Skip to main content

Full text of "Images of truth: remembrances and criticism"

See other formats


UNIVERSITY 
OF  FLORIDA 
LIBRARIES 


Images  of  Truth 


Books  by  Glenway  Wescott 

Images  of  Truth 

Apartment  in  Athens 

The  Pilgrim  Hawk 

A  Calendar  of  Saints  for  Unbelievers 

Fear  and  Trembling 

Good-bye  Wisconsin 

The  Grandmothers 

The  Apple  of  the  Eye 


GLENWAY   WESCOTT 

IMAGES   OF   TRUTH 

REMEMBRANCES   AND    CRITICISM 


Everything  that  is  possible  to  be  believed  is  an  image  of  the  truth. 

WILLIAM  BLAKE 


HARPER  &  ROW    •    Publishers    •   New  York  and  Evans  ton 


PAST! 
COLtE 


m 


3 


COS//. 

c  ,  3 


Portions  of  this  book  were  first  published  in  Atlantic  Monthly,  Harper's 
Magazine,  Southern  Review,  Town  and  Country,  and  Vogue.  "An  Intro- 
duction to  Colette"  is  from  The  Short  Novels  of  Colette,  Dial  Press,  1951* 
"Break  of  Day"  appeared  as  the  introduction  to  Break  of  Day  by  Colette, 
Farrar,  Straus  &  Cudahy,  Inc.,  i960. 


images  of  truth.  Copyright  ©  1939,  1947,  1951,  1952,  i960,  1962  by  Glen- 
way  Wescott.  Printed  in  the  United  States  of  America.  All  rights  reserved. 
No  part  of  this  book  may  be  used  or  reproduced  in  any  manner  whatsoever 
without  written  permission  except  in  the  case  of  brief  quotations  embodied 
in  critical  articles  and  reviews.  For  information  address  Harper  &  Row, 
Publishers,  Incorporated,  49  East  33rd  Street,  New  York  16,  N.  Y.  Library 
of  Congress  catalog  card  number:  62-15J23  First  edition,  h.-m. 


i  0 


i 

T 


TO  MONROE  WHEELER 
LIFELONG. 


i 


Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

in  2011  with  funding  from 

LYRASIS  Members  and  Sloan  Foundation 


http://www.archive.org/details/imagesoftruthremOOwesc 


Contents 


1      FICTION  WRITING  IN  A    TIME  OF  TROUBLES 

page  3 


2      KATHERINE  ANNE  PORTER  PERSONALLY 
page  25 


3      SOMERSET  MAUGHAM  AND  POSTERITY 

page  59 


4      AN  INTRODUCTION   TO    COLETTE 

page  86 


5      A   CALL  ON  COLETTE  AND   GOUDEKET 

page  142 


6      ISAK  DINESEN,   THE  STORYTELLER 

page  149 


7      THOMAS  MANN:   WILL  POWER  AND  FICTION 

page  164 


8      TALKS   WITH    THORNTON  WILDER 

page  242 


Images  of  Truth 


Chapter  One 

Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 


Grief  is  a  species  of  idleness. 

SAMUEL  JOHNSON 

This  volume  consists  of  informal  portraiture  of  two  or  three 
fellow  writers  near  and  dear  to  me,  and  of  certain  blessed  elders 
and  betters,  with  loving  commentary  on  their  production  of  stories 
and  novels. 

While  happily  working  away,  in  marginal  relationship  to  the 
work,  I  have  been  led  to  try  to  define  and  profess  my  own  faith  in 
the  narrative  art,  with  particular  beliefs  about  it  that  have  stayed 
unchanged  in  my  mind  for  many  years,  regardless  of  my  personal 
ability  or  inability.  For  which  purpose  let  me  take  a  text,  as  reli- 
gious writers  and  preachers  do,  but  a  pre-Christian  secular  text: 
the  beginning  of  the  eleventh  book  of  the  Odyssey.  Do  you  recall 
the  tale  it  tells? 

Odysseus,  coming  back  from  Troy  to  Ithaca,  lost  his  way;  and 
his  mistress,  Circe,  advised  him  to  consult  the  ghost  of  Tiresias 
about  it.  As  you  may  recall,  this  ancient  soothsayer  had  been  cursed 
and  stricken  with  hermaphroditism  as  a  result  of  having  come 
upon  a  pair  of  serpents  (perhaps  the  demigod  and  demigoddess, 
Cadmus  and  Harmonia,  in  their  serpent  phase)  and  watched  them 
entwining  in  intercourse.  Long  afterward,  an  argument  having 
arisen  between  the  supreme  god  and  goddess,  Zeus  and  Hera,  as  to 
which  sex,  male  or  female,  enjoyed  intercourse  more  keenly,  they 
asked  Tiresias  to  settle  it,  and  he  said  female.  Whereupon  Hera 
caused  him  to  go  blind;  but  Zeus  decreed  that  he  should  live  seven 

3 


Images  of  Truth  •  4 

lifetimes  and  keep  his  wisdom  always.  This  wisdom  Odysseus  des- 
perately needed,  to  plot  a  course  for  himself  and  his  fellow  mariners 
back  to  their  native  land. 

They  were  then  in  the  Cimmerian  country,  a  place  somewhere 
between  the  ocean  and  the  underworld;  a  miserable  shadowy  coast 
inhabited  by  only  a  few  pirates  in  caves.  There  on  the  beach 
Odysseus  dug  a  hole  about  eighteen  inches  square  and  eighteen 
inches  deep;  and  he  moistened  the  sand  all  around  it  with  milk 
and  honey  and  wine  and  water;  he  said  prayers;  and  he  sacrificed 
a  couple  of  sheep  in  such  a  way  as  to  fill  the  hole  with  their  blood; 
and  with  this  as  a  lure  he  invoked  a  great  company  of  ghosts,  among 
them  the  proud  seven-lived  Theban  seer,  by  whom  he  was  given 
the  necessary  information  for  his  homeward  journey;  and  afterward 
he  talked  the  night  away  with  other  thrilling  phantoms. 

For  many  a  year  the  few  dozen  lines  in  which  this  is  narrated  by 
Homer  have  charmed  and  uplifted  and  exercised  my  mind.  I 
reread  them  yesterday,  in  translation,  not  in  Greek.  For  I  am, 
roughly  speaking,  an  autodidact;  the  University  of  Chicago  at 
which  I  did  spend  one  school  year  and  a  half  was  under  the  sway 
of  the  elective  theory  of  education  at  the  time.  I  own  only  four 
translations:  Pope's,  and  Ezra  Pound's,  which  is  a  paraphrase 
from  the  Latin  of  a  humanist  named  Divus,  and  Lawrence  of 
Arabia's,  and  the  quite  recent  prize  version  by  Robert  Fitzgerald. 

In  a  personal  way  I  have  always  associated  the  passage  with  an 
old  popular  song,  the  burden  of  which  is  losing  one's  way  and 
wanting  to  get  back  home.  I  remember  the  first  time  I  heard  it, 
when  I  was  a  small  boy  in  a  small  town  in  Wisconsin,  long  before 
I  had  read  any  ancient  literature.  Another  boy,  the  first  friend  for 
whom  I  ever  felt  great  affection,  the  first  friend  who  ever  felt  great 
affection  for  me,  sang  it.  It  was  in  the  evening.  We  had  had  a  picnic 
supper  of  sandwiches  and  apples,  with  a  bottle  of  beer,  upon  the 
brow  of  a  hill  over  a  small  lake  on  the  outskirts  of  the  town,  and 
we  had  stayed  to  see  the  sunset.  As  I  did  not  like  beer,  my  friend 
had  imbibed  all  the  bottleful  and  was  just  slightly  drunk.  As  it 
happened  I  had  never  before  seen  anyone  under  the  influence  in 
a  happy  way.    (All  my  family  abstained,  except  my  grandfather 


5  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

in  the  long  decline  of  his  life  when  he  had  a  Civil  War-induced 
stomach  ailment  and,  under  doctor's  orders,  took  a  little  Marsala, 
or  perhaps  Madeira,  in  a  tablespoon.  The  family  farm  was  ringed 
round  with  German  immigrants  of  peasant  stock;  but  they  all 
drank  unhappily,  whipping  their  horses  and  chasing  their  chil- 
dren.) 

On  our  way  home  my  friend  strode  on  ahead,  down  the  hill  and 
into  town  and  along  the  narrow,  uneven  sidewalk,  toward  the  man- 
sion of  his  parents  and  my  grandparents'  small  house.  As  it  was 
between  day  and  night,  in  back  yards  and  on  various  lanes  children 
were  still  in  swings,  and  lovers  already  in  hammocks.  A  little  un- 
known dog  attached  itself  to  us,  wagging  its  tail.  None  of  this 
apparently  meant  anything  to  my  friend,  absorbed  in  his  mysterious 
selfish  alcoholic  condition.  He  was  no  longer  paying  any  attention 
to  me;  I  tagged  along  after  him.  I  was  twelve  years  old;  he  was 
fourteen  or  fifteen,  and  his  voice  had  changed  not  long  before  that. 
As  loudly  as  he  was  able,  in  the  tones  of  his  half-manhood  somewhat 
unmanageable,  unaccustomed,  he  sang  the  Odyssean  refrain,  inebria- 
tion and  fatigue,  uncertainty  and  homesickness,  which  no  doubt  he 
had  heard  older  boys  and  grown  men  sing  when  they  were  befuddled. 

In  the  years  that  have  elapsed  since  then  I  have  seen  a  great  deal 
of  drunkenness;  in  one  way  and  another  it  has  been  important  to 
me.  In  convivial  circumstances  of  all  kinds  I  like  those  around  me 
to  be  intoxicated,  short  of  sickness,  short  of  violent  melancholy 
and  ugly  temper.  Two  friends  of  mine  have  been  true  alcoholics, 
roistering  and  hypochondriacal,  anguished  and  unable  to  stop.  For 
my  own  part  I  never  really  cared  whether  I  drank  or  not;  neverthe- 
less, a  decade  ago,  for  reasons  of  health,  I  had  to  stop.  In  a  nouvelle 
entitled  The  Pilgrim  Hawk,  I  painted  a  little  portrait  of  a  drunk- 
ard; and  recently  in  a  brilliant  brief  treatise  on  the  history  and  the 
problem  of  drinking  I  was  cited  as  an  authority,  of  which  I  am 
proud. 

I  mention  all  this  to  make  a  point  that,  to  my  mind,  is  of  the 
utmost  importance  in  general  morality;  and  that,  furthermore,  is 
a  matter  of  principle  and  preference  in  literature  and  the  other 


Images  of  Truth  •  6 

arts. — Moderation  is  a  good  thing  in  itself.  Think  how  many  of 
the  decisive  factors  in  our  lives  are  neither  good  nor  evil:  i.e.,  love 
and  intellect  and  industriousness  and  patriotism  and  sport  and 
other  exercises  of  the  body.  The  principle  of  restraint  and  limita- 
tion works  both  ways,  works  indeed  in  every  way.  A  small  family 
is  praiseworthier  than  any  heedless  passionate  proliferation.  Pleas- 
ant intoxication  upon  occasion  is  preferable  to  absolute  sobriety. 
In  the  matter  of  overpopulation,  and  in  cases  of  compulsive  alco- 
holism, ruinous  gambling,  sickening  excesses  of  drug  addiction,  or 
mass  production  of  pornographic  reading  matter,  the  objection  is 
not  to  children,  or  to  the  beverage  or  the  game  or  the  chemical  or 
the  eroticism;  it  is  to  the  exorbitance,  the  exaggeratedness.  For 
one  can  destroy  oneself  as  handily  with  medicine  as  with  poison 
(though  perhaps  not  so  fast);  sicken  oneself  not  only  with  pot 
but  with  bread  and  milk  and  cream;  ruin  oneself  with  philanthropy 
as  with  horse  racing;  exhaust  oneself  in  the  marriage  bed  exactly  as 
in  the  brothel  or  the  Turkish  bath. 

In  literature  and  the  arts,  I  think,  this  same  rule  applies,  espe- 
cially as  to  the  length  and  breadth  and  inclusiveness  of  the  work, 
and  as  to  the  degree  of  its  unconventionalities  of  style  and  struc- 
ture. Originality,  that  is  to  say,  individuality — that  mere  uniqueness 
which  distinguishes  one  face  from  every  other  face,  one  life  history 
from  every  other  (likewise  any  given  sunset  and  leaf  and  bird  and 
bug  from  all  the  sunsets  and  leaves  and  birds  and  bugs  that  are 
almost  identical,  but  not  quite)  — is  of  greater  importance  than 
any  extreme  innovation,  or  one-man  revolutionizing  effect,  or 
disturbance  of  the  art  for  disturbance's  sake.  It  often  happens, 
indeed,  that  the  work  of  followers  of  the  famous  innovators  gives 
greater  pleasure  and  means  more  to  the  public  and  to  posterity 
than  the  revolutionary  work  which  led  the  way. 

The  essentials  in  literature  (perhaps  more  demonstrably  than 
in  music  or  painting)  are  enjoyment  and  communication;  not  the 
given  creative  man's  outburst  of  skill  and  ego,  not  the  mere  stupe- 
faction or  submissiveness  of  the  reading  public.  In  cases  of  extreme 
and  difficult  writing  what  the  public  often  does  is  to  express  admi- 
ration while  just  pretending  to  read.  Pleasure  and  understanding 


7  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

from  the  reader's  standpoint  depend  largely  on  the  more  lasting 
aspects  of  the  language  and  on  logicalities  of  grammar  and  syn- 
tax. Allowances  always  have  to  be  made  for  him,  as  to  his  fatigue 
and  bewilderment  and  error.  Just  as  mere  physical  stature  more 
than  anything  else  determines  the  length  of  a  bed,  and  the  con- 
formation of  one's  buttocks,  the  design  of  a  chair,  reader  psychology 
keeps  influencing  literature,  in  the  way  of  a  stubborn  rejection  of 
the  inordinate  and  the  elaborate,  an  irresistible  veering  away  from 
the  riddlesome.  There  are  limits  to  innovation;  strong  creative 
personalities  constantly  break  through  them  and  go  beyond  them, 
but  they  re-establish  themselves,  with  an  impressive  similarity, 
down  through  the  ages. 

My  conclusion  is  that  brilliancy  of  ego,  headstrong  and  headlong 
display  of  intellect,  powers  of  elaboration,  poetical  afflatus,  and 
that  frenzied  and  exalted  artistry  which  is  like  drunkenness,  play 
an  important  part  in  literature;  but  as  regularly  as  clockwork,  most 
of  the  time,  everything  of  that  sort  has  to  give  way  to  a  prosaic 
simplicity,  to  brevity  and  explicitness,  and  to  traditional  themes 
and  immemorial  symbols  and  images. 

In  Greece  (in  Delphi,  if  my  memory  is  correct)  there  is  a 
famous  meaningful  bas-relief  known  as  "The  Truce  of  the  Two 
Great  Gods."  Long  ago  Eva  Palmer  Sikelianos,  the  American  lady 
who,  having  married  a  Greek  poet,  spent  her  fortune  putting  on 
performances  of  Sophocles  and  Euripides  in  modern  Greek,  showed 
me  a  photograph  of  it.  Once  a  year  Apollo,  the  god  of  reason  and 
light  and  music  and  medicine  and  prophecy,  journeyed  to  the 
North  for  a  holiday  among  the  Hyperboreans,  his  remotest  wor- 
shipers, and  during  that  absence  would  always  lend  or  sublet  his 
temple  to  Dionysus,  the  god  of  unreason  and  madness,  of  ecstasy 
and  drunkenness.  In  the  bas-relief  their  antithetical  and  complemen- 
tary hands  touch,  as  the  one  departs  from  the  temple  and  the  other 
enters.  To  my  way  of  thinking  these  are  two  most  salutary  and 
crucial  factors  in  literature  and  the  arts  (as  in  morals  and  in  life 
in  general):  reason  and  unreason  touching  hands;  and  the  limita- 
tion of  the  occupancy  af  the  drunken  unreasonable  god  to  just  the 
vacation  time,  once  a  year. 


Images  of  Truth  ■  8 

One  night  when  I  was  not  a  small  boy  in  Wisconsin,  but  an 
expatriate  in  the  south  of  France,  and  an  enthusiast  about  the 
religious  thinking  and  the  collective  storytelling  of  the  Greeks,  I 
heard  another  more  recent  American  drinking  song.  I  was  looking 
down  from  a  balcony  of  the  Hotel  Welcome  over  the  white  stone 
quay  and  the  beautifully  formed  small  harbor  of  Villefranche  (of 
mythical  Greek  origin),  with  the  arm  of  Cap  Ferrat  shadowy  around 
it.  An  old  American  battleship  lay  at  anchor,  vague  and  asleep, 
twinkling  over  the  water.  The  bar  on  the  ground  floor  of  the  hotel 
had  just  closed,  and  there  were  four  of  our  sailors  arguing  about 
something  in  melancholy,  monotonous  voices  under  my  balcony. 
One  of  them  suddenly  cheered  up  and  strode  off  by  himself,  and 
gracefully,  conceitedly,  went  and  tiptoed  upon  the  very  edge  of  the 
quay,  as  if  it  were  a  tightrope;  and  balancing  there,  he  sang  the 
more  recent  song,  Odyssean  also:  "Show  Me  the  Way  to  Go  Home." 
Drunk  as  he  was,  I  suppose  the  fun  of  singing  made  him  drunker. 
He  fell  into  the  sea.  His  friends  having  pulled  him  out,  he 
tried  to  fight  one  of  them;  but  the  other  two  made  peace.  Then 
they  threw  their  arms  over  one  another's  shoulders  and  all  began 
to  sing,  and  went  up  the  steep  street  toward  Nice,  singing. 

This  triad  of  things  haunts  me:  the  question  of  Odysseus  on  the 
Cimmerian  shore,  the  tipsiness  of  the  friend  of  my  boyhood  singing 
one  common  drinking  song,  the  immersion  of  the  sailor  in  the 
harbor  of  Villefranche  singing  another.  It  is  a  principal  question  in 
the  very  nature  of  mankind:  the  way  home,  wherever  the  wayfaring 
has  been,  and  whatever  the  homeless  feeling  refers  to  or  amounts 
to.  In  our  time,  history  has  posed  it  perhaps  more  solemnly  than  it 
has  ever  been  posed  before,  in  song  or  story,  in  epic  or  in  tragic 
drama. 

In  the  first  quarter  of  this  century  we  were  all  so  happy  at  home 
in  the  several  fortunate  democracies,  and  so  made  ourselves  at 
home  abroad  also  in  blessed  places  of  expatriation,  the  counties  of 
England,  the  hill  towns  of  Italy,  the  south  of  France,  that  we  took 
happiness  for  granted;  which  played  us  false  in  due  course.  Wher- 
ever we  happened  to  be  corporeally,  in  space  and  place,  around  us 
we  had  a  favorable  ambience,  and  up  ahead  there  were  vistas  some- 


9  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

what  open  and  luminous  and  extensive;  we  felt  fortunate;  a  general 
felicity  was  the  habitation  of  our  hearts,  the  seat  and  basis  of  our 
talent.  In  the  state  of  our  minds,  at  least,  peace  seemed  permanent. 

World  War  I,  which  was  hideously  destructive  in  reality — it 
slaughtered  a  generation,  shook  the  foundations  of  the  world, 
loosed  the  whirlwind,  weakened  important  governments,  brought 
on  revolutions — did  not  change  things  in  the  spirit  and  in  creative 
and  philosophical  orientation  as  much  as  you  might  think.  If  you 
reread  the  literature  of  the  twenties  and  reconsider  any  number  of 
the  lives  that  were  most  typical  of  that  time,  you  will  be  impressed 
by  its  optimistic,  progressive  mentality,  above  all.  Even  with  respect 
to  politics,  until  the  League  of  Nations  demonstrated  its  weakness, 
until  the  National  Socialist  Party  came  to  power  in  Germany,  we 
had  hopes,  high  hopes,  high  enough! 

Then  as  now,  in  cold  warfare  and  hot  warfare  alike,  silly  people 
and  easily  discouraged  people  would  ask  one  another:  what  are  we 
fighting  for?  As  a  rule,  naturally,  we  fight  simply  to  regain  what 
we  had  before  the  fighting  began;  we  fight  for  another  opportunity 
to  remedy  the  faults  and  inequities  of  the  general  way  of  life  that 
we  have  idly  or  ignorantly  put  off  doing  anything  about  when  we 
had  the  time  and  the  wherewithal.  Certainly  not  Utopia,  perhaps 
not  even  giant  strides  ahead;  but  a  prospect  of  improvement,  a 
chance  to  progress.  In  many  respects  life  on  this  earth  is  irremedi- 
able, we  know  that.  But  even  the  natural  and  absolute  earthly 
tragedies  (of  which  death  is  incomparably  the  greatest)  are  easier 
to  bear  if  they  come  upon  us  in  circumstances  of  some  stability,  in 
a  familiar  and  domestic  context,  with  some  notion  of  everything's 
eventually  getting  better,  for  one's  offspring  and  other  beloved 
youngsters,  if  not  for  ourselves;  with  some  feeling  of  immortality, 
by  means  of  continuing  and  self-renewing  traditions  and  the  endur- 
ing structures  of  art  and  literature,  if  not  in  the  old  religious  way. 

I  have  not  forgotten  my  theme;  it  is  not  arms  and  the  man — it  is 
the  fountain  pen  and  the  typewriter,  and  men,  women,  and 
children,  as  the  literary  art,  and  especially  narrative  art,  is  con- 
cerned with  them.  But  in  this  modern  time  it  is  difficult  if  not 
impossible  to  consider  any  one  aspect  of  our  existence,  or  of  real- 


Images  of  Truth  •  10 

ity  at  large,  separately  from  any  other  aspect;  perhaps  it  isn't  even 
desirable  to  do  so.  For  evidently  everything  is  connected  and  in- 
volved in  fact.  We  learn  to  think  almost  entirely  in  contrasts  and 
juxtapositions,  in  the  famous  antinomies:  good  and  evil,  land  and 
sea,  day  and  dark,  art  and  ignorance.  It  probably  is  the  right  way 
to  think.  If  our  fathers  and  grandfathers  at  the  beginning  of  the 
century  had  borne  war  in  mind  as  well  as  peace,  we  might  have 
kept  the  balance  in  our  favor. 

Be  that  as  it  may:  those  contrasts  and  antitheses  are  basic  to 
literary  art.  What  we  call  the  creative  spirit  really  does  not  create 
anything.  It  evokes  and  recollects  and  relates.  It  is  a  mere  inclina- 
tion of  our  good  nature  and  our  good  will,  stooping  and  bending 
close  to  evil  in  order  to  understand  it.  It  is  a  flashing  of  our  small 
individual  light,  as  best  we  know  how,  into  the  general  darkness. 

Some  men  (for  whatever  reason)  have  an  especially  acute  sense 
that  mankind  is  in  the  dark,  in  innocence  or  ignorance;  that  some- 
thing is  lost,  either  the  meaning  of  the  experiences  behind  us  or  the 
difficulty  or  the  heart's  desire  confronting  us  next,  on  the  way  to 
the  future.  They  are  most  apt  and  able  to  become  literary  artists, 
and  in  that  capacity  to  investigate  the  situation  in  some  respect, 
to  reveal  things  a  little. 

It  is  legendary  that  in  the  Crimean  War,  when  the  allied  expedi- 
tionary force  about  to  invade  that  southernmost  part  of  Russia 
found  itself  extremely  short  of  maps,  a  certain  commanding  officer, 
in  despair,  trying  to  figure  out  his  geographical  situation  and  to 
solve  his  tactical  and  logistical  problem,  made  use  of  a  Ouija 
board. 

Now,  certainly  all  our  allies,  and  at  least  one  of  the  powerful  na- 
tions confronting  us,  with  dangerously  mingled  feelings  of  hostility 
and  fear  and  envy,  have  maps  enough,  including  some  absolute 
marvels  made  by  electronic  cameras  in  unmanned  space  vehicles 
automatically  whirring  in  circles  in  the  stratosphere,  televising 
their  findings  back  to  headquarters.  But  still  our  governing  classes 
and  chiefs  of  state  seem  not  to  have  much  sense  of  direction,  either 
literally  or  figuratively;  the  best  they  can  do  is  to  feel  their  way 
along  in  terrible  obscurity  and  trepidation,  perhaps  on  a  collision 


ii  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

course.  Naturally  a  writer  is  inclined  to  suggest  that,  in  lieu  of 
Ouija  boards,  they  read  more  books,  beginning  with  the  Iliad  and 
the  Odyssey. 

Obviously  enough,  in  wartime,  whenever  or  wherever  it  may  be, 
the  whole  world  is  an  Iliad;  cruel  and  compulsive  and  convulsive. 
It  is  even  more  noteworthy  that  in  our  present  peacetime  (we 
call  it  peace)  the  whole  world  is  an  Odyssey;  which  is  a  clear  and 
instructive  analogy,  not  farfetched.  Think  how  many  men  there 
must  be  at  any  given  moment,  day  after  day,  night  and  day,  erring 
hither  and  thither  across  the  sea,  not  just  sailors  but  wretched  land- 
lubber-types as  well,  such  as  scientists  and  engineers  and  journalists 
and  secret  agents,  seasick  half  the  time,  in  boats  often  as  rudimen- 
tary as  Odysseus';  not  just  on  the  mere  Mediterranean  but  on  the 
entire  extreme  ocean  all  around  the  earth,  which  no  longer  seems 
to  have  a  center;  not  just  on  the  briny  deep  but  in  the  sky  as  well, 
beyond  the  sound  barrier,  beyond  the  atmosphere.  We  have  ex- 
tended our  world  a  little  but  with  no  absolute  or  basic  change;  it 
is  not  unlike  Odysseus'.  The  elements  still  overlap  and  intermingle, 
the  dark  and  the  daylight,  the  fire  and  the  ice,  the  quick  and  the 
dead;  and  our  recent  space  excursions  have  been  by  water  as  much 
as  by  air. 

For  every  Icarus  there  are  a  hundred  thousand  Odysseuses  still; 
for  every  one  who  goes  weightless,  a  hundred  thousand  are  seasick 
in  the  rudimentary  boats,  and  a  hundred  thousand  heartsick,  on 
beaches  every  bit  as  dark  as  those  of  the  Cimmerian  country, 
with  hardly  any  idea  where  they  are,  certainly  not  the  remotest 
notion  how  to  get  where  they  hope  they  are  going.  Have  the  seven 
lives  of  Tiresias  run  out?  What  about  some  sheep's  blood  for  him? 
Has  his  thirst  abated,  has  his  wisdom  also  turned  to  mere  idealism 
and  optimism  and  fear  and  propaganda  in  the  modern  way,  our 
foolish  way? 

Certainly  the  misery  and  bravery  of  humanity  now,  the  subject 
matter  available  to  us,  for  any  and  every  sort  of  world-wide,  heroic, 
exalted,  and  visionary  literature,  is  as  great  as,  perhaps  greater 
than,  anything  vouchsafed  the  ancient  Greeks  or  any  of  the  other 
literature-loving  peoples  in  history.  But  there  is  not  the  least  like- 


Images  of  Truth  •  12 

lihood  of  our  producing  anything  epical  or  universal  or  commen- 
surate with  present  reality. 

Even  those  of  us  who  stay  comfortably  and  sedentarily  at  home 
in  fact,  elderly  men,  disabled  men,  women  of  genius,  on  farms  or 
in  idyllic  small  towns  or  in  retirement  in  places  like  Florida  and 
California,  are  kept  closely  in  touch,  by  means  of  the  mass  media, 
with  others'  seafaring  and  airfaring  and  with  the  general  darkness 
and  lostness,  the  blood  soaking  into  the  sand;  and  no  answer  from 
Tiresias  yet.  The  literary  inspiration  also  is  dispersed  all  over  the 
place,  the  heart  in  morsels,  the  mind  divided. 

In  imagination  everyone  (everyone  who  has  any  imagination)  is 
now  expeditionary  to  some  extent,  and  in  some  sense  a  refugee,  and 
revolutionary  in  a  way.  Some  of  us  have  wondrous  genius,  many  of 
us  have  considerable  serviceable  abilities,  but  not  for  the  too  haunt- 
ing, too  vast,  too  challenging  subject  matter,  the  whirlwind  that 
we  too  are  whirling  in.  Neither  Odysseus  nor  any  man  along  with 
him  wrote  the  Odyssey;  that  came  centuries  later.  Which  we  regard 
as  a  sufficient  excuse  for  our  not  managing  to  write  the  various 
minor  things  of  which  we  certainly  are  capable. 

I  remember  an  exchange  of  letters  about  this  with  Thornton 
Wilder  in  the  spring  of  1948.  I  had  written  to  him  in  one  of  my 
melancholy  fits,  though  with  nothing  really  to  complain  of:  my  bod- 
ily health  holding  up  well;  my  family  angelic  around  me,  guardian- 
angelic;  the  work  I  had  in  hand  of  intense  interest  to  me  (only 
somewhat  beyond  the  range  of  my  talent). 

For  various  reasons  I  had  been  longing  to  travel  abroad  again 
for  a  year  or  two,  and  lacked  the  courage  to  do  so.  At  that  time  of 
my  life,  I  thought,  any  new  and  important  writable  experience  or 
theme  was  apt  to  make  me  abort  the  piece  of  work  that  I  had  in 
progress,  or  perhaps  I  should  say,  in  process.  For  as  a  matter  of  fact 
nothing  was  progressing  for  me  very  well.  Certainly  in  Western  and 
Central  Europe  (then  as  now)  there  were  fearful  themes:  the  recur- 
rence of  the  everlasting  and  characteristic  animus  of  European 
mankind  in  which  a  great  part  of  civilization  in  the  past  was  forged 
and  fused,  hammer  on  anvil,  hot  metal  in  cold  water,  for  which 


ij  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

there  is  not  room  on  that  mere  peninsula  of  Eurasia  any  longer; 
the  intellect  of  France  infected  with  German  philosophy,  existen- 
tialism, etc.;  and  other  symptomatic  matters  painful  to  my  mind. 

Just  after  this  letter  of  mine,  as  it  happened,  Wilder  delivered 
an  address  at  the  annual  Ceremonial  of  the  American  Academy  and 
National  Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters.  He  entitled  it  "A  Time  of 
Troubles,"  and  in  great  part  it  seemed  intended  for  me.  He  did  not 
declare  in  it  that  all  periods  of  human  history  have  been  equally 
and  constantly  troubled.  He  did  not  deny  the  possibility  of  various 
future  Utopias  based  on  this  or  that  revolutionary  daydream.  He 
admitted,  indeed,  that  in  our  time  little  old  ladies  who  have 
hitherto  led  sheltered  lives  are  to  be  seen  crawling  over  the  refuse 
heaps  at  the  edge  of  town  looking  for  something  to  eat,  while  other 
nations,  particularly  this  nation,  ostentatiously  hoard  or  dump  or 
destroy  mountains  of  good  food,  thus  making  themselves  targets  for 
future  vengeance.  He  did  allude  to  the  worse  and  worse  murderous- 
ness  of  our  more  and  more  scientific  wars. 

But,  he  pointed  out  sternly,  the  periods  of  peace  and  security 
and  benevolence  in  the  past  have  been  but  interludes:  "brief,  cir- 
cumscribed, parochial,  well-fenced  and  exceptional."  Let  us  never, 
never,  regard  them  as  a  norm.  Every  age  has  to  be  its  own  norm. 

Upon  rereading  Homer,  Goethe  remarked  that  "the  Iliad  teaches 
us  that  it  is  our  task  here  on  earth  to  enact  Hell  daily";  with  which 
grim  statement  Matthew  Arnold  concurred.  On  that  pleasant  after- 
noon at  the  Institute,  Wilder  quoted  all  three  of  these  authorities 
on  the  human  situation;  and  Kierkegaard  to  boot. 

Finally,  he  declared  to  us  that  the  creative  man  is  under  no  obli- 
gation to  supply  final  answers  to  the  great  tragic  questions  or  "to 
balance  the  books  of  good  and  evil."  In  so  far  as  he  is  called  upon 
to  go  through  hell  in  his  life,  all  he  has  to  do  about  it  creatively  is 
to  depict  that  life,  to  paint  a  portrait  of  himself  experiencing  it, 
and  to  express  his  various  emotional  responses.  To  most  writers  of 
consequence,  he  concluded,  "Ages  of  Security  and  Ages  of  Anxiety 
look  much  alike." 

Just  emerging  from  my  fit  of  sadness,  I  was  touched  to  the  quick 


Images  of  Truth  •  14 

by  this  discourse.  Wilder  is  an  inspiring,  admonishing,  cautionary, 
exemplary  man,  though  not  goody-goody  (the  example  he  sets  us 
is  not  always  good). 

I  learned  later  that  he  had  had  no  thought  of  admonishing  me 
particularly  that  afternoon.  My  sad  letter  had  gone  to  New  Haven, 
and  he  was  elsewhere;  so  that  it  did  not  reach  him  until  some  time 
after  the  Ceremonial;  and  presently  he  replied  to  it,  still  upon  a 
challenging  and  reproachful  note.  Somehow  he  had  not  altogether 
enjoyed  giving  the  Blashfield  address  but  it  was  worth  giving,  he 
wrote,  if  in  any  way  it  suggested  to  me  that  "writers  can  be  doubly 
lively  under  lowering  skies,  like  porpoises." 

Furthermore,  he  had  been  teaching  somewhere  that  spring,  and 
the  university  youngsters  as  of  that  date,  he  had  found,  were  of  a 
fine  porpoise-like  liveliness,  self-inspiring  and  undaunted.  Evidently 
it  was  people  between  forty-five  and  fifty-five,  he  noted,  who  took 
fright  at  world-wide  disturbance  and  historic  danger.  It  seemed  to 
distract  them  from  the  painfulness  of  having  to  say  good-by  to  their 
youth.  As  he  well  knew,  I  was  forty-seven  at  the  time. 

In  point  of  fact,  the  diminution  of  my  youthfulness,  the  onset  of 
my  middle  age,  was  not  really  frightening  to  me.  But  Wilder's  error 
about  me  in  this  respect  alerted  me  to  an  error  of  my  own.  It  was 
not  the  heartbreak  and  seeming  delirium  and  black  incomprehen- 
sible state  of  the  world  at  large,  the  Cimmerian  situation,  Odysseus 
lost,  and  Tiresias  absent  or  silent,  which  had  stricken  me;  it  was 
the  mere  fact  that  my  work  had  not  been  going  well. 

I  am  one  of  those  blessed-accursed  writers  whom  feelings  of  un- 
deserved good  fortune,  perceptions  or  illusions  of  overabundant 
subject  matter,  enthusiasms  of  all  sort,  somewhat  overwhelm  and 
embarrass,  and,  as  to  the  range  and  sufficiency  of  my  talent,  dwarf. 
I  had  been  struggling  with  a  kind  of  novel  that  did  not  suit  me  and 
did  not  fit  the  themes  and  remembrances  and  visions  that  I  had  to 
work  with. 

How  I  wish  that  the  several  early  teachers  and  inspirers  of  my 
youth,  and  kind  reviewers  of  my  early  published  work,  instead  of 
calling  constantly  for  maximum  inspiration  in  the  way  of  the  full- 
length,  realistic,  naturalistic  novel,  had  started  me  where  fiction 


ij  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

itself  started,  with  the  anecdote  and  the  episode  and  the  fable  and 
the  allegory  and  the  fairy  tale,  and  followed  along  with  the  rem- 
iniscence and  the  cautionary  tale  and  the  short  story,  letting  the 
great  novel  form  develop  integrally,  as  an  assemblage  of  materials 
requiring  in  each  instance  a  particular  handling  for  a  particular 
expressive  purpose,  not  an  imposition  of  arbitrary  pattern,  not  an 
adornment  of  vain  style;  as  a  mechanism  of  the  writer's  imagina- 
tion directed  at  the  reader's  imagination,  with  sound  and  previously 
exercised  component  parts.  But,  in  fact,  professors  of  creative  writ- 
ing and  indeed  literary  critics  have  their  own  problems;  surely  it  is 
a  folly  to  expect  them  to  know  things  that  it  takes  many  a  creative 
writer  half  a  lifetime  to  find  out. 

It  is  one  of  the  magical  and  fantastic  things  about  art,  perhaps 
especially  literary  art:  there  is  a  kind  of  health  and  ill-health  about 
it,  right  and  wrong,  perdition  and  salvation.  When  it  goes  wrong, 
when  talent  breaks  down  or  dries  up  or  withers  away  or  grows  pain- 
ful, as  a  rule  it  is  a  matter  of  misunderstanding  or  of  not  master- 
ing form.  And,  as  a  rule,  the  way  to  save  it,  the  way  it  saves  itself 
— and  the  way  it  may  save  its  poor  practitioner  from  his  cramp  and 
inhibition  and  impotence  and  shame — is  by  means  of  some  reori- 
entation of  aesthetics,  often  some  return  to  simpler  concepts  and 
structures  of  the  literature  of  the  past. 

Almost  any  subject  matter  that  comes  forcefully  to  the  writer's 
mind,  or  that  he  has  his  heart  set  on,  will  serve,  will  work,  if  his 
form  is  right.  In  this  eclectic,  vainly  philosophizing  era,  in  the 
midst  of  a  century  half  maddened  by  disorders  more  ominous  and 
onerous  than  those  that  particularly  plague  writers,  there  has  been 
a  great  deal  of  obscuration  and  distortion  of  literary  theory,  espe- 
cially with  respect  to  fiction.  The  modernism  of  poets  seems  a  simpler 
enterprise  than  any  corresponding  notion  or  concept  of  the  narra- 
tive art;  but  poets  have  had  a  complicating  influence,  as  so  many  of 
them  make  a  profession  or  an  avocation  of  reviewing  books,  and 
lay  down  the  law  to  the  rest  of  us. 

I  myself  began  as  a  poet,  which  is  a  not  altogether  advantageous 
background  for  a  life  of  fiction  writing.  The  art  of  poetry  is  word 
by  word,  in  very  close  connections  like  lace,  juxtapositions  like 


Images  of  Truth  •  16 

mosaic.  Whereas  to  tell  a  story  as  it  should  be  told,  especially  a 
long  story  or  a  novel,  we  must  cast  an  easier  spell,  looser  and  farther 
flung,  inclusive  of  some  imperfection;  so  that  the  reader  can  take 
it  in  his  own  way,  as  experience  rather  than  as  artistry,  and  if  he 
pleases,  retell  some  of  it  to  himself  in  his  own  words,  relive  some 
of  it.  The  novel  writer  does  not  want  the  novel  reader  to  pause 
much,  in  the  actual  reading,  in  particular  admiration  of  a  given 
sentence  or  paragraph  or  page.  The  thing  is  to  keep  his  mind  on  the 
move,  credulous  and  emotionally  responsive  until  the  whole,  greater 
than  the  sum  of  the  parts,  has  been  made  clear  to  him.  The 
prose  of  the  verse-trained  writer  is  apt  to  be  too  arresting,  too  con- 
spicuously pictorial,  too  densely  compressed,  too  euphonious,  with 
effects  of  the  music  of  the  language. 

We  have  to  work  that  much  harder,  to  make  easy  reading,  but 
not  too  easy,  lest  we  lull  the  reader  to  sleep.  We  learn,  and  we  re- 
learn;  and  always  in  any  art  there  are  good  techniques  to  be  devel- 
oped even  against  the  grain  of  the  medium.  There  are  important 
forms  of  fiction  to  which  a  slow  or  difficult  style  is  not  a  handicap. 
By  added  artistry,  the  too  artistic  effect  can  be  avoided  or  covered 
up.  If  we  have  energy  enough,  pluck  enough,  in  the  painstaking 
way,  finally  we  break  through  our  self-consciousness  and  we  find 
some  simple  solution. 

For  weeks  at  a  time  I  read  nothing  but  poetry,  though  I  never 
regret  having  ceased  to  write  it.  Once  over  the  hump  into  middle 
age,  the  pleasure  of  exercising  the  talent  that  one  has,  sufficiently 
consoles  one  for  the  mere  fancied  genius  of  one's  youth.  But  I  often 
feel  a  kind  of  homesickness  of  mind;  I  steal  back  to  the  poetical 
standpoint;  I  retrace  my  poor,  faltering,  and  divagating  steps  from 
the  way  I  first  undertook  literature  to  the  way  it  seems  to  be  for 
me  now;  and  I  find  myself  tempted  by  very  grand,  arbitrary,  and 
over-artful  notions  of  narrative  structure  and  craftsmanship.  Gen- 
erally speaking,  I  think  that  the  inspirations  of  poets  have  been 
unbeneficial  to  the  art  of  fiction,  as  they  naturally  incline  to  mere 
oddities  and  novelties  of  construction  and  style  (to  what  I  call  tri- 
angular armchairs  and  procrustean  beds,  three-legged  trousers,  and 
three-fingered  gloves). 


iy  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

Now  let  me  remind  you  once  more  of  my  ancient  text,  beloved 
passage  of  epic  Greek  literature,  prototypical  of  narrative  art  in 
general — "naked  Ulysses  clad  in  eternal  fiction,"  to  borrow  the 
glamorous  phrase  which  is  in  the  foreword  to  Chapman's  Homer. 
The  scene  of  Odysseus  on  the  Cimmerian  shore  is  a  good  allegory 
or  image  of  the  more  tried  and  true  old  notions  of  fictitious  form; 
the  three  perennial  types  of  novel  that  we  may  need  to  go  back  to, 
or  at  least  to  think  back  about. — 

First,  narrative  of  instruction  and  revelation;  for  example,  to 
name  some  obvious  contemporary  volumes,  Forster's  A  Passage  to 
India,  Maugham's  Christmas  Holiday,  Richard  Hughes's  The  Fox 
in  the  Attic,  and  (bringing  my  own  work  into  the  picture  self-indul- 
gently)  Apartment  in  Athens. 

Second,  narrative  of  reminiscence  and  sentiment;  for  example, 
Willa  Cather's  My  Antonia,  and  my  family  chronicle,  The  Grand- 
mothers. 

Third,  narrative  of  recreation  and  daydream,  luring  and  exercis- 
ing the  reader's  imagination  this  way  and  that,  at  liberty  and  at 
ease;  for  example,  Isak  Dinesen's  "The  Deluge  at  Norderney"  or 
"The  Monkey." 

(There  are  also  composite  or  intermediate  forms,  and  one  or 
two  specialized  categories,  such  as  the  historical  novel,  verging  on 
scholarly  truthfulness,  and  the  philosophical  novel,  incorporating 
disquisitional  and  argumentative  prose  in  some  quantity.) 

The  greatest  or  the  gravest  of  the  functions  of  fiction  is  the  first 
mentioned,  the  questioning  of  Tiresias.  Indeed,  we  fiction  writers 
question  everyone  and  make  what  we  can  of  the  answers.  We  rouse 
up  our  own  memories,  experience  scarcely  worth  remembering, 
time  that  has  gone  to  waste  all  our  lives;  but  it  is  not  because  we 
love  the  past;  it  is  because  we  fear  the  future.  It  is  not  in  self-love  but 
to  save  ourselves,  and  others  as  well,  if  we  are  good  at  it.  We  raise 
the  dead  and  we  make  them  speak;  but  for  those  of  us  who  are  true 
novelists  it  is  not  as  a  means  of  expressing  our  particular  opinion. 
We  ask  the  dead  questions  and  pass  the  information  on.  We  do  not 
simply  utter  our  experience  through  them.  They  are  not  puppets, 
they  have  voices  of  their  own;  and  the  heart  of  every  matter  as  we 


Images  of  Truth  •  18 

see  it  seems  to  come  to  us  from  their  knowledge,  as  it  were  inde- 
pendent of  our  knowledge,  prior  to  our  experience. 

On  the  Cimmerian  shore,  by  the  trench  or  hole  full  of  sacrificial 
sheep's  blood,  Odysseus  sat  and  waited,  knowing  that  the  spirits  of 
the  dead  are  forever  thirsty  and  would  come  at  last.  Which  they 
did,  like  a  herd  of  shadowy  cattle  crowding  each  other  around  a 
watering  trough.  Among  them  he  saw  the  ghost  of  his  own  old 
mother,  Anticlea,  and  she  whimpered  for  a  sip  of  blood,  but  with 
his  sword  drawn  before  him  over  the  warm  puddle,  he  refused  her 
pitilessly,  refused  them  all,  until  at  last  Tiresias,  the  wise  ghost, 
appeared,  and  had  the  first  drink,  and  told  him  how  to  get  back 
home  to  Ithaca.  This  is  a  prefiguration  of  the  literature  of  revela- 
tion and  guidance. 

Then  he  let  the  other  ghosts  come  forward — "thin,  airy,  shoals 
of  visionary  ghosts,"  as  Pope  describes  them — and  take  their  sips  of 
blood,  beginning  with  his  mother.  She  told  him  what,  for  senti- 
ment's sake,  he  wanted  to  hear;  that  his  wife,  Penelope,  longed  for 
him  so  faithfully  that  she  had  insomnia;  that  his  young  son,  Tele- 
machus,  had  grown  up  to  be  a  man  and  was  well  thought  of,  in- 
vited everywhere;  that  his  aged  father  or  stepfather,  Laertes,  had 
fallen  into  second  childhood,  refused  to  sleep  in  his  bed,  stubbornly 
went  outdoors,  even  on  chilly  nights  in  the  fall,  and  lay  in  the  au- 
tumn leaves;  and  that  the  cause  of  her  own  death  had  been  loneli- 
ness. Loneliness  for  whom?  For  Odysseus  himself,  her  dear  son,  her 
questioner.  Touched  by  this,  Odysseus  tried  to  give  her  a  hug  and  a 
kiss.  But,  as  she  was  a  ghost,  his  arms  clasped  nothing;  upon  which 
she  explained  to  him  something  about  death:  it  is  an  untying  of 
the  nerves,  so  that  the  flesh  and  the  bones  and  the  psyche  disperse, 
dissociate.  This  beautifully  exemplifies  in  miniature  our  fiction  of 
remembrance  and  reawakened,  recalled  emotion. 

Odysseus  stayed  there  on  the  haunted  sands  for  hours  that  night, 
to  see  what  other  extraordinary  figures  would  come  to  his  trough 
of  blood,  a  rush  of  female  ghosts  to  start  with,  whom  he  lined  up 
in  single  file,  so  as  to  hear  their  cries  and  their  confidences:  Tyro, 
to  whom  the  god  of  the  ocean  made  love  in  a  little  bower  of  water- 
spouts, and  who  bore  him  twins;  and  Leda,  the  sweetheart  of  the 


ip  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

swan;  and  Ariadne  "passioning,"  to  use  Shakespeare's  participle  for 
her;  and  horrid  Eriphyle,  who,  for  a  fee  or  a  bribe,  betrayed  her 
husband  into  military  service;  and  a  dozen  others — thrilling  crea- 
tions of  the  collective  narrative  genius  of  ancient  Greece,  greater 
than  that  of  any  other  people  in  history — whom  the  gloomy  goddess, 
Persephone,  presently  drove  away  helter-skelter. 

There  also  came,  thirstily,  Hercules,  with  various  eddying  spirits 
who  were  inferior  to  him  but  able  to  anger  him  with  the  noise  of 
their  wings;  he  kept  glaring  and  drawing  his  bow  and  arrow.  There 
came  Tantalus,  the  personifier  of  insatiable  desire;  and  Sisyphus, 
the  personification  of  futility  and  existentialism;  and  Oedipus,  the 
"pompous  wretch."  There  came  several  great  recent  casualties  of 
the  Trojan  War;  notably  Agamemnon,  Odysseus'  commanding 
officer,  who  sobbingly  narrated  how  his  wife  had  murdered  him 
and  not  even  respected  his  corpse  afterward,  leaving  the  eyelids 
open  and  the  jaw  unbound.  Odysseus  reminded  him  of  the  fact  that 
in  his  family,  the  Atrides,  none  of  the  men  had  much  luck  with 
women;  had  not  his  sister-in-law,  Helen,  caused  the  Trojan  War 
in  the  first  place?  There  came  Ajax,  still  in  his  battle  array  and 
battle  anger,  with  a  host  of  the  "grisly  forms"  of  those  who  fell  by 
his  truncheon,  "shooting  o'er  the  lawns  of  Hell,"  to  quote  another 
of  Pope's  magical  passages. 

When  he  got  back  home  Odysseus  narrated  all  these  apparitions 
to  the  King  and  Queen  of  the  Phaeacians  and  to  their  court,  to 
amuse  them  and  to  beguile  the  time  at  a  long  banquet;  singing  for 
his  supper,  that  is,  yarning  for  his  supper.  In  all  this  the  Odyssey 
is  the  prototype  of  recreational  storytelling  and  story  writing.  Often 
it  is  a  renarration  of  tales  already  told  over  and  over  by  everyone, 
and  here  and  there  it  may  seem  to  us  modern  readers  meaningless 
and  without  a  moral. 

I  believe  that  there  is  a  more  precise,  potent  truth  in  story  than 
in  philosophy.  In  a  truthful  account  of  something  which  has  hap- 
pened, our  minds  discover,  almost  without  thinking,  a  kind  of 
knowledge  of  the  world  which  lies  deeper  and  is  less  subject  to 
perversion  and  change  than  all  the  rules  of  ethics  cut  and  dried. 
The  emotion  of  a  story  has  a  more  pacifying,  fortifying  effect  on 


Images  of  Truth  •  20 

our  wild  hearts  than  any  amount  of  preaching  and  teaching.  And 
in  spite  of  our  modern  sophistication,  our  pride  of  economics  and 
politics  and  science,  wildness  of  the  heart  is  still  one  of  the  most 
problematical  and  important  things  in  the  world.  Sometimes  it  is 
our  downfall  and  sometimes,  if  we  understand  it  aright,  our  salva- 
tion. It  may  be  good  or  it  may  be  evil;  it  may  be  energy  or  only  a 
fast  fever. 

As  I  have  said,  a  great  part  of  fiction  is  a  diagnosis;  and  once  in 
a  while,  when  some  class  or  profession  or  family  of  mankind  has 
been  spiritually  sick,  novels  have  prescribed  something  to  relieve  or 
cure  the  sickness.  In  great  salutary  works  of  this  kind  there  may  not 
be  as  much  beauty  or  kindness  or  fun  as  we  should  like.  The  novel- 
ist has  sat  like  Odysseus  with  his  drawn  sword  and  kept  ordinary 
sentiments  of  humanity  back  a  bit;  refraining  in  his  own  person, 
as  well  as  in  the  work,  from  a  large  part  of  what  makes  life  pleasant 
and  interesting. 

Story  reading  or  novel  reading  is  a  good  pastime.  For  perhaps 
the  majority  of  the  reading  public  today  it  is  no  more  than  that. 
For  my  part  personally,  when  I  want  literary  recreation,  relief  from 
immediacy,  release  of  tension,  daydream  at  second  hand,  I  infinitely 
prefer  The  Thousand  and  One  Nights  or  Hans  Christian  Ander- 
sen, or  Isak  Dinesen,  to  any  sort  of  romancing  or  fantasy-making 
about  modern  life.  Of  the  ordinary,  current,  carelessly  written, 
prosaic  kind  of  novel  you  need  a  new  one  every  few  days,  as  it  were 
a  clean  pack  of  cards  for  solitaire.  Naturally,  the  proud  hard-work- 
ing writer  is  not  content  to  have  his  work  played  with  awhile,  like 
a  pack  of  cards,  and  then  scrapped.  But  this  happens;  pastimes 
change  month  by  month  or  year  by  year.  Even  those  parts  of  the 
Odyssey  intended  to  amuse  banquets,  those  catalogues  of  armament 
and  enumerations  of  princes  and  compendia  of  legends  which  were 
a  riddle  and  a  charm  for  the  general  public  in  olden  time,  now 
have  gone  out  of  date.  We  have  to  keep  looking  things  up  in  Bul- 
finch  or  in  Lempriere.  Whereas  the  questioning  of  Tiresias  and  the 
pathetic  report  of  Odysseus'  mother  have  meant  more  and  more 
to  us  as  the  centuries  have  passed. 

In  order  to  last  a  novel  must  be  functional.  To  be  sure,  it  must 


2i  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

entertain,  and  it  must  convince,  and  it  must  thrill  somehow;  but 
it  must  also  help.  It  must  be  adaptable  to,  and  serviceable  in,  peo- 
ple's lives  as  they  privately  lead  them  day  in  and  day  out.  Speak- 
ing for  myself,  once  more,  I  find  the  present  world  so  enthralling 
and  alarming  that  I  scarcely  care  to  read  fiction  at  all  unless  it  gives 
me  some  theme  worth  thinking  about  after  the  reading  is  done; 
unless  it  alleviates  and  sweetens  the  experience  I  am  involved  in; 
unless  as  I  go  about  my  business  and  my  pleasure  I  can  feel  in  my- 
self some  increase  of  clarity  and  ability  thanks  to  it.  "The  only  end 
of  writing  is  to  enable  readers  better  to  enjoy  life,  or  better  to  en- 
dure it,"  said  Dr.  Johnson. 

It  need  not  have  what  you  would  call  noble  subject  matter.  In  my 
opinion  one  of  the  best  short  works  of  fiction  ever  written,  one  of 
the  likeliest  to  last,  is  Adolphe  by  Benjamin  Constant,  a  harsh  little 
love  story,  a  case  of  adultery  and  satiety  and  vanity.  Think  when 
it  was  written:  Benjamin  Constant  was  reading  it  aloud  to  the 
Queen  of  Holland  when  the  news  of  the  Battle  of  Waterloo  was 
brought  to  the  palace,  which  interrupted  them. 

But  whatever  the  rulers  and  the  chiefs  of  state  and  ministers  of 
state  and  the  party  secretaries  and  the  dictators  and  various  rabble- 
rousers  and  the  generals  and  admirals  and  the  scientists,  physicists 
and  electronic  engineers  and  biochemists  and  geneticists  and  vari- 
ous brain-washers,  have  in  store  for  us,  we  presumably  shall  always 
have  some  private  life,  domestic  and  social  relationships  and  soli- 
tary private  psychology,  to  cope  with  in  ourselves  and  in  others.  If 
you  are  badly  afflicted  by  your  private  heartache,  whatever  it  may 
happen  to  be,  and  distracted  by  accidents  of  your  previous  experi- 
ence, half  realized,  misunderstood  or  half  forgotten;  if  you  go  winc- 
ing through  life,  baffled  by  yourself,  stung  by  anxiety,  bothered  by 
conscience,  falling  in  and  out  of  love  for  example,  uncontrollably 
— as  it  might  be,  in  the  worst  weather  in  the  world,  a  stumble  and 
a  slip  on  a  slushy  sidewalk  into  an  unclean  gutter — the  chances 
are  that  you  will  make  a  botch  of  whatever  you  have  to  do. 

Almost  a  hundred  and  fifty  years  have  elapsed  since  Benjamin 
Constant  wrote  Adolphe.  It  is  still  important,  interesting,  and  en- 
lightening. To  this  day,  a  man  I  know  who  is  wise  and  kind  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  22 

apt  to  worry,  when  a  love  relationship  starts  in  the  circle  of  his 
friends,  presents  the  lovers  with  a  copy  of  it,  as  one  might  give 
quinine  to  travelers  departing  to  the  tropics.  This  is  the  kind  of 
thing  that  works  of  fiction  are  good  for. 

The  last  book  read  by  Maupassant  before  he  went  mad,  that  is 
to  say,  while  he  was  going  mad,  was  Tolstoi's  The  Death  of  Ivan 
Ilyitch.  (Someone  in  Paris  informed  Tatiana  Tolstoi  of  this,  and 
she  recorded  it  in  her  journal.)  This  is  another  of  the  purposes  and 
functions  of  narrative  literature:  a  sort  of  secular  extreme  unction; 
spiritual  sedation,  with  some  vision  of  a  potential  better  life. 

Its  techniques  and  various  spellbinding  effects  on  readers'  minds 
go  back  to  ancient  illiterate  times,  before  the  concept  of  romantic 
love  took  hold  of  us,  indeed  prior  to  the  Christian  sense  of  mental 
health  and  salvation. 

Many  years  ago  in  the  spring  I  visited  Marrakech,  the  chief  south- 
ern city  of  Morocco,  and  I  remember  its  novelists,  if  they  may  be 
called  that:  storytellers  seated  on  the  ground  in  the  market  place, 
uttering  the  serial  installments  of  their  art  to  a  public  which  for 
the  most  part  was  unable  to  read,  probably  still  is  unable.  There 
were  sorcerers  and  snake  charmers  there  as  well,  whose  public  dis- 
dainfully stood  around  or  walked  around,  looking  down  on  what 
was  done  for  them.  The  story  lovers,  for  the  most  part,  sat  cross- 
legged,  as  the  storyteller  himself  did;  with  others  who  had  not  found 
room  to  sit,  pressed  close  around,  in  order  not  to  miss  anything:  a 
ring  of  men  of  many  complexions  and  various  casts  of  countenance, 
with  differing  reactions  to  the  given  tale;  some  grinning  or  brood- 
ing with  a  pout  or  with  a  frown,  some  breathing  hard  in  childish 
suspense.  They  came  and  went,  according  to  their  other  interests 
and  pressures  of  the  day,  or  according  to  the  intrinsic  interest  of 
the  subject  matter  and  the  more  or  less  spellbinding  effect  of  the 
telling  in  different  parts  of  the  tale;  but  I  noticed  three  or  four  who 
stayed  spellbound  for  an  hour  or  more  at  a  stretch,  as  the  afternoon 
wore  on. 

There  were  two  such  narrators  when  I  was  there.  The  one  I  liked 
best  narrated  very  loud  and  never  laughed  at  his  own  jokes  or  put 
on  airs  of  virtuosity  or  vanity,  but  scowled  a  great  deal,  flashing 


23  •  Fiction  Writing  in  a  Time  of  Troubles 

his  eyes,  then  shutting  them  tight,  and  sitting  in  silence  for  a  while, 
to  consider  the  next  development  of  his  plot.  He  made  me  think  of 
blind  Homer,  and  reminded  me  of  the  fact  that,  for  a  storyteller, 
a  sort  of  blindness  to  everything  except  the  story  is  a  good  thing. 

The  sobriety  of  the  Moorish  storyteller  notwithstanding,  evi- 
dently part  of  what  he  told  was  funny.  The  ring  of  shoulders  shook 
with  laughter,  and  one  or  another  of  the  darker-skinned  among 
them  would  make  a  characteristically  African  gesture  of  hugging 
himself;  but  all  soundlessly,  lest  they  miss  a  sentence.  Their  amused 
faces  soon  quieted  down;  all  their  eyes  refixed  on  the  narrator,  to 
assist  their  ears.  When  their  expressions  intensified  and  hardened, 
I  guessed,  it  reflected  something  pathetic  in  the  plot,  or  something 
sensual.  They  never  gave  one  another  a  glance,  perhaps  from  mo- 
ment to  moment  were  scarcely  aware  of  the  collectivity  around 
them;  each  separately  rapt  away  by  the  art  of  the  yarn,  keeping  it 
to  himself,  or  between  himself  and  the  yarn-spinner,  as  though  the 
enjoyment  of  it  were  a  kind  of  love. 

How  I  wanted  to  understand  what  the  story  was  about!  The  nar- 
rator's exalted,  hard-working  face  and  the  ring  of  the  other  faces, 
credulous  and  uneasy  but  pleased,  piqued  and  confused  my  imagi- 
nation. When  I  was  a  child  in  Wisconsin  my  Chicago  uncle  and 
aunt  gave  me  a  volume  of  tales  from  The  Thousand  and  One 
Nights,  illustrated  in  color.  Presumably  the  subject  matter  of  those 
afternoons  in  Marrakech  derived  in  some  measure  from  that  master- 
piece of  the  Near  East,  as  it  had  been  inherited  and  altered  by  suc- 
cessive tellers  and  gradually  exported  westward  as  centuries  passed. 
But  the  inspiration  and  the  techniques  of  the  two  Moors  or  Berbers 
cross-legged  there  in  the  market  place,  telling  and  retelling,  with 
improvisations  and  changes  and  reinterpretations  to  suit  each  suc- 
cessive occasion  and  faraway  place,  dated  much  farther  back  than 
Scheherazade  and  her  lord  and  master,  to  classical  antiquity  and 
indeed  prehistory. 

The  tales  in  that  beloved  volume  almost  everyone  on  earth  must 
have  in  mind,  however  vaguely;  but  I  remember  the  illustrations 
better  than  the  text:  immense  scenes  of  burning  stone  with  caverns 
in  them,  weird  gardens  and  prisonlike  walled  cities  crowning  the 


Images  of  Truth  •  24 

horizon  far  off,  and  Aladdin,  and  Sinbad,  and  one  of  the  genii, 
bright-eyed,  sunburned,  and  nude,  except  for  a  white  loincloth 
which  the  wind  whipped  out  after  him,  like  tail  feathers  of  a  vast 
loose  bird.  I  think  that  must  have  been  the  first  representation  of 
the  human  body  unclothed  (almost  unclothed)  that  I  ever  saw. 
Certainly  it  was  the  first  pictorial  art  to  excite  my  puerile  admira- 
tion; the  work  of  Maxfield  Parrish,  a  painter  famous  in  those  days 
who  painted  somewhat  in  the  style  of  Salvador  Dali. 

I  wonder  whether  anyone  who  knew  Arabic — or  was  it  Berber? 
— ever  sat  down  here  in  the  market  place  in  Marrakech  and  made 
note  of  its  tales.  Our  energetic  but  culturally  somewhat  idle,  irre- 
sponsible civilization  neglects  things  of  greater  consequence  than 
this:  great  chances  missed,  good  works  put  off,  good  stories  not  told, 
or  told  perhaps  and  not  written,  in  one  ear  and  out  the  other.  The 
happy  prolixity  at  the  foot  of  the  bell  tower,  the  Koutubia  by  name, 
left  me  vaguely  disheartened  and  abashed,  reflecting  that  half  of 
one's  individual  life  is  wasted  on  one,  half  of  the  world  goes  to 
waste.  A  part  of  my  indulgence  in  these  characteristic,  repetitious, 
melancholy  notions  was  due  to  my  not  understanding  what  the 
voices  of  the  market  place  said. 

I  often  think  that  if  I  had  never  been  bitten  by  the  ambition  to 
produce  stories  and  novels  and  other  works  of  what  is  called  "orig- 
inal" literature — if  I  had  not  made  solemn  promises  to  three  or 
four  men  and  women  whom  I  love  and  to  whom  I  am  indebted — I 
might  have  spent  my  life  translating  and  translating;  a  blissful  life. 

The  voices  of  the  market  went  on  and  on  until  the  landscape  of 
the  foothills  of  the  Atlas  was  washed  with  volatile  sunset  color  in 
the  distance,  then  dulled  by  nightfall;  and  the  prayer-master  called 
from  the  bell  tower. 


Chapter  Two 

Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 


The  only  real  voyage  is  not  an  approach  to  landscapes  but  a  viewing  of 
the  universe  with  the  eyes  of  a  hundred  other  people. 

MARCEL  PROUST 


Having  had  the  pleasure  of  lifelong  friendship  with  Miss  Porter,  I 
find  it  irksome  to  call  her  "Miss  Porter."  It  has  been  mainly  a  com- 
radeship of  the  literary  life,  and  on  that  account  perhaps,  in  conver- 
sation and  in  correspondence,  I  often  address  her  as  "Porter."  A 
host  of  her  fellow  writers  and  others  speak  of  her  and  to  her  as 
"Katherine  Anne,"  with  or  without  a  basis  of  intimacy.  Somewhat 
like  Jane  Austen,  or  like  Colette,  she  has  an  unassuming  sort  of 
celebrity  that  invites  or  at  least  inspires  friendliness.  Let  me  now 
also  take  the  fond  informal  tone,  to  celebrate  the  publication  of 
her  novel  Ship  of  Fools,  twenty  years  in  the  making. 

First,  some  facts:  She  was  born  on  May  15,  1890,  in  Texas,  in 
"soft  blackland  farming  country,  full  of  fruits  and  flowers  and 
birds,"  on  the  banks  of  a  branch  of  the  Colorado  River  denomi- 
nated Indian  Creek,  small  and  clear,  unimportant  but  unforget- 
table. She  went  to  a  convent  school,  perhaps  more  than  one,  and  was 
an  uneven  student:  A  in  history  and  composition  and  other  sub- 
jects having  to  do  with  literature,  but,  she  admits,  "D  in  everything 
else,  including  deportment,  which  sometimes  went  down  to  E  and 
stopped  there." 

She  spent  an  important  part  of  her  girlhood  in  New  Orleans, 
and  afterward  lived  in  New  York  City  and  in  Mexico  City  and  in 
Paris  and  in  Baton  Rouge,  Louisiana,  and  in  more  recent  years, 

25 


Images  of  Truth  •  26 

in  upper  New  York  State  and  in  Southern  California  and  in  Con- 
necticut and  in  Washington,  D.C.  Prior  to  Ship  of  Fools,  she  pub- 
lished five  short  novels  or  nouvelles,  and  approximately  twenty 
short  stories  (my  count),  and  several  dozen  essays  and  criticisms 
and  historical  studies;  quality  always  instead  of  quantity.  She  is  an 
incomparable  letter  writer,  sparkling,  poignant,  and  abundant, 
and  a  famous  conversationalist. 

Now  let  me  try  to  describe  her,  as  to  her  physical  presence  and 
personality.  Like  many  women  accustomed  to  being  loved,  she 
dreads  and  disapproves  of  photographers,  although  in  fact  usually 
she  has  lent  herself  well  to  their  techniques,  and  they  have  been  on 
her  side.  I  remember  one  of  her  diatribes,  some  years  ago,  against 
a  photographer  and  an  interviewer  sent  by  one  of  the  news  weeklies, 
who,  she  said,  had  caught  her  unawares  and  committed  a  misrepre- 
sentation of  her.  In  the  photograph  in  question  when  it  appeared 
she  looked  (to  me)  like  Marie  Antoinette  young,  her  hair  perfectly 
coifed  and  powdered-looking,  playing  her  typewriter  as  though  it 
were  a  spinet.  And  it  amazed  me  to  note  how  skillfully  she  had  been 
able  to  simplify  the  record  of  her  life  for  the  interviewer  also. 

She  has  in  fact  a  lovely  face,  of  the  utmost  distinction  in  the 
Southern  way;  moonflower-pale,  never  sunburned,  perhaps  not 
burnable.  She  is  a  small  woman,  with  a  fine  figure  still;  sometimes 
very  slender,  sometimes  not.  Her  eyes  are  large,  dark,  and  lustrous, 
and  they  are  apt  to  give  one  fond  glances,  or  teasing  merry  looks, 
or  occasionally  great  flashes  of  conviction  or  indignation.  Her  voice 
is  sweet,  a  little  velvety  or  husky.  In  recent  years  she  has  familiar- 
ized a  great  number  of  appreciative  fellow  Americans  with  it,  by 
means  of  reading  and  speaking  engagements,  and  phonograph  re- 
cordings. 

I  remember  hearing  her  read  her  finest  nouvelle,  "Noon  Wine," 
one  summer  afternoon  in  1940,  at  a  time  of  cruel  setbacks  in  her 
personal  life,  in  a  little  auditorium  on  the  campus  of  Olivet  College 
planted  with  oak  trees.  It  was  hot  and  the  windows  stood  open.  The 
oak  trees  were  full  of  bluejays,  and  they  were  trying  to  shout  her 
down.  Were  they  muses  in  bird  form,  I  remember  humorously  ask- 
ing myself,  inspiring  her  to  cease  publicly  performing  old  work,  to 


2 j  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

start  writing  something  new?  (In  fact  it  was  later  that  year  that 
she  began  Ship  of  Fools,  then  temporarily  entitled  No  Safe  Harbor.) 
She  must  have  had  a  bout  of  bronchitis  that  spring  or  summer; 
she  almost  whispered  the  great  tale,  breathing  a  little  hollowly, 
with  an  uneasy  frayed  sound  now  and  then.  Certainly  there  were 
not  as  many  decibels  in  her  voice  as  in  the  outcry  of  the  jays.  Never- 
theless, her  every  tone  carried;  her  every  syllable  was  full  of  mean- 
ing and  easy  to  understand,  just  as  it  is  in  print. 

Certainly  not  muses,  she  protested  years  later,  when  I  had  writ- 
ten her  a  reminiscent  letter  about  our  brief  sojourn  together  on 
that  campus:  "Jays  are  the  furies,  never  trust  them,  never  be  de- 
ceived by  them." 

They  congregated  on  the  hilltop  in  Connecticut  where  she  then 
lived,  "thieving  and  raiding  and  gluttonizing  everything  in  sight," 
depriving  even  the  squirrels  of  their  peanuts,  and  of  course  driv- 
ing away  from  the  seed  table  "all  the  little  sweet  birds"  that  she 
especially  wanted  to  feed  and  save. 

Characteristically,  she  had  in  mind  a  certain  hierarchy  of  the 
bird  world,  poetical  but  perhaps  not  just.  One  day  she  looked  up 
and  discovered  hawks  hovering  over  the  wood-lot  and  the  meadow, 
closer  and  closer,  and  it  came  over  her  with  dismay  that  by  draw- 
ing the  small  birds  together  she  was  simply  facilitating  matters  for 
the  predators.  That  was  the  underlying  theme  of  Flowering  Judas, 
the  story  that  made  her  reputation  in  1930,  a  theme  of  intense 
concern  to  her  all  her  life:  involuntary  or  at  least  unintentional 
betrayal. 

But,  she  wrote,  the  songbirds  of  Connecticut  "were  skilled  and 
quick,  and  we  know  that  they  can  make  common  cause  and  chase 
a  hawk  away;  we  have  seen  that  together,  have  we  not?  And  in  some 
way,  I  cannot  hate  a  hawk;  it  is  a  noble  kind  of  bird  who  has  to 
hunt  for  living  food  in  order  to  live;  his  risks  and  privations  are 
great.  But  the  jay!  there  is  no  excuse  for  his  existence,  there  should 
be  a  bounty  on  every  ugly  hammerhead  of  that  species!" 

Throughout  human  history  hawks  have  been  thought  godlike, 
or  at  least  comparable  to  the  greatest  men  of  action,  our  heroes, 
our  lords  and  masters.  In  this  letter  Katherine  Anne  seemed  to 


Images  of  Truth  •  28 

make  some  identification  o£  the  small  birds  with  men  and  women 
of  letters  and  of  the  arts,  a  somewhat  more  modern  fancy.  In  a  later 
letter  she  referred  once  more  to  Cyanocitta  cristata,  the  middle-sized 
hammerheaded  ones,  as  emblematic  of  certain  intrusive  parasitic 
persons  who  devote  themselves  to  writers,  perhaps  to  her  more 
than  the  average.  "They  are  as  rapacious  and  hard  to  fight  off  as 
the  bluejays,"  but,  she  boasted,  "I  have  developed  a  great  severity 
of  rejection  that  I  did  not  know  I  was  capable  of.  We  were  all 
brought  up  on  the  Christian  and  noble  idea  that  we  have  no  right 
to  deny  our  lives  and  substance  to  anyone  who  seems  to  need  either 
or  both.  Never  was  a  fonder  delusion."  And  then  with  characteristic 
love  of  justice,  even  in  the  midst  of  irritation,  she  reminded  herself 
that,  to  some  extent,  life  and  substance  had  been  contributed  to 
her  by  certain  persons  in  her  day;  how  had  those  persons  known 
that  she  was  a  songbird?  Are  there,  for  human  beings  also,  what 
ornithologists  call  "field  marks"? 

One  of  her  "field  marks,"  I  think,  is  a  profound,  inward,  hidden 
way  of  working;  not  just  thoughtfully,  methodically,  as  perhaps 
prose  writers  ought  to  be  able  to  work,  as  indeed  in  her  case  the 
finished  product  suggests  that  she  may  have  done.  "I  spend  my  life 
thinking  about  technique,  method,  style,"  she  once  told  me.  "The 
only  time  I  do  not  think  of  them  at  all  is  when  I  am  writing." 


