For one born in eighteen hundred
and three much was recently become incredible that
had at least warmed the imagination even of the sceptical
eighteenth century. Napoleon, sealing the tomb
of the Revolution, had foreclosed many a problem,
extinguished many a hope, in the sphere of practice.
And the mental parallel was drawn by Heine.
In the mental world too a great outlook had lately
been cut off. After Kant’s criticism of
the mind, its pretensions to pass beyond the limits
of individual experience seemed as dead as those of
old French royalty. And Kant did but furnish
its innermost theoretic force to a more general criticism,
which had withdrawn from every department of action,
underlying principles once thought eternal. A
time of disillusion followed. The typical personality
of the day was Obermann, the very genius of ennui,
a Frenchman disabused even of patriotism, who has
hardly strength enough to die.
In no century would Prosper Merimee
have been a theologian or metaphysician. But
that sense of negation, of theoretic insecurity, was
in the air, and conspiring with what was of like tendency
in himself made of him a central type of disillusion.
In him the passive ennui of Obermann became a satiric,
aggressive, almost angry conviction of the littleness
of the world around; it was as if man’s fatal
limitations constituted a kind of stupidity in him,
what the French call bêtise. Gossiping
friends, indeed, linked what was constitutional in
him and in the age with an incident of his earliest
years. Corrected for some childish fault, in
passionate distress, he overhears a half-pitying laugh
at his expense, and has determined, in a moment,
never again to give credit — to be for ever
on his guard, especially against his own instinctive
movements. Quite unreserved, certainly, he never
was again. Almost everywhere he could detect
the hollow ring of fundamental nothingness under the
apparent surface of things. Irony surely, habitual
irony, would be the proper complement thereto, on
his part. In his infallible self-possession,
you might even fancy him a mere man of the world,
with a special aptitude for matters of fact.
Though indifferent in politics, he rises to social,
to political eminence; but all the while he is feeding
all his scholarly curiosity, his imagination, the
very eye, with the, to him ever delightful, relieving,
reassuring spectacle, of those straightforward forces
in human nature, which are also matters of fact.
There is the formula of Merimee! the enthusiastic amateur
of rude, crude, naked force in men and women wherever
it could be found; himself carrying ever, as a mask,
the conventional attire of the modern world — carrying
it with an infinite, contemptuous grace, as if that,
too, were an all-sufficient end in itself. With
a natural gift for words, for expression, it will
be his literary function to draw back the veil of
time from the true greatness of old Roman character;
the veil of modern habit from the primitive energy
of the creatures of his fancy, as the Lettres
a une Inconnue discovered to general gaze,
after his death, a certain depth of passionate
force which had surprised him in himself. And
how forcible will be their outlines in an otherwise
insignificant world! Fundamental belief gone,
in almost all of us, at least some relics of it remain — queries,
echoes, reactions, after-thoughts; and they help to
make an atmosphere, a mental atmosphere, hazy perhaps,
yet with many secrets of soothing light and shade,
associating more definite objects to each other by
a perspective pleasant to the inward eye against a
hopefully receding background of remoter and ever
remoter possibilities. Not so with Merimee!
For him the fundamental criticism has nothing more
than it can do; and there are no half-lights.
The last traces of hypothesis, of supposition, are
evaporated. Sylla, the false Demetrius, Carmen,
Colomba, that impassioned self within himself, have
no atmosphere. Painfully distinct in outline,
inevitable to sight, unrelieved, there they stand,
like solitary mountain forms on some hard, perfectly
transparent day. What Merimee gets around his
singularly sculpturesque creations is neither more
nor less than empty space.
So disparate are his writings that
at first sight you might fancy them only the random
efforts of a man of pleasure or affairs, who, turning
to this or that for the relief of a vacant hour, discovers
to his surprise a workable literary gift, of whose
scope, however, he is not precisely aware. His
sixteen volumes nevertheless range themselves in three
compact groups. There are his letters — those
Lettres a une Inconnue, and his letters
to the librarian Panizzi, revealing him in somewhat
close contact with political intrigue. But in
this age of novelists, it is as a writer of novels,
and of fiction in the form of highly descriptive drama,
that he will count for most: — Colomba, for
instance, by its intellectual depth of motive, its
firmly conceived structure, by the faultlessness of
its execution, vindicating the function of the novel
as no tawdry light literature, but in very deed a
fine art. The Chronique du Règne
de Charles IX., an unusually successful
specimen of historical romance, links his imaginative
work to the third group of Merimee’s writings,
his historical essays. One resource of the disabused
soul of our century, as we saw, would be the empirical
study of facts, the empirical science of nature and
man, surviving all dead metaphysical philosophies.
