During the course of this malady which
attacks impoverished races, sudden calms succeed an
attack. Strangely enough, Des Esseintes awoke
one morning recovered; no longer was he tormented by
the throbbing of his neck or by his racking cough.
Instead, he had an ineffable sensation of contentment,
a lightness of mind in which thought was sparklingly
clear, turning from a turbid, opaque, green color to
a liquid iridescence magical with tender rainbow tints.
This lasted several days. Then
hallucinations of odor suddenly appeared.
His room was aromatic with the fragrance
of frangipane; he tried to ascertain if a bottle were
not uncorked no! not a bottle was to be
found in the room, and he passed into his study and
thence to the kitchen. Still the odor persisted.
Des Esseintes rang for his servant
and asked if he smelled anything. The domestic
sniffed the air and declared he could not detect any
perfume. There was no doubt about it: his
nervous attacks had returned again, under the appearance
of a new illusion of the senses.
Fatigued by the tenacity of this imaginary
aroma, he resolved to steep himself in real perfumes,
hoping that this homeopathic treatment would cure
him or would at least drown the persistent odor.
He betook himself to his dressing
room. There, near an old baptistery which he
used as a wash basin, under a long mirror of forged
iron, which, like the edge of a well silvered by the
moon, confined the green dull surface of the mirror,
were bottles of every conceivable size and form, placed
on ivory shelves.
He set them on the table and divided
them into two series: one of the simple perfumes,
pure extracts or spirits, the other of compound perfumes,
designated under the generic term of bouquets.
He sank into an easy chair and meditated.
He had long been skilled in the science
of smell. He believed that this sense could give
one delights equal to those of hearing and sight;
each sense being susceptible, if naturally keen and
if properly cultivated, to new impressions, which
it could intensify, coordinate and compose into that
unity which constitutes a creative work. And it
was not more abnormal and unnatural that an art should
be called into existence by disengaging odors than
that another art should be evoked by detaching sound
waves or by striking the eye with diversely colored
rays. But if no person could discern, without
intuition developed by study, a painting by a master
from a daub, a melody of Beethoven from one by Clapisson,
no more could any one at first, without preliminary
initiation, help confusing a bouquet invented by a
sincere artist with a pot pourri made by some manufacturer
to be sold in groceries and bazaars.
In this art, the branch devoted to
achieving certain effects by artificial methods particularly
delighted him.
Perfumes, in fact, rarely come from
the flowers whose names they bear. The artist
who dared to borrow nature’s elements would only
produce a bastard work which would have neither authenticity
nor style, inasmuch as the essence obtained by the
distillation of flowers would bear but a distant and
vulgar relation to the odor of the living flower,
wafting its fragrance into the air.
Thus, with the exception of the inimitable
jasmine which it is impossible to counterfeit, all
flowers are perfectly represented by the blend of
aromatic spirits, stealing the very personality of
the model, and to it adding that nuance the more,
that heady scent, that rare touch which entitled a
thing to be called a work of art.
To resume, in the science of perfumery,
the artist develops the natural odor of the flowers,
working over his subject like a jeweler refining the
lustre of a gem and making it precious.
Little by little, the arcana of this
art, most neglected of all, was revealed to Des Esseintes
who could now read this language, as diversified and
insinuating as that of literature, this style with
its unexpected concision under its vague flowing appearance.
To achieve this end he had first been
compelled to master the grammar and understand the
syntax of odors, learning the secret of the rules
that regulate them, and, once familiarized with the
dialect, he compared the works of the masters, of
the Atkinsons and Lubins, the Chardins and Violets,
the Legrands and Piesses; then he separated the construction
of their phrases, weighed the value of their words
and the arrangement of their periods.
Later on, in this idiom of fluids,
experience was able to support theories too often
incomplete and banal.
Classic perfumery, in fact, was scarcely
diversified, almost colorless and uniformly issuing
from the mold cast by the ancient chemists. It
was in its dotage, confined to its old alambics,
when the romantic period was born and had modified
the old style, rejuvenating it, making it more supple
and malleable.
Step by step, its history followed
that of our language. The perfumed Louis XIII
style, composed of elements highly prized at that time,
of iris powder, musk, chive and myrtle water already
designated under the name of “water of the angels,”
was hardly sufficient to express the cavalier graces,
the rather crude tones of the period which certain
sonnets of Saint-Amand have preserved for us.
