauve.
He approached, placed his nose above the plant and
quickly recoiled. It exhaled an odor of toy boxes
of painted pine; it recalled the horrors of a New Year’s
Day.
He felt that he would do well to mistrust
it and he almost regretted having admitted, among
the scentless plants, this orchid which evoked the
most disagreeable memories.
As soon as he was alone his gaze took
in this vegetable tide which foamed in the vestibule.
Intermingled with each other, they crossed their swords,
their krisses and stanchions, taking on a resemblance
to a green pile of arms, above which, like barbaric
penons, floated flowers with hard dazzling colors.
The air of the room grew rarefied.
Then, in the shadowy dimness of a corner, near the
floor, a white soft light crept.
He approached and perceived that the
phenomenon came from the Rhizomorphes which
threw out these night-lamp gleams while respiring.
“These plants are amazing,”
he reflected. Then he drew back to let his eye
encompass the whole collection at a glance. His
purpose was achieved. Not one single specimen
seemed real; the cloth, paper, porcelain and metal
seemed to have been loaned by man to nature to enable
her to create her monstrosities. When unable to
imitate man’s handiwork, nature had been reduced
to copying the inner membranes of animals, to borrowing
the vivid tints of their rotting flesh, their magnificent
corruptions.
“All is syphilis,” thought
Des Esseintes, his eye riveted upon the horrible streaked
stainings of the Caladium plants caressed by a ray
of light. And he beheld a sudden vision of humanity
consumed through the centuries by the virus of this
disease. Since the world’s beginnings,
every single creature had, from sire to son, transmitted
the imperishable heritage, the eternal malady which
has ravaged man’s ancestors and whose effects
are visible even in the bones of old fossils that
have been exhumed.
The disease had swept on through the
centuries gaining momentum. It even raged today,
concealed in obscure sufferings, dissimulated under
symptoms of headaches and bronchitis, hysterics and
gout. It crept to the surface from time to time,
preferably attacking the ill-nourished and the poverty
stricken, spotting faces with gold pieces, ironically
decorating the faces of poor wretches, stamping the
mark of money on their skins to aggravate their unhappiness.
And here on the colored leaves of
the plants it was resurgent in its original splendor.
“It is true,” pursued
Des Esseintes, returning to the course of reasoning
he had momentarily abandoned, “it is true that
most often nature, left alone, is incapable of begetting
such perverse and sickly specimens. She furnishes
the original substance, the germ and the earth, the
nourishing womb and the elements of the plant which
man then sets up, models, paints, and sculpts as he
wills. Limited, stubborn and formless though
she be, nature has at last been subjected and her
master has succeeded in changing, through chemical
reaction, the earth’s substances, in using combinations
which had been long matured, cross-fertilization processes
long prepared, in making use of slips and graftings,
and man now forces differently colored flowers in
the same species, invests new tones for her, modifies
to his will the long-standing form of her plants,
polishes the rough clods, puts an end to the period
of botch work, places his stamp on them, imposes on
them the mark of his own unique art.”
“It cannot be gainsaid,”
he thought, resuming his reflections, “that
man in several years is able to effect a selection
which slothful nature can produce only after centuries.
Decidedly the horticulturists are the real artists
nowadays.”
He was a little tired and he felt
stifled in this atmosphere of crowded plants.
The promenades he had taken during the last few days
had exhausted him. The transition had been too
sudden from the tepid atmosphere of his room to the
out-of-doors, from the placid tranquillity of a reclusive
life to an active one. He left the vestibule
and stretched out on his bed to rest, but, absorbed
by this new fancy of his, his mind, even in his sleep,
could not lessen its tension and he was soon wandering
among the gloomy insanities of a nightmare.
He found himself in the center of
a walk, in the heart of the wood; twilight had fallen.
He was strolling by the side of a woman whom he had
never seen before. She was emaciated and had flaxen
hair, a bulldog face, freckles on her cheeks, crooked
teeth projecting under a flat nose. She wore
a nurse’s white apron, a long neckerchief, torn
in strips on her bosom; half-shoes like those worn
by Prussian soldiers and a black bonnet adorned with
frillings and trimmed with a rosette.
There was a foreign look about her,
like that of a mountebank at a fair.
He asked himself who the woman could
be; he felt that she had long been an intimate part
of his life; vainly he sought her origin, her name,
her profession, her reason for being. No recollection
of this liaison, which was inexplicable and yet positive,
rewarded him.
He was searching his past for a clue,
when a strange figure suddenly appeared on horse-back
before them, trotting about for a moment and then
turning around in its saddle. Des Esseintes’
heart almost stopped beating and he stood riveted
to the spot with horror. He nearly fainted.