The  years  on  the  hilltop  in  Connecticut  appear  to  have  been 
the  crucial  period  in  the  composition  of  Ship  of  Fools.  In  a  letter 
dated  April  26,  1958,  she  described  her  daily  life  there:  "I  need  to 
keep  submerged  in  the  same  mood  and  state  of  mind  for  weeks  at 
a  time,  very  hard  to  explain  to  people  who  need  a  change  and  rec- 
reation every  day,  and  sometimes  several  times  a  day.  Of  course  I 
do  a  little  baking,  and  I  water  the  plants,  and  walk  in  the  meadow, 
and  even  read  a  little  now  and  then,  mostly  poetry,  but  I  have 
stopped  listening  to  music.  I  must  keep  silence."  (The  bread  that 
she  bakes,  I  may  tell  you,  people  come  miles  to  eat.) 

Literary  critics  and  historians  have  often  remarked  the  mighty 


2Cf  .  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

contributions  of  the  female  sex  to  literature,  far  and  wide  and  al- 
ways. For  the  most  part  those  who  have  done  the  contributing  have 
been  spinsters,  nuns,  courtesans,  invalids,  a  little  exempt  from  the 
more  distracting,  exhausting  aspects  of  womanhood  as  such.  Kath- 
erine Anne,  throughout  her  youth  and  middle  age,  led  a  maximum 
life,  concomitantly  with  her  perfect,  even  perfectionist  story  writ- 
ing. As  I  have  remarked,  she  seems  to  like  to  simplify  a  part  of  the 
record  of  her  existence  for  any  sort  of  questioner.  In  fact,  except 
for  essentially  private  matters  of  love  and  marriage  and  ill-health 
and  economics,  it  really  has  been  simple.  And  therefore  I  (and 
other  friends),  instead  of  concentrating  on  ascertaining  all  the 
realities,  the  dates  and  the  names  and  the  locations  and  so  on,  have 
always  interested  ourselves  in  what  might  be  called  story  material 
about  her,  somehow  more  characteristic  than  her  mere  biography. 
For  example,  when  she  was  a  girl  somewhere  in  the  South,  she 
had  to  spend  months  and  months  in  a  sanitarium  with  a  grave 
pulmonary  illness,  diagnosed  as  one  of  the  baffling,  uncommon 
forms  of  tuberculosis.  She  was  too  ill  to  have  visitors.  Letters  also 
evidently  were  overstimulating  and  exhausting.  Even  books  seemed 
not  good  for  her;  her  reading  had  to  be  rationed,  just  a  few  pages  at 
a  time.  Then  it  was  discovered  that  the  intense  restlessness  of  her 
bright  eyes  gazing  at  the  ceiling,  examining  and  re-examining  the 
furniture,  staring  at  the  solitude,  gave  her  a  temperature.  Her  doctor 
therefore  prescribed  that  a  restful  green  baize  cloth  be  placed  over 
her  face  for  an  hour  or  two  every  morning  and  every  afternoon,  as 
one  covers  the  cage  of  a  canary  when  one  doesn't  want  it  to  sing.  I 
feel  convinced  that  if  anything  of  the  sort  were  done  to  me  I  should 
give  up  the  ghost,  on  account  of  the  autosuggestion  and  the  discour- 
agement. Not  Katherine  Anne!  That  was  only  the  beginning  of  a 
lifetime  of  delicate  health  and  indomitable  strength. 

All  this  balance  of  physiology  in  her  case,  strong  constitution, 
poor  health,  has  mystified  those  who  care  for  her.  Perhaps  the  phy- 
sicians whom  she  happened  on  here  and  there — "the  pulse-takers, 
the  stethoscope-wielders,  the  order-givers,"  as  she  has  called  them — 
have  been  mystifiers  in  some  measure.  One  of  them,  in  upstate  New 
York,  told  her  that  her  trouble  was  all  a  matter  of  allergies,  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  30 

when  she  inquired,  "What  allergies?"  his  answer  was,  "You're  aller- 
gic to  the  air  you  breathe." 

Another,  in  California,  she  wrote  me,  "set  out  to  change  my 
chemistry,  which  made  him  say  tst,  tst,  after  a  very  thorough  going- 
over,  and  he  aims  to  supply  all  my  lacks  and  to  suppress  all  my 
internal  enemies.  There  is  about  the  whole  project  something  so 
blithely  Californian  that  I  cannot  but  fall  in  with  it." 

Still  another,  a  young  one  in  Connecticut,  pleased  her  by  prac- 
ticing "real  materia  medica,"  and  not  saying  anything  at  all  about 
her  state  of  mind  or  her  nervous  condition.  She  has  always  objected 
to  having  strangers,  even  specialists,  fussing  around  in  her  psychol- 
ogy, comparing  them  to  the  most  disrespectful,  disrupting  type  of 
cleaning  woman.  "They  mess  the  place  up;  they  don't  know  where 
things  belong,  or  what  goes  with  what." 

One  year  at  Christmastime,  when  she  had  been  felled  for  ten  days 
by  some  form  of  influenza  and  had  been  taking  one  of  the  sulfa 
drugs,  she  got  up  out  of  bed,  though  in  mortal  weakness;  took  a 
look  at  herself:  prettily  dressed,  with  "her  hair  in  a  curl  or  two," 
with  an  expression  on  her  face  which  she  could  not  quite  make  out, 
"distinctly  remote,  disengaged,  full  of  mental  reservations";  and 
then  in  a  longish  letter  undertook  to  make  clear  to  me  her  whole 
view  of  life.  But  it  was  unclarifiable,  inexplicable,  she  had  to  admit, 
even  to  herself  as  she  was  living  it,  "because  its  truth  or  falseness 
cannot  be  known  until  the  end." 

Therefore,  instead,  she  concluded  that  letter  with  an  account  of 
the  medicines  she  had  been  taking:  "a  fantastic  row  of  apothecary's 
powders,  pills,  and  potions,  all  of  them  in  the  most  poisonously 
brilliant  colors,  amethyst  and  sapphire  and  emerald  and  purple, 
each  with  its  own  mission  of  soothing  or  elevating  the  spirits, 
calming  the  heart  or  stimulating  it,  loosening  the  phlegm  and  tight- 
ening the  nerves,  stopping  the  cough  and  lowering  the  fever. 

"As  for  the  sulfa,  I  have  had  to  take  a  tablet  every  four  hours 
for  two  nights  and  two  days,  and  never  once  did  my  mind  fail  to 
wake  me  at  the  right  hour,  on  the  hour,  like  a  little  radio  station. 
Once  I  slept  stubbornly,  and  was  waked  finally  by  a  sharp  rapping 


3 1  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

at  my  door.  It  was  four  in  the  morning;  the  whole  house  was  asleep 
and  quiet.  I  sat  up  in  bed,  knowing  Who  had  done  it." 

It  is  hard  to  read  this  slight  incident  rightly,  with  its  capitalized 
Who,  suggestive  of  the  commissioning  of  Mozart's  never-finished 
Requiem  by  Whoever  that  was,  a  being  never  seen  again,  and  of 
other  such  myths.  But,  stop  and  think,  if  that  rapper  at  Katherine 
Anne's  door  at  four  in  the  morning  had  been  Death,  He  would 
have  stayed  his  hand  and  let  her  sleep  and  skip  the  sulfa.  That  was 
in  1943;  it  is  pleasant  to  think  that  the  greater  part  of  Ship  of  Fools 
was  written  on  time  borrowed  from  Him. 

No  doubt  about  it,  there  are  warring  forces  in  Katherine 
Anne.  Is  it  that  her  physique  wearies  of  having  to  house  a  spirit  so 
strenuous  and  emotional,  and  now  and  then  tries  to  expel  it  or  to 
snuff  it  out?  Or  is  it  instinctive  in  her  soul  to  keep  punishing  her 
body  for  not  being  superhuman,  for  not  being  ideal,  for  not  being 
immortal?  Neither  has  ever  exactly  prevailed  over  the  other;  both 
have  been  invincible.  Nothing  has  come  of  the  great  dichotomy;  or, 
to  be  exact,  literature  has  come  of  it. 

"Every  force  of  instinct  and  every  psychic  evil  in  us,"  she  once 
wrote,  "fight  the  mind  as  their  mortal  enemy;  but  in  this  as  in  every- 
thing else  I  have  known  from  the  beginning  which  side  I  am  on, 
and  I  am  perfectly  willing  to  abide  by  my  first  choice  until  death; 
indeed  I  can't  do  otherwise.  For  death  it  must  be  in  the  end,  so  far 
as  the  flesh  is  concerned;  but  what  lives  on  afterward  can  be  honor- 
able." To  wit,  twenty-six  works  of  fiction  of  different  lengths,  honor- 
able and  (I  am  sure)  durable;  and  more  to  come. 

She  lived  in  Mexico  for  a  good  while  when  she  was  young,  and  a 
number  of  the  men  who  revolutionized  that  intense  and  artistic 
though  primitive  nation  were  her  friends.  In  1922  she  brought  the 
first  exhibition  of  Mexican-Indian  folk  art  north  of  the  border,  but 
only  as  far  north  as  Los  Angeles.  One  of  the  revolutionaries  wrote  a 
song  about  her,  "La  Nortena,"  which,  I  have  heard  tell,  has  become 
a  folk  song;  little  companies  of  young  singers,  mariachis,  like  boy 
scouts  in  a  dream,  sing  it  in  the  streets.  I  understand  that  another 
lady  also  lays  claim  to  it.  Be  that  as  it  may;  "Flowering  Judas" 


Images  of  Truth  •  52 

softly  resounds  with  music  of  that  kind,  strummingly  accompanied 
and  perhaps  mortally  seductive. 

Some  years  later  in  Paris  she  wrote  another  Mexican  tale,  a  nou- 
velle  in  memoir  form,  "Hacienda."  It  is  a  rarity  in  her  lifework  in 
that  it  is  all  a  clef;  mainly  a  portrait  of  the  great  Russian  film 
maker,  Eisenstein,  with  others  of  note,  helpers  and  hinderers  of  his 
work  in  Mexico,  clustered  around.  It  has  a  singularity  of  style  also, 
somehow  an  outdoor  style,  leafy  and  tendrilous,  seeming  to  weave 
itself  into  a  fabric  without  her  usual  touch;  soft  breezy  sentences, 
with  a  warmth  and  animation  unlike  her  earlier  writing. 

Certainly  it  points  toward  Ship  of  Fools.  For  some  mysterious 
reason,  perhaps  nothing  but  the  timing  in  her  life,  her  recollection 
of  Mexico  evidently  has  lapsed  less  for  her,  subsided  less,  than  that 
of  other  places  she  has  lived.  "Flowering  Judas"  had  an  odd,  almost 
painful  dreaminess,  with  only  present-tense  verbs;  and  in  the  first 
twenty  pages  of  Ship  of  Fools,  when  the  passengers  are  assembling 
and  waiting  to  sail,  as  in  "a  little  purgatory  between  land  and  sea," 
the  half-Indian  world  seems  to  reach  out  after  them,  overstimulat- 
ingly,  and  it  haunts  the  entire  volume,  across  the  ocean,  though  its 
subject  matter  is  mainly  German  and  American. 

In  another  way  the  latest  of  her  nouvelles,  "The  Leaning  Tower," 
must  also  have  served  as  a  study  for  the  future  greater  undertaking: 
a  tale  of  Berlin  on  the  eve  of  the  Nazi  revolution,  when  in  fact 
Katherine  Anne  spent  a  winter  there,  and  saw  the  dangerousness 
of  the  Germans,  and  understood  how  risky  it  was  to  fear  them  or, 
on  the  other  hand,  to  be  too  simply  prejudiced  against  them.  Doubt- 
less also,  while  writing  it,  during  World  War  II,  she  was  aware  of 
the  aesthetic  pitfall  of  propagandizing  in  any  sense,  with  the  excite- 
ment of  the  time.  She  holds  her  breath  in  it. 

Now  to  turn  to  another  area  of  the  legendry  of  Katherine  Anne's 
life,  which  she  has  not  perpetuated  in  any  of  her  fiction. — Someone, 
years  ago,  used  to  say  that  at  an  early  age  she  had  been  in  the 
movies  as  a  Mack  Sennett  bathing  girl,  along  with  Gloria  Swanson 
and  Mabel  Normand  et  al.  Certainly  she  was  as  good-looking  as 
they,  whether  or  not  she  could  have  performed  as  funnily.  For  some 
reason  I  never  quite  like  to  question  or  cross-question  her  about 


35  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

things;  but  I  once  ventured  to  do  so  about  this.  It  was  a  matter  of 
journalism,  she  explained,  not  show  business.  Commissioned  to 
write  an  article  for  some  newspaper  or  magazine  she  pretended 
briefly  to  be  a  comedienne  for  the  sake  of  the  realistic  detail  and 
local  color. 

Not  so  long  ago  she  had  a  try  at  earning  her  living  by  script 
writing.  Her  first  Hollywood  assignment  was  not  so  much  to  write 
as  to  be  attached  in  an  Egeria-like  or  muse-like  capacity  to  a  famous 
producer,  now  dead.  For  a  while  this  amused  her;  at  least  she  sent 
back  to  the  Eastern  seaboard  amusing  reports  of  it.  "One  or  the 
other  of  us,"  she  reported — he  had  another  salaried  writer  also  at 
his  beck  and  call,  perhaps  more  than  one — "tosses  a  tiny  shred  of  an 
idea  at  him.  He  seizes  it  out  of  the  air  and  without  stopping  for 
breath  constructs  a  whole  scene.  He  then  asks  us  what  we  think  of 
it,  and  as  we  open  our  mouths  to  answer,  he  says,  'It's  a  wonderful 
scene.  Now  what  else  have  you  got  in  mind?'  And  the  thing  is  re- 
peated; sometimes  we  just  sit  there  for  two  hours."  What  he  had  in 
mind,  or  perhaps  I  should  say,  in  the  works,  was  a  film  about  Queen 
Elizabeth  I. 

Presently  she  began  to  feel  like  "a  fox  with  his  leg  in  a  trap," 
gnawing  away  at  it;  and  by  the  end  of  the  thirteen-week  stint  con- 
tracted for  in  the  first  place  she  had  persuaded  her  famous  man  that 
she  was  not  the  inspirer  he  needed.  A  part  of  their  maladjustment, 
she  sensed,  was  the  fact  that  he  was  a  Christian  Scientist,  whereas  she 
had  been  brought  up  a  Roman  Catholic.  During  the  thirteen 
weeks  he  had  seemed  deeply  disapproving  of  the  large  salary  that  he 
or  his  studio  had  been  paying  her;  but  suddenly,  she  wrote,  when 
she  was  on  her  way,  he  "began  to  worry  about  my  future.  What  on 
earth  was  I  going  to  do  now?  where  was  I  going?  did  I  have  any 
money?  I  was  happy  to  be  able  to  tell  him  that  I  was  relatively  rich 
and  wasn't  going  anywhere." 

In  fact  she  was  relatively  poor;  apparently  they  had  been  paying 
her  in  Confederate  money  or  fool's  gold  or  something.  Not  seeing 
any  other  solution  for  her  practical  problems  just  then,  she  trans- 
ferred her  talents  to  another  studio,  where  she  was  put  to  work  on  a 
film  about  Madame  Sans-Gene. 


Images  of  Truth  •  34 

All  her  life  Katherine  Anne  has  been  bewitched  by  the  hope  of 
ceasing  to  be  homeless,  of  settling  somewhere  and  getting  her  books 
and  manuscripts  and  notebooks  out  of  storage  and  within  reach 
somehow,  on  shelves  and  in  filing  cabinets  and  in  ring-binders.  With 
the  evanescent  Western  money  she  bought  a  small  segment  of 
mountain  for  a  building  site,  but  could  not  keep  it.  One  day  as  she 
sat  peacefully  writing  in  a  rented  ranch  cabin  in  the  Mojave  Desert 
a  Western  wind  arose  and  tore  out  a  window  frame  over  her  desk 
and  slightly  fractured  her  skull;  once  more,  the  Furies!  But,  never 
forget,  the  Furies  sometimes  are  on  the  side  of  the  angels.  She  did 
not  properly  belong  out  West,  at  least  not  then. 

In  subsequent  years,  a  good  deal  of  the  time,  at  intervals,  she  has 
had  to  depend  on  the  universities  and  colleges  for  her  livelihood. 
As  a  rule,  at  the  beginning  of  her  various  stints  or  bouts  on  cam- 
puses, she  has  been  persuaded  by  the  literature-loving  educators  who 
have  arranged  things,  or  she  has  persuaded  herself,  that  not  much 
actual  pedagogy  would  be  required  of  her.  Usually,  however,  they 
seem  to  have  got  the  harness  on  her  in  some  way.  I  remember  a 
letter  from  a  very  great  university  indeed,  in  the  Middle  West, 
specifying  her  teaching  schedule:  only  five  hours  a  week  actually 
behind  the  microphone  in  the  classroom  (so  specified  in  her  con- 
tract) and  only  about  eighty  term  papers  to  be  read  and  graded. 
But  she  also  had  to  examine  the  manuscripts  of  the  more  creative 
young  persons  on  campus  and  to  advise  them  in  hour-long  sessions; 
about  fourteen  of  these  a  week.  Also  once  a  week  she  had  to  give  a 
spontaneous  hour-long  lecture  to  some  special  class  or  group  or  club. 
It  may  be  that  no  trained  and  experienced  professional  would  find 
this  schedule  at  all  onerous  or  unfair.  To  Katherine  Anne,  as  a 
mature  woman  of  genius  in  delicate  health,  perhaps  somewhat 
proud  and  euphoric,  with  so  much  creative  work  of  her  own  not 
only  in  mind  but  partly  on  paper,  and  covered  by  publishers'  con- 
tracts, it  seemed  hard;  anal  all  too  often  her  university  engagements 
were  terminated  by  illness. 


55  *  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

<§> 
As  the  quantity  of  my  quotations  will  have  suggested  to  you,  I 
have  been  rereading  my  precious  file  of  long  letters  from  her,  and 
another  set  addressed  to  Monroe  Wheeler,  about  two  hundred  in 
all.  She  and  I  made  friends  in  Paris  in  1932  and  began  our  corre- 
spondence upon  my  return  to  this  country  in  the  autumn  of  1933, 
and  it  has  been  continuous  ever  since.  Yes,  yes,  probably  she  should 
have  repressed  or  restrained  this  long-distance  friendliness  some- 
what, in  order  to  produce  more  for  publication.  But  as  I  peruse  her 
letters,  now  that  much  of  the  circumstantial  detail  in  them  has 
ceased  to  be  of  interest,  and  therefore  the  main  elements  and  out- 
lines of  her  mind  and  her  life  appear  more  impressively,  as  it  were 
a  range  of  hills  which  the  autumn  has  stripped  of  leaves,  I  am  struck 
by  something  about  them  that  may  have  conditioned  her,  even  bene- 
fited her,  in  her  art  of  fiction. 

It  is  that  they  are  extraordinarily,  uniquely  subjective:  self- 
judging  and  explanatory  and  disciplinary,  and  self-defending,  with 
matchless  detail  and  finesse  in  all  these  mirrorings  of  the  heart  and 
the  mind,  shifting  and  shining,  and,  in  a  way,  hypnotizing.  Whereas 
in  fiction  she  has  been  free  from  herself.  In  fiction  she  has  main- 
tained a  maximum  impersonality,  a  disengagement  from  any  sort  of 
autobiographical  point  of  view,  a  distinctness  between  her  own  ego, 
her  sensitivenesses  and  compulsions  and  illusions,  and  those  of  all 
the  alter  egos  that  she  writes  about,  and  an  abstention  from  fantasy 
and  lyricism  and  rhetoric,  of  which  most  novelists,  indeed  even 
many  journalists  and  historians,  are  incapable. 

It  is  almost  startling  to  compare  her  with  other  famous  twentieth- 
century  women  in  this  respect:  Virginia  Woolf!  Colette!  Even  reti- 
cent and  rather  cold  writers  such  as  Maugham  have  made  use  of 
their  shyness,  exercised  their  self-consciousness,  almost  as  a  conven- 
tion or  a  technique.  As  for  the  writing  of  our  more  extreme, 
compendious,  sociological  novelists,  it  is  a  sort  of  concavity,  which 
almost  teases  one  to  deduce  what  they  themselves  are,  convexly; 
rather  like  the  shapes  of  ancient  Pompeians  in  the  awful  layers  of 
ashes  from  Vesuvius. 

Katherine  Anne  is  not  like  that  at  all.  The  objectivity  of  her 


Images  of  Truth  •  36 

narrative  art,  if  I  may  apply  to  her  Coleridge's  famous  formula 
(only  Shakespeare  really  filled  the  bill,  he  thought),  is  a  matter  of 
sending  herself  out  of  herself;  of  thinking  herself  into  "the  thoughts 
and  feelings  of  beings  in  circumstances  wholly  and  strangely  differ- 
ent" from  her  own:  hie  labor,  hoc  opus. 

I  believe  that  her  vast  self-expressive  and  confidential  first-person 
communication  to  her  friends,  freshly  inspired  or  provoked  each 
time,  swiftly  produced  on  the  typewriter,  and  not  rewritten,  scarcely 
reread,  has  served  to  purify  her  mind  of  a  good  deal  of  that  pride 
and  willfulness  and  narcissism  and  excitability  by  which  the  life- 
work  of  most  modern  fiction  writers  has  often  been  beclouded,  en- 
feebled, blemished.  Of  course  her  letter  writing  must  have  shortened 
her  working  days  and  used  up  incalculable  energy,  thus  reducing 
the  amount  of  her  production  of  the  more  public  forms  of  litera- 
ture. 

In  the  earliest  of  her  nouvelles,  "Old  Mortality,"  a  Northerner 
may  mind  the  extremely  regional  feeling,  the  patriotism  of  the 
South,  which  is  a  group  subjectivity.  But  even  this  is  so  much  less 
soft  and  heady  and  spicy  than  the  accounts  that  other  fiction  writ- 
ers have  given  us  of  that  important  part  of  the  world,  its  premises, 
its  problems,  that  it  seems  almost  bitter,  like  a  medicine,  like  a 
lesson.  At  the  end  of  it  the  protagonist,  Miranda,  realizes  how  much 
of  her  girlhood  she  has  spent  "peering  in  wonder"  at  other  people's 
notions  of  the  past,  "like  a  child  at  a  magic-lantern  show,"  and  re- 
solves to  close  her  mind  stubbornly  to  all  such  secondhand  remem- 
brance, spiritual  predigestion. 

In  "Pale  Horse,  Pale  Rider,"  and  in  later  stories  featuring  that 
same  somewhat  autobiographical  Miranda — the  best  of  which  is 
perhaps  "The  Grave,"  an  episode  of  almost  mystical  childhood, 
having  to  do  with  the  closeness  and  connectedness  of  life  and  death, 
womb  and  tomb  (as  in  medieval  religious  imagery)  — all  is  self- 
possessed  and  responsible,  thoughtful  and  indeed  philosophical. 
What  I  call  her  impersonality  applies  even  to  the  painting  of 
her  own  portrait,  when  it  is  fictitious.  And  apparently  the  saving 
thoughtfulness,  the  mastery  of  her  mind  over  every  sort  of  old  ideal 


37  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

and  dark  prejudice  and  grievance  and  self-flattery,  takes  place  at 
the  time  that  she  stores  things  away  in  her  memory,  for  future  use; 
not  just  according  to  her  formal  intellect  and  her  sense  of  story 
pattern  when  she  begins  to  work.  Again,  we  may  see  in  this  some- 
thing of  her  classic  practical  womanly  temperament,  housewifeli- 
ness!  Subject  matter  that  she  deems  worth  keeping  she  simply  folds 
up  a  little,  scales  down  a  little,  and  deflates  and  dehydrates,  with  ap- 
plications of  sense  of  humor,  sense  of  proportion,  sense  of  justice, 
as  it  were  against  moth  and  worm  and  mildew  and  dust. 

It  pleases  me  to  recall  a  conversation  that  I  had  with  Katherine 
Anne  while  she  was  writing  "Pale  Horse,  Pale  Rider"  and  was  hav- 
ing trouble  with  a  passage  in  it  toward  the  end  in  which  Miranda, 
desperately  ill,  almost  dead,  was  to  see  heaven.  She  told  me  that 
she  herself,  at  the  end  of  World  War  I,  had  experienced  this  part 
of  what  she  had  created  this  heroine  to  experience  and  to  make 
manifest;  and  because,  no  doubt,  it  really  was  heaven,  she  found 
herself  unable  to  re-see  it  with  her  lively,  healthy  eyes. 

This  conversation  took  place  in  a  valley  in  New  Jersey  where  I 
used  to  live,  which  has  been  turned  into  a  water  reservoir,  gone 
forever!  It  was  springtime;  the  sward  or  sod  was  moss  green,  strewn 
with  little  blue  shadows  under  the  trees  half  in  leaf;  the  vistas  up- 
stream and  downstream  were  dim,  Bavarian-looking;  and  there 
were  some  soprano  voices  within  earshot,  I  have  forgotten  whose 
voices.  With  characteristic,  somewhat  superficial  helpfulness  I  pro- 
posed to  my  dear  friend  and  rival,  "Why  not  at  that  point  just 
write  a  page  about  your  inability  to  recede,  your  impotence  to  write? 
Eternal  curtain,  blinding  effulgence!  Let  each  one  of  your  readers 
fill  in  the  kind  of  heaven  that  his  particular  life  has  prepared  him 
to  go  to,  when  his  turn  comes. 

"What  else  is  heaven,  anyway?"  I  went  on,  where  angels  fear  to 
tread.  "What  can  it  be,  empirically,  but  the  indescribable;  the  de- 
feat of  literature;  the  end  of  empiricism?" 

To  my  amusement  and  perhaps  regret,  mingled  with  a  little  van- 
ity, Katherine  Anne  did  not  take  to  this  suggestion.  She  let  "Pale 
Horse"  go  for  another  year,  and  turned  to  other  work.  She  said  au 


Images  of  Truth  •  38 

revoir  to  her  New  York  and  New  Jersey  friends  and  went  to  live 
for  a  while  in  Louisiana,  perhaps  waiting  all  that  time  to  re-see 
Miranda's  heaven. 

In  due  course,  "Pale  Horse,  Pale  Rider"  appeared  in  book  form, 
in  1939,  with  the  vision  worth  a  year's  waiting:  "thinned  to  a  fine 
radiance,  spread  like  a  great  fan,  and  curved  out  into  a  curved  rain- 
bow." What  comes  before  this  also  is  extraordinary:  Miranda  at 
death's  door  with  the  influenza  of  1918,  afraid  of  her  doctor  just 
because  he  is  her  doctor,  in  charge  of  her  death,  and  because  he  is 
a  German  doctor,  and  because  it  is  1918.  Even  in  Denver,  Colorado, 
where  that  story  is  set,  a  world  war  does  not  let  one  even  die  at 
peace.  I  think  that,  if  the  years  to  come  winnow  literary  wheat 
from  chaff  as  the  past  has  done,  this  story  may  be  valued  as  a  unique 
record  of  that  modern  curse  and  ailment,  horror  of  the  German, 
which  lapsed  during  the  twenties,  then  began  again;  also  as  a  prel- 
ude to  Ship  of  Fools. 

Miranda's  beginning  to  recover  from  influenza  is  another  extraor- 
dinary page;  just  less  and  less  bitterness  of  pus  in  the  naturally 
sweet  flesh,  up  and  up  toward  life,  with  a  wink  of  consciousness 
more  and  more  often.  The  strangest  return,  the  way  of  the  solitary 
ego,  the  opposite  of  the  great  legend — the  Orpheus  in  Miranda 
keeping  the  Eurydice  in  her  alive  not  by  looking  away  but  precisely 
by  contemplating  what  was  happening  every  instant. 

Of  the  three  nouvelles  in  that  volume,  indeed,  of  the  five  that 
she  has  published  thus  far,  "Noon  Wine"  is  the  one  that  I  love  best. 
I  may  say,  parenthetically,  that  Katherine  Anne  herself  objects  to 
my  use  of  the  borrowed  French  word  and  its  several  cognates,  also 
European  in  origin,  novella,  novelle,  and  novelette.  I  see  her  point. 
As  to  vocabulary,  whatever  the  problem,  she  is  a  purist,  and  it  is 
vulgar  to  trick  out  one's  writing  about  writing  with  this  and  that 
imported  feather  (though  Poe  did  so  a  good  deal).  Also,  as  the 
author,  to  date,  of  only  one  large-scale  work  of  fiction  in  an  era 
when  "novel,  novel,"  is  the  word  to  conjure  with,  and  when  most 
of  the  praise  as  well  as  the  pay  goes  to  bulky  productions,  she  must 
oe  glad  of  any  nuance  of  one's  criticism  which  will  remind  the 
reader  that  "Pale  Horse,  Pale  Rider"  and  "Old  Mortality"  and 


59  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

"Noon  Wine"  and  "Hacienda"  and  "The  Leaning  Tower"  are 
major  works.  They  are,  indeed;  and  doubtless  it  took  more  skill, 
more  time,  and  more  creative  strength  to  keep  them  to  the  length 
that,  as  it  seemed  to  her  (and  as  it  seems  to  me),  inspiration  and  sub- 
ject matter  in  those  five  cases  called  for  than  it  would  have  taken 
to  amplify  them,  to  swell  them  up  with  self-generating  detail,  to 
spin  them  out  with  extra  passages  of  introductoriness  and  didacti- 
cism and  suspense  and  consequences,  as  large-scale  novelists  ordi- 
narily do. 

But,  for  my  part,  I  cannot  wean  myself  from  the  use  of  the  term 
"nouvelle,"  because  it  designates  not  just  a  certain  length,  let  us 
say,  twenty  or  thirty  thousand  words,  but  a  scope  and  particular 
inspiration  fundamentally  differing  from  the  several  types  of  short 
story  and  the  several  variations  of  the  novel.  The  nouvelle  is  an 
account  of  a  limited  number  of  characters  in  close  connection,  or 
in  consequential  or  interesting  contrast;  and  of  their  situation  as 
a  whole  and  their  state  of  being  in  some  detail  and  in  depth,  not 
just  an  incident  or  episode  in  their  lives.  It  is  a  mode  of  narration 
in  which  the  narrated  time  serves  as  a  window  to  illuminate  a  re- 
moter past  and  to  reveal  something  of  a  foreseeable  future;  multum 
in  parvo,  but  very  multum  and  not  too  parvo.  It  often  shows  as 
many  facets  of  meaning  as  a  novel,  but  it  does  not  apply  to  as  many 
levels  of  experience  and  observation  and  significance.  Along  with 
Goethe's  novelle  which  is  called  Die  Novelle  and  Mann's  Death  in 
Venice  and  Benjamin  Constant's  Adolphe  and  Merimee's  Carmen 
and  Colette's  Gigi  and  Melville's  Billy  Budd  and  Forster's  The 
Eternal  Moment,  Katherine  Anne's  "Noon  Wine"  is  a  model  of  the 
form,  an  example  for  the  textbooks. 

It  has  an  epic  quality  despite  its  small  scale  and  modern  dress, 
with  only  two  heroes,  one  heroine,  and  one  significant  villain, 
expressing  themselves  commonly,  and  in  natural  pitiful  circum- 
stances. The  epic  that  it  makes  me  think  of,  I  may  say,  humorously 
but  not  insincerely,  is  Paradise  Lost,  because  it  has  Lucifer  in  it,  a 
very  modern  and  American  Lucifer  named  Mr.  Hatch.  Hatch,  not 
exactly  fat,  "more  like  a  man  who  has  been  fat  recently";  Hatch, 
who  goes  to  and  fro  "telling  other  people  what  kind  of  tobacco  to 


Images  of  Truth  •  40 

chew";  Hatch,  with  the  discovery  and  roundup  of  ''twenty-odd 
escaped  loonatics"  to  his  credit.  His  prey  this  time  is  Olaf  Helton, 
whose  brother  years  before  took  away  his  harmonica,  who  therefore 
stabbed  said  brother  with  a  pitchfork.  He  escaped,  and  since  then 
has  been  working  for  lazy  Mr.  Thompson  and  his  dear  sickly  wife. 
He  has  somewhat  lightened  their  burden  and  much  restored  their 
prosperity.  They  have  got  in  the  habit  of  hearing  what  you  might 
call  his  theme  song,  a  drinking  song,  rendered  over  and  over  on  a 
series  of  new  harmonicas. 

When  Hatch  appears  on  the  scene  it  all  goes  like  a  charm,  like 
a  curse.  To  save  Helton,  as  he  thinks,  Thompson  kills  Hatch.  He 
is  tried  and  acquitted;  but  the  breach  of  the  great  taboo  is  too  much 
for  him  to  forgive  himself.  The  Eumenides  are  in  him,  nagging, 
arguing;  soon  his  state  of  mind  is  such  that  he  frightens  even  his 
beloved  wife.  Therefore  he  condemns  himself  to  death  and  executes 
himself.  There  is  a  most  touching  page  toward  the  close  which  is 
like  a  song  or  an  aria:  Mrs.  Thompson  weeping  to  have  Helton 
back,  saying  a  sort  of  prayer  against  the  violence  of  menfolk,  kneel- 
ing before  her  icebox  as  if  it  were  an  altar;  the  icebox  Helton  had 
helped  her  to  buy.  This  perfectly  womanly  woman,  eternal  by- 
stander and  born  widow;  and  the  typical  hired  man,  the  type  of 
wrongdoer  whom  even  the  Eumenides  might  spare  because  there 
was  no  idea  or  idealism  behind  his  wrong,  whom  everyone  except 
the  Hatches  of  this  world  must  forgive;  and  the  Thompsons'  fine 
little  boys,  by  the  evolution  of  whose  characters  we  are  subtly  made 
to  feel  time  passing  and  humanity  incessant:  all  these  are  exem- 
plary, human  and  arch-human,  in  the  grandest  manner.  Grand  also, 
the  way  in  which  the  murder  of  Hatch  is  made  to  epitomize  our 
lesser  losses  of  temper  also,  even  the  wielding  of  the  jackknife  of 
wit  and  of  the  little  hatchet  of  righteous  criticism,  by  which  the 
psyche  of  the  stupid  man  may  be  somewhat  murdered  and  the  heart 
of  the  murderous-minded  man  himself  broken.  Also  it  is  a  reminder 
of  how  evil  may  come  of  resistance  to  evil,  of  which  the  worldly  man 
in  this  half-Germanized  world  needs  to  be  reminded. 

There  is  no  end  to  the  kinds  of  evil  which  Hatch  typifies.  You 
belittle  him  unfairly  and  unwisely  if  you  assume  that  he  has  gone 


ji  '  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

hunting  his  twenty-odd  madmen  just  for  the  cash  compensation. 
It  has  been  chiefly  to  satisfy  his  clear  sense  of  right  and  wrong;  and 
to  exercise  the  power  to  which  he  is  entitled  as  a  democratic  citizen. 
There  is  some  repression  of  the  ego  in  our  comfortable  country,  and 
therefore  some  perversion  of  it,  therefore  cruelty.  Hatch  has  the 
legal  mind,  particularly  what  you  might  call  the  blue-legal  mind. 

Behold  in  him  also  political  genius,  which  is  psychopathic  un- 
less it  is  psychiatric,  and  in  either  case  more  oratorical  than  honest. 
At  the  start  he  positively  woos  Thompson,  like  a  candidate  for 
public  office:  Hatch  "For  Law  and  Order."  And  you  might  think 
that  this  hell-bent  bullying  technique  would  not  get  one  vote;  but 
you  learn  that  it  gets  millions.  In  him  also  may  be  seen  some  evils 
of  journalism,  and  some  evils  of  the  police,  so  worrisome  and  intimi- 
dating that  one  scarcely  cares  to  comment  on  them. 

Look  at  him  as  you  like:  he  signifies  always  a  little  more  than  you 
have  seen  and  seems  larger  than  life-size;  and  you  think  that  he 
must  have  more  lives  than  a  cat;  and  with  facets  like  a  diamond  he 
throws  bright,  instructive  flashes,  on  one  thing  and  another.  Thus  I 
feel  justified  in  having  used  that  moot,  incongruous  word  "epic." 
He  is  not  only  a  man  hunter,  he  is  mankind  as  man  hunter,  sempi- 
ternal. He  is  not  only  a  busybody,  he  is  the  great  American  busy- 
body; godlike  as  only  a  devil  can  be.  Lucifer!  No  wonder  that 
Thompson  at  first  is  reminded  of  someone  he  has  seen  before,  some- 
where. Katherine  Anne  just  mentions  this,  without  explanation. 
It  is  perhaps  the  only  signal  she  gives  that  she  meant  Hatch  to  be 
a  personification  as  well  as  a  person.  Thompson  hates  him  long  be- 
fore there  has  been  a  peep  out  of  him  about  his  man  hunt;  and  so 
does  the  reader,  surely,  upon  instinct.  Hatch-malevolence  can  often 
be  felt  previous  to,  and  lies  deeper  than,  Hatch-activity.  It  lies  so 
deep  indeed  that  one  is  half  afraid  to  say  simply  that  it  is  evil.  I 
always  particularly  resent  the  fact  that  he  has  kept,  as  you  might 
say,  virtuous,  in  order  to  accumulate  a  good  conscience,  as  one 
might  pinch  pennies  half  one's  life  to  invest  in  a  big  business;  and 
his  air  of  friendliness  without  affection,  curiosity  without  imagina- 
tion, and  the  detached  manner  of  his  invasion  of  the  others'  privacy. 
Of  course  it  is  scarcely  detachment  to  get  chopped  open  by  one's 


Images  of  Truth  •  42 

host's  ax;  but  I  feel  that  this  is  the  least  that  could  be  expected  to 
happen  to  him  in  the  circumstances,  an  occupational  hazard.  I 
resent  the  fact  that  he  manages — Katherine  Anne  lets  him  manage 
— not  to  deserve  it. 

A  specific  and  unabashed  (though  somewhat  mysterious)  morality 
works  through  and  through  this  whole  tale,  like  a  fat,  like  a  yeast, 
like  an  antidote.  Katherine  Anne  does  not  pity  Hatch,  but  seem- 
ingly she  would  like  to;  she  abstains  from  despising  him.  Perhaps 
suspicious  of  the  very  clarity  of  her  hatred  of  hatchism,  she  com- 
pensates the  individual  Hatch  for  it  by  a  kind  of  demi-deification 
and  enlargement.  She  is  as  careful  about  him  as  if  she  were  wearing 
his  face  as  a  mask  for  her  face,  and  this  were  confession  of  a  mis- 
deed of  hers.  Do  not  forget  that  both  Helton  and  Thompson  com- 
mit murder;  and  the  latter's  plea  of  self-defense  is  specious  or 
erroneous,  if  not  dishonest.  Hatch  is  not  to  blame  for  anything  ex- 
cept his  being,  and  his  happening  to  be  just  there,  in  juxtaposition 
with  these  others.  For  many  years  he  has  been  doing  what  he  at- 
tempts that  day;  no  one  has  ever  objected  before;  what  reason  had 
he  to  suppose  there  was  any  law  against  it?  The  written  law  is  a 
makeshift,  and  the  unwritten  law  all  double  meaning.  In  entire 
civilization,  every  one  of  us  is  partly  responsible  for  this  darkness. 
Katherine  Anne,  mild  even  as  she  contemplates  murder,  assumes 
responsibility. 

Let  me  say  finally  that  it  is  a  great  factor  in  my  admiration  of 
this  story  that  she  has  not  pointed  out  any  one  of  the  significances 
I  have  seen  in  it  and  tried  to  list.  There  was  no  need  to,  I  admir- 
ingly think.  As  critic,  pro  tern,  it  is  my  pleasure  to  point.  The  feel- 
ing of  the  good  and  evil  in  question  doubtless  accumulated  in  her 
heart  in  the  abstract,  for  years;  and  the  contrast  of  the  two,  no, 
three  kinds  of  humanity,  and  eternal  warfare  of  the  two  equally 
sincere  schools  of  morality,  must  have  come  to  her  mind  one  day 
with  such  energy  that  there  was  no  resisting  the  impulse  to  show 
them  in  action,  in  an  ideal  bout.  Then,  because  of  her  humane  and 
womanly  humility,  abstraction  blushed;  abstraction  bowed  to  fate, 
the  truest  fate  of  all,  that  of  circumstance  and  coincidence  and 
dialogue;  abstraction  stooped  to  human  nature,  and  dressed  itself 


43  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

and  embodied  itself  in  this  episode,  whether  fact  or  fancy  or  a 
mixture. 

One  could  not  ask  for  a  more  objective  work  of  fiction  than 
"Noon  Wine."  Everything  that  it  tells  is  a  question  of  its  time  and 
its  place  and  its  conjunction  of  characters,  only  four  principals, 
with  nothing  of  that  darkling  presence  and  involvement  and  pur- 
pose of  the  author  behind  the  scenes,  between  the  lines,  which  may 
be  said  to  give  a  poetical  quality  or  a  fourth  dimension  to  narra- 
tive. It  is  freestanding,  with  little  or  no  pedestal,  little  or  no  matrix; 
and  her  important  essay  about  the  writing  of  it  in  the  Yale  Review 
in  1956  (twenty  years  after  the  fact),  though  richly  reminiscent  of 
the  little  experiences  with  which  it  began — the  blast  of  a  shotgun, 
a  scream  in  death  agony,  "a  fat  bullying  whining  man,"  a  poor 
wife  perjuring  herself,  a  curvetting  horse,  a  doleful  tune — made  it 
seem  an  even  more  absolute  creation  or  invention  than  I  had  sup- 
posed on  first  reading. 

That  essay  begins  with  almost  a  formula:  "By  the  time  a  writer 
has  reached  the  end  of  a  story,  he  has  lived  it  at  least  three  times 
over — first,  in  the  series  of  actual  events  that,  directly  or  indirectly, 
have  combined  to  set  up  the  commotion  in  his  mind  and  senses 
that  causes  him  to  write  the  story;  second,  in  memory;  and  third, 
in  the  re-creation  of  the  chaotic  stuff."  And  toward  the  close  of  it 
she  arrives  at  a  more  profound  statement:  "I  do  know  why  I  remem- 
bered them" — that  is  to  say,  the  shot,  the  scream,  the  horse,  the 
tune  (as  it  were,  spark,  pollen,  seed,  yeast) — "and  why  in  my  mem- 
ory they  slowly  took  on  their  separate  lives  in  a  story.  It  is  because 
there  radiated  from  each  of  those  glimpses  of  strangers  some  ele- 
ment, some  quality  that  arrested  my  attention  at  a  vital  moment 
of  my  own  growth,  and  caused  me,  a  child,  to  stop  short  and  look 
outward,  away  from  myself;  to  look  at  another  human  being  with 
that  attention  and  wonder  and  speculation  which  ordinarily,  and 
very  naturally,  I  think,  a  child  lavishes  only  on  himself."  To  be 
noted  for  future  textbooks,  components  and  instrumentalities  of 
creative  writing — various  accidental  or  incidental  evidences  of  the 
senses,  things  the  writer  sees  and  hears  and  feels,  and  their  timing 
and  sequence  in  relation  to  the  more  general  processes  of  his  pri- 


Images  of  Truth  •  44 

vate  and  inner  life;  a  childish  or  childlike  mind,  maturing  by  fits 
and  starts  in  one  way  and  another,  peeping  out  of  the  hidey-hole 
of  self,  giving  things  a  second  look,  thinking  things  over,  and  lav- 
ishing its  curiosity  and  wonder. 

Yeats  said — did  he  not? — that  certain  of  our  nineteenth-century 
classics,  notably  Emerson's  essays  and  Leaves  of  Grass,  were  some- 
what vitiated  by  their  not  incorporating  or  reflecting  any  large  and 
clear  vision  of  evil.  But  certainly  Hawthorne  and  Melville  were  not 
limited  to  optimism  and  fond  ecstasy.  "Noon  Wine"  is  of  that  line- 
age, grandly  and  sorrowfully  envisaging  right  and  wrong,  both  on 
the  personal  level,  where  something  can  be  done  about  it,  and  in  the 
sense  of  the  sublime,  the  insoluble.  Let  me  call  attention  partic- 
ularly to  the  power  and  the  complexity  of  the  characterization  of 
the  villain  in  it,  Hatch,  a  veritable  Lucifer;  brilliantly  signifying 
more,  at  every  point,  than  the  author  actually  tells  us,  faceted  like 
a  diamond,  flashing  instructively  in  many  directions.  "Noon  Wine" 
would  make  a  fine  opera  libretto  for  a  composer  able  to  write  duets 
and  trios  and  quartets,  without  which  (I  think)  music  drama  never 
quite  touches  the  heart. 

It  always  pleases  me  to  note  how  little  continuousness,  impinge- 
ment, or  repetition  there  is  between  one  of  Katherine  Anne's  stories 
and  another.  In  the  case  of  most  specialists  in  short  fiction,  as  in 
that  of  painters  of  easel  pictures  and  composers  of  chamber  music, 
one  finds  some  new  order  of  artistry  every  few  years;  and  between, 
only  variants  of  the  same  inspiration  or  the  same  method,  efforts 
to  perfect,  or  indeed  a  copying  of  themselves  without  much  effort. 
Katherine  Anne,  when  not  hitting  high  spots,  really  has  preferred 
not  to  hit  anything  at  all,  at  least  not  anything  fictitious.  She  just 
keeps  turning  the  pages  of  her  mind  until  she  comes  to  one  that  is 
untouched,  to  which  she  then  applies  a  new  pen,  silvery  and  needle- 
sharp.  Line  the  stories  up:  "Flowering  Judas,"  "He,"  "The  Jilting 
of  Granny  Weatherall,"  "The  Cracked  Looking  Glass";  each  ad- 
vances a  separate  proposition  in  morals  or  psychology,  solves  an 
unfamiliar  problem  of  form. 

No  theme  except  the  given  theme,  one  feels,  could  develop  itself 
properly  or  transpire  effectively  in  that  particular  setting  and  those 


45  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

circumstances.  And  yet  she  never  forces  the  connection  and  con- 
gruity  between  the  scene  and  the  event.  There  is  a  minimum 
of  anthropomorphism  in  her  landscapes  and  changes  of  weather. 
Shapes  and  inanimate  objects  in  her  portrayal  of  the  world  are 
never  geometrical  or  surrealistic  or  modernistic.  Things  are  what 
they  are;  and  what  people  do  results  directly  from  what  they  are. 
Everything  is  for  the  portraiture,  inner  portraiture  mainly,  and  for 
the  philosophy,  which  is  almost  entirely  unspoken,  and  for  the 
tale,  the  tale! 


Her  most  recent  collection  of  stories  was  published  in  1944.  Re- 
cently four  admirable  short  narratives,  not  portions  of  Ship  of  Fools, 
have  appeared  in  magazines;  one  of  them,  "St.  Augustine  and  the 
Bullfight,"  is  (I  think)  a  masterpiece,  in  a  strange  new  form,  a  hy- 
brid of  essay  and  tale,  of  which  I  expect  her  to  make  further  use. 
Also  occasionally  she  has  produced  valuable  pieces  of  expository 
prose.  In  every  type  of  short  work  she  is  a  ready  writer,  given  a  green 
light,  and  a  little  removal  from  sociability,  and  certain  facilities  in 
the  way  of  board  and  keep. 

But  never  a  ready  novelist!  All  that  time,  a  third  of  a  lifetime, 
her  struggle  with  Ship  of  Fools  has  been  going  on.  With  the  ever- 
lasting problem  of  her  delicate  health,  and  the  other  difficulties  and 
jeopardies  that  I  have  tried  to  describe  without  making  a  melo- 
drama and  a  sentimentality  of  her  life,  certainly  she  has  not  worked 
at  the  novel  uninterruptedly;  but  she  has  kept  up  her  dedication  of 
herself  to  it,  only  it,  and  staked  her  reputation  and  her  self-respect 
on  it.  "Even  when  I  was  a  little  child,"  she  once  said  to  me,  "I 
knew  that  youth  was  not  for  me" — a  sentence  wonderfully  expres- 
sive of  her  particular  lifelong  uneasiness,  responsiveness  to  her  fate 
up  ahead,  and  great  patience  from  start  to  finish,  knowing  or  sens- 
ing that  she  was  going  to  grow  old  at  the  appointed,  self-appointed 
task. 

Troubles,  jeopardies,  hardships;  note  that  I  do  not  say  misfor- 
tunes. The  perils  and  disorders,  even  the  wounds  of  a  war  scarcely 


Images  of  Truth  •  46 

seem  deplorable  to  the  home-coming  soldier  (or  to  his  grateful 
countrymen),  unless  his  battle  has  been  lost;  not  even  then,  if  he 
has  shown  heroism  and  if  his  story  has  been  nobly  reported.  The 
fearsomeness  of  childbearing  and  the  fatigues  of  parenthood  are 
unhappy  only  if  the  children  perish  or  turn  out  to  be  good  for 
nothing.  Likewise  one  cannot  evaluate  the  experience  of  a  literary 
genius  unless  and  until  one  has  perused  all  that  has  resulted  from 
it.  Obviously  a  great  deal  of  heartbreak  and  travail  has  been  Kath- 
erine  Anne's  lot.  But,  but,  let  us  remind  ourselves,  no  fortunate  and 
facile  youthful  or  even  middle-aged  person  could  have  written  Ship 
of  Fools.  It  has  required  the  better  part  of  a  lifetime  of  unshrinking 
participation  in  life  and  unshirking  endeavor,  of  hardheadedness 
and  heat  of  heart  and  almost  fanaticism,  and  now  we  have  the  re- 
sult; and  surely  it  must  seem  to  her,  in  her  weariness  and  pride, 
cheap  at  the  price. 

So  many  writers  of  our  generation  brought  forth  novels  in  our 
twenties,  immaturely.  Often  they  were  novels  in  name  only,  en- 
larged tales,  family  chronicles,  disguised  self-portraits.  Some  of  us 
then  hit  upon  a  formula  or  worked  out  a  method,  so  as  to  produce 
narrative  reading  matter  wholesale;  and  some  of  us,  on  the  other 
hand,  simply  got  tired  of  the  great  form,  or  despaired  of  it.  With 
lesser  fish  to  fry,  we  let  the  white  whale  go.  Not  Katherine  Anne! 
And  when,  twenty  years  ago,  as  a  famed  specialist  in  the  short  story, 
she  let  it  be  known  that  she  had  begun  a  novel,  she  meant  precisely 
that:  a  large  lifelike  portrayal  of  a  numerous  and  representative 
society,  with  contrasts  of  the  classes  and  the  masses  and  the  gener- 
ations and  the  ethnic  groups,  with  causes  and  effects  in  the  private 
psychology  of  one  and  all,  and  with  their  influences  on  one  another 
— every  man  to  some  extent  a  part  of  every  other  man's  fate — and 
all  of  this  made  manifest  in  behavior,  action,  plot!  Despite  destiny, 
unfavorable  in  some  respects,  despite  passionate  life  and  personal 
weakness  and  disadvantages  in  the  day  and  age  and  in  our  present 
heterodox  American  culture,  Katherine  Anne  would  be  a  novelist, 
a  novelist,  or  else!  As  the  time  passed,  there  arose  in  literary  circles 
a  murmur  of  skepticism  or  pessimism  to  which  (I  hope)  she  herself 
was  deaf. 


47  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

Let  me  confess  that,  at  one  point,  when  she  had  confided  prob- 
lems and  despondencies  to  me,  I  began  to  write  her  a  deplorable 
though  well-meaning  letter,  advising  her  to  give  up  the  novel,  as 
such;  to  salvage  stories  and  sketches  out  of  the  incomplete  manu- 
script; and  to  go  on  to  whatever  she  had  next  on  her  agenda.  Thank 
goodness,  I  was  persuaded  by  my  closest  friend  to  consign  this  mel- 
ancholy suggestion  to  the  wastebasket,  and  presently  I  paid  Kath- 
erine Anne  a  visit  on  her  wooded  hill  in  Connecticut,  where,  as 
she  said,  she  lived  "on  guard  and  secretive  and  solitary  as  a  wood- 
chuck  peeping  out  of  its  hidey-hole."  And  she  read  aloud  several 
chapters  that  were  new  to  me,  and  I  suddenly  caught  sight  of  what 
was  in  her  mind,  the  great  novel  structure;  the  whole  so  very  much 
more  than  the  sum  of  the  parts.  I  came  away  repentant,  exalted, 
and  did  not  lose  confidence  in  it  or  in  her  again. 

Ship  of  Fools  began  with  a  sea  voyage  that  she  took  in  1931,  and 
specifically,  she  says,  with  an  account  of  it  in  a  letter  to  her  friend 
and  fellow  writer,  Caroline  Gordon.  Ten  years  later  she  began  put- 
ting it  in  fiction  form,  and  gradually,  perhaps  somewhat  uninten- 
tionally, it  ceased  to  be  a  reminiscence  and  a  tale  and  became  a 
true  and  full-length  novel:  The  ship  Vera,  that  is  to  say,  Truth, 
but  with  no  abstraction  other  than  that,  no  symbolism,  on  its  voy- 
age from  Veracruz  in  Mexico  to  Bremerhaven  in  Germany  via  four 
intermediate  ports  of  call,  a  voyage  only  twenty-six  days  long  in  the 
narrated  fact,  but  in  the  art  of  the  telling,  with  reference  to  many 
of  the  passengers,  lifelong,  in  that  something  of  their  past  and 
something  of  their  future  is  included  in  it  all  along,  by  means  of 
great  flashbacks  and  mirrorings  of  motive  and  fate,  by  means  of  a 
prophetic  understanding  of  the  patterns  of  their  lives  still  to  be 
lived;  about  three  dozen  of  them  clearly  delineated  and  memorable, 
some  unforgettable:  a  lot  of  Germans  and  a  Swede  and  three  Swiss 
and  four  Americans,  and  some  Mexicans  and  Cubans  and  Spaniards 
(a  vague  pitiful  collectivity  of  hundreds  of  the  poorest  Spaniards, 
deportees,  in  steerage);  every  age  group;  aristocrats  and  profes- 
sional men  and  artists  and  various  bourgeois  and  riffraff  and  mer- 
chant mariners  (and  that  shadowy  Spanish  proletariat^  diversely 
involved  in  love  and  lust  and  mortal  illness  and  craziness  and  chau- 


Images  of  Truth  •  48 

vinism  and  cruel  intolerance  and  religiosity,  actively  involved,  in 
brilliant  incidents  with  hallucinating  dialogue;  all  things  motivat- 
ing one  another,  all  things  illuminating  one  another. 

What  in  the  world  made  us  so  negative,  Katherine  Anne's  friends 
and  enemies,  and  all  the  literary  gentry?  With  the  long,  solid,  closely 
wrought,  and  polished  work  in  hand,  the  grumpiness  about  it  for  so 
long  seems  strange.  Occasionally,  when  publication  had  to  be  post- 
poned again,  and  then  again,  did  I  not  sometimes  hear  in  certain 
voices,  voices  well-meaning  enough  as  a  rule,  tones  of  what  in  psy- 
choanalytical parlance  used  to  be  known  as  Schadenfreude,  exhila- 
ration-when-things-go-wrong? Have  I  ever  been  guilty  of  just  that 
myself?  I  believe  not.  But  who  knows? 

Though  almost  certainly  she  has  had  no  notion  of  it,  she  has 
been  enviable  for  years.  Her  fame  has  been  out  of  proportion  to  the 
amount  of  her  work,  however  highly  one  might  think  of  it  as  to  its 
excellence.  At  least  in  theory,  a  good  many  of  us  would  willingly 
have  experienced  her  sadnesses,  shouldered  her  burdens,  faced  up  to 
her  disappointments,  in  order  to  have  produced  just  those  few  vol- 
umes of  her  short  fiction  (even  giving  up  hope  of  the  legend- 
ary novel)  and  to  have  felt  her  satisfaction  in  consequence.  How 
proudly  she  spoke  of  her  vocation  at  times,  almost  as  though  she 
were  a  ruler  or  as  though  she  were  a  saint!  "I  have  tossed  a  good 
many  things  considered  generally  desirable  over  the  windmill  for 
that  one  intangible  thing  that  money  cannot  buy,  and  I  find  to 
my  joy  that  I  was  right.  There  is  no  describing  what  my  life  has 
been  because  of  my  one  fixed  desire:  to  be  a  good  artist,  responsible 
to  the  last  comma  for  what  I  write."  Most  of  the  time,  at  least  much 
of  the  time,  even  when  things  have  been  in  no  wise  flourishing  for 
her,  she  has  seemed  somehow  exultant,  heroic,  heroine-like. 

Furthermore,  she  has  a  formidable  wit,  which  may  have  troubled 
some  people.  Vide,  if  you  have  not  taken  cognizance  of  this,  her 
satirical  portrait  of  Gertrude  Stein  in  The  Days  Before,  or  her  more 
recent  minority  opinion  of  Lady  Chatterley's  Lover,  by  which  some 
Lawrence  admirers  felt  deflated  as  it  were  with  beak  and  claw.  I 
have  tried  to  think  of  some  sample  of  her  humor  in  its  briefer  and 
sometimes  even  fiercer  form,  a  vive  voix  or  by  mail,  that  it  might 


49  '  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

be  feasible  to  tell,  naming  no  names.  But  hers  is  a  type  of  humor 
that  cannot  be  appreciated  if  the  target  is  veiled.  Of  course  in  a 
way  one  is  proud  to  be  chastised  with  intellect  and  virtuosity  like 
hers;  at  any  rate  one  prides  oneself  on  taking  it  stoically;  but  it  may 
leave  sorenesses  of  scar  tissue,  reflexes  of  spite.  No  matter. 

It  occurs  to  me  that  there  is  a  minimum  of  laughter  of  any  kind 
in  Ship  of  Fools.  George  Moore  maintained  that  humorousness 
always  has  a  bad  effect  in  a  novel,  disruptive  of  the  illusion  in  it, 
drawing  attention  away  from  the  characters  in  it  to  the  humorous 
disposition  of  the  author.  I  have  never  heard  Katherine  Anne  say 
anything  about  this,  but  evidently  her  instinct  has  been  in  accord 
with  that  of  the  influential,  half-forgotten  Irish  writer.  Humor  is 
one  of  the  subjectivities,  along  with  pathos  and  anger,  powerful  in 
her  letters,  distilled  out  of  her  fiction,  for  fiction's  sake. 


Ship  of  Fools  is  a  phenomenal,  rich,  and  delectable  book.  Though 
I  had  read  a  good  many  parts  of  it  in  typescript  and  in  serial  pub- 
lication from  time  to  time,  its  qualities  as  they  appear  in  book 
form  far  exceed  my  expectations:  the  hallucinating  specificity;  the 
supreme  and  constant  meaningfulness  of  everything;  the  bewitch- 
ment of  the  story  as  such,  or,  to  be  exact,  the  stories  (plural)  inter- 
woven; and  a  continual  sense  of  cause  and  effect,  both  in  the  mind 
and  in  external  circumstances,  amounting  to  suspense  but  at  the 
same  time  inspiring  confidence  in  the  judgment  and  truthfulness 
of  the  novelist;  the  main  generalizations  of  psychology  and  moral- 
ity as  plain  and  acceptable  as  the  face  of  a  clock,  the  minute  hand 
seeming  to  cause  the  hours,  the  hour  hand  the  days,  and  subse- 
quently the  weeks  and  months  and  years  and  indeed,  in  retrospect 
and  prospect,  entire  lifetimes.  A  good  many  readers  are  going  to 
regret  having  been  given  snatches  of  this  novel  in  magazines.  An 
analogy  in  terms  of  music  occurs  to  me:  the  themes  best  suited  to 
large-scale  polyphonic  compositions  do  not  make  the  shapeliest 
sonatas  or  the  most  moving  songs. 

I  think  that  reviewers  may  be  tempted  to  describe  Ship  of  Fools 


Images  of  Truth  •  50 

as  a  grand-hotel  novel,  making  a  customary  and  convenient  use  of 
the  title  of  a  best  seller  of  some  years  back:  a  contrivance  of  heter- 
ogeneous humanity  cheek  by  jowl,  a  matching  and  contrasting  of 
little  plots,  with  a  measure  of  general  involvement  as  it  were  by 
chance,  ring  around  a  rosy,  all  of  which  one  does  find  in  caravan- 
series  and  sometimes  in  great  country  houses  and  in  hospitals  and, 
as  it  is  in  this  case,  on  board  ship. 

But  in  Katherine  Anne's  novel  this  is  only  the  superficial  aspect 
and  the  rough  outline.  Essentially  it  is  a  theme  novel,  with  great 
themes.  Shall  I  undertake  to  list  them?  Femaleness,  and  the  basic 
coercive-submissive  (not  to  say  sado-masochistic)  relations  of  males 
and  females;  middle  age;  neuroticism;  and  several  predestining 
historic  matters:  the  influential  mentality  of  American  expatriates, 
egocentric  but  sensitive;  the  pre-Nazi  mentality  of  otherwise  quite 
ordinary  middle-class  and  lower  middle-class  Germans,  with  their 
wild  conceit  backed  up  by  fanatic  hard  work  and  co-operativeness 
within  the  group;  the  cold  and  sickening  ferment  of  ideas  like  anti- 
Semitism.  What  the  twentieth  century  has  had  to  read  in  the  news- 
papers is  often  worse  than  what  Calvin  found  in  the  Bible. 

It  seems  to  me  that  she  now  paints  her  vision  of  evil  with  a  more 
mingled  palette,  although  there  is  less  pathos  about  it  than  when 
she  was  young.  Now  no  one  is  entirely  blameless — even  one  of  the 
children  on  the  S.A.  Vera  is  hopeless,  and  the  other  two  are  fiends 
— but,  on  the  other  hand,  she  never  disregards  or  belittles  anyone. 
On  the  whole  I  should  say  that  all  the  qualities  that  I  have  praised 
in  her  previous  fiction — that  grasp  of  lamentable  evil  predestina- 
tion, and  the  dead  seriousness  in  general,  the  objectivity,  the  knack 
of  verisimilitudinous  portraiture  (often  like  Frans  Hals,  sometimes 
like  Goya),  the  natural-seeming  style,  the  manner  always  respon- 
sive to,  adjusted  to,  the  matter,  and  suspense  throughout,  well  reg- 
ulated but  with  no  trickiness — all  are  still  praiseworthy  in  Ship  of 
Fools,  unchanged  except  for  the  tremendous  change  of  scale. 

The  central  part  of  Ship  of  Fools  is  the  story  of  the  amorous 
entanglement  of  a  willful  and  clever  American  girl  painter  with  a 
young  fellow  artist,  whom  she  perhaps  loves  but  does  not  like   (and 


5/  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

is  disliked  by).  Adjacent  to  this  is  the  portrait  of  a  lonely  divorced 
American  woman  of  a  certain  distinction,  whose  rather  passive 
and  self-centered  psychology  erupts  at  last  in  a  strange  disgraceful 
action.  Rather  in  the  background,  as  the  historiis  personae  are 
placed  and  arranged,  and  a  little  more  remote  from  anything  the 
reader  is  apt  to  have  encountered  in  his  own  walk  of  life,  with 
obscurer  motivations  and  great  pathos  and  a  more  intense  episodic 
interest,  there  is  another  love  relationship,  somewhat  tenderer  than 
that  of  the  young  Americans,  between  a  middle-aged  Spanish  no- 
blewoman, whose  life  really  has  become  hopeless  in  every  way 
and  who  has  taken  to  drugs,  and  a  saintly  German  doctor  with  a 
hopeless  heart  condition,  who  supplies  her  with  drugs  and  other- 
wise befriends  her  and  loves  her  desperately. 

There  is  only  one  Jew  on  board  the  Vera,  one  named  Julius 
Loewenthal,  and  we  are  under  no  great  obligation  to  be  sorry  for 
him  personally;  no  one  actually  mistreats  him;  he  seems  not  sorry 
for  himself  personally,  only  for  the  collectivity  of  Jews.  He  is  bigot- 
edly  religious,  even  superstitious,  and  rabidly  anti-Gentile.  The 
victim  of  the  German  insolence  and  silliness  is  a  good  Aryan  Ger- 
man, an  oil-man  named  Freytag,  with  a  beloved  Jewish  wife  (not 
on  board).  When  his  miscegenation  gets  bruited  about  he  is  re- 
moved from  the  captain's  table  and  seated  with  Loewenthal,  who 
also  gives  him  a  hard  time,  hating  to  hear  of  a  Jewish  girl's  having 
stooped  so  low  as  to  marry  one  of  the  goyim,  even  a  good  one. 

How  rich  it  is,  in  human  interest,  tribulation,  and  reading  pleas- 
ure; God's  plenty,  and  indeed  the  devil's  plenty  also!  In  the  area 
of  love  and  sexuality,  for  example,  we  get  to  know  and  understand 
two  somewhat  sustained  love  affairs,  in  addition  to  the  two  that  I 
have  just  mentioned;  and  four  middle-aged  marriages,  with  a  pair 
of  young  honeymooners  in  ideal  euphoria  and  peak  activity  in  the 
background;  and  the  uncomfortable  unilateral  sexual  needs  of 
three  single  males — a  violent  Scandinavian,  a  tough  Texan,  and 
a  maddened  German  teen-ager;  and  the  feverishness  of  a  sextet  of 
Cuban  medical  students;  and  the  routine  venality  and  occasional 
animal  passion  of  a  Spanish  song-and-dance  troupe;  to  say  nothing 


Images  of  Truth  •  52 

of  the  presumable  sex  life  of  the  poor  multitude  in  steerage.  In  the 
course  of  the  twenty-six  days,  the  human  cargo  there  on  the  lower 
deck  is  increased  by  seven  babies,  boy-babies. 

In  reading  Ship  of  Fools  one  is  less  aware  of  structure  than  of 
movement,  as  it  might  be  the  movement  of  one's  eyes  lighting  first 
on  one  thing,  then  on  another,  or  on  this  person  or  that.  For  ex- 
ample, in  Veracruz  on  the  day  of  sailing,  first  we  see  an  Indian, 
then  an  appalling  mutilated  beggar;  whereupon  a  pair  of  passen- 
gers, obese  German  passengers,  with  an  obese  white  bulldog,  leave 
behind  them  on  a  bench  a  reminder  of  sandwiches,  which  the  beg- 
gar drags  himself  to  and  wolfs  down;  and  after  that  a  patrol  of 
soldiers  or  policemen,  with  rifles  at  the  ready,  marches  in  and  takes 
the  Indian  away,  perhaps  to  shoot  him.  Meanwhile  the  principal 
personages  begin  to  come  into  view,  singly  or  in  pairs  or  in  trios, 
friendly  or  hostile  or  indifferent.  The  reader  gradually  circulates 
among  them,  stirred  at  first  only  by  curiosity;  and  the  writer,  as  to 
the  order  and  the  emphasis  and  the  dimensions  of  her  writing, 
seems  actuated  at  first  only  by  a  readiness  to  respond  to  the  reader's 
interest.  She  keeps  answering  the  questions  that  she  keeps  induc- 
ing us  to  ask. 

The  title  is  a  revival  of  that  of  a  moral  allegory  very  famous 
all  over  Europe  at  just  about  the  time  that  Columbus  discovered 
America:  Sebastian  Brant's  Das  Narrenschiff.  Katherine  Anne  read 
it  not  long  after  that  voyage  to  Europe  with  which  this  vast  and 
gradual  work  of  fiction  started.  "This  simple,  almost  universal 
image  of  the  ship  of  this  world  on  its  voyage  to  eternity,"  she  says 
in  an  introductory  note,  "suits  my  purpose  exactly.  I  am  a  passen- 
ger on  that  ship." 

Structurally,  Ship  of  Fools  is  in  three  parts:  I.  Embarcation;  II. 
High  Seas;  III.  The  Harbors — subdivided  in  about  a  hundred  and 
fifty  brief  untitled  sections.  There  are  three  epigraphs:  A  line  of 
Baudelaire,  "Quand  partons-nous  vers  le  bonheurV  When  shall  we 
set  out  toward  happiness?  A  phrase  from  a  song  by  Brahms:  "Kein 
Haus,  Keine  Heimat,"  No  house,  no  homeland.  One  of  St  Paul's 
somber  metaphorical  sayings:  "For  here  we  have  no  continuing 
city  .  .  ." 


53  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

In  the  first  hour  of  my  reading  I  noticed  that  in  the  case  of  some 
passengers  Katherine  Anne  gives  us,  in  a  section  each,  profoundly 
though  swiftly,  the  whole  being  and  salient  features  of  the  entire 
life  story.  Whereas  her  introduction  of  certain  other  people  is  much 
more  casual,  our  penetration  into  their  nature  and  mentality  shal- 
lower, or  at  any  rate  slower,  the  disclosure  of  the  past  less  dramatic. 
This  puzzled  me.  Presently  I  realized  that  her  complete,  profound 
likenesses  are  of  the  less  important,  less  complex  characters;  those 
that  she  presents  easy-goingly  are  the  principals,  who  are  to  be 
given  the  lion's  share  of  the  hundreds  of  pages  up  ahead. 

It  is  a  vast  portrait  gallery,  with  portraits  of  all  sizes,  hung  here 
and  there  on  the  wall,  high  and  low;  and  some  of  the  portrayed 
ones  seem  to  dance  down  out  of  their  frames,  some  tumble  out, 
some  fight  their  way  out,  with  fearful  vitality.  I  can  think  of  only 
one  possible  reason  for  anyone's  not  liking  this  book:  just  at  the 
start  the  characters  are  almost  too  strong;  one  shrinks  from  them  a 
little.  No,  you  may  say,  I  do  not  wish  to  spend  another  page  with 
this  smug  glutton,  or  this  hypochondriacal  drunkard,  or  this  lach- 
rymose widow;  no,  not  another  word  out  of  that  girl  in  the  green 
dress!  But  presently,  having  read  a  certain  number  of  pages,  you 
feel  a  grudging  sympathy  with  one  and  all,  or  a  rueful  empathy,  or 
at  least  solidarity,  as  a  fellow  human  being. 

I  told  Katherine  Anne  this  one  day  on  the  telephone,  and  she 
said,  "I  promised  myself  solemnly:  in  this  book  I  will  not  load  the 
dice.  We  all  do  it,  even  you  have  done  it;  and  so  have  I  in  my  day, 
as  you  well  know.  But  this  time,  I  resolved,  everyone  was  to  have 
his  say.  I  would  not  take  sides.  I  was  on  everyone's  side." 

At  that  point  I  had  reached  only  about  page  100,  and  I  replied 
to  her,  "Yes,  my  dear,  but  it  might  also  be  said  that  you  are  on  no 
one's  side." 

This  evidently  surprised  her  a  bit  but  she  took  it  kindly.  I  wanted 
to  go  on  and  turn  it  into  a  great  compliment.  For,  truly,  this  is  one 
of  the  magic  effects  of  the  art  of  fiction  at  its  very  best:  when  the 
reader,  knowing  nothing  in  the  world  about  a  set  of  characters  ex- 
cept what  the  writer  has  written  for  him,  suddenly  says  to  himself, 
Oh,  I  understand  these  poor  people  better  than  this  literary  person 


Images  of  Truth  •  54 

seems  to;  he  or  she  lacks  compassion  or  profundity  or  sociology  or 
political  sense  or  something.  Thus  each  and  every  character  is  given 
a  separate  life.  The  umbilical  cord  is  cut;  the  matrix  cleared  away. 
But  Katherine  Anne  talks  as  brilliantly  on  the  phone  as  in  person; 
she  interrupted  me  and  distracted  me.  Anyway,  who  am  I  to  lecture 
this  woman  of  genius  about  her  techniques,  her  spells?  She  must 
always  know  what  she  is  doing,  I  think;  at  least  she  knows  what  she 
has  done. 

Some  of  the  passengers  on  the  Vera  really  are  hateful  or  at  least 
horrifying.  For  example,  the  half-dead  old  German  who  believes 
that  to  compensate  for  his  own  extremity  God  has  conferred  on 
him  a  power  of  saving  others'  lives  by  touching  them  with  his  ter- 
rible hand.  He  has  himself  pushed  about  in  a  wheel  chair  by  his 
blond  young  nephew  who  loathes  him.  Concha,  the  youngest  and 
prettiest  of  the  Spanish  dancers,  who  is  enamored  of  blondness, 
cannot  give  herself  to  the  sex-starved  boy  unless  he  pays  her;  her 
pimp-partner,  Tito,  would  beat  her  if  she  did.  She  therefore  tries 
to  persuade  the  boy  to  murder  the  old  man. 