Merimee, perhaps, may have had in him the making
of a master of such science, disinterested, patient,
exact: scalpel in hand, we may fancy, he would
have penetrated far. But quite certainly he
had something of genius for the exact study of history,
for the pursuit of exact truth, with a keenness of
scent as if that alone existed, in some special area
of historic fact, to be determined by his own peculiar
mental preferences. Power here too again, — the
crude power of men and women which mocks, while it
makes its use of, average human nature: it was
the magic function of history to put one in living
contact with that. To weigh the purely
physiognomic import of the memoir, of the pamphlet
saved by chance, the letter, the anecdote, the very
gossip by which one came face to face with energetic
personalities: there lay the true business of
the historic student, not in that pretended theoretic
interpretation of events by their mechanic causes,
with which he dupes others if not invariably himself.
In the great hero of the Social War, in Sylla, studied,
indeed, through his environment, but only so far as
that was in dynamic contact with himself, you saw,
without any manner of doubt, on one side, the solitary
height of human genius; on the other, though on the
seemingly so heroic stage of antique Roman story, the
wholly inexpressive level of the humanity of every
day, the spectacle of man’s eternal bêtise.
Fascinated, like a veritable son of the old pagan
Renaissance, by the grandeur, the concentration, the
satiric hardness of ancient Roman character, it is
to Russia nevertheless that he most readily turns — youthful
Russia, whose native force, still unbelittled by our
western civilisation, seemed to have in it the promise
of a more dignified civilisation to come. It
was as if old Rome itself were here again; as, occasionally,
a new quarry is laid open of what was thought long
since exhausted, ancient marble, cipollino or verde
antique. Merimee, indeed, was not the first to
discern the fitness for imaginative service of the
career of “the false Demetrius,” pretended
son of Ivan the Terrible; but he alone seeks its
utmost force in a calm, matter-of-fact carefully ascertained
presentment of the naked events. Yes!
In the last years of the Valois, when its fierce passions
seemed to be bursting France to pieces, you might have
seen, far away beyond the rude Polish dominion of
which one of those Valois princes had become king,
a display more effective still of exceptional courage
and cunning, of horror in circumstance, of bêtise,
of course, of bêtise and a slavish capacity of
being duped, in average mankind: all that under
a mask of solemn Muscovite court-ceremonial.
And Merimee’s style, simple and unconcerned,
but with the eye ever on its object, lends itself
perfectly to such purpose — to an almost phlegmatic
discovery of the facts, in all their crude natural
colouring, as if he but held up to view, as a piece
of evidence, some harshly dyed oriental carpet from
the sumptuous floor of the Kremlin, on which blood
had fallen.
A lover of ancient Rome, its great
character and incident, Merimee valued, as if it had
been personal property of his, every extant relic
of it in the art that had been most expressive of its
genius — architecture. In that grandiose
art of building, the most national, the most tenaciously
rooted of all the arts in the stable conditions of
life, there were historic documents hardly less clearly
legible than the manuscript chronicle. By the
mouth of those stately Romanesque churches, scattered
in so many strongly characterised varieties over the
soil of France, above all in the hot, half-pagan south,
the people of empire still protested, as he understood,
against what must seem a smaller race. The Gothic
enthusiasm indeed was already born, and he shared
it — felt intelligently the fascination of
the Pointed Style, but only as a further transformation
of old Roman structure; the round arch is for him
still the great architectural form, la forme noble,
because it was to be seen in the monuments of antiquity.
Romanesque, Gothic, the manner of the Renaissance,
of Lewis the Fourteenth: — they were all,
as in a written record, in the old abbey church of
Saint-Savin, of which Merimee was instructed to draw
up a report. Again, it was as if to his concentrated
attention through many months that deserted sanctuary
of Benedict were the only thing on earth. Its
beauties, its peculiarities, its odd military features,
its faded mural paintings, are no merely picturesque
matter for the pencil he could use so well, but the
lively record of a human society. With what
appetite! with all the animation of George Sand’s
Mauprat, he tells the story of romantic violence having
its way there, defiant of law, so late as the year
1611; of the family of robber nobles perched, as abbots
in commendam, in those sacred places. That grey,
pensive old church in the little valley of Poitou,
was for a time like Santa Maria del Fiore
to Michelangelo, the mistress of his affections — of
a practical affection; for the result of his elaborate
report was the Government grant which saved the place
from ruin. In architecture, certainly, he had
what for that day was nothing less than intuition — an
intuitive sense, above all, of its logic, of the necessity
which draws into one all minor changes, as elements
in a reasonable development. And his care for
it, his curiosity about it, were symptomatic of his
own genius. Structure, proportion, design, a
sort of architectural coherency: that was the
aim of his method in the art of literature, in that
form of it, especially, which he will live by, in fiction.