This enigmatic, sexless figure was green; through her
violet eyelids the eyes were terrible in their cold
blue; pimples surrounded her mouth; horribly emaciated,
skeleton arms bared to the elbows issued from ragged
tattered sleeves and trembled feverishly; and the
skinny legs shivered in shoes that were several sizes
too large.
The ghastly eyes were fixed on Des
Esseintes, penetrating him, freezing his very marrow;
wilder than ever, the bulldog woman threw herself
at him and commenced to howl like a dog at the killing,
her head hanging on her rigid neck.
Suddenly he understood the meaning
of the frightful vision. Before him was the image
of Syphilis.
Pursued by fear and quite beside himself,
he sped down a pathway at top speed and gained a pavillion
standing among the laburnums to the left, where he
fell into a chair, in the passage way.
After a few moments, when he was beginning
to recover his breath, the sound of sobbing made him
lift his head. The bulldog woman was in front
of him and, grotesque and woeful, while warm tears
fell from her eyes, she told him that she had lost
her teeth in her flight. As she spoke she drew
clay pipes from the pocket of her nurse’s apron,
breaking them and shoving pieces of the stems into
the hollows of her gums.
“But she is really absurd,”
Des Esseintes told himself. “These stems
will never stick.” And, as a matter of fact,
they dropped out one after another.
At this moment were heard the galloping
sounds of an approaching horse. A fearful terror
pierced Des Esseintes. His limbs gave way.
The galloping grew louder. Despair brought him
sharply to his senses. He threw himself upon
the woman who was stamping on the pipe bowls, entreating
her to be silent, not to give notice of their presence
by the sound of her shoes. She writhed and struggled
in his grip; he led her to the end of the corridor,
strangling her to prevent her from crying out.
Suddenly he noticed the door of a coffee house, with
green Venetian shutters. It was unlocked; he
pushed it, rushed in headlong and then paused.
Before him, in the center of a vast
glade, huge white pierrots were leaping rabbit-like
under the rays of the moon.
Tears of discouragement welled to
his eyes; never, no never would he succeed in crossing
the threshold. “I shall be crushed,”
he thought. And as though to justify his fears,
the ranks of tall pierrots swarmed and multiplied;
their somersaults now covered the entire horizon, the
whole sky on which they landed now on their heads,
now on their feet.
Then the hoof beats paused. He
was in the passage, behind a round skylight.
More dead than alive, Des Esseintes turned about and
through the round window beheld projecting erect ears,
yellow teeth, nostrils from which breathed two jets
of vapor smelling of phenol.
He sank to the ground, renouncing
all ideas of flight or of resistance. He closed
his eyes so as not to behold the horrible gaze of
Syphilis which penetrated through the wall, which even
pierced his closed lids, which he felt gliding over
his moist spine, over his body whose hair bristled
in pools of cold sweat. He waited for the worst
and even hoped for the coup de grace to end
everything. A moment which seemed to last a century
passed. Shuddering, he opened his eyes.
Everything had vanished. Without any transition,
as though by some stage device, a frightful mineral
landscape receded into the distance, a wan, dead,
waste, gullied landscape. A light illumined this
desolate site, a peaceful white light that recalled
gleams of phosphorus dissolved in oil.
Something that stirred on the ground
became a deathly pale, nude woman whose feet were
covered with green silk stockings.
He contemplated her with curiosity.
As though frizzed by overheated irons, her hair curled,
becoming straight again at the end; her distended
nostrils were the color of roast veal. Her eyes
were desirous, and she called to him in low tones.
He had no time to answer, for already
the woman was changing. Flamboyant colors passed
and repassed in her eyes. Her lips were stained
with a furious Anthurium red. The nipples of her
breasts flashed, painted like two pods of red pepper.
A sudden intuition came to him.
“It is the Flower,” he said. And his
reasoning mania persisted in his nightmare.
Then he observed the frightful irritation
of the breasts and mouth, discovered spots of bister
and copper on the skin of her body, and recoiled bewildered.
But the woman’s eyes fascinated him and he advanced
slowly, attempting to thrust his heels into the earth
so as not to move, letting himself fall, and yet lifting
himself to reach her. Just as he touched her,
the dark Amorphophalli leaped up from all sides
and thrust their leaves into his abdomen which rose
and fell like a sea. He had broken all the plants,
experiencing a limitless disgust in seeing these warm,
firm stems stirring in his hands. Suddenly the
detested plants had disappeared and two arms sought
to enlace him. A terrible anguish made his heart
beat furiously, for the eyes, the horrible eyes of
the woman, had become a clear, cold and terrible blue.
He made a superhuman effort to free himself from her
embrace, but she held him with an irresistible movement.
He beheld the wild Nidularium which yawned,
bleeding, in steel plates.
With his body he touched the hideous
wound of this plant. He felt himself dying, awoke
with a start, suffocating, frozen, mad with fear and
sighing: “Ah! thank God, it was but a dream!”