Later, with myrrh and olibanum, the mystic odors,
austere and powerful, the pompous gesture of the great
period, the redundant artifices of oratorial art, the
full, sustained harmonious style of Bossuet and the
masters of the pulpit were almost possible. Still
later, the sophisticated, rather bored graces of French
society under Louis XV, more easily found their interpretation
in the almond which in a manner summed up this epoch;
then, after the ennui and jadedness of the first empire,
which misused Eau de Cologne and rosemary, perfumery
rushed, in the wake of Victor Hugo and Gautier, towards
the Levant. It created oriental combinations,
vivid Eastern nosegays, discovered new intonations,
antithèses which until then had been unattempted,
selected and made use of antique nuances which it
complicated, refined and assorted. It resolutely
rejected that voluntary decrepitude to which it had
been reduced by the Malesherbes, the Boileaus, the
Andrieuxes and the Baour-Lormians, wretched distillers
of their own poems.
But this language had not remained
stationery since the period of 1830. It had continued
to evolve and, patterning itself on the progress of
the century, had advanced parallel with the other arts.
It, too, had yielded to the desires of amateurs and
artists, receiving its inspiration from the Chinese
and Japanese, conceiving fragrant albums, imitating
the Takeoka bouquets of flowers, obtaining the
odor of Rondeletia from the blend of lavender
and clove; the peculiar aroma of Chinese ink from
the marriage of patchouli and camphor; the emanation
of Japanese Hovenia by compounds of citron,
clove and neroli.
Des Esseintes studied and analyzed
the essences of these fluids, experimenting to corroborate
their texts. He took pleasure in playing the
rôle of a psychologist for his personal satisfaction,
in taking apart and re-assembling the machinery of
a work, in separating the pieces forming the structure
of a compound exhalation, and his sense of smell had
thereby attained a sureness that was all but perfect.
Just as a wine merchant has only to
smell a drop of wine to recognize the grape, as a
hop dealer determines the exact value of hops by sniffing
a bag, as a Chinese trader can immediately tell the
origin of the teas he smells, knowing in what farms
of what mountains, in what Buddhistic convents it
was cultivated, the very time when its leaves were
gathered, the state and the degree of torréfaction,
the effect upon it of its proximity to the plum-tree
and other flowers, to all those perfumes which change
its essence, adding to it an unexpected touch and
introducing into its dryish flavor a hint of distant
fresh flowers; just so could Des Esseintes, by inhaling
a dash of perfume, instantly explain its mixture and
the psychology of its blend, and could almost give
the name of the artist who had composed and given it
the personal mark of his individual style.
Naturally he had a collection of all
the products used by perfumers. He even had the
real Mecca balm, that rare balm cultivated only in
certain parts of Arabia Petraea and under the monopoly
of the ruler.
Now, seated in his dressing room in
front of his table, he thought of creating a new bouquet;
and he was overcome by that moment of wavering confidence
familiar to writers when, after months of inaction,
they prepare for a new work.
Like Balzac who was wont to scribble
on many sheets of paper so as to put himself in a
mood for work, Des Esseintes felt the necessity of
steadying his hand by several initial and unimportant
experiments. Desiring to create heliotrope, he
took down bottles of vanilla and almond, then changed
his idea and decided to experiment with sweet peas.
He groped for a long time, unable
to effect the proper combinations, for orange is dominant
in the fragrance of this flower. He attempted
several combinations and ended in achieving the exact
blend by joining tuberose and rose to orange, the
whole united by a drop of vanilla.
His hesitation disappeared. He
felt alert and ready for work; now he made some tea
by blending cassie with iris, then, sure of his technique,
he decided to proceed with a fulminating phrase whose
thunderous roar would annihilate the insidious odor
of almond still hovering over his room.
He worked with amber and with Tonkin
musk, marvelously powerful; with patchouli, the most
poignant of vegetable perfumes whose flower, in its
habitat, wafts an odor of mildew. Try what he
would, the eighteenth century obsessed him; the panier
robes and furbelows appeared before his eyes; memories
of Boucher’s Venus haunted him; recollections
of Themidor’s romance, of the exquisite Rosette
pursued him. Furious, he rose and to rid himself
of the obsession, with all his strength he inhaled
that pure essence of spikenard, so dear to Orientals
and so repulsive to Europeans because of its pronounced
odor of valerian. He was stunned by the violence
of the shock. As though pounded by hammer strokes,
the filigranes of the delicate odor disappeared;
he profited by the period of respite to escape the
dead centuries, the antiquated fumes, and to enter,
as he formerly had done, less limited or more recent
works.
He had of old loved to lull himself
with perfumes. He used effects analogous to those
of the poets, and employed the admirable order of
certain pieces of Baudelaire, such as Irreparable
and lé Balcon, where the last of the five lines
composing the strophe is the echo of the first verse
and returns, like a refrain, to steep the soul in
infinite depths of melancholy and languor.
He strayed into reveries evoked by
those aromatic stanzas, suddenly brought to his point
of departure, to the motive of his meditation, by
the return of the initial theme, reappearing, at stated
intervals, in the fragrant orchestration of the poem.