Another  pair  of  the  Spanish  dancers,  Lola  and  Tito,  have  twin 
children  named  Ric  and  Rac;  male  and  female,  though  we  can 
scarcely  tell  which  is  which.  They  seem  more  demonic  than  human, 
"infant  gorgons  intent  on  turning  each  other  to  stone";  and  when 
their  parents  torture  them  for  unsuccessfully  stealing  the  noble- 
woman's pearl  necklace,  what  we  feel  is  scarcely  pity;  it  is  fear, 
fear  of  the  worse  and  worse  evil  that  cruelty  to  them  will  engender. 
The  only  thing  that  they  are  afraid  of  is  separation;  the  pulling 
apart  of  their  identical  soul,  if  any. 

There  is  one  physical  monster,  pitiful  and  harmless,  an  S-shaped 
hunchback  named  Herr  Glocken,  and  a  kind  of  unfunny  clown, 
a  fat  bellowing  red-shirted  political  agitator.  But  these  grotesque 
personages  are  on  the  very  outer  edges  of  the  book;  a  little  closer 
to  our  humanity  than  the  professor's  wife's  vomiting  white  bulldog, 
but  not  much.  They  make  a  frame  around  the  more  important,  less 
anomalous  portraits;  a  baroque  or  rococo  frame.  This  also  differen- 
tiates Katherine  Anne's  novel  from  other  novels  of  the  grand-hotel 
type.  She  is  not  mainly  interested  in  the  patchwork  and  variegation 


55  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

of  human  nature.  What  fires  and  polarizes  her  mind  are  the 
themes  (as  I  have  said),  the  elements,  the  universal  character- 
istics: mutual  unkindness  of  lovers,  gluttony  and  alcoholism,  snob- 
bery and  conformism,  and  political  power,  even  that  inevitably 
wielded  by  the  captain  of  a  ship  at  sea,  and  bourgeoisie  versus  des- 
titution, and  immaturity  versus  senility — with  scarcely  ever  a  word 
about  any  of  these  subjects  in  the  abstract,  not  a  bit  of  intellec- 
tuality per  se;  only  intelligence,  constantly  arising  afresh  from  ob- 
servation. 

There  are  superb  episodes  and  quick  little  inner  crises  of  this 
passenger  and  that,  for  better  or  worse.  To  suggest  to  you  the  range 
of  Katherine  Anne's  Active  power,  let  me  refer  summarily  to  some 
of  them;  my  memory  leaping  from  peak  to  peak. — 

The  reverie  of  little  Hans,  the  redheaded  greenish-pale  child  of 
the  alcoholic  lawyer,  terribly  minding  the  body  odor  of  his  par- 
ents, but  finding  his  own  body  odor  sweet;  wondering  why  in  the 
one  case,  why  not  in  the  other. 

The  love-making  of  Amparo,  the  most  talented  of  the  dancers, 
and  of  her  pimp,  Tito,  whom  she  truly  loves;  admirable  alley-cat 
passion. 

The  confiscation  of  every  sort  of  weapon  on  board,  ordered  by 
the  captain  after  a  fight  in  steerage,  including  the  knives  of  a  wood 
carver  named  Echegaray,  the  means  of  his  livelihood,  instruments 
of  his  art;  he  sits  weeping  piteously. 

Dog  overboard!  it  is  the  vomiting  bulldog,  flung  over  the  rail  by 
the  fiendish  twins.  Man  overboard!  it  is  the  poor  wood  carver, 
suicidal  perhaps,  but  in  any  case  giving  his  life  to  save  the  dog's 
life. 

And  just  as  his  body,  artificial  respiration  not  having  been  at- 
tempted in  time,  is  being  lowered  back  into  the  sea  with  due  rites, 
the  entrance  of  three  whales  in  the  midst  of  the  distant  seascape, 
fountaining  along. 

The  girls  of  Tenerife,  where  everyone  goes  ashore  for  a  day, 
racing  along  with  heavy  water  cans  on  their  heads,  thrillingly  beau- 
tiful and  provocative  but  chaste,  with  the  Texan  in  vain  pursuit  of 
one  of  them. 


Images  of  Truth  •  56 

The  sad  neurotic  divorcee,  when  she  has  had  a  little  too  much 
to  drink,  and  when  the  Texan  is  helplessly  drunk,  beating  him  in 
the  face  with  her  shoe,  although  she  scarcely  knows  him;  avenging 
herself  by  proxy  for  all  her  bad  luck  with  inferior  men. 


Having  delivered  the  entire  final  typescript  of  Ship  of  Fools,  Kath- 
erine  Anne  confessed  to  her  editor,  Seymour  Lawrence,  that  she 
had  scarcely  been  able  to  read  it  as  reading  matter;  it  remained 
work  in  progress  for  her  even  at  that  point.  "Has  it  a  form,  a  shape, 
as  a  whole?"  she  wanted  to  know. 

"Yes,"  he  answered,  "it  is  like  a  great  wave." 

And  so  it  is.  It  rises  rather  slowly  and  coldly  at  first,  with  an  effect 
of  distance,  of  remoteness  from  the  reader's  mind,  indeed  of  small- 
ness  of  scale.  Gradually  one  is  impressed,  gradually  one  is  enthralled, 
then  lifted  higher  and  higher,  and  submerged  deeper  and  deeper, 
almost  drowned.  The  wave  breaks,  at  the  end  of  Part  II,  with  (let 
us  say)  the  burial  at  sea  of  Echegaray,  the  heroic  and/or  suicidal 
wood  carver.  But  by  that  time  our  responsiveness,  intentness,  and 
ravishment  are  like  a  wide  shelving  shore,  a  flat  and  curving  beach. 
And  for  almost  two  hundred  pages  after  the  breaking  of  the  wave, 
up  it  comes  still,  in  long  breakers  or  combers,  some  with  subsidiary 
crests  of  great  brilliance  and  violence. 

Yes,  like  a  wave.  Incidentally,  I  note  this  peculiarity  of  Katherine 
Anne's  style:  she  rarely  indulges  in  figures  of  speech.  One  evening  in 
my  family  circle  I  read  about  thirty  of  these  pages  aloud,  and  only 
one  simile  caught  my  eye:  little  greenish-pale  Hans  has  freckles 
"like  spots  of  iodine."  No  one  since  Stendhal  has  written  so  plainly, 
so  glass-clearly;  and  my  author  carries  about  three  times  as  much 
evidence  of  the  senses  as  the  author  of  Le  Rouge  et  le  Noir  ever  did, 
and  she  is  much  less  inclined  to  infatuation  and  spite  and  eccentric 
argument  than  he  was. 

For  a  while  after  I  have  been  reading  her,  my  own  way  of  writing 
— with  impulsive  images,  with  effects  of  cadence  and  pace,  harmo- 
niousness  and  dissonance,  based  on  my  way  of  reading  things  aloud, 


57  •  Katherine  Anne  Porter  Personally 

with  ideas  that  I  sometimes  let  language  itself  provide,  and  with  a 
certain  impressionism  due  to  my  having  a  memory  at  once  excitable 
and  faulty,  resuccumbing  to  emotions  of  the  past  when  I  should  be 
just  mustering  up  the  details — puts  me  to  shame. 

Now,  to  give  a  recapitulation  and  a  close  to  this  rambling  study 
of  my  friend's  lifework,  let  me  quote  another  of  her  letters,  somber 
once  more,  but  blended  with  some  of  her  malicious  spirit;  showing 
also  her  great  virtue  of  steadfastness.  It  was  written  in  Liege,  Bel- 
gium, where  she  had  been  given  a  Fulbright  Fellowship  to  teach  at 
the  university.  In  a  letter  to  her  I  had  vexed  her  with  a  weak  refer- 
ence of  some  sort  to  my  age,  and  she  chose  to  take  it  personally  and 
struck  back  with  an  expression  of  some  pathos  and  acerbity. 

"When  you  and  others  younger  than  I,  by  I  forget  how  many 
years,  but  a  good  number,  complain  of  getting  old,  I  think  with 
dismay:  What  must  they  be  thinking  of  me?" 

Truly,  I  had  not  been  (in  that  letter)  thinking  of  her  at  all. 

"I  have  had  such  a  struggle  to  survive,"  she  wrote,  "so  many  ill- 
nesses that  nearly  crippled  me  when  I  was  young,  so  many  intima- 
tions of  mortality  before  my  time;  I  felt  more  decrepit  at  twenty-four 
than  I  have  since;  and  now  I  do  not  have  a  proper  sense  of  time.  It 
does  not  chop  itself  like  stove  wood  into  decades  convenient  for 
burning.  It  is  a  vast  drift  in  which  I  float,  eddying  back  and  forth, 
spinning  round  now  and  then,  moving  always  towards  no  fixed 
point;  but  one  day  it  will  dissolve  and  drop  me  into  the  abyss." 

In  any  case,  she  went  on  to  say,  she  could  never  trust  other  peo- 
ple's eyes  or  judgments  in  the  matter.  "When  I  was  sixteen,  a  woman 
of  middle  age,  when  told  my  age,  said  'Ha,  she'll  never  see  eighteen 
again!'  And  when  I  was  twenty-eight,  a  man,  not  at  all  malicious, 
guessed  my  age  to  be  forty.  Oddly  enough,  when  I  was  fifty,  another 
man,  who  loved  me,  also  thought  me  forty;  and  I  told  him  about  the 
other  guess,  and  wondered  if  I  was  never  to  escape  from  that  particu- 
lar decade." 

Why,  she  asked  me,  should  she  worry  about  her  visible  years  when 
others  were  so  happy  to  do  that  worrying  for  her?  Though  she  did 
not  blame  me  for  my  worrisomeness,  this  sentence  struck  home. 

She  then  told  me  her  favorite  story  about  age.  She  was  lunching  in 


Images  of  Truth  •  58 

Hollywood  with  Charles  Brackett,  the  distinguished  screen  writer 
(who  is  an  old  friend  of  hers  and  of  mine)  and  two  important  film 
directors;  a  few  tables  away  sat  the  then  famous  child  actress, 
Margaret  O'Brien,  with  her  mother,  her  governess,  her  director,  and 
someone  else.  "And  the  three  men  at  my  table  looked  her  over  as 
though  she  were  a  pony  they  were  thinking  of  buying,  and  one  of 
them  said,  'How  old  is  she  now?'  and  another  answered,  'Six  years 
old/  and  there  was  a  pause,  and  then  Charlie  said,  'She  looks  older 
than  that.'  There  was  a  kind  of  nod-around  among  them  and  the 
moment  passed." 

The  concluding  paragraph  of  this  letter  is  a  kind  of  prose  poem: 

"It  is  five  o'clock,  I  am  in  a  dowdy  furnished  apartment  where 
the  keys  don't  turn,  the  gas  cocks  stick,  the  bathroom  gadgets  work 
half  way,  the  neighborhood  is  tout-petit  bourgeois,  the  furnishings 
are  from  the  Belgian  branch  of  Sears  Roebuck,  the  place  is  subur- 
ban, the  wild  yellow  leaves  are  flying  in  a  high  bitter  wind  under  a 
smoky  sky,  and  I  have  come  to  world's  end,  and  what  was  my  errand 
here?  There  is  nothing  I  wish  to  say  to  anyone  here;  does  anybody 
want  to  listen?  But  it  does  look  as  if  here  again,  with  all  the  unlike- 
liness, the  place  and  the  time  had  met  for  me  to  sit  at  this  table, 
three  and  one  half  feet  square,  and  write  something  more  of  my 
own." 

Amen  to  that,  says  her  perennially  grateful  reader.  She  did  not  in 
fact  write  much  in  Liege.  The  autumn  weather  in  that  part  of  the 
world  and  the  Fulbright  schedule  of  lectures  proved  too  much  for 
her  respiratory  tract,  and  she  had  to  come  home.  But  it  was  not  long 
afterward  that  she  settled  herself  in  Connecticut  and  began  to  see 
daylight  as  to  her  novel  writing. 

In  that  same  letter  of  the  dark  night  of  her  soul  in  Belgium,  or, 
to  be  precise,  teatime  of  her  soul  in  Belgium,  she  declared  that  the 
only  disturbing  thing  about  the  passage  of  time,  for  her,  was  the 
fact  that  she  had  four  books  all  clearly  conceived  and  partly  begun 
and  waiting  to  be  finished.  Now,  three  to  go!  And  now  perhaps  not 
so  many  of  us  will  care  to  bet  against  her. 


Chapter  Three 

Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 


A  rule  of  criticism:  "Do  not  dictate  to  your  author;  try  to  become  him." 

VIRGINIA  WOOLF 


Two  or  three  times  I  have  undertaken  to  write  something  about 
the  lifework  of  Somerset  Maugham,  with  somewhat  the  same  slight 
bewilderment  and  difficulty  each  time.  For  a  while  all  went  well,  in 
my  mind,  making  my  plan,  according  to  the  number  of  pages  as- 
signed to  me  and  their  intended  destination  and  use,  entertaining 
all  the  ideas  that  might  conceivably  and  properly  be  applied  in  such 
a  text;  profuse  and  various  themes,  derived  from  a  pleasant,  friendly 
relationship  and  from  a  beneficial  and  enjoyable  reading  and  reread- 
ing. But  a  profusion  is  not  ideal  when  one  has  to  produce  a  small 
prose  work,  as  (come  to  think  of  it)  Maugham  himself  has  taught 
me,  along  with  other  lessons. 

He  used  to  say  that  he  preferred  not  to  read  commentaries  on 
himself.  But  every  now  and  then,  having  weighed  a  thought  or  con- 
structed a  sentence,  I  would  foolishly  ask  myself  how  it  might  strike 
him,  evoking  over  the  page  his  remarkable  face,  in  which  various 
elements  of  his  character  and  effects  of  his  life  are  (as  you  might 
say)  interestingly  inscribed  or  jotted  down,  in  delicate  crisscross 
wrinkles:  his  kind  though  choleric  mouth;  his  fine  eyes,  one  almost 
round  and  the  other  sharply  focused  with  a  slant,  which  you  may 
see  in  Bernard  Perlin's  beautiful  silverpoint  portrait.  Along  with 
the  feathery  sound  of  my  fountain  pen  on  the  paper,  or  between 
fits  and  starts  of  my  typewriter,  I  seemed  to  hear  his  soft  but  author- 

59 


Images  of  Truth  •  60 

Itative  voice,  making  an  appropriate  but  not  always  very  tactful 
remark. 

Henry  James  said,  in  I  cannot  think  what  connection,  that  when 
a  work  of  creative  literature  is  very  formally  presented,  escorted  into 
the  reader's  mind  with  too  many  arguments  and  considerations,  it 
is  like  having  a  dinner  guest  brought  to  the  house  by  policemen. 
(This  is  not  exactly  quoted;  he  put  it  more  volubly  and  porten- 
tously, in  his  style.)  Nevertheless,  when  he  himself  came  to  collect 
his  lifework,  he  posted  prefaces  in  every  volume,  an  entire  constab- 
ulary of  prefaces,  armed  to  the  teeth  with  intellect  and  imposingly 
turned  out,  with  gold  braid,  and  with  spit  and  polish. 

Maugham  has  written  a  good  many  little  forewords,  models  of 
informality,  pertinence,  and  good  humor.  Young  writers  especially 
ought  to  look  for  them  and  to  give  them  thought;  likewise  his  essay, 
"On  Style  (After  Reading  Burke),"  and  the  little  piece  upon  his 
sixty-fifth  birthday,  and  his  brief  address  at  the  Library  of  Congress 
when  he  presented  the  manuscript  of  Of  Human  Bondage  to  this 
nation,  and  a  meditation  upon  his  seventieth  birthday,  which  is  at 
the  end  of  the  volume  entitled  A  Writer's  Notebook. 

Never  having  had  any  conviction  that  he  was  a  genius,  all  his  life 
he  has  used  his  head  about  everything  having  to  do  with  writing, 
which  cannot  be  said  of  many  writers.  He  modestly  and  consciously 
learned  to  write;  therefore  it  is  easier  to  learn  from  his  remarks, 
however  cursory  or  circumstantial,  than  from  more  expansive,  ex- 
citing documents  of  the  vocation  of  letters  such  as  James's  prefaces. 
Maugham,  characteristically,  hints  more  than  he  expounds;  which 
is  just  as  well,  if  your  interest  is  personal  and  serious.  You  can  make 
what  you  wish  of  his  helpfulness,  to  suit  your  case. 

You  must  not  be  misled  by  his  rather  small  and  offhand  manner 
in  this  confidential  expository  writing;  the  English  gentleman's  self- 
satisfying  modesty.  Remember  also,  when  his  attitude  seems  to  be 
inflexible  in  some  sense,  or  when  he  harps  on  his  preferences  and 
theories,  that  sometimes  this  is  his  way  of  criticizing  fellow  writers 
whose  reputations  appear  to  him  undeserved  or  unsound.  All  his 
life  he  has  had  to  share  the  literary  scene  with  various  genius-types, 


6i  •  Somerset  Maugham,  and  Posterity 

posturing  and  boasting.  This  has  inclined  him  to  a  sort  of  extreme 
unpretentiousness.  Others  have  made  a  glamour  of  their  pure  art- 
istry and  integrity,  without  producing  much;  all  blow  and  no  go. 
He,  on  the  contrary,  has  set  up  as  a  principle,  even  a  duty,  that  non- 
stop productivity  which  comes  naturally  to  him,  and  which  he 
certainly  enjoys,  and  which  has  profited  him.  Now  and  then  he  has 
seemed  to  suggest  that  anyone  not  capable  of  producing  a  great 
deal,  or  not  willing  to  do  so,  might  as  well  give  up  literature.  Others 
have  talked,  in  season  and  out,  of  their  inspiration  and  dedication, 
message  and  messianic  feeling.  All  or  almost  all  his  remarks  have 
been  carefully  couched  in  terms  of  the  mere  profession  of  writing, 
the  career  of  writing,  even  the  pursuit  of  fortune  by  that  means. 

No  insincerity  in  any  of  this,  mind  you!  But  a  man  cannot  live 
for  half  a  century  in  a  great  constant  limelight,  sought  after  and 
indiscreetly  questioned  in  society,  and  subject  to  the  changeable  and 
illogical  standards  of  the  literary  journalism  of  the  day,  without 
developing  some  self-consciousness. 

For  a  long  time  he  was  the  dean  of  novelists  writing  in  English. 
By  which  advertisement-like  statement  I  mean  that  for  more  than 
a  quarter  of  a  century  he  was  the  one,  the  only  one,  who  had  the  ad- 
miration of  an  elite  of  highly  cultivated,  sophisticated  readers  and 
of  a  sufficient  number  of  good  fellow  writers,  with  increasing  influ- 
ence on  the  younger  ones,  and  at  the  same  time  gave  great  pleasure 
to,  made  sense  to,  and  affected  the  lives  of,  a  million  or  more  ordi- 
nary mortals.  What  else  is  deanship?  It  is  never  a  matter  of  unanim- 
ity. In  the  condition  of  contemporary  literary  culture  especially,  a 
small  superior  group  in  agreement  or  in  coalition  with  the  multitude 
is  apt  to  overrule  or  overwhelm  any  objection  that  may  start  up  in 
medium  intellectual  circles.  Evidently  this  is  what  happened  about 
Maugham,  leaving  perhaps  a  vague  resentment  in  the  minds  of 
some  of  those  who  might  have  been  expected  to  mold  (and  indeed 
unmold)  contemporary  opinion,  and  who  scarcely  did  so  in  his  case, 
who  carped  in  vain. 

For  about  a  decade  after  World  War  II  he  seemed  the  most  con- 
troversial of  literary  figures  as  well  as  the  most  successful.  As  literary 


Images  of  Truth  •  62 

controversies  go,  this  had  a  certain  distinction,  in  that  nothing  of 
miscellaneous  thought  was  at  issue,  neither  politics  nor  morals  nor 
any  other  ideology.  It  was  all  about  the  narrative  art;  whether  or 
not  he  deserved  to  be  called  a  great  or  even  a  fine  narrative  artist, 
or  only  an  ordinary  producer  of  magazine  stories  and  books  for  the 
lending  libraries;  whether  his  career  has  been  a  true  vocation,  or 
simply  a  case  of  ambition  and  energetic  endeavor  crowned  with  odd 
success;  whether  the  shelfful  of  his  fiction  is  of  a  high  category  or  just 
a  present  plaything  for  the  mind  of  a  commonplace  throng. 

Unfortunately  the  arguments  pro  and  con  have  not  been  pre- 
sented at  full  length  or  with  sufficient  clarity  and  conviction.  I  can- 
not think  of  another  important  man  of  letters  about  whom  there 
is  so  little  to  read,  of  any  interest.  In  both  the  praise  and  the  blame 
a  few  conventional  terms  keep  appearing,  as  in  a  kaleidoscope 
around  and  around;  and  in  the  past  decade  or  so  the  blamers  have 
shown  more  verve  and  self-assurance  than  the  praisers.  Our  diligent 
book  reviewers,  perhaps  having  written  themselves  dry  about  him 
long  since,  have  reacted  lassitudinously  to  the  almost  annual  suc- 
cession of  his  books.  Certain  of  our  noteworthy  serious  critics  (Ed- 
mund Wilson  for  one),  offended  in  taste  or  dissatisfied  in  intellect, 
entirely  lost  their  patience  with  this  or  that  recent  volume  and 
seemed  peculiarly  to  be  trying  to  shame  the  rest  of  us  out  of  our 
enjoyment. 

As  a  rule  perhaps  one  ought  not  to  take  cognizance  of  this  kind 
of  adverse  opinion,  or  of  the  group  thinking  and  conversation  of 
intellectuals  which  it  may  be  taken  to  reflect.  It  cannot  be  replied 
to  in  any  detail  without  giving  it  emphasis  and  further  circulation. 
But  in  the  instance  of  Maugham  at  present  it  seems  worth  while 
because  he  is  to  be  blamed  for  some  of  the  confusion  and  the  repe- 
titiousness. 

In  all  his  confidential  expository  writing  he  has  presented  him- 
self, or,  one  might  say,  typed  himself,  as  having  only  a  limited 
specific  talent;  as  not  knowing  or  thinking  much  about  anything 
outside  his  field  of  professional  dramaturgy  and  narration;  as  hav- 
ing no  vision  of  the  state  of  the  world,  no  psychological  science,  no 
profundity;  and  as  not  admitting  any  intention  in  his  writing  except 


6$  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

to  entertain.  "The  purpose  of  art  is  to  please."  He  should  have  been 
warned  of  the  riskiness  of  oversimplification  and  understatement  in 
an  age  of  advertising. 

For  his  least  favorable  critics  have  borrowed  a  good  part  of  his 
representation  of  himself,  even  parroting  certain  phrases  and  epi- 
thets, belittlingly,  and  to  the  advantage  of  their  preferred  school  of 
modern  writing,  whatever  it  may  be.  In  their  aggressiveness,  his 
defense  position  has  been  turned  around;  as  if  it  were  some  bit  of 
Maginot  Line  with  forces  of  the  enemy  established  in  it  by  mis- 
chance or  by  mistake.  The  confusion  is  great,  quid  pro  quo;  and 
those  who  disapprove  of  him  attack  one  so  fiercely,  in  the  regular 
uniform  of  his  thought  turned  inside  out,  and  with  the  passwords — 
writing  is  a  livelihood,  fiction  is  a  pastime,  the  mixture  as  before 
— that  one  often  feels  obliged  to  fight  him  too,  before  one  can  give 
him  his  due  praise. 

Some  people  of  course  are  real  believers  in  unpopularity,  mis- 
trusters  of  success;  and  the  recently  booming  market  for  whatever 
bears  Maugham's  signature,  and  the  adaptations  of  the  motion- 
picture  industry,  and  all  the  publicity  and  the  publicizing,  have 
made  these  people  disrespectful.  His  detractors  have  him  on  their 
minds  a  good  deal,  and  feel  romantically  about  him  in  their  way; 
they  are  anti-fans.  In  ordinary  social  intercourse  one  hears  far  more 
talk  of  any  sort  of  relative  failure  on  his  part — when  a  given  novel 
can  be  said  to  have  fallen  short  of  the  standard  set  by  some  previous 
novel,  or  perhaps  has  sold  a  few  hundred  thousand  copies  less — 
than  of  the  successes  of  other  writers.  I  may  seem  sarcastic,  but  it  is 
not  my  intention  to  suggest  that  the  opponents  to  Maugham  are 
all  of  a  superficial  or  unreasonable  spirit.  Certainly  they  are  not. 
Among  my  best  friends  there  are  three  or  four  whose  opinion  of 
authors  as  a  rule  tallies  with  mine,  whose  cultivation  and  judgment 
I  appreciate  exceedingly,  with  whom  I  cannot  have  a  civil  conver- 
sation about  this  one  author,  so  zealous  or  jealous  have  they  become, 
in  their  resolve  not  to  have  him  overestimated. 

But  the  poor  criticism  and  the  captious  momentary  talk  have 
only  increased  Maugham's  general  celebrity,  emphasized  his  un- 
swerving strength  of  mind  in  his  own  way,  and  given  further  adver- 


Images  of  Truth  •  64 

tisement  to  his  tranquil,  uninfluenced,  unceasing  production.  The 
fact  is  that  the  anti-Maugham  party  have  not  really  been  able  to 
put  up  a  candidate  of  their  own  for  the  specific  position  in  contem- 
porary letters — the  combined  artistic  and  popular  position — which 
they  are  so  impatient  of  his  continuing  to  hold,  decade  after  decade. 
All  these  years  they  seem  never  to  have  found  themselves  in  agree- 
ment with  the  great  public  about  any  contemporary  writer,  nor 
succeeded  in  bringing  the  collectivity  around  to  the  style  of  writing 
they  do  care  for. 


Now  here  let  me  cast  my  vote  with  the  majority,  for  Maugham,  be- 
ginning with  a  general  statement  of  admiration,  a  profession  of 
faith.  I  believe  that  his  best  books,  perhaps  eight  or  ten  volumes, 
will  endure  for  posterity  and  be  read  with  continuing  benefit  and 
pleasure.  Except  for  the  extreme  jeopardies  facing  Western  civili- 
zation as  a  whole,  I  feel  no  uneasiness  whatever  about  his  having 
his  sufficient  fame  in  the  outcome  of  the  century;  his  share  of  what 
is  called,  in  rather  old-fashioned  writers'  parlance,  immortality. 

In  the  meantime  a  really  considerable  slump  of  his  reputation  is 
to  be  expected;  something  more  than  the  restlessness  against  him 
in  literary  society  and  the  carping  of  professional  critics.  It  is  normal, 
melancholy  though  it  must  be  for  any  author  who  has  lived  to  see 
it.  Presently,  a  great  many  of  those  who  for  years  have  delighted 
in  him  above  all  other  storytellers  will  have  had  their  fill,  and  they 
will  forget  to  recommend  him  to  the  younger  generation.  Already 
his  imitators  have  somewhat  coarsened  and  debased  the  forms  and 
devices  of  his  fiction,  so  that  one  looks  upon  certain  of  the  beauties 
of  it  with  a  dull,  dissipated  eye;  he  no  longer  gets  credit  for  unique- 
ness. 

And  meanwhile  his  successors,  it  is  to  be  hoped — those  who  are 
not  too  idle  or  freakish  or  unfortunate — have  been  getting  set  with 
types  of  literature  to  suit  themselves,  with  departures  from  his  way 
of  thinking.  In  subject  matter  especially,  various  frontiers  have 
been  opening  up  continually:  new  ruling  passions  in  the  ascendant, 


6$  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

and  up-to-date  strengths  of  mind  and  weaknesses  of  character,  which 
Maugham  in  old  age  could  not  be  expected  to  understand  very 
well,  which  his  perfected  forms  and  practiced  techniques  would  not 
have  suited  in  any  case;  concepts  of  what  is  desirable  in  life,  and 
what  is  hateful  or  insufferable,  differing  radically  from  those  he  has 
exemplified  in  a  hundred  various  tales  and  indeed  in  his  own  life 
story. 

Do  I  make  him  seem  older  than  he  is  in  fact?  Never  a  muscular, 
sanguine,  egotistical  man,  for  many  years  he  has  been  acutely 
conscious  of  his  age.  Infants  born  when  he  first  began  to  complain 
of  it,  in  The  Summing  Up  (1938),  have  grown  to  manhood,  and  he 
is  still  producing  books,  only  a  little  less  regularly  and  ambitiously; 
still  enjoying  his  life  to  some  extent;  but  still  dwelling  on  the 
solemn  theme,  the  note  of  farewell.  I  think  this  is  a  trait  of  literary 
artists;  as  work  of  art  does  actually  offer  the  possibility  and  degree 
of  survival  after  death,  it  is  apt  to  lead  to  some  imagination  of 
the  time  far  ahead.  My  impression  is  that  as  life  has  worn  on,  and 
his  career  has  seemed  to  be  drawing  to  a  close,  Maugham  has  often 
wondered  how  posterity  was  going  to  view  his  career  and  collected 
works,  though  I  have  never  heard  him  speak  of  it. 

With  praise  of  him  by  serious  critics  so  insufficient  in  these  last 
decades  of  his  life  (a  mountain  of  clippings  indeed,  but  more  than 
half  of  it  quibbling,  unimpressed,  or  unenlightened)  and  the  word 
of  mouth  of  the  intellectuals  so  little  in  unison,  likely  to  make  only 
a  weak,  jangled  reverberation  in  the  period  to  come,  and  no  very 
remarkable  record  of  official  or  academic  honors — for  he  has  not 
been  greatly  indulged  in  this  way  either — what  is  going  to  lead  the 
good  reader  of  posterity  to  take  the  trouble  of  procuring  and  read- 
ing and  re-evaluating  his  books?  Curiosity,  I  suppose,  above  all. 
What  made  this  man  so  beloved  by  the  unliterary,  unofficial,  unaca- 
demic  humanity  of  his  time?  And  as  it  has  been  a  crucial  historic 
time,  what  can  his  popularity  have  signified,  and  what  good  or  harm 
was  there  in  it?  So  few  contemporary  men  of  letters  have  kept  their 
public  for  three  decades,  with  a  continuous  production  and  increas- 
ing sale  of  books  the  while;  attention  will  be  attracted  to  him  by 
this.  He  will  be  part  of  a  history  lesson. 


Images  of  Truth  •  66 

And  when  it  comes  to  reading  for  pleasure  or  for  any  personal 
emotion  or  edification,  he  will  not  have,  in  (let  us  say)  the  middle 
of  the  twenty-first  century,  all  the  competition  that  appears  at  pres- 
ent. A  quantity  of  literature,  especially  fiction,  vanishes  in  thin  air. 
Some  of  the  work  of  famed  contemporaries  of  his  has  already  been 
shelved;  and  in  almost  all  of  it  we  can  see  the  ephemeral  and  per- 
ishable elements.  Any  little  random  enumeration  and  review  of  them 
is  suggestive  of  the  relative  soundness  of  his  narrative  art,  indicative 
of  its  greater  staying  power.  In  the  various  ways  in  which  they  have 
proved  weak,  he  took  the  trouble  to  develop  particular  strength. 
The  mistakes  they  made,  the  predilections  they  indulged  in:  these 
were  what  he  most  severely  forbade  himself  and  guarded  against. 
I  gather  that  in  his  formative  years  he  studied  everything  they  were 
doing;  then  considered,  in  his  reading  of  all  the  still-valid  fiction  of 
the  past,  every  sort  of  parallel;  carried  the  lesson  forward  in  specula- 
tion upon  the  future;  and  regularly  applied  it  to  his  day's  work, 
most  earnestly  desiring  not  to  have  written  in  vain. 

H.  G.  Wells,  for  example,  so  hard-working  and  serious,  so  influ- 
ential for  many  years,  wrote  like  a  newspaper;  and  since  he  rashly 
prophesied  things  in  every  volume,  what  he  got  right  will  seem 
platitudinous  and  what  he  got  wrong,  absurd.  At  the  other  extreme, 
the  fine  fiction  of  the  period  has  been  characterized  by  a  certain 
remoteness  of  subject  matter,  elusive  and  allusive;  and  obscured 
by  linguistic  innovations,  a  playing  with  words,  like  poetry.  It  is 
hard  to  foresee  how  so  luxurious  a  fabric  of  writing  will  endure; 
there  is  not  much  precedent  in  literary  history.  Half  the  work  of 
wonderful  Joyce  surely  will  revert  to  the  universities;  recondite 
crossword  puzzles.  Not  a  learned  type  of  reader  myself,  I  feel  that 
the  best  novels  of  Ford  Madox  Ford  and  Maurice  Baring  might  be 
appreciated  if  they  were  read  at  all;  but  they  are  likely  to  be  over- 
looked, their  careers  in  their  lifetime  having  gone  so  modestly.  As 
I  remarked  just  now,  there  is  more  than  the  pecuniary  advantage 
in  having  sold  like  hot  cakes;  readers  long  afterward  wonder  why. 
E.  M.  Forster  will  certainly  last;  only  five  novels,  and  (what  a  mys- 
tery it  is)  none  at  all  since  1924I 


6y  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

Thus  very  naturally,  with  so  little  early  twentieth-century  litera- 
ture that  will  still  seem  readable,  the  wondering  future  reader  will 
turn  to  the  wide  shelfful  of  the  collected  works  of  Maugham;  the 
one  of  all  his  generation  the  least  like  a  genius,  the  one  most  em- 
phatically disavowing  any  such  pretension.  Down  out  of  the  attic 
of  literary  history  his  narrative  art  will  be  brought,  as  though  it 
were  some  piece  of  inherited  furniture  that  had  gone  out  of  fashion 
for  a  time;  comfortably  functional,  solidly  constructed,  with  not 
much  gilt  on  it  but  finely  carved. 

And  the  use  and  the  enjoyment  of  reading  him  many  years  hence, 
I  believe,  will  not  be  very  different  from  our  own  at  present — pre- 
cisely because  he  has  been  sagacious  and  cautious  in  his  handling 
of  themes  of  the  day  which  grow  commonplace  or  obscure;  because 
he  has  been  content  to  write  a  pure  prosaic  prose  without  any  re- 
markable invention  of  new  ways  of  expressing  things;  because  he 
has  written  a  great  amount,  so  as  to  constitute  a  distinct  Maugham- 
world  into  which  his  readers  can  enter,  of  which  they  can  learn  the 
idiom  and  the  implications,  each  volume  helping  them  to  under- 
stand the  next,  building  up  their  response  to  the  next;  and  because 
he  has  discovered  and  devised  story  after  story  worth  telling  for  the 
story's  sake,  the  one  and  only  thing  he  has  boasted  of  himself.  The 
love  of  narration  as  such  evidently  is  elemental  and  permanent  in 
human  nature. 


If  you  have  been  following  Maugham's  own  line  about  his  work 
too  ingenuously,  or  reading  the  current  criticism  with  entire  respect, 
you  may  have  assumed  that  it  is,  if  not  altogether  thoughtless,  of  a 
very  limited  intellectual  interest.  Now  I  will  dispute  this,  and  give 
you  some  illustration  and  analysis  of  the  kind  of  thought  I  find  in 
his  fiction,  or  (as  I  suppose  Maugham  would  prefer  to  have  me  say) 
the  kind  of  meaning  I  read  into  it. 

Without  exaggeration!  I  maintain  only  that  in  all  his  best  stories 
and  novels  there  is  an  underlying,  somewhat  hidden  significance, 


Images  of  Truth  •  68 

pervasive  spiritual  sense,  and  important  moral  counsel,  and  general 
view  of  life  and  vision  of  the  present  world — supplementary  to  that 
sole  purpose  of  entertainment  continually  announced  by  him — 
which  will  repay  whatever  trouble  of  intellect  you  may  take  in  your 
reading.  You  will  be  the  wiser  for  it.  Presumably  he  is  not  aware 
of  all  that  he  puts  in  a  work  of  fiction;  but  I  feel  sure  that  he  is 
always  conscious  of  more  than  he  cares  to  talk  about. 

In  his  lifetime  he  has  had  an  extraordinary  range  of  experience 
of  the  world,  often  in  contact  with  great  personages  of  his  genera- 
tion, sometimes  concerned  with  historic  events.  Also  year  after  year 
all  sorts  of  persons,  struck  by  the  tolerant  spirit  and  sagacity  of  his 
writing,  have  kept  bringing  him  their  report  or  confession  of  those 
extreme  occurrences  of  private  life  in  which  modern  human  nature 
so  often  strangely  manifests  itself,  unveils  itself.  He  has  a  reading 
and  speaking  knowledge  of  five  languages,  and  has  read  everything, 
including  all  the  classics  of  religion  and  metaphysics,  studiously. 
He  is  the  most  serious  of  men,  seeking  the  general  truth  in  all  things, 
holding  himself  responsible  for  his  every  belief  or  disbelief,  never 
fooling  himself  or  others,  thinking  hard.  It  would  be  odd  indeed 
if  his  production  of  books,  even  unpretentious  stories,  were  as  light- 
weight as  the  common  estimation  has  it. 

To  be  sure,  he  has  a  strict  sense  of  the  different  literary  forms, 
putting  limitations  upon  his  content  in  each  of  them  accordingly. 
Not  only  The  Summing  Up  but  various  other  volumes  of  nonfiction 
have  been  somewhat  in  the  vein  of  autobiography,  therefore  not 
appropriate  for  any  display  of  intellect  as  an  end  in  itself.  In  many 
a  story  he  has  made  use  of  the  first  person  singular;  and  then,  quite 
as  modestly,  as  though  it  were  reminiscence  or  truthful  expository 
writing,  he  has  allowed  himself  only  that  extent  of  thoughtfulness, 
intelligence  rather  than  intellect,  which  could  be  referred  to  his  own 
character,  within  plausible  radius  of  himself.  In  a  novel  of  course 
there  is  always  something  or  other  subject  to  interpretation  in  terms 
of  economics  and  the  social  sciences,  psychology,  and  so  on.  But  he 
has  kept  all  this  somewhat  out  of  evidence,  according  to  his  dear 
tenets  of  simplicity  and  clarity;  in  any  case  kept  it  out  of  vocabulary. 

Now,  some  readers  depend  a  great  deal  on  verbal  associations 


6$  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

and  style  in  general,  as  indications  of  seriousness  of  thought:  mas- 
sive abstruse  specialized  words,  complicatedness  and  elaboration  in 
other  ways  as  well,  and  a  mysterious  solemnity.  There  is  never  any- 
thing like  that  in  Maugham.  He  irately  disapproves  of  it  in  others' 
work,  even  in  the  writing  of  technical  philosophy  and  the  accounts 
which  scientists  give  of  their  research  and  speculation.  Years  ago, 
I  remember  his  taking  the  matter  up  with  certain  eminent  profes- 
sors and  a  biologist  or  two  in  person,  advocating  a  less  self-indulgent 
style.  In  all  his  mature  period  his  own  way  of  expressing  ideas  has 
been  direct  and  plain  and  pithy,  somewhat  in  emulation  of  Dryden 
and  Swift  and  their  followers,  but  with  constant  observance  of  the 
rhythm  of  informal  modern  conversation  and  with  some  easy  col- 
loquialism. 

If  you  are  looking  for  deep  thoughtfulness  in  a  story  or  a  novel 
by  Maugham,  you  cannot  expect  to  have  it  underlined  for  you  as 
such.  You  must  use  your  head,  in  order  not  to  mistake  simplicity 
for  insignificance;  and  you  must  learn  to  recognize  his  idea  in  that 
envelope  of  reality  in  which  ideas  do  actually  generate,  in  incident 
and  in  dialogue  and  in  little  sequences  of  cause  and  effect.  Also  you 
will  need  to  read  somewhat  slowly,  pondering  as  you  go  along, 
and  to  bear  it  all  in  mind  for  some  time  afterward,  weighing  it 
against  your  own  experience  and  ideas  and  feelings.  Otherwise 
Maugham  is  not  the  author  for  you,  and  may  never  be. 

If,  on  the  other  hand,  you  are  the  more  natural,  easy-minded, 
unreasoning  man,  and  what  you  want  is  the  mere  spinning  of  a  yarn, 
now  a  kind  of  myth  against  some  exotic  background,  now  a  pitiful 
or  exciting  bit  of  low  life,  now  a  humorous  scene  of  high  life,  to 
pass  the  time — with  perhaps  just  a  little  inspiration  or  revelation 
incidentally  adhering  to  your  mind  when  this  or  that  feature  of  the 
plot  chances  to  correspond  to  some  recollection  or  present  preoc- 
cupation of  your  own — well,  you  have  Maugham's  explicit  blessing. 
You  are  the  reader  he  writes  for,  by  his  own  account. 

For  my  part,  I  like  works  of  fiction  to  have  meaning,  the  deeper 
and  the  more  consequential  the  better;  and  unless  I  find  this  to  my 
satisfaction,  fiction  reading  amuses  me  very  little  and  leaves  me  dis- 
contented. Story  form  can  convey  a  greater  and  more  accurate  truth 


Images  of  Truth  •  jo 

— as  to  human  nature  in  its  various  manifestations  and  inhibitions, 
and  general  human  fate  of  the  day  and  age — than  any  abstract  or 
generalized  literature,  dogma  or  dialectic  or  deduction  of  science. 
The  actual  perusal  of  a  book  is  only  a  part  of  the  literary  experi- 
ence. By  mere  mechanism  of  the  mind,  the  time  I  pass  in  recalling 
and  reflecting  upon  what  I  have  read  is  greater  than  the  time  it 
takes  to  read.  When,  with  no  difficulty  or  superfluity  or  prolixity,  I 
have  been  given  something  worth  thinking  about,  I  love  the  writing 
in  question,  and  the  writer;  this  is  my  chief  reason  for  admiring 
Maugham. 

The  thought  in  Maugham's  novels  is  mostly  ethics,  religion,  or 
the  psychology  of  creative  endeavor.  The  Moon  and  Sixpence,  for 
example,  has  to  do  with  the  strange  compelling  destiny  of  the  artist 
ahead  of  his  time,  to  whom  moral  defects,  unkindness  toward  others, 
even  brutality  and  megalomania,  may  prove  helpful  in  becoming 
great;  as  in  the  case  of  Gauguin.  Cakes  and  Ale — which  I  once  heard 
Maugham  himself  recommend  as  his  own  first  choice  of  his  novels 
— gives  a  picture  of  the  literary  life,  with  assorted  types  of  men  of 
letters,  the  celebrity  and  the  young  novice,  the  real  creator  and 
the  parasitic  literary  journalist,  and  others;  it  also  shows  the  es- 
sential goodness  of  a  sexually  loose  woman  and  her  benign  influ- 
ence on  the  men  around  her.  The  Painted  Veil  is  a  portrayal  of  the 
unhappiness  resulting  from  irresponsible  adultery;  the  beneficial 
psychotherapeutic  effect  of  doing  good  to  others;  and  the  appeal  of 
Roman  Catholicism  when  one  is  unhappy. 

To  be  sure,  none  of  this  will  greatly  impress  or  entirely  satisfy 
any  true  intellectual.  It  is  not  that  absolute  learnedness  and  virtu- 
osity of  mind  which  Thomas  Mann,  for  example,  in  the  novels  of 
his  old  age,  exercised  almost  as  proudly  and  far-rangingly  as  San- 
tayana  in  his  eclectic  philosophy  or  Toynbee  in  his  world  history. 
On  the  other  hand,  what  Maugham  has  to  offer  is  not  frivolous 
matter;  and  the  point  of  thinking,  I  take  it,  is  not  quantity  of 
thought  but  Tightness,  relevance,  and  indeed  helpfulness. 


yi  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 


Christmas  Holiday  is  unique  in  Maugham's  fiction  in  that  its  theme 
is  sociological  and  political.  It  is  the  one  of  his  fifteen-odd  novels 
that  has  meant  most  to  me  personally.  As  you  may  recall,  it  is  the 
tale  of  a  happy-natured  and  fortunate  English  youngster  named 
Charlie,  holidaying  in  Paris.  He  has  a  less  fortunate  friend  there 
named  Simon,  who  introduces  him  to  a  pathetic  Russian-refugee 
prostitute  calling  herself  Lydia.  Presently  she  confesses  her  true 
identity — she  is  the  wife  of  Robert  Berger,  a  notorious  murderer — 
then,  little  by  little,  narrates  their  love  and  his  evil  deed. 

Upon  its  first  publication  in  1939,  I  think  that  the  majority  of 
Maugham's  readers  did  not  respond  with  their  customary  enthu- 
siasm; as  though  determined  to  shut  their  eyes  a  few  more  months 
to  what  its  entire  plot  and  all  its  characterizations  portended.  Also 
those  who  wrote  the  criticisms  of  it  missed  its  grave  implications, 
not  stopping  to  think.  Which  is  no  final  matter;  books  of  the  great- 
est importance,  even  masterpieces,  even  classics,  often  have  had  to 
wait  awhile  for  their  high  rating  and  proper  interpretation.  For  ex- 
ample, take  the  case  of  Stendhal. 

Nineteen  hundred  and  thirty-nine,  the  end  of  the  great  lull  in 
modern  history;  the  moment  of  awakening  from  the  sweetest,  most 
heedless  sleep  humanity  ever  indulged  in!  As  of  that  date,  Christ- 
mas Holiday  had  greater  significance  than  any  comparable  reading 
matter,  I  think:  social  significance.  The  phrase  is  outworn,  I  know, 
but  here  we  have  exactly  what  if  was  meant  for. 

Maugham  in  this  slight  volume,  less  than  a  hundred  thousand 
words  long,  with  his  air  of  having  nothing  on  his  mind  except  his 
eight  characters — how  they  came  together  and  what  happened  and 
what  they  said  and  how  they  felt — explains  more  of  the  human  basis 
of  fascism  and  nazism  and  communism  than  anyone  else  has  done: 
the  self-fascinated,  intoxicated,  insensible  character  of  all  that  new 
leadership  in  Europe;  the  womanish  passivity  of  the  unhappy  masses 
dependent  on  it  and  devoted  to  it;  the  Anglo-Saxon  bewilderment 
in  the  matter,  which  still  generally  prevails;  and  the  seeds  of  his- 
toric evil  yet  to  come,  not  at  all  extirpated  in  World  War  II  but 
rather  multiplied  and  flung  with  greater  profusion  in  no  less  re- 


Images  of  Truth  •  72 

ceptive  soil  farther  afield,  even  beyond  Europe.  Europe  the  start- 
ing point,  the  womb  and  the  cradle,  as  in  fact  it  has  been  for 
millenniums. 

It  is  a  political  allegory  as  plain  as  Candide;  though  far  tougher 
and  less  pleasant,  less  cocksure.  Our  part  of  the  twentieth  century 
is  harder  to  diagnose  than  the  eighteenth  ever  was.  Young  Charlie  is 
a  representative  of  that  prosperous  and  liberal  middle  class  which, 
prior  to  World  War  II,  was  the  predominant  governing  class  of 
Europe.  Robert  Berger  typifies  the  new  dictating  class  which  de- 
veloped out  of  World  War  I  and  has  had  a  setback  in  World  War 
II  but  apparently  still  has  a  future,  with  ex-middle-class  Simon  at- 
tached to  him  as  brain-truster  and  propagandist.  Lydia  personifies 
the  desperate  and  infatuated  common  people. 

All  of  us  in  the  remoter  and  temporarily  securer  part  of  Anglo- 
Saxondom,  are  Charlies;  and  how  can  we  help  shivering,  as  he  does, 
when  we  hear  Simon's  propaganda  and  apologia  and  forecast — to 
my  mind,  the  most  brilliant  pages  Maugham  has  ever  written — and, 
worse  still,  when  we  sense  the  relatedness  and  the  awful  understand- 
ing between  the  multitudinous  Lydias  and  increasing  Robert  Bergers 
in  the  world?  Paired  off  everywhere:  the  hopeless  and  the  ruthless, 
the  victim  and  the  victimizer,  Duce  and  dupe,  Fuehrer  and  follower, 
commissar  and  worker,  hero  and  hero-worshiper,  villain  and  villain- 
worshiper;  antithetical  mortal  types!  Somehow  each  appears  to  be 
the  other's  fate,  the  other's  mate;  in  a  kind  of  complicity,  in  cahoots. 
Is  it  a  different  humanity  from  ours?  Or  only  a  different  stage  of  the 
same  great  reign  of  terror? 

It  is  painful  reading  matter,  I  tell  you,  that  midnight  when  in  the 
excitement  of  having  murdered,  Robert  Berger  makes  love  to  Lydia 
so  passionately  and  insatiably  that  he  seems  to  her  godlike;  and  as 
she  tells  it  later  on — when  she  is  leading  a  degraded,  woebegone 
life,  with  her  notion  of  atonement — we  sense  that  she  thinks  it  was 
worth  it. 

Robert  Berger  of  course  is  amorality  personified,  because  he  has 
found  that  it  pays  well,  and  out  of  overweening  conceit,  and  for  the 
fun  of  it.  But  be  not  sentimental!  Lydia  is  amoral  too,  in  her  grand 
passion  and  her  despair.  She  has  no  belief  in  anything  except  love: 


73  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

the  more  extravagant  the  quantity  of  love  the  better.  Call  it  roman- 
tic if  you  like,  it  is  a  state  of  spirit  almost  exactly  corresponding  to 
a  convulsion,  or  animal  reaction  of  the  body.  Harmless  and  well- 
meaning  as  she  is,  observe  how  complacently  she  yields  herself  to 
his  excitement  of  evil  derivation,  flattering  herself  with  it,  asking 
nothing  else  of  him.  She  merges  her  soul  with  his.  Indeed  Simon  is 
the  only  character  in  this  book  who  has  a  distinct  feeling  of  right 
and  wrong,  or  any  sense  of  the  consequences;  and  Simon  is  half- 
crazy,  in  self-pity  based  on  his  boyhood  and  in  bitterness  against 
authority,  no  matter  what,  come  what  may. 

It  is  not  a  propaganda  novel.  No  mention  of  Germany,  for  ex- 
ample; or  of  unfortunate  Italy;  or  of  Russia,  for  that  matter,  except 
what  Lydia  remembers  of  the  bygone  days  of  Lenin's  revolution. 
No  particular  criticism  of  the  tumbledown  ancient  structure  of  Eu- 
rope; no  blueprint  of  ameliorated  future.  Only  the  human  equation: 
the  fortunate  and  innocent  youngster  who  has  his  little  vision  of  evil 
but  not  the  remotest  notion  what  is  to  be  done  about  it;  the  un- 
healthy-minded intellectual  who  believes  in  evil;  the  girl  of  the 
lower  depths  who  endures  evil  and  apparently  always  will,  utterly 
discouraged  and  incorrigibly  inclined  to  mysticism;  and  Robert 
Berger  the  evildoer,  born  evil;  and  the  old  woman  who  because  she 
gave  him  birth  blames  herself  forever,  and  lies  and  cheats  to  save 
him. 

Add  it  up  and  draw  conclusions  from  it  if  you  like,  as  best  you 
can:  add  and  subtract  and  multiply  and  divide  and  subdivide!  In 
various  staff  headquarters  and  foreign  offices  and  peace  conferences, 
better  heads  than  yours  and  mine  are  aching  with  the  emergency 
and  the  mystery  of  it  still,  today,  this  minute;  and  I  hope  to  God 
that  some  of  them  have  read  this  book.  On  the  continent  of  Europe 
which  is,  after  all,  the  most  consequential  portion  of  the  world,  at 
least  half  the  women  and  the  homosexuals  are  Lydias,  hundreds  of 
thousands  of  the  men  are  Simons;  and  what  of  the  Robert  Bergers? 
Law  and  order  have  been,  more  or  less,  restored.  A  good  number  of 
the  worst  ones,  the  mass  murderers  and  super-thieves  and  the  more 
impassioned  liars,  have  been  caught  red-handed,  repressed,  impris- 
oned, executed;  that  much  the  victory  of  1945  accomplished.  But  the 


Images  of  Truth  •  7^ 

unlucky  unwholesome  multitudes  upon  whom  they  battened — and 
by  whom  they  were  given  their  strength — are  still  the  same,  in  a 
plight  worse  than  ever,  with  daydreams  wilder.  They  are  more  to  be 
pitied  than  blamed,  yes,  but  none  the  less  dangerous  for  all  that.  Pas- 
sive to  their  passionate  ones,  in  maleness  and  femaleness  entangled, 
in  the  European  mood  of  love-death,  Liebestod,  presently  they  may 
once  more  bring  forth  the  leaders  appropriate  to  their  circum- 
stances, the  types  whom  the  weak  love  and  the  morbid  admire;  and 
then  what? 

The  last  line  in  Christmas  Holiday  is:  "the  bottom  had  fallen  out 
of  his  world/'  that  is,  the  holidaying  English  boy's  world.  Now 
naturally  almost  all  Europeans  say  as  much;  and  Americans  echo 
it.  For  evidently  Europe  is  the  bottom  of  our  world  also;  but  an 
echo  is  never  a  sufficient  answer. 

Now,  with  no  intent  of  sophistry,  to  you  who  have  followed  my 
Maugham  interpretation  and  my  little  thread  of  argument  almost 
to  the  end,  I  say  this. — Never  pretend  to  have  made  more  sense 
of  a  novel  or  to  have  found  more  meaning  in  it  than  your  actual 
experience  of  the  reading  of  it  has  entailed.  Never  attach  more  im- 
portance to  a  novel  than  you  feel.  Let  me  not  bully  you  about  this 
novel  that  I  love. 

I  remember  that  when  it  first  appeared,  and  my  friends  were 
reading  it  and  more  or  less  enjoying  it,  and  I  spoke  of  its  dread  al- 
legory and  prophetic  sense,  a  number  of  them  said  they  had  no  idea 
what  I  was  talking  about.  A  year  or  so  later  I  brought  the  subject  up 
in  conversation  with  Maugham.  As  a  rule  he  dislikes  listening  to 
anyone's  opinion  of  his  writing.  I  think  this  is  not  just  shyness  but 
also  a  kind  of  contrariety.  If  you  quibble  with  him,  he  wants  to 
fight  back,  even  unfairly,  haughtily.  The  least  excess  of  praise,  on 
the  other  hand,  only  stimulates  in  him  the  artist's  deep  and  pain- 
ful discontent  with  everything  he  has  done  to  date.  Which  is 
one  of  the  important  nerve  centers  of  art.  But  upon  this  occasion  he 
did  not  shut  me  up.  I  outlined  all  the  significance  of  his  book  as  it 
appeared  to  me;  I  alluded  to  the  various  disagreeing  or  obtuse 
readers. 

Maugham  said,  "Certainly  I  had  those  things  in  the  back  of  my 


J5  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

mind  while  I  was  writing  it.  But  if  I  had  insisted  on  them  I  should 
have  spoiled  my  story.  It  is  not  the  business  of  a  novelist  to  tell  his 
readers  what  they  are  to  think  of  his  characters  and  his  plot.  If  you 
want  your  work  of  fiction  to  be  read,  and  you  have  some  point 
that  you  wish  to  make,  you  must  bring  it  in  discreetly.  Your  reader 
may  not  take  your  meaning,  or  it  may  not  interest  him.  You  must 
let  him  read  for  his  pleasure." 


Now  I  want  to  examine  one  of  his  short  stories,  still  with  my 
characteristic  fervent  interest  in  what  it  signifies  or  points  to;  a 
very  different  thing  from  the  dread  allegory  of  revolutionary 
Europe.  It  is  my  favorite  story,  at  least  for  the  moment:  "The 
Treasure."  May  I  point  out  that  it  was  written  in  1942,  a  time  when 
Maugham's  powers  of  creation  might  indeed  have  been  expected  to 
be  dwindling,  running  on  at  their  ease  in  mere  competence,  upon 
accrued  reputation — as  he  himself  would  sometimes  remark,  with 
others  echoing? 

It  is  an  incident  of  sexual  intercourse  between  a  middle-aged 
celibate  gentleman  and  his  perfect  domestic  servant,  just  one  night 
and  the  morning  after;  an  indiscreet  and  yet,  as  it  turns  out,  harm- 
less romance.  Behold  them,  in  the  slightest  and  quickest  possible 
account  of  the  matter,  like  a  snapshot  with  the  light  evenly  diffused, 
not  an  ugly  shadow  of  a  single  feature,  not  a  line  out  of  focus:  the 
good  mild  man,  Richard  Harenger,  habit-bound,  but  worthy  of 
our  respect  in  many  ways;  and  the  faultless,  quiet,  and  somewhat 
mousy  woman,  Mrs.  Pritchard,  the  treasure. 

Though  it  has  a  charming  humor,  you  might  call  it  a  lonely 
kind  of  thing  to  read;  you  feel  as  isolated  with  them  as  they  are 
with  each  other.  They  do  not  speak  of  the  other  inhabitants  of  their 
world,  that  is,  their  two  worlds:  the  men  he  works  with,  the  people 
she  goes  back  to  when  she  is  not  working.  This  indeed  they  have  in 
common:  both  of  them  are  of  that  order  of  human  beings  who  have 
to  be  judged  primarily  on  whether  they  are  good  at  their  jobs  or 
not,  and  they  both  are;  it  is  an  important  premise.  Having  read  to 


Images  of  Truth  •  76 

the  end — average  reading  time  about  twenty  minutes — you  are  per- 
haps as  well  acquainted  with  them  as  they  are  with  each  other;  al- 
though, as  employer  and  employee,  they  have  lived  together  a  good 
while  before  the  quick  exceptional  impulse  of  manhood  and 
womanhood  comes  to  them,  that  one  night.  The  morning  brings  a 
little  panic,  at  least  to  the  male  breast.  Companionableness  of  the 
body  in  the  midnight  hour  is  all  very  well,  but  they  are  not  in  the 
least  kindred  spirits.  How  could  they  be,  stationed  in  life  as  they 
respectively  are?  But  she  says  nothing,  and  he  thanks  his  stars. 
According  to  your  morality  and  your  recollections,  it  may  give  you 
a  lump  in  your  throat  or  it  may  make  you  blush. 

On  its  very  small  scale  it  is  a  perfectly  formed  story,  as  it  were 
Chopin  in  words,  though  the  words  are  all  so  prosaic:  the  briefest 
prelude,  then  the  nocturne  for  four  pages,  then  the  aubade  for  a 
page  and  a  half;  all  in  perfect  pitch,  and  in  exact  contemporaneity, 
and  pertinent  to  everyone  or  almost  everyone  in  some  way. 

A  couple  of  no  particular  interest,  no  oddity  at  all:  what  charms 
us?  what  gives  them  their  breath  of  life?  I  think  it  is  the  fact  that 
each  of  them  has  a  particular  morality,  that  of  the  male  and  that 
of  the  female,  that  of  the  property  holder  and  that  of  the  wage 
earner,  and  perhaps  other  dissimilarities  besides;  and  in  spite  of 
the  conventions  and  the  selfish  considerations  and  the  points  of 
pride  fixed  in  their  minds,  it  is  not  static  in  either  case.  You  feel  it 
trembling  in  the  balance;  you  observe  its  positive  and  negative 
poles,  prosaic  realities  in  the  morning,  relaxation  and  risk  in  the 
dead  of  night. 

The  humor  of  it — need  I  say? — is  the  matter  of  the  classes  and 
the  masses,  in  the  particular  small  unorganized  category  of  domes- 
tic employment.  In  the  more  disclassed  and  democratic  time  to 
come,  they  tell  us,  such  a  man  as  Harenger,  if  he  requires  the  par- 
ticular service  that  Mrs.  Pritchard  rendered  so  exemplarily  that 
night,  may  have  to  marry  her;  which  may  or  may  not  prove  a 
happier  arrangement.  This  is  a  kind  of  joke  rarely  offered  by 
Maugham;  what  the  French  call  pince-sans-rire,  that  is,  pinching 
without  laughing. 

When  a  characteristic  contemporary  incident  is  as  well  told  as 


yj  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

this — no  matter  how  slight  and  smiling  and  pastime-like — it  can 
be  compared  to  one  of  those  clocks  which  need  no  winding  up.  It 
takes  its  movement  from  the  general  current  of  the  day  and  age, 
alternating  current  indeed;  and  with  its  silvery  tinkle  exactly  on 
time,  of  its  time,  you  hear  also  a  regretful  echo  and  a  prophetic 
echo. 

Twenty  minutes  of  reading  matter  for  pleasure,  it  expresses 
other  things  as  well:  that  very  modern  hypocrisy  about  sex  the 
point  of  which  is  to  avoid  responsibility,  to  save  oneself  trouble; 
and  a  form  of  virtuousness  of  which  many  people  are  quite  proud, 
though  if  the  truth  were  told  it  amounts  only  to  lack  of  sexual 
energy  or  lack  of  fancy;  and  that  state  of  late  middle  age  when  we 
lose  hope  of  love,  perhaps  even  the  faculty  of  loving,  when  a  little 
pleasure  is  all  we  have  a  right  to  expect,  and  a  little  goes  a  long 
way,  and  (let  us  face  it)  even  pleasure  does  not  mean  as  much  to 
us  as  convenience  and  comfort.  It  is  as  expressive  of  homosexual  re- 
lationships as  of  heterosexual,  perhaps  more  so. 


When  I  began  this  essay  I  fancied  that  I  might  refrain  from  writing 
about  Of  Human  Bondage,  the  novel  that  first  made  Maugham 
famous  as  a  novelist,  having  come  to  the  conclusion  that  everyone 
I  know  appreciates  it  just  a  little  more  than  I  do.  A  good  many  men 
of  letters  pride  themselves  on  their  not  liking  this  and  that;  not  I. 
But  if  I  were  to  disqualify  myself  and  skip  over  so  famous  a  work, 
who  knows  what  conclusions  my  readers  might  jump  to.  In  fact  I 
am  well  aware  of  its  great  qualities,  and  its  shortcomings  seem  to 
me  significant.  Published  in  1915,  it  is  now  regarded  as  a  modern 
classic,  and  rightly;  but  whereas  Maugham's  other  mature  novel 
writing  is  definitely  characteristic  of  the  twenties  and  the  thirties, 
the  modernity  of  this  is  questionable  in  some  way,  might  almost 
have  been  done  at  the  turn  of  the  century.  It  is  naturalistic  and 
convincing  in  the  way  of  George  Moore  and  Gissing  and  Hardy, 
indeed  the  way  of  Maugham's  own  early  Liza  of  Lambeth  and  Mrs. 
Craddock;  but  at  the  same  time  it  is  a  narrative  of  mood  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  y8 

neurosis  and  symbolism.  But,  although  it  is  a  spacious  and  copious 
work,  life  does  not  seem  to  flow  through  it  freely  or  completely.  It 
is  somewhat  willfully  composed,  according  to  preconception  and 
thesis.  It  has,  as  you  might  say,  north  light  in  lieu  of  sunshine,  and 
a  sort  of  blackness  here  and  there,  as  a  substitute  for  shadowy 
depths  and  real  mystery. 

In  theme  and  plot  it  comprises  several  elements  of  very  general 
interest  and  emotional  appeal.  First  and  foremost,  it  provides  an 
image  of  youth.  In  epochs  of  social  transition  and  readjustment  of 
morals,  a  type  of  self-important  immaturity  is  apt  to  appeal  power- 
fully to  the  imagination  of  the  younger  generation;  for  example, 
Saint-Preux,  Werther,  Lord  Byron  (all  Hamlets,  in  a  way).  Be- 
cause they  were  so  representative  and  influential  in  their  time  the 
historian  will  always  have  to  consider  them,  although  they  are 
perhaps  more  dead  than  alive  on  our  bookshelves.  Correspondingly 
in  this  century  we  have  had  Buddenbrook,  and  the  Shropshire  Lad, 
and  just  lately  the  suicidal  and  mystical  Glass  boy.  Maugham's 
Philip  Carey  comes  in  between. 

The  device  with  which  the  work  concludes,  that  of  an  aesthetic 
object  with  spiritual  connotations — as  the  poor  limping  and  vic- 
timized protagonist's  understanding  of  himself  develops,  he  likens 
it  to  the  design  of  a  Persian  carpet — is  reminiscent  of  Henry  James, 
is  it  not?  (This  observation  might  irritate  Maugham  or  it  might 
make  him  laugh.) 

The  weakness  of  Of  Human  Bondage,  at  least  from  an  American 
standpoint,  is  the  class  consciousness  that  runs  all  through  it.  Philip 
never,  never  forgets  that  Mildred  is  lowlier-born  than  he;  but  then 
(it  seems  to  me)  the  reader  never  forgets  that  he  is  lowlier-born 
himself  than  quite  a  lot  of  other  people.  It  is  an  atmosphere  not  of 
dog  eat  dog,  but  of  dog  snub  dog.  Perhaps  this  is  not  an  outworn 
theme  in  England.  The  welfare  state  and  the  opening  up  of  educa- 
tion have  brought  on  a  slight  recrudescence  of  snobbery  and 
counter-snobbery,  which  the  success  of  the  so-called  angry  young 
writers  and  the  new  cult  of  D.  H.  Lawrence  illustrate. 

The  great  thing  in  Of  Human  Bondage  is  the  love  story:  an 
impassioned   mutual   misunderstanding   and   stranglehold   of    two 


79  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

pathetic  young  persons,  as  painful  as  cats,  as  awkward  as  dogs.  The 
relationship  never  altogether  explains  itself,  but  it  seems  very  real, 
and  it  is  unforgettable  and  instructive. 

Although  the  outer  reality  of  the  book  was  all  obviously  drawn 
from  Maugham's  remembrances  of  his  own  youth,  I  have  never 
sensed  anything  particularly  autobiographical  about  this  main  mat- 
ter of  the  relationship  between  a  loving  booby  and  an  unrequiting 
strumpet.  Perhaps  he  came  upon  it  in  Hazlitt,  along  with  many 
other  germs  of  fiction  incidentally  expended,  unwritten. — "The 
contempt  of  a  wanton  for  a  man  who  is  determined  to  think  her 
virtuous.  .  .  .  He  officiously  reminds  her  of  what  she  ought  to 
be;  and  she  avenges  the  galling  sense  of  her  lost  character  on  the 
fool  who  still  believes  in  it." 

Maugham's  particular  admiration  of  Hazlitt  is  excellently  ex- 
pounded in  the  essay  entitled  "On  Style"  which  I  have  already 
recommended;  but  with  little  or  no  portraiture  of  the  great  Ro- 
mantic essayist,  no  retelling  of  his  ill-starred  love  life,  in  which, 
as  between  Philip  and  Mildred,  the  distress  of  sex  was  complicated 
by  class  prejudice. 

Certainly  the  subject  matter  of  unpleasurable,  unbeneficial,  hope- 
less love,  roughly  speaking  sado-masochistic,  transcends  in  impor- 
tance the  more  sentimental  and  idealistic  contents  of  Of  Human 
Bondage:  the  egocentric  immaturity,  the  numinous  aestheticism, 
the  social  tension,  and  it  is  less  apt  to  seem  old-timely  and  inconse- 
quential to  future  readers. 

The  style  of  Of  Human  Bondage  is  unsatisfactory  to  me.  It  is 
neither  relaxed  and  conversational,  which,  roughly  speaking,  has 
been  Maugham's  later  way  of  writing,  nor  finely  measured  and 
embellished;  it  is  only  eloquent  and  copious.  Rarely  indeed  is  any 
sentence  fitted  to  the  thought  in  question,  drawn  tight,  and  sent 
swiftly  and  airily,  arrowlike,  to  its  target.  Instead,  this  is  the  kind 
of  prose  that  just  keeps  encircling  its  content,  sincerely  and  tire- 
lessly, until  of  course  at  last  the  reader  understands,  without  really 
having  to  concentrate  or  make  an  effort,  and  without  the  particu- 
lar pleasure  of  illumination  or  disclosure  at  any  point.  Did 
Maugham  at  that  time  lack  dexterity  and  definiteness?  Certainly 


Images  of  Truth  •  80 

in  his  later  novels,  even  those  that  followed  Of  Human  Bondage 
in  short  order,  he  demonstrated  every  sort  of  skill  and  precision. 
This  one  major  work  he  seems  to  have  composed  for  readers  of  a 
somewhat  slow  and  passive  mentality,  needing  to  have  things 
spelled  out. 


With  reference  to  the  lifelong  labor  of  literature  Maugham  has 
said  that  he  was  greatly  influenced  by  a  fact  about  Darwin  which,  at 
an  impressionable  age,  he  read  in  some  book  or  heard  someone 
tell:  Darwin  never  worked  more  than  three  hours  a  day.  Reflecting 
on  this — ambitious  but  reasonable  youth  that  he  was — he  came  to 
the  conclusion  that  if  biological  science  could  be  revolutionized 
and  a  great  deal  of  the  ideology  and  the  ethics  of  the  era  altered 
at  that  comfortable  rate  of  daily  endeavor,  surely  it  would  suffice 
for  him  to  earn  a  living  and  make  a  name  for  himself  as  a  play- 
wright and  story  writer  and  novelist. 

A  willful  man,  he  seems  to  have  persisted  in  this  as  well  as  other 
plans  of  those  early  days.  He  rouses  from  sleep  at  dawn  or  soon 
after;  but  he  brings  no  manuscript  or  even  notebook  into  his  bed- 
room, and  does  not  go  to  his  writing  room  until  he  has  read  awhile 
and  breakfasted  at  leisure.  Just  before  one  o'clock  he  steps  into 
the  living  room,  ready  for  his  cocktail  and  lunch;  pleased  with  him- 
self if  the  work  has  gone  forward,  clear  in  his  conscience  anyway. 
Approximately  Darwin's  three  hours  .  .  . 

But  in  order  not  to  set  him  up  as  a  dangerous  example  to  any 
ambitious  but  lazy  literary  youngster — and  not  to  give  aid  and 
comfort  to  those  of  the  intelligentsia  who  maintain  that  he  has  had 
it  easy,  and  all  his  renown  is  but  good  luck — I  will  give  a  little 
more  information.  Listen  to  this,  and  try  to  imagine  yourself  work- 
ing as  he  does.  Week  in  and  week  out,  year  after  year,  in  whatever 
circumstances — though  surrounded  by  frivolity,  though  assailed 
by  bothers  and  anxieties,  and  touched  upon  occasion  as  all  men  are 
by  exceeding  affection  or  pity  or  self-pity  or  anger — regularly  every 
morning  he  goes  to  his  desk  and  labors  at  his  writing.  For  months 


8i  -  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

at  a  time  he  will  not  skip  a  day.  One  day  I  did  see  him  in  the  living 
room  before  lunch,  grumpily  seated  by  the  fireplace;  he  had  a  bad 
toothache,  and  even  then  he  was  engrossed  in  a  heavy  laborious 
tome,  preparatory  to  the  composition  of  something  theological  or 
historical. 

Indeed  in  his  middle  life  he  made  some  voyage  every  year  or 
so,  notably  to  the  Orient  and  around  the  South  Seas,  in  what  must 
have  seemed  a  carefree  manner.  But  think  of  the  cargo  of  fiction  he 
brought  back  upon  each  return  voyage!  He  was  not  wasting  his 
time.  To  this  day  the  spirit  of  travel  for  travel's  sake  (and  story's 
sake)  has  scarcely  calmed  down  in  him.  Even  in  the  city,  with  details 
of  publishing  or  other  commitments  of  his  career  to  attend  to,  also 
when  he  takes  vacations  in  the  summer  or  weekends  with  friends — 
except  when  actually  in  transit,  in  the  train  or  in  the  plane — reg- 
ularly almost  every  morning  he  goes  to  some  desk  or  substitute  table 
and  works  awhile. 

This  is  not  drudgery,  I  know,  but  it  is  something  that  for  my 
part  I  should  find  harder  to  endure  and  sustain:  control,  inner 
tension,  and  in  fact,  faith,  and  faith  in  oneself — and  I  dare  say  it 
is  more  to  the  purpose  of  literature  in  the  long  run  than  that  way  of 
pent-up  ambition  occasionally  overflowing,  rushing,  making  up  for 
lost  time,  which  gives  one  the  feeling  of  being  a  genius,  or  that 
way  of  desperate  engagement  and  deadline  with  stimulants  and 
sedatives  and  hell  to  pay,  which  is  the  habit  of  so  many  contem- 
porary authors. 