As historian and archaeologist, as
a man of erudition turned artist, he is well seen
in the Chronique du Règne de Charles
IX., by which we pass naturally from Merimee’s
critical or scientific work to the products of his
imagination. What economy in the use of a large
antiquarian knowledge! what an instinct amid a hundred
details, for the detail that carries physiognomy in
it, that really tells! And again what outline,
what absolute clarity of outline! For the historian
of that puzzling age which centres in the “Eve
of Saint Bartholomew,” outward events themselves
seem obscured by the vagueness of motive of the actors
in them. But Merimee, disposing of them as an
artist, not in love with half-lights, compels events
and actors alike to the clearness he desired;
takes his side without hesitation; and makes his hero
a Huguenot of pure blood, allowing its charm, in that
charming youth, even to Huguenot piety. And
as for the incidents — however freely it
may be undermined by historic doubt, all reaches a
perfectly firm surface, at least for the eye of the
reader. The Chronicle of Charles the Ninth is
like a series of masterly drawings in illustration
of a period — the period in which two other
masters of French fiction have found their opportunity,
mainly by the development of its actual historic characters.
Those characters — Catherine de Medicis and
the rest — Merimee, with significant irony
and self-assertion, sets aside, preferring to think
of them as essentially commonplace. For him the
interest lies in the creatures of his own will, who
carry in them, however, so lightly! a learning equal
to Balzac’s, greater than that of Dumas.
He knows with like completeness the mere fashions
of the time — how courtier and soldier dressed
themselves, and the large movements of the desperate
game which fate or chance was playing with those pretty
pieces. Comparing that favourite century of the
French Renaissance with our own, he notes a decadence
of the more energetic passions in the interest of
general tranquillity, and perhaps (only perhaps!)
of general happiness. “Assassination,”
he observes, as if with regret, “is no longer
a part of our manners.” In fact, the duel,
and the whole morality of the duel, which does
but enforce a certain regularity on assassination,
what has been well called lé sentiment du
fer, the sentiment of deadly steel, had then the
disposition of refined existence. It was, indeed,
very different, and is, in Merimee’s romance.
In his gallant hero, Bernard de Mergy, all the promptings
of the lad’s virile goodness are in natural collusion
with that sentiment du fer. Amid
his ingenuous blushes, his prayers, and plentiful
tears between-while, it is a part of his very sex.
With his delightful, fresh-blown air, he is for ever
tossing the sheath from the sword, but always as if
into bright natural sunshine. A winsome, yet
withal serious and even piteous figure, he conveys
his pleasantness, in spite of its gloomy theme, into
Merimee’s one quite cheerful book.
Cheerful, because, after all, the
gloomy passions it presents are but the accidents
of a particular age, and not like the mental conditions
in which Merimee was most apt to look for the spectacle
of human power, allied to madness or disease in the
individual. For him, at least, it was the office
of fiction to carry one into a different if not a better
world than that actually around us; and if the Chronicle
of Charles the Ninth provided an escape from the tame
circumstances of contemporary life into an impassioned
past, Colomba is a measure of the resources for mental
alteration which may be found even in the modern age.
There was a corner of the French Empire, in
the manners of which assassination still had a large
part.
“The beauty of Corsica,”
says Merimee, “is grave and sad. The aspect
of the capital does but augment the impression caused
by the solitude that surrounds it. There is
no movement in the streets. You hear there none
of the laughter, the singing, the loud talking, common
in the towns of Italy. Sometimes, under the
shadow of a tree on the promenade, a dozen armed peasants
will be playing cards, or looking on at the game.
The Corsican is naturally silent. Those who
walk the pavement are all strangers: the islanders
stand at their doors: every one seems to be on
the watch, like a falcon on its nest. All around
the gulf there is but an expanse of tanglework; beyond
it, bleached mountains. Not a habitation!