He actually wished to saunter through
an astonishing, diversified landscape, and he began
with a sonorous, ample phrase that suddenly opened
a long vista of fields for him.
With his vaporizers, he injected an
essence formed of ambrosia, lavender and sweet peas
into this room; this formed an essence which, when
distilled by an artist, deserves the name by which
it is known: “extract of wild grass”;
into this he introduced an exact blend of tuberose,
orange flower and almond, and forthwith artificial
lilacs sprang into being, while the linden-trees rustled,
their thin emanations, imitated by extract of London
tilia, drooping earthward.
Into this decor, arranged with
a few broad lines, receding as far as the eye could
reach, under his closed lids, he introduced a light
rain of human and half feline essences, possessing
the aroma of petticoats, breathing of the powdered,
painted woman, the stephanotis, ayapana, opopanax,
champaka, sarcanthus and cypress wine, to which he
added a dash of syringa, in order to give to the artificial
life of paints which they exhaled, a suggestion of
natural dewy laughter and pleasures enjoyed in the
open air.
Then, through a ventilator, he permitted
these fragrant waves to escape, only preserving the
field which he renewed, compelling it to return in
his strophes like a ritornello.
The women had gradually disappeared.
Now the plain had grown solitary. Suddenly, on
the enchanted horizon, factories appeared whose tall
chimneys flared like bowls of punch.
The odor of factories and of chemical
products now passed with the breeze which was simulated
by means of fans; nature exhaled its sweet effluvia
amid this putrescence.
Des Esseintes warmed a pellet of storax,
and a singular odor, at once repugnant and exquisite,
pervaded the room. It partook of the delicious
fragrance of jonquil and of the stench of gutta percha
and coal oil. He disinfected his hands, inserted
his resin in a hermetically sealed box, and the factories
disappeared.
Then, among the revived vapors of
the lindens and meadow grass, he threw several drops
of new mown hay, and, amid this magic site for the
moment despoiled of its lilacs, sheaves of hay were
piled up, introducing a new season and scattering
their fine effluence into these summer odors.
At last, when he had sufficiently
enjoyed this sight, he suddenly scattered the exotic
perfumes, emptied his vaporizers, threw in his concentrated
spirits, poured his balms, and, in the exasperated
and stifling heat of the room there rose a crazy sublimated
nature, a paradoxical nature which was neither genuine
nor charming, reuniting the tropical spices and the
peppery breath of Chinese sandal wood and Jamaica
hediosmia with the French odors of jasmine, hawthorn
and verbena. Regardless of seasons and climates
he forced trees of diverse essences into life, and
flowers with conflicting fragrances and colors.
By the clash of these tones he created a general, nondescript,
unexpected, strange perfume in which reappeared, like
an obstinate refrain, the decorative phrase of the
beginning, the odor of the meadows fanned by the lilacs
and lindens.
Suddenly a poignant pain seized him;
he felt as though wimbles were drilling into his temples.
Opening his eyes he found himself in his dressing
room, seated in front of his table. Stupefied,
he painfully walked across the room to the window
which he half opened. A puff of wind dispelled
the stifling atmosphere which was enveloping him.
To exercise his limbs, he walked up and down gazing
at the ceiling where crabs and sea-wrack stood out
in relief against a background as light in color as
the sands of the seashore. A similar decor
covered the plinths and bordered the partitions which
were covered with Japanese sea-green crepe, slightly
wrinkled, imitating a river rippled by the wind.
In this light current swam a rose petal, around which
circled a school of tiny fish painted with two strokes
of the brush.
But his eyelids remained heavy.
He ceased to pace about the short space between the
baptistery and the bath; he leaned against the window.
His dizziness ended. He carefully stopped up the
vials, and used the occasion to arrange his cosmetics.
Since his arrival at Fontenay he had not touched them;
and now was quite astonished to behold once more this
collection formerly visited by so many women.
The flasks and jars were lying heaped up against each
other. Here, a porcelain box contained a marvelous
white cream which, when applied on the cheeks, turns
to a tender rose color, under the action of the air to
such a true flesh-color that it procures the very illusion
of a skin touched with blood; there, lacquer objects
incrusted with mother of pearl enclosed Japanese gold
and Athenian green, the color of the cantharis
wing, gold and green which change to deep purple when
wetted; there were jars filled with filbert paste,
the serkis of the harem, emulsions of lilies, lotions
of strawberry water and elders for the complexion,
and tiny bottles filled with solutions of Chinese ink
and rose water for the eyes. There were tweezers,
scissors, rouge and powder-puffs, files and beauty
patches.