Furthermore,  in  Maugham's  case,  the  time  he  spends  at  his  desk 
is  only  a  part  of  the  labor.  All  his  stories  and  novels  have  been 
worked  out  in  his  mind  before  he  ever  takes  his  neat  pen  in  hand. 
Someone  has  told  him  an  incident  of  real  life,  perhaps  no  more 
than  an  impressive  utterance  or  gesture  at  some  crucial  moment. 
That  is  the  commencement,  as  it  were  the  grain  of  sand  in  the 
bivalve.  But  real  life  never  seems  to  him  as  good  as  imagination,  at 
least  not  as  good  to  write  about.  Therefore  he  ponders,  and  some- 
times years  pass  before  he  is  able  to  devise  the  fulfillment  and 
change,  the  different  ending,  the  superstructure  of  moral  implica- 
tion, which  will  make  all  the  difference  between  reality  and  art. 


Images  of  Truth  •  82 

Then  he  begins  searching  for  the  bits  and  pieces  of  everyone  he 
has  ever  known  which  can  be  molded  into  fictitious  beings  capable 
of  doing  or  experiencing  whatever  it  is  that  he  has  to  tell;  adding 
subordinate  episodes  as  they  may  enhance  or  clarify  the  main  mat- 
ter, and  drawing  all  into  one  unit;  regulating  whatever  faults  of 
implausibility  or  contradiction  may  develop;  and  deciding  upon 
the  order  of  narration  most  natural  to  it,  most  effective  for  it.  All 
this  goes  on  in  his  head;  not  in  Darwin's  three  hours  but  in  the 
other  twenty-one,  when  he  rouses  too  early  in  the  morning,  when 
he  sits  by  the  fire,  when  he  is  taking  short  salubrious  walks. 

There  is  a  touching  page  in  his  memoir  of  the  beginning  of 
World  War  II,  Strictly  Personal,  bearing  upon  this  matter  of  the 
advance  preparation  of  his  fiction.  In  the  disaster  of  France  he 
was  in  personal  peril;  the  Germans  having  learned  from  his  volume 
of  stories  entitled  Ashenden  that  he  had  served  as  a  secret  agent  in 
World  War  I,  or  something  on  that  order.  As  he  was  escaping  to 
England  on  a  miserable  coal  boat,  seated  with  fellow  passengers  on 
the  deck — as  a  kindness  to  them,  to  pass  the  deadly  tedium  and  to 
relieve  their  collective  fear  and  shock  and  loss — he  told  them 
stories.  He  began  with  some  which  he  was  in  the  habit  of  telling, 
which  he  had  learned  to  rely  on  to  amuse  people.  But  he  ran 
through  his  repertory  of  these  little  set  pieces;  and  so  he  went  on 
and  gave  his  unhappy  audience  the  benefit  of  certain  plots  and 
projects  of  fiction  which  he  had  borne  in  mind  through  the  years, 
and  never  been  willing  to  tell,  lest  the  bloom  of  his  own  interest 
in  them  be  worn  off  before  they  were  ready  to  be  written.  The 
reason  for  his  willingness,  then  and  there,  on  the  vessel  of  refuge, 
was  the  shadow  of  death  hanging  over  them,  environing  them.  They 
expected  to  encounter  a  submarine  or  perhaps  a  flight  of  predatory 
planes;  therefore  the  aging  storyteller  felt  that  he  could  spare  some 
of  his  fondly  hoarded  material.  Even  in  the  event  of  a  safe  home- 
coming, he  fancied,  he  would  not  live  to  cope  with  it  all. 

This  must  be  the  most  interesting  and  individual  aspect  of  his 
vocation  of  letters  and  his  career:  his  planning  and  planning,  major 
matters  and  minor  matters  alike;  his  constant  looking  ahead  and 
budgeting  every  faculty  and  every  opportunity,  with  due  unflatter- 


8$  '  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

ing  consideration  of  the  probabilities  for  and  against  him;  his 
sense  of  a  significance  and  a  form  in  the  story  of  his  life,  beginning 
and  middle  and  end,  as  definite  as  in  the  construction  of  any 
three-act  play  or  short  story  or  shapely  short  novel;  and  his  con- 
stant thought  of  death,  the  indelible  finis  on  the  unfinishable  page. 

Even  in  his  reading  of  the  works  of  other  men,  I  have  noticed 
that  he  keeps  to  a  sort  of  schedule.  Detective  stories  are  to  kill  time 
when  he  is  sleepless  or  in  some  pain.  Novels  that  friends  have  sent 
him  can  be  sufficiently  perused,  in  kindness  and  out  of  curiosity,  in 
half-hours  of  relaxation.  Usually  he  devotes  an  hour  in  the  after- 
noon or  evening  to  rereading  one  of  the  classics  of  fiction,  Goethe, 
Fielding,  Cervantes,  and  the  rest;  and  he  keeps  certain  volumes 
which  mean  a  great  deal  to  him  on  his  night  table,  against  the 
difficult  hour  of  daybreak. 

As  to  the  great  old  masters  of  fiction,  remember  that  it  has  always 
been  his  hope  and  intention  that  the  best  of  his  books  should 
entitle  him  to  some  place  in  their  hierarchy  of  world  fame  and  cen- 
tennial duration,  though  a  modest  place.  His  requirement  of  him- 
self has  never  changed  in  the  fifty  or  more  years;  perhaps  not  to  be 
great,  but  to  be  good,  according  to  the  proposition  of  their  great- 
ness. They  are  the  objects  of  his  devotion,  as  it  were  the  inspiring 
and  interceding  saints.  Also  each  of  them  is  exemplary  to  him  in 
some  particular  of  the  art;  and  he  still  constantly  turns  to  them 
when  he  has  come  upon  any  little  problem  of  his  own  writing,  to 
consider  what  solution  one  or  the  other  may  have  found  in  a 
parallel  case.  When  anything  in  his  work  in  progress  has  reference 
to  a  learned  or  abstract  matter,  he  researches  tirelessly.  He  has 
been  known  to  study  as  many  as  forty  volumes  for  one  short  and 
easily  readable  chapter. 

Naturally,  as  a  fiction  writer,  his  principal  research  is  just  learn- 
ing to  know  people,  getting  them  to  tell  him  what  they  have  ex- 
perienced, probing  their  minds,  observing  their  emotions  and 
their  morals.  In  this  he  has  been  tireless,  too;  also  patient  and 
relentless,  teasing  and  combative  and  kind — whatever  the  human 
instance  may  call  for — and  nothing  that  does  not  infringe  upon  the 
Darwinian  hours  seems  to  him  too  much  trouble;  not  a  detail  of 


Images  of  Truth  •  84 

humanity  is  too  small  for  his  acute  and  impartial  eye.  Often  as  he 
goes  out  to  dine  he  has  a  question  ready  to  put  to  someone  he 
expects  to  meet;  the  answer  to  which  will  fit  into  the  morrow's 
page. 

He  is,  as  nearly  as  can  be,  a  single-minded  man.  Some  years  ago 
he  confided  to  a  friend  that,  within  his  remembrance,  he  had  never 
gone  anywhere  or  cared  to  have  any  new  person  introduced  to  him 
— except  for  one  of  his  diversions,  for  example  bridge  playing — or 
pursued  a  particular  acquaintance  with  anyone,  unless  he  had  some 
idea  of  a  function  or  utility  for  his  literary  art  in  so  doing:  some 
study  of  the  narratable  world  up  to  date;  or  a  search  for  types  of 
humanity,  in  the  way  of  a  painter  needing  models  to  pose  for  him; 
or  a  glimpse  into  strange  ways  of  living;  or  an  experimental  dis- 
cussion of  ideas  important  to  him  with  reference  to  work  coming 
up. 

Naturally  the  friend,  upon  hearing  this,  felt  a  pang  of  self- 
consciousness  and  pride;  but  later  he  remarked  that  of  his  obser- 
vation over  a  period  of  years  he  believed  it  to  be  true  enough.  In 
appreciation  of  his  friendship  in  the  time  he  spent  in  this  country 
during  World  War  II,  let  me  say  that  I  think  it  is  no  longer  true. 
Every  sort  of  ulterior  motive  and  craft  and  documentary  sense 
seems  to  have  waned  out  of  his  various  human  interests.  His  kind- 
ness toward  young  people  has  a  character  of  benign,  humorous 
fatherliness,  without  any  very  intense  urge  to  understand  them.  In 
society  he  seeks  especially  those  who  can  tell  him  of  philosophy  and 
religion.  As  the  years  pass,  the  shadow  of  mortality  grows  no 
lighter  or  smaller,  no,  not  in  any  man's  life!  Once  in  a  while  he 
recognizes  new  subject  matter  as  such,  when  he  hears  of  it  or 
comes  upon  it,  and  points  out  to  some  young  writer  its  interest  and 
feasibility,  and  the  proper  way  to  handle  it.  But,  even  more  cer- 
tainly than  on  the  perilous  refugee  boat,  he  reminds  himself  that 
there  will  not  be  time  for  it  to  rise  and  swell  in  his  mind,  to  ripen 
for  his  neat  final  manuscript  and  printed  best-selling  page.  He 
makes  way  for  us,  he  leaves  it  to  us,  with  his  blessing;  but  also 
with  a  certain  challenging,  sardonic,  mistrustful  sense.  He  is  easy 
to  please  but  not  easy  to  satisfy. 


#5  •  Somerset  Maugham  and  Posterity 

Let  us  not  have,  in  praise  of  a  man  so  realistic  and  judicious,  any 
mixing  of  the  classifications  of  men  or  any  sentimentality.  He  is  not 
a  saint  or  a  sage  or  a  hero;  only  a  true  and  greatly  accomplished 
literary  artist.  But  neither  let  us  forget  that  art  has  its  virtues,  and 
they  are  rewarded  in  more  ways  than  one.  I  remember  that  one  day 
he  came  in  from  his  writing  room,  visibly  happy — with  a  light  step, 
the  strong  downward  expression  of  his  mouth  softened,  his  eyes  in 
their  delicate  crisscross  wrinkles  perfectly  clear — and  remarked, 
"I  will  tell  you,  as  it  may  not  have  occurred  to  you,  that  there  is  a 
particular  drawback  in  the  career  of  writing." 

Upon  our  inquiring  what  the  drawback  was,  he  answered,  "When 
you  have  finished  the  day's  work,  and  you  have  to  take  your  leisure 
and  wait  for  your  creative  gift  to  be  restored  next  morning,  any- 
thing you  can  do  in  the  remaining  hours  of  the  day  seems  a  little 
pale  and  flat." 

To  have  commenced  literature  two  thirds  of  a  century  ago,  and 
still,  in  spite  of  life — and  by  life  I  mean  disillusionment  and  un- 
lucky affections,  increase  of  pain  and  worldly  losses,  and  the  shames 
of  human  nature,  along  with  horrible  war  and  civil  war,  and  the 
ruin  of  nations,  and  the  failure  of  a  whole  structure  of  delect- 
able usages — still  to  enjoy  writing  so  much  that  nothing  compares 
with  it,  and  to  write  to  the  end,  is  a  grand  and  enviable  thing,  and 
a  spiritual  thing.  There  are  a  number  of  good  reasons  for  dedicat- 
ing oneself  to  the  art  of  writing;  surely  this  is  as  good  as  any. 


Chapter  Four 

An  Introduction  to  Colette 


/  have  a  passion  for  the  truth,  and  for  the  fictions  that  it  authorizes. 

JULES  RENARD 

Upon  publication  of  Mitsou,  her  love  story  of  World  War  I,  Colette 
received  a  letter  from  Proust.  "I  wept  a  little  this  evening,  which  I 
have  not  done  for  a  long  while." 

Mitsou  concludes  with  a  passionate  communication  from  a  little 
musical  comedy  star  to  her  lieutenant  in  the  trenches;  and  this  im- 
pressed Proust  especially,  but  he  quibbled:  "It  is  so  beautiful,  it 
even  verges  on  prettiness  here  and  there,  and  amid  so  much  ad- 
mirable simplicity  and  depth,  perhaps  there  is  a  trace  of  preciosity." 
He  could  not  quite  believe  in  the  sudden  elevation  and  refinement 
of  Mitsou's  style,  educated  only  by  love.  And  how  characteristic  of 
the  very  neurotic  great  man!  The  chapter  of  the  lovers'  dining  in 
a  restaurant  reminded  him  dolefully  of  an  engagement  to  dine  with 
Colette  which  he  had  been  compelled  to  break,  it  unfortunately 
having  coincided  with  one  of  his  illnesses. 

Upon  publication  of  Cheri  she  received  a  letter  from  Gide.  He 
expected  her  to  be  surprised  to  hear  from  him;  and  perhaps  she 
was.  While  Proust  was  a  great  complimenter,  Gide  was  known  to  be 
somewhat  chary  of  endorsements.  He  had  read  the  tragical  tale 
of  the  youngster  in  love  with  the  aging  courtesan  at  one  sitting, 
breathlessly,  he  said.  "Not  one  weakness,  not  one  redundancy, 
nothing  commonplace!"  Why  in  the  world,  he  wondered,  had  none 
of  the  critics  compared  her  young  hero  or  villain  with  Benjamin 

86 


8y  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

Constant's  "insupportable"  Adolphe?  "It's  the  same  subject  in  re- 
verse, almost." 

On  the  whole,  this  was  higher  praise  than  Proust's,  and  de- 
servedly higher;  for  in  the  three  intervening  years  Colette  had 
extended  and  intensified  her  art.  Gide  quibbled  also,  or  rather  he 
suggested  that  with  his  natural  uneasiness  and  malicious  humor,  if 
he  took  a  little  more  trouble,  in  all  probability  he  would  find  some- 
thing quibble-worthy.  "I'd  like  to  reread  it  but  I'm  afraid  to.  What 
if  it  were  to  disappoint  me,  upon  second  reading?  Oh,  quick,  let 
me  mail  this  letter  before  I  consign  it  to  the  wastebasket!" 

It  is  pleasant  and,  I  think,  appropriate  to  begin  with  a  glance  at 
these  two  little  documents  of  literary  history.  For,  when  Proust  and 
Gide  were  dead  and  gone,  it  seemed  to  me — and  to  a  good  many 
other  readers  in  France  and  in  foreign  parts — that  Colette  was  the 
greatest  living  fiction  writer. 

I  know  that  in  critical  prose,  as  a  rule,  the  effect  of  the  superla- 
tive "greatest"  is  just  emotional.  It  is  not  really  susceptible  of 
analysis,  at  least  not  of  proof.  Even  the  comparative  "greater"  is 
unhandy  in  any  limited  number  of  pages,  as  it  calls  for  some 
examination  of  those  who  may  be  thought  comparable.  Greater 
than  Mauriac?  Greater  than  Martin  du  Gard,  Jules  Romains, 
Montherlant,  Sartre?  Yes,  I  say,  though  I  have  not  had  the  zeal  to 
read  or  reread  that  entire  bookshelf  for  the  present  purpose.  Let 
me  not  pretend  to  be  able  to  prove  anything.  Let  me  just  peaceably 
point  to  those  of  Colette's  merits,  here  and  there  in  her  work,  which 
I  regard  as  components  of  greatness;  going  upon  the  assumption 
that  in  the  essentials,  as  to  general  literary  standards,  the  reader 
will  agree  with  me.  Easy  does  it! 

I  may  state  that,  beginning  about  a  decade  ago,  I  have  familiar- 
ized myself  with  Colette's  work  in  its  entirety.  My  nearest  and  dear- 
est friend,  with  characteristic  munificence,  made  me  a  present  of  the 
collected  edition,  fifteen  volumes,  seven  thousand  pages,  two  million 
words,  in  that  handsome  format  which  finally  crowns  the  French 
literary  life:  laid  paper  with  margins,  red  ink  as  well  as  black;  and 
had  it  handsomely  bound  for  me  in  Holland.  That  spring  I  read 
everything  that  I  had  missed  in  ordinary  editions  in  the  past,  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  88 

reread  all  the  masterworks  that  I  had  loved  so  dearly  for  many  years. 
I  go  on  rereading  every  so  often;  and  thus  I  know  whereof  I  speak. 
I  have  it  all  fairly  fresh  in  my  mind. 

I  wish  that  I  could  illustrate  this  essay.  From  childhood  and  girl- 
hood on  to  the  day  of  her  death,  Colette  photographed  entrancingly. 
The  first  written  description  of  her  that  I  ever  read  was  an  entry 
in  Jules  Renard's  Journal,  November,  1894:  her  appearance  at  the 
first  night  of  Maeterlinck's  translation  of  'Tis  Pity  She's  a  Whore, 
bright-eyed,  laughing,  "with  a  braid  of  hair  long  enough  to  let  the 
bucket  down  a  well  with";  Melisande-like. 

Rebecca  West  has  described  her  in  her  middle  age,  out  for  a  walk 
with  her  bulldog,  a  rich  silk  scarf  looped  through  its  collar  in  lieu 
of  a  leash.  That  most  gifted  and  intrepid  reporter's  principal  im- 
pression was  of  animal  energy  and  fierceness;  to  such  a  degree,  she 
declared,  that  it  almost  frightened  her. 

I  first  met  Colette  in  1935,  when  she  and  Maurice  Goudeket,  her 
third  husband,  came  to  New  York  on  the  maiden  voyage  of  the 
Normandie.  Her  American  publisher  invited  me  to  a  cocktail  party 
in  her  honor.  She  was  not  expected  to  speak  English,  and  as  I  had 
lived  in  France  long  enough  to  speak  French  fluently  if  not  cor- 
rectly, it  was  thought  that  I  could  facilitate  the  sociability.  It  thrilled 
me  to  meet  her. 

I  remember  her  strong  hands — serious  writing  is  a  manual  labor! 
— and  her  fine  feet  in  sandals,  perhaps  larger  than  most,  rather  like 
the  feet  of  Greek  goddesses.  I  remember  her  slightly  frizzly  hair 
fetched  forward  almost  to  her  eyebrows,  because  (as  she  has  told 
her  readers)  she  has  a  square  boyish  or  mannish  forehead.  I  remem- 
ber her  delicate  nostrils  and  her  painted  thin  lips. 

The  conversation  that  I  had  been  invited  to  engage  in  was  not 
really  very  witty  or  deep.  She  extolled  the  great  maiden  ocean  liner; 
how  safe  it  seemed,  how  imperturbable  upon  the  waves!  She  gave  it 
as  her  opinion  that  there  was  nothing  at  all  surprising  about  sky- 
scrapers; man  having  been  all  through  the  ages  a  mountain  climber, 
a  tower  builder.  I  then  expressed  my  pleasure  in  the  little  conver- 
sation I  had  had  with  Goudeket,  a  distinguished  and  interesting 
man. 


8p  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

"He  is  a  very  good  friend,"  she  said,  and  she  emphasized  friend 
a  little.  As  I  recalled  certain  bitter  pages  about  her  first  marriage 
— the  bitterest  were  still  to  come — I  supposed  that  the  designation 
of  "husband"  seemed  unromantic  to  her. 

Now  I  will  furnish  a  sort  of  biography  in  rough  outline  and  re- 
sume. I  wish  that,  instead,  her  autobiographies — the  half  dozen 
little  volumes  that,  taken  together,  are  perhaps  her  most  important 
work:  La  Maison  de  Claudine,  Sido,  Le  Pur  et  VImpur,  Mes  Ap- 
prentissages,  L'Etoile  Vesper,  Le  Fanal  Bleu — were  all  available  in 
English.  What  I  shall  do  is  flutter  in  and  out  of  that  noble  repository 
and  treasure-trove,  picking  out  bright  bits,  like  a  magpie.  Though 
she  has  many  reticences,  grandeurs  of  style,  and  sometimes  little  rid- 
dles, she  seems  not  to  have  left  much  for  other  narrators  of  her  life 
to  do,  except  to  simplify  and  vulgarize. 

Sidonie  Gabrielle  Colette  was  born  on  January  28,  1873,  in  a 
village  in  Burgundy,  Saint-Sauveur-en-Puisaye.  Her  father,  Jules 
Joseph  Colette,  was  a  pensioned-off  soldier  who  had  fought  in  North 
Africa,  in  the  Crimea,  and  in  the  wars  of  Italian  liberation,  and  lost 
a  leg  at  the  second  battle  of  Marignan.  Her  mother,  Adele  Eugenie 
Sidonie  Landoy,  born  in  Paris,  was  a  young  widow  when  the  ex- 
Zouave  loved  and  wooed  and  won  her.  It  was  a  good  marriage.  She 
was  an  octoroon.  Blessed  France!  where  it  may  seem  to  handicap 
one  in  a  career  of  serious  authorship  to  have  commenced  with  a 
series  of  slightly  raffish  best  sellers,  or  to  have  divorced  and  gone  on 
the  stage,  as  Colette  did;  but  where  race  prejudices  are  few  and  mild. 
Never  have  I  heard  any  mention  of  that  sixteenth  part  of  Negro 
blood  in  the  famous  authoress's  veins;  only  her  own  statement. 

Mme.  Jules  Joseph  Colette — Sido,  if  we  may  presume  to  use  that 
abridged  name  which,  her  daughter  has  said,  "sparkles  amid  all  my 
memories" — was  a  woman  of  real  force  of  character  and  unusual 
mind,  with  a  gift  of  expression  from  which,  doubtless,  for  the  most 
part,  her  daughter's  genius  derived.  As  a  young  girl  Colette  must 
have  felt  overwhelmed  by  her.  The  first  independent  action  of 
Colette's  life,  marriage,  rash  and  premature,  was  in  specific  rebel- 
lion against  the  better  parental  judgment.  Thereafter  Sido  must 
have  sensed  the  wrongness  of  impinging  too  closely  upon  her  daugh- 


Images  of  Truth  •  go 

ter's  difficult  life;  she  stood  upon  a  certain  ceremony,  kept  her  dis- 
tance. 

La  Naissance  du  Jour  (Break  of  Day)  (1928),  the  novel  of  the 
renunciation  of  love  in  which  Colette  portrayed  herself  under  her 
own  name,  and  as  approximately  the  age  that  she  had  reached  in 
reality  at  the  time  of  writing  it,  testifies  to  the  fact  that  the  thought 
of  her  mother  was  still  a  challenge  to  her,  sixteen  years  after  her 
death.  On  page  after  page  she  studies  herself  in  the  mirror  of  her  in- 
heritance, measures  herself  against  Sido's  stature;  and  true  bereave- 
ment echoes  all  through  it,  slow  and  impassioned,  like  the  ground 
bass  of  a  passacaglia  or  a  chaconne. 

She  began  her  filial  tribute  long  before  that.  The  best  of  the  little 
chapters  of  La  Maison  de  Claudine  (1922),  which  is  an  account  of 
the  home  from  which  the  author  of  the  Claudine  novels  came — not 
otherwise  connected  with  the  best-selling  series — are  portrait  sketches 
of  the  dear  progenetrix.  Sido  (1929)  is  a  more  formal  portrait,  but 
still  entranced  and  entrancing.  Even  after  thirty-four  years,  in 
L'Etoile  Vesper  (The  Evening  Star)  (1946),  there  are  sudden  touch- 
ing souvenirs:  a  fragment  of  a  blue  dress  of  Sido's,  a  miniature  of 
Sido's  mother — to  whom  Sido's  father,  the  quadroon,  was  notori- 
ously unfaithful — one  of  Sido's  recollections  of  another  of  her  chil- 
dren, and  a  severe  motherly  criticism,  of  neglected  and  disorderly 
cupboards.  And  in  this  text,  as  elsewhere,  whenever  assailed  by  fear 
or  bitterness  or  any  other  serious  trouble,  she  evokes  the  great  strong 
spirit,  and  despite  her  own  age,  threescore  and  ten — threescore  and 
nine,  to  be  exact — clings  almost  like  a  child.  The  filial  devotion, 
half  of  it  posthumous,  was  the  mightiest  strand  in  her  entire  being. 

The  next  most  important  strand  was  coarse  and  incongruous, 
and  seemingly  weak;  nevertheless,  it  held  her  a  long  time.  At  twenty 
she  married  the  noted  journalist  and  hack  writer,  Henri  Gauthier- 
Villars,  known  as  Willy.  She  was  then,  as  he  remarked  some  years 
later  of  her  heroine,  Claudine,  as  pure  and  unsophisticated  as  "any 
little  Tahitian  before  the  missionaries  got  there."  He  was,  to  char- 
acterize him  in  his  own  manner,  the  opposite  of  a  missionary.  He 
was  a  bad,  clever,  corpulent,  somewhat  crazy  man.  He  was  only  about 


pi  '  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

fifteen  years  older  than  she,  but  already  the  worse  for  wear,  physi- 
cally as  well  as  spiritually.  "Worse  than  mature,"  Colette  said. 

"The  day  after  that  wedding  night  I  found  that  a  distance  of  a 
thousand  miles,  abyss  and  discovery  and  irremediable  metamor- 
phosis, separated  me  from  the  day  before."  What  a  painful  sentence! 
What  a  beautiful  sentence!  All  of  her  portrait  of  Willy  from  mem- 
ory years  later  is  perfection.  "The  shadow  of  Priapus,  flattered  by 
the  moonlight  or  lamplight  on  the  wall" — then,  little  by  little,  the 
traits  of  the  mere  middle-aged  man  coming  out  from  behind  that 
image  of  newly  espoused  male — "a  look  in  his  bluish  eyes  impos- 
sible to  decipher;  a  terrible  trick  of  shedding  tears;  that  strange 
lightness  which  the  obese  often  have;  and  the  hardness  of  a  feather- 
bed filled  with  small  stones."  He  was  nervous,  disgraceful,  and 
shameless,  foxy  and  comical  and  cruel.  He  was  thought  to  resemble 
King  Edward  VII;  but  in  spite  of  his  carefully  dyed,  extra-thick 
handlebar  mustaches,  his  wife  noted  also  something  of  Queen  Vic- 
toria. 

The  term  "hack  writer,"  as  applied  to  Willy,  needs  a  little  ex- 
plaining. He  was,  as  you  might  say,  a  wholesaler  of  popular  reading 
matter:  music  criticism  and  drama  criticism;  and  in  book  form  as 
well  as  journalism,  revelations  of  his  own  everyday  life  and  night 
life  in  the  somewhat  side-splitting  way,  sometimes  verging  on  the 
libidinous,  with  verbal  pyrotechnics,  especially  puns;  and  all  sorts 
of  light  fiction,  something  for  almost  every  type  of  reader;  ancf  once 
in  a  while,  dramatizations.  Hacking  indeed;  but  he  himself  did 
scarcely  any  of  the  writing!  Doubtless  he  had  what  is  called  a  psychic 
block  to  start  with,  but  he  made  it  work.  He  employed  writers,  sev- 
eral at  a  time,  for  his  different  types  of  production.  "Willy  have 
talent,"  said  Jules  Renard.  He  was  not  lazy.  He  helped  his  helpers. 
Sometimes  he  seemed  to  want  to  fool  them,  pretending  that  the 
work  of  one  of  them  was  his  work,  and  getting  another  to  revise  it, 
and  so  on.  He  may  or  may  not  have  given  them  a  fair  share  of  the 
income  from  all  this;  they  never  understood  his  finances.  Some  of 
them  had  literary  careers  on  their  own  in  later  years:  Messrs.  Vuil- 
lermoz,  Curnonsky,  Marcel  Boulestin. 


Images  of  Truth  •  92 

Young  Mme.  Colette  Willy's  literary  career  began  with  her  telling 
little  tales  of  Saint-Sauveur;  tales  of  childhood,  girlhood,  and  school- 
girlhood.  One  day  Willy  suggested  her  trying  to  get  some  of  these 
memories  down  on  paper.  She  tried,  the  result  disappointed  him, 
and  he  discouraged  her.  But  one  day  when  he  happened  to  need 
money  he  picked  up  her  manuscript  again  and  thought  better  of  it. 
Could  she  not  work  on  it  a  little  more?  he  asked  her.  It  needed  only 
a  detail  of  psychology  here  and  there,  a  specification  of  emotion. 
Why  not  develop  her  little  heroine's  crushes  on  her  girl  friends  just 
a  little  further? 

Immature  female  writers,  as  Colette  remarked  years  later,  are  not 
notable  for  their  moderation;  nor  old  female  writers  either:  "Fur- 
thermore, nothing  is  so  emboldening  as  a  mask."  Before  long  Willy's 
reminiscing  young  wife  was  his  favorite  ghost  writer.  He  paid  her 
too;  well  enough,  it  seemed  to  her  at  the  time,  enabling  her  to  send 
little  presents  to  Sido,  woolen  stockings,  bars  of  bitter  chocolate.  He 
would  lock  her  in  her  room  for  four-hour  stretches  while  she  inked 
up  a  certain  number  of  pages  with  her  heaven-sent  and  profitable 
phrases,  sentences,  paragraphs. 

In  her  recollection  of  all  this  Colette  has  expressed  mixed  emo- 
tions, doubtless  impossible  to  unmix:  pathos,  furious  resentment, 
and  toughness  toward  herself — Willy  locked  the  door,  but,  she  had 
to  admit,  there  was  nothing  to  hinder  her  from  throwing  herself 
out  the  window — and  in  spite  of  all,  a  certain  appreciation  of  the 
way  destiny  worked  to  her  advantage  in  it,  amor  fati.  For  thus  in 
servitude,  page  by  page,  volume  by  volume,  she  became  a  profes- 
sional writer.  Regular  as  clockwork:  Claudine  at  School  (1900), 
Claudine  in  Paris  (1901),  Claudine  Married  (1902),  Claudine  and 
Annie  (1903);  and  then  a  new  series,  Minne,  and  Les  Egarements  de 
Minne.  Willy  took  all  the  credit  and  signed  them  all. 

Claudine,  all  four  Claudines,  had  a  fantastic  success.  Shall  I  at- 
tempt to  say  what  it  was  like,  with  American  equivalents,  for  fun? 
Rather  like  a  combination  of  Tarkington's  Seventeen  and  Anita 
Loos's  Gentlemen  Prefer  Blondes.  Also  there  was  the  factor  of  per- 
sonal notoriety.  Suppose  Anita  Loos  had  been  married  to,  let  us 
say,  Alexander  Woollcott,  and  he  had  posed  as  the  author  of  it, 


93  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

and  given  the  public  to  understand  that  it  was  the  true  story  of  her 
life!  Also  in  due  course  it  was  dramatized  and  acted  by  a  favorite 
actress,  Polaire,  who  was,  as  you  might  say,  a  cross  between  Mae 
West  and  Shirley  Temple.  The  name  "Claudine"  was  bestowed 
upon  a  perfume,  indeed  two  perfumes  in  competition,  and  upon 
a  form  of  round  starched  schoolgirlish  collar,  and  upon  a  brand  of 
cigarettes  and  a  flavor  of  ice  cream.  It  makes  one  think  of  the  old 
story  of  the  sorcerer's  apprentice,  with  a  variation:  young  Mme. 
Willy  not  only  brought  the  broomstick  to  life,  she  was  the  broom- 
stick. 

No  wonder  she  has  shown  a  divided  mind  about  the  merits  and 
demerits  of  those  early  volumes.  As  a  rule  her  references  have  been 
rather  shamefaced,  disdainful;  and  critical  commentators  on  her 
work  have  followed  suit,  even  I.  But  in  truth  almost  any  writer  who 
had  not  gone  on  to  write  something  very  much  better  would  be 
quite  sufficiently  proud  to  have  written  the  Claudines.  To  be  sure, 
here  and  there  they  put  us  in  mind  of  that  once  popular  periodical, 
La  Vie  Parisienne.  They  are  a  little  foolish  but  not  at  all  false.  They 
are  wonderfully  recreational,  with  all  the  assortment  of  approaches 
to  romance,  and  with  small  talk,  sparkling  every  instant. 

A  part  of  Colette's  talent  appears  in  them  all  right:  her  warmth 
of  heart,  brilliance  of  the  senses,  command  of  language;  only  none 
of  her  genius.  She  surely  appreciates  them  as  well  as  they  deserve, 
for  all  her  little  promulgations  of  sackcloth  and  ashes.  She  fought 
hard  to  get  the  rights  away  from  Willy;  for  a  while  both  names 
appeared  on  the  title  pages,  then  hers  alone;  and  she  devoted  two 
and  a  half  volumes  of  the  proud  definitive  edition  to  them. 

While  she  was  writing,  writing,  writing,  for  Willy,  intimate  re- 
lations between  them  went  from  bad  to  worse.  Halfway  through 
the  miserable  marriage,  or  perhaps  three  quarters  of  the  way,  she 
suddenly  felt  unable  to  stand  it;  collapsed  in  her  own  mind  about 
it.  She  began  to  believe  that  perhaps  Willy  was  not  simply  wicked 
but  insane;  a  furtive  kind  of  insanity,  venting  itself  in  little  sadisms 
and  in  whims  and  frauds  of  one  kind  and  another.  She  tried  to  pity 
him  but  she  found  herself  unable  to  pity  him.  Presently  she  realized 
that  the  reason  she  was  unable  to  pity  him  was  that  she  had  begun 


Images  of  Truth  •  94 

to  be  afraid  of  him.  She  wrote  of  this  with  somber  moderation, 
with  a  sort  of  good  nature,  which  gives  one  gooseflesh.  "Healthy 
young  people  do  not  easily  open  their  minds  to  fear,  not  altogether, 
not  constantly.  The  worst  tormentors  have  their  hours  of  clemency 
and  gaiety.  Perhaps  even  a  mouse  finds  time,  between  one  wound 
and  the  next,  to  appreciate  the  softness  of  the  cat's  paw."  And  on 
another  page  there  is  an  allusion  to  something  that  happened  fi- 
nally, that  she  resolved  never  to  tell;  worse  than  anything  that  she 
had  told! 

Whereupon  she  retreated  to  the  country,  to  a  little  property  in  the 
Franche-Comte  called  Monts-Boucons.  Willy  gave  it  to  her,  but 
afterward  seized  it  back.  She  told  him  that  going  away  would  en- 
able her  to  get  on  faster  with  her  work,  his  work;  but  there  appears 
not  to  have  been  any  vagueness  in  her  own  mind  about  it;  it  was  for 
the  specific  purpose  of  suffering.  It  was  what  in  our  American  life 
is  so  common  or,  I  should  say,  what  we  have  so  common  a  term  for 
(the  French  have  none):  nervous  breakdown.  It  was  the  turning 
point  of  her  life;  anguish,  the  first  phase  of  independence! 

In  her  account  of  this,  years  later,  I  note  one  of  those  components 
of  literary  greatness  which  I  have  undertaken  to  indicate  when  I 
came  to  them;  a  sort  of  contradictoriness  in  the  working  of  her  mind; 
manifoldness.  When  reticence  would  seem  to  have  closed  down  on 
her,  because  she  is  ashamed  to  tell  the  whole  story,  and  no  wonder; 
when  her  thought  has  failed,  no  knowing  any  longer  what  to  think; 
when  she  feels  obliged  in  all  honesty  and  modesty  to  specify  that 
she  cannot  really  specify  anything — then!  then  more  than  ever,  com- 
pensatorily,  her  power  of  expression  of  emotion  reaches  its  peak,  by 
means  of  images  and  verbal  music. 

There  in  retreat  in  the  Franche-Comte  countryside,  having  on 
her  mind  day  and  night  her  problem  of  oversophisticated,  broken- 
down  psychopathological  metropolitan  home  life,  suddenly  she  dis- 
covered, not  the  meaning,  not  the  moral,  but  the  metaphor,  in 
simple  nature  around  her;  in  the  painfulness  of  nature.  Metaphor 
singular?  No,  metaphors  plural!  all  over  the  place;  but  all  saying  the 
same  thing. — A  superb  serpent  pecked  to  death  by  hens.  Dark  pain- 
ful wasps  slumberous  in  the  ground  like  a  tiny  buried  bunch  of 


95  '  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

grapes.  Her  cat  undeterrably  murderous  without  even  any  excuse 
of  hunger,  and  the  bird  on  its  nest  optimistic  but  obstinate  as  the 
cat  approached.  Her  old  horse  so  badly  mistreated  by  its  previous 
owner  that,  when  she  went  riding,  it  had  to  be  bandaged  as  well  as 
saddled  .  .  . 

By  means  of  these  observations  she  expressed  the  dread  and  dis- 
gust to  which  her  married  life  had  turned,  more  than  by  any  out- 
spokenness or  outcry.  And  none  of  it  really  could  be  said  to  be,  for 
the  creature  concerned,  error  or  bad  luck  or  injustice;  in  each  case 
it  was  according  to  the  given  nature.  Oh,  likewise  in  her  own  case 
as  the  wife  of  Willy!  She  was  justified  in  forgiving  herself  for  her 
weaknesses  of  the  past.  On  the  other  hand,  she  could  not  be  expected 
to  repress  in  herself  indefinitely  a  certain  dire  strength  of  which 
she  was  beginning  to  feel  the  stirrings.  Both  things  were  in  her 
nature,  in  her  attitude  and  reaction  to  the  rest  of  nature  and  to 
others'  human  nature:  awful  compliance  for  a  while,  but  power  of 
rebellion  after  a  while,  even  power  of  hatred. 

But  never,  for  her,  indifference  or  obliviousness!  This  is  what  I 
call  the  contradiction:  the  creative  mind  embellishing  what  it  hates; 
winding  around  what  it  is  escaping  from;  rendering  everything,  as  it 
goes  along,  in  so  far  as  can  be,  unforgettable.  For  example,  that 
reptile  and  the  barnyard  fowl  and  those  predatory  insects  and  that 
beat-up  horse;  Colette  kept  them  stored  in  her  head  for  about  thirty 
years,  along  with  the  more  general  concepts  of  early  sorrow,  early 
philosophy.  As  she  has  expressed  it  in  the  way  of  aphorism:  "By 
means  of  an  image  we  are  often  able  to  hold  on  to  our  lost  belong- 
ings. But  it  is  the  desperateness  of  losing  which  picks  the  flowers  of 
memory,  binds  the  bouquet." 

Nervous  breakdown  had  done  her  good,  as  it  often  does,  or  so 
it  seems:  something  in  the  way  of  a  liberating  effect.  In  some  way 
suffering  outweighed  her  natural  conservatism.  As  she  expressed  it 
in  later  years  almost  cynically,  she  had  monogamous  blood  in  her 
veins  by  inheritance,  the  effect  of  which  was  a  certain  enfeeble- 
ment  in  the  ways  of  the  world.  There  by  herself  in  Monts-Boucons, 
bloodletting!  What  year  was  that?  Perhaps  1904.  Now  and  again 
the  chronology  of  her  memoirs  disappears  in  the  poetry.  She  did 


Images  of  Truth  •  96 

not  actually,  entirely,  leave  Willy  until  1906.  Why  the  delay,  when 
she  had  seen  all  and  foreseen  all,  and  as  they  say,  found  herself? 

In  more  than  one  text  Colette  has  declared,  and  no  doubt  sin- 
cerely thought,  that  it  was  mainly  on  her  mother's  account.  From 
the  very  first  day  of  her  marriage  and  metropolitan  life  she  had 
painstakingly  prevaricated  in  every  letter  back  to  the  provincial 
town.  Perhaps  Sido  read  between  the  lines,  but  she  replied  only 
to  what  her  daughter  chose  to  tell.  Little  by  little  Colette  felt  bound 
by  her  own  spiderweb.  Given  what  our  sociologists  call  vertical 
social  mobility,  it  is  a  frequent  crisis  in  the  lives  of  gifted  young 
persons  who  have  ventured  to  the  city  in  search  of  fortune,  to  no 
avail,  and  then  have  to  consider  giving  up  and  going  back  home: 
prodigal  sons  or  daughters  not  even  remorseful,  nobodies  with  not 
even  a  cent  or  a  sou.  The  prospect  of  burdening  Sido  in  the  financial 
way  troubled  Colette  especially.  Must  she  not  have  been  inhibited 
by  another  point  of  pride  also?  In  Sido's  instant  perception  of  the 
miserableness  of  Willy,  and  prediction  of  the  martyrdom  of  being 
married  to  him,  had  she  not  felt  some  possessiveness,  bossiness?  It 
is  a  matter  of  observations  that  daughters  often  very  nearly  perish 
rather  than  admit  that  mother  knew  best. 

But  at  the  close  of  a  life  and  career  so  felicitous  and  successful, 
let  us  not  glibly  say  that  at  this  or  that  point  things  were  miscon- 
ceived or  mismanaged.  Nowadays  one  is  apt  to  make  too  much  of 
the  spell  cast  by  parents,  and  the  fixation  of  first  marriage,  and 
everything  of  that  sort.  Especially  in  the  lives  of  literary  persons, 
planners  by  their  temperament  and  training,  the  feelings  of  ability 
and  ambition  may  be  of  more  decisive  effect.  What  caused  her  to  set 
her  bizarre  young  heart  on  the  odd  older  man  from  Paris  in  the 
first  place,  if  it  was  not  the  fact  that  he  was  a  literary  man?  And 
after  she  came  to  hate  him  with  her  whole  heart,  probably  it  was 
the  muse  which  kept  her  there  beside  him  a  while  longer,  faithful 
to  vocation  rather  than  to  the  marriage  vow;  only  seemingly  shilly- 
shallying, while  accumulating  the  materials  for  a  great  piece  of 
literature  decades  later. 

Willy  was  her  job  as  well  as  her  husband  and  her  subject  matter. 
She  remembered  to  tell  us  how — doubtless  sensing  her  restlessness, 


97  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

the  gradual  unfolding  of  her  wings  for  flight,  also  the  sharpening 
and  tensing  of  her  beak  and  claw — he  opportunely  raised  her  wages. 
The  Minnes  were  more  remunerative  than  the  Claudines.  It  does 
seem  to  me  that  if  I  had  been  the  author  of  those  six  volumes  at  the 
rate  of  one  a  year  I  should  have  felt  quite  confident  of  being  able 
to  support  myself  by  writing — also  my  mother  in  the  provinces, 
forsooth,  if  called  upon — even  without  an  accustomed  consort, 
slave-driver,  agent,  and  front  man.  But  Colette  did  not  feel  confident. 
She  was  like  someone  learning  to  swim,  someone  who  has  learned, 
who  can  swim,  but  still  depends  on  water  wings.  And  the  fact  is  that, 
when  at  last  she  got  up  her  courage  and  left  Willy,  and  continued 
writing — an  excellent  volume  in  1907,  another  in  1908 — there  was 
not  a  living  in  it.  It  must  be  admitted  that  she  did  not,  perhaps  could 
not,  certainly  never  wished  to,  write  any  longer  in  the  previous 
half-humorous  best-selling  style,  Willy's  style.  She  went  on  the  stage 
instead. 


I  feel  a  little  embarrassment  about  the  theatrical  interlude  in 
Colette's  life;  which  let  me  deal  with  summarily.  I  have  not  gos- 
siped with  any  old  friends  of  hers,  or  questioned  my  Parisian 
friends  of  that  generation  for  the  outward  aspect  and  general  public 
impression  of  her  life  on  stage  and  backstage,  or  researched  con- 
cerning her  in  the  drama  criticism  and  gossip  columns  of  news- 
papers or  news  weeklies  which  perhaps  exist  in  French  libraries, 
yellowed  but  not  yet  moldered  away. 

Even  in  her  lifetime,  surely,  Colette  would  not  have  minded  my 
doing  so.  As  a  rule  when  literary  folk  manifest  a  dread  of  gossip, 
horror  of  investigation,  like  the  ostrich  in  the  adage,  one  reason  is 
an  exasperated  proprietary  sense.  They  want  to  do  their  own 
telling  in  their  own  way  with  due  applause  and  profit.  Colette 
told  all  about  her  career  on  stage  quite  soon:  two  theatrical 
novels,  three  if  we  count  Mitsou,  and  a  volume  of  sketches,  as  well 
as  various  passages  in  her  autobiographical  works. 

But,  having  read  all  that,  I  find  myself  in  a  quandary  which  (I 


Images  of  Truth  •  98 

think)  may  derive  from  ambiguity  or  at  least  uncertainty  in  her 
feeling.  So  much  of  it  seems  to  me  funny,  but  apparently  to  her  it  all 
bore  connotations  of  resentment,  misfortune,  sorrow.  Even  when  the 
theme  is  the  picturesqueness  of  something,  or  eccentricity  of 
someone,  when  obviously  she  means  to  make  it  as  entertaining 
as  possible,  it  is  in  a  minor  key  or  upon  a  sharp  or  harsh  note. 
The  theatrical  way  of  life  is  lonely,  and  it  was  especially  so  in 
old-fashioned  vaudeville  or  music  hall,  with  brief  engagements  in 
a  hundred  towns.  Perhaps  in  young  womanhood  loneliness,  lone- 
someness,  loneness,  is  as  hard  to  bear  as  unhappy  marriage.  Perhaps, 
with  a  vocation  as  absolute  as  Colette's  for  literature,  working  at 
anything  else  seems  an  outrage. 

And  literary  persons  especially  mind  the  impermanences  of  the 
interpretative  arts,  musical  performance  as  well  as  acting  and  danc- 
ing. In  Antibes  on  the  French  Riviera  there  is,  or  used  to  be,  a  little 
Roman  tombstone  bearing  the  inscription:  septentrion  aet  xii 
saltavit  et  placuit.  Have  I  remembered  the  Latin  as  it  should 
be? — Someone  named  North,  or  perhaps  someone  from  the  North, 
aged  twelve,  danced  and  gave  pleasure.  In  Paris  in  the  Musee 
Guimet  there  is,  or  used  to  be,  a  little  Egyptian  mummy;  within  its 
angular  tight  leathery  arms  appear  some  dried  bits  of  something 
else:  it  is  a  dancing  girl  clasping  upon  her  bosom  her  last  bouquet. 
Which  is  said  to  have  inspired  Anatole  France's  Thais,  Massenet's 
Thais,  and  indirectly,  Somerset  Maugham's  Rain.  Such  are  the  per- 
sonifications of  the  theatre,  vanishing  out  of  men's  minds  in  no 
time,  unless  memorialized  in  writing  or  one  of  the  other  fine  arts. 

Colette's  stage  career  began  more  or  less  by  chance,  in  semi-public, 
upon  occasions  of  that  elaborated,  almost  laborious  sociability 
which  is  peculiarly  Parisian:  masked  balls,  soirees  litteraires,  ama- 
teur theatricals.  She  has  given  us  an  account  of  a  great  afternoon 
in  the  garden  of  a  noted  and  lovely  young  American  woman, 
sapphire-eyed  Miss  Nathalie  Barney,  when  she,  Colette,  and  an- 
other lovely  young  American  woman,  red-haired  Miss  Eva  Palmer, 
costumed  as,  respectively,  Daphnis  and  Chloe,  performed  a  playlet 
by  Pierre  Louys.  That  same  afternoon  there  also  entered,  upon  a 
white  horse,  costumed  as  patient  Griselda,  that  young  Dutch  or 


pp  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

perhaps  Asiatic  woman,  Mata  Hari,  whom  the  Germans  later  em- 
ployed as  a  spy  and  whom  the  French  detected  and  executed.  Come 
to  think  of  it,  I  do  not  believe  that  Colette's  old  friends  have  gos- 
siped about  her  much;  not  in  my  time,  not  interestingly.  As 
acknowledged  elsewhere,  years  later  I  had  the  honor  of  acquaint- 
ance with  the  red-haired  Chloe  just  mentioned  when  she  was  Mrs. 
Sikelianos,  and  expounded  the  dualism  of  Greek  religion  to  me; 
but  never  a  word  about  that  gala  garden  party. 

Presently  Colette  got  beyond  the  fashionable  and  sophisticated 
orbit  and  took  for  her  partner  a  good  capable  man  named  Georges 
Wague,  who  made  a  professional  of  her.  For  several  seasons  they 
appeared  in  various  pantomimes,  ballets,  and  sketches,  most  of  the 
time  on  tour  around  the  provincial  cities.  One  of  their  numbers  was 
first  entitled  "Dream  of  Egypt,"  which  a  certain  police  commis- 
sioner, goodness  knows  why,  obliged  them  to  change  to  "Oriental 
Reverie."  Their  greatest  success  was  entitled  "Flesh,"  and  it  ran  for 
an  entire  year.  Then  there  was  "The  Bird  of  Night,"  in  which 
Colette  wore  rags  and  tatters,  rather  Sicilian-looking,  with  a  third 
performer  named  Christine  Kerf,  and  they  all  three  went  about 
glowering  at  something. 

The  iconography,  especially  the  photographic  archives,  seems 
more  evocative  than  the  literary  or  journalistic  record.  Some- 
where in  a  scrapbook  I  have  pasted  a  reproduction  in  rotogravure 
of  an  early  news  photograph  in  which  Colette  is  making  an  entry, 
perhaps  on  stage,  perhaps  at  a  ball,  with  a  panache  of  what  appears 
to  be  real  peacock  tail,  borne  upon  the  shoulders  of  four  young 
strength-and-health  men  in  jockstraps.  In  recent  years,  in  magazines 
and  in  popular  little  monographs,  there  have  appeared  a  number 
of  such  shots,  a  little  less  comical  and  a  little  more  poetical  with 
the  passage  of  time:  one  as  a  black  cat,  in  woolly  tights  with  inked-on 
whiskers;  another  in  repose,  propped  up  on  a  taxidermized  head, 
showing  to  advantage  those  fine  feet  which,  a  quarter  of  a  century 
later,  impressed  me.  A  certain  art  study  reminds  us  who  was  the 
most  famous,  most  influential  dancer  in  the  world  in  those  days: 
Isadora  Duncan.  In  at  least  one  action  photograph  we  are  able  to 
glimpse  something  of  Colette's  talent;   a  tension  and  a  kind  of 


Images  of  Truth  •  ioo 

blissfulness  in  the  holding  of  her  head  and  the  outflinging  of  her 
arms. 

The  upbringing  and  formation  of  a  writer  as  such:  that  is  the 
significance  of  everything  I  have  had  to  tell  thus  far.  Even 
follies  working  out  better  than  one  could  have  calculated;  even 
mere  drudgeries  serving  a  dual  purpose,  future  subject  matter  as 
well  as  present  livelihood  nothing  to  be  regretted  unless  the 
fatigue  is  too  great  or  the  lifetime  too  short!  For,  as  a  rule,  the  de- 
velopment of  talent  into  mastery,  or  even  genius,  is  not  a  matter  of 
studying  to  write  or  training  to  write,  but  of  exercising  as  greatly 
as  possible  the  entire  being,  senses,  nerves,  excitements,  emotions, 
thoughts;  only  two  or  three  habits  of  mind  making  the  difference, 
leading  on  specifically  to  literature:  the  recollective  faculty,  con- 
versational power,  including  the  power  of  making  others  talk,  and 
of  course  studiousness  of  the  classics  of  literature  and  the  other  arts. 

As  we  look  back  on  Colette's  life,  indefatigable  beyond  anyone's, 
and  not  short,  certainly  we  see  that  her  odd,  hazardous,  almost 
scandalous  young  womanhood,  even  the  years  of  hack  writing,  even 
the  intense  unhappiness,  even  the  years  of  hack  acting  and  danc- 
ing, all  of  it  just  as  it  happened  was  almost  ideal  foi  the  future 
writer's  purpose. 


Now  please  look  with  me  at  some  of  the  result  and  the  outcome,  the 
writing  itself;  particularly  the  works  of  fiction.  I  will  point  to  things 
and  underline  things,  with  a  good  bit  of  quotation  and  paraphrase, 
with  commendation  to  my  heart's  content  and  very  little  adverse 
criticism.  The  two  novels  of  the  theatre,  La  Vagabonde  (1910)  and 
its  sequel,  L'Entrave  (1913)  made  a  reputation  for  Colette,  quite 
distinct  from  the  success  and  notoriety  of  the  Claudines.  Renee 
Nere,  the  protagonist  of  both,  is  also  in  some  measure  self-portrai- 
ture, analytical,  spiritual,  and  not  without  self-consciousness.  Per- 
haps Colette  felt  that  this  somber  presentation  would  counteract 
the  foolish,  girlish  mask  she  had  put  on  for  Willy. 

The  curiosity  about  the  life  of  Thespians  evidently  is  interna- 


ioi  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

tional  and  ever-recurrent,  but  as  a  rule  has  not  inspired  novelists 
very  profoundly.  Colette,  for  her  part,  played  down  all  the  glamour 
of  show  business,  reduced  it  to  realism,  almost  dispelled  it. 
Theatre  is  merely  Renee  Nere's  livelihood,  while  she  rejoices  in, 
then  suffers  from,  love-relationships.  I  think  the  appeal  of  these  two 
novels  must  have  been  not  particularly  to  the  stage-struck  but  to 
career  women  in  general.  Those  were  the  early  days  of  feminism, 
with  a  little  host  of  women  even  in  France  seeking  to  wean  them- 
selves from  domestic  unhappiness  by  means  of  various  labors  out  in 
the  world,  with  vttry  little  written  by  way  of  guidebook  for  them, 
to  say  nothing  of  consolation. 

It  was  Cheri  (1920)  which  made  Colette  famous.  Though  she  did 
not  get  around  to  writing  The  Last  of  Cheri  until  six  years  later, 
they  really  constitute  one  and  the  same  work.  It  requires  an  un- 
usual ability  to  hold  a  theme  in  mind  for  so  long  a  time,  ripening 
it,  resolving  it,  perhaps  depending  for  some  of  its  elements  on 
one's  further  experience  as  well  as  developing  artistry. 

Colette's  first  pairing  off  of  novels,  Minne  followed  by  Les 
Egarements  de  Minne,  was  just  upon  order  from  Willy;  and  as  soon 
as  they  became  her  property  she  combined  them  rather  imperfectly 
in  one  volume,  L'Ingenue  Libertine  (1909).  But  perhaps  this  effort 
of  reconstruction  inspired  her  serious  interest  in  binary  form.  The 
connection  between  La  Vagabonde  and  UEntrave  is  more  than  just 
the  further  developments  in  the  life  of  Renee  Nere.  Over  and  above 
the  explicit  continuity  there  are  recurrences  of  emotion,  like  echoes 
in  the  transepts  of  a  large  building,  back  and  forth. 

In  Cheri  and  The  Last  of  Cheri  the  double  construction  is 
handled  much  more  decisively  and  strongly.  There  is  an  entire 
shifting  of  key  and  change  of  tempo  from  one  to  the  other,  and  a 
somewhat  different  proposition  in  morals  and  psychology;  yet  the 
reader  feels  that  all  this  was  a  part  of  the  writer's  knowledge  and 
plan  in  the  first  place.  A  sweeping  and  agitated,  sensual,  humorous 
love  story  ending  in  farewell,  then  a  concentrated  and  solemnly  in- 
structive account  of  psychopathology,  they  are  structurally  perfect 
together,  with  an  effect  of  not  simply  chiming  echoes  but  of  poly- 
phonic music;  with  clear  perspectives  both  in  the  passage  of  time 


Images  of  Truth  •  102 

and  in  the  way  the  mind  of  each  protagonist  focuses  on  the 
characters  of  the  other  protagonists,  and  all  according  to  human 
nature  and  fatality  from  start  to  finish. 

Said  Laurence  Sterne,  of  all  men  of  genius  perhaps  the  least 
masterly,  "I  begin  with  writing  the  first  sentence,  trusting  to  Al- 
mighty God  for  the  second."  Have  you  observed  and  compared  the 
odd  beginnings  of  the  various  great  novels?  It  is  pleasant  to  do 
so,  and  it  often  illumines  the  deep-laid  aesthetic  and  particular 
personality  of  the  novelist  in  question.  Both  of  Sterne's  own  first 
sentences  are  famous.  There  is  a  thrilling  solemnity  about  the  four 
and  a  half  syllables  of  Moby  Dick,  "Call  me  Ishmael";  and  the  rest 
of  the  paragraph  meandering  along,  "the  watery  part  of  the  world" 
and  so  forth.  The  dozen  words  of  Anna  Karenina,  thoughtful,  uni- 
versal, and  yet  simple,  give  an  instant  impression  of  narrative 
genius:  "All  happy  families  resemble  one  another;  every  unhappy 
family  is  unhappy  in  its  own  way."  In  due  course  there  was  struck 
the  new  note  of  American  literary  art;  in  Hemingway's  first  book, 
for  instance,  "Everybody  was  drunk  .  .  ." 

Now  turn  to  the  opening  page  of  Cheri,  the  voice  of  the  spoiled 
youngster  addressing  his  aging  mistress,  an  absurd  outcry:  "Lea! 
Let  me  have  your  pearls!"  Do  you  see?  it  is  rather  like  theatre,  sud- 
den, in  order  to  prevail  over  the  incredulity  and  metropolitan 
nervousness  of  the  audience;  and  poetical  in  the  way  of  the  stage, 
with  more  paradox  than  sentiment. 

It  is  not  unlike  the  fine  opening  scene  of  Der  Rosenkavalier ,  first 
thing  in  the  morning,  with  the  dramatic  soprano  in  or  on  her 
grandiose  eighteenth-century  bed,  and  the  mezzo-soprano  uttering 
the  clarion  notes  of  the  pledge  of  everlasting  devotion  which  in  fact 
only  lasts  out  that  act.  I  wish  that  in  the  course  of  one  of  my 
conversations  with  Colette  I  had  thought  to  ask  her  whether  she 
had  seen  the  music  drama  of  Strauss  and  Hofmannsthal  (1911) 
before  writing  Cheri  (1920).  She  had  always  been  appreciative  of 
music,  and  indeed  in  Willy's  day  helped  with  his  music  criticism 
and  went  along  to  Bayreuth. 

No  matter.  The  theme  of  an  oldish  woman  in  love  with  a  very 
young  man  or  a  boy,  and  vice  versa,  is  an  old  and  fairly  familiar 


103  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

theme;  natural,  insoluble,  therefore  persistent — except  perhaps  in 
the  United  States.  We  seem  to  take  our  matriarchy  straight,  in  the 
proper  context  of  family  relationship,  and  more  often  analytically 
than  for  the  expression  of  heartache  or  heartbreak. 

"Lea,  Lea,  you're  not  listening  to  me!"  the  heartbreaking  French 
youngster  continues.  "Let  me  have  your  string  of  pearls,  Lea!  It's 
as  becoming  to  me  as  it  is  to  you.  Are  you  afraid  of  my  stealing 
it?"  And  there,  swiftly  and  simply,  you  have  the  three  or  four 
moral  factors  upon  which  the  entire  sad  story  turns:  Cheri's 
childishness;  and  his  exceeding  good  looks  and  corresponding  self- 
admiration;  and  that  constant  concern  with  cash  value,  which  was 
practically  all  the  education  he  had  been  given,  prior  to  this  love 
affair;  and  his  resigning  himself  to  having  a  bad  reputation,  not  so 
much  cynicism  as  defeatism. 

Mauriac,  a  strictly  Roman  Catholic  writer,  having  written  a 
biography  of  Racine,  situating  the  glorious  dramatic  poet  in  re- 
lation to  baroque  theology  as  well  as  classical  theatre,  emphasizing 
his  profoundly  troubled  Christianity,  inscribed  a  copy  of  it  some- 
what surprisingly:  "To  Colette,  nearer  than  she  thinks  to  this 
periwigged  man." 

If  we  give  this  a  second  thought,  even  in  the  opera-like  or  operetta- 
like first  part  of  Cheri  we  find  something  of  Mauriac's  meaning:  the 
suggestion  that  mere  human  nature,  natural  human  happiness,  is 
hopeless,  that  there  is  original  sin,  et  seq.  None  of  Colette's  unhappy 
mortals,  whether  like  puppets  jerked  to  their  death  by  pride  and 
error  or  just  drawn  to  it  by  time  in  the  ordinary  way,  seems  to  have 
the  least  sense  of  the  eternal  life,  or  any  feeling  of  having  to  choose 
between  salvation  and  perdition.  But  often  their  undeluded,  un- 
reconciled attitude  as  to  the  condition  of  humankind  here  below  is 
quite  Catholic.  In  the  mentality  of  Cheri,  in  his  plight  of  psyche 
if  not  within  his  will  power,  is  a  readiness  for  religion. 

Interviewed  by  someone,  in  Les  Nouvelles  Litteraires  if  I  remem- 
ber correctly,  Colette  stated  the  subject  of  this  pair  of  novels  in 
plain  terms  without  a  hint  of  religion  or  even  of  philosophy,  as 
follows. — When  a  woman  of  a  certain  age  enters  into  a  relationship 
with  a  much  younger  man,  she  risks  less  than  he.  His  character  is 


Images  of  Truth  •  104 

still  in  a  formative  stage,  and  therefore  the  more  likely  to  be 
spoiled  by  their  love,  deformed  by  the  failure  of  it.  After  they  have 
parted  he  may  be  haunted  by  her,  held  back  by  her,  forever. 

This  of  course  is  what  reminded  Gide  of  Benjamin  Constant's 
Adolphe.  I  am  tempted  to  quote  from  the  famous  commentary 
which  Constant  added  by  way  of  preface  to  the  third  edition:  as  to 
those  degrees  of  passionateness  which  a  young  man  may  think  he 
can  arouse  in  his  mistress  without  feeling  them  himself;  which 
nevertheless  little  by  little  take  root  in  him  also,  and  injure  him 
terribly  in  the  uprooting.  It  would  require  very  lengthy  quotation 
and  perhaps  new  translation. 

Cheri  is  younger  than  Adolphe.  Lea  is  older  than  Ellenore.  Shall 
I  tell  you  the  plot?  It  is  simple:  the  life  and  love  and  death  of  one 
Frederic  Peloux.  Cheri  is  his  pet  name,  as  we  should  say  darling  or 
dearie — the  French  word  is  not  quite  so  belittling,  as  it  means, 
literally,  cherished  one.  The  protagonists  of  the  older  generation  are 
all  courtesans,  or  so  near  as  makes  no  matter;  and  all  rather  super- 
annuated and  retired.  The  cleverest  and  least  pleasant  of  them, 
Charlotte  Peloux,  Cheri's  mother,  has  contrived,  or  at  least  facili- 
tated, his  attachment  to  her  old  friend,  Lea,  born  Leonie  Vallon, 
known  as  Baroness  de  Lonval.  Lea  was  in  her  forties;  in  all  walks 
of  life  women  were  expected  to  retire  early  then.  Cheri  was  nine- 
teen. It  suited  Mme.  Peloux  to  have  him  kept  out  of  mischief,  and 
schooled  and  exercised  for  his  future  marriage,  and  at  someone 
else's  expense  the  while. 

It  worked  like  a  charm.  It  continued  for  six  years,  quite  peace- 
ably and  dignifiedly,  in  good  understanding  and  good  health  and 
powerful  enjoyment  of  sex.  You  may  look  down  at  it,  as  a  kind 
of  mutuality  of  the  commonplace  and  the  materialistic — bourgeoisie 
gone  wrong — yet  in  its  way  it  was  love.  At  any  given  moment  it 
must  have  seemed  to  everyone  that  Cheri  was  playing  the  inferior 
part.  He  always  took  that  wrongly  suggestive  tone;  his  requirement 
of  the  pearls,  for  example.  Oh,  probably  his  love  never  attained 
any  particular  height  or  powerfulness,  except  in  intercourse.  On  the 
other  hand,  it  never  really  diminished  or  altered,  until  the  day  of  his 


ioj  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

death.  Only  his  young  body  detached  itself  from  Lea's  old  body, 
and  only  when  ordered  to  do  so. 

How  remarkably  we  are  made  to  see  and  feel  that,  although  she 
has  begun  to  age  quite  rapidly,  Lea  is  still  physically,  sexually  at- 
tractive: blue-eyed  and  rosily  blonde,  with  long  legs,  and  that  very 
flat  back  which  you  may  also  observe  in  Renaissance  sculpture, 
with  dimpled  buttocks  and  somewhat  exceptionally  elevated  breasts, 
long-lasting. 

Colette  lets  her  do  most  of  the  emphasizing  on  age  herself.  With 
one  eye  always  on  the  mirror — as  a  normal  and  necessary  part  of 
the  discipline  of  courtesanship — evidently,  a  good  while  before  her 
intimacy  with  Cheri  started,  she  had  learned  always  to  think  of  her- 
self as  gradually  growing  older.  That  was  what  the  passage  of 
time,  every  day,  every  hour,  every  minute,  meant  to  her.  She  had 
accustomed  herself  to  the  prospect  of  finding  herself,  one  fine  day, 
really  old,  disgracefully  and  decisively  old;  and  she  had  resolved  to 
call  a  halt  to  love  life  and  sex  life  before  that  happened.  Thus,  in 
her  sorrow  when  it  came  time  to  lose  Cheri,  time  to  let  him  go,  time 
to  help  him  go,  there  was  a  factor  of  submissiveness  to  fate;  long- 
prepared,  philosophical. 

The  gerontophilic  devotion — the  feeling  of  a  young  person  for 
someone  definitely  not  young — is  a  very  genuine,  earnest,  and 
passionate  devotion.  Who  has  not  experienced  it  or  observed  it? 
Only  as  a  rule  it  is  not  to  be  depended  on;  it  is  short-lived,  subject 
to  sudden  coldness  and  indeed  sexual  incapability;  it  is  a  fire  in 
straw.  It  was  not  exactly  like  that  in  Cheri's  case.  The  elder  person, 
beloved  in  that  way,  very  naturally  skeptical  to  begin  with,  never- 
theless as  a  rule  is  almost  certain  to  get  enthralled  little  by  little. 
But  if  you  have  any  common  sense,  good  education,  or  worldly 
wisdom,  you  will  keep  your  skepticism  in  mind  even  after  it  has 
ceased  to  have  any  currency  in  your  heart.  For  you  must  be  pre- 
pared to  yield  your  young  person  to  some  other  young  person  or 
persons  one  fine  day,  upon  a  moment's  notice.  Was  this  not  what 
happened  between  Lea  and  Cheri,  when  young  Edmee  came  on  the 
scene?  Not  exactly. 


Images  of  Truth  •  106 

For  we  feel  quite  certain  that  Cheri  would  never  have  decided 
upon,  nor  lifted  a  hand  to  procure  for  himself,  that  pulchritudinous 
well-schooled  impeccable  creature;  not  in  a  thousand  years.  It  was 
all  managed  by  the  matriarch,  Mme.  Peloux,  more  managerial  than 
anyone,  and  more  mercenary.  Edmee  was  the  daughter  of  the 
courtesan  noted  among  them  for  having  put  away  the  most  respect- 
able amount  of  money.  It  was  a  case  of  gerontocracy's  having 
prevailed  over  gerontophily.  And  in  the  essentials  Lea  functioned 
as  one  of  the  gerontocracy.  She  co-operated  in  the  transfer  of  her 
darling  back  home,  back  under  his  mother's  control,  and  into  that 
holy  state  of  matrimony  which,  as  the  French  conceive  and  practice 
it,  certainly  is  a  mother's  province. 

Miserable  young  man!  his  emotions  are  pathetic  and  profound, 
as  we  see  terribly  by  the  outcome.  His  heart  is  in  the  right  place  but 
he  has  scarcely  any  head.  Whether  in  happiness  or  unhappiness, 
he  has  not  even  observed  exactly  what  his  emotions  were,  until  too 
late;  until  someone  else  has  decided  things.  To  all  intents  and  pur- 
poses he  is  inarticulate.  His  talk — his  explanation  of  the  beauty  and 
singularity  of  his  eyelids,  for  example — is  a  kind  of  play-acting, 
like  that  of  infants  at  a  certain  age;  sound  rather  than  sense.  In  more 
ways  than  one  he  is  a  kind  of  infant.  In  the  very  first  instance,  his 
passage  from  his  mother's  malicious  and  avaricious  salon  to  Lea's 
bed  and  board — oh,  blissful  bed  and  sumptuous  board! — was  but  a 
bewitchment.  Now  back  again,  as  it  were  the  dream  of  an  infant  not 
yet  born,  from  one  part  of  the  womb  to  another. 

The  comedy  of  the  aging  courtesans  is  as  well  developed,  and  per- 
haps as  important,  as  Cheri's  misery.  And  in  their  scenes  together 
the  malicious,  almost  joyous  tone  and  brisk  pace  of  the  first  volume 
continue  into  the  second:  satirical  vivace  even  amid  the  funeral 
march.  Once  in  a  while  we  laugh  at  them,  but  more  often  with 
them,  in  appreciation  of  the  fun  they  make  of  one  another.  It  is  not 
all  unkindness.  In  this  class  of  womanhood  one  has  to  be  careful  of 
old  friends,  in  view  of  the  difficulty  of  replacing  them.  Their  main 
objective  in  their  youth  and  in  their  prime  having  been  to  please 
men,  now  it  is  rather  to  find  various  ways  of  conciliating  other 
women;  talking  amusingly  is  one  way.  Sense  of  humor  keeps  up  their 


ioy  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

courage,  and  serves  another  mutual  purpose  also:  helps  them  pre- 
tend that  those  compulsions  which  constitute  their  morality — 
competitiveness,  avarice,  cruelty — are  not  really  heavy  upon  them; 
that  a  part  of  their  evil  is  not  evil  at  all,  but  only  a  convention, 
affection  and  clowning. 

Lea  is  the  least  amusing,  but  partly  in  consequence  of  that  keeps 
our  sympathy  from  beginning  to  end.  Note  especially  her  first  en- 
counter with  Mme.  Peloux  after  the  marriage  of  Cheri  and  Edmee. 
Upon  previous  readings  I  seem  to  have  missed  this  passage;  now 
it  delights  me.  After  absenting  herself  in  the  South  of  France  for  a 
season,  by  way  of  discipline  and  therapy,  Lea  has  returned  to  town 
with  her  heartbreak  not  remedied,  but  anesthetized,  scarred  over. 
She  has  reached  that  decision  so  long  meditated:  farewell  to  men, 
once  and  for  all,  and  at  once.  Naturally  she  has  been  feeling  dull 
and  nervous,  listless  and  slack. 

Then,  without  warning,  she  is  called  upon  by  Cheri's  mother, 
Edmee's  mother-in-law;  triumphant  and  infernally  inquisitive,  and, 
yes,  at  the  same  time  sincerely  friendly.  For  an  hour  Lea  sits 
and  gazes  at  that  all  too  familiar  face  and  form,  the  short  and  tight 
and  tirelessly  bestirring  body,  the  large  inhumane  eyes  and  the  glib 
lips;  sits  and  listens  to  that  lifelong  chatter,  petty  but  savage,  detail 
after  detail  of  the  skillful,  almost  mechanical  futility  of  her  exist- 
ence, the  organized  heartlessness.  All  of  this,  Lea  reflects,  with  self- 
commiseration  for  a  moment,  is  being  visited  upon  her  as  a  test  of 
her  strength  of  character. 

And  the  next  moment,  exultantly,  she  realizes  that  in  fact  her 
character  is  strong  enough.  In  the  time  to  come  as  in  the  time  gone 
by,  she  will  be  able  to  strike  back.  She  knows,  or  can  soon  figure  out, 
what  well-turned  phrase  will  hurt,  what  practiced  and  well-timed 
smile  will  worry.  And  upon  the  instant  she  feels  less  discouraged 
about  herself.  From  her  dreaming  of  love,  and  nightmare  of  the  end 
of  love,  and  sloth  of  sorrow,  now  animadversion  and  contempt  and 
resentment  have  waked  her  up.  She  feels  her  heavy-heartedness,  her 
sense  of  having  nothing  to  live  for,  lifting  and  dispelling.  What  she 
will  have  to  live  for  is  simply  self-defense.  Her  terrible  old  friend, 
old  enemy,  will  keep  her  on  her  mark.  In  the  strain  of  losing  Cheri, 


Images  of  Truth  •  108 

and  in  the  spirit  of  general  renunciation,  she  has  been  living  at  a 
somewhat  higher  level  and  greater  tension  than  was  good  for  her. 
Mme.  Peloux  has  brought  her  down  to  earth.  She  is  grateful. 