Only, here and there, on the heights about the town,
certain white constructions detach themselves from
the background of green. They are funeral chapels
or family tombs.”
Crude in colour, sombre, taciturn,
Corsica, as Merimee here describes it, is like the
national passion of the Corsican — that morbid
personal pride, usurping the place even of grief for
the dead, which centuries of traditional violence
had concentrated into an all-absorbing passion for
bloodshed, for bloody revenges, in collusion with the
natural wildness, and the wild social condition of
the island still unaffected even by the finer
ethics of the duel. The supremacy of that passion
is well indicated by the cry, put into the mouth of
a young man in the presence of the corpse of his father
deceased in the course of nature — a young
man meant to be commonplace. “Ah!
Would thou hadst died malamorte — by violence!
We might have avenged thee!”
In Colomba, Merimee’s best known
creation, it is united to a singularly wholesome type
of personal beauty, a natural grace of manner which
is irresistible, a cunning intellect patiently diverting
every circumstance to its design; and presents itself
as a kind of genius, allied to fatal disease of mind.
The interest of Merimee’s book is that it allows
us to watch the action of this malignant power on
Colomba’s brother, Orso della Robbia,
as it discovers, rouses, concentrates to the leaping-point,
in the somewhat weakly diffused nature of the youth,
the dormant elements of a dark humour akin to her
own. Two years after his father’s murder,
presumably at the instigation of his ancestral enemies,
the young lieutenant is returning home in the company
of two humorously conventional English people, himself
now half Parisianised, with an immense natural cheerfulness,
and willing to believe an account of the crime which
relieves those hated Barricini of all complicity in
its guilt. But from the first, Colomba, with
“voice soft and musical,” is at his side,
gathering every accident and echo and circumstance,
the very lightest circumstance, into the chain
of necessity which draws him to the action every one
at home expects of him as the head of his race.
He is not unaware. Her very silence on the matter
speaks so plainly. “You are forming me!”
he admits. “Well! ’Hot shot,
or cold steel!’ — you see I have not
forgotten my Corsican.” More and more,
as he goes on his way with her, he finds himself accessible
to the damning thoughts he has so long combated.
In horror, he tries to disperse them by the memory
of his comrades in the regiment, the drawing-rooms
of Paris, the English lady who has promised to be
his bride, and will shortly visit him in the humble
manoir of his ancestors. From his first
step among them the villagers of Pietranera, divided
already into two rival camps, are watching him in
suspense — Pietranera, perched among those
deep forests where the stifled sense of violent death
is everywhere. Colomba places in his hands the
little chest which contains the father’s shirt
covered with great spots of blood. “Behold
the lead that struck him!” and she laid on the
shirt two rusted bullets. “Orso! you will
avenge him!” She embraces him with a kind of
madness, kisses wildly the bullets and the shirt,
leaves him with the terrible relics already exerting
their mystic power upon him. It is as if in
the nineteenth century a girl, amid Christian habits,
had gone back to that primitive old pagan version
of the story of the Grail, which identifies it
not with the Most Precious Blood, but only with the
blood of a murdered relation crying for vengeance.
Awake at last in his old chamber at Pietranera, the
house of the Barricini at the other end of the square,
with its rival tower and rudely carved escutcheons,
stares him in the face. His ancestral enemy
is there, an aged man now, but with two well-grown
sons, like two stupid dumb animals, whose innocent
blood will soon be on his so oddly lighted conscience.
At times, his better hope seemed to lie in picking
a quarrel and killing at least in fair fight, one of
these two stupid dumb animals; with rude ill-suppressed
laughter one day, as they overhear Colomba’s
violent utterances at a funeral feast, for she is
a renowned improvisatrice. “Your father
is an old man,” he finds himself saying, “I
could crush with my hands. ’Tis for you
I am destined, for you and your brother!” And
if it is by course of nature that the old man dies
not long after the murder of these sons (self-provoked
after all), dies a fugitive at Pisa, as it happens,
by an odd accident, in the presence of Colomba, no
violent death by Orso’s own hand could have
been more to her mind. In that last hard page
of Merimee’s story, mere dramatic propriety
itself for a moment seems to plead for the forgiveness,
which from Joseph and his brethren to the present
day, as we know, has been as winning in story as in
actual life. Such dramatic propriety, however,
was by no means in Merimee’s way.