He handled this collection, formerly
bought to please a mistress who swooned under the
influence of certain aromatics and balms, a
nervous, unbalanced woman who loved to steep the nipples
of her breasts in perfumes, but who never really experienced
a delicious and overwhelming ecstacy save when her
head was scraped with a comb or when she could inhale,
amid caresses, the odor of perspiration, or the plaster
of unfinished houses on rainy days, or of dust splashed
by huge drops of rain during summer storms.
He mused over these memories, and
one afternoon spent at Pantin through idleness
and curiosity, in company with this woman at the home
of one of her sisters, returned to him, stirring in
him a forgotten world of old ideas and perfumes; while
the two women prattled and displayed their gowns,
he had drawn near the window and had seen, through
the dusty panes, the muddy street sprawling before
him, and had heard the repeated sounds of galoches
over the puddles of the pavement.
This scene, already far removed, came
to him suddenly, strangely and vividly. Pantin
was there before him, animated and throbbing in this
greenish and dull mirror into which his unseeing eyes
plunged. A hallucination transported him far
from Fontenay. Beside reflecting the street,
the mirror brought back thoughts it had once been instrumental
in evoking, and plunged in revery, he repeated to himself
this ingenious, sad and comforting composition he
had formerly written upon returning to Paris:
“Yes, the season of downpours
is come. Now behold water-spouts vomiting as
they rush over the pavements, and rubbish marinates
in puddles that fill the holes scooped out of the
macadam.
“Under a lowering sky, in the
damp air, the walls of houses have black perspiration
and their air-holes are fetid; the loathsomeness of
existence increases and melancholy overwhelms one;
the seeds of vileness which each person harbors in
his soul, sprout. The craving for vile debaucheries
seizes austere people and base desires grow rampant
in the brains of respectable men.
“And yet I warm myself, here
before a cheerful fire. From a basket of blossoming
flowers comes the aroma of balsamic benzoin, geranium
and the whorl-flowered bent-grass which permeates
the room. In the very month of November, at Pantin,
in the rue de Paris, springtime persists. Here
in my solitude I laugh at the fears of families which,
to shun the approaching cold weather, escape on every
steamer to Cannes and to other winter resorts.
“Inclement nature does nothing
to contribute to this extraordinary phenomenon.
It must be said that his artificial season at Pantin
is the result of man’s ingenuity.
“In fact, these flowers are
made of taffeta and are mounted on wire. The
springtime odor filters through the window joints,
exhaled from the neighboring factories, from the perfumeries
of Pinaud and Saint James.
“For the workmen exhausted by
the hard labors of the plants, for the young employes
who too often are fathers, the illusion of a little
healthy air is possible, thanks to these manufacturers.
“So, from this fabulous subterfuge
of a country can an intelligent cure arise. The
consumptive men about town who are sent to the South
die, their end due to the change in their habits and
to the nostalgia for the Parisian excesses which destroyed
them. Here, under an artificial climate, libertine
memories will reappear, the languishing feminine emanations
evaporated by the factories. Instead of the deadly
ennui of provincial life, the doctor can thus platonically
substitute for his patient the atmosphere of the Parisian
women and of boudoirs. Most often, all that
is necessary to effect the cure is for the subject
to have a somewhat fertile imagination.
“Since, nowadays, nothing genuine
exists, since the wine one drinks and the liberty
one boldly proclaims are laughable and a sham, since
it really needs a healthy dose of good will to believe
that the governing classes are respectable and that
the lower classes are worthy of being assisted or
pitied, it seems to me,” concluded Des Esseintes,
“to be neither ridiculous nor senseless, to ask
of my fellow men a quantity of illusion barely equivalent
to what they spend daily in idiotic ends, so as to
be able to convince themselves that the town of Pantin
is an artificial Nice or a Menton.
“But all this does not prevent
me from seeing,” he said, forced by weakness
from his meditations, “that I must be careful
to mistrust these delicious and abominable practices
which may ruin my constitution.” He sighed.
“Well, well, more pleasures to moderate, more
precautions to be taken.”
And he passed into his study, hoping
the more easily to escape the spell of these perfumes.
He opened the window wide, glad to
be able to breath the air. But it suddenly seemed
to him that the breeze brought in a vague tide of
bergamot with which jasmine and rose water were blent.
Agitated, he asked himself whether he was not really
under the yoke of one of those possessions exercised
in the Middle Ages. The odor changed and was
transformed, but it persisted. A faint scent of
tincture of tolu, of balm of Peru and of saffron,
united by several drams of amber and musk, now issued
from the sleeping village and suddenly, the metamorphosis
was effected, those scattered elements were blent,
and once more the frangipane spread from the valley
of Fontenay as far as the fort, assailing his exhausted
nostrils, once more shattering his helpless nerves
and throwing him into such a prostration that he fell
unconscious on the window sill.