Here  in  a  small  way  we  have  a  philosophic  mystery:  the  vision 
of  evil  as  giving  opportunity  for  an  exercise  of  virtuousness  of  a 
sort.  I  realize  that  my  comment  upon  this  is  longer  than  Colette's 
telling.  In  incident  as  in  aphorism,  along  with  the  stimulation  of 
our  senses,  acceleration  of  our  sentiments,  she  has  the  power  to  set 
our  brains  to  work.  As  Montesquieu  expressed  it  in  a  maxim:  "A 
great  thought  is  one  that  puts  us  in  mind  of  a  number  of  other 
thoughts." 

Meanwhile  the  process  of  Cheri's  death  has  started,  though  it  does 
not  happen  until  1919.  As  noted  above,  a  certain  lack  of  intellect 
has  been  ominous  in  him  all  along,  predisposing  him  to  demoraliza- 
tion. Stupid,  or  if  you  like,  innocent,  apparently  he  has  taken  it 
for  granted  that  he  will  be  able  to  resume  amorous  intimacy  with 
his  old  beloved  after  the  necessary  term  of  concentration  on  his 
young  wife.  He  attempts  it  one  night;  and  perhaps,  if  he  had  not 
then  noticed  certain  new  ravages  of  her  age,  devastated  nape  of 
neck,  weightiness  or  weightedness  of  cheek — he  pretends  to  be 
asleep,  and  peeps  at  her  with  only  the  narrowest  beam  of  morning 
light  between  his  beautiful  eyelids,  through  his  thick  eyelashes — 
and  if  she  had  not  noticed  his  noticing,  perhaps,  perhaps! 

Indeed  they  are  tempted  by  one  another  even  after  that;  later 
that  morning,  for  just  a  moment,  there  glimmers  between  them  a 
further  hope  of  the  recommencement  of  love,  a  lunatic  hope,  "such 
as  may  be  entertained  by  persons  falling  down  out  of  a  tower,  for 
the  time  it  takes  them  to  reach  the  ground."  That  is  the  conclusion 
of  the  first  novel;  a  thrilling  chapter.  What  difference  would  it  have 
made  if  they  had  recommenced?  Only  the  difference  of  a  few  more 
months  of  enjoyment,  or  perhaps  a  year,  perhaps  two  years;  down- 
hill enjoyment,  of  course.  But  is  that  not  the  best  that  is  ever  offered 
anyone  on  this  earth:  prolongation,  with  deterioration?  Also,  for 
Cheri,  the  difference  between  suicide  and  a  gradual  ordinary  death. 

As  it  happens,  his  suicide  is  gradual  too.  The  entire  second  novel, 
The  Last  of  Cheri,  is  devoted  to  it.  No  suspense;  the  very  first  page 


iop  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

indicates  to  us,  with  many  tiny  touches — I  count  seven  suggestive 
words,  set  in  odd  cadences — that  he  feels  condemned  to  death  or  has 
condemned  himself.  But  he  finds  it  a  strange  hard  task  to  carry  out 
the  sentence.  Even  his  self-absorbed  wife  senses  something  wrong 
with  him:  "white  shirt-front  and  white  face  hanging  in  a  darkness." 
One  thing  he  has  to  overcome  is  his  self-esteem,  his  narcissism;  that 
more  than  anything  might  have  inclined  him  to  spare  himself. 
Every  time  anything  or  anyone  reminds  him  of  his  good  looks,  the 
prospect  seems  to  brighten. 

The  outbreak  of  World  War  I  is  wonderfully  timely  for  him, 
just  two  years  after  his  marriage;  and  as  long  as  it  goes  on,  his  mor- 
bidity does  deviate  into  heroism.  And  when  peace  has  been  restored, 
will  that  not,  we  ask  ourselves,  serve  at  least  as  an  acceptable  substi- 
tute for  happiness?  No,  it  is  the  ignobility  of  the  postwar  life  which 
strikes  him;  ignoblest  of  all,  his  own  parent  and  his  own  spouse. 
Of  course  the  real  trouble,  or  perhaps  I  should  say,  the  true  pretext 
for  the  real  trouble,  is  just  his  inoperative  and  irremediable  feel- 
ing about  Lea.  Not  infrequently,  I  believe  great  love  gets  one  in  a 
habit  of  procrastination;  so  that  one's  grief  at  the  failure  or  loss  of 
it  also  rather  maunders,  loiters,  creeps. 

Notwithstanding  Colette's  deftness  and  forward-moving  rhythm, 
she  has  allowed  The  Last  of  Cheri  to  be,  doubtless  wanted  it  to  be, 
her  slowest  book.  It  has  called  to  my  mind  the  catch  phrase  of  a  co- 
median in  old-fashioned  burlesque  years  ago,  one  of  those  endlessly 
patient,  absolutely  pessimistic  types  prone  to  more  or  less  comic  ac- 
cidents: "No  hope,  no  hurry." 

Nothing  that  really  deserves  to  be  called  accident  happens  to 
Cheri,  scarcely  even  incident.  We  are  given  a  fantastic  feeling  of 
being  with  him  morning,  noon,  and  night,  while  all  his  life  is  in  a 
kind  of  quiet  decomposition,  unraveling  and  discoloring.  We  watch 
him  as  he  seems  to  be  deliberately  experimenting  with  himself,  with 
singular  little  techniques,  little  exercises,  to  turn  his  mind  back- 
ward, to  deaden  himself  to  the  present,  to  withhold  himself  from 
the  future.  It  is  all  quite  harmless  behavior;  only  entirely  unenjoy- 
able  and  without  true  motivation. 

At  the  last  he  spends  most  of  his  time  with  an  awful  little  old 


Images  of  Truth  •  no 

woman,  the  oldest  of  all  the  courtesans,  called  La  Copine,  that  is, 
the  chum  or  pal,  who  knew  Lea  well  in  her  heyday.  Comedy  again, 
but  this  time  it  is  not  vivace  or  even  allegro;  La  Copine  is  like  a 
death's-head  wearing  a  wig,  reminiscing  all  through  the  night, 
largo.  She  has  a  great  collection  of  photographs  of  Lea,  studio  por- 
traits framed  and  snapshots  just  thumbtacked  up.  In  one  of  the 
snapshots  she  is  escorted  by  one  of  her  young  lovers;  not  the  one 
before  Cheri,  but  the  one  before  that.  In  another  snapshot  there 
appears  in  the  background  an  elbow  which  La  Copine  declares  must 
have  been  Cheri's  own  elbow;  but  he  knows  better,  and  it  is  only  a 
blur  anyway. 

And  then  suddenly,  when  it  has  become  almost  a  bore — in  the 
scenes  with  La  Copine,  Colette  has  lulled  our  minds  along  with  a 
soft,  almost  listless  humorousness — suddenly  we  have  reached  the 
end.  Cheri  has  reached  the  point  of  real  readiness  for  the  little  flat 
revolver  which  he  has  had  in  his  pocket  a  long  time.  He  bolsters  it 
up  between  two  pillows  so  that  he  can  stretch  out  at  ease,  his  ear 
pressed  to  the  barrel.  In  his  freakish  fatigue  of  life,  at  the  last  min- 
ute he  seems  almost  unwilling  or  unable  to  make  the  effort  of  dying. 
We  have  a  feeling  that  his  laziness  might  almost  have  saved  him. 
The  worst  and  most  rudimentary  of  the  forms  of  will  power,  stub- 
bornness, has  destroyed  him.  We  mourn  over  him  very  little. 

Instead  our  minds  run  on  ahead  to  what  might  possibly  furnish 
a  third  volume:  the  reactions  of  those  who  have  loved  him.  It  is  a 
gauge  of  the  verity  of  Colette's  characterizations  that  we  can  con- 
ceive their  suffering  in  a  circumstance  she  has  not  written — the 
thunderclaps  in  their  several  minds,  especially  the  punishment  of 
Mme.  Peloux,  and  the  ghastly  bafflement  of  Lea,  realizing  how  stu- 
pid she  was  ever  to  let  him  go,  how  conventional,  how  lazy;  and  of 
course  for  them  both,  for  all  the  courtesans,  fear!  The  sudden  need- 
less passing  of  one  so  young  sounds  the  knell  of  everyone  older, 
deafeningly. 


in  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 


Glancing  back  at  all  the  above  synopsis  and  commentary,  I  have  a 
troubling  impression  of  having  imposed  on  the  story  of  Cheri  an 
extra  sordidness  somehow;  accentuation  of  the  immorality,  diminu- 
tion of  the  charm.  No  wonder!  For  what,  in  fact,  have  I  had  to  offer? 
Only  some  of  its  bones,  no  flesh  and  blood,  nothing  in  the  skin  of 
the  language  in  which  it  was  written — none  of  the  beauty  of  the 
way  Colette  wrote,  which  is  often  like  a  conferring  of  her  own  per- 
sonal physical  beauty  upon  the  fictitious  creatures  she  writes  about, 
even  unfortunate  old  satirized  macabre  creatures  like  La  Copine. 
By  means  of  diction,  syntax,  cadence,  she  gives  them  all  something 
like  complexion,  milkiness  and  snowiness,  rosiness  and  amber,  and 
something  like  sheen  of  hair,  sometimes  raven  and  sometimes 
golden,  and  sinew  in  one  place  and  bosom-softness  in  another,  and 
every  single  lineament  of  things  in  accord  with  every  other,  accord- 
ing to  all  five  senses;  that  is  to  say,  verbal  equivalents. 

Style!  it  is  what  Colette  is  most  celebrated  for,  in  France,  in 
French;  or  perhaps  I  should  say,  what  first  brought  about  her  ce- 
lebrity. Even  in  the  early  volumes,  perhaps  not  in  the  Claudines 
but  surely  in  the  Dialogues  des  Betes  (1904)  and  Les  Vrilles  de  la 
Vigne  (1908),  she  wrote  like  an  angel;  handled  the  language  to  per- 
fection, or  almost  to  perfection,  in  an  inimitable,  influential  way. 

And  of  course  the  sensuousness  which  I  have  tried  to  suggest  is 
only  one  aspect  of  it.  Elegance,  brevity,  and  clarity  are  other  aspects; 
and  those  turns  of  phrase,  speedy  and  forceful  and  neat,  and  with 
a  sense  of  fun,  for  which  the  French  have  the  word  "esprit."  Ex- 
pressiveness above  all!  In  the  first  place,  the  expression  or  at  least 
implication  of  the  mentality  of  the  author,  in  passages  where  the 
theme  or  construction  of  the  particular  work  requires  this  to  be  re- 
strained or  held  back;  connecting  it,  therefore,  with  the  lifework 
as  a  whole,  maintaining  some  coherency  of  thought  and  correspond- 
ence of  emotions  throughout.  Colette's  great  characteristics  of  mind 
and  heart  are  an  odd  form  of  pride;  serenity;  thankfulness;  stoicism; 
and  a  kind  of  sharpness  or  asperity. 

And  in  the  second  place,  more  important  for  the  novelist  as  such, 


Images  of  Truth  •  112 

the  rendering  of  nuances  of  the  particular  subject  matter,  minutiae 
of  characterization,  instantaneities  of  the  plot,  with  almost  imper- 
ceptible touches,  subtle  selections  of  vocabulary,  small  patterns  of 
syntax,  even  little  calculated  disorders.  When  a  manner  is  as  fine 
and  intensive  as  Colette's,  it  can  hardly  be  distinguished  from  the 
action  or  emotion  or  thought  it  has  to  convey.  On  many  a  page  her 
meaning  really  resides  in  the  mode  of  utterance  rather  than  in  the 
terms  of  statement;  the  nuance  is  all-signifying,  as  in  poetry;  and 
it  loses  heartbreakingly  in  translation,  as  poetry  does. 

Having  mentioned  in  passing  certain  subtleties  of  this  kind  in 
The  Last  of  Cheri  I  wish  that  I  could  examine  passages  in  the  other 
novels  with  the  like  or  even  closer  application.  But  I  know  that, 
alas,  writing  about  the  detail  and  texture  of  writing  is  a  mug's 
game,  especially  in  English.  We  are  short  of  technical  terms  of  the 
art,  English  and  American  literature  never  having  been  as  pains- 
takingly wrought  and  self-conscious  as  the  French.  Academic  critics 
of  course  invent  technicalities  and  teach  them  to  their  pupils,  but 
neither  the  general  reader  nor,  indeed,  the  creative  writer  under- 
stands them  very  well.  Perhaps  on  the  whole  the  best  way  is  just 
to  express  enthusiasm  simply,  as  one  would  any  other  feeling,  rejoic- 
ing in  the  artistry  in  question,  marveling  at  it,  pondering,  with 
imagery  more  or  less  in  the  manner  of  the  artist  under  consideration, 
and  with  borrowings  from  the  phraseology  of  the  other  arts  if  they 
seem  to  suit. 

In  this  way,  for  my  part,  I  often  compare  Colette's  prose  to  danc- 
ing. That  was  at  the  back  of  my  mind  when  I  declared  that  her  years 
on  the  stage  had  been  helpful  to  her  in  the  development  of  her 
greatness  as  a  writer.  I  borrow  an  exquisitely  apt  term,  not,  to  be 
sure,  from  the  kind  of  dancing  Colette  did,  but  from  the  old  Italian- 
Russian-French  tradition:  absoluteness,  as  applied  to  the  perfectly 
trained  and  entirely  experienced  female  ballet  dancer,  assoluta.  A 
discipline  and  indeed  muscularity  altogether  disguised  by  graceful- 
ness, so  that  the  eye  of  the  beholder  is  deceived,  the  sense  of  reality 
set  aside — for  a  split  second,  the  ballerina  assoluta  is  emancipated 
from  gravity;  she  pauses  and  reposes  in  mid-air,  stops  to  think  in 
mid-air!  Does  this  seem  altogether  farfetched,  as  an  analogy  of  liter- 


iij  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

ary  style?  Believe  me,  I  could  prove  it,  with  plentiful  and  suitable 
citations,  with  perfect  phrases  suspended  in  mid-paragraph,  and 
never  for  a  split  second  failing  to  keep  time  to  a  general  music. 


Twice,  a  quarter  of  a  century  apart,  Colette  undertook  a  most  dif- 
ficult or  delicate  theme:  triangularity  in  marriage,  by  which  term 
I  mean  something  more  than  chance  infidelity,  something  different 
from  the  regular  sinfulness  of  adultery;  an  involvement  of  the  mar- 
riage partner  sinned  against,  condonation  or  acceptance  for  what- 
ever reason,  or  perhaps  inclusion  somehow — in  Claudine  Married 
(1902),  which  is  the  third  in  the  Claudine  series,  and  in  The  Other 
One  (1929). 

In  the  very  early  work  the  involving  element,  connecting  link, 
is  some  measure  of  homosexual  responsiveness  between  young  Clau- 
dine and  a  strange  young  woman  named  Rezi,  who  presently  turns 
out  to  be  Claudine's  husband's  mistress.  He  encourages  their  attach- 
ment, with  intermingled  amusement,  kindness,  and  lustfulness.  To 
be  a  good  novel,  with  this  oddity  and  crisscrossed  compounded 
feeling,  it  would  have  had  to  be  very  good.  In  fact,  it  is  only  pleas- 
ant and  interesting. 

For  one  thing,  there  is  the  dubious,  perhaps  illegitimate  but  ir- 
resistible biographical  interest;  the  mirroring  of  Colette's  own  youth 
in  the  immature  and  surely  distortive  creation.  In  those  days  when 
Claudine  was  not  only  a  best-selling  book  but  a  successful  play, 
played  by  Polaire,  Willy  persuaded  Colette  to  bob  her  wonderful 
long  hair  to  match  the  bizarre  and  entrancing  little  actress's.  In  a 
popular  edition  of  Mes  Apprentissages  Colette  let  us  see  a  photo- 
graph of  them,  out  of  doors  somewhere,  at  the  races  or  at  a  garden 
party;  unhappy  young  ghost  writer  and  moody  young  matinee  idol 
in  strikingly  similar  white  ruffles,  like  twins,  escorted  by  their  no- 
torious elderly  employer.  Perhaps  Willy  intended  only  a  bit  of  good 
publicity.  We  cannot  now  entirely  accept  the  conclusion  to  which  an 
excitable  Parisian  public  undoubtedly  jumped.  In  one  of  her  most 
beautiful  miniature  narratives,   Colette   made   her   feeling   about 


Images  of  Truth  •  114 

Polaire  quite  clear,  as  of  great  importance  in  her  life  then,  in  an- 
other way;  no  triangle.  Possibly  it  was  public  misapprehension, 
wrong  gossip,  which  provided  her  with  that  part  of  the  plot  of  Clau- 
dine  Married  in  the  first  place.  Accident  is  sometimes  inspirational. 

But  in  spite  of  her  great  lifelong  use  of  experience  of  her  own  in 
her  work  of  fiction,  on  the  whole  she  was  less  inspired  by  the  turn 
of  personal  events,  the  impulse  to  explain  or  to  justify  her  conduct, 
than  most  authors.  Her  life  provided  her  with  knowledge,  but  in 
the  handling  of  it  she  has  been  extraordinarily  objective,  with  pride 
of  aesthetics  rather  than  of  reputation,  and  with  unusual  educa- 
bility  and  severe  critical  sense.  I  am  inclined  to  think  that  even  in 
her  early  work,  when  any  self-indulgence  or  frivolity  appears  in  it, 
it  is  because,  at  that  time,  she  could  do  no  better;  she  had  not 
learned  how  to  write  those  pages  more  seriously.  Le  Ble  en  Herbe 
(1923),  her  masterly  novel  of  young  love,  youngest  love,  initiation 
and  defloration — the  modern  Daphnis  and  Chloe — recapitulates  one 
of  the  themes  of  the  not  quite  successful  Ingenue  Libertine.  I  think 
that  dissatisfaction  with  Claudine  Married  may  have  been  one 
thing  that  moved  her  to  write  The  Other  One.  Alas,  once  more, 
she  somewhat  missed  the  mark.  If  she  were  to  live  long  enough, 
she  might  try  it  again,  in  still  another  volume,  perhaps  a  master- 
piece. 

Certainly  the  autobiographical  factor  has  ceased  to  amount  to 
much  in  The  Other  One.  Farou,  the  husband  in  it,  bears  not  the 
slightest  resemblance  to  Willy.  He  is  a  playwright  but  rather,  if 
I  may  say  so,  like  Henri  Bernstein.  He  is  a  great  bull-like,  hard- 
working, tireless  and  tiring  creature.  He  loves  his  wife  Fanny  very 
well,  though  he  has  been  unfaithful  to  her  in  the  way  of  a  little 
relaxation  now  and  then,  as  it  has  happened  to  come  in  handy. 
She  has  always  forgiven  him  and  relaxed  about  it;  and  now  re- 
laxation, even  laxness,  laziness,  is  a  part  of  her  nature.  She  seems 
just  not  capable  of  not  forgiving,  though  this  time  it  is  under  her 
own  roof,  under  her  nose.  The  mistress  this  time,  Jane,  Farou's 
secretary,  has  become  her  good  friend  and  comfortable  companion. 
Fanny  is  not  young;  neither  is  Farou,  but  he  still  seems  rather  ex- 


ii$  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

cessive  in  her  life,  too  much  for  her.  All  things  considered,  she  feels 
the  need  of  Jane;  and  Farou  needs  her,  rather  more  in  the  secretarial 
capacity  than  the  amorous  capacity.  Fanny  gets  to  thinking  of  Jane 
no  longer  conventionally  as  interloping  mistress,  rather  as  an  as- 
sistant wife;  and  the  book  comes  to  a  close  in  this  way,  which  is  a 
kind  of  happy  ending. 

As  a  whole,  The  Other  One  lacks  vitality.  Perhaps  this  subject 
matter  lay  fallow  in  her  mind  too  long.  It  does  not  lack  plausibility 
or  function  or  general  human  interest;  only  it  is  not  intensely  in- 
teresting. It  lacks  chiaroscuro:  no  brilliance  anywhere  in  it,  no  deep 
sort  of  obscurity  either.  Or  perhaps  I  should  say,  the  lights  and 
shades,  the  several  contrastable  elements,  are  not  arranged  to  set 
each  other  off  to  best  advantage.  The  date  of  it  puzzles  and  fascinates 
me:  1929,  the  year  after  the  avowedly  autobiographical  Naissance 
du  Jour,  sumptuous  with  landscape-writing,  grievous  with  frustrated 
and  stoical  amorous  feeling,  haunted  by  Sido's  ghost.  Perhaps  wea- 
ried by  that,  she  went  to  the  other  extreme  in  the  story  of  the  Farou 
family;  overdid  the  objectivity.  And  after  it,  not  another  volume  for 
three  years — then  a  spate  again,  the  most  remarkable  sequence  of 
all:  Le  Pur  et  Vlmpur  (1932),  the  boldest  of  her  reminiscences,  all 
about  various  singularities  of  sex,  then  The  Cat  (1933),  and  then 
Duo  (1934).  When  we  consider  The  Other  One  in  its  place,  in 
relation  to  the  lifework,  it  is  mysterious.  In  seemingly  shallow, 
limpid,  even  glassy  waters  we  discern  greenish  and  bluish  tones; 
something  sunken  perhaps,  wreckage  or  treasure. 


Duo  (1934)  also  is  a  story  of  marital  irregularity,  but  not  condoned 
at  all,  quite  the  contrary;  and  it  has  an  unhappy  ending,  as  unhappy 
as  Cheri,  except  that  the  denouement  comes  about  more  promptly. 
The  marriage  of  Michel  and  Alice  has  lasted  a  decade;  a  good  mar- 
riage, with  no  lack  of  sexual  responsiveness  thus  far,  a  happy,  hard- 
working life,  working  more  or  less  in  double  harness  in  various 
theatrical  enterprises.  But,  recently  while  he  was  absent  in  the  South 
of  France  on  some  business  venture,  she  gave  herself  to  one  Am- 


Images  of  Truth  •  116 

brogio,  a  business  associate;  a  silliness,  a  mistake,  to  which  she  called 
a  halt  after  about  two  weeks.  And,  indiscreetly,  she  has  kept  some 
improper  letters  from  him,  in  a  purple  letter  case;  and  she  carelessly 
lets  Michel  catch  a  glimpse  of  this,  then  tries  to  persuade  him  that 
there  is  not,  never  has  been,  any  such  object;  and  thus  the  deadly 
trouble  starts;  jealousy,  the  unpleasantest  conceivable  subject,  the 
shame  and  disgrace  of  humankind,  from  the  beginning  of  human 
history.  No,  not  from  the  beginning,  but  ever  since  Dante  or  ever 
since  Catullus! 

"I  do  not  believe  in  denouements,"  Balzac  made  one  of  his  high- 
brow great  ladies  say.  Literature  can  do  as  well  as  chance,  if  the  liter- 
ary man  tries  hard  enough.  "But,"  she  concluded,  "if  we  reread  a 
book  it  is  for  the  details."  Colette's  details  are  a  marvel.  For  ex- 
ample, turn  to  Michel  and  Alice's  breakfast  on  the  terrace.  It  is  the 
morning  after  the  first  evening  of  his  wild  jealousy  and  her  evasive- 
ness and  defiance;  after  a  night  of  extra-deep  sleep,  in  avoidance  of 
intercourse.  Our  concern  about  them  has  been  well  worked  up,  in 
behalf  of  both  the  justifiably  but  exorbitantly  aggrieved  husband 
and  the  culpable  but  regretful  and  well-meaning  wife.  "Man  and 
woman,  close  together,  disunited,  languishing  for  one  another." 
We  hope  that  they  may  soon  make  peace. 

Wifely,  there  on  the  terrace,  to  make  him  as  comfortable  as  pos- 
sible, she  reaches  across  and  turns  the  coffee  pot  and  the  cream 
pitcher,  so  that  he  shall  have  the  handles  on  his  side.  Without 
comment!  A  good  part  of  matrimony  is  in  that  gesture.  Then  a  still 
slumberous  bee  comes  clumsily  to  the  honey  pot,  and  she  will  not 
let  him  swat  it  with  his  napkin.  "No,  let  it  go,"  she  cries,  "it's  hun- 
gry, it's  working."  And  the  mention  of  those  two  fundamentals, 
work,  hunger,  bulking  so  much  larger  in  her  womanly  mind  than 
jealousy — that  male  mania,  negative  form  of  eroticism,  which  is 
tormenting  him,  destroying  their  marriage,  destroying  him — brings 
tears  to  her  eyes. 

Note  Colette's  probity  in  this  particular:  she  informs  us  of 
Alice's  being  the  healthier-minded  of  the  two,  having  the  more 
constructive  purpose.  Michel  is  the  sympathetic  one,  we  suffer  for 


ii j  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

him;  but  she  is  rather  to  be  approved,  less  disapproved.  And  subtlety 
as  well  as  probity!  Writing  as  a  woman,  with  wisdom  explicitly  wom- 
anly always,  Colette  enters  further  into  Alice's  mind  and  motivation 
than  into  Michel's.  She  seems  to  hint  at  various  extenuating  cir- 
cumstances, excuses  for  her  infidelity.  Also,  I  think,  she  makes  it 
quite  clear  that,  if  asked,  as  one  woman  moralizing  with  another, 
she  would  agree  with  Alice  that  infidelity  was  no  such  terrible 
thing,  per  se. 

In  due  course,  remembering  and  understanding  everything  about 
Alice,  her  background,  family,  upbringing,  and  all,  Colette  also 
added  a  sequel  to  Duo — Le  Toutounier  (1939). — Alice  widowed, 
back  in  the  family  studio  apartment  in  Paris;  a  conversation  piece 
with  two  of  her  sisters,  Colombe  and  Hermine,  somewhat  woebegone 
bachelor  girls,  career  women.  Their  fond  curiosity  brings  out  Alice's 
defects,  inadequacies;  their  psychology  mirrors  hers  with  the  great- 
est animation  of  little  lights  and  colors.  And  here  we  note  that  those 
characters  Colette  knows  best,  and  perhaps  loves  best,  put  her  under 
no  particular  obligation  of  indulgence.  Here  we  learn  why  we  did 
not  like  Alice  better  in  the  former  novel;  what  it  was  about  her 
that,  almost  more  than  the  fact  of  her  infidelity,  contributed  to  her 
husband's  desperation.  For  example,  a  certain  conceit  not  unusual 
in  women,  but  especially  brought  out  by  tactlessness  in  her  case; 
and  a  kind  of  bravery  that  is  not  real  courage,  only  false  pride  and 
defiance.  Think  back!  how  she  frittered  away  Michel's  patience 
and  good  will  by  changing  her  story  every  little  while:  admixture 
of  truth  and  falsehood,  unkinder  than  either.  How  self-indul- 
gent she  is,  doubtless  always  was;  therein  she  trespassed  in  the  first 
place.  Worst  of  all,  her  lack  of  imagination;  therefore  she  fails  to 
say  the  things  that  might  possibly  have  consoled  the  poor  creature 
trespassed  against;  therefore  at  last  she  lets  him  have  it,  the  entire 
documentary  truth,  crude  and  exciting. 

Note  how  I  have  mingled  tenses  in  all  these  sentences,  turning 
from  the  one  book  to  the  other;  years  apart  in  the  writing,  only 
months  in  the  chronology  of  Alice's  life.  Here  once  more  the  binary 
form  is  impeccable;  the  division  of  the  material  very  precise  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  118 

meaningful.  For  one  thing,  at  the  end  of  Duo  we  are  alone  with 
Michel  when  he  is  planning  to  drown  himself;  whereas  in  Le  Tou- 
tounier,  Alice  allows  herself  to  believe,  and  convinces  her  sisters 
(and  the  insurance  company),  that  it  was  an  accidental  death. 

Nevertheless,  she  blames  him,  even  for  misadventure — hah,  the 
fool!  stumbling  into  the  floodwater,  forgetting  the  slipperiness  of 
the  red-clay  riverbank — because  she  loved  him,  still  loves  him,  and 
terribly  misses  him.  There  is  often  a  factor  of  anger  in  great  be- 
reavement. Do  you  remember  Schumann's  song  cycle,  Frauenliebe 
und  Leben? — "Now  for  the  first  time  you  have  hurt  me,  hard  un- 
merciful man,  by  dying,  and  that  struck  home!"  She  also  blames 
him  for  his  proneness  to  tragical  feeling,  darkening  those  last  few 
days  before  the  so-called  accident;  much  ado  about  nothing,  a  trait 
of  maleness. 

But  even  in  bitter  widowhood  Alice  does  not  blame  him  as  Colette 
blames  him,  and  as  we  blame  him.  Colette  shows  us  his  abysmal  pes- 
simism, his  self -destructive  ardor,  from  the  first  word  of  the  trouble. 
And  at  the  end,  Alice's  impatient  stupid  entire  revelation,  with 
documentary  evidence,  which  maddens  him:  he  himself  insisted 
on  it;  he  would  not  take  no  for  an  answer.  Neither  to  the  right  nor 
to  the  left  would  he  turn  or  even  look;  nothing  else  touched  or  ex- 
cited him,  only  his  determination  to  know  more  than  he  could  bear 
knowing.  The  sin  of  Psyche!  he  would  commit  it  if  it  killed  him, 
and  it  did. 

Let  me  also  call  attention  to  the  pages  about  the  singing  of  the 
nightingales,  once  to  each  of  these  miserable  mortals  whose  love 
is  failing.  The  nightingale  is  a  bird  very  dear  and  personal  to  Co- 
lette. Les  Vrilles  de  la  Vigne  (1908),  one  of  the  first  works  of  her 
own  sole  devising,  without  Willy,  begins  with  a  sort  of  allegory 
or  fairy  tale,  two  or  three  pretty  pages.  A  nightingale  falls  asleep 
in  a  vineyard  in  the  burgeoning  springtime,  and  when  it  wakes  up, 
has  a  bad  fright;  for  the  tendrils  of  grapevine  have  begun  to  wind 
around  its  feet  and  wings.  Therefore,  thereafter,  it  sings  and  teaches 
its  young  to  sing,  "While  the  grapevine  is  growing,  growing,  grow- 
ing, I'll  stay  awake."  In  French  this  is  a  near  enough  approximation 


up  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

of  nightingale  rhythm.  It  expresses  her  feeling  of  escape  from  mar- 
riage— thirteen  years  of  tendrils! — and  of  blessedly  finding  that  she 
has  voice  and  song  of  her  own;  that  is,  literary  talent  and  something 
to  express  by  means  of  it. 

Here  in  Duo,  in  the  prime  of  that  talent,  we  have  nightingales 
once  more.  The  poor  adulteress  leaves  the  room,  and  the  poor 
cuckold,  sitting  there  by  himself,  begins  to  pay  attention  to  a  num- 
ber of  them,  singing  their  hearts  out,  but  softly,  remotely;  and  then 
to  a  soloist,  a  much  greater  voice  than  the  others,  or  perhaps  only 
proximity  makes  it  seem  so.  But  how  sad!  how  sick!  Michel  is  not 
able  to  take  any  pleasure  in  any  of  it.  It  is  as  though  his  thoughts 
partly  deafened  him.  How  can  a  man  so  sad  and  sick  partake  of 
glorious  nocturne?  Only  by  withholding  his  breath,  then  trying  to 
breathe  in  time  to  the  music,  which  suffocates  him  a  little  and  keeps 
him  from  thinking  for  a  minute  or  two.  And  afterward — one  of 
Colette's  characteristic  touches,  with  her  sense  of  physiology  keener 
than  anyone's! — he  feels  a  burning  thirst. 

A  couple  of  pages  further  on,  he  goes  out  of  the  room;  Alice 
comes  back.  It  is  her  turn  to  listen,  especially  to  that  one  loud  tenor 
voice  seemingly  wasting  itself  away  in  brilliance,  in  repetitions  so 
insistent  and  variations  so  farfetched  that  it  scarcely  suits  her  trou- 
bled heart;  it  seems  to  hinder  all  emotion,  except  its  own  emotion, 
if  it  can  be  called  emotion.  But,  but,  when  the  soloist  pauses  for  a 
moment  to  catch  its  breath,  there  arises  the  soft  chorus  of  the  far- 
away singers,  each  for  himself,  each  at  the  same  time  in  harmony 
with  the  others — "accordes"  is  Colette's  word,  which  means  recon- 
ciled as  well  as  harmonized;  which  also  means  matched,  mated, 
betrothed.  And  unhappy  Alice  is  reminded  of  the  great  spring  labor 
going  on  along  with  the  spring  concert;  assembling  and  weaving 
the  nests,  laying  and  hovering  and  hatching  the  eggs,  feeding  the 
fledglings;  labor  of  the  females  for  the  most  part.  But  not  lonely; 
as  long  as  they  must  labor  the  males  will  not  fail  to  serenade  them! 

It  is  one  of  those  metaphors,  extended  and,  as  you  might  say, 
dramatized,  bearing  as  great  a  portion  of  the  author's  thought  as 
her  dialogue  or  her  action — for  which  I  love  her.  Do  you  not?  Do 


Images  of  Truth  •  120 

you  see  what  it  signifies,  suggests?  The  woman  listening  to  those 
male  birds,  thinking  of  those  dutiful  female  birds  inarticulately 
nesting,  is  childless.  In  her  joint  life  with  Michel  now  stricken  sud- 
denly, in  their  hapless  marriage  unbalanced,  toppling,  hopeless,  that 
important  cornerstone  of  civilized  heterosexuality  is  lacking:  no 
egg,  no  fledgling,  no  real  nest!  Therefore,  perhaps  she  thought  of 
herself  as  free  to  lead  a  little  double  life  for  a  fortnight,  entitled  to 
partake  of  modern  single-standard  morality;  thus  she  erred  in  idle- 
ness, with  not  even  watchful  conscience,  not  even  sufficiently  trou- 
bling to  keep  it  secret.  Therefore,  therefore  .  .  .  Go  farther  with  this 
theme  if  you  wish.  Colette  always  knows  when  to  stop;  here  she  has 
stopped  with  the  metaphor. 

A  bad  thing  about  jealousy  is  the  element  of  pornography  in  it: 
the  stimulation  of  visualizing  one's  darling  in  someone  else's  arms, 
with  the  consequence  of  desiring  somewhat  more  than  usual  just 
when  one  is  expected  to  content  oneself  with  somewhat  less — or  as 
in  extreme  and  morbid  instances,  as  in  Michel's  case,  looking  back- 
ward, crying  over  spilt  milk,  desiring  the  past.  How  clearly  Colette 
has  marked  this,  though  with  no  stress  or  scabrousness!  Michel 
himself  admits  it,  in  a  single  painful  exclamation,  after  Alice  has 
let  him  read  all  Ambrogio's  letters:  one  of  the  games  of  love  played 
by  those  two  happened  to  be,  ah,  something  the  miserable  husband 
has  especially  delighted  in,  more  than  anything,  more  than  life. 

Another  detail:  whereas  Alice  is  Parisian,  Michel  is  a  South- 
erner, meridional — even  as  Sidonie,  nee  Landoy,  and  Jules  Joseph 
Colette.  Make  no  more  of  this  parallel  than  it  is  worth;  it  doubtless 
furnished  their  daughter  with  observations  of  the  contrast  of  tem- 
peraments. From  the  first  page  of  Duo  it  is  suggested  that  Alice  is 
somewhat  the  more  intelligent  or  more  civilized — or  rather,  the 
other  way  around:  Michel  is  the  more  instinctive,  primitive.  Perhaps 
I  oversimplify  this.  The  point  is  that  he  is  not  at  all  the  type  of  man 
for  whom  it  is  normal  or  natural  to  forgive  a  breach  of  the  marriage 
vow.  But  for  the  grace  of  God,  but  for  a  generation  or  so,  and  a 
veneer  of  twentieth-century  morals,  this  story  might  have  ended  in 
murder  instead  of  suicide.  It  would  have  done  Michel  good  to  give 
Alice  a  beating,  would  it  not?  Yes,  but  perhaps  he  would  not  have 


i2i  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

known  when  to  stop.  Indeed,  this  might  quite  plausibly  be  given 
as  his  excuse  for  committing  suicide:  to  prevent  murder,  or  to  pun- 
ish himself  for  murderousness. 

As  representations  of  suicide,  a  subject  most  important  to  us, 
important  in  the  symbolical  or  anagogical  way  especially,  psycholo- 
gists having  shown  us  how  frequently  misdemeanors  and  misfor- 
tunes partake  of  the  same  dark  frenzy,  only  a  little  less  dark — the 
same  desire  to  die  but  less  determined,  the  same  unwillingness  to 
live,  dilatory — see  how  the  case  of  Michel  compares,  contrasts,  with 
the  case  of  Cheri!  This  is  but  a  momentary  violence,  though  the 
result  is  forever;  an  act  almost  of  aggression,  though  the  point  of 
departure  is  true  uxorious  devotedness. 

Whereas  Cheri  is  bemused  and  benumbed,  torpid,  unmotivated. 
Would  that  he  had  been  capable  of  a  bit  of  violence  1  Colette  has 
given  us,  as  one  of  the  gravest  indications  of  his  state,  the  fact  that 
he  feels  no  jealousy  of  Edmee.  That  might  have  waked  him  up  and 
saved  him.  Or,  alas,  he  might  have  relapsed  into  his  slumberous- 
ness  again,  gone  sleepwalking  away  in  some  other  realm  no  less 
lonely.  For  there  is  a  curse  upon  him;  and  we  feel  that  if  he  had  not 
turned  it  into  the  channel  of  death  it  would  have  developed  in  an- 
other direction:  imbecility  or  worse. 

The  Last  of  Cheri,  from  the  first  page  to  the  last,  is  a  representa- 
tion of  that  famous  so-called  sin  of  the  Middle  Ages,  rampant  again 
in  this  century  in  more  ways  than  one:  acedia,  that  is,  horrible 
languor,  malignant  listlessness,  irremediable  boredom,  paralysis  of 
soul;  the  intolerable  sorrowfulness  when  even  the  specific  sorrow 
keeps  slipping  one's  mind.  And  this  is  the  greatest  portrayal  of  it  in 
modern  literature.  Michel  is  not  in  this  classification  at  all.  If  the  en- 
raging circumstance  of  Alice's  infidelity  had  not  befallen  him,  or  if 
Alice  had  kept  him  in  blessed  ignorance  of  it,  he  would  have  been 
all  right. 

See  the  mystery  of  morals!  Although  Cheri's  background  is  so 
bad,  all  those  old  courtesans  constituting  so  gross  and  mean  and 
base  a  society — and  Michel  and  Alice  and  even  Ambrogio  are  just 
average  inoffensive  humanity — the  opprobrium  upon  him  is  slighter; 
for  the  most  part  we  think  of  it  as  sickness.  Michel  is  the  wickeder. 


Images  of  Truth  •  122 

In  case  of  suicide  we  cannot  moralize  upon  the  act  itself — we  do  not 
know  enough — only  upon  the  attitude  of  mind,  heart,  and  soul, 
just  prior  to  it.  What  was  in  Michel's  mind,  heart,  soul?  Possessive- 
ness,  punitiveness,  intermingling  of  lust  and  prudery,  deafness  and 
blindness  to  all  the  signs  of  Alice's  love,  rejection  of  her.  In  Cheri's? 
Only  disappointment,  disappointment  in  himself  and  in  the  crazy 
bad  sick  world — many  a  saint  has  felt  as  much — and  fatigue  and 
loneliness  and  stupor;  nothing  very  bad,  nothing  unfair. 

And  see  the  indivisibility  of  morals  and  psychology!  in  Duo  Alice 
is  the  healthy  one.  In  so  far  as  Michel's  wicked  intention  is  to  make 
her  suffer,  he  miscalculates,  it  miscarries,  she  is  too  strong  for  him. 
Wherein  lies  her  strength?  In  her  dullness  of  mind  as  well  as  her 
robustness,  lack  of  imagination  as  well  as  good  nature.  Her  salva- 
tion and  Cheri's  perdition  are  correlative  in  some  way,  but  impos- 
sible to  correlate.  The  fact  is  that  neither  of  the  two  sets  of  values 
by  itself — neither  right  versus  wrong  nor  sickness  versus  health — 
will  serve  to  explain  or  to  save  humanity.  We  have  to  try  first  one, 
and  then  the  other.  And  in  the  last  analysis  of  course  there  is  no 
salvation:  everyone  is  deathward  bound,  the  road  has  no  turning, 
God  is  not  mocked. 


It  occurs  to  me  that  I  have  taken  Duo  out  of  chronology,  for  no 
particular  reason;  not  far  out.  The  Cat  (1933)  is  another  of  Colette's 
masterpieces,  made  of  rather  similar  materials  of  middle-class  hu- 
•manity,  matrimony  again;  matrimonial  misunderstanding  and  mis- 
chance and  fiasco.  Approximately  of  the  same  length,  the  same 
shortness,  I  think  you  will  agree  that,  because  it  is  more  poetical, 
it  tells  more  and  signifies  more  per  page.  It  has  no  sequel,  needs 
no  sequel. 

The  marriage  of  Alain  and  Camille  scarcely  deserves  to  be  called 
a  marriage;  it  lasts  only  a  few  months,  a  trial  and  a  failure.  We  first 
see  Alain  still  living  at  home  with  fond  parents.  He  has  a  most 
cherished,  most  beautiful  cat  named  Saha,  a  thoroughbred  Carthu- 
sian, grayish-bluish.  After  the  honeymoon  he  takes  it  to  live  with 


/23  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

them.  Marriage  does  not  make  him  any  the  happier;  neither  does 
he  make  his  wife  happy.  He  lets  her  realize  his  vague  sense  of  having 
made  a  mistake,  vague  longing  to  be  back  home  again,  infidelity 
of  spirit.  The  cat  seems  to  Camille  emblematic  of  all  that.  She  tries 
to  kill  it,  does  not  succeed.  But  Alain  cannot  forgive  her,  nor  she 
him. 

Do  you  observe  how  this  constitutes  a  sort  of  diptych  with  the 
story  of  Michel  and  Alice?  And  here  also,  how  strong  and  sure  Co- 
lette's sense  of  justice  is;  how  deft  her  communication  of  it,  though 
never  passing  specific  judgment!  Is  it  by  instinct,  or  with  intellect 
like  a  precision  instrument?  I  think  it  is  a  part  of  her  femininity, 
and  an  attractive  part,  to  seem  to  set  aside  claims  of  mere  cerebra- 
tion. As  in  Duo  she  has  presented  the  wife  somewhat  more  under- 
standing^ than  the  husband,  that  is,  more  explanatorily,  with  an 
extra  perspective,  a  brighter  light.  But  by  the  same  token,  the  more 
critically!  We  are  not  in  the  least  obliged  to  love  the  female;  we  are 
allowed  to  love,  and  to  feel  that  Colette  herself  loves,  the  male. 

Indeed,  peering  a  little  more  profoundly  into  creative  coincidence 
than  it  is  proper  to  do,  we  may  remark  that  we  have  heard  of  only 
one  other  person  on  earth  as  devoted  to  cats  or  to  a  cat  as  this  young 
Alain;  that  person  is  old  Colette  herself.  And  as  she  conceived  this 
story  she  may  well  have  arrived  at  a  part  of  the  tension  between  him 
and  his  bride  by  asking  herself,  What  if  I  had  to  choose  between  my 
cat  and  some  such  vain,  disrespectful,  disturbing  new  young  person? 

Alain's  young  person  really  is  a  terrible  girl,  a  type  that  may 
sometimes  incline  one  to  despair  of  the  epoch;  so  very  nearly  in  the 
right  about  almost  everything,  but  just  missing  the  point;  so  self- 
righteous  but  so  lacking  in  self-assurance;  possessive  without 
strength,  destructive  without  deadliness.  She  has  energy  to  burn 
but  somehow  very  little  warmth,  except  perhaps  in  the  specific 
conjugal  connection.  With  a  certain  fatuity,  as  to  her  importance 
to  her  husband,  which  gradually  gives  way  to  sadness  and  bitter- 
ness, in  the  realization  of  her  unimportance,  she  seems  to  have 
nothing  else  to  live  for. 

Indeed  we  sympathize  with  her  as  to  her  resentment  of  the  cat. 
We  see  that  it  is  less  exorbitant  and  less  abstract  than  Michel's 


Images  of  Truth  •  124 

jealousy  in  Duo.  The  trespassing  of  Ambrogio  against  him  was  a 
thing  of  the  past;  and  even  at  the  time  of  its  happening  he  felt  no 
injury,  not  the  slightest  pang,  no  deprivation.  Whereas  Saha  is  an 
ever-present  rival,  lauded  by  Alain  with  every  other  breath,  and 
established  by  him  as  a  permanent  feature  of  their  married  life. 
But  why,  we  wish  to  know,  why  could  she  not  somehow  gradually 
vitiate  and  exorcise  the  childish  magic  it  has  for  her  dear  husband? 
Is  there  ever  any  point  in  a  vain,  violent  iconoclasm,  loudly  deny- 
ing the  tabu  and  pushing  down  the  sacred  image?  And  if  it  came 
to  the  point  of  violence  against  her  will,  if  her  husband  in  his 
aelurophily  suddenly  maddened  her,  why  so  inefficient  about  it? 
Why  defenestration,  instead  of  poisoning  or  drowning?  The  folly 
of  just  giving  it  a  push,  hurting  it,  and  arousing  its  hatred,  paroxysm 
of  hissing  and  explosive  yellowish  eyes,  which  is  what  betrays  her 
to  Alain! 

The  worst  of  this  kind  of  female  character,  we  say  to  ourselves, 
is  that  even  in  violence  it  falls  between  two  stools.  It  results  not  even 
in  disaster  but  in  muddle  and  mess  and  absurdity.  But,  beware! 
this  kind  of  objection  is  valid  in  aesthetics,  if  you  really  prefer 
tragedy  to  comedy;  but  in  morals  it  is  evil  nonsense.  Falling  between 
two  stools  is  better  than  successfully  killing  cats.  The  reason  for 
Camille's  weakness  and  coarseness  and  confusion,  and  even  loss  of 
husband,  is  fundamental  and  creditable.  To  express  it  in  the  senti- 
mental style,  she  is  on  the  side  of  life.  It  not  only  enables  us  to  for- 
give her,  it  necessitates  our  forgiveness. 

Her  dear  husband  really  is  a  maddening  youth,  though  attractive. 
He  is  as  fatuous  in  his  feeling  of  unimpeachable  male  supremacy  as 
she  in  her  feeling  of  absolute  female  desirability;  as  self-indulgent 
in  his  daydreaming  and  voluptuous  frivolity  with  his  pet  as  she 
in  her  vain  commotion  and  pursuit  of  pastime.  We  can  never  feel 
quite  happy  about  him,  even  when  he  is  perfectly  happy  himself, 
even  when  he  gets  back  home  where  perhaps  he  belongs.  In  the  very 
first  chapter  we  observe  how  recklessly  his  parents  have  spoiled  him; 
marriage  to  Camille  seems  the  only  hope  for  him.  At  the  end  of  the 
story  we  cannot  see  into  his  future  at  all;  it  seems  all  beclouded  and 


12$  '  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

scarcely  even  tragic,  just  harrowing.  He  is  a  type  that  may  sometimes 
incline  one  to  despair  of  France. 

Two  thousand  years  ago  St.  Paul  decided  that  it  is  better  to 
marry  than  to  burn;  a  way  of  stating  the  case  which  seems  to  start 
marital  relations  off  on  the  wrong  foot.  Psychologists  nowadays, 
scarcely  less  severe,  have  added  that  it  is  better  to  be  infantile — 
better  to  disappoint  a  wife  and  concentrate  on  a  cat  and  giwe  up 
marriage  altogether,  as  Alain  did — than  to  commit  suicide.  If  we 
agree,  we  are  constrained  to  admire  this  young  man  more  than  the 
poor  hero  of  Duo.  Colette  seems  not  to  have  reached  any  absolute 
decision  upon  this  point;  no  aphorism  that  I  can  recall.  But  cer- 
tainly she  expects  us  to  take  Alain's  cat  as  an  emblem  of  child  life, 
home  life,  childish  home  life,  and  of  its  compromise  and  consolation 
in  secret:  autoeroticism.  No  pettiness  about  this;  nothing  belittled 
or  made  sordid  or  left  sordid — not  ever,  in  the  writing  of  this  good 
woman  and  liberal  writer! 

Let  me  call  your  attention  to  her  description  of  Saha  at  night, 
at  the  beginning  of  the  story:  one  night  just  before  Alain's  marriage, 
on  his  bed,  thrusting  her  claws  through  his  pajamas  just  enough  to 
worry  him,  with  a  pleasurable  worrisomeness;  then  giving  him  one 
of  her  infrequent  quick  kisses  with  her  chilly  nose;  then  seating  her- 
self on  his  chest  while  he  falls  asleep;  and  until  morning,  vigilant 
perfect  superhuman  creature,  seeming  to  fix  with  her  hard  eyes,  and 
to  follow  around  and  around  in  the  darkness,  the  fateful  zodiacal 
signs,  lucky  and  unlucky  stars,  which  in  unknowable  time  and  in 
incomprehensible  space  dance  to  and  fro  over  sleeping  humanity. 
Two  things  at  once — it  is  that  manifoldness  in  Colette's  mind  which 
I  have  mentioned,  as  of  the  time  of  her  great  fit  of  depression  in 
Franche-Comte — a  very  slight  instance,  Alain's  mere  inconsequential 
self-provided  soporific  pleasure,  and  at  the  same  time  a  very  great 
concept,  great  eternality  and  destiny,  even  as  personified  by  Bashet, 
the  cat-goddess  of  the  Egyptians. 

Toward  the  close  of  the  story  there  is  another  little  picture  of 
Alain  and  Saha  together.  He  holds  her  in  his  arms,  rejoicing  in  her 
entire  contentedness  and  entire  confidence  in  him.  With  the  peril 


Images  of  Truth  •  126 

of  Camille's  rivalry  happily  averted,  Saha  has,  Alain  reflects,  a  life 
expectancy  of  perhaps  another  decade;  and  he  winces  at  the  thought 
of  the  brevity  of  life,  the  brevity  of  love.  In  the  decade  after  that 
decade,  he  promises  himself,  probably  he  will  want  a  woman  or 
women  in  his  life  again.  He  does  not  specify  Camille;  he  is  not  such 
a  cad  as  to  expect  her  to  wait  for  him.  But  in  any  event,  he  promises 
Saha,  he  will  never  love  another  cat. 

Yes,  this  love  scene  of  childish  man  and  almost  womanly  cat 
seems  almost  too  good  to  be  true,  too  pretty  and  tender  and  humor- 
ous. It  is  a  kind  of  happy  ending.  Any  valid  commentary  upon  a 
work  of  narrative  art  has  to  be  in  some  measure  a  retelling.  Now 
suddenly  I  realize  how  much  less  cheerful  my  retelling  of  this  has 
been  than  the  text  itself.  The  loveliest  of  love  stories;  at  the  same 
time  a  serious  study  of  modern  matrimony,  yes,  indeed!  But  the 
true  love  in  question  is  that  between  Alain  and  Saha;  the  true  mar- 
riage is  theirs.  Camille  is  the  troublemaker,  the  interloper,  who 
makes  a  fool  of  herself  and  is  successfully  driven  back  out  of  the 
way.  It  is  almost  an  allegory  or  a  fairy  tale;  and  what  truth  there  is 
in  it  I  certainly  cannot  state,  in  the  way  of  either  ethics  or  psycho- 
therapeutics. 


In  Gigi,  the  most  successful  of  Colette's  short  narratives — meta- 
morphosed into  an  American  play  and  into  two  motion  pictures, 
one  French,  with  perfect  performances  by  two  illustrious  elderly 
comediennes,  one  American,  with  music — two  of  her  chief  lifelong 
themes  are  entrancingly  and  significantly  combined:  the  crossing  of 
the  border  between  girlhood  and  womanhood,  and  the  ordeal  of 
growing  old,  with  due  sagacity  and  tenderness  and  vicarious  power. 
Gigi  is  the  darling  child  of  a  family  of  unmarried  women,  all  (or 
almost  all)  courtesans.  Her  mother  has  been  unsuccessful,  and  there- 
fore is  reduced  to  singing  small  parts  at  the  Opera-Comique.  There- 
fore her  loving  and  tyrannous,  realistic  and  pessimistic  grandmother 
and  her  wealthy  and  conceited  and  didactic  great-aunt  Alicia  have 


i2j  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

taken  her  in  hand,  to  train  her  for,  and  launch  her  in,  the  only  way 
of  life  they  know. 

It  is,  for  the  reader  as  well  as  the  pretty  and  promising  girl,  edu- 
cational: how  to  sit  becomingly  with  one's  elbows  close  at  one's 
sides  and  one's  shoulder  blades  flat  on  one's  back,  how  to  smoke 
without  getting  the  tip  of  one's  cigarette  wet  or  even  moist,  how  to 
negotiate  difficult  foods  such  as  soft-boiled  eggs  and  broiled  or 
roasted  small  game  birds;  and  questions  of  still  graver  consequence, 
for  example,  which  jewels  may  be  accepted  as  a  sufficient  token  of 
esteem,  and  which,  on  the  other  hand,  are  virtually  an  insult. 

By  the  miracle  of  Colette's  handling,  her  gift  of  romanticization, 
her  profundity  of  human  kindness,  none  of  this  is  cynical  or  squalid. 
The  details  of  petty  and  even  funny  realism  do  not  obscure  the  sad 
reality  of  old  age,  most  notable  in  cases  of  extreme  worldliness  like 
these  superannuated  charmers,  in  whose  range  of  vision  there  is 
no  eternal  life  except  ever-recurrent  youth,  generation  after  genera- 
tion. Nor  does  the  social  satire  detract  from  the  romantic  happiness 
of  the  ending,  when  Gigi  is  wiser  than  they;  when  all  their  calcula- 
tion of  making  a  living  by  being  lovable  suddenly  gives  way  to  love 
itself,  love  requited,  and  wedding  bells. 

Perhaps  the  reader  has  begun  to  have  enough  of  being  escorted 
through  Colette's  enjoyable  lifework  from  page  to  page  by  me,  and 
will  willingly  go  on  now  independently,  with  references  to  his  own 
experience  and  applications  to  his  own  problems.  For  my  part,  at 
any  rate,  I  suddenly  feel  almost  ashamed  of  stating  and  interpreting 
so  much,  topsy-turvy  and  wrong  end  to. 

For,  truly,  slight  pure  narrative  itself  ought  to  be  given  precedence 
over  any  meaning  that  one  can  read  into  it  or  any  moral  that  may 
seem  attachable  to  it.  Is  not  this  the  profound  thing  about  narra- 
tion, the  almost  mystic  belief  of  the  true  narrator?  Incident, 
description,  characterization,  dialogue,  are  the  means  of  expression 
of  truths  that  are  greater,  more  affecting,  truer,  than  anything  that 
can  be  put  in  general  or  theoretical  form.  Perhaps  a  great  narrator 
like  Colette  only  pretends  to  be  thinking  about  her  characters, 
coming  to  conclusions  about  them,  pointing  morals — the  supreme 


Images  of  Truth  •  128 

narrative  device,  to  convince  us  of  their  reality!  We  are  able  to 
moralize  about  them,  ergo  they  exist. 


I  will  tell  you  something  of  the  latter  part  of  Colette's  life,  with 
a  particular  appreciation  of  the  extraordinary  love  story  which 
is  reflected  in  her  autobiographical  novel,  La  Naissance  du  Jour 
(Break  of  Day);  then  conclude  this  long  fond  essay. 

Colette's  later  years  do  not  lend  themselves  to  lively  recapitula- 
tion as  her  venturesome  youth  did.  Somewhat  as  it  is  said  of  kings 
and  queens,  that  happy  reigns  have  no  history,  it  will  be  understood 
that  very  great  labor  of  authors  and  authoresses — fifteen  short  novels 
and  fifteen  long  stories  and  scores  of  very  short  tales  and  sketches 
and  half  a  dozen  volumes  of  nonfiction  in  this  authoress's  case — is 
bound  to  curtail  the  more  obvious  materials  of  biography. 

Just  prior  to  World  War  I  Colette  married  Henry  de  Jouvenel. 
She  bore  him  a  daughter,  Bel-Gazou,  of  whom  she  wrote  enchant- 
ingly,  enchantedly,  at  the  age  and  stage  of  growth  when  a  little 
human  being  is  most  like  any  other  immature  animal:  La  Paix  chez 
les  Betes  (Peace  among  the  Animals).  Jouvenel  was  a  distinguished 
and  successful  newspaperman.  Therefore,  very  naturally,  Colette 
forsook  the  stage  and  also  took  up  the  career  of  journalism,  and 
after  their  divorce  continued  in  it  for  many  years,  indeed  never 
discontinued;  presumably  had  to  depend  on  it  for  a  part  of  her 
livelihood  until  almost  the  end  of  her  life.  The  literary  art,  in  the 
present  half-revolutionized  world,  does  not  as  a  rule  feed  its  practi- 
tioner, though  world-famous.  While  more  Frenchmen  read  more 
books  than  we,  they  pay  less  per  volume. 

Thousands  of  pages  of  Colette's  collected  works  were  first  printed 
in,  if  not  conceived  for  or  commissioned  by,  various  newspapers 
and  periodicals;  including  five  solid  years  of  drama  criticism,  in  the 
second-thickest  volume.  No  one  has  written  more  gravely  than  she  of 
the  waste  and  fatigue  of  hack  writing,  though  without  plaintiveness 
or  pretension.  But,  on  the  other  hand,  I  think  no  one  has  managed 
it  so  well,  with  so  much  to  show  for  it  in  the  end.  After  her  auto- 


12$  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

biographies  have  grown  familiar  around  the  world  as  one  great 
work,  perhaps  her  greatest,  then  surely  some  editor  will  select  and 
assemble  from  all  her  reporting,  column  writing,  and  familiar  essay 
writing  the  equivalent  of  an  important  diary,  notable  especially  for 
terse,  intense  aphoristic  passages,  which  surely  a  great  many  readers 
will  appreciate. 

All  her  life,  she  confided  to  us,  she  suffered  from  two  recurrent 
bad  dreams:  one  of  the  presses  rolling,  and  no  copy;  and  another  of 
coming  out  on  a  vast  vacuous  platform  or  stage  to  sing,  and  her  song 
lapsing.  In  those  old  days  of  her  acting  and  dancing,  did  she  also 
sing?  I  do  not  recall  any  mention  of  that.  Which  reminds  me:  just 
for  the  pleasure  of  it,  in  1924,  she  went  back  on  the  stage  in  Leopold 
Marchand's  dramatization  of  Cheri,  in  the  role  of  Lea,  with  the 
famous  comedienne  so  near  and  dear  to  her,  Marguerite  Moreno,  in 
the  role  of  Mme.  Peloux,  Cheri's  mother. 

In  1925  she  met  Maurice  Goudeket,  and,  before  long,  entered  into 
the  great  understanding  and  intimacy  with  him  which  continued  for 
the  rest  of  her  life.  As  I  have  said,  an  early  stage  of  that  relationship 
is  reflected,  but  not  (Goudeket  has  assured  us)  truly  narrated,  in 
Break  of  Day.  Both  in  content  and  in  form,  this  work  of  fiction  is 
especially  meaningful  and  central.  Central  even  in  the  way  of  paper 
and  printer's  ink,  it  is  to  be  found  in  Volume  VIII  of  the  Oeuvres 
Completes,  with  seven  octavo  volumes  before  it  and  seven  after  it. 
In  our  understanding  of  her  narrative  art  as  a  whole,  it  is  impres- 
sive as  a  kind  of  divide,  or  watershed,  halfway  between  her  story- 
telling and  her  vein  of  autobiographical  subjectivity,  and  indeed 
between  fact  and  fiction;  halfway  also  in  her  life,  between  the 
influence  of  her  unforgettable  mother  and  her  exemplary  and  help- 
ful third  marriage.  Even  her  style  in  it  is  transitional  and  momen- 
tous, a  matter  of  echoing,  reminiscing  effects  and  of  little  clarion 
notes  of  surprise  and  prophecy  here  and  there;  befitting  that  time  of 
life  which  has  been  called  the  old  age  of  youth  and  the  youth  of  old 
age,  a  time  fraught  with  heartache  and  youthful  tensions. 

An  almost  careless  admixture  of  autobiography  in  her  various 
forms  of  fiction  was  characteristic  of  Colette  even  in  her  salad  days, 
when  her  first  husband,  Willy,  bullied  her  into  writing,  and  she  let 


Images  of  Truth  •  130 

him  sign  her  books  temporarily.  The  heroine  of  L'Entrave  and  of 
The  Vagabond,  the  sad  divorcee  bravely  earning  her  living  as  an 
interpretative  dancer  in  vaudeville,  is  obviously  a  self-portrait. 
Upon  occasion  she  mingled  things  the  other  way  round,  carrying 
elements  of  her  yarn-spinning  over  into  the  early  volumes  of  non- 
fiction:  for  example,  the  most  important  of  her  tributes  to  her 
mother  is  entitled  La  Maison  de  Claudine,  as  one  might  say,  The 
Home  that  Claudine  Came  From. 

In  Break  of  Day,  which  is  in  story  form,  nouvelle  form,  the 
mingling  is  stranger  than  ever.  It  frankly  purports  to  be  an  experi- 
ence of  her  own,  and  she  portrays  herself  not  only  in  the  throes  of  it 
but  with  pen  in  hand,  fountain  pen  in  sunburned,  garden-hardened 
hand,  all  through  the  summer  night  and  in  the  dawning  blueness 
of  another  day,  day  after  day,  writing  it.  The  name  she  gives  herself 
in  it  is  the  same  as  on  the  title  page:  "Colette."  Furthermore,  she 
surrounds  herself  with  known  unfictitious  friends:  Carco,  the  suc- 
cessful novelist,  Segonzac,  the  famous  painter,  Therese  Dorny,  a 
beloved  comedienne  of  those  days,  and  others.  Only,  evidently,  Vial, 
a  young  man  whom  this  "Colette"  loves  and  decides  not  to  go  on 
loving,  is  fictitious. 

Most  nouvelles,  which  somehow  take  place  in  a  perpetual,  mobile 
present,  with  continuous  updating  of  the  past  and  continuous 
glimpsing  of  the  future,  have  simple  plots.  What  could  be  simpler 
than  the  plot  of  Break  of  Day?  A  literary  woman  in  her  fifties  has 
been  enjoying  an  amorous  intimacy  with  a  man  in  his  thirties.  Into 
the  picture  comes  a  strong  young  woman  who  has  made  up  her  mind 
to  marry  him.  Thus  far,  he  seems  not  to  have  fallen  in  love  with 
the  young  woman;  he  still  loves  the  older  woman;  but  she  is 
ashamed  to  compete,  perhaps  afraid  to.  She  gives  him  up  and  sends 
him  away,  and  resignedly  dedicates  herself  to  an  independent  way 
of  life,  with  her  good  friends  and  beautiful  cats,  with  her  garden 
and  orchard  and  vineyard,  with  her  literary  subject  matter  (includ- 
ing what  has  just  happened)  and  her  sense  of  style,  decisive  in 
morals  and  mores  as  well  as  in  literature. 

What  necessitated  this  renunciation?  That  is  suggested  to  us  by 
the  secondary  sense  of  the  title,  La  Naissance  du  Jour:  the  birth  of 


i^i  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

the  day,  the  coming  of  the  light,  revelation.  In  the  pattern  of  her 
intimacy  with  the  young  man — altered,  though  only  slightly  altered, 
by  the  marriageable  girl — it  has  been  revealed  to  her  that  he  will 
not  be  able  to  make  her  happy  much  longer;  neither  will  any  other 
young  or  youngish  man.  Worse  still,  it  is  going  to  be  impossible  for 
him  to  keep  from  making  her  unhappy.  To  suffer  from  ill-founded 
expectations  of  love  at  her  age  is  beneath  her  dignity.  It  is  her  duty, 
she  thinks,  to  avoid  unhappiness  of  that  order. 

In  his  tender,  distinguished  memoir,  Close  to  Colette,  Maurice 
Goudeket  states  that  Vial  was  not  modeled  upon  him  in  any  essen- 
tial. Certainly,  let  us  take  his  word  for  this,  although  the  dates  and 
overlapping  circumstances  to  be  noted  in  two  recently  published 
volumes  of  Colette's  letters  are  striking  and  must  have  meaning. 
When  Colette  and  he  drew  close  to  each  other  in  1925  they  were 
aged,  respectively,  fifty-two  and  thirty-five.  She  wrote  Break  of  Day 
in  her  house  in  Saint-Tropez,  which  is  the  scene  of  it,  and  in  a 
hotel  nearby  in  Provence  (when  Goudeket  was  in  Paris)  during  the 
autumn  of  1927  and  the  following  winter. 

We  often  thoughtlessly  say  that  art  takes  a  long  time,  whereas  life 
is  short,  "Ars  longa,  vita  brevis";  which  saying  seems  to  relieve  the 
embarrassment  of  unenergetic  artists,  but  is  not  necessarily  true.  In 
fact  it  may  be  quicker  and  easier  to  write  a  story  than  to  love  or 
hate,  settle  down  or  run  away,  marry  or  part.  The  creative  faculty 
is  able  to  do  some  experimenting  with  the  creator's  life,  which 
may  be  to  his  or  her  advantage. 

Certainly,  for  Colette,  the  renunciation  of  love  accounted  for  in 
this  fiction  of  "Colette"  and  Vial  was,  in  actuality,  the  road  not 
taken.  Her  loving  companionship  with  Goudeket  went  on  uninter- 
ruptedly; she  refers  to  him  in  almost  all  her  letters  from  1925  on.  In 
1935  they  got  around  to  a  formalization  or  legalization  of  their 
relationship,  and  he  was  her  perfect  helpmate,  watchdog,  adviser, 
editor,  and  (as  she  customarily  called  him)  "best  of  friends,"  until 
her  death  in  1954.  It  is  hard  to  think  of  Goudeket  as  ever  having 
been  a  mere  lover  and  beloved  (like  Vial),  so  greatly  did  he  transcend 
that  youthful  role  in  the  successive  decades.  He  has  not  written 
boastfully  of  the  transcendence;  but  pages  and  pages  of  her  elderly 


Images  of  Truth  •  132 

autobiographical  writing  have  a  marvelous  aura  of  appreciation  of 
him. 

The  most  moving  of  her  self-portraits  is  the  opening  chapter  of 
L'Etoile  Vesper,  which  is  all  interspersed  with  dialogue  of  husband 
and  wife,  the  least  wordy  dialogue  in  all  literature,  as  their  con- 
joined minds  at  that  late  date  scarcely  required  words.  When  the 
Germans  were  in  France,  with  a  weak  French  government  to  do 
their  bidding,  Goudeket,  being  of  Jewish  descent,  was  taken  in  a 
general  roundup  of  about  twelve  hundred  various  unfortunate  per- 
sons and  kept  in  the  concentration  camp  of  Compiegne  for  a 
while;  and  after  his  liberation  from  that  hellhole,  had  to  live 
half  free  and  half  in  hiding,  here  and  there  in  the  provinces, 
preyed  upon  by  the  bureaucracy  and  the  evil  police,  for  another 
eighteen  months.  Colette's  account  of  this  is  terse  and  stoic,  and  her 
account  of  his  home-coming,  at  last,  proud  and  reticently  tender. 

In  the  course  of  those  war  years  Colette  was  gradually  stricken 
with  extreme  arthritis,  and  for  the  last  decade  of  her  life  was  con- 
fined to  wheel  chairs  and  to  bed.  I  do  not  see  how  she  could 
possibly  have  accomplished  the  latter  part  of  her  lifework  without 
Goudeket's  affection  and  surveillance  and  help. 

All  this  is  a  far  cry  from  the  discouraged  realism  and  renunciation 
of  Break  of  Day.  We  may  conclude  that  it  was  a  hypothesis  which 
did  not  come  true,  and  that  Vial  was  a  personification.  What  Colette 
had  to  say  farewell  to  in  1927  and  1928  was  just  a  part  of  herself, 
and  just  one  aspect  of  love;  the  fierce  and  fearful  narcissism  of  al- 
ways wanting  to  mirror  oneself  in  the  beloved,  the  weak  possessive- 
ness,  the  hopeless,  unnecessary  jealousy,  and  the  point  of  pride. 
Indeed  it  is  a  wonderful  simplification  to  be  able  to  attribute  all 
one's  happiness  to  someone  and  to  blame  that  same  someone  for  all 
one's  unhappiness;  but  there  are  other  simplifications  for  us  as  we 
grow  older. 

The  word  "love"  in  a  love  story — and  in  almost  any  criticism  of 
fiction,  unless  the  critic  spells  out  his  meaning — is  apt  to  connote 
only  that  magic  realm  in  which,  as  Sir  Thomas  Browne  expressed 
it,  two  people  "so  become  one  that  they  both  become  two."  Per- 
haps there  is,  or  can  be,  some  truth  in  this  in  young  manhood 


755  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

and  young  womanhood;  certainly  it  grows  false  and  fatal  as  the 
years  pass.  Farewell  to  it,  Colette  said  in  this  story;  never  again!  And 
if  she  had  not  exorcised  and  uprooted  the  romanticism  in  herself  by 
some  such  creative  effort  as  this  broken-off  romance  with  imaginary 
Vial,  she  might  not  have  had  the  courage  to  entrust  the  rest  of  her 
life  and  her  lifework,  and  the  first  part  of  her  posthumous  reputa- 
tion, to  Goudeket. 

The  glory  of  the  true  history,  and  the  crowning  of  their  two  lives 
with  the  Oeuvres  Completes,  makes  one  almost  impatient  with  the 
melancholy  tale.  Here  we  may  see  a  disadvantage  in  the  combining 
of  real  and  personal  materials  with  the  composites  and  embodi- 
ments of  fiction.  Knowing  the  rest  of  Colette's  life  as  she  lived  it, 
we  cannot  take  the  somberness  of  her  narration  as  literally  as  she 
intended.  But  the  somber  implications  last,  and  may  serve  the  reader 
well,  in  his  own  thought  and  feeling.  Any  piece  of  authorship  that 
ends  in  leave-taking  and  in  the  solitude  of  the  one  left  behind 
(though  left  behind  to  write,  as  in  this  case)  touches  upon  every- 
one's loneliness  and  the  universal  anxiety.  It  reminds  us  of  the  one 
really  hateful  thing  about  life:  that  we  must  all  depart  from  it 
eventually,  or  to  state  the  matter  more  exactly,  that  it  must  depart 
from  us,  is  departing  from  us. 

But  Colette's  melancholy  writing  is  saved  from  dreariness  and 
desolation  by  her  stoic  sense.  It  is  a  somewhat  nobler  and,  I  may  say, 
better-natured  form  of  stoicism  than  the  mere  endurance  of  dis- 
tress. Though  she  never  jokes,  there  are  gleams  of  humor,  bitter 
mischief,  and  brilliancy  round  and  about  her  every  sad  saying  and 
every  poor  prospect.  Having  said  things  or  portrayed  things,  she 
rather  simply  forbids  herself  to  be  distressed  by  them  any  longer. 
She  forces  the  distressing  matter,  disappointment  or  injustice  or 
bad  luck,  all  the  way  down  inside  herself,  into  depths  of  literature, 
profundities  of  love,  and  other  almost  mystic  depositories  of  her 
thinking;  and  she  gives  us  to  understand,  induces  us  to  believe,  that 
she  is  strong  enough  to  be  able  to  do  this  without  too  many  of  those 
cross-purposes  of  the  mind  and  the  nervous  system  which  we  call 
neuroses. 

Break  of  Day  begins  with  a  letter  from  her  mother,  Sido,  to  her 


Images  of  Truth  •  134 

second  husband,  Henry  de  Jouvenel,  declining  an  invitation  to  visit 
them  in  Paris,  the  year  before  her  death;  other  maternal  letters,  in 
whole  or  in  part,  are  interspersed  in  the  text;  and  Colette  handles 
a  good  many  of  her  Active  incidents  and  arguments  as  it  were  in  a 
musical  composition,  variations  on  themes  of  Sido's  life  and  Sido's 
thought;  notably,  an  intense  responsiveness  to  physical  beauty, 
which  is  not  often  characteristic  of  the  female  sex;  fastidiousness 
and  pride,  especially  with  regard  to  the  imperfections  of  the  body  in 
the  decline  of  life;  and  great  work-morality.  It  makes  a  strange  im- 
mortal atmosphere:  a  ghostly  presence,  handing  down  feminine 
ideas  from  generation  to  generation. 