“What I must have is the hand that fired the
shot,” she had sung, “the eye that guided
it; aye! and the mind moreover — the mind,
which had conceived the deed!” And now, it is
in idiotic terror, a fugitive from Orso’s vengeance,
that the last of the Barricini is dying.
Exaggerated art! you think.
But it was precisely such exaggerated art, intense,
unrelieved, an art of fierce colours, that is needed
by those who are seeking in art, as I said of Merimee,
a kind of artificial stimulus. And if his style
is still impeccably correct, cold-blooded, impersonal,
as impersonal as that of Scott himself, it does but
conduce the better to his one exclusive aim.
It is like the polish of the stiletto Colomba carried
always under her mantle, or the beauty of the fire-arms,
that beauty coming of nice adaptation to purpose, which
she understood so well — a task characteristic
also of Merimee himself, a sort of fanatic joy in
the perfect pistol-shot, at its height in the singular
story he has translated from the Russian of Pouchkine.
Those raw colours he preferred; Spanish, Oriental,
African, perhaps, irritant certainly to cisalpine
eyes, he undoubtedly attained the colouring you associate
with sun-stroke, only possible under a sun in which
dead things rot quickly.
Pity and terror, we know, go to the
making of the essential tragic sense. In Merimee,
certainly, we have all its terror, but without the
pity. Saint-Clair, the consent of his mistress
barely attained at last, rushes madly on self-destruction,
that he may die with the taste of his great love fresh
on his lips. All the grotesque accidents of
violent death he records with visual exactness, and
no pains to relieve them; the ironic indifference,
for instance, with which, on the scaffold or the battle-field,
a man will seem to grin foolishly at the ugly rents
through which his life has passed. Seldom or
never has the mere pen of a writer taken us so close
to the cannon’s mouth as in the Taking of the
Redoubt, while Matteo Falcone — twenty-five
short pages — is perhaps the cruellest story
in the world.
Colomba, that strange, fanatic being,
who has a code of action, of self-respect, a conscience,
all to herself, who with all her virginal charm only
does not make you hate her, is, in truth, the type
of a sort of humanity Merimee found it pleasant to
dream of — a humanity as alien as the animals,
with whose moral affinities to man his imaginative
work is often directly concerned. Were they
so alien, after all? Were there not survivals
of the old wild creatures in the gentlest, the politest
of us? Stories that told of sudden freaks of
gentle, polite natures, straight back, not into Paradise,
were always welcome to men’s fancies; and that
could only be because they found a psychologic truth
in them. With much success, with a credibility
insured by his literary tact, Merimee tried his own
hand at such stories: unfrocked the bear
in the amorous young Lithuanian noble, the wolf in
the revolting peasant of the Middle Age. There
were survivals surely in himself, in that stealthy
presentment of his favourite themes, in his own art.
You seem to find your hand on a serpent, in reading
him.
In such survivals, indeed, you see
the operation of his favourite motive, the sense of
wild power, under a sort of mask, or assumed habit,
realised as the very genius of nature itself; and that
interest, with some superstitions closely allied to
it, the belief in the vampire, for instance, is evidenced
especially in certain pretended Illyrian compositions — prose
translations, the reader was to understand, of more
or less ancient popular ballads; La Guzla,
he called the volume, The Lyre, as we might say; only
that the instrument of the Illyrian minstrel had but
one string. Artistic deception, a trick of which
there is something in the historic romance as such,
in a book like his own Chronicle of Charles the Ninth,
was always welcome to Merimee; it was part of the
machinery of his rooted habit of intellectual reserve.
A master of irony also, in Madame Lucrezia he
seems to wish to expose his own method cynically; to
explain his art — how he takes you in — as
a clever, confident conjuror might do. So properly
were the readers of La Guzla taken in that
he followed up his success in that line by the Theatre
of Clara Gazul, purporting to be from a rare Spanish
original, the work of a nun, who, under tame,
conventual reading, had felt the touch of mundane,
of physical passions; had become a dramatic poet,
and herself a powerful actress. It may dawn on
you in reading her that Merimee was a kind of Webster,
but with the superficial mildness of our nineteenth
century. At the bottom of the true drama there
is ever, logically at least, the ballad: the
ballad dealing in a kind of short-hand (or, say! in
grand, simple, universal outlines) with those passions,
crimes, mistakes, which have a kind of fatality in
them, a kind of necessity to come to the surface of
the human mind, if not to the surface of our experience,
as in the case of some frankly supernatural incidents
which Merimee re-handled. Whether human love
or hatred has had most to do in shaping the universal
fancy that the dead come back, I cannot say.
Certainly that old ballad literature has instances
in plenty, in which the voice, the hand, the brief
visit from the grave, is a natural response to the
cry of the human creature. That ghosts should
return, as they do so often in Merimee’s fiction,
is but a sort of natural justice. Only, in Merimee’s
prose ballads, in those admirable, short, ballad-like
stories, where every word tells, of which he was a
master, almost the inventor, they are a kind of half-material
ghosts — a vampire tribe — and never
come to do people good; congruously with the mental
constitution of the writer, which, alike in fact and
fiction, could hardly have horror enough — theme
after theme. Merimee himself emphasises this
almost constant motive of his fiction when he adds
to one of his volumes of short stories some letters
on a matter of fact — a Spanish bull-fight,
in which those old Romans, he regretted, might seem,
decadently, to have survived. It is as if you
saw it. In truth, Merimee was the unconscious
parent of much we may think of dubious significance
in later French literature. It is as if there
were nothing to tell of in this world but various
forms of hatred, and a love that is like lunacy; and
the only other world, a world of maliciously active,
hideous, dead bodies.
Merimee, a literary artist, was not
a man who used two words where one would do better,
and he shines especially in those brief compositions
which, like a minute intaglio, reveal at a glance his
wonderful faculty of design and proportion in the
treatment of his work, in which there is not a touch
but counts. That is an art of which there are
few examples in English; our somewhat diffuse, or
slipshod, literary language hardly lending itself
to the concentration of thought and expression, which
are of the essence of such writing. It is otherwise
in French, and if you wish to know what art of that
kind can come to, read Merimee’s little romances;
best of all, perhaps, La Venus d’Ille and Arsène
Guillot. The former is a modern version of the
beautiful old story of the Ring given to Venus, given
to her, in this case, by a somewhat sordid creature
of the nineteenth century, whom she looks on with
more than disdain. The strange outline of the
Canigou, one of the most imposing outlying heights
of the Pyrénées, down the mysterious slopes of which
the traveller has made his way towards nightfall into
the great plain of Toulouse, forms an impressive background,
congruous with the many relics of irrepressible old
paganism there, but in entire contrast to the bourgeois
comfort of the place where his journey is to end,
the abode of an aged antiquary, loud and bright just
now with the celebration of a vulgar worldly marriage.
In the midst of this well-being, prosaic in spite
of the neighbourhood, in spite of the pretty old wedding
customs, morsels of that local colour in which Merimee
delights, the old pagan powers are supposed to reveal
themselves once more (malignantly, of course), in the
person of a magnificent bronze statue of Venus recently
unearthed in the antiquary’s garden. On
her finger, by ill-luck, the coarse young bridegroom
on the morning of his marriage places for a moment
the bridal ring only too effectually (the bronze hand
closes, like a wilful living one, upon it), and dies,
you are to understand, in her angry metallic embraces
on his marriage night. From the first, indeed,
she had seemed bent on crushing out men’s degenerate
bodies and souls, though the supernatural horror of
the tale is adroitly made credible by a certain vagueness
in the events, which covers a quite natural account
of the bridegroom’s mysterious death.
The intellectual charm of literary
work so thoroughly designed as Merimee’s depends
in part on the sense as you read, hastily perhaps,
perhaps in need of patience, that you are dealing with
a composition, the full secret of which is only to
be attained in the last paragraph, that with the last
word in mind you will retrace your steps, more than
once (it may be) noting then the minuter structure,
also the natural or wrought flowers by the way.
Nowhere is such method better illustrated than by
another of Merimee’s quintessential pieces, Arsène
Guillotand here for once with a conclusion ethically
acceptable also. Merimee loved surprises in
human nature, but it is not often that he surprises
us by tenderness or generosity of character, as another
master of French fiction, M. Octave Feuillet,
is apt to do; and the simple pathos of Arsène Guillot
gives it a unique place in Merimee’s writings.
It may be said, indeed, that only an essentially
pitiful nature could have told the exquisitely cruel
story of Matteo Falcone precisely as Merimee has told
it; and those who knew him testify abundantly to his
own capacity for generous friendship. He was
no more wanting than others in those natural sympathies
(sending tears to the eyes at the sight of suffering
age or childhood) which happily are no extraordinary
component in men’s natures. It was, perhaps,
no fitting return for a friendship of over thirty
years to publish posthumously those Lettres a
une Inconnue, which reveal that reserved,
sensitive, self-centred nature, a little pusillanimously
in the power, at the disposition of another.