The  reason  Sido  declined  to  visit  Colette  and  Jouvenel  was  that 
a  pink  cactus  which  someone  had  given  her  was  in  bud.  In  untrop- 
ical  France,  she  explained,  it  was  apt  to  blossom  only  every  fourth 
year.  If  she  missed  it  this  time,  she  might  not  live  to  see  another 
blossoming.  This  is  on  the  first  page,  and  on  the  second  page,  Colette 
imagines  her  mother's  joyous  concentration,  with  an  enraptured 
expression  smoothing  all  the  wrinkles  out  of  her  old  face,  bending 
down  and  watching  the  place  in  the  midst  of  the  knife-edged 
plant  where  the  promise  of  the  flower  was  thrusting — "a  woman 
who,  like  a  flowering  plant  herself,  had  gone  on  indefatigably  un- 
folding and  opening  for  three  quarters  of  a  century" — and  on  the 
third  page,  we  have  Colette's  acknowledgment  of  the  similarity  of 
her  own  almost  perverse,  blissful  gaze  at  her  Vial  as  he  slipped  out 
of  her  bed,  out  of  her  house,  at  daybreak. 

When  Sido,  in  her  mid-seventies,  played  chess  with  a  little  shop- 
keeper in  her  village,  she  kept  on  the  alert  for  any  sign  of  her 
senescence.  "When  I  become  too  disgraceful  and  impotent  at  it,  I 
shall  renounce  it  as  I  have  renounced  other  things,  as  a  matter  of 
decency." 

In  still  another  letter  the  solitary  old  woman,  though  in  danger  of 
fatal  illness,  objected  absolutely  to  a  family  plan  of  hiring  someone 
to  spend  the  night  in  the  house  with  her.  No  poor  substitute  com- 
panionship in  the  wee  small  hours  for  her!  she  protested,  and  item- 
ized the  miseries  involved:  the  rumpled  bed  and  the  unpleasant 
toilet  bowl,  alien  inhalation  and  exhalation  in  the  dark,  and  the 


ij5  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

humiliating  prospect  of  having  to  wake  up  with  someone  else  in  the 
room.  "Death  is  preferable,"  she  said,  "it  is  less  improper." 

No  wonder  that  the  daughter  of  such  a  woman  minded  the  com- 
pulsions of  love  as  she  began  to  feel  un-young.  Goudeket  has  told  us 
that,  even  as  an  octogenarian,  with  every  excuse  of  arthritic  im- 
mobility and  last-minute  literary  endeavor,  his  wife  would  not 
admit  him  to  her  room  in  the  morning  until  the  tasks  and 
technicalities  of  her  toilet  and  make-up  and  wardrobe  had  been 
completed. 

Colette's  father  also  had  cherished  a  packet  of  letters  written  to 
him  by  Sido  when  she  had  been  obliged  to  spend  some  time  in  a 
nursing  home  after  an  operation.  After  his  death  she  found  them 
all  in  his  desk,  and  expressed  a  sort  of  disapproval.  "What  a  pity 
that  he  loved  me  so  much!  It  was  his  love  for  me  that  annihilated, 
one  by  one,  the  fine  faculties  that  might  have  inclined  him  toward 
literature  and  science.  He  chose  to  keep  dreaming  of  me  instead, 
tormenting  himself  about  me;  and  I  found  this  inexcusable." 

It  is  what  I  call  work-morality.  According  to  the  idealism  that 
the  strong-spirited  mother  and  the  gifted  emancipated  daughter  had 
in  common,  it  is  wrong  to  pride  oneself  on  any  mere  greatness  of 
love  or  mere  intensity  about  it  or  mere  continuation  of  it.  Let  us  ask 
ourselves,  instead,  what  results  from  it  in  the  other  areas  of  our 
lives,  lifelong:  perhaps  a  strengthening  and  steadying  of  the  various 
functions  of  head  and  heart,  perhaps  not;  possibly  a  tribute  to  it  in 
some  way,  by  means  of  intelligence  and  talent,  or  it  may  be,  alas, 
nothing  but  inhibition  and  vapidity. 

Break  of  Day  is  a  story  of  literature  as  well  as  love.  When  Colette 
declared  in  it  that  she  felt  duty-bound  not  to  subject  herself  to 
untimely,  unnecessary  unhappiness,  the  duty  that  she  had  in  mind 
was  her  vocation  of  letters.  As  of  that  date,  the  time  had  come  for 
her  to  lay  in  a  supply  of  her  customary  lifelong  pale-blue  paper, 
to  take  pen  in  hand,  to  rediscover  in  her  memory  the  great  traces 
of  nature  and  human  nature,  the  pleasures  and  sorrows  of  the 
prime  of  life,  and  to  convey  them  to  others'  minds,  readers'  minds, 
by  means  of  well-focused  language  and  logical  grammar  and  clarify- 
ing syntax  and  sweet  euphony;  and  never  again  to  be  distracted  from 


Images  of  Truth  •  75 6 

literature  by  life.  "Cold  with  emotion  is  the  bronzed  hand,  which 
races  upon  the  page,  stops,  crosses  something  out,  and  starts  again; 
cold  with  a  youthful  emotion." 

From  that  time  on,  pride  and  courage  and  vocation  were  to  be 
the  predominant  moral  concepts  in  her  work,  and  pantheism  was  to 
be  its  principal  emotion,  transcending  individual  or  intrapersonal 
feelings.  I  find  the  imagery  of  nature  worship  in  Break  of  Day,  even 
in  English,  enchanting.  Turn  the  page  now,  and  see  for  yourself:  the 
ripening  color  of  the  Saint-Tropez  afternoon,  after  the  siesta,  with 
a  cat  also  rousing  from  its  siesta,  yawning  like  a  flower;  and  then 
the  descent  of  the  north  wind,  the  mistral,  anesthetizing  all  that 
part  of  the  earth  between  the  Alps  and  the  Mediterranean;  the 
early-morning  seascape,  blue-black,  and  scarcely  awake  yet,  when 
Colette  went  wading  out  into  it,  then  trudged  back  up  the  beach 
with  a  load  of  seaweed,  to  make  a  mulch  around  her  tangerine 
trees;  the  beautiful  child  holding  a  rose,  on  the  threshold  of  Sido's 
sickroom,  afraid  of  her  because  she  was  dying;  even  Vial's  naked 
beauty — his  body  somehow  more  exact,  more  aroused,  more  ex- 
pressive than  his  face — with  antique  patina  of  sunshine  and  salt 
water,  and  a  bluish  light  shining  on  his  shoulders,  a  greenish  light 
girding  his  loins.  Death  and  sex  also  subordinated  to  a  general 
concept  of  the  Tightness  of  nature. . . . 

If  one  is  religious  at  all,  in  the  pantheistic  way,  when  the  fateful 
farewell  time  comes,  it  may  be  easier  to  forfeit  and  to  take  leave  of 
things  beloved,  things  more  or  less  perfect,  at  their  peak — the  pink 
cactus  in  bloom — than  of  any  lesser  thing,  worn  away  or  overblown. 
In  case  of  the  more  acute  and  tragic  deprivation,  one  can  at  least 
keep,  for  remembrance  and  for  a  kind  of  worship,  a  godlike  image, 
a  concept  of  heaven  on  earth.  So,  at  the  time  of  writing  Break  of 
Day,  Colette  evidently  thought. 


Beginning  in  1948,  continuing  through  1949,  concluding  in  1950, 
the  illustrious  old  publishing  company  of  Flammarion  issued  the 
collected  edition   to  which  I   have  kept  referring  in   this  essay; 


1 37  -  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

prepared  for  the  press,  as  its  colophon  specifies,  by  the  author's 
husband.  "Thus,  at  the  conclusion  of  a  long  career,"  wrote  the 
collected  one  in  a  tiny  general  preface,  "thus  and  only  thus  is  the 
writer  enabled  to  compute  the  total  accumulated  weight  of  his  life- 
work.  At  this  point  only  is  he  entitled  to  rejoice  in  his  own  good 
opinion;  also  his  real  anguish  commences."  Anguish  of  unrevis- 
ability,  irremediability — fundamental  though  much  ignored  prin- 
ciple of  ethics  as  well  as  aesthetics! 

In  other  brief  sentences  scattered  all  through  the  collection  she 
sounded  the  same  proud,  uneasy  note;  glanced  back  disappointedly 
but  dispassionately  upon  every  work  in  which  she  could  detect  un- 
worthiness,  frivolity,  mannerism.  So  many  pages  having  been  writ- 
ten in  a  great  rush,  of  dire  necessity,  she  was  afraid  of  their  seeming 
not  polished  enough.  Here  and  there,  alas,  had  she  not  failed  to 
discover  the  absolutely  suitable  word,  to  form  the  perfectly  felicitous 
phrase?  As  she  had  been  dependent  on  incidental  inspiration  so 
frequently,  with  this  fortuitous  commitment  and  then  that,  perhaps 
her  entire  lifework  lacked  cohesiveness,  which  the  younger  genera- 
tion, and  in  due  course  posterity,  might  notice  and  deplore. 

Let  no  one  laugh  or  even  smile  at  her  unnecessary  humility, 
fastidious  and  fretful  apologia.  Instead,  let  the  multitude  of  fellow 
writers  hang  their  heads  in,  relatively  speaking,  shame;  and  let 
the  shameless,  the  unhumble,  the  uneducable,  despair  and  cease 
and  desist  from  writing  altogether;  and  let  the  very  young  with 
any  talent,  in  high  school,  at  universities,  at  writers'  conferences, 
on  newspapers,  wherever  they  may  be,  dedicate  themselves  with 
stricter  and  fonder  vows  than  the  usual!  It  seems  to  me  that  the 
time  has  come — a  part  of  the  twentieth-century  revolution  being 
against  culture — to  speak  out  in  this  connection  with  some  porten- 
tousness  and  intensity.  In  the  more  serious  sects  of  religion  per- 
fectionism is  a  sin:  and  according  to  the  present  science  or 
semiscience  of  psychology,  no  doubt  it  is  psychopathological.  But  in 
the  literary  art  it  is  just  method;  the  one  and  only  good  and 
sound  method. 

It  is  an  essential  feature  of  the  artistic  temperament:  pride  of 
greatness — and  heartbreaking  ideal  of  greatness  for  those  who  know 


Images  of  Truth  •  138 

that  they  personally  are  second  rate,  which  keeps  them  from  de- 
clining to  third  rate  or  fourth  rate — taking  all  that  has  been  done 
already  as  a  matter  of  course,  a  matter  of  no  further  interest;  climb- 
ing up  on  the  previous  proud  accomplishment,  not  to  glory  in  it, 
just  to  see  what  may  lie  beyond,  perhaps  accomplishable,  if  one 
lives  long  enough.  From  which  must  derive  for  aging  artists  a 
certain  chronic  bitterness,  and  for  second-raters,  a  sickness  at  heart. 
For  we  never  do  live  long  enough.  "Ars  longa,  vita  brevis." 

It  can  be  justified  in  religion,  come  to  think  of  it!  Bossuet,  the 
glorious  baroque  theologian  and  preacher,  explained  it  in  some- 
one's funeral  sermon:  "We  are  inevitably  less  than  our  thoughts, 
God  having  taken  pains  to  indicate  by  means  of  them  His  in- 
finity/' Without  changing  his  saying  much:  artists,  by  the  great 
pains  they  take  and  by  the  extent  of  their  intelligence,  always 
greater  than  their  ability — along  with  other  voices  in  the  enormous 
concert  of  the  world,  cacophony  of  the  cosmos — indicate  and  cele- 
brate infiniteness.  And  surely  there  is  not  in  the  world  at  present 
a  greater  exponent  of  this  than  Sidonie  Gabrielle  Goudeket,  nee, 
and  known  as,  Colette. 

We  know  how  the  aesthetic  conscience  and  high,  tender,  and 
constant  virtuosity  began  in  her  case.  She  recalled  a  very  early,  very 
significant  slight  incident  for  us.  It  is  in  a  commissioned  text,  ac- 
companying some  fine  color  plates  of  exotic  butterflies,  hack  writing 
— an  account  of  the  butterfly  collecting  of  her  two  adolescent 
brothers;  over-nice  and  wasteful.  Every  evening  they  would  sit  in 
judgment  upon  the  day's  catch  and  relentlessly  eliminate  every 
unworthy  specimen.  "Thus,  aged  seven  or  eight,  I  learned  that 
only  beauty  deserves  preservation,  and  that  the  sons  of  men  in 
their  vainglory  are  never  altogether  satisfied  with  anything." 
Neither,  it  may  be  concluded,  are  the  daughters  of  women;  least 
of  all,  the  daughter  of  Sido. 

Supreme  rememberer!  how  frequently,  and  with  what  youthful 
sensitivity  until  the  very  end,  her  mind  turned  upon  those  early 
days!  Perhaps  I  have  laid  too  much  stress  on  her  dissatisfaction  with 
the  style  and  form  of  this  and  that  small  part  of  her  lifelong  crea- 
tion. Certainly  she  regretted  its  incompletions  more  than  its  im- 


J5p  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

perfections,  looking  longingly  at  certain  mysterious  untouched 
themes,  unarticulated  messages,  especially  things  about  her  mother. 
She  specified  in  the  final  preface  to  La  Maison  de  Claudine  in  1949 
that,  when  Sido  died,  she  seemed  not  to  have  departed  upon  any 
remote  path  into  abstract  eternity;  instead,  she  said,  "she  has  made 
herself  better  known  to  me  as  I  have  grown  older."  Perhaps  the 
extraordinary  matriarch  had  deposited  things  in  her  mind  that  she 
had  not  yet  discovered.  "I  began  this  discovery  late  in  life.  What 
better  could  I  conclude  with?" 

I  remember  thinking,  when  I  read  this  page,  that  she  might  still 
find  time  to  paint  one  more  filial  portrait.  She  gave  it  up,  or 
perhaps  put  it  off  too  long.  Almost  everyone  in  the  shadow  of  death 
likes  to  plan  something  up  ahead;  it  gives  one  a  feeling  of  a  certain 
extension  of  one's  lease  of  life.  But  not  extremely  fearful,  cer- 
tainly disregarding  her  bodily  desuetude  and  the  unabating  pain 
and  the  increasing  awkwardness,  she  kept  on  with  her  exquisite 
journalism.  Often,  in  the  past,  photographers  had  concentrated  on 
her  strong  hand  with  well-fleshed  and  tapering  fingers  and  unpro- 
truding  fingernails,  poised  over  pages  of  her  work  in  progress,  or 
reposing  amid  sulphur-glass  paperweights  and  other  bibelots  and 
small  useful  objects  in  elegant  disorder.  It  appeared  not  greatly 
changed  in  the  last  photographs.  It  always  either  held,  or  was  about 
to  take  up,  one  of  her  accustomed  extra-thick  pens. 

She  lived  out  her  life  in  the  heart  of  Paris,  in  the  Palais-Royal, 
that  extensive  rectangle  of  not  very  palatial  architecture  built  by 
Louis  XV's  cousin  Philippe-Egalite  who  was  not  opposed  to  the 
Revolution,  whom  the  revolutionists  decapitated  nevertheless.  It  is 
said  to  be  the  first  apartment  house  ever  erected;  that  is,  the  first 
conglomeration  of  fairly  small  sets  of  rooms  designed  to  be  rented 
to  independent  individuals  of  middling  income.  Inside  the  rectangle 
is  a  colonnade,  a  playground,  statuary,  flower  beds,  a  little  melodious 
uplifted  water,  and  an  orderly  plantation  of  modest  trees. 

It  suited  Colette.  The  bed  in  which  she  lay  bedridden  was  placed 
alongside  of  the  window,  with  a  mobile  desk  that  she  could  pull  up 
close  over  her  knees.  She  slept  very  little,  troubled  by  the  usual 
nervousness  of  the  aged  as  well  as  by  the  caprices  of  unrelenting 


Images  of  Truth  •  140 

arthritis  and  by  her  genius,  and  often  worked  at  night.  Over  her 
head  hung  that  electric  light  sheathed  with  blue  paper  referred  to 
in  the  title  of  her  memoir  of  1949,  Le  Fanal  Bleu  (The  Blue  Beacon). 
To  nocturnal  strollers  in  the  colonnade  and  the  arbitrary  garden 
area  down  below  it  became  as  familiar  as  that  star  referred  to  in 
the  title  of  her  memoir  in  1946,  L'Etoile  Vesper  (The  Evening  Star), 
the  folding  star  of  shepherds,  Sappho's  star.  Colette's  modesty 
about  her  authorship  was  not  constant,  thank  heaven;  it  was 
traversed  by  almost  youthful  gleams  of  natural  and  joyous  impor- 
tance and  by  the  sense  of  immortality  looming.  And,  especially 
when  she  worked  late,  she  must  often  have  thought  of  Flaubert, 
who  more  than  anyone  else  influenced  her  in  the  matter  of  style, 
verbal  workmanship,  justness  of  diction,  melopoeia;  Flaubert  who 
kept  such  a  regular  nocturnal  working  schedule  that  the  bargemen 
up  and  down  the  Seine  used  his  study  window  as  a  lighthouse. 

There  is  a  text  expressive  of  her  belief  in  the  literary  art,  which 
let  me  now  translate,  carefully,  not  without  vanity  of  my  own 
style,  as  a  somewhat  more  appropriate  tribute  to  this  writer  whom 
I  love  than  any  10,000- word  exegesis.  In  her  young  womanhood 
she  made  friends  with  the  noted  courtesan,  Caroline  Otero,  known 
as  La  Belle  Otero;  a  sort  of  friendship  of  curiosity  to  which  writers 
naturally  are  inclined.  When  she  came  to  write  Cheri,  apparently 
this  world-famous  beauty — with  thorough  changes,  from  brunette 
to  blonde,  and  from  Spanish  to  one  hundred  per  cent  French,  and 
so  on — posed  in  her  mind  for  certain  aspects  of  the  characterization 
of  wonderful  Lea. 

Years  later,  sixteen  years  later,  she  wrote  a  description  of  Otero, 
in  Mes  Apprentissages,  and  brought  into  it  with  seeming  casualness, 
with  little  touches  in  sentence  after  sentence,  and  with  wondrous 
authority  at  the  close  of  the  second  paragraph,  an  article  of 
creative  faith:  "That  beautiful  body,  so  arrogant  in  its  declining 
years,  defiant  of  every  illness  and  evil  frequentation  and  the  passage 
of  time,  that  well-nourished  body,  with  plumpness  drawn  smooth 
over  its  muscles,  with  luminous  complexion,  amber  by  daylight, 
pale  in  the  evening:  I  vowed  that  someday  I  would  describe  it, 
painstakingly  and  disinterestedly.  We  can  never  produce  perfect 


iji  •  An  Introduction  to  Colette 

likenesses  of  the  faces  dearest  to  us;  we  slip  into  passionate  deforma- 
tion somehow.  And  who  ever  will  undertake  to  set  down  faithfully 
all  the  traits  of  true  love? 

"Instead  we  record,  with  words  as  with  paintbrush,  the  flaming 
redness  of  outworn  foliage,  a  green  meteor  amid  the  blue  of  mid- 
night, a  moment  of  the  dawn,  a  disaster.  .  .  .  Spectacles  not  notable 
for  their  significance  or  their  profundity,  but  charged  by  us  with 
premonition  and  emphasis.  For  the  time  to  come  they  will  bear 
the  imprint  of  the  four  numerals  of  a  given  year;  and  mark  the 
culmination  of  some  error,  the  decline  of  some  prosperity.  There- 
fore, it  is  not  for  us  to  say  with  any  assurance  that  we  have  ever 
painted,  contemplated,  or  described  in  vain." 


Chapter  Five 

A  Call  on  Colette  and  Goudeket 


Love  is  a  secondary  passion  to  those  who  love  most,  a  primary  passion  to 
those  ivho  love  least.  —Walter  savage  landor 


When  I  went  abroad  in  1952  and  called  on  my  old  and  dear  friend 
Cocteau,  who  was  Colette's  neighbor  in  the  Palais-Royal,  he  told 
me  that  it  had  been  one  of  her  most  dolorous  weeks;  her  arthritis 
clamping  down  tight  and  chiseling  away  at  her.  In  spite  of  which, 
he  thought,  surely  she  would  receive  me,  especially  if  he  telephoned 
and  asked  her  to.  For  various  reasons,  I  scarcely  wanted  his  powers 
of  persuasion  so  exercised  in  my  behalf. 

Later  in  the  week  I  found  Anita  Loos,  the  dramatizer  of  Gigi, 
dining  at  Florial's,  out  beside  the  fountain  under  the  honey  locusts, 
and  she  confirmed  the  bad  news  of  the  arthritis;  nevertheless,  she 
encouraged  me.  "Don't  write,"  was  her  advice.  "M.  Goudeket, 
the  guardian  husband,  will  think  it  his  duty  to  ward  you  off.  Just 
take  a  chance,  ring  the  doorbell.  At  least  you  will  see  him,  or  you 
will  see  Pauline,  the  perfect  servant.  They're  both  worth  seeing." 

But  I  could  not  imagine  myself  standing  all  unannounced  on 
their  doorstep,  nor  think  of  any  suitable  initial  utterance  to  the 
doorkeeper.  Then  I  recalled  the  fact  that  when  my  young  friend 
Patrick  O'Higgins  wanted  to  get  in  and  take  photographs  of  her, 
he  armed  himself  with  roses.  With  neither  his  infectious  half-Irish 
gaiety  nor  his  half-French  manners,  perhaps  I  could  afford  an  even 
more  imposing  bouquet,  to  compensate.  I  sought  out  the  major 
florist  near  the  Palais-Royal,  and  asked  if  they  knew  which  size 
and  shape  and  shade  and  redolence  of  rose  Mme.  Colette  favored. 
142 


j^5  •  A  Call  on  Colette  and  Goudeket 

They  knew  exactly:  I  forget  its  name;  it  had  a  stout  but  not  in- 
flexible stem,  and  petals  wine-red  on  the  inside,  brownish  on  the 
outside. 

In  the  doorway  the  perfect  servant  gave  me  a  good  look  and 
concluded  that  she  had  never  laid  eyes  on  me  before.  I  held  the 
roses  up  a  little;  I  thrust  them  forward.  It  brought  to  my  mind  an 
encounter  once  upon  a  time  with  a  fine  police  dog  when,  thank 
heaven,  I  had  in  hand  a  good  thick  slice  of  bread  for  the  purpose  of 
conciliation.  I  made  polite  statements  about  my  not  really  expect- 
ing Mme.  Colette  to  see  me  but,  on  the  other  hand,  not  wanting 
her  to  hear  from  M.  Cocteau  or  Mile.  Loos  or  anyone  of  my  sojourn 
in  Paris  and  departure  without  having  paid  my  respects.  Pauline 
evidently  regarded  this  as  all  hypocrisy  but  appreciated  the  style  of 
it.  She  took  the  roses,  forbade  me  to  depart  without  being  seen  by 
M.  Goudeket,  ordered  me  to  sit  down  and  be  patient,  and  went 
away  very  neatly. 

The  Palais-Royal  is  a  quiet  building.  I  could  hear  a  heavy  chair 
being  pushed  back  somewhere;  I  could  hear  footsteps  along  a 
corridor,  certainly  not  Pauline's  footsteps,  heavier  and  not  so  neat. 
Facing  me  was  a  double  door  composed  of  panes  of  glass  backed 
by  permanent  light-colored  curtains,  which  made  everything  there 
in  the  hallway  rather  bright  but  nothing  really  visible. 

"What  is  it,  Pauline?  Who  is  it,  Pauline?  But  no,  but  no,  not 
that  vase,  not  for  roses.  Oh,  they're  magnificent,  aren't  they?  So 
long-legged  and  in  such  quantity!  Leave  them  here  on  my  bed,  for 
the  moment." 

Though  the  farthest  thing  in  the  world  from  a  young  voice,  it 
had  a  sound  of  unabated  femininity,  and  it  could  never  have  been 
livelier  at  any  age.  It  was  slightly  hoarse,  but  with  the  healthy 
hoarseness  of  certain  birds;  nothing  sore-throated  about  it. 

"Who  brought  them,  Pauline?  What  young  man?  The  one  of 
the  other  day,  the  Swiss  one?  But,  my  poor  dear  Pauline,  if  he's 
gray-haired,  what  makes  you  think  he's  young?  If  only  you'd  re- 
member names,  so  much  simpler." 

Thus  she  sputtered  or,  to  be  more  exact,  warbled,  and  I  gathered 
that  Pauline  withdrew  from  the  room  in  mid-sentence;  the  hoarse 


Images  of  Truth  •  144 

and  sweet  phrases  murmured  to  a  close.  Presently  I  heard  a  manly 
mumble  of  M.  Goudeket,  meant  for  me  not  to  be  able  to  under- 
stand; and  presently  there  he  was  with  me  in  the  hallway,  wel- 
coming, at  least  half  welcoming. 

He  declared  that  he  remembered  me,  which,  remarkable  man 
that  he  is,  may  have  been  the  case.  "As  for  Colette,"  he  added,  in 
a  sort  of  aside,  "I  am  afraid  she  is  not  in  good  enough  health  to  see 
you." 

Using  his  arm  like  a  great  wand  or  baton  he  motioned  me  into 
a  room  which  appeared  to  be  his  room,  where  there  was  a  display 
of  bibliophily  and  an  important  desk. 

In  France  I  always  observe  a  great  difference  between  politesse 
and  just  politeness.  Politesse  is  stronger  and  can  be  made  quite  un- 
comfortable for  one  or  both  of  the  participants.  M .  Goudeket  seated 
himself  at  the  desk,  assigned  me  a  chair  vis-a-vis,  and  questioned  me 
for  half  or  three  quarters  of  an  hour  until  he  became  convinced 
that  I  truly,  unselfishly,  loved  Colette's  work  and  would  continually 
do  my  best  to  further  a  general  love  of  it  in  vast  and  remunerative 
America. 

I  told  him  what  I  thought:  a  number  of  the  most  interesting  titles 
for  export  to  this  country  had  not  yet  been  translated  (still  have 
not) — especially  her  reminiscences,  which  ought  to  be  combined  in 
one  fat  volume,  suitable  for  a  large-circulation  book  club.  I  went 
on  to  say,  in  a  less  businesslike  manner,  that  I  could  not  think  of  any 
autobiography  by  a  woman  to  compare  with  this  work  of  hers. 
Most  women,  throughout  literary  history,  have  been  rather  secretive, 
therefore  objective.  Not  even  Mme.  de  Sevign£  is  in  Colette's  class 
for  width  and  depth  of  revelation,  for  fond  instructiveness,  and 
for  poetical  quality.  This  comparison,  though  perhaps  hackneyed, 
seemed  to  gratify  M.  Goudeket. 

Then  I  mentioned  Colette's  particular  gift  of  brief  wise  commen- 
tary, epigram,  and  aphorism.  As  a  rule  this  is  not  one  of  the  abilities 
of  the  fair  sex.  Logan  Pearsall  Smith's  famous  Treasury  of  English 
Aphorisms  included,  if  I  remembered  rightly,  only  two  authoresses. 
This  information  made  M .  Goudeket  smile. 


i<f5  '  A  Call  on  Colette  and  Goudeket 

As  soon  as  cordiality  prevailed  between  us,  our  conversation 
flagged.  Despairing  by  that  time  of  seeing  the  beloved  authoress,  I 
looked  at  my  watch  and  alluded  to  the  fact  that  I  had  another 
engagement,  beginning  to  be  pressing. 

This  apparently  astonished  M.  Goudeket.  "But  I  thought  you 
wished  to  pay  your  respects  to  Colette,"  he  protested.  "Surely  you 
can  spare  just  a  few  more  minutes!  Speaking  for  Colette,  alas,  I  am 
afraid  she  will  be  deeply  disappointed  if  you  don't." 

He  said  this  with  rare  aplomb,  disregarding  what  he  had  said 
upon  my  arrival,  exactly  as  though,  at  some  point  in  our  interview, 
he  had  been  able  to  slip  out  of  the  room  and  reconsult  her  about  me, 
or  as  though  she  had  communicated  to  him  by  telepathy. 

"Colette  has  changed  her  mind  about  seeing  you,"  he  said.  "She 
is  feeling  in  rather  better  health  today  than  usual.  Come,  we  will 
knock  on  her  door."  He  knocked  good  and  hard  and  then  ushered 
me  in.  He  addressed  her  as  "dear  friend"  and  he  called  me  "M. 
Ouess-cotte." 

Let  me  not  flatter  myself  that  the  great  writer  had  been  primping 
for  me  all  that  half  or  three  quarters  of  an  hour;  but  certainly  I 
have  never  seen  a  woman  of  any  age  so  impeccable  and  im- 
maculate and  (so  to  speak)  gleaming.  Let  me  not  try  to  describe 
her:  her  paleness  of  enamel  and  her  gemlike  eyes  and  her  topknot 
of  spun  glass,  and  so  forth.  There  was  evidence  of  pain  in  her  face 
but  not  the  least  suggestion  of  illness.  What  came  uppermost  in  my 
mind  at  the  sight  of  her  was  just  rejoicing.  Oh,  oh,  I  said  to  myself, 
she  is  not  going  to  die  for  a  long  while!  Or,  if  she  does,  it  will  have 
to  be  sudden  death  somehow,  burning  death,  freezing  death,  or 
thunderbolt  of  some  kind.  The  status  quo  certainly  is  life,  from 
head  to  foot. 

She  arched  her  neck  back  away  from  me  and  turned  her  head 
somewhat  circularly,  though  in  only  a  segment  of  circle.  She  worked 
her  eyes,  staring  for  a  split  second,  then  narrowing  them,  then 
staring  again,  so  that  all  their  degrees  of  brightness  showed.  She 
gave  me  her  hand,  strong  with  lifelong  penmanship  as  well  as 
gardening  and  the  care  of  pets. 


Images  of  Truth  •  146 

"Please  sit  on  my  bed,"  she  said.  "Yes,  there  at  the  foot,  where 
I  can  look  straight  at  you.  Arthritic  as  I  am,  it  wearies  me — or  per- 
haps I  should  say  it  bores  me — to  turn  my  head  too  often." 

Oh,  the  French  euphemism,  which  is  stoicism  in  a  way!  Evidently 
it  was  not  a  matter  of  weariness  or  boredom  but  of  excruciation.  A 
moment  later,  in  my  enjoyment  and  excitement  of  being  there,  I 
made  a  clumsy  move  sideways,  so  that  the  weight  of  my  elbow 
rested  on  the  little  mound  of  her  feet  under  the  coverlet.  She 
winced  but  did  not  scowl.  I  apologized  miserably,  which  she  put  a 
stop  to  by  pulling  the  coverlet  up  above  her  ankles,  in  a  dear 
humorous  exhibitionism. 

"Do  you  see?  I  have  excellent  feet.  Do  you  remember?  I  have 
always  worn  sandals,  indifferent  to  severe  criticism,  braving  in- 
clement weather;  and  now  I  have  my  reward  for  it,  do  you  not 
agree?" 

Yes,  I  did  remember,  I  did  agree.  She  exercised  the  strong  and 
silken  arches  for  me  and  twinkled  the  straight,  red-lacquered  toes. 

On  the  whole,  I  must  admit,  our  dialogue  or  trialogue  was  not 
very  remarkable.  I  had  been  warned  of  her  deafness;  indeed  the 
beautiful  first  page  of  Le  Fanal  Bleu  is  a  warning.  Now,  as  I  try 
to  recall  things  that  she  said,  I  find  that  they  were  not  very  well 
focused  on  the  cues  that  her  husband  and  I  gave  her;  she  only 
half  heard  us.  She  devoted  all  possible  cleverness  to  mitigating 
and  disguising  the  vacuum  between  us,  and  therefore  did  not  shine 
in  other  ways,  as  she  might  have  done  in  solo  performance. 

Naturally  her  husband  knew  best  how  to  pitch  his  voice  for  her 
ear,  or  perhaps  she  could  somewhat  read  his  lips.  "M.  Ouess-cotte 
thinks  your  autobiographies  will  have  the  greatest  success  in 
America,"  he  said. 

"Oh,  has  he  read  them?  Oh,  the  Americans  are  greater  readers 
than  the  poor  French,  aren't  they,  monsieur?" 

"M.  Ouess-cotte  is  perhaps  exceptional,"  her  husband  murmured 
sagaciously. 

"Have  you  read  Le  Pur  et  I'lrripur?"  she  asked.  "I  happened  to 
read  it  myself  the  other  day  and  I  took  pride  in  it.  I  believe  it  to  be 
my  best  book.  It  is  the  book  in  which  I  make  my  personal  con- 


7^7  •  A  Call  on  Colette  and  Goudeket 

tribution  to  the  general  repository  of  knowledge  of  the  various 
forms  of  sensuality,  do  you  remember?" 

I  remembered  so  well  that  I  recognized  this  last  sentence  as  a 
quotation  from  it,  almost  word  for  word:  "Le  tresor  de  la  connais- 
sance  des  sens  .  .  "  It  is  a  work  of  gospel  truth  to  my  way  of  think- 
ing, and  has  greatly  guided  me  in  my  own  life  and  love  life. 

When  we  fell  silent  M.  Goudeket  gave  us  a  helping  hand,  a  help- 
ing sentence.  "M .  Ouess-cotte  suggests  that  I  ought  to  make  a  selec- 
tion of  your  thoughts  in  aphoristic  form  which  I  should  find  here 
and  there  throughout  your  work;  something  like  the  Pensees  of 
Pascal  or  of  Joubert." 

"But  no,  certainly  not,  my  poor  friend!  You  know  perfectly 
well,  I  am  no  thinker,  I  have  no  pensees.  I  feel  almost  a  timidity 
and  almost  a  horror  of  all  that.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  thanks  be  to 
God,  perhaps  the  most  praiseworthy  thing  about  me  is  that  I 
have  known  how  to  write  like  a  woman,  without  anything  moral- 
istic or  theoretical,  without  promulgating." 

And  she  expressed  this  bit  of  negative  femininism  in  an  em- 
phatic manner,  with  her  sweet  voice  hardened,  sharpened.  "I  am 
a  genuinely  womanly  writer,"  she  insisted.  "I  am  the  person  in  the 
world  the  least  apt  to  moralize  or  philosophize." 

I  felt  challenged  by  this  seeming  humility.  I,  as  you  might  say, 
took  the  floor  and  discoursed  with  eloquence  for  two  or  three  or 
perhaps  five  minutes.  I  can  recall  everything  I  said,  but,  for  some 
strange  reason,  I  seem  to  hear  it  in  English,  not  in  French.  Is  it 
possible  that  in  my  opinionatedness  I  slipped  into  my  native  tongue 
without  noticing?  I  seem  to  see  Mme.  Colette's  face  turning  mask- 
like, as  though  she  had  suddenly  grown  much  deafer;  and  M. 
Goudeket,  than  whom  nobody  could  be  less  stupid,  looked  a  little 
stupefied. 

It  amounted  to  my  giving  her  the  lie  direct.  Whether  she  liked  it 
or  not,  I  declared,  she  was  a  thinker,  she  did  philosophize.  In  volume 
after  volume  she  has  enabled  us  to  trace  exactly  the  stages  of  her 
development  of  mind,  her  reasoning  in  its  several  categories  and 
connections.  The  gist  of  it  may  perhaps  be  called  pantheistic;  a 
cult  of  nature  which  is  no  mere  matter  of  softly  yielding  to  it, 


Images  of  Truth  •  148 

which  infers  a  nay  as  well  as  a  yea,  and  which  includes,  yes,  indeed, 
with  outstretched  arms,  all  or  almost  all  human  nature.  Of  the 
utmost  importance  to  her  is,  quite  simply,  belief  in  love;  the  partic- 
ular passion  in  due  course  giving  way  to  general  loving-kindness, 
amor  giving  way  to  caritas,  amour  leading  to  amor  fati.  A  part 
of  it  is  just  spectatorship  and  dramatic  sense,  with  no  admiration 
of  evil,  indeed  not;  only  an  appreciation  of  the  part  that  evil  may 
play  in  fate,  as  among  other  things  it  occasions  virtue,  and  a  will- 
ingness to  yield  to  it  in  the  end,  when  worse  comes  to  worst,  when 
it  takes  the  form  of  death. 

Suddenly  hearing  myself  talking  so  grandiosely,  and  mixing  my 
languages,  my  few  words  of  Italian  along  with  my  French  and/or 
American,  of  course  I  stopped;  and  then  it  was  time  to  bid  the 
great  woman  and  her  good  husband  au  revoir.  They  very  kindly 
urged  me  to  return  to  Paris  before  long,  and  she  undertook  to  rise 
from  her  bed  when  that  time  came  and  to  lunch  with  me  at  the 
restaurant  just  down  the  street,  the  Vefour,  where  she  had  a  corner 
table  marked  with  her  name  on  a  brass  plate. 

I  departed  with  a  lump  in  my  throat,  with  a  very  natural  dread 
of  old  mortality.  But  then  I  reminded  myself  of  the  printed  form  of 
immortality,  a  sure  thing  in  Colette's  case.  I  stopped  at  a  book- 
store and  bought  Le  Pur  et  Vlmpur,  though  I  have  two  copies  of 
it  in  New  Jersey,  one  very  cheap,  for  rough-and-ready  reading,  and 
one  well  bound,  for  the  sentiment  and  the  symbol.  I  immediately 
cut  the  pages  of  this  third  copy,  not  wanting  anyone  to  observe  it 
uncut  in  my  hand  and  to  shame  me  by  the  supposition  that  I  had 
not  yet  read  it.  I  walked  through  the  Tuileries  and  up  along  the 
Seine  hugging  it  (so  to  speak)  to  my  bosom. 


Chapter  Six 

Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 


The  human  imagination  is  a  curious  thing.  If  it  is  properly  fertilized  it 
can  shoot  up  like  a  fakir's  tree  in  the  twinkling  of  an  eye.  Tanya  knew  the 
trick,  and  between  us  we  built  up  in  our  imagination  a  future  in  which 
everything  but  the  impossible  had  a  place. 

The  storyteller's  husband,  bror  von  blixen  finecke 


Baroness  Blixen,  the  Danish  authoress  who  writes  in  English  under 
the  name  of  Isak  Dinesen,  came  to  New  York  and  Washington  and 
Boston  in  the  winter  of  1958-59,  not  just  to  be  lionized,  and  not 
to  lecture  in  the  ordinary  way.  In  recent  years  in  her  native  land 
she  has  specialized  in  word-of-mouth  narration;  and  her  purpose 
here  was  to  tell  stories  to  various  audiences,  and  to  have  some  of 
her  storytelling  perpetuated — I  hope  that  will  prove  to  be  the  ap- 
plicable and  truthful  word — on  tape  and  film,  financed  by  the  Ford 
Foundation.  She  had  hoped  to  go  on  to  California  and  to  Wis- 
consin, which  her  father  had  visited  before  she  was  born,  and  writ- 
ten a  book  about;  but  she  had  to  give  that  up. 

She  is  elderly  and  in  delicate  health;  so  slight  a  figure  that,  when 
she  walks,  someone's  strong  arm  is  required  to  steady  her  and  hold 
her  up.  If  that  responsibility  has  befallen  you,  and  you  relax  it  for 
a  moment,  she  is  liable  to  sink  to  the  floor;  however,  her  fall  is 
like  a  feather's  and  she  never  complains  of  it.  She  has  intrepidity 
and  exquisite  energy. 

She  bears  a  resemblance  to  Queen  Elizabeth,  the  Shakespearean 
or  Elizabethan  Elizabeth  (not  the  present  sovereign).  She  has  that 
same  shell-like,  almost  skull-like  brow,  and  interrogative  eyebrow 

149 


Images  of  Truth  •  150 

and  aquiline  nose.  But  Good  Queen  Bess  was  red-haired  and 
green-eyed,  wasn't  she?  This  Danish  noblewoman's  hair  is  of 
sable;  and  her  eyes  are  dark,  with  diamond  amid  their  darkness, 
capable  of  all  the  traditional  brunette  effects:  they  flash,  they 
sparkle,  they  brood,  they  caress. 

Europeans  of  late  have  been  anxious  to  be  or  to  seem  like  us; 
not  Baroness  Blixen!  She  is  rather  a  storybook  foreigner,  despite  her 
mastery  of  our  language  both  conversational  and  literary.  New 
Yorkers  were  charmed  by  her  exceptional,  fanciful  ways;  for  ex- 
ample, her  eating  and  drinking.  The  word  went  around,  specifying 
what  she  liked,  the  same  minimal  if  not  simple  fare  at  each  meal: 
half  a  dozen  oysters,  a  few  grapes,  and  a  split  of  champagne.  Later, 
she  found  out  how  coercively  beneficial  this  country  can  be.  Unfair 
clubwomen  in  Boston  having  imposed  on  her  more  engagements 
than  she  had  agreed  to,  she  had  to  be  put  to  bed  in  a  hospital  for 
ten  days,  where  the  doctors  decided  that  the  champagne  was 
counter-indicated  and  prescribed  milk  instead. 

As  an  honorary  member  of  the  American  Academy  and  National 
Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters,  she  attended  the  annual  meeting  of 
the  Institute  and  there  gave  what,  I  suppose,  you  would  call  a 
lecture.  It  expounded  the  custom  and  function  of  having  a  motto 
or  successive  mottoes  to  point  the  way  in  one's  life,  instancing  those 
she  has  made  use  of  herself,  and  her  changes  from  time  to  time  as 
her  circumstances  or  aspirations  changed.  When  she  was  a  venture- 
some girl,  cramped  in  small  Denmark,  she  chose  a  Latin  motto: 
"Navigare  necesse  est,  vivere  non  est,"  which  I  translate  freely:  "To 
set  sail  somewhere  is  more  important  than  life  itself."  This  ac- 
corded with  her  emigration  to  East  Africa  in  1914,  where  she 
owned  and  operated  a  coffee  plantation  near  Nairobi  until  1931. 
Her  most  recent  motto  is  lapidary  and  tripartite,  that  inscribed 
over  the  gates  of  a  castle  in  Spenser's  Faerie  Queene:  over  the  first 
gate,  "Be  bold,"  and  over  the  second,  "Be  bold,"  and  over  the 
third,  "Be  not  too  bold."  This  perhaps  covers  her  exploit  of 
traversing  the  Atlantic  so  late  in  life;  a  calculated  risk,  with  self- 
knowledge  and  with  safeguards. 

Her  principal  storytelling  in  New  York  was  done  at  the  Poetry 


151  '  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

Center  of  the  Young  Men's  Hebrew  Association,  which,  with  a  cer- 
tain endowment  by  the  late  Aline  Bernstein,  the  beloved  of 
Thomas  Wolfe,  has  become  the  chief  platform  in  the  world  for 
poets  and  poetical  prose  writers.  As  she  came  on  stage  there,  walk- 
ing very  slowly  on  the  arm  of  a  young  staff  poet  named  William  Jay 
Smith,  then  pausing  and  turning  and,  by  way  of  salute  to  the  maxi- 
mum audience  including  standees,  outstretching  her  fine-boned  arm 
in  a  gesture  of  some  singularity — as  of  a  hunter  beckoning  with  a 
riding  crop,  or  as  of  an  actor  in  the  role  of  Prospero  motioning  this 
or  that  airy  creature  into  existence,  or  perhaps  back  out  of  existence 
— we  all  spontaneously  stood  up  and  acclaimed  her. 

As  soon  as  we  kept  quiet  she  established  herself  in  an  important 
straight  chair,  spot-lit,  and  after  catching  her  breath  in  physical 
weariness  for  a  moment,  and  gazing  around  the  auditorium  with 
a  royal  gaze,  a  gypsy  gaze,  began  the  evening's  narration.  She  has 
an  ideal  voice  for  the  purpose,  strong,  though  with  a  kind  of 
wraithlike  transparency,  which  she  is  able  to  imbue  with  emotions, 
but  only  narrative  emotions.  She  rarely  indulges  in  mellifluousness 
in  the  way  of  poets;  neither  does  she  do  much  Thespian  mimicking. 

The  basic  sound  of  storytelling  is  very  different  from  that  of 
poetry  or  drama;  you  would  notice  this,  I  think,  even  if  you  didn't 
understand  a  word.  Dramatic  art  wants  to  differentiate  everything, 
for  the  sake  of  the  confrontation  and  the  impact,  and  the  con- 
sequences in  subsequent  scenes.  Whereas  the  true  narrative  feeling, 
as  a  rule,  unifies.  The  narrator's  enthusiasm  about  his  subject  matter 
and  fondness  for  his  heroes  and  heroines,  even  for  his  villains  and 
villainesses,  somewhat  predominate  over  the  various  states  of  mind 
and  fullnesses  of  heart  that  the  narrated  events  entail  for  them. 

What  especially  colors  Isak  Dinesen's  voice,  what  gives  it  overtone 
and  urgency,  is  remembrance  or  reminiscence.  With  soft  strong  tone 
seeming  to  feel  its  way,  sometimes  almost  faltering,  shifting  its  di- 
rection as  power  of  evocation  sways  it,  not  perturbed  by  her  listeners, 
perhaps  helped  by  them,  she  seems  to  be  re-experiencing  what  she 
has  to  tell,  or  if  it  is  fable  or  fantasy,  redreaming  it.  She  never 
gives  an  impression  of  having  memorized  a  text  and  recalling  the 
sentences  and  paragraphs.  When  I  had  heard  her  tell   a  given 


Images  of  Truth  •  752 

story  a  second  or  third  time,  it  astonished  me  to  realize  that  it  had 
been  verbatim,  or  nearly  so.  "The  King's  Letter,"  her  piece  de 
resistance  again  and  again  on  her  little  American  tour,  requires 
about  three  quarters  of  an  hour  to  read;  three  quarters  of  an  hour 
by  heart,  an  undertaking  comparable  to  a  liedersinger's  concert,  or 
indeed  to  the  great  roles  in  the  operas  of  Wagner. 

"The  King's  Letter"  comprises  a  set  of  wonderful  episodes  of  her 
life  as  a  colonial  landholder,  coffee  planter,  and  lion  hunter — not 
fictitious,  or  not  very  fictitious — which  for  some  reason  she  did  not 
include  in  Out  of  Africa.  That  volume,  her  second  in  order  of 
publication,  is  an  account  of  her  long  expatriation  in  Kenya 
Colony:  the  landscape,  and  famous  fauna,  and  the  friendships  that 
flourish  exceptionally  when  one  is  living  in  a  foreign  land,  and  in 
greatest  detail,  her  love  and  understanding  of  the  Africans.  It  is  a 
masterpiece.  The  perusal  of  it,  nowadays,  is  like  a  medicine,  alleviat- 
ing some  of  the  fever  of  our  minds  due  to  our  awareness  of  the 
rebellion  of  the  colored  races  against  the  white  race  everywhere  in 
the  world. 

I  think  that  she  and  Joyce  Gary,  the  author  of  Aissa  Saved  and 
The  African  Witch,  in  their  premonition  or  prophecy  of  the 
atrocities  of  the  Mau  Mau  and  the  anarchy  in  the  Belgian  Congo, 
were  far  in  advance  of  other  authorities  on  the  Dark  Continent. 
Certainly  no  recent  book  that  I  know  explains  so  much. 

Out  of  Africa  is  ravishingly  written;  it  is  like  a  love  potion, 
strengthening  us  in  our  enthusiasm  about  our  life,  whoever  we  are, 
whenever  or  wherever  it  may  be:  appointed  small  portion  of  time 
and  space,  this  earth  of  ours  beyond  compare,  matrix  of  the  be- 
loved human  species,  no  matter  what  the  color,  however  the  story 
ends!  One  of  the  books  that  I  love  best  in  all  the  library  of  the 
world,  it  is  hard  for  me  to  read  it  with  equanimity  now,  because 
it  was  my  mother's  favorite  book,  and  my  mind  is  not  quite  healed 
from  the  distress  of  her  death. 

Let  me  give  you  an  example  of  Isak  Dinesen's  descriptive  prose 
in  that  volume,  a  majestic  procession  of  wild  animals  as  it  were  in 
the  Garden  of  Eden.  Before  she  had  to  take  over  the  active  every- 
day management  of  her  coffee  farm  she  had  been  an  ardent  hunter 


153  •  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

and  had  taken  part  in  many  a  memorable  safari.  On  one  of  them,  she 
writes,  "I  had  seen  a  herd  of  Buffalo,  one  hundred  and  twenty-nine 
of  them,  come  out  of  the  morning  mist  under  a  copper  sky,  one  by 
one,  as  if  the  dark  and  massive,  iron-like  animals  with  the  mighty, 
horizontally  swung  horns  were  not  approaching,  but  were  being 
created  before  my  eyes  and  sent  out  as  they  were  finished.  I  had 
seen  a  herd  of  Elephant  travelling  through  dense  Native  forest, 
where  the  sunlight  is  strewn  down  between  the  thick  creepers  in 
small  spots  and  patches,  pacing  along  as  if  they  had  an  appointment 
at  the  end  of  the  world.  It  was,  in  giant  size,  the  border  of  a  very 
old,  infinitely  precious  Persian  carpet,  in  the  dyes  of  green,  yellow 
and  black-brown.  I  had  time  after  time  watched  the  progression 
across  the  plain  of  the  Giraffe,  in  their  queer,  inimitable,  vegetative 
gracefulness,  as  if  it  were  not  a  herd  of  animals  but  a  family  of 
rare,  long-stemmed,  speckled  gigantic  flowers  slowly  advancing.  I 
had  followed  two  Rhinos  on  their  morning  promenade,  when  they 
were  sniffing  and  snorting  in  the  air  of  the  dawn, — which  is  so  cold 
that  it  hurts  the  nose, — and  looked  like  two  very  big  angular  stones 
rollicking  in  the  long  valley  and  enjoying  life  together.  I  had  seen 
the  royal  Lion,  before  sunrise,  below  a  waning  moon,  crossing  the 
grey  plain  on  his  way  home  from  the  kill,  drawing  a  dark  wake 
in  the  silvery  grass,  his  face  still  red  up  to  the  ears,  or  during 
the  midday  siesta,  when  he  reposed  contentedly  in  the  midst  of  his 
family  on  the  short  grass  and  in  the  delicate,  spring-like  shade  of 
the  broad  Acacia  trees  of  his  park  of  Africa." 

Compact  with  natural,  animal,  and  primitive  realities,  Out  of 
Africa  is  also  studded  with  tales,  some  of  them  fables  and  parables, 
some  almost  myths,  and  with  character  sketches  and  life  stories. — 
For  example,  the  drunkenness  of  an  old  Kikuyu  chieftain  named 
Kinanjui,  a  close  friend,  and  toward  the  end  of  the  volume,  his 
deathbed,  like  that  of  one  of  the  Homeric  heroes.  For  example,  the 
poisoning  of  her  cook  Esa,  who  inherited  a  black  cow,  which  mad- 
dened him  with  happiness,  who  then  took  a  lascivious  young  second 
wife,  though  he  was  old;  she  poisoned  him.  The  frustration  of  a 
Swedish  professor  who  wanted  to  kill  fifteen  hundred  female 
monkeys,  to  investigate  something  about  the  fetuses  inside  them. 


Images  of  Truth  •  154 

The  battle  of  a  rooster  and  a  chameleon,  as  it  were  a  coat  of  arms 
in  motion,  which  happened  toward  the  end  of  Isak  Dinesen's  so- 
journ in  Africa,  a  portent. 

Though  with  not  the  slightest  confession  of  sentiment  or  sen- 
suality, a  great  love  story  runs  through  the  work  like  a  strong  silken 
thread,  like  a  great  warm  blood  vessel:  her  friendship  with  an 
English  gentleman  named  Denys  Finch-Hatton,  an  Africa-lover 
like  herself,  who  comes  and  goes  in  chapter  after  chapter.  He  flew 
a  small  airplane,  and  one  day,  without  previous  notice,  proposed 
her  going  up  in  it  with  him,  to  see  the  buffalo  out  feeding  in  the 
hills. 

"I  cannot  come,"  she  said,  "I  have  got  a  tea  party  up  at  the 
house." 

"But  we  will  go  and  see  them  and  be  back  in  a  quarter  of  an 
hour,"  he  said. 

Which  they  did,  and  presently  found  twenty-seven  of  them,  "a 
long  way  below  us,  like  mice  moving  gently  on  a  floor,"  and  then, 
under  the  leadership  of  an  old  bull  with  hundredweight  horns, 
stampeding  to  a  small  dim  thicket  in  a  glade  in  a  hill,  where  indeed 
they  would  have  been  invisible  to  anyone  coming  along  the 
ground;  "but  they  could  not  hide  themselves  from  the  bird  of  the 
air." 

"When  I  came  back  to  my  tea  party,"  Isak  Dinesen  concludes 
this  incident,  "the  teapot  on  the  stone  table  was  still  so  hot  that  I 
burned  my  fingers  on  it."  And,  characteristically — her  mind  always 
brimming  over  with  traditional  lore,  with  old  imagery  out  of  the 
treasure-trove  of  the  world — she  remarks  that  the  Prophet  Mo- 
hammed "had  the  same  experience  when  he  upset  a  jug  of  water, 
and  the  Archangel  Gabriel  took  him,  and  flew  with  him  through 
the  seven  heavens,  and  when  he  returned,  the  water  had  not  yet 
run  out  of  the  jug." 

Here  and  there  in  the  book  she  explains  how  she  began  to  be  a 
writer  of  fantastic  tales.  (As  a  girl  she  had  studied  painting,  even 
traveling  to  Paris  for  the  purpose.)  For  one  thing,  her  Africans 
prompted  her  to  turn  to  authorship,  as  she  could  often  divert  them 
by  reciting  poetry:  "Please  talk  like  rain,  talk  like  rain  some  more," 


755  *  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

they  would  beseech  her — and  even  in  matters  of  some  difficulty 
and  consequence  she  could  sway  them  by  a  bit  of  glamorous  or 
cautionary  narrative. 

Messrs.  Hay  craft  and  Kunitz  in  their  popular  reference  book,  Liv- 
ing Authors,  quote  her  about  this:  "I  began  to  write  there  in  Kenya, 
to  amuse  myself  in  the  rainy  season.  My  native  servants  took  a  great 
interest  in  my  work,  believing  that  I  was  attempting  to  write  a 
sort  of  new  Koran,  and  used  to  come  and  ask  me  what  God  had  in- 
spired me  to  write." 

Her  great  friend  also  inspired  her.  "Denys  had  a  trait  of  character 
which  to  me  was  very  precious,  he  liked  to  hear  a  story  told.  For 
I  have  always  thought  that  I  might  have  cut  a  figure  at  the  time 
of  the  plague  of  Florence.  Fashions  have  changed,  and  the  art  of 
listening  to  a  narrative  has  been  lost  in  Europe.  The  Natives  of 
Africa,  who  cannot  read,  have  still  got  it;  if  you  begin  to  them, 
'There  was  a  man  who  walked  out  on  the  plain,  and  there  met 
another  man,'  you  have  them  all  with  you,  their  minds  running 
upon  the  unknown  track  of  the  men  on  the  plain." 

The  blessed  outdoor  Englishman  "lived  much  by  ear"  and  pre- 
ferred hearing  a  tale  to  reading  one,  and  when  he  came  to  the  farm, 
was  apt  to  ask  if  she  had  got  a  story.  So  she  invented  things  in  his 
absence,  and  in  the  evenings  he  would  make  himself  comfortable 
in  front  of  the  fire,  and  she  would  sit  on  the  floor,  "cross-legged 
like  Scheherazade  herself."  He  remembered  what  she  had  pre- 
viously told  better  than  she  did  herself,  and  gently  chided  her  for 
any  inconsistency  or  error. 

He  taught  her  Latin  and  got  her  into  the  way  of  reading  the 
Bible.  In  Eugene  Walter's  interview  with  her  in  the  Paris  Review, 
she  provided  a  long  list  of  other  favorite  and  influential  reading 
matter,  among  other  things:  E.  T.  A.  Hoffmann  and  La  Motte- 
Fouque  and  Barbey  d'Aurevilly  and  Mark  Twain,  Voltaire  and 
Scott  and  Joseph  Conrad. 

Out  of  Africa  is  her  only  truthful  work;  I  mean,  her  only  factual 
work.  Seven  Gothic  Tales,  her  first  publication,  and  Winter's  Tales, 
and  Anecdotes  of  Destiny,  and  Last  Tales,  are  pure  fiction,  absolute 
fictitiousness,  harking  back  not  only  to  the  above-listed  narrators 


Images  of  Truth  •  156 

but  to  the  epics  and  the  sagas  as  they  developed  orally  piece  by 
piece,  long  before  they  were  ever  written  down,  and  to  the  corre- 
sponding unpublished  literature  fragmentarily  persisting  in  our 
time,  in  Ireland,  for  example,  a  livelihood  for  old  begging  men  with 
an  itinerary  of  illiterate  cottages,  and  in  the  market  place  of 
Marrakech  where,  in  vicarious  excitement,  without  understanding 
one  word,  I  myself  (as  related  elsewhere)  have  enjoyed  the  inter- 
minable serial  narration  of  cross-legged  Moors  or  Berbers. 

Of  course  Isak  Dinesen  must  be  aware  of  the  strangeness  and 
indeed  sophistication  of  her  practicing,  for  world-wide  book  readers, 
so  primitive  a  type  of  fiction — intended  to  amuse,  to  amaze,  and 
to  allure  the  imagination — and  she  may  feel  supported  by  certain 
tenets  of  the  ancients  applicable  to  it.  Aristotle  said:  "Impossibilities 
are  justified  if  they  serve  the  purpose  of  the  poetry."  Longinus 
said:  "The  effect  of  genius  is  not  to  persuade  or  to  convince  but 
rather  to  transport  the  audience  out  of  its  usual  frame  of  mind." 
Admittedly,  both  these  philosophers  were  referring  to  dramatic 
poetry;  and  Isak  Dinesen's  narrative  often  leans  in  that  direction, 
and  beckons  (I  should  think)  to  the  future  dramatist  or  scenario 
writer. 

In  Last  Tales,  an  old  prince  of  the  church,  Cardinal  Salviati, 
expounds  an  aesthetic  of  the  storyteller's  story,  differing  funda- 
mentally from  the  more  modern  artistry  of  the  novelist.  One  of  his 
great  lady  penitents,  sensing  underneath  his  wisdom  and  humane- 
ness something  more  than  the  usual  vocational  experience,  asks, 
"Who  are  you?"  In  reply,  he  informs  her  of  the  mystery  of  his 
birth,  one  of  a  pair  of  twins;  no  knowing  which  one,  the  other 
having  been  burned  up.  He  cannot  really  identify  himself,  he  tells 
her,  except  by  what  he  has  done  and  what  has  been  done  to  him. 

In  the  modern  novel  the  most  important  thing  is  individuality; 
therefore  it  has  to  be,  above  all,  explanatory  and  intimate.  The 
question  asked  in  it  as  a  rule  is  not  who  but  what — what  is  he  or  she? 
what  are  you,  the  reader?  or  indeed,  as  it  is  often  a  subterfuge  for 
autobiography,  what  am  I?  It  is  portraiture  or  self-portraiture,  step- 
ping out  of  the  frame  only  enough  to  demonstrate  itself  in  action,  or 
to  teach  a  lesson,  or  to  make  a  point. 


iff  •  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

Whereas  to  the  storyteller  the  events  come  first.  Particularity  or 
peculiarity  of  the  personages  involved  comes  second,  as  their  activ- 
ity depicts  it,  as  destiny  has  brought  it  about.  In  the  first  book  of 
the  Bible,  Genesis — which,  as  Cardinal  Salviati  points  out,  is  a 
story,  not  a  novel — humanity  does  not  even  appear  until  the  sixth 
day.  "By  that  time  they  were  bound  to  come,  for,  where  the  story  is, 
the  characters  will  gather." 

Sometimes  Isak  Dinesen  borrows  or  (I  suppose  one  should  say) 
inherits  types  of  humanity  from  the  old  collective  family  tree  of 
Western  civilization,  such  as  Scheherazade,  Prospero  and  Ariel,  the 
Wandering  Jew,  the  Barber  of  Seville,  Philippe-Egalite,  Stefan 
George.  "The  Wine  of  the  Tetrarch,"  a  tale  with  which  she  often  re- 
galed her  American  listeners — it  has  been  available  to  readers  for 
years,  as  a  sub-narration  in  the  first  story  in  her  first  book — is  a 
bringing  together  of  the  Apostle  Peter  and  the  man  Barabbas,  in 
whose  stead,  upon  whose  cross,  Christ  was  crucified.  It  stirringly  ex- 
presses the  anguished  vacuity  of  the  pagan  spirit  in  which  Chris- 
tianity, that  most  effective  amalgam  of  ethics  and  superstition,  first 
took  place  and  took  hold. 

Another  story  of  the  Near  Eastern  past,  "Alexander  the  Great 
and  the  Sybil,"  inherited  by  a  certain  old  gentleman  from  his  grand- 
father and  told  to  another  old  gentleman  in  Last  Tales,  she  bor- 
rowed back  from  that  same  volume  and  amplified  and  changed,  as  to 
its  meaning  and  moral,  and  gave  as  a  sample  of  her  storytelling 
technique  on  someone's  television  program.  The  Macedonian  world 
conqueror,  temporarily  in  residence  in  Babylon,  heard  of  a  powerful 
sibyl  or  sorceress  in  that  city  and  had  her  brought  before  him.  He 
had  no  interest  in  having  his  fortune  told,  accustomed  as  he  was  to 
shaping  destiny  for  himself  by  military  prowess  and  leadership,  but 
he  thought  it  would  be  pleasant  to  learn  the  secret  and  the  technique 
of  clairvoyancy,  so  that  upon  occasion,  either  for  pleasure  or  for 
advantage,  he  could  prophesy  for  other  people. 

She  consented  to  instruct  him,  but  in  return  for  every  separate 
step  and  particularity  of  her  art  he  had  to  recompense  her  with  a 
precious  stone  out  of  his  casket,  first  a  topaz,  then  a  sapphire,  then  a 
ruby,  and  finally  an  emerald,  which  he  yielded  up  most  reluctantly^ 


Images  of  Truth  •  158 

as  he  had  intended  to  present  it  to  the  famous  Greek  dancer  and 
courtesan  Thais. 

The  last  and  essential  secret  lesson,  the  sorceress  or  sibyl  warned 
him  solemnly,  was  a  matter  of  life  and  death.  If  he  learned  it  from 
her  and,  when  the  time  came,  failed  to  conform  to  it  exactly,  it 
would  destroy  him.  Despite  this  warning  he  persisted  in  his  desire 
to  learn. 

So  she  recapitulated  her  instructions  up  to  that  point:  the  selection 
of  the  sticks  of  aloe  and  olive  and  oleander  and  baobab,  the  right 
occult  pattern  to  pile  them  in,  the  sprinkling  with  specified  incenses, 
and  the  setting  fire  to  the  pile  with  a  torch — and  finally  told  him 
that,  just  at  that  moment,  as  he  gazed  into  the  smoke,  it  was  abso- 
lutely crucial  for  him  to  refrain  from  thinking  of  the  left  eye  of  a 
camel.  To  think  of  the  right  eye  of  a  camel  would  be  dangerous,  but 
the  left  eye  would  be  fatal. 

This  appalled  King  Alexander,  and  he  never  undertook  the  hocus- 
pocus  that  he  had  set  his  heart  on  and  that  had  cost  him  four 
precious  stones. 

Its  meaning,  I  suppose — having  a  mind  more  explicit  and  utilitar- 
ian than  the  great  Danish  yarn-spinner's — is  that  some  knowledge- 
able persons  have  knowledge  for  sale;  kings  have  the  wherewithal  to 
buy  it;  and  the  better  part  of  any  such  bargain  is  the  positive  part: 
ingredients,  arrangements,  and  matters  of  invocation  and  enumera- 
tion. The  hard  part  (which  indeed  may  prove  impossible)  is  to  non- 
know,  non-think,  non-remember.  For  the  mind,  except  in  certain 
pathological  states,  or  after  prolonged  occult  exercises,  is  irresistible 
to  itself,  uninhibitable  by  itself.  It  is  useless  to  be  reminded  not  to 
think  of  a  thing.  The  reminder  itself  is  a  thought.  We  human  beings 
are  all  zombis,  in  a  sense;  that  is,  we  are  inhabited  by  a  kind  of 
superhumanity,  if  not  divinity:  a  part  of  our  being  superior  to  the 
whole,  a  part  not  controllable  by  the  whole. 

There  is  sententiousness  more  functional  than  this  in  many  of 
Isak  Dinesen's  tales;  and  some  strange  and  disorderly  aphorisms. 
Remember  that  she  is  Kierkegaard's  compatriot  as  well  as  Hans 
Christian  Andersen's.  But  most  of  it  is  fictitious;  not  opinionated. 
Neither  in  the  aggregate  nor  in  separate  flashes  of  suggestive  intel- 


i$9  *  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

ligence  does  it  constitute  one  of  those  systems  of  thought  that  authors 
develop  for  all  the  population  of  their  books  at  once,  or  for  them- 
selves, to  stabilize  and  comfort  the  artistic  temperament.  She  is  not 
proposing  a  philosophy  of  her  own;  only  letting  her  personages 
philosophize:  mysticism,  thanksgiving,  anarchism,  whatever  comes 
naturally  to  the  lips  of  those  who  are  having  extraordinary  experi- 
ences, or  who  have  had  them  in  the  past  and  lived  to  tell  the  tale. 

Often  she  composes  a  double  or  triple  fabric:  narrative  within  nar- 
rative, interruptingly,  and  narrations  about  narrators.  One  of  her 
storytellers,  very  professional,  having  earned  her  living  in  this  way 
for  two  hundred  years,  ancient  and  black-veiled  and  mumble-voiced, 
says,  "Where  the  storyteller  is  loyal,  eternally  and  unswervingly  loyal 
to  the  story,  there,  in  the  end,  silence  will  speak." 

Indeed,  if  we  examine  the  production  of  most  fiction  writers  we 
find  that  their  message  or  thesis  of  greatest  consequence,  greatest 
originality,  is  something  that  they  seem  not  to  have  known  when 
they  took  pen  in  hand.  They  learn  from  their  material  as  the  work 
progresses,  from  the  phantoms  of  memory  and  from  the  powers  and 
accidents  of  the  art. 

In  a  long  story  entitled  "The  Roads  round  Pisa,"  a  young  Danish 
nobleman  traveling  alone,  thinking  that  he  would  give  a  year  of 
his  life  to  be  able  to  talk  to  a  faraway  friend,  in  order  to  develop  a 
more  objective  understanding  of  himself  and  his  plight  in  life, 
says,  "I  wonder  if  it  is  really  possible  to  be  absolutely  truthful  when 
you  are  alone.  Truth,  like  time,  is  an  idea  arising  from,  and 
dependent  upon,  human  intercourse."  In  Isak  Dinesen's  mind,  gen- 
erally speaking,  it  evidently  always  depends  upon  some  interrela- 
tionship of  persons,  by  their  psychology  and  by  great  abstract 
coincidence  assembled  and  entangled;  in  a  word,  plot! 

One  great  charm  and  strangeness  of  her  work  as  a  whole — at  this 
somber  mid-point  of  the  century,  amid  so  much  other  world  litera- 
ture that  is  desperate,  whining,  punitive — is  her  having  almost  en- 
tirely silenced  in  it  any  personal  misfortune  or  depressed  state  of 
her  own  mind.  "All  sorrows  can  be  borne  if  you  put  them  into  a 
story  or  tell  a  story  about  them,"  she  has  written,  in  I  forget  which 
volume.  Yes,  yes,  if  your  concept  of  the  story  form  and  narrative 


Images  of  Truth  •  160 

style  is  classic,  stoic,  non-neurotic.  Over  all,  her  narrative  mood — or 
do  I  mean  mode? — is  characterized  by  bravery,  sweetness,  enjoy- 
ment, even  when  it  has  reference  to  tragic  factors. 

Some  time  ago,  at  home  in  Denmark,  she  expressed  her  apprecia- 
tion of  having  had  an  unusually  happy  life;  and  an  interviewer 
asked  her  to  explain  it;  wherein  lay  the  happiness?  Her  explanation 
was  that  all  her  senses  have  been  very  acute  and  healthy — sight, 
hearing,  taste  and  smell.  "I  have  never  met  anyone  who  could  see 
as  well  as  I  could,"  she  said. 

Rungstedlund,  her  house  in  Denmark,  was  an  inn  in  the  eight- 
eenth century,  and  the  important  poet,  Johannes  Ewald — who 
wrote  the  Danish  national  anthem — lived  there  at  the  end  of  his 
life,  when  he  had  broken  almost  every  bone  in  his  body  falling 
from  a  horse.  According  to  someone  she  talked  to  recently,  the  lady 
of  Rungstedlund  has  seen  his  ghost,  or  perhaps  only  heard  his 
ghostly  step;  and  she  has  put  him  in  a  story,  in  mid-nocturnal  con- 
verse with  Christian  VII,  King  of  Denmark  at  the  time. 

According  to  history  books,  that  king  seems  to  have  been,  on  the 
whole,  insane;  and  Ewald  was  wild  and  unfortunate.  But  Isak 
Dinesen  pitches  their  talk  in  a  lull  of  their  two  minds,  complement- 
ing each  other  serenely  enough.  One  subject  of  their  conversation, 
proposed  by  the  King,  is  the  idea  that  there  is,  or  can  be,  perfect 
happiness  on  earth. 

The  poet  agrees,  and  specifies  that  in  his  opinion  there  are  three 
kinds  of  perfect  happiness:  (1)  To  feel  in  oneself  an  excess  of 
strength.  (2)  To  have  been  in  pain,  and  to  have  it  cease.  (3)  To 
know  for  certain  that  you  are  fulfilling  the  will  of  God. 

It  has  occurred  to  me  that  these  three  happinesses,  diffused  of 
course  in  every  existence,  appertain  especially,  respectively,  to  three 
classifications  of  persons:  the  very  young;  those  in  the  shadow  of 
death;  and  creators  of  literature  and  the  arts.  It  is  the  young  who 
are  most  often  excessively  strong;  and,  oh,  great  analgesia  must  be 
the  only  consolation  for  having  to  depart  from  this  wondrous  world 
and  our  beloved  fellow  worldlings;  and,  with  due  deference  to 
saints  and  scientists,  I  think  that  creative  men  are  most  apt  to  feel 
sure  that  they  are  doing  what  they  were  created  to  do. 


i6i  •  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

Isak  Dinesen,  in  the  several  decades  of  her  creativity,  surely  has 
known  this  third  happiness  to  her  heart's  content.  She  has  given 
us  to  understand  that  it  has  not  all  been  simply  euphoric  and  vol- 
untary. One  night  in  the  spring  of  1959,  just  before  her  return  to 
Denmark,  dining  at  a  friend's  apartment  with  the  poetess,  Marianne 
Moore,  she  told  a  sort  of  fable  of  her  own  life;  a  fable  with  a  moral 
or  maxim.  By  that  time  her  fond  Americans  really  had  tired  her 
out.  In  diaphanous  black,  her  physical  being  made  one  think  of  a 
fever-wasted  child;  but  her  eyes  were  as  lively  as  the  diamonds  in 
her  ears.  She  really  did  no  more  than  haunt  the  dinner  table:  only 
one  oyster,  perhaps  three  grapes;  but  later,  in  the  softest  corner  of 
the  room,  amid  cushions,  she  sat  up  as  straight  as  though  enthroned 
on  stage  at  the  Poetry  Center. 

Her  mingling  of  formality  and  ease,  intimacy  and  sense  of  per- 
formance, is  characteristic  and  memorable.  Facing  an  audience,  she 
simply  reminisces,  unrestrained  and  trustful.  On  the  other  hand,  in 
familiar  circumstances,  in  private,  she  gives  of  herself  as  generously 
and  intentionally  as  though  she  had  been  paid  a  great  fee.  Let  the 
writer  who  scribbles  or  types  or  dictates  all  day  long  relax  as  he 
pleases  at  the  end  of  the  day;  a  mere  everyman  among  his  fellows. 
In  its  very  nature  the  storyteller's  art  is  never  done.  Listening  public 
is  much  more  ubiquitous  than  reading  public. 