For just there lies the interest, the psychological
interest, of those letters. An amateur of power,
of the spectacle of power and force, followed minutely
but without sensibility on his part, with a kind of
cynic pride rather for the mainspring of his method,
both of thought and expression, you find him here taken
by surprise at last, and somewhat humbled, by an unsuspected
force of affection in himself. His correspondent,
unknown but for these letters except just by name,
figures in them as, in truth, a being only too much
like himself, seen from one side; reflects his taciturnity,
his touchiness, his incredulity except for self-torment.
Agitated, dissatisfied, he is wrestling in her with
himself, his own difficult qualities. He demands
from her a freedom, a frankness, he would have been
the last to grant. It is by first thoughts, of
course, that what is forcible and effective in human
nature, the force, therefore, of carnal love, discovers
itself; and for her first thoughts Merimee is always
pleading, but always complaining that he gets only
her second thoughts; the thoughts, that is, of a reserved,
self-limiting nature, well under the yoke of convention,
like his own. Strange conjunction! At the
beginning of the correspondence he seems to have been
seeking only a fine intellectual companionship;
the lady, perhaps, looking for something warmer.
Towards such companionship that likeness to himself
in her might have been helpful, but was not enough
of a complement to his own nature to be anything but
an obstruction in love; and it is to that, little
by little, that his humour turns. He — the
Megalopsychus, as Aristotle defines him — acquires
all the lover’s humble habits: himself
displays all the tricks of love, its casuistries,
its exigency, its superstitions, aye! even its vulgarities;
involves with the significance of his own genius the
mere hazards and inconsequence of a perhaps average
nature; but too late in the day — the years.
After the attractions and repulsions of half a lifetime,
they are but friends, and might forget to be that,
but for his death, clearly presaged in his last weak,
touching letter, just two hours before. There,
too, had been the blind and naked force of nature
and circumstance, surprising him in the uncontrollable
movements of his own so carefully guarded heart.
The intimacy, the effusion, the so
freely exposed personality of those letters does but
emphasise the fact that impersonality was, in literary
art, Merimee’s central aim. Personality
versus impersonality in art: — how much or
how little of one’s self one may put into one’s
work: whether anything at all of it: whether
one can put there anything else: — is clearly
a far-reaching and complex question. Serviceable
as the basis of a precautionary maxim towards
the conduct of our work, self-effacement, or impersonality,
in literary or artistic creation, is, perhaps, after
all, as little possible as a strict realism.
“It has always been my rule to put nothing of
myself into my works,” says another great master
of French prose, Gustave Flaubert; but, luckily as
we may think, he often failed in thus effacing himself,
as he too was aware. “It has always been
my rule to put nothing of myself into my works”
(to be disinterested in his literary creations, so
to speak), “yet I have put much of myself into
them”: and where he failed Merimee succeeded.
There they stand — Carmen, Colomba, the “False”
Demetrius — as detached from him as from each
other, with no more filial likeness to their maker
than if they were the work of another person.
And to his method of conception, Merimee’s
much-praised literary style, his method of expression,
is strictly conformable — impersonal in its
beauty, the perfection of nobody’s style — thus
vindicating anew by its very impersonality that much
worn, but not untrue saying, that the style is the
man: — a man, impassible, unfamiliar, impeccable,
veiling a deep sense of what is forcible, nay, terrible,
in things, under the sort of personal pride that makes
a man a nice observer of all that is most conventional.
Essentially unlike other people, he is always fastidiously
in the fashion — an expert in all the little,
half- contemptuous elegances of which it is capable.
Merimee’s superb self-effacement, his impersonality,
is itself but an effective personal trait, and, transferred
to art, becomes a markedly peculiar quality of literary
beauty. For, in truth, this creature of disillusion
who had no care for half-lights, and, like his creations,
had no atmosphere about him, gifted as he was with
pure mind, with the quality which secures flawless
literary structure, had, on the other hand, nothing
of what we call soul in literature: — hence,
also, that singular harshness in his ideal, as if,
in theological language, he were incapable of grace.
He has none of those subjectivities, colourings,
peculiarities of mental refraction, which necessitate
varieties of style — could we spare such? — and
render the perfections of it no merely negative qualities.
There are masters of French prose whose art has begun
where the art of Merimee leaves off.