That  night  with  Marianne  Moore,  who  listens  inspiringly,  Isak 
Dinesen  told  of  the  time,  two  or  three  years  before,  when,  having 
had  two  or  three  operations  on  her  spine,  she  couldn't  sit  up,  either 
to  write  or  to  typewrite;  the  post-operative  pain  was  too  grievous. 
Notwithstanding  this,  she  intensely  desired  to  produce  one  more 
book  before  she  died.  So  she  lay  flat  on  the  floor  and  dictated  to 
Clara  Svendsen,  her  secretary,  day  after  day.  She  had  never  dic- 
tated before,  and  somehow  it  differed  fundamentally  from  merely 
telling  the  stories;  she  couldn't  get  things  right.  There  had  to  be 
seven  or  eight  successive  versions  of  some  pages.  She  began  to 
despair.  Clara  Svendsen  urged  her  to  give  it  up,  to  wait  until  her 
health  improved,  until  the  pain  abated. 

"No,  no,"  the  recumbent  aged  authoress  answered,  "let  us  work 
just  one  more  hour;  let  us  compose  just  one  more  page.  Of  course 


Images  of  Truth  •  162 

we  shall  not  get  the  book  done,  but  we  must  keep  on  trying  to  finish 
a  little  more  of  it." 

In  due  course  they  did  get  it  done;  enough  of  it  to  be  publish- 
able.  It  is  the  volume  entitled  Last  Tales.  She  has  published  another 
volume  since  then. 

"It  taught  me  a  lesson,"  she  told  Marianne  Moore  and  the  rest 
of  us.  "When  you  have  a  great  and  difficult  task,  something  perhaps 
almost  impossible,  if  you  only  work  a  little  at  a  time,  every  day  a 
little,  without  faith  and  without  hope" — and  she  underlined  the 
words  with  her  spooky,  strong,  but  insubstantial  voice — "suddenly 
the  work  will  finish  itself." 

I  do  believe  that  the  renunciation  of  those  two  glorious  and  help- 
ful virtues — faith!  hope! — in  certain  circumstances  may  be  the 
saving  grace.  Despairing  absolutely  of  what  we  want  to  do  may  help 
us  to  do  what  can  be  done. 

Not  all  her  anecdotes  and  gems  of  conversation  are  solemn  and 
illuminating.  She  has  an  exquisite  and  (you  might  say)  frolicsome 
wit.  One  afternoon  at  a  cocktail  party  she  propounded  to  her  host- 
ess, and  to  two  or  three  other  young  women  of  romantic  and  fash- 
ionable aspect  in  a  circle  around  her,  this  question:  "Which  of  the 
great  poets  of  the  past  would  you  choose  to  have  been  loved  by?" 

The  youngest  of  them  answered,  "Baudelaire,"  which  charmed 
and  amused  me,  but  seemed  to  horrify  the  Baroness. 

She  also  expressed  horror  of  Tennyson  and  Rilke.  We  then 
turned  the  tables  on  her.  "Which  poet  would  you  choose  yourself?" 

"Robert  Burns,"  she  answered  unhesitatingly. 

Someone  pointed  out  to  her  that  she  would  have  had  to  resign 
herself  to  his  going  away  and  leaving  her  to  her  own  devices  a  great 
part  of  the  time. 

"Yes,  but  I  could  always  have  gone  on  expecting  him  to  come 
back,"  she  said.  "Furthermore,  all  my  life  I  have  felt  a  hearty  dis- 
like of  a  one-man  dog  and  of  a  one-woman  man." 

In  the  story  entitled  "Converse  at  Night  in  Copenhagen"  from 
which  I  have  already  quoted,  the  unruly  national  poet,  Johannes 
Ewald,  explained  to  crazy  King  Christian  that,  as  our  human  exist- 
ence came  about  by  means  of  the  divine  creative  word,  Logos,  it 


163  •  Isak  Dinesen,  the  Storyteller 

ought  to  be  translated  by  us  and  given  back  to  the  Creator  in  our 
vocabulary,  in  myth  and  reminiscence,  the  abiding  forms  of  our 
gratitude.  Terrible,  Ewald  said  it  was,  to  feel  this  obligation  to  Al- 
mighty God.  "Terrible  in  its  weight  and  incessancy  is  the  obligation 
of  the  acorn  to  yield  Him  the  oak  tree." 

Many  of  Isak  Dinesen's  protagonists  say  similar  things;  it  is  like 
the  music  of  Mozart  in  his  operas,  which  some  opera  lovers  find 
impersonal,  as  between  one  character  and  another,  that  is,  undra- 
matic.  Upon  this  point  of  the  fulfillment  of  fate,  she  has  spoken 
for  herself,  autobiographically,  in  Out  of  Africa:  "Pride  is  the  faith 
in  the  idea  that  God  had  when  He  made  us.  A  proud  man  is  con- 
scious of  the  idea,  and  aspires  to  realize  it." 

By  this  time,  with  life  concluding,  the  heat  and  flicker  and 
ashes  of  her  lovely  mind  must  be  all  strangely  mingled  with  that 
proud  sense  of  having  realized  and  incarnated  eternal  concepts. 


Chapter  Seven 

Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 


Without  contraries  is  no  progression.  Attraction  and  repulsion,  reason  and 
energy,  love  and  hate,  are  necessary  to  human  existence. 

— WILLIAM  BLAKE 


Thomas  Mann,  in  his  famous  old  age,  paying  tribute  to  Schiller, 
whom  he  had  cared  for  more  than  any  other  writer  when  he  was 
young,  spoke  deferentially  of  "the  mountains  of  learned  apprecia- 
tion and  analysis"  piled  up  by  scholarship  in  the  century  and  a 
half  since  Schiller  died.  "In  my  diffidence,"  he  said,  "I  am  em- 
boldened by  only  one  thing":  the  kinship  of  creative  experience, 
and  fraternal  intimacy  of  every  creative  artist  with  all  his  fellow 
artists,  "irrespective  of  stature,  epoch,  or  character." 

When  I  came  upon  this  passage  in  Last  Essays,  it  seemed  an 
encouragement  to  write  about  him.  I  needed  to  be  encouraged  be- 
cause he  is  more  foreign  to  me  than  any  other  great  man  of  letters 
whom  I  have  undertaken  to  eulogize  or  criticize.  The  difference 
between  us,  in  epoch,  is  only  one  generation;  however,  it  has  been 
a  great  watershed  in  history,  and  may  prove  more  decisive,  more 
revolutionary,  than  anything  that  his  thinking  or  mine  has  en- 
compassed. I  too  have,  or  have  had,  the  character  of  a  novelist.  I 
am  not  vain  of  my  stature,  or  sensitive  about  it.  I  will  try  to  make 
my  modest  point  of  view  very  definite  and  consequential;  you  can 
discount  it  all  you  like. 

Definitely,  to  begin  with,  The  Magic  Mountain  is  the  only  novel 
of  Mann's  that  I  am  enthusiastic  about.  I  admire  Dr.  Faustus,  but 
164 


i6$  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

without  liking  it  or  greatly  enjoying  it.  Not  one  of  his  other  long 
works  of  fiction  pleases  me  so  much  as  half  a  dozen  of  the  short  nar- 
ratives and  essays.  Let  me  list  half  a  dozen. — A  Weary  Hour,  the 
brief  soliloquy-story  about  Schiller,  dated  1905;  the  earliest  instance 
of  Mann's  portraying  himself  and  examining  himself  in  the  guise 
of  some  great  predecessor.  Tonio  Kroeger,  of  course,  and  Tristan. 
The  early  nouvelle-like  fragment  of  the  Confessions  of  Felix  Krull; 
the  swindler's  transvestite  childhood.  Perhaps  not  Death  in  Venice; 
it  is  a  fine  and  powerfully  atmospheric  story,  but  the  handling  of 
the  homosexual  theme  in  it  is  not  true  to  life,  I  think.  The  essay 
on  Frederick  the  Great,  dated  1915,  in  spite  of  the  history  lesson 
in  it,  which  seems  obsolete  and  certainly  is  nefarious  from  a  non- 
German  standpoint.  Disorder  and  Early  Sorrow  and  Mario  and  the 
Magician,  perfect  tales  of  the  twenties.  The  essay  which  is  a  com- 
parison between  Goethe  and  Tolstoi.  The  short  novel  about  Goethe, 
Lotte  in  Weimar.  The  essay  on  Chekhov,  a  little  production  of  the 
very  end  of  his  life.  Wescott's  choice! 

Next,  let  me  specify  something  about  my  title,  "Will  Power  and 
Fiction."  Does  it  suggest  to  you  that  famous  pattern  of  the  philos- 
ophy of  Schopenhauer,  which  indeed  underlies  a  part  of  Mann's 
thinking?  The  will  as  distinguished  from  intellect,  wielding  in- 
tellect as  its  mere  instrument;  the  part  trying  to  include  the  whole, 
and  almost  succeeding;  the  will  to  live,  which  Schopenhauer  ex- 
pressed in  the  sublimest  of  aphorisms:  "The  will  is  the  strong  blind 
man  who  carries  on  his  shoulders  the  lame  man  who  can  see." 

That  is  not  what  I  mean  by  will  power.  I  mean  mere  resoluteness, 
even  obstinacy;  a  deliberate  manipulation  and  organization  of 
one's  character  for  purposes  of  one's  lifework,  with  plans  for  the 
day's  work  accordingly,  every  day,  and  an  enforcement  of  those 
plans  upon  oneself  and  upon  one's  environing  fellow  men,  year  in 
and  year  out;  heroic,  Herculean  work-morality,  which  in  the  end 
Mann  virtually  personified,  and  which  enabled  him — in  spite  of  all 
that  he  enumerated  in  Death  in  Venice  as  having  been  overcome 
by  that  most  accomplished  of  his  author-protagonists,  Aschenbach: 
"grief  and  torment,  desertion,  and  frailty  of  body,  vice,  passion,  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  166 

a  thousand  hindrances" — to  bring  his  talent  and  his  genius  to 
fruition  in  a  heavy  harvest  of  collected  works. 

In  Mario  and  the  Magician,  Cipolla,  who  is  really  not  a  magician 
but  a  hypnotist,  and  who  personifies  fascism,  says  to  his  victim,  a 
type  of  foolish  common  man  to  whom  authoritarian  leadership 
often  proves  irresistible,  "It  would  be  a  pleasant  change  for  you, 
don't  you  think,  to  divide  up  the  willing  and  the  doing?" 

Mann,  during  his  long  life  devoted  to  writing,  never  divided 
them  up.  At  times,  I  personally  wish  that  he  had  done  so.  A  part  of 
my  thesis  is  that,  as  to  the  style  and  design  and  dimensions  of  the 
late  novels,  will  power  entered  into  his  aesthetic  more  than  is 
usually  the  case  in  literature,  and  that  it  had  a  questionable,  con- 
troversial, even  regrettable  effect. 

Having  mentioned  Schopenhauer,  as  to  my  idiosyncrasy  in  the 
use  of  that  one  word,  "will,"  let  me  caution  you  not  to  expect  too 
much  of  me  in  the  abstract  way,  about  either  life  or  art.  I  am  one  of 
those  men — more  numerous  than  you  might  suppose,  especially  in 
the  United  States — who  are  not  only  shallowly  educated  in  philoso- 
phy, but  somewhat  incapable  of  it,  and  often  mistrustful  of  it  and 
depressed  by  it. 

Why  have  I  not  been  prompted  by  this  inaptitude,  and  other 
limitations  that  I  might  mention,  to  let  the  subject  matter  of  Mann 
alone,  and  to  seek  some  other  pretext  for  my  discussion  of  the  several 
issues  in  narrative  aesthetics — whether  a  novel  ought  to  be  long  or 
short,  whether  it  should  deal  in  profundities  or  bring  everything  to 
the  surface,  and  so  on — which  his  novels  suggest,  but  which  other 
inferior  productions  of  fiction  might  be  found  to  illustrate  also. 

Anxiously  reading  and  rereading  all  sorts  of  work  by  him,  stren- 
uously beginning  to  compose  these  pages,  of  course  I  have  felt  the 
incongruity  and  rashness.  But,  I  say,  just  as  the  German  translators 
of  Shakespeare  had  to  give  up  as  a  bad  job  all  the  inherently  Eng- 
lish beauty  of  the  dramatic  poetry  as  such,  and  still  had  incompar- 
able dramaturgy  left — the  plays  of  Shakespeare  are  as  successful 
on  the  German  stage  as  in  the  English-speaking  world — we  could 
expurgate  out  of  Mann's  fiction  all  the  abstractions  that  I  find 
troubling,  the  Teutonic  arguing  and  loose  erudition,  and  still  retain 


i6y  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

for  general  enjoyment  a  large  amount  of  fine,  fantastic,  and  noble 
narrative;  Mann  for  the  easy  reader,  the  simple  thinker! 


The  reminiscences  of  Mann  translated  and  published  in  the  United 
States  thus  far  have  disappointed  me.  There  has  been  generaliza- 
tion enough,  authorizing  us,  almost  encouraging  us,  to  wonder  and 
to  hypothesize  and  to  begin  composing  a  legend,  but  with  a  paucity 
of  the  data  most  desirable  for  the  understanding  of  the  personality 
of  a  man  of  genius,  the  uninventable  details — haphazard  beams  of 
light  and  little  lightning  flashes.  I  hope  that  all  this  is  being  well 
recorded  in  Germany.  Even  the  closest  kinsmen  and  the  proudest 
friends  grow  forgetful,  and  presently  they  die,  and  their  knowledge 
dies  with  them.  I  am  not  thinking  of  formal  full-length  biography. 
During  most  of  his  lifetime,  pinned  down  as  he  was  by  his  labors, 
blessed  by  a  great  marriage,  and  in  old  age,  somewhat  constrained 
and  embarrassed  by  his  expatriation  in  America  and  in  Switzerland, 
perhaps  he  did  not  have  an  especially  interesting  life  to  write  about 
in  that  way. 

His  own  "Lebensabriss,"  the  autobiographical  sketch  that  he 
wrote  for  a  German  periodical  in  1930  and  permitted  Harrison  of 
Paris  (that  is,  Monroe  Wheeler  and  my  brother's  wife)  to  publish 
in  a  limited  edition  in  Paris  in  1932 — which  for  some  reason  was 
not  published  in  the  ordinary  way  in  this  country  until  i960 — is 
precious  though  rather  dry  and  slight.  Toward  the  end  of  his  life 
he  took  his  diary  of  the  years  that  he  devoted  to  Dr.  Faustus,  1943- 
1947,  and  reworked  it  into  a  memoir  of  the  process  of  composition 
of  that  oddest  of  masterpieces,  in  the  context  of  his  everyday  life 
in  exile  in  California,  and  against  the  distant  background  of  the 
war  in  Europe,  which  he  entitled  Die  Enstehung  des  Dr.  Faustus 
(1949).  This  does  not  make  lively  reading,  but  it  is  the  rarest  sort  of 
document,  invaluable  to  the  Mann  enthusiast  and  to  the  serious 
critic  alike.  Its  very  dullness  and  the  headline-like  simplification  of 
every  sort  of  subject  matter  in  it,  except  the  literary  enterprise 
going  forward,  add  to  the  validity  of  the  portrayal  of  the  laborious 


Images  of  Truth  -  168 

aged  creative  man's  character  and  custom  of  life.  Also  there  are 
precious  details  of  the  inspiration  and  the  various  ingredients  of 
the  work,  and  of  his  own  view  of  it  which  kept  changing  and  open- 
ing out  as  it  progressed.  In  glimpses  throughout  the  little  volume, 
there  is  an  interesting,  intriguing  portrait  sketch  of  the  musicologist 
and  philosopher,  Theodor  Wiesengrund-Adorno,  who  helped  him 
in  every  phase  of  the  work. 

I  have  found  Erika  Mann's  memoir  of  the  final  year  of  her 
father's  life  endearing  and  informative,  and  I  hope  that  she  has  in 
store  for  us  a  record  of  other  years.  I  gratefully  recall  a  perceptive 
essay  by  Arthur  Eloesser.  Perhaps  others  personally  acquainted  with 
Mann  have  not  understood  what  it  is  that  I  (and  other  like-minded 
but  less  outspoken  readers)  want  and  feel  the  need  of:  something 
like  Gorki's  thrilling  brief  reminiscences  of  Tolstoi,  which  Mann  ad- 
mired and  which  he  used  in  his  essay  comparing  the  sublime  genius 
of  Yasnaya  Polyana  and  the  great  sage  of  Weimar. 

Over  the  door  of  his  grandfather's  house  in  Luebeck  (I  owe  this 
bit  of  information  to  Janet  Flanner)  there  was  incised  this  motto: 
"Work.  Save.  Pray."  And,  surely,  no  grandfather's  grandson  ever 
worked  harder  than  he,  especially  after  fifty.  In  a  sense  he  prayed, 
too,  with  anxious  self-criticism  and  impersonal  world-wide  uneasy 
conscience  all  his  life.  I  have  not  heard  of  his  saving  money,  but 
perhaps  the  massive  proportions  and  redundancy  of  his  principal 
late  novels  and  of  many  of  his  essays  reflected  a  certain  old-fash- 
ioned thriftiness,  even  parsimony.  The  wastebasket  did  not  appeal 
to  him. 

As  a  small  boy  he  discovered  the  Homeric  mythology  in  an  old 
schoolbook  of  his  mother's,  and  pretending  to  be  Achilles,  dragged 
his  small  sister  three  times  around  the  walls  of  Troy.  I  am  inclined 
to  read  deep  meanings  into  this.  For  most  novelists,  even  those 
specializing  in  subject  matter  of  olden  time,  the  process  of  fiction  is 
a  transposition  backward;  a  matter  of  their  conferring  upon  per- 
sonages of  legend  and  history,  or  upon  invented  inhabitants  of 
yesterday  or  of  the  day  before  yesterday,  their  own  up-to-the-minute 
worldly  wisdom  and  self-knowledge.  They  carry  their  own  present 
back  into  other  people's  pasts.  Especially  in  the  tetralogy  about  the 


169  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

Jews  and  the  Egyptians,  Joseph  and  His  Brothers,  Mann  was  more 
scholarly,  in  the  way  of  a  researcher  and  a  resurrecter.  He  liked 
to  cast  himself  in  the  roles  of  the  past,  borrowing  for  various 
purposes  of  his  life  and  his  art  what  he  took  to  be  the  historic  expe- 
rience and  the  tradition.  When  he  wrote  about  great  literary  men 
dead  and  gone,  it  was  not  just  interpretation  of  their  lives  and  col- 
lected works;  it  was  rather  a  matter  of  submitting  to  their  influence, 
explaining  himself  in  the  light  of  what  he  found  out  about  them. 

In  the  American  Academy's  commemorative  tribute  to  him  after 
his  death,  written  and  read  by  Thornton  Wilder,  there  is  this  be- 
guiling sentence:  "He  was  methodical  in  work  and  of  great  in- 
dustry, furnishing  constant  occupation  to  two  secretaries."  Did 
Wilder  mean  just  Frau  Mann  and  Erika,  or  two  salaried  persons 
in  addition  to  them;  four  in  all?  The  little  working  methods  of 
prolific  writers  interest  me  exceedingly.  Often  they  are  more  sug- 
gestive of  the  dark  reality  of  their  work  than  anything  that  they  are 
able  to  tell  us  about  their  theory  of  literature  or  the  sources  of 
their  inspiration. 

"I  worry  only  in  the  afternoon,"  he  confided  to  Fritz  Kaufmann, 
the  author  of  an  important  philosophical  book  about  him,  Thomas 
Mann:  The  World  as  Will  and  Representation;  and  I  take  this  to 
mean  that  he  would  not  allow  his  mind  to  dwell  upon  any  matter 
of  real  life,  parental  anxieties  and  vexations,  social  maladjustments 
and  disappointments,  or  even  harrowing  events  in  the  wide  world, 
until  he  had  concluded  the  daily  creativity. 

I  wonder  what  can  have  inspired  him  to  make  himself  the  spokes- 
man for  disorder  and  psychopathology  in  so  great  a  part  of  his 
lifework?  If  any  very  dissipated  man  were  to  declare  and  expound 
puritanism,  all  his  life,  we  should  apply  hard  words  to  him:  hypo- 
crite, pharisee,  tar  tuff  e!  Here  we  have  the  reverse,  a  lifelong  student, 
burner  of  midnight  oil,  meticulous  indefatigable  craftsman,  de- 
voted and  dependent  family  man,  polyphiloprogenitive  to  the  num- 
ber of  six,  fine  gentleman  and  world  citizen,  nevertheless  advocating 
decadence  and  foolishness,  at  least  always  expressing  the  fascination 
of  that  side  of  life.  Was  this  only  an  echoing  of  Nietzsche  and  other 
such   immoralists?   I   think   that   he   rather  exaggerated   the   pri- 


Images  of  Truth  •  iyo 

ority  and  the  decisiveness  of  those  nineteenth-century  influences. 
After  he  had  made  up  his  mind  or  yielded  to  his  fate,  then,  and  per- 
haps not  until  then,  he  would  hunt  around  for  some  prototype  or 
precedent;  ex  post  facto! 

Can  he  have  been  an  immoral  fellow  at  a  very  early  age,  or  to 
state  the  matter  more  modernly,  done  things  that,  as  a  son  of  com- 
placent and  coercive  Luebeck,  he  had  been  taught  to  regard  as 
heinous?  Possibly;  not  probably.  In  great  measure,  I  believe,  his 
suggesting  that  this  was  the  case  was  artifice  for  art's  sake,  and  for 
the  furtherance  of  his  vocation  and  career,  staking  out  a  claim  in 
the  area  of  human  subject  matter  in  which  he  knew  himself  to  be 
least  developed  and  least  authoritative. 

Surely  the  Thomas  Mann  whom  we  saw  resident  in  Princeton 
and  on  the  west  coast  during  the  war  years  gave  not  the  slightest 
impression  of  ever  having  been  dissipated  or  accursed  in  any  way, 
or  on  the  other  hand,  of  temperamental  mediocrity  or  smallness  in 
life.  Let  me  humorously  call  attention  to  a  sentence  in  "Goethe 
and  Tolstoi,"  somewhat  applicable  to  the  author  of  that  brilliant 
essay  himself:  "Through  long  creative  years  his  [Tolstoi's]  marriage 
was  an  idyll  of  family  life,  full  of  healthy,  God-fearing  pleasure, 
against  a  lavish  economic  background  of  agriculture  and  cattle 
breeding."  Animal  husbandry  would  not  (I  think)  have  suited  the 
Manns:  otherwise,  to  use  a  new  American  locution,  it  figures. 

He  was  physically  extraordinary,  still  youthful-looking  in  his 
sixties,  when  I  occasionally  saw  him:  a  dignified,  almost  stately, 
slow-moving  man  with  intense  eyes  and  an  uneasy,  portentous 
expression.  He  had  a  way  of  sitting  up  very  straight  even  in  a  soft 
armchair,  not  as  one  ordinarily  sits  in  an  armchair,  rather  as  in  a 
saddle;  I  remember  thinking,  the  first  time  I  saw  him,  that  in  his 
youth  he  must  have  borne  a  resemblance  to  the  famous  medieval 
Rider  in  Bamberg  Cathedral.  He  was  not  apt  to  be  talkative,  and 
in  casual  sociability  sometimes  scarcely  listened  to  the  conversation 
around  him.  I  don't  suppose  that  he  was  ever  very  confidential,  in 
the  way  of  intimate  remembrances  or  expressions  of  emotion.  In  his 
"Lebensabriss,"  the  autobiographical  sketch  that  I  have  mentioned, 
he  tells  us  that  even  as  a  youngster  in  Bohemian  and  artistic  circles 


iyi  '  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

in  Munich,  he  called  only  half  a  dozen  friends  "du."  It  would  not 
have  occurred  to  me  to  ask  him  any  sort  of  important  direct  ques- 
tion. 

And  yet  in  his  expository  handling  of  biographical  material 
about  other  men  of  letters,  as  well  as  in  his  fiction  early  and  late, 
he  was  apt  to  emphasize  traits  that  seemed  reminiscent  of  himself, 
derivations  from  his  own  experience.  Can  this  have  been  somehow 
compulsive,  that  is,  inwardly  obligatory?  In  any  case  he  was  well 
aware  of  it.  "The  autobiographical  impulse,"  he  said,  presupposes 
"a  degree  of  brains  and  sensitivity  which  justifies  it  beforehand"; 
whereas  the  purely  inventive,  imaginative  faculty  "so  often  rests 
upon  sheer  self-deception." 

In  Death  in  Venice,  as  incriminatingly  as  can  be,  he  attributes  to 
the  perverse  dying  writer,  Aschenbach,  some  of  his  own  published 
writings  and  unfulfilled  literary  projects;  one  of  the  oddest  auto- 
biographical impulses  ever!  I  have  a  theory  about  this,  not  corrobo- 
rated by  anyone. — Must  he  not  have  had  in  mind  the  famous  poet, 
Stefan  George?  (There  is  another  reflection  of  that  strange  person- 
ality in  Isak  Dinesen's  greatest  tale,  The  Deluge  at  Nordemey.) 

Der  Siebente  Ring,  peculiar  lyrical  utterance  of  a  creative  man's 
doting  on  a  beautiful  teen-ager,  had  appeared  just  four  years  prior  to 
Mann's  story.  Perhaps,  as  he  was  beginning  to  conceive  it,  he  asked 
himself:  what  if  the  author  of  Der  Siebente  Ring  had  been  some- 
what older  and  much  weaker  than  he  was  in  fact,  and  what  if  the 
boy  Maximin  had  been  much  stronger  and  had  not  died?  And  then, 
as  he  was  not  just  a  ruthless  fiction  writer  but  a  high-minded,  well- 
meaning  man  of  the  world  as  well,  perhaps  it  occurred  to  him  that 
the  reflection  on  his  eminent  confrere  would  be  attenuated  and 
rendered  less  discourteous  if  he  took  some  of  the  suggested  onus  on 
his  own  broad  shoulders. 

Two  birds  with  one  stone,  furthermore!  As  I  have  already  stated, 
the  observation  of  the  psychology  of  homosexuality  in  this  famous 
tale  is  not  altogether  convincing  or  significant.  Even  as  he  com- 
posed it,  Mann  may  have  detected  in  it  something  shaky  and  un- 
authoritative. In  his  youth  and  his  old  age  alike,  literature  took 
precedence  for  him  over  every  other  value.  Certainly  his  position  in 


Images  of  Truth  •  772 

society  in  his  native  land  in  the  first  quarter  of  the  century  was 
strong  and  privileged  enough  for  him  to  afford  any  slight  scandalous 
suggestion.  It  may  be  that  he  deliberately  lent  Aschenbach  those  tell- 
tale books  of  his  own,  to  prop  the  characterization  up,  to  validate  it 
and  guarantee  it. 

Elsewhere  in  the  lifework  there  are  other  similar  instances  of 
sophistry  for  art's  sake.  Just  when  a  critic  or  a  confrere  might  have 
impugned  his  grasp  of  some  principle  of  human  nature,  his  acquaint- 
ance with  a  particular  social  or  cultural  background,  or  his  tracing 
of  the  distant  origin  or  complex  motivation  of  something  that  he 
was  writing — the  reasons  for  someone's  unreasonableness,  the  mys- 
tery of  someone's  behavior — he  would  manage  to  say  in  an  aside,  or 
to  suggest  very  persuasively,  that  the  complexity  in  question  was  in 
his  own  character;  he  himself  had  thought  thus  and  so,  in  a  previous 
phase  or  past  period,  if  not  at  present;  this  or  that  had  been  his  own 
action,  or  the  near  equivalent  of  something  that  he  had  done.  To 
quote  Whitman,  "I  was  the  man,  I  suffered,  I  was  there";  or  an  even 
higher-ranking,  older  poet,  Virgil,  speaking  for  Aeneas  to  Dido: 
"All  of  this  misery  I  saw,  great  part  of  it  I  was." 

True  or  false,  here  is  an  anecdote  illustrative  of  this  matter,  dat- 
ing from  the  early  days  of  his  vocation  of  fiction. — Upon  the  publi- 
cation of  Tristan  (1903),  someone  in  Luebeck  recognized  himself  in 
it,  a  matter  of  one  of  his  uniquenesses  or  at  least  idiosyncrasies  por- 
trayed to  the  life,  and  accused  the  young  portrayer  of  having  spied 
on  him,  from  window  to  window,  with  a  spyglass.  To  which  Mann 
is  said  to  have  answered  that,  yes,  indeed,  he  did  own  an  optical 
instrument  of  that  sort,  and  had  often  observed  his  accuser  through 
it,  exactly  as  specified.  But  as  to  the  characterization  in  the  famous 
story,  it  so  happened  that  the  spied-on  gentleman  had  not  contrib- 
uted anything  to  that;  it  was  self-portraiture. 

Generally  speaking,  and  seriously  speaking,  Mann's  "autobio- 
graphical impulse" — his  willingness  to  identify  himself  with  key 
figures  in  his  work,  villainous  as  well  as  heroic  figures,  assuming 
spiritual  responsibility  for  them  in  some  measure,  lending  them  his 
good  traits,  aspiration,  obstination,  work-morality,  if  anything  of 
that  kind  seemed  called  for,  taking  upon  himself  opprobrium  of 


ij3  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

their  bad  traits  (or  semblance  of  opprobrium)  if  necessary — doubt- 
less enabled  him  to  bear  with  some  equanimity  the  reproaches  of 
people  whom  he  portrayed  in  his  fiction  or  who  recognized  them- 
selves somewhere  in  it. 

The  chief  work  of  his  old  age,  Dr.  Faustus,  raised  this  issue  in  a 
troubling  and  controversial  way.  It  is  a  make-believe  biography  and 
violent  expressionist  portrait  of  a  German  composer  named  Adrian 
Leverkuehn,  a  reworking  of  the  Faust  legend,  incorporating  also 
some  of  the  psychology  and  (in  simplified  fashion)  the  philosophy 
of  Friedrich  Nietzsche,  and  certain  biographical  facts  about  him, 
notably  his  syphilitic  infection  and  his  insanity  in  consequence. 
What  this  modernized  Faust  and  latter-day  Nietzsche  wants  in  ex- 
change for  his  immortal  soul  and  his  health  is  absolute  greatness  as 
a  musician,  indeed  the  ability  to  revolutionize  modern  music;  and 
what  Mann  did,  to  make  this  important  lifework  real  to  himself  as 
he  wrote  about  it — and  to  his  readers  in  due  course — was  to  borrow 
the  actual  and  specific  musical  modernism  of  the  famous  composer 
who  happened  to  be  his  near  neighbor  in  southern  California, 
Arnold  Schoenberg. 

There  was  no  mystery  about  this  in  the  published  volume.  Schoen- 
berg obliged  him  to  append  to  it  a  characteristically  worded  "Au- 
thor's Note"  to  the  effect  that  "the  form  of  musical  composition 
delineated  in  Chapter  XXII,  known  as  the  twelve-tone  or  row  sys- 
tem is  in  truth  the  intellectual  property  of  a  contemporary  composer 
and  theoretician,  Arnold  Schoenberg";  that  the  novelist  has  "trans- 
ferred this  technique  in  a  certain  ideational  context"  to  the  hero  or 
villain  of  his  novel;  and  that  numerous  "details  of  musical  theory 
expounded  here  and  there  in  it  have  been  taken  from  Schoenberg's 
treatise  or  textbook  entitled  Harmonielehre." 

In  so  far  as  I  can  imagine  myself  in  Schoenberg's  situation — 
doubtless  a  silly  thing  to  try  to  do — it  seems  to  me  that,  having 
revolutionized  modern  music,  and  published  an  epochal  treatise  on 
how  to  write  it  in  my  way,  I  should  have  taken  some  satisfaction  in 
the  fact  that,  inadvertently,  I  had  taught  a  world-famous  literary 
neighbor  how  to  write  interestingly  about  it.  Quite  the  contrary:  as 
a  fellow  exile,  presumably  not  syphilitic,  certainly  not  crazy — or,  as 


Images  of  Truth  •  174 

the  saying  goes,  crazy  like  a  fox — Schoenberg  found  himself  ex- 
tremely unsatisfied  and  dissatisfied,  and  vented  his  irateness  and  sad- 
ness in  an  open  letter  to  a  literary  review. 

I  certainly  do  not  believe  that  Mann  intended  to  insult  Schoen- 
berg or  even  to  hurt  his  feelings.  The  eminent  composer's  touchiness 
seems  to  us  now,  and  must  have  seemed  to  the  author  of  Dr.  Faustus 
at  the  time,  shortsighted,  if  not  ungrateful.  Mann  was  the  proudest 
writer  on  earth,  well  aware  of  his  permanent  high  standing  in  cul- 
ture and  powerful  influence,  and  doubtless  he  felt  that  he  was  mak- 
ing a  contribution  to  that  immortality  which  Schoenberg,  with  his 
stubborn,  idiosyncratic  musical  output,  obviously  desired  and  was 
entitled  to.  Romans  a  clef,  as  a  rule,  in  the  long  run  damage  no  one. 
In  the  case  of  any  great  creative  personality  or  public  figure,  poster- 
ity is  glad  to  have  them. 

Furthermore,  from  Mann's  viewpoint,  Dr.  Faustus  was  a  work  of 
introspection,  an  act  of  conscience.  Its  principal  point  was  the  sym- 
bolical connection  and  correspondence  between  Leverkuehn's  per- 
sonal hubris  and  downfall  and  the  German  national  tragedy. 
Mann's  own  hubris  had  been  an  obvious  fact  of  the  German  literary 
life  for  half  a  century.  His  having  to  go  into  exile  in  Switzerland 
and,  still  farther  afield,  in  the  United  States  doubtless  had  a  hum- 
bling, depressing  effect  on  him.  Nevertheless,  and  despite  the 
uniqueness  of  his  talent  and  the  internationality  of  his  reputation, 
he  still  thought  of  himself  as  the  most  representative  of  Germans.  In 
all  these  essentials  Leverkuehn  was  his  mouthpiece;  to  all  intents 
and  purposes  he  was  Leverkuehn.  The  mere  addition  of  certain  as- 
pects of  Schoenberg's  career  as  a  musician  to  the  sublime  and  ter- 
rible personification  of  Germany  that  he  (Mann)  had  conceived  out 
of  his  own  inner  resources  and  out  of  the  sacred  subconscious  was  a 
comparatively  minor  matter.  Willingly,  always,  he  himself  had 
played  the  scapegoat's  part,  shouldering  his  share  of  responsibility 
for  things,  more  than  his  share.  Now,  if  he  had  a  mind  to  use  some- 
one else's  shoulder,  even  the  famous  dodecaphonist's  shoulder,  for 
an  ounce  of  the  burden,  a  detail  of  the  work,  oughtn't  he  to  be  al- 
lowed to? 

I  am  on  Mann's  side.  I  do  not,  I  cannot,  disapprove  of  any  fiction 


ij5  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

writer's  modeling  his  hero  or,  for  that  matter,  his  villain,  on  this  or 
that  recognizable  prototype,  even  a  living  prototype.  It  is  a  thing 
that  all  of  us  who  write  fiction  have  a  passion  to  do,  whether  or  not 
we  have  the  courage.  It  is  one  of  our  skills,  one  of  our  mysteries  and 
fecundities.  Often  indeed  it  requires  a  certain  fanaticism  and  hard- 
heartedness.  Some  of  us  simply  fail  to  imagine,  and  others  refuse 
to  consider,  the  feelings  of  those  they  write  about;  and  often,  in 
consequence,  their  work  is  more  powerful  than  that  of  scrupulous 
or  inhibited  novelists. 


Now  I  want  to  examine  certain  of  the  particulars  of  Mann's  art  in 
that  novel  which  I  greatly  prefer  to  the  imaginary  biography  of 
Leverkuehn,  namely,  The  Magic  Mountain,  pointing  to  what  de- 
lights me  especially,  and  making  something  of  an  issue  of  its  im- 
perfections. I  will  be  specific  and  descriptive  in  both  respects. 

Though  it  has  been  his  most  popular  novel  (in  the  United  States), 
and  though  surely  its  main  theme  and  setting  are  unforgettable 
— pulmonary  disease  as  an  exemplification  of  the  human  condition 
in  general,  Alpine  sanatorium  as  a  macrocosm — you  may  not  have 
kept  in  mind  various  details  that  I  attach  importance  to,  or  see 
meaning  in;  perhaps  you  have  scarcely  noticed  them,  with  so  much 
else  to  notice  on  every  page.  It  is  one  of  the  most  minute  and  florid 
compositions  in  all  literature,  with  a  forceful  sort  of  homogeneity 
made  up  of  many  small  contrasts,  with  every  thread  drawn  tight, 
every  bit  of  the  colorfulness  and  the  highlights  and  the  shadows  in 
keeping  and  in  order;  yet  never  quite  three-dimensional,  like  an 
immense  millefleurs  tapestry. 

Do  you  remember  how  it  starts,  in  medias  res,  with  the  arrival  at 
the  International  Sanatorium  Berghof  of  a  young  everyman,  Hans 
Castorp,  to  visit  his  tuberculous  soldier-cousin,  Joachim?  Immedi- 
ately we  are  provided  with  a  symbol  of  transitoriness  and  a  sugges- 
tion of  the  disgust  of  death:  he  has  to  wait  for  his  room  to  be  fumi- 
gated, because  an  American  lady  has  just  died  in  it.  Swiss  altitude 
and  the  stimulation  of  the  environment  of  sick  people  affect  him 


Images  of  Truth  •  176 

with  a  certain  inverse  hilarity,  something  like  a  mardi  gras,  but  with 
a  hint  of  witches'  sabbath.  He  keeps  blushing,  and  perhaps  it  is 
fever;  he  laughs  more  than  ever,  and  has  bad  dreams. 

Then  in  Chapter  II  the  strong  skillful  narrator  turns  us  around 
and  bids  us  look  at  Hans's  family  background  and  childhood,  a 
small  world  of  the  upper  bourgeosie,  rather  like  that  of  his  first 
novel,  Buddenbrooks,  presumably  not  unlike  that  of  the  Mann  fam- 
ily in  Luebeck;  in  which,  however,  disquieting  themes  of  the  present 
work  as  a  whole  are  predicated,  foreshadowed:  bygone  time,  which 
has  a  tragic  or  at  least  harrowing  aspect  (certainly  it  must  be  bad 
for  one,  if  one  ponders  it  too  constantly  and  intensely);  a  sense  of 
the  relatedness  of  love  and  disease;  vaguely  homosexual  feelings; 
and  a  good  many  inklings  of  death,  death  mystical  and  universal! 

For  example,  there  drifts  up  in  Hans's  mind,  from  that  half-for- 
gotten life,  the  similarity,  noticed  by  him  at  the  time,  between  the 
odor  of  his  grandfather's  corpse  laid  out  in  the  coffin  and  the  body 
odor  of  one  of  his  schoolmates,  a  somewhat  sickly  boy;  and  not  many 
pages  later,  when  Frau  Chauchat,  the  female  protagonist  of  the 
work,  makes  her  entrance,  very  exciting  to  the  young  bourgeois, 
what  attracts  him  particularly  is  her  resemblance  to  another  school- 
mate, one  named  Pribislav  Hippe.  Hippe  means  scythe,  emblem  and 
implement  of  the  Grim  Reaper.  Liebestod,  love-death?  No,  princi- 
pally, in  this  book,  it  is  Liebeskrankheit,  love-sickness.  For  the  idea 
and  the  point  of  a  sanatorium  is  to  get  well,  isn't  it?  This  Berghof 
of  Mann's  imagination  is  the  very  abode  of  the  will  to  live;  simply 
fatuous  and  physical  in  some  cases,  hopeless  in  some,  systematic 
and  feasible  in  a  few.  It  is  as  churning  and  writhing  and  jumping 
with  life  as  a  fishpond  or  a  snake  pit  or  a  monkey  house. 

In  this  same  chapter,  Hans's  second  day  in  the  place,  he  voluptu- 
ously smokes  cigars  named  after  one  of  the  mistresses  of  one  of  the 
kings  of  France;  and  the  constant  coughing  of  an  Austrian  Herr 
Rittmeister  arouses  in  him  a  sado-masochistic  imaginativeness  that 
he  has  not  noticed  in  himself  before:  with  his  mind's  eye  he  seems 
able  to  penetrate  the  cougher's  body — he  has  never  had  a  thought 
like  that  before—and  that  night  he  has  a  highly  stylized  dream  in 
which  he  and  his  good  and  good-looking  cousin  are  somewhere  on 


ijj  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

a  bobsled  riding  or  sliding  downhill,  with  the  cavalier  coughing 
gentleman  sitting  up  front,  steering. 

The  room  next  to  Hans's  is  occupied  by  a  low-class  Russian  couple 
whose  intercourse  is  ardent  and  noisy,  and  it  makes  him  nervous.  He 
happens  to  be  fretting  about  this  when  Frau  Chauchat,  the  heroine 
— let  me  say  rather,  the  hero's  beloved  (she  scarcely  deserves  to  be 
called  a  heroine)  — makes  her  entrance.  She  too  is  Russian,  and 
though  not  low-class,  heralds  herself  by  an  unmannerly  noisiness. 
Whenever  she  comes  into  the  dining  room  she  slams  the  door,  which 
Hans  has  noticed  and  resented  on  previous  occasions,  without  seeing 
who  was  doing  it.  Now  he  sees  her:  pale  and  freckled  and  redheaded, 
with  seductive  round  arms  but  unattractive  stubby  fingers;  a  woman 
who  looks  like  a  schoolboy  and  makes  him  feel  like  one.  These  vari- 
ous initial  hints  of  polymorphous  sexuality  notwithstanding,  the 
part  she  plays  in  the  novel  is  that  of  a  sort  of  Goethean  Helen  to 
Hans's  Faust;  the  furthest  thing  in  the  world  from  a  Gretchen. 

In  Mann's  representations  of  normal  youthful  passion  there  is 
often  an  odd  effect  of  coldness  or  forgetfulness,  a  lack  of  empathy. 
The  Faust-Helen  pattern  seems  to  come  more  naturally  to  him: 
peculiar,  intense,  imaginary  intimacy  of  those  who,  as  he  phrases  it 
in  Death  in  Venice,  "know  each  other  only  with  their  eyes";  a  part 
of  whose  interest  in  each  other  is  "unslaked  curiosity,"  a  part  of 
whose  mutual  respect  is  simply  not  having  a  basis  for  disrespect.  It 
is  a  pattern  that  turns  up  more  regularly  in  homosexual  behavior 
than  in  relations  between  males  and  females. 

Before  we  have  read  twenty  pages  we  realize  that  despite  a  Tol- 
stoian  gift  for  details  of  the  human  condition,  for  the  texture  and 
pattern  of  ordinary  assorted  everyday  existence,  this  is  not  going  to 
be  anything  like  an  eighteenth-  or  a  nineteenth-century  novel.  In 
the  "Lebensabriss,"  with  reference  to  these  preliminary  chapters, 
Mann  speaks  of  "the  comfortable  English  key  I  began  in."  Comfort- 
able? English?  Sometimes  in  comments  on  his  own  work  like  this, 
whether  in  commendation  or  the  opposite,  he  seems  almost  to  be 
joking,  enjoying  the  thought  that  his  readers  were  apt  to  believe 
anything  that  happened  to  come  into  his  head.  But  if  this  is  a  joke, 
it  is  one  that  he  persisted  in  year  after  year;  and  he  would  always 


Images  of  Truth  •  ij8 

buttress  and  back  himself  up  in  any  whimsicality  about  his  writing 
by  referring  to  his  forerunners  in  fiction,  the  blessed  hierarchy 
and  peck  order  of  his  chosen  old  masters  of  novel  writing. 

Mann's  joking  on  the  whole  was  less  effective  than  he  seemed  to 
think.  He  was  a  born  worker;  and  even  when  in  the  nature  of  the 
given  work  the  reader  was  bound  to  find  it  heavy  going,  the  writing 
itself  amused  him.  "My  endeavor  is  to  make  the  heavy  light,"  he 
said  in  1951  in  an  interview,  perhaps  ironically,  "my  idea  is  clarity; 
and  if  I  write  long  sentences — a  tendency  inherent  in  the  German 
tongue — I  make  it  my  business,  not  without  success,  to  maintain  the 
utmost  transparency  and  spoken  rhythm.  ...  I  feel  myself  to  be 
primarily  a  humorist." 

Presumably  he  intended  The  Magic  Mountain  to  satirize  certain 
novels  of  the  past,  somewhat  as  Cervantes  did  in  Don  Quixote; 
Fielding  and  Jane  Austen  likewise,  here  and  there.  Mann's  touch  in 
the  satirical  way  is  delicate,  almost  too  delicate.  Some  of  his  best 
pages  are  colored  by  sophistication  and  implicit  bookishness.  In  so 
far  as  he  gives  himself  English  airs,  he  compensates  for  this  soon 
enough,  with  deliberately,  self-consciously  German  effects.  When  he 
has  waxed  lyrical  or  epical,  he  offsets  it  with  a  sentimental  passage 
or  a  slight  parody  or  a  farcical  turn.  Though  surely  nothing  in  the 
entire  great  novel  is  exactly  a  laughing  matter — with  grief  and 
disease  ubiquitous,  even  morbidly  glamorous  in  it — again  and  again, 
by  the  above  means  and  other  devices,  he  induces  in  us  something  in 
the  nature  of  hilarity;  a  mood  corresponding  to  his  young  hero's 
when  he  first  arrives  on  the  mountaintop  and  is  influenced  by  the 
altitude:  jocund,  mystical,  slightly  hysterical. 

In  the  way  of  a  little  further  extension  of  his  dualistic  habit  of 
mind,  he  was  inclined  to  a  kind  of  double  entendre,  but  not  in  the 
ribald  sense.  The  scene  of  the  love-making  of  Hans  and  Frau  Chau- 
chat  when  they  have  had  too  much  to  drink  is  just  a  little  ribald. 
Note  that  during  it  they  converse  in  French,  very  Teutonic  French. 

As  a  rule  the  effect  of  Mann's  dichotomousness  in  his  way  of 
writing  was  merely  mockery  showing  through  the  earnestness, 
pathos  and  gruesomeness  interspersed  and  blended  with  the  pleasur- 
able vitality;  two  tones  at  once,  as  in  shot  silk,  or  in  certain  fine 


ij9  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

composite  minerals,  which  rather  unifies  the  work,  as  to  its  mood 
and  manner. 

Its  more  important  structural  unity  is  just  the  portraiture,  a 
constant  comparison  and  contrast  of  the  denizens  of  Berghof;  cross- 
beams and  cornerstones  of  the  human  nature  there  assembled.  Of 
the  mentality  and  character  of  his  half  dozen  personages  of  greatest 
consequence  in  the  sanatorium,  Mann  not  only  gives  subtle  and 
powerful,  sometimes  overpowering  explanations,  but  lets  us  hear 
their  own  self-expression,  explaining  things  to  one  another,  harangu- 
ing one  another,  arguing. 

Hofrat  Behrens,  the  medical  director  of  the  sanatorium,  is  the 
type  of  scientist  who  has  a  playful  mind,  skeptical  of  all  sorts  of  con- 
cepts, even  those  most  germane  and  workable  in  the  practice  of 
medicine.  To  some  extent  he  is  a  sick  man  himself.  He  is  an  artist  in 
his  spare  time.  He  has  had  some  amorous  intimacy  with  Clavdia 
Chauchat,  the  hero's  beloved.  Dr.  Krokowski,  the  staff  psychoanalyst, 
theorizes  extremely  about  amorous  proclivity  and  the  susceptibility 
to  disease,  to  the  effect  that  love  makes  one  sick,  and  sickness  makes 
one  concupiscent;  with  the  usual  basic  uncertainty  as  to  which 
comes  first,  which  is  the  easier  to  get  at  in  treatment.  He  discovers 
that  one  of  his  patients  has  mediumistic  powers  and  arranges 
seances  with  her  for  the  very  questionable  benefit  of  other  patients, 
including  Hans.  A  good  Italian  named  Settembrini,  a  political  lib- 
eral and  humanist  in  the  nineteenth-century  tradition,  attaches 
himself  to  Hans  as  a  substitute  father  and  mentor,  hoping  to 
counteract  the  wrong  ideas  and  morbid  influences  of  the  mountain. 

The  most  astonishing  and  prophetic  of  the  creatures  of  Mann's 
imagination  in  this  novel  is  an  Eastern  European  Jew  named 
Naphta,  orphaned  in  a  pogrom,  in  which  local  avengers  of  Christ 
crucified  his  father;  adopted,  after  that,  by  Jesuits,  and  given  every 
advantage  of  worldly  and  theological  education.  Despite  this,  and 
somewhat  in  consequence  of  it,  he  has  become  a  type  of  crypto- 
Communist  and  proto-Nazi.  Catholicism  and  terrorism  mixed,  blood 
lust  and  dialectics  mixed,  have  made  a  veritable  witches'  brew  in 
this  man's  head,  which  issues  in  pages  and  pages  of  frightening  and 
sickening  talk.  "Liberation  and  development  of  the  individual  are 


Images  of  Truth  •  180 

not  the  key  to  our  age,"  he  declares.  What  it  needs,  what  it  is  strain- 
ing to  bring  about,  what  must  happen  to  it  in  due  course,  is  a  "moral 
chaos"  and  a  "radical  sepsis"  and,  in  due  course,  an  "anointed 
Terror."  Some  such  nasty  combination  of  words  issues  every  time  he 
opens  his  mouth;  prescriptions  of  gangrene,  applications  of  mag- 
gots, lancings  of  things  with  a  rusty  knife. 

He  and  Settembrini  violently  discuss  all  this  for  ten  or  fifteen 
pages  at  a  time,  about  a  hundred  pages,  all  in  Volume  II.  Political 
theory,  history  lessons  biased  in  one  way  or  the  other,  opposite 
views  of  the  future  of  European  humankind:  their  debate  raises  the 
tone  of  the  work  above  the  sensationalism  and  sometimes  sordid 
hypochondria  inherent  in  the  subject  matter  of  the  tuberculosis  life; 
but  at  the  same  time  loads  it  down  with  what  you  might  call  edito- 
rializing, ideas  that  seemingly  never  develop,  never  move  along  with 
the  chronology  of  the  fiction,  and  cumulatively  constitute  the  great 
fault  of  the  novel  as  such,  the  work  as  a  whole,  the  narrative  per 
se:  its  abstraction,  volubility,  voluminousness. 

Very  specifically  in  two  chapters,  this  baptized  Jew  and  this 
idealistic  agnostic  Italian  between  them,  conduct  an  important  part 
of  Hans's  adult  education,  the  development  and  expansion  of  every- 
man's  mind,  which  is  The  Magic  Mountain's  main  theme,  refrain, 
and  gist:  demoralizing  devil  on  the  one  hand,  guardian  angel  on 
the  other,  contending  for  his  soul. 

In  the  characterization  of  those  two,  and  in  their  fanatic  de- 
bating, Mann  certainly  had  an  unfictitious  and  autobiographical 
matter  in  mind.  Settembrini  bears  a  resemblance  to  Mann's  elder 
brother  Heinrich,  the  author  of  The  Little  Town  and  of  Professor 
Unrat  (popular  in  its  motion  picture  version,  The  Blue  Angel)  with 
whom  Settembrini's  creator  had  engaged  in  acrimonious  controversy 
during  World  War  I.  The  question  was,  roughly  speaking,  whether 
or  not,  in  a  time  of  national  emergency,  the  creative  man  should 
partake  of  the  collective  martial  enthusiasm.  In  a  sense,  I  think, 
Thomas  Mann  wanted  to  partake  of  everything,  always. 

Heinrich  Mann  had  objected  bitterly  to  certain  passages  in  the 
essay   entitled   "Frederick    the   Great   and    the    Grand   Coalition" 


181  '  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

(1915).  This  is  said  to  consist  in  some  measure  of  thoughts  salvaged 
from  an  abandoned  historical  novel  (to  which,  by  the  way,  Mann 
refers  in  Death  in  Venice  as  a  part  of  Aschenbach's  lifework).  For 
example,  Mann  notes  that  the  brilliant,  harmful  eighteenth-century 
monarch  was  quite  as  capable  of  a  tranquil  career  of  flute  playing 
and  belles-lettres  as  he  was  of  "the  frightful  stains  and  bloody 
horrors  of  war";  but  instinctively  and  secretly,  Mann  goes  on  to  say, 
he  preferred  the  latter.  Because  he  was  a  German,  a  typical  German, 
he  felt  that  "this  secret  instinct,  this  element  of  the  daemonic  and 
the  super-personal,"  was  a  profounder  thing  in  him  than  any  per- 
sonal idea  or  desire  or  principle.  And,  Mann  concludes,  it  was  des- 
tiny, urgent  and  irresistible  in  his  mind  and  heart;  it  was  the  spirit 
of  history  incarnate  in  him.  "He  had  to  do  wrong,  in  order  that  the 
great  destiny  of  a  great  people  might  be  fulfilled." 

It  is  in  flat,  small  pronouncements  of  this  kind  in  his  expository 
and  hortatory  work  that  Mann  seems  most  foreign  to  us.  When  he 
aspires  to  be  somewhat  Latin-inspired  in  his  prose  style,  at  least 
Goethe-like,  lapidary  and  lucid,  he  lets  us  see  suddenly  the  rash- 
ness of  his  thinking,  his  sense  of  theoretical  imperatives,  feelings 
of  predestination,  and  prophetic  notions  of  what  history  has  (so  to 
speak)  in  its  mind. 

Heinrich  Mann  embodied  his  disapproval  of  all  this  in  an  essay 
on  Zola,  which  evidently  stung  and  challenged  the  younger  brother 
deeply.  During  the  further  war  years  Thomas  Mann  produced 
a  vast  volume  of  musings  and  arguments,  liberalism  versus  tradi- 
tional authoritarianism,  national  Kultur  versus  the  more  civilized 
feeling  of  world  citizenship,  entitled  Betrachtungen  eines  Unpoliti- 
schen  (Reflections  of  a  Nonpolitical  Man)  (1918);  of  which  no 
English  translation  has  as  yet  appeared. 

A  good  many  passages  of  Naphta's  shocking  discourse  in  The 
Magic  Mountain  doubtless  echo  that  old  disagreement  between  his 
brother  and  himself — more  importantly  perhaps,  at  the  bottom  of 
his  heart,  between  himself  and  himself — and  can  be  matched  with 
passages  in  the  Betrachtungen.  By  presenting  one  last  version  of  it 
in  the  desperate  colloquy  of  Settembrini  and  Naphta  in  such  a  way 


Images  of  Truth  •  182 

that  the  balance  of  the  reader's  sympathies  cannot  but  be  tipped 
toward  the  former,  perhaps  in  proud  sophisticated  fashion  Thomas 
intended  a  sort  of  apology  to  Heinrich. 

It  may  be  noted  that  Heinrich  Mann  apparently  never  budged 
from  his  liberal  internationalism  to  the  day  of  his  death.  Whereas 
the  younger,  profounder  brother  was  to  move  through  an  entire 
spectrum  of  political  convictions;  and  in  the  end,  as  an  old  man,  he 
looked  back  calmly,  complacently,  upon  all  his  thoughts,  no  matter 
how  dichotomous — perhaps  the  more  dichotomous  the  better — and 
referred  somewhat  proudly  to  the  book  that  we  in  Anglo-Saxondom 
do  not  know.  To  such  an  extent  was  he  born  to  be  a  fiction  writer, 
with  a  sort  of  vocational  deformation  in  the  course  of  his  lifetime  of 
writing,  that  all  he  seemed  to  ask  of  life  at  the  last  was  to  round  it- 
self out,  as  a  good  story  does;  dark  and  nonsensical  perhaps,  but 
with  shape! 

Three  quarters  of  the  way  through  The  Magic  Mountain,  Mann 
introduces  a  personage  even  more  impressive  than  Settembrini 
or  Naphta,  though  less  intellectual,  less  inclined  to  serious  conver- 
sation: Mynheer  Peeperkorn,  a  "kingly,  incoherent  man,"  a  giant 
and  an  immoderate  drinker,  almost  an  alcoholic.  Both  in  and  out  of 
his  cups,  Peeperkorn  personifies  the  love  of  life  and  the  joy  of  liv- 
ing. Before  long  Frau  Chauchat  becomes  his  mistress;  and  after  that 
he  commits  suicide,  for  a  reason  which  Mann  seems  to  find  more 
respectable  than  the  deathward  urges  of  others  of  the  Alpine  society: 
a  feeling  of  the  onset  of  old  age,  which  friendly  frequentation  of 
Hans  along  with  their  mutual  beloved  has  intensified. 

Peeperkorn,  who  has  come  to  Berghof  from  the  Orient,  accompa- 
nied by  a  picturesque  Malayan  servant,  advocating  and  taking 
the  lead  in  convivialities  of  all  sorts,  as  unbridled  as  may  be  in  a 
serious  Swiss  sanatorium,  is  a  type  of  aging  Bacchus,  to  whom  Frau 
Chauchat  plays  Ariadne.  German  readers  of  the  twenties  were  re- 
minded of  Gerhart  Hauptmann,  the  dramatist,  also  a  pagan  and 
bibulous  personality. 

More  interesting  to  us  now,  in  this  character  creation,  are  Mann's 
borrowings  from  that  lovely  small  volume  of  Gorki's  remembrances 
of  Tolstoi  which  I  have  mentioned  elsewhere:  the  trait  of  extreme 


183  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

virility,  with  a  corresponding  horror  of  the  physical  debasement 
of  the  decline  of  life;  an  anecdote  of  Tolstoi's  rapturously  watch- 
ing the  swoop  of  a  hawk  upon  a  barnyard  fowl  (with  typical  ag- 
grandizement, half  humorous,  half  Wagnerian,  Mann  assigns  to 
Peeperkorn  an  eagle  instead  of  a  hawk);  and  an  image  of  the  glori- 
ous old  man  of  Yasnaya  Polyana  in  the  midst  of  his  disciples  "like  an 
orchestra  leader  playing  at  one  and  the  same  time  on  various  instru- 
ments." 

The  Magic  Mountain  is  what  is  (or  was)  known  in  German 
critical  writing  and  textbooks  as  a  "Bildungsroman"  or  an  "Ent- 
wickelungsroman,"  a  development  novel.  Hans  does  develop  aston- 
ishingly. Almost  at  the  end  of  the  vast  novel — on  the  penultimate 
page,  to  be  exact — Mann  refers  to  him  as  a  simple  soul.  Simple, 
perhaps,  in  the  old  primary  dictionary  meaning:  honest  and  un- 
cunning,  but  by  that  time  certainly  not  uncomplicated,  not  inno- 
cent, not  ordinary.  Mann  in  his  determined  way,  with  almost 
ostentatious  skillfulness,  has  made  him  plausible,  but  hardly  (as  it 
seems  to  me)  probable,  having  conferred  upon  him  an  intellect  too 
far-ranging,  spiritual  interests  too  cosmic  and  esoteric.  Is  there  any 
other  protagonist  in  world  literature  so  well  educated,  at  least  well 
informed,  and  indefatigably  meditative  and  speculative?  Mann's 
suggestion  is  that  his  basic  indecisiveness,  his  inability  or  disinclina- 
tion to  make  up  his  mind,  only  adds  to  the  extent  and  importance  of 
his  intellectuality,  verging  on  infinitude,  or  at  any  rate,  constantly 
broaching  infinite  matters.  As  we  read  the  closing  chapters,  were  it 
not  for  the  author's  strong  technique,  somehow  referring  back  to 
the  opening  chapters  every  little  while,  echoing  what  he  has  already 
said,  jogging  our  memories,  we  might  almost  forget  that  this  is  the 
same  boy  who  first  came  to  the  Berghof :  full-fleshed,  clean  and  soft, 
energetic  though  phlegmatic,  rather  sleepy  when  not  excited,  red- 
faced  with  inhibition  and  fever. 

Frau  Chauchat  points  out  to  him  that,  whereas  she  lives  for  life's 
sake,  from  moment  to  moment,  impetuously  and  self-forgetfully, 
what  he  wants  from  life  is  the  educative  effect,  self-realization,  self- 
enrichment;  and  this  difference  between  them  rather  vexes  her. 
Within  Mann's  intellectual  frame  of  reference,  as  gradually  disclosed 


Images  of  Truth  •  184 

in  the  work  as  a  whole,  the  reader  finds  this  only  natural:  contrast 
between  male  and  female,  and  between  Teuton  and  Slav.  Certainly, 
in  the  outcome  of  everything  that  happens  to  Hans  during  his  so- 
journ at  Berghof,  the  aggregate  of  everything  that  transpires  about 
him,  he  gets  what  she  has  accused  him  of  seeking. 

Let  me  call  your  attention  to  the  cultural  sophistication  of  all  this, 
not  just  a  reviving  and  updating  of  old  pagan  religious  traditions 
and  myths,  Prometheus,  Orpheus,  Theseus,  Tiresias,  Oedipus,  which 
has  gone  on  continually  in  European  arts  and  letters  since  the  Ren- 
aissance. In  Germany,  especially,  this  has  been  a  more  eclectically 
bookish  and  artistic  epoch  than  the  quattrocento  or  the  cinquecento; 
also  more  theatrical  and  musical.  The  allusiveness  and  resonance  in 
Mann's  work  derived  from  a  whole  shelfful  of  nineteenth-century 
writers  as  well  as  the  ancients,  and  to  half  a  lifetime  of  concerts  and 
operas.  Hans  is  a  variant  upon  Wilhelm  Meister,  obviously;  he  is 
also  Faust,  with  two  Mephistos  instead  of  just  one;  he  is  also  Tann- 
hauser,  as  of  Act  I,  in  Venusberg;  and  once  in  a  while,  for  a 
page  or  two,  he  is  Parsifal.  Does  not  the  International  Sanatorium 
Berghof  also  occasionally  remind  you  of  the  Decameron?  Except 
that  the  victims  of  Mann's  plague  are  all  up  in  the  castle,  not  down 
below  in  the  city;  and  they  do  very  little  of  their  storytelling  them- 
selves. Mann  enjoyed  his  own  copious  aristocratic  language,  and 
would  not  have  trusted  any  of  his  dramatis  personae  to  bring  out 
in  a  colloquial  way  the  iridescent  meaningfulness  that  he  saw  in 
them  and  in  their  various  plights  and  crises.  Settembrini  is  Socrates; 
indeed  one  of  Naphta's  insults  to  him  is  that  evidently  he  has  been 
corrupting  poor  undersexed,  slightly  homosexual  Hans.  Settem- 
brini is  also  Sarastro,  Hans  is  both  Tamino  and  Pamino,  and  Frau 
Chauchat  is  the  Queen  of  the  Night. 


The  Magic  Mountain  is  an  almost  perfect  example  of  its  type  of 
novel:  the  group  portrait  of  a  little  world  set  apart.  In  form  and 
structure  it  corresponds  somewhat  to  Katherine  Anne  Porter's  Ship 
of  Fools.  But  naturally  the  German  great  man  interprets  his  world 


i8$  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

in  the  philosophical  way  much  more  than  the  American  woman  of 
genius  does,  and  sets  his  worldlings  to  philosophizing  also,  as  in  imi- 
tation of  their  creator.  This  results  in  the  one  notable  imperfec- 
tion of  The  Magic  Mountain:  its  extreme  length  and  looseness,  in 
which  one  may  see  some  self-indulgence  on  Mann's  part,  but  which, 
for  him,  certainly,  was  a  matter  of  aesthetic  principle,  creative 
innovation. 

If  I  were  teaching  an  advanced  and  leisurely  course  in  novel  writ- 
ing, I  should  like  to  assign  to  a  young  would-be  novelist,  or  to  two 
or  three  of  them,  the  exercise  of  drastically  abridging  it.  Mann  would 
not  be  so  hard  to  handle  in  this  way  as  some  other  discursive  narra- 
tors, for  example,  Proust  and  Balzac,  because  the  modes  of  his  writ- 
ing, historic,  descriptive,  expository,  didactic,  dialectic,  ironic,  are 
not,  as  a  rule,  closely  combined  or  intermingled.  He  is  apt  to  shift 
his  mind  from  one  to  the  other  quite  consciously  and  decidedly, 
taking  pride  in  the  gamut  of  his  effects  and  assorted  components 
of  his  narrative  power. 

The  pace  and  scope  of  the  first  fifty  pages  of  The  Magic  Mountain 
are  exactly  right,  I  think,  with  impact  enough,  and  a  definite  in- 
dication of  the  general  direction  of  the  work,  and  a  good  ratio  of 
items  of  fact  to  expressions  of  feeling.  My  young  abridgers  might 
try  to  keep  that  same  movement  and  proportion  throughout;  and  if 
they  did  so,  I  really  believe  that  they  would  find  it  desirable,  and 
certainly  feasible,  to  eliminate  two  or  three  hundred  pages  of  what 
follows;  approximately  a  third!  Most  obviously  curtailable  are  the 
several  chapters  in  which  his  hero,  Hans  Castorp,  with  time  on  his 
hands  on  the  mountaintop,  gives  himself  a  kind  of  adult  education: 
scientific,  historical,  philosophical.  Mann  evidently  was  glad  of  the 
opportunity  to  educate  his  readers  adultly  along  with  his  protago- 
nist, and  to  display  his  own  extraordinary  erudition.  And  certainly 
a  quantity  of  the  political  debating  of  Settembrini  and  Naphta 
could  be  removed,  not  to  the  wastebasket — for  it  is  brilliant,  and  of 
prophetic  interest  even  today — but  to  some  separate  book  form  or 
pamphlet  form,  as  an  essay  in  antithetical  generalization,  or  perhaps 
a  dialogue  in  the  manner  of  Plato. 

Also,  every  little  way,  from  beginning  to  end,  there  are  sentences 


Images  of  Truth  •  186 

and  paragraphs  of  Mann's  running  commentary  on  the  issues  and 
events  of  his  fictitious  world  that  could  come  away.  Often  we  seem 
to  be  sitting  in  a  large,  darkened  or  dimmed  auditorium,  with 
scenes  and  characterizations  shining  and  shifting,  one  after  another, 
in  the  dark,  like  lantern  slides,  while  the  masterful  narrator  gives 
us  a  tremendous  lecture  along  with  his  narrative,  pointing  out  the 
fine  points  and  the  profundities  in  each  bright  picture,  and  argu- 
ing things  back  and  forth.  It  makes  a  great  impression,  but  of  course 
it  brings  the  narrative  almost  to  a  standstill  now  and  then.  I  wonder 
whether  it  is  worth  while. 

Precedent  for  it  there  certainly  is.  Nineteenth-century  men  and 
women  of  genius  of  the  highest  rank  indulged  in  a  vast  amount  of 
expository  self-expression  in  their  novels.  Perhaps  it  was  more  im- 
portant to  Mann  to  feel  that  he  was  being  a  genius  like  them,  to 
manifest  genius  in  everything  he  wrote,  than  simply  to  master  his 
form,  and  to  be  brief  and  evocative  and  expeditious.  Indeed  I 
know  that  there  are  worse  faults  than  length  and  complexity. 
Mann's  artistry  never,  never  flagged  or  fell  into  ordinary  stereo- 
types. In  the  totality  of  The  Magic  Mountain,  nine  hundred  pages 
long,  there  are  only  a  few  slumps  or  anti-climaxes,  a  few  pages  of 
complicated  violent  action  a  little  skimped,  and  some  progressions 
and  retrogressions  just  synopsized,  not  rendered;  harmless  little 
holes,  inconspicuous  little  blemishes,  in  the  massive  construction. 
I  complain  of  the  too  much,  not  the  too  little.  The  important  lesson 
for  my  imaginary  students  of  the  art  of  the  novel  would  be  the  mere 
subtraction  and  the  negative  benefit:  how  much  more  vividly  and 
convincingly  a  great  many  matters  of  human  interest  and  various 
dramatic  or  melodramatic  passages  would  stand  out  if  the  pages  and 
pages  of  expository  writing  leading  up  to  them,  descending  away 
from  them,  could  be  scaled  down,  or  if  Mann  had  kept  them  under 
control  in  the  first  place. 

What  would  The  Magic  Mountain  be  like,  if  it  were  edited 
by  me  or  by  imaginary  disciples  of  mine?  A  less  impressive,  less 
imposing  work,  I  dare  say,  not  more  than  five  or  six  hundred  pages, 
but  surely  profound  enough,  with  only  as  much  biology  and  pathol- 


i8j  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

ogy  and  psychopathology  and  heredity  as  may  be  apparent  in  the 
problems  and  emotions  of  particular  human  beings;  with  just 
weather  instead  of  meteorology,  the  changing  seasons  year  after 
year  instead  of  time  in  the  abstract,  and  specific  landscape,  Alpine 
valleys  and  upland  meadows  and  mountain  tops,  instead  of  geology; 
not  intensely  political,  except  in  as  much  as  it  is  a  cross  section  of 
the  society  to  which  World  War  I  was  about  to  happen;  not  exactly 
philosophical,  except  in  the  way  of  the  ordinary  effects  of  love  and 
truth  and  freedom  and  strength,  and  conversely,  of  animosity  and 
falsehood  and  authority  and  weakness,  and  of  a  constant  brooding 
awareness  of  ever-oncoming  death.  A  work  of  heartbreaking  human- 
ity and  macabre  humor;  a  marvel,  in  its  way! 

Perhaps  I  ought  to  be  ashamed  of  this  hypothesis  and  fantasy  of 
abridging  a  novel  which  I  delight  in,  as  is;  which  furthermore  a 
million  readers  the  world  over  have  found  to  their  satisfaction. 
Could  not  future  readers  be  left  to  their  own  devices  about  it,  to  do 
their  own  skipping,  without  any  prompting  by  fanatical  advocates 
of  simpler,  purer  narrative  form?  Yes,  but  let  me  make  my  point.  If, 
at  that  stage  of  his  development  as  a  novelist,  which  was,  in  fact, 
the  turning  point  of  his  art,  Mann  had  been  obliged  or  persuaded 
or  inspired  to  reduce  The  Magic  Mountain  to  one  volume  instead 
of  two,  he  would  have  done  just  what  I  have  been  thinking  of 
doing:  sacrificed  a  vast  mass  of  his  marginal,  interpretational  writ- 
ing, and  a  good  deal  of  the  abstract  arguing  of  his  characters  also, 
and  kept  every  bit  of  definite  time  and  three-dimensional  location 
and  lifelike  humanity  and  interesting  action:  narrative  pure  and 
simple!  It  could  not  be  reduced  in  any  other  way.  The  superfluity 
is  all  in  the  expository  prose.  There  is  not  the  least  fat  or  gristle  or 
roughage  or  padding  in  the  story  line  or  the  portraiture  or  the 
intimate  conversation  or  the  passages  of  poetical  or  emotional  ex- 
pression. 

In  fact,  needless  to  say,  there  never  was  any  question  of  Mann's 
reducing  anything;  quite  the  contrary.  It  is  a  point  of  some  im- 
portance. He  did  not  strive  particularly  to  be  a  popular  writer. 
As  the  author  of  Buddenbrooks,  fame  and  fortune  descended  upon 


Images  of  Truth  •  188 

him  so  early  in  life  that  perhaps  he  scarcely  had  occasion  to  calcu- 
late his  success  in  any  way.  But  in  this  one  respect,  perhaps,  the 
general  cultural  predilection  of  his  time  and  place,  the  habit  of 
mind  of  the  cultivated  reading  public,  influenced  him  more  than 
he  was  aware.  In  Germany  and  Austria  and  in  the  several  satellite 
Central  European  and  Scandinavian  cultures,  during  the  half  cen- 
tury prior  to  the  publication  of  The  Magic  Mountain,  there  was  a 
cult  of  the  extensive,  the  massive,  the  overpowering,  the  colossal, 
not  only  in  literature  but  in  all  the  arts — as  indeed  in  the  United 
States  also,  at  that  same  time,  in  architecture  and  machinery  and 
other  features  of  the  new  materialism. 

By  Mann's  own  account,  later  on,  the  impulse  to  be  prolix  and 
vast  came  from  within.  Even  as  a  youngster,  he  declared,  he  had  had 
"a  willful  love  of  mere  largeness."  Characteristically,  whenever  he 
became  aware  of  any  powerful  predilection  or  peculiarity  in  himself 
or  in  his  work,  he  would  turn  and  consider  the  matter  in  its  historic 
perspective,  in  terms  of  the  creativity  of  the  past,  mirroring  himself 
most  willingly  in  studies  of  the  nineteenth-century  supermen, 
Wagner  as  well  as  the  philosophers  and  poets  and  novelists.  In 
1933,  in  a  long  essay  on  the  composer  of  The  Ring  of  the  Niebelung, 
he  noted  that  a  desire  to  have  everything  on  the  largest  possible 
scale,  "a  taste  for  the  monumental  and  the  copious  and  the  gran- 
diose," characterized  all  or  almost  all  of  them.  But  at  the  same  time 
they  desired  to  have  a  great  many  things  on  a  very  small  scale: 
factually,  in  the  mise  en  scene  of  their  lives,  a  quantity  of  bibelots 
and  symbolic  objects  and  scientific  curios  and,  correspondingly,  in 
their  inner  experience,  minute  subjectivities,  fixations  of  intellect, 
and  crises  of  conscience.  But  in  every  respect  the  detail  only  added 
to  the  monumentality.  They  heaped  their  pettinesses  up  in  tower- 
ing structures;  organized  them,  always,  with  reference  to  some 
planned  grandeur. 

In  another  passage,  referring  to  Tolstoi  even  more  fondly  than 
to  Wagner,  Mann  called  it  a  "democratic  amplitude,"  and  spoke  of 
the  strength  of  character  and  stubbornness  that  it  took  to  pursue 
and  cleave  to  an  ideal  of  that  kind,  in  a  petty  modern  society  and 


i8p  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

culture.  The  author  of  War  and  Peace,  throughout  his  life,  had 
been  criticized  for  the  relentlessness  with  which  he  carried  through 
every  bit  of  his  tremendous  concepts  as  planned,  with  "deliberate 
and  splendid  long-windedness."  Hasty  and  weary  modern  readers 
resented  this,  Mann  said.  Only  in  the  concluding  chapters  of  War 
and  Peace,  if  I  remember  rightly,  is  Tolstoi  as  theoretical  and 
loquacious  as  Mann,  and  no  doubt  he  was  aware  of  this  fact. 

As  I  go  on  indicating  and  interpreting  the  oddities  and  extrava- 
gances in  Mann's  work,  I  hope  that  it  does  not  seem  simply  humor- 
ous and  disrespectful.  Truly,  I  exaggerate  only  to  clarify;  I  jest  to 
arouse  interest  and  to  stir  up  differences  of  opinion.  If  The  Magic 
Mountain  seems  satisfactory  to  you  on  all  counts,  if  you  defer  to 
those  important  critical  writers  and  professors  who  see  in  it  the 
norm  and  the  apogee  of  twentieth-century  narrative  art,  well  and 
good,  more  power  to  you,  more  power  to  it. 

If,  on  the  other  hand,  you  feel  as  I  do  that  it  is  far  from  perfect, 
never  let  my  quibbling  and  theorizing  lead  you  into  any  absolute 
disregard  or  disillusionment.  Go  back  to  it;  reread  it  just  cursorily 
this  time;  play  my  game  of  impertinent  abridgment;  skip  all  the 
tremendous  thoughtfulness  and  the  scientific  lore  of  forty  or  fifty 
years  back.  Banish  from  your  mind  the  small  or  middle-sized,  lucid, 
evocative  and  symbolical  modern  masterpieces  that  (in  principle)  I 
prefer,  and  perhaps  you  do  too:  for  example,  Forster's  A  Passage  to 
India,  and  Richard  Hughes'  A  High  Wind  in  Jamaica,  and  Co- 
lette's Cheri,  and  Virginia  Woolf's  Between  the  Acts,  and  to  be 
sure,  Tonio  Kroeger  and  Lotte  in  Weimar.  With  a  free  mind,  taking 
it  at  face  value,  you  will  be  surprised  to  find  how  much  of  The 
Magic  Mountain  is  to  be  enjoyed  and  re-enjoyed,  praised  and  prized. 

The  parts,  indeed,  are  superior  to  the  whole.  It  is  what  you  might 
call  a  three-ring  circus;  whatever  your  point  of  view  (wherever  you 
sit,  around  the  tremendous  900-page  arena)  you  can  never  see  it 
all  in  focus,  in  reasonable  order;  somehow  there  is  dust  in  the  at- 
mosphere all  through  it,  and  glare  in  one  part,  obscurity  in  an- 
other; the  tent  poles  do  not  stand  straight;  the  vast  canvas  sags,  the 
sawdust  seems  to  pile  up  and  pile  up — but,  all  the  while,  on  every 


Images  of  Truth  •  190 

page,  in  every  square  foot  of  the  rings  and  around  the  track,  there 
are  wonderful  little  acts,  magic  and  conjuring  and  sleight  of  hand 
and  juggling  and  tumbling,  and  clowns  and  freaks. 


Some  of  Mann's  best  portraiture  in  The  Magic  Mountain  is  tiny; 
sometimes  as  many  as  half  a  dozen  supernumeraries  clustered  in 
one  small  pattern,  so  clearly  drawn  and  crystallinely  lit  that  they 
practically  detach  themselves  from  the  main  creation.  For  ex- 
ample, a  scene  of  young  people  on  a  terrace  after  their  heavy  sana- 
torium meal  of  meats  and  sweets,  replete  and  idle  and  mischievous, 
with  Mann's  malicious  intellect  shining  on  them  along  with  the 
Alpine  daylight.  I  keep  forgetting  in  what  part  of  the  two  volumes 
to  look  for  this;  it  has  no  very  marked  function  in  its  chapter  or  in 
the  unwinding  of  the  work  as  a  whole.  There  are  a  Balkan  military 
man  with  an  important  mustache;  a  Dutch  boy  who  collects  stamps; 
a  pair  named  Max  and  Moritz;  and  some  devout  person  from  Mann- 
heim— is  it  a  man  or  a  woman? — who  keeps  lurking  as  close  to  the 
others  as  he  or  she  can  get,  and  persisting  in  an  attitude  of  maxi- 
mum melancholy  and  selfish  desperation,  which  the  others  resent 
and  are  made  a  little  melancholy  by.  The  mere  assorted  liveness  or 
livingness  of  these  creatures  is  unforgettable;  why?  It  is  nothing, 
that  is,  it  would  be  nothing,  were  it  not  the  human  race;  it  is  Europe 
on  the  eve  of  one  of  its  wars;  and  it  is  the  purest  fiction,  in  that  as- 
pect of  the  art  which  is  even  more  fundamental  than  theme  or 
message  or  form  or  plot:  just  getting  to  know  people,  people  who 
doubtless  have  died  long  since,  or  perhaps  never  existed. 

Then  there  is  the  opposite  sort  of  small  scene,  not  at  all  marginal 
or  incidental;  tensely  composed,  and  vigorously  intentional,  with 
reference  to  the  entirety  of  the  work,  endlessly  worth  thinking 
about.  For  example,  an  episode  of  almost  blasphemous  pathos,  the 
rebellion  of  a  little  dying  girl  named  Barbara  Hujus  against  having 
to  take  the  Last  Sacrament;  the  hullabaloo  she  makes,  and  then  "a 
gruesome  sort  of  begging,"  suddenly  muffled,  as  though  the  earth 
had  already  opened  and  swallowed  her  up.  What  has  happened  is 


ipi  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

that  she  has  retreated  from  the  priest  under  the  covers,  kicking 
with  all  her  might.  I  am  afraid  that  this  impresses  me  as  a  truer 
representation  of  the  love  of  life  than  all  of  Peeperkorn's  personify- 
ing and  attitudinizing. 

No  matter  about  the  very  hermetic,  heavy,  slow  intellectual  pages 
that  happen  to  baffle  me  or  bore  me.  Have  I  seemed  to  forget  that 
it  took  a  man  of  genius  to  compose  them?  Indeed  not;  it  is  unfor- 
gettable. Only  these  other  lightweight  pages,  half-pages,  paragraphs, 
which  have  a  kind  of  naturalness  and  self-evidence  that  is  like  day- 
light, a  feeling  of  close  proximity  that  is  like  body  heat,  a  little  pal- 
pitation as  of  the  breath  of  life,  delight  me  so  much  that  I  cannot 
help  wishing  that  he  himself  had  been  distracted  from  the  full  de- 
ployment of  his  genius  more  often,  and  given  us  an  even  larger 
amount  of  his  fleeting  and  miserable  and  sublime  humanity  in 
miniature,  thumbnail  sketching  of  homunculi,  for  which  he  had  a 
greater  gift  than  anyone  else  on  earth. 

Reality,  it  occurs  to  me,  is  prolific  in  this  type  of  weird  little  event, 
unique  though  unimportant  humanity.  Even  journalism  shows  us 
a  good  deal  of  it.  Literary  writers  neglect  it  as  a  rule,  for  the  good 
and  sufficient  reason  that  it  is  difficult  to  organize  it  in  any  quantity 
in  coherent  book  form.  But  Mann's  organizing  power  and  sense  of 
construction  were  formidable.  In  his  way,  taking  as  much  time  and 
space  as  he  liked,  he  could  handle  the  slightest  item  about  the  least 
important  of  his  supernumerary  people  just  as  strongly  and  im- 
portantly as  the  great  social  problems  and  the  history  lessons  and 
the  metaphysical  matters,  drifting  clouds  of  the  timeless  and  the 
useless,  that  in  the  end  he  preferred. 

And  despite  his  abstract  preference,  I  must  say,  he  never  lost  his 
more  essential  narrative  ability  having  to  do  with  human  beings, 
even  in  the  less  naturalistic,  more  symbolical  works  of  the  autumn  of 
his  life.  In  Dr.  Faustus,  for  example,  not  only  are  his  principal  per- 
sonages as  powerfully  established  in  our  minds  as  ever,  with  sig- 
nificances even  more  definite  than  in  his  early  fiction,  there  is  still  a 
great  quantity  of  miniature  lives,  little  dramatic  actions  and  expres- 
sions, characterizations  for  characterization's  sake.  Every  so  often  he 
gives  us  slight  glimpses  of  people  who  have  no  great  raison  d'etre  in 


Images  of  Truth  •  jp2 

the  larger  scheme  of  the  work — like  wild  birds  casting  their  shadows 
across  windows  now  and  then;  like  little  animals  more  or  less  at 
home  amid  the  expository  tangles,  in  and  out  of  vacant  spaces  in  the 
deep,  florid  paragraphs. 

It  is  the  human  bestiary  that  delights  me.  The  dirty  stable  girl, 
Hanne,  who  teaches  the  infant  composer  Leverkuehn  and  other 
children  to  sing  rounds,  the  alphabet  of  polyphony,  is  unforgettable. 
Privat-docent  Eberhard  Schleppfuss,  Professor  Dragfoot  (another  of 
the  breed  of  Naphta),  is  unforgettable;  would  that  one  could  forget 
him!  The  child  Nepomuk,  who  took  for  himself  the  name  of  Echo, 
the  only  human  being  ever  loved  by  Leverkuehn,  screaming  his 
miniature  life  away  in  spinal  meningitis — akin  to  Hanno  Budden- 
brook,  and  to  the  consumptive  children  of  Berghof,  and  to  one 
or  another  of  the  little  Shakespearean  princes — breaks  my  heart. 

Even  at  that  late  date  Mann  (aged  seventy  and  plus)  obviously 
took  an  ecstatic  interest  in  human  nature — the  finest  thing  in  the 
Entstehung  is  an  account  of  his  transforming  a  little  grandson  of  his 
into  the  ill-fated  Echo,  and  trying  not  to  frighten  the  little  one's 
mother  by  the  inauspicious  creative  act — and  he  still  knew  how  to 
arouse  the  reader's  corresponding  interest.  But  in  Dr.  Faustus,  as 
indeed  in  Joseph  and  His  Brothers,  absorbed  in  perceptions  far- 
flung  and  timeless,  and  aesthetic  and  metaphysical  issues  of  some 
difficulty,  he  found  less  room  for  the  record  of  homo  sapiens  as  such. 
Whereas  in  The  Magic  Mountain  there  is  some  slight  hallucinating 
human  beauty,  sentiment  or  sensuality  or  enigma,  on  almost  every 
page,  with  a  brightness  and  emphasis,  denoting  (I  think)  pride  in 
what  he  was  able  to  do  in  that  way. 

For  example,  the  funeral  march  of  the  Mexican  lady  who  has  two 
doomed  handsome  sons.  "Tous  les  deux!  tous  les  deux!  both  of 
them!"  she  says  to  everyone.  It's  the  only  thing  she  knows  how  to 
say  in  French;  she  can't  say  anything  at  all  in  German.  To  the 
sound  of  music  from  a  nearby  hotel,  Sefiora  Tous-les-Deux  paces 
around  the  garden  with  ceremonious  woeful  tread;  Hans  is  watching 
her  from  his  balcony.  Then  the  music  changes  to  a  waltz,  and  his  at- 
tention shifts  to  the  lascivious  Russians  next  door.  Suddenly  it 
occurs  to  him  that  there  is  some  parallel  between  the  two  Mexican 


jp5  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

sons  going  to  their  death,  as  it  were  in  double  harness,  and  himself 
and  his  dear  cousin  Joachim;  and  he  feels  the  strain  of  unenacted 
sex  and  the  magnetism  of  old  mortality. 

For  example,  the  gluttonous  boy  suddenly  raging  at  the  dwarf 
waitress  Emerentia,  stomping  and  pounding,  shouting  "I  will"  and 
"I  won't" — it  is  something  about  the  tea,  not  hot  enough  or  not 
steeped  enough.  And  his  fury  communicates  itself  to  the  others  in 
the  dining  room,  for  no  reason  except  the  human  contagiousness, 
mammalian  contagiousness:  "some  of  them  sprang  up  and  glared, 
fists  doubled,  teeth  clenched;  others  sat  white  and  trembling,  their 
eyes  cast  down." 

By  that  time,  the  historic  chronology  keeping  pace  with  this  Ac- 
tive chronicle  of  the  life  in  a  health  resort  in  a  neutral  country, 
World  War  I  has  begun  to  darken  on  the  horizon  of  Europe,  with 
intermittent  but  persistent  flickers  like  summer  lightning. 

In  that  same  chapter,  almost  at  the  end  of  the  book,  there  are 
other  symptoms  of  the  basic  recurrent  illness  of  the  Continent,  evi- 
dently less  curable  than  tuberculosis. — A  female  patient  quarrels  so 
strenuously  with  a  woman  who  runs  a  lingerie  shop  in  the  village 
that  it  gives  her  a  hemorrhage.  A  Jewish  patient  and  an  anti-Semitic 
patient  come  to  blows  in  the  hallway.  The  Polish  patients  all  get 
to  feuding,  with  tedious  formalities,  like  diplomats.  Hans's  rival  in- 
structors, Settembrini  the  good  European,  and  Naphta  the  totali- 
tarian Jew,  in  the  heat  of  an  argument  about  political  assassination 
— whether  or  not  there  is  any  justification  for  it  in  ethics — finally 
realize  how  irremediably  they  hate  each  other,  and  fight  a  duel. 
With  a  certain  theatricality  and  magnanimity  Settembrini  shoots 
in  the  air;  whereupon  Naphta  blows  his  brains  out.  Wishful  plot- 
ting on  Mann's  part,  I  may  say;  for  in  fact  the  Naphtas  of  one  stripe 
and  another  were  to  dominate  German  history  for  decades  after  that. 

It  was  in  1912,  we  are  told,  that  Mann  began  the  composition  of 
The  Magic  Mountain,  and  I  have  oftened  wondered  how  he  would 
have  concluded  it  if  World  War  I  had  not  taken  place.  For  that  is 
all  the  denouement  it  has:  the  peculiar  suicidal  duel,  then  the 
historic  thunderbolt.  And  by  that  time  many  of  the  dwellers  on 
the  mountain,  the  sick  population  of  Berghof ,  have  gone  back  down 


Images  of  Truth  •  194 

to  the  world  at  sea  level,  and  many  have  died.  Joachim's  death 
especially  has  cast  a  desolation  upon  the  latter  chapters;  because, 
surely,  he  was  Dr.  Behrens's  most  respectable  and  lovable  patient. 
We  realize  at  last  that  we  have  never  quite  loved  Hans,  perhaps 
because  Mann,  on  the  one  hand,  has  made  too  singular  a  figure  of 
him,  and  on  the  other  hand,  always  somewhat  made  fun  of  him. 
Frau  Chauchat  has  gone  away  somewhere,  and  Hans  evidently  has 
licked  his  wounds  and  more  or  less  forgotten  about  her.  For  ap- 
proximately a  hundred  pages  everyone's  story  has  been  slowing 
down,  like  a  huge  top,  with  declining  hum  and  little  lurches.  Then 
war  is  declared,  and  we  see  and  hear  Hans  in  the  midst  of  it,  just 
once:  everyman,  stumbling  across  a  dull  battlefield  with  three 
thousand  other  typical  young  Germans,  singing  to  himself  Schu- 
bert's "Lindenbaum." 

Of  all  the  incidents  in  The  Magic  Mountain,  the  one  that  most 
truly  touches  my  imagination  is  Dr.  Behrens's  letting  Hans  look 
at  his  cousin  Joachim's  heart  in  the  course  of  a  fluoroscopic  exam- 
ination. (A  doctor  friend  once  let  me  look  at  my  own,  holding  a 
mirror  up  to  the  fluoroscope.)  While  Behrens  is  calling  attention  to 
evidences  of  tuberculosis  in  Joachim's  lungs,  Hans  independently 
notices  something  like  a  bag,  a  strange  animal  shape,  darkly  visible: 
"pulsating  and  expanding  and  contracting  rather  regularly,  some- 
what after  the  fashion  of  a  jellyfish  swimming." 

"Good  God,  it  is  the  heart,  Joachim's  honor-loving  heart,"  Hans 
exclaims  to  himself.  "I  am  looking  at  your  heart,"  he  says  to  his 
cousin  in  a  repressed  voice. 

"Go  ahead  and  look,"  Joachim  answers,  probably  smiling  back 
in  the  darkness. 

After  that,  Behrens  shows  Hans  his  own  hand,  with  the  flesh  dis- 
solved from  it  in  a  mist;  and  on  the  translucent  bone  of  one  finger, 
his  grandfather's  signet  ring,  very  black  and  seemingly  loose,  ready 
to  be  passed  on  to  some  successor  and  inheritor,  some  other  tempo- 
rary ring  wearer.  And  "for  the  first  time  in  his  life,"  Mann  specifies, 
Hans  understands  that  he  is  predestined  to  die;  and  at  the  thought, 
there  comes  over  his  face  "the  expression  it  usually  wore  when  he 


195  *  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

listened  to  music:  a  little  dull,  sleepy,  and  pious,"  his  lips  parted,  his 
head  inclined  to  one  side. 

The  incident  that  I  like  least  also  has  to  do  with  the  relationship 
of  the  cousins;  Joachim  this  time  posthumous  and  ghostly.  It  is  the 
eighth  section  of  the  last  chapter  and  is  entitled  "Highly  Question- 
able." At  the  invitation  of  Krokowski,  who  has  what  I  am  inclined 
to  call  a  decadent  attitude  toward  such  things,  a  girl  named  Elly 
Brand  who  has  mediumistic  powers  raises  Joachim  from  the  dead 
for  Hans  to  see  and  speak  to.  I  imagine  that,  as  Mann  conceived 
this  episode,  it  was  to  have  been  the  climax  of  the  book  on  one  of 
its  planes,  that  of  the  emotions  and  the  private  life.  Surely  he  can- 
not have  intended  it  to  be  anti-climactic,  which  it  is  in  a  way.  In  a 
short  essay,  Okkulte  Erlebnisse,  he  gave  us  an  account  of  his  own 
experiences  in  this  realm  of  spiritualism:  "backstairs  metaphysics," 
he  calls  it,  with  seemingly  some  disrespect  but  not  entire  incredulity. 
"May  lightning  strike  me  if  I  lie,"  he  protests — and  somehow  it  isn't 
an  altogether  reassuring  protestation — and  goes  on  to  describe  a 
handkerchief  which  levitated  and  hung  in  the  air  awhile,  and  a 
typewriter  which  typed  itself,  well  out  of  the  reach  of  anyone's 
fingers  or  other  mere  mundane  percussiveness. 

The  occurrence  in  Krokowski's  room  is  more  romantic  and  mean- 
ingful than  this,  for  better  or  worse.  At  the  height  of  the  trance, 
upon  instructions  from  the  psychoanalyst,  Hans  has  to  sit  in  front 
of  frail  maidenly  Elly  and  clasp  her  hands  and  grip  her  legs  between 
his  knees.  She  tosses  to  and  fro,  as  though  in  pain;  it  is  a  harrowing 
experience  for  Hans,  lasting  almost  two  hours.  His  struggle  with 
her  reminds  him  (or  perhaps  I  should  say,  it  reminds  Mann,  who 
reminds  us)  of  the  role  of  a  midwife  or  it  may  be  of  a  young  hus- 
band and  father-to-be,  during  a  childbirth. 

Meanwhile  a  recording  of  Valentine's  aria  from  Gounod's  Faust 
has  been  placed  on  the  phonograph;  the  needle  gets  to  the  inside 
of  the  platter;  the  music  ceases,  and  no  one  does  anything  about  it; 
it  scratches  around  and  around  and  around.  Whereupon,  suddenly, 
there  sits  dear  handsome  Joachim,  in  his  astral  body.  Hans,  our 
somewhat  simple  soul,  indefatigable  experience  seeker,  dabbler  in 


Images  of  Truth  •  196 

everything,  whispers  fondly  to  his  cousin,  "Forgive  me,  forgive  me!" 

What  for?  one  wonders.  It  might  well  be,  I  should  say,  for  dis- 
turbing Joachim's  heavenly  rest,  only  to  provide  an  evening's  dilet- 
tantism and  sensation  seeking. 

The  trouble  with  this  scene,  I  feel,  is  not  just  a  question  of  its 
healthy-mindedness  or  morbidity,  or  even  of  its  validity  in  point 
of  fact.  In  a  work  of  imaginative  literature  it  rarely  seems  to  matter 
whether  or  not  the  writer  believes  everything  that  he  writes.  But 
reader  reaction  always  matters.  The  fiction  reader,  particularly, 
wants  the  fiction  writer  to  take  a  position,  which  may  be  fictitious 
or  insincere,  but  which  ought  to  be  definite,  so  that  the  focus  of 
the  work  as  it  refers  to  the  lives  of  the  narrated  persons  in  whose 
reality  we  are  asked  to  believe  shall  be  clear  and  persuasive. 

Apt  to  take  both  sides  in  every  argument,  addicted  to  antithesis, 
always  longing  for  synthesis,  and  when  synthesis  was  not  forthcom- 
ing, often  contenting  himself  with  mere  changeableness,  flexibility, 
and  ambivalence — Mann  wasn't  the  writer  to  inspire  confidence  in 
a  phenomenon  such  as  Joachim's  ghost.  The  very  texture  of  his 
writing,  his  little  effects  of  mockery  and  mimicry,  and  flights  of 
rhetoric,  make  the  reader  dubious. 

"Superstition  is  the  poetry  of  life,"  Goethe  said.  Poets  do  fre- 
quently play  around  with  themes  of  spiritualism  and  ghostliness, 
some  of  them  in  natural  credulity,  some  only  pretending  to  be 
credulous,  vacillating  between  their  truth  and  untruth;  still  others 
(Yeats,  for  example)  making  a  mystery  of  the  extent  of  their  belief, 
the  degree  of  their  sincerity  or  insincerity,  all  their  lives.  Poetry 
readers  do  not  mind.  Novelists  have  to  take  somewhat  more  re- 
sponsibility for  their  beliefs  and  disbeliefs,  because  of  the  length 
and  breadth  of  the  form  of  the  novel;  it  requires  consistency  and 
consequentiality  to  hold  it  together.  A  certain  candor  about  ob- 
jectionable matters  is  a  part  of  the  novelist's  constructive  power;  as 
you  might  say,  tongues  and  grooves,  nuts  and  bolts.  If  they  are  too 
loose,  the  work  as  a  whole  will  somewhat  sag  and  tilt.  Decisiveness 
is  more  structural  than  suggestiveness. 

Our  word  "superstition"  is  a  somewhat  less  serviceable,  less  com- 


1 9 y  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

prehensive  vocable  than  the  German  equivalent,  "Aberglaube." 
Goethe  and  Mann  meant  by  it  (I  think)  a  setting  aside  of  whatever 
objections  one's  critical  faculties  may  make;  a  disregard  of  the 
counter-indications.  Occultism  is  important  indeed  to  a  good  many 
men:  something  primitive  in  them  vestigial  in  that  way,  something 
neurotic  thus  manifesting  itself.  I  do  not  suppose  that  it  meant 
much  to  Mann  personally.  It  was  a  literary  component,  one  of  the 
accepted,  expected  devices  of  the  romantic  tradition,  which  he  just 
used  when  it  suited  him.  His  use  of  it  was  mistaken  and  disappoint- 
ing (I  think);  but  it  was  not  inspirational  or  compulsive. 

His  particular  Aberglaube,  excessive  predilection,  immoderate 
habit  of  mind,  had  to  do  with  intellectuality  and  erudition.  Except 
for  the  Devil  in  Dr.  Faustus  (provided  by  the  medieval  tradition  and 
the  previous  great  treatments  of  the  legend),  the  supernatural  pro- 
vided him  with  only  an  interlude  or  a  scherzo  here  and  there; 
whereas  in  all  his  long  novels,  learnedness  of  some  sort  accounts  for 
almost  half  the  text. 

An  entire  chapter  of  The  Magic  Mountain  (Chapter  V)  is  devoted 
to  Hans's  gluttony  to  know  things,  and  the  consequences  of  this:  a 
sort  of  mental  indigestion,  an  intensifying  of  his  emotions,  and  per- 
haps, from  the  bourgeois  point  of  view,  a  weakening  of  his  char- 
acter. In  this  respect  it  somewhat  parodies  Goethe's  Faust,  who  also 
wanted  knowledge  rather  than  power  or  pleasure. 

But  this  is  realistic  and  didactic  fiction,  a  cautionary  tale  as  well 
as  a  modern  myth  and  fantasy;  and  I  think  there  is  bound  to  be  a 
question  in  the  serious  reader's  mind,  as  to  his  agreement  or  dis- 
agreement with  Mann's  thesis  or  premise  in  it.  Do  we  really  believe 
that  it  is  important  for  a  rather  ordinary,  affluent  young  man  in  ill- 
health,  like  Hans,  to  stuff  his  mind  with  massive  technicalities  of 
anatomy  and  psychology  and  pathology  and  biology  and  biochem- 
istry and  pharmacology  and  radiology,  as  Hans  does  in  Chapter  V, 
just  to  be  in  the  know  and  au  courant,  with  no  notion  of  merely 
professing  a  science  or  of  doing  laboratory  work  or  otherwise  mak- 
ing himself  useful;  to  talk  himself  hoarse  about  political  theory 
and  sociology  and  theology  and  metaphysics,  or  to  listen  to  various 


Images  of  Truth  •  198 

fanatics  talking  themselves  hoarse,  in  hopes  of  making  all  that  auto- 
didactic  matter  meaningful  to  himself  somehow,  of  co-ordinating  it 
with  his  own  vague  awareness  of  his  retarded  psyche,  presumably 
psychosomatic  pulmonary  condition,  and  generally  unfunctional, 
unwilling,  nonwilling  way  of  life? 

It  expresses  an  idea  of  education  entirely  acquisitive  and  exhibi- 
tionistic;  everything  in  mere  concepts  and  verbal  formulations,  as  it 
might  be  for  purposes  of  conversation,  for  showing  off.  All  knowing- 
ness;  no  training,  no  skills,  no  discipline!  I  do  not  think  it  either 
commendable  or  important. 

Despite  Mann's  techniques  of  shadings  of  humor  and  rather 
poetical  exaggerations,  by  which  he  (so  to  speak)  kept  hedging  his 
bet  about  some  things,  I  think  it  safe  to  say  that  this  entire  matter 
of  educatedness  was  important  to  him.  He  must  necessarily  have 
read  all  the  treatises  and  textbooks  that  Hans  read;  and  it  is  with 
obvious  enjoyment  that  he  gave  us  the  gist  of  them  in  a  fantastic 
sequence  of  epitomizing,  synthesizing  paragraphs  and  pages.  The 
great  question  arising  out  of  all  that  reading  matter  was:  what  is 
life?  Repeatedly,  more  or  less  rhetorically,  he  asked  it,  or  brought  it 
into  Hans's  conversation  or  his  soliloquizing  somehow.  "It  was  the 
existence  of  the  actually  impossible-to-exist,  of  a  half-sweet,  half- 
painful,  balancing  or  scarcely  balancing,  in  this  restricted  and  fever- 
ish process  of  decay  and  renewal,  upon  the  point  of  existence  .  .  ." 

Perhaps  I  can  make  this  sentence  less  obscure:  it  was  the  exist- 
ence of  a  thing  that  in  fact  can  scarcely  be  said  to  exist;  a  constrained 
and  feverish  process  of  decay  and  renewal,  with  bitterness  and  sweet- 
ness in  the  balance,  almost  unbalanced,  and  always  on  the  verge 
of  existing. 

Of  course,  Mann's  German  is  far  finer  than  Mrs.  Lowe-Porter's 
English,  and  finer  than  my  American;  but  no  matter.  It  is  a  phe- 
nomenal, untranslatable  way  of  writing  at  best,  calling  to  mind  the 
bravura  music  that  the  castrati  sopranos  of  the  eighteenth  century, 
Farinelli  and  others,  performed  at  the  close  of  their  concerts,  daz- 
zling both  to  the  musical  connoisseur  and  to  rococo  society  at  large. 
I  think  that  Mann  meant,  above  all,  to  dazzle. 

What  was  life?  Hans  echoes  his  creator's  question.  "It  was  a  secret, 


igg  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

ardent  stirring  in  the  frozen  chastity  of  the  universe;  a  clandestinely 
voluptuous  and  impure  sucking  and  secreting;  an  exhalation  of 
carbon-monoxide  gas  and  various  material  impurities  of  mysterious 
origin  and  composition  ...  a  pullulation,  something  opening  out 
and  shaping  up,  something  unstable  and  top-heavy  (but  with  laws  of 
growth  inherent  in  it,  controlling  it),  something  brewed  out  of 
water,  albumen,  salt,  and  fats,  which  was  called  flesh  and  became 
form  .  .  .  nothing  but  the  next  step  on  the  reckless  path  of  the 
spirit  dishonored  .  .  ." 

There  are  thirteen  or  fourteen  pages  of  this,  nonstop.  Then  Hans 
falls  asleep  and  dreams  of  Frau  Chauchat,  a  rather  anatomical 
dream  of  "the  fine-grained  skin  of  her  triceps,"  and  "blue  branch- 
ings of  larger  veins"  around  her  elbows;  and  as  he  dreams,  a  heavy 
volume  of  embryology  that  he  has  been  reading  slips  down  and 
presses  heavily  on  the  pit  of  his  stomach  and  obstructs  his  breathing. 
This  takes  only  about  half  a  page.  But  to  my  taste,  as  a  novel 
reader,  that  half-page,  the  hero's  sleepiness  and  slight  eroticism,  the 
heroine's  round  and  pallid  and  freckled  and  blue-blooded  arm — 
preferably  leaving  out  some  of  the  big  words,  such  as  "triceps"  and 
"blastula"  and  "epithelia"  and  "rudimentary  lanugo"  and  "organic 
plurality" — is  more  valuable  and  more  instructive  than  all  the  vain 
passages  of  popularized  science  and  eclectic  philosophizing.  It  en- 
compasses true  facts  of  life,  experience  or  (what  is  next  best)  vicari- 
ousness;  it  expresses  sympathy  and  empathy;  it  reiterates  a  more  or 
less  universal  ancient  theme;  it  appertains  to  one  of  the  established 
realms  of  narrative  art. 

Hans  had  never  seen  a  dying  man  until  he  came  to  the  Sanatorium 
Berghof.  His  father  and  his  mother  and  his  grandfather  had  all  de- 
parted this  life  while  he  happened  to  be  away  from  home  or  out  of 
the  room,  and  he  felt  somewhat  defrauded  of  the  experience.  The 
great  eyes  of  the  first  moribund  man  whom  he  visits  in  his  sickroom, 
rolling  toward  the  bright  window,  toward  the  open  door,  and  to- 
ward Hans  himself  standing  in  the  doorway,  make  a  tremendous 
impression  on  him.  Instinctively — it  is  Mann's  adverb  (Mrs.  Lowe- 
Porter's  adverb) — he  tries  to  protrude  and  to  roll  his  own  eyes  in 
the  same  manner,  with  slow  significant  gaze. 


Images  of  Truth  •  200 

Then,  as  he  comes  away  down  the  hall,  he  encounters  Frau 
Chauchat,  and  finds  himself  more  than  ever  responsive  to  her  ob- 
scure affection  and  slight  wiles  of  the  flesh;  something  in  him  has 
been  brought  to  life  by  the  shock  effect  of  the  fatal  event,  the 
glimpse  of  the  universal  specter.  Episodes  of  this  kind  (I  think) 
truly  reveal  certain  mechanisms  of  our  poor  human  nature  as  it  is 
in  fact,  connecting  links  not  only  between  one  human  being  and 
another  (indeed  every  human  being  and  every  other)  but  between 
our  psychology  on  its  several  levels  and  our  experience.  And  all 
that  is  what  young  men  and  women,  fiction  readers,  need  to  learn, 
and  what  the  techniques  of  fiction,  rightly  conceived  and  skillfully 
exercised,  are  best  suited  to  reveal  and  teach. 

But  even  in  The  Magic  Mountain — and,  as  I  have  already  said, 
more  and  more  disturbingly  in  the  later  novels — one  feels  that  mere 
reality  and  humanity,  psychology  and  physiology  and  motivation 
and  coincidence,  although  Mann's  supreme  talent  lay  in  that  direc- 
tion, were  gradually  ceasing  to  excite  him  and  satisfy  him.  He  de- 
veloped a  passion  for  ideas.  On  page  after  page  his  characters  as  he 
shows  them  to  us  just  sit  and  think,  or  lie  and  think;  and  then  little 
by  little  he  begins  to  do  more  and  more  of  their  thinking  for  them, 
and  to  try  to  embody  in  the  work  as  a  whole  a  philosophy  of  some 
sort,  coherent  and  integral. 

What  philosophy?  As  I  confessed  at  the  start  of  this  essay,  the 
abstract  aspect  of  Mann's  work  is  not  for  me  to  expound,  in  any 
depth  or  in  detail.  But  in  The  Magic  Mountain  there  is  something 
simple  about  it  still.  It  is  a  matter  of  antithesis,  and  it  serves  in 
the  first  place  a  rather  formal,  rhetorical  purpose:  elaborations  of 
his  figures  of  speech,  first  in  one  direction  and  then  the  opposite, 
deployments  of  his  terms  of  reference  in  apposition  or  in  alterna- 
tion. But  of  course,  once  he  got  started  in  any  dualistic  train  of 
thought,  he  was  apt  to  follow  it  away  loosely  and  truantly  into  the 
metaphysical  darkness,  where  not  only  is  everything  the  opposite 
of  everything  else,  but  perhaps  everything  is  also  the  same  as  every- 
thing else;  where  of  course  his  more  serious  interpreters  have  de- 
lighted to  go  along  with  him. 

Unfortunately,   spirit   and  nature,   the   two   terms   upon  which 


20i  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

Mann  dwelt  oftenest,  and  most  fervently  longed  to  see  synthesized 
— in  experience  as  well  as  in  theory  and  art,  at  some  future  date  if 
not  in  our  time — are  the  hardest  for  me  to  grasp,  with  my  unabstract 
mind.  One  thing  that  I  do  perceive  is  that  Mann's  frame  of  refer- 
ence was  always  anthropocentric.  By  nature,  he  never  meant  just 
the  outdoors,  the  elements,  flora  and  fauna.  He  meant  human  na- 
ture in  so  far  as  it  can  trust  to  its  instincts  and  still  succeed  some- 
how, without  too  much  inner  conflict  and  sickening  exhausting 
effort;  for  example,  Goethe's  human  nature.  By  spirit  he  meant  self- 
awareness  and  what  we  now  call  neurotic  drives,  and  all  that  pro- 
fundity and  prophecy  which  so  frequently  appear  to  be  connected 
with  sickness  in  some  way;  for  example,  Dostoevski's  epilepsy, 
Nietzsche's  syphilis,  Schiller's  nose  colds. 

Indeed,  it  may  be  that  Mann's  feeling  for  dichotomies  stemmed 
in  the  first  place  from  Schiller's  famous  essay,  "On  the  Naive  and 
the  Sentimental."  Goethe  was  naive  and  he  (Schiller)  was  senti- 
mental; in  other  words,  Goethe  was  classic  and  Schiller  was  ro- 
mantic; to  which  Goethe  replied  that  he  (Goethe)  was  healthy  and 
Schiller  was  sick.  See  how  I  simplify  things! 

There  is  a  rather  apt  or  relevant  aphorism  about  this  in  Holy 
Writ:  "the  children  of  this  world  are  wiser  in  their  generation  than 
the  children  of  light."  Goethe  was  a  child  of  this  world;  so  was 
Tolstoi.  Schiller  was  a  child  of  light.  Mann,  I  think,  was  a  child  of 
light  who  wanted  to  become  (and  did  become,  at  last,  for  the  most 
part)  a  child  of  this  world. 

On  the  flyleaf  of  my  worn  old  Volume  II  of  The  Magic  Mountain 
I  find  listed  by  me,  years  ago,  some  other  paired-off  or  contrasting 
values  which  Mann  evidently  saw  exemplified  in  history  or  personi- 
fied in  his  cast  of  characters,  which  he  assigned  to  them  as  subjects 
of  their  discussion,  or  discoursed  upon  himself,  in  interspersed  solilo- 
quies: Love  and  death  (or,  as  I  prefer  to  put  it,  love  and  disease), 
impulse  and  intentional  will  power,  science  and  the  occult,  music 
and  morality,  progress  and  medievalism,  liberal  emancipatedness 
and  old  Christian  ideals,  Freemasonry  and  Jesuitism;  also,  the 
somewhat  vague  values  that  he  ascribes  to  the  contrasting  nationali- 
ties, German  and  French,  Teuton  and  Slav,  Nordic  and  Mediter- 


Images  of  Truth  •  202 

ranean,  and  in  the  more  remote  historical  perspective,  European 
and  Asiatic,  and  Hellenic  and  Judaic. 

Of  all  these  matters  Mann  solemnly  discourses  at  times,  and  at 
other  times  makes  rather  a  jest;  and  I  note  that  he  seems  most  apt 
to  be  facetious  when  he  is  reasoning  in  the  abstract.  His  characteris- 
tic pathos  and  harshness,  and  his  feeling  of  predestination  and  of 
bravery  against  fate,  he  expresses  best  in  the  simple  narrative  mode, 
in  the  way  of  individual  instance  and  episode. 

The  several  antitheses  on  my  list  having  to  do  with  progress  pro 
and  con,  liberalism  and  religion,  etc.,  obviously  refer  to  Hans's  rival 
instructors,  kindly  discursive  Settembrini  and  cruel  polemical 
Naphta;  dichotomy  incarnate.  In  Volume  I,  before  Naphta's  ap- 
pearance on  the  mountaintop,  Mann  contrasts  no  less  strikingly 
Settembrini's  Latin  leftishness  and  the  old  conservatism  of  Hans's 
Hanseatic  family.  But  he  does  not  dramatize  or  dialecticize  this 
much;  he  simply  shows  it  to  us  in  an  extended  image.  Settembrini 
tells  Hans  about  his  grandfather,  who  was  a  conspirator  for  liberty's 
sake.  Which  sets  Hans  to  thinking  of  his  grandfather,  an  extreme  old 
Baltic  grand  bourgeois,  somewhat  victimized  in  his  declining  years 
by  radicals;  an  entire  lifetime  and  denouement  of  life  at  just  about 
the  farthest  possible  remove  from  what  Settembrini  has  been  telling 
him. 

Then  suddenly  Hans  remembers  a  late  summer  evening  in  Hol- 
stein,  when  he  happened  to  be  rowing  on  a  lake  as  the  sun  went 
down;  at  the  same  time  the  moon  rose  across  from  it;  and  as  he 
slowly  propelled  himself  upon  the  water,  the  scene  seemed  to  him 
more  fantastic  than  any  dream;  daylight  in  the  west,  fixed  and 
glassy,  and  the  east  all  wreathed  in  the  magic  of  moonbeams  and 
mist,  "equally  convincing  to  his  bewildered  sense." 

Oh,  grandfather  daylight  versus  grandfather  moon!  Which  will 
win?  Hans  asks  himself.  Both  seem  invincible;  each  has  his  realm  of 
lifetime,  also  presumably  of  universal  time.  He  remembers  how,  in 
the  rowboat,  his  eyes  shifted  from  one  scene  to  the  other,  until  "the 
balance  finally  settled  in  favor  of  the  night  and  the  moon."  I  prefer 
to  think  that  Mann  meant:  in  favor  of  what  was  and  is,  in  favor 


2oj  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

of  what  has  happened  and  may  be  expected  to  happen  again,  the 
local  and  the  timely,  there  and  then;  not  just  some  more  German 
nocturnalism  and  decadent  death  wish. 

Let  me  give  you  one  more  example  of  Mann's  fictional  antithesis, 
meaningful  in  itself  and  of  itself.  When  Settembrini  comes  calling 
on  Hans  in  his  sanatorium  bedroom,  he  touches  the  light  switch  im- 
mediately inside  the  door  as  he  enters,  and  at  that  same  instant, 
starts  one  of  his  eloquent  harangues;  so  that  his  rhetoric  and  ideal- 
ism come  to  be  associated  in  Hans's  mind  with  a  blaze  of  light;  so 
to  speak,  epiphany! 

Frau  Chauchat,  on  the  other  hand,  like  a  good  many  pale, 
freckled,  Titian-haired  persons,  is  light-shy;  her  blue  eyes  wince 
and  redden;  and  one  of  Hans's  gallantries  when  he  is  most  in  love 
with  her  is  to  rise  from  his  table  in  the  dining  room  and  stride  across 
and  draw  the  western  curtains  to  protect  her  from  the  violent  rays 
of  the  Alpine  sun. 

It  is  in  passages  like  this  that  to  my  taste  Mann  is  at  his  finest. 
They  are  less  reminiscent  of  the  masters  of  the  narrative  art  who 
meant  most  to  him,  Goethe,  Tolstoi,  Zola,  than  of  Turgenev  and 
Chekhov,  or,  come  to  think  of  it,  contemporaries  such  as  Colette 
and  Forster. 


These  finenesses,  revelations  of  nature  and  human  nature,  each  in 
terms  of  the  other,  by  means  of  incident  and  symbol,  have  not 
been  Mann's  chief  claim  to  fame.  Nor  did  he  principally  aim  at 
them  in  the  latter  half  of  his  creative  life.  It  took  another  couple 
of  decades  to  bring  his  several  innovations  in  the  form  of  the  novel 
to  their  full  effect  and  to  the  point  of  maximum  critical  interest.  His 
biblical  tetralogy,  Joseph  and  His  Brothers  (1933-1943),  and  his 
tremendous  make-believe  biography,  Dr.  Faustus  (1947),  are  more 
original  and  profound  works  than  The  Magic  Mountain  (1924). 

But  if  we  look  closely  at  the  last-named,  we  can  see  that  it  was 
during  the  writing  of  it,  not  in  the  post-mature  years,  that  his  con- 


Images  of  Truth  •  204 

cept  of  the  narrative  art  changed.  The  turning  points  are  in  it,  be- 
twixt and  between  pages,  in  arbitrary  shiftings  and  reshapings  in 
mid-chapter,  and  in  a  particular  afflatus  of  the  intellect,  as  it  were 
of  the  strangest  wind  blowing  through  and  through  page  after  page 
of  it,  with  consequences;  in  an  enlargement  of  the  dialectic,  and  a 
gradual  and  singular  loosing  and  loosening  of  the  ironic  style,  al- 
ternating between  jest  and  preachment  so  rapidly  that  one  loses 
track. 

Even  a  superficial  resume  of  his  career  of  writing  prior  to  The 
Magic  Mountain  shows  us  something  of  what  made  it  seem  essential 
to  him  to  turn  and  change.  All  his  early  fame  and  fortune  had  been 
based  on  one  novel,  Buddenbrooks,  published  in  1901.  Throughout 
this  essay  (it  now  occurs  to  me)  I  have  but  vaguely  referred  to  this 
brilliant  and  important  work,  and  neglected  to  give  a  proper  ac- 
count of  it.  When  Mann  got  the  Nobel  Prize,  the  Swedish  Academy 
specified  that  it  was  for  Buddenbrooks,  although  The  Magic  Moun- 
tain had  been  triumphantly  published  just  before  that.  This  may 
have  been  in  deference  to  Gerhart  Hauptmann,  who  perhaps 
minded  seeing  himself  in  the  guise  of  Mynheer  Peeperkorn;  who 
nevertheless  (Mann  himself  tells  us)  was  chiefly  instrumental  in 
getting  the  prize  for  him.  No  matter;  either  work  deserved  it,  both 
called  for  it. 

Buddenbrooks  is  the  most  successful,  the  most  thoughtful,  the 
most  depressing  and  uplifting  of  family  chronicles.  Perhaps  a  certain 
subjective  embarrassment  has  made  me  stupid  about  it,  or  perspicu- 
ous only  in  one  way,  having  written  a  family  chronicle  myself, 
differently  conceived  in  every  respect,  and  less  successful.  Though 
Mann  certainly  is  one  of  the  personifiers  of  the  twentieth  century, 
a  part  of  my  feeling  about  Buddenbrooks  is  that  this  first  fruit 
of  his  genius  is  a  nineteenth-century  type  of  novel.  As  noted  else- 
where, I  have  this  same  feeling  about  Of  Human  Bondage,  which 
Maugham  wrote  in  his  forties.  Mann  wrote  Buddenbrooks  in  his 
early  twenties;  nevertheless  there  is  a  strange  maturity,  even  middle- 
agedness,  about  it  also. 

Though  large  and  powerful,  it  is  a  relatively  simple  work.  In 


20$  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

construction  and  style,  it  probably  did  not  call  for  much  creative 
deliberation  or  decisiveness.  As  who  should  know  better  than  I,  a 
family  chronicle  is  not  a  difficult  type  of  narrative.  In  some  measure 
the  design  of  it  can  be  made  to  follow  a  pattern  of  collective  domes- 
tic reality  as  it  has  transpired  in  the  author's  own  experience.  Con- 
sanguinity and  chronology  will  sufficiently  connect  things  in  it;  the 
passage  of  time  will  keep  them  moving  along  in  a  sufficiently  straight 
line.  As  obviously  it  was  based  on  biographical  and  autobiographical 
fact,  several  generations  of  kith  and  kin  in  Luebeck,  doubtless  it 
entailed  for  Mann  personally  psychological  hardship,  stress  of  the 
spirit.  But  probably  as  soon  as  he  applied  the  past  tense  to  the  ma- 
terial, the  book  more  or  less  wrote  itself.  As  a  kind  of  borrowing 
from  life  and  an  inheritance  from  relatives,  the  effect  of  it  in  the 
mind  of  the  young  aesthete  and  prodigal  son  may  well  have  been  a 
feeling  of  good  luck  rather  than  mastery;  a  sense  of  commitment  to 
further  brilliant  production  in  due  course  rather  than  of  pride  in 
his  precocious  achievement  or  confidence  in  himself. 

At  that  time  and,  of  course,  continuously  in  the  first  decade  of  the 
century,  he  was  storing  up  the  detailed  observations  of  multitudi- 
nous small-scale  humanity  which  in  due  course  crowded  the  scene 
of  The  Magic  Mountain;  but  his  environing,  expectant  reading 
public  could  not  have  realized  this  or  foretold  the  glorious  out- 
come. The  young  writer  himself  probably  was  not  clearly  con- 
scious of  it  or  certain  of  its  worth.  For  the  substance  of  any  work  of 
literary  art,  until  artistry  of  some  sort  has  begun  to  take  effect,  is  but 
a  clutter,  a  random  and  wearisome  amassment,  like  the  bundles  of 
clippings  and  press  releases  in  what  is  called  the  morgue  in  the  offices 
of  a  great  newspaper,  but  not  sorted  or  alphabetized;  like  someone's 
hoarded  accumulation  of  scrapbook  material,  untrimmed,  unpasted, 
or  fanatic  accumulation  of  snapshot  film,  exposed  but  not  developed. 

What  in  the  world  was  the  development  to  be?  What  form  of  nar- 
rative could  conceivably  embrace  and  satisfactorily  ennoble  the  poor 
odds  and  ends  and  bits  and  pieces  of  contemporaneity  with  which 
life  was  providing  him?  What  theme  with  a  will  of  its  own,  form- 
generating;  or  foolproof  plot,  which  might  enable  him  to  dispense 


Images  of  Truth  •  206 

with  form;  or  panacea-like  way  of  writing,  readable  and  admirable 
even  without  any  new  structure,  without  subject  matter  of  impor- 
tance or  intrinsic  interest?  In  his  immature  celebrity,  and  slow- 
ness to  develop  out  of  it  and  beyond  it,  Mann  in  his  thirties  must 
have  suffered  a  great  cumulative  embarrassment  and  uneasiness. 

It  was  not  all  in  his  imagination  and  in  his  swelled  head.  There 
was  in  fact  a  certain  humility,  if  not  humiliation,  in  that  second 
stage  of  his  career.  In  so  far  as  the  success  of  Buddenbrooks  had 
been  just  lucky,  his  luck  ran  out.  In  so  far  as  it  derived  from  innate 
ability  and  a  certain  effortlessness,  he  didn't  understand  it,  and 
couldn't  summon  it  up  in  himself  again.  A  decade  passed,  a  decade 
and  a  half,  and  nothing  that  he  produced  sold  so  well  as  Budden- 
brooks; nothing  had  so  great  a  success  of  esteem  either.  He  went  on 
distinguishing  himself  by  that  production  of  short  fiction  which  I 
personally  admire  so  intensely;  but,  quantitatively,  what  did  it 
amount  to?  Only  about  a  dozen  stories  and  tales;  and  Fiorenza,  a 
sort  of  history  lesson  in  the  form  of  an  unactable  drama;  and  one 
novel,  Royal  Highness,  somewhat  unsuccessful  and  moderately  ad- 
mired but  rather  conventional.  No  other  book-length  work  for 
almost  a  quarter  of  a  century. 

Along  with  his  self-consciousness  as  to  the  relatively  small  amount 
of  output  of  his  fiction,  perhaps  he  minded  some  of  its  qualitative 
shortcomings  also,  though  they  were  less  obvious:  a  reiteration  of 
certain  themes,  a  too  constant  concern  with  the  Bohemian  way 
of  life  and  the  neurotic  or  neurasthenic  frame  of  mind;  a  narrow 
range  of  emotions,  almost  a  specialization  in  regretfulness,  modesty, 
mockery — the  artist's  temperament  feeding  on  itself,  the  creative 
eyes  staring  into  itself!  Even  his  bourgeois  subject  matter  of  that 
time  seems  permeated  with  aestheticism;  his  children  are  all  pre- 
cocious and  his  young  men  somewhat  childlike.  Even  his  pet  ani- 
mals seem  not  quite  at  home  in  the  houses  of  their  owners,  in  a 
way  that  is  suggestive  of  human  parisitism,  especially  the  parisitism 
of  the  arts. 

In  about  1912  evidently  it  occurred  to  him  that  objectivity,  even 
in  a  calculated,  methodical  way,  might  help.  He  conceived  and  com- 
menced an  old-fashioned,  Defoe-like  novel,   Confessions  of  Felix 


20 j  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

Krull,  a  life  story  told  by  his  protagonist  in  his  own  words;  mimicry, 
almost  parody,  inspired  by  someone's  memoirs  that  he  had  enjoyed 
reading.  But  that  technique  tired  him;  "a  difficult  feat  of  equilib- 
rium," as  he  said  of  it  years  later.  He  was  able  to  finish  only  the 
childhood  portion,  which  he  published  in  1923,  as  a  nouvelle-length 
fragment.  (The  rest  of  Krull's  personality  and  exploits  lay  fallow  in 
his  mind  until  the  very  end  of  his  life.) 

His  next  production  was  Death  in  Venice,  the  most  intense  and 
least  prosaic  of  his  nouvelles,  which  (I  suspect)  expresses  his  own  de- 
pression and  sense  of  inadequacy  as  a  fiction  writer  somewhat  more 
importantly  than  its  ostensible  theme,  the  bewitchment  and  self- 
destructiveness  of  the  elderly  paederast,  Aschenbach.  He  meant  to 
follow  this  with  another  short  narrative  in  similar  vein,  about  a 
tuberculosis  sanatorium,  Death  in  Davos  as  it  might  have  been 
called,  or  Death  in  Arosa;  which  project  World  War  I  interrupted. 

Then  in  the  war  years  he  produced  that  essay  which  I  have  already 
mentioned,  the  Betrachtungen,  and  this  more  than  anything  else  (I 
believe)  happened  to  show  him  the  way  out  of  his  rut  of  small  form 
and  limited  theme  as  a  fiction  writer.  For  my  present  purpose,  let 
me  not  attach  too  much  importance  to  the  nationalistic  German 
themes  of  this  noteworthy  though  little-known  publication.  It  may 
interest  you  to  compare  it  with  Dostoevski's  Writer's  Diary,  which 
also  strikes  jarring  notes  and  suggests  ethnic  prejudices  and  other 
reprehensible  attitudes. 

In  time  of  war  especially,  love  of  one's  country  and  of  one's  com- 
batant countrymen  is  apt  to  disturb  one  emotionally,  and  unless 
one  has  a  really  strong  and  cautious  mind  and  a  definite  sense  of  in- 
tellectual direction  this  may  lead  to  lamentable  rationalizations; 
which  in  Mann's  Betrachtungen  it  did.  In  a  sense  it  is  an  unpreten- 
tious work.  A  part  of  his  argument  in  it,  with  regard  to  the  political 
and  international  issues  at  stake  in  1914-1918,  amounts  only  to  this: 
that  a  creative  man  may  be  excused  for  not  understanding  such 
things  very  well.  For  obvious  reasons  it  has  not  been  published  in 
English.  Perhaps  it  should  be  now,  Germany's  situation  in  world 
affairs  having  been  transformed  and  retransformed  in  the  forty 
years  that  have  elapsed. 


Images  of  Truth  •  208 

In  a  study  of  Mann's  lifework  entitled  The  Ironic  German,  Erich 
Heller  has  pointed  out  that,  in  one  of  the  impassioned  anti-Nazi 
tracts,  thundering  away  in  exile  in  America — somewhat  like  Victor 
Hugo  on  the  Isle  of  Guernsey — he  borrowed  and  re-used,  in  quite 
close  paraphrase  but  in  reverse,  certain  extreme  pro-German  para- 
graphs of  the  Betrachtungen.  Was  this  a  trick  that  his  aged  memory 
played  on  him,  or  one  of  the  extremes  of  his  ironic  spirit,  endlessly 
protean,  clever  and  fearless  to  the  end? 

The  Betrachtungen  has  not  been  held  against  him  as  rigorously  or 
as  acrimoniously  as  you  might  expect,  either  in  the  Fatherland  or 
abroad.  After  a  war,  a  sort  of  amnesty  applies  to  enemy  ideas  as  well 
as  enemy  action.  Mann,  in  his  own  mind,  certainly  invalidated  all 
these  ideas  quite  soon.  Early  in  the  twenties  he  found  himself,  if  not 
perfectly  reconciled  to  his  countrymen's  having  lost  their  war,  at 
least  able  to  see  that  some  good  had  come  of  their  not  having  won 
it.  He  declared  an  honorable  and  helpful  adherence  to  the  Weimar 
government,  whose  policies  of  international  liberalism  were  not  far 
removed  from  those  opinions  of  his  brother  Heinrich's  that  had  irri- 
tated and  inspired  him  in  the  first  place.  Presently,  on  the  German 
horizon,  he  began  to  see  dark  signs  of  a  nationalism  more  extreme 
than  anything  that  he  or  Heinrich  Mann  had  dreamed  of,  pro  or 
con,  which  was  to  precipitate  them  into  exile  in  due  course.  Dur- 
ing World  War  II,  Thomas  Mann's  foreign  readers  assumed  that 
he  bitterly  deplored  and  regretted  his  German  patriotism  during 
World  War  I.  But  in  so  far  as  they  did,  it  was  an  over-simplifica- 
tion. Toward  the  end  of  his  life  he  reread  and  reinterpreted  the 
Betrachtungen  in  a  short  essay,  frankly  expressing  his  sense  of  its 
crucial  importance  to  himself  and  to  others  interested  in  under- 
standing him  and  his  creative  work. 

It  was  more  important  in  its  aesthetic  influence  on  Mann  (I 
think)  than  in  its  mistaken  political  orientation.  Perhaps  as  a  citi- 
zen he  was  always  somewhat  superficial,  almost  frivolous.  It  was  as 
a  novelist  that  the  Betrachtungen  shook  him,  enlightened  him, 
changed  him,  sending  him  back  to  his  lifework  of  novel  writing 
with  a  changed  sense  of  what  he  personally  and  uniquely  had  to 
contribute  to  the  art  of  fiction;  of  all  that  might  be  included  in  a 


209  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

novel,  for  the  first  time,  and  how  the  inclusion  was  to  be  managed, 
as  never  before! 

Suddenly  he  seems  to  have  begun  to  realize  the  foolhardiness 
of  his  mind,  the  fitfulness  of  his  convictions;  and  to  have  a  warning 
sense  of  how  rapidly,  all  his  life,  ideas  of  the  kind  that  he  had  en- 
deavored to  express  in  the  Betrachtungen  would  cease  to  mean  any- 
thing, or  perhaps,  overnight,  would  mean  the  opposite  of  what  he 
had  first  thought.  But  was  that  necessarily  a  shortcoming  or  a  dis- 
advantage for  a  novelist?  Might  it  not  be  all  to  the  good,  enabling 
him  to  see  both  sides  of  every  question,  to  make  the  best  of  both 
worlds,  or  the  worst  of  both  worlds,  as  the  case  might  be;  not  in  a 
confusion  or  a  pusillanimity  or  a  duplicity,  which  was  the  way  of 
ordinary  mortals,  but  for  art's  sake,  fiction's  sake?  Was  there  not  a 
virtue  to  be  made  of  his  many-faceted  and  kaleidoscopic  nature,  the 
multi-potentiality  of  his  mind? 

For  a  fiction  writer,  is  it  essential  to  come  to  a  conclusion?  In 
any  case,  if  and  when  he  does  so,  the  greater  the  hurdle  has  been,  the 
more  impressive  the  leap  of  his  intelligence  and  his  fancy,  as  he 
clears  it.  The  blacker  the  muddle,  the  brighter  and  more  refreshing 
the  elucidation!  In  any  very  thoughtful  sort  of  writing,  as  in  think- 
ing itself,  sometimes  it  may  be  just  doing  it  that  matters,  more  than 
the  outcome.  Obstacles  to  one's  reasoning  power,  such  as  illogicality, 
obscurity,  inexpressibility,  may  serve  simply  as  a  part  of  one's  train 
of  thought;  a  variation  on  the  theme  one  started  with.  The  main 
thing  about  narrative  prose,  Mann  evidently  thought  or  felt,  was  to 
keep  it  moving.  His  sense  of  the  sequence  of  his  ideas  must  not  have 
worried  him  any  more  than  his  sense  of  proportion.  He  skillfully 
avoided  outright  repetition  but  indulged  in  any  number  of  overlap- 
ping effects  and  resumes. 

As  to  the  political  opinions  that  he  had  temporarily  espoused  and 
stated,  overstated,  in  the  Betrachtungen,  I  doubt  very  much  (as  I 
know  literary  men)  whether  he  felt  any  great  burning  regret  or  point 
of  pride.  Only  in  the  future,  instead  of  committing  himself  person- 
ally, as  he  had  done  in  the  controversial  war  book,  he  would  fiction- 
alize everything  of  that  kind,  with  far-ranging,  almost  universal 
identification  of  himself  with  first  one  hero  or  villain,  then  another, 


Images  of  Truth  •  210 

and  with  subsidiary  personages  as  well,  so  as  to  have  occasion,  sooner 
or  later,  to  utter  whatever  happened  to  come  into  his  head. 

Oh,  now,  perhaps,  nothing  in  the  entire  scope  of  his  profuse, 
excitable  intellect  would  ever  have  to  go  to  waste.  As  a  novelist  it 
would  be  his  privilege,  you  might  say  his  duty,  to  keep  gyring  up 
and  down,  circling  right  and  left,  apostasizing  and  changing  sides. 
In  the  new  novel  of  ideas  with  which  his  genius  was  burgeoning  at 
last,  every  idea  should  have  its  reversal  or  rebuttal  just  as  strong  and 
perhaps  as  true,  just  as  tragical  or  satirical — or,  to  use  one  of  his 
favorite  words,  just  as  humoristic — as  the  original  statement. 

At  that  point  surely  he  must  have  begun  to  see  in  his  mind's  eye 
Settembrini  and  Naphta  shadowily  alive,  begun  to  hear  their 
more  and  more  meaningful,  symbolical  squabble,  as  though  they 
were  actors  in  the  wings  of  a  theatre  waiting  to  be  cued;  and  with 
reference  to  other  propositions,  political  and  philosophical  and  his- 
torical, other  paired-off  types  of  humanity  as  well,  poised  in  anger, 
coupled  in  love,  or  dancing  around  one  another  in  mere  curiosity 
or  mere  frolic,  antitheses  incarnate:  Behrens  and  Kropowski,  Peep- 
erkorn  and  Frau  Chauchat,  Hans  and  Joachim,  followed  by  Joseph 
and  Amenophis,  and  Potiphar  and  Potiphar's  wife,  followed  by 
Leverkuehn  and  Zeitblom  and  Kretschmar  and  Schildknapp  and 
the  rest.  The  twenty  years  of  Mann's  almost  unintentional  watch- 
fulness of  the  European  species  then  roused  up  out  of  his  mind, 
flocked  on  stage,  went  into  action. 

Taking  (as  you  might  say)  tactical  advantage  of  his  idiosyncrasies 
and  shortcomings,  with  his  characteristic  German  sense  of  the 
Zeitgeist — perfect  timing,  as  it  proved! — he  gave  up  a  part  of  the 
natural  skill  and  finesse  with  which  he  had  begun  a  quarter  of  a 
century  earlier,  in  order  to  assume  a  quite  different  position  in  world 
literature,  more  original,  more  modernistic,  and  by  his  own  ac- 
count of  it  more  German,  less  French;  deliberately,  if  not  desper- 
ately, sacrificing  certain  beauties  of  his  earlier  work,  shapeliness, 
pace,  simplicity,  lucidity,  memorableness,  symbolism,  for  the  sake  of 
grandeurs  familiar  to  us  now  in  the  novels  of  his  post-maturity  and 
old  age:  panoramic  effect,  scope,  and  sweep,  and  maximum  inclu- 
siveness,  especially  including  those  generalities  and  didactic  matters 


2ii  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

that  can  be  transposed  into  fiction  from  philosophy,  and  transposed 
back  in  due  course  by  university  men  in  their  theses  and  exegetical 
essays. 

In  my  opinion  he  sacrificed  too  much.  I  am  prejudiced.  I  love  his 
talent  of  the  beginning  of  the  century,  all  that  astonishing  natural 
small-scale  ability  and  entrancing  technique,  so  precocious  that  one 
may  be  tempted  to  call  it  innate;  whereas  I  only  admire  his  genius  of 
the  thirties  and  forties  and  fifties.  As  long  as  his  lifework  is  read  and 
reread,  and  the  first  half  of  his  production  compared  with  the  second 
half,  some  readers  are  going  to  regret  and  lament  (as  I  do)  his 
change  of  direction,  the  violent  ambition  of  his  middle  age.  How 
can  I  express  my  feeling  about  this,  simply,  humorously,  so  that  it 
may  be  understood  by  Mann  admirers  who  do  not  share  it?  It  is  (I 
imagine)  what  some  contemporary  of  Franz  Schubert's  might  have 
felt,  if,  having  written  perhaps  a  quarter  or  a  third  of  his  heavenly 
lieder,  he  had  suffered  a  failure  of  nerve  or  a  change  of  heart,  and 
more  or  less  ceased  song  writing,  forcing  himself  forward  in  the 
century,  amplifying  and  elaborating  and  somewhat  coarsening  his 
lyrical  genius,  in  order  to  compose,  as  indeed  Schubert  might  have 
done,  two  or  three  of  the  operas  of  Richard  Wagner. 

To  the  attentive,  intensive  student  of  literature,  the  text  of  The 
Magic  Mountain  itself  provides  internal  evidence  of  the  way  this 
new  aesthetic  worked.  After  the  first  fifty  pages  or  so,  it  began  to 
swell  and  to  go  forward  as  with  seven-league  boots,  but  irregular 
boots,  sometimes  stumbling,  and  stopping  for  an  analysis  of  what 
the  stumble  was  about,  circling  and  circling  certain  themes  in  the 
way  of  an  explorer  or  a  hunter,  as  it  seemed  uncontrollably.  Some 
things  evidently  had  to  be  written  out  in  full  before  Mann  could  de- 
cide whether  he  meant  them  or  not;  sometimes  he  let  things  stand 
without  really  making  up  his  mind  about  them.  What  price  decisive- 
ness? If  he  made  up  his  mind  too  soon  he  might  just  have  to  un- 
make it  over  the  page,  in  order  to  furnish  this  or  that  personage  of 
fluctuating  fiction  with  his  characteristic  truth  or  half-truth. 

As  the  new  way  of  writing  hit  its  stride,  surely  he  did  not  try  very 
hard  to  control  it.  Non-sincerity  and  profusion,  circumlocution  and 
proliferation,  humor  and  solemnity,  intermingled  and  almost  inter- 


Images  of  Truth  •  212 

changeable:  given  literary  genius,  one  may  or  may  not  approve 
of  this  non-responsible  exercise  of  it,  but  surely  it  is  bound  to  be  en- 
joyable, inebriating,  sportive;  rather  like  the  Asiatic  concept  of  the 
dance  of  the  god  Siva,  flaunting  and  revolving,  flinging  and  stomp- 
ing forever.  Thus,  about  halfway  through  The  Magic  Mountain, 
the  creative  intellect  of  the  post-mature  but  still  youthful  author 
found  itself,  eased  itself;  his  genius  approached  its  apogee;  and  he 
probably  could  see  in  great  ranging  outline  all  the  rest  of  his  life- 
work,  to  the  very  end. 

As  I  have  already  remarked,  he  made  a  practice  and  lifelong  in- 
tellectual exercise  of  comparing  himself  with  his  five  or  six  favorite 
creative  giants  of  the  nineteenth  century,  Dostoevski  and  Zola  and 
indeed  Wagner,  as  well  as  Goethe  and  Tolstoi;  and  it  was  not  just 
the  gigantic  dimensions  of  their  principal  works  that  excited  and 
gratified,  appealed  to  him  and  challenged  him,  it  was  the  fact  that 
they  were  epoch-making,  reformers  and  revolutionizers  of  the  novel 
(and  in  the  case  of  Wagner,  of  course,  of  the  opera).  Several  con- 
temporaries of  Mann's  just  then,  in  the  twenties,  were  making  bold 
attempts  to  alter  the  forms  and  fashions  of  twentieth-century  crea- 
tivity, transforming  painting  and  sculpture  and  music  and  archi- 
tecture as  well  as  literature,  lock,  stock,  and  barrel.  They  were  the 
modern  men  that  he  envied  and  longed  to  emulate. 

Mann  was  in  his  fifties  when  he  wrote  The  Magic  Mountain.  That 
is  an  age  of  profound  inner  changes,  usually  for  the  better  if  the 
corporeal  and  organic  being  has  preserved  itself  well  enough  to  with- 
stand the  disturbance  of  spirit,  the  change  and  intensification  of 
working  schedule.  As  Mann  looked  around  the  literary  scene,  and 
realized  that  in  the  twenty  years  gone  by  he  had  not  matched 
Buddenbrooks,  and  that  furthermore  it  was  only  a  sort  of  German 
equivalent  of  The  Way  of  All  Flesh  or  The  Forsyte  Saga,  I  fancy  that 
he  minded  it  extremely.  To  be  sure,  Samuel  Butler  and  Galsworthy 
had  come  along  after  him,  and  he  was  not  really  like  them;  but 
there  they  were,  treading  on  his  heels,  breathing  down  the  back  of 
his  neck;  he  did  not  want  to  be  like  them.  Death  in  Venice  might 
almost  have  been  written  by  Maurice  Barres  or  by  Colette;  Tristan 
perhaps  by  Forster.  He  did  not  care  to  be  in  that  class,  or  for  that 


2/5  *  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

matter,  in  a  class  with  Svevo  or  Romain  Rolland  or  Sigrid  Undset. 
Do  or  die,  he  wanted  to  be  someone  like,  let  us  say,  Joyce  or  Proust 
or  Picasso  or  Kandinsky  or  Schoenberg. 

Are  these  names  all  anachronistic?  No  matter.  My  point  is  not  that 
Mann  had  particular  modern  creators  in  mind  as  his  challengers  and 
rivals;  but  that  modernism  was  in  the  air,  and  that  he  quite  con- 
sciously and  willfully  aspired  to  that  kind  of  greatness.  In  the 
Entstehung,  the  memoir  of  his  old  age,  he  refers  almost  wistfully  to 
James  Joyce,  whom  he  read  then  perhaps  for  the  first  time.  He 
could  not  "have  direct  access  to  the  linguistic  structure  erected  by 
the  Irish  writer,"  he  lamented,  but  the  Joyce  commentators,  Levin 
and  Robinson  and  Joseph  Campbell,  revealed  to  him  "many  an 
unexpected  relationship  and  even  affinity."  Like  Ulysses  and  Finne- 
gans  Wake,  he  thought  (he  hoped),  Dr.  Faustus  was  an  anti-novel, 
destructive  of  many  of  the  modes  and  creative  premises  of  the  past, 
forcefully  engendering  the  future.  And  while  it  is  his  production  of 
essays,  short  novels,  and  stories  that  is  masterful,  valuable,  and  de- 
lightful, the  full-length  and  overextended  novels  doubtless  are 
more  important.  They  loom  in  the  literature  of  the  age  like  a  moun- 
tain range. 

Buddenbrooks  is  sheer  and  soaring  as  though  thrust  up  by  some 
young  earthquake,  cloud-capped  and  breezy.  The  Magic  Mountain 
is  a  vast  Andean  plateau  with  environing  abysses.  Joseph  and  His 
Brothers  is  loftier  than  the  foregoing,  but  distantly,  as  it  is  a  histori- 
cal novel,  wall-like  along  the  horizon.  Amid  the  miscellaneous  work 
of  the  years  of  exile,  Dr.  Faustus  stands  up  highest  of  all,  blackly 
wrapped  in  historic  storm,  flashing  with  superstition,  avalanching 
down  in  its  concluding  chapters  according  to  the  old  legendary  plot. 
The  Confessions  of  Felix  Krull,  sloping  up  from  the  abandoned 
work  of  earlier  years,  ends  again  in  mid-narrative,  breaks  off  like  a 
shattered  precipice. 

Whereas  the  stories  and  essays  that  I  have  been  reading  and  re- 
reading all  my  life  with  so  much  more  enjoyment,  and  now  critically 
and  didactically  advocate,  are  mere  foothills,  upland  pastures,  vales 
with  a  vista,  leading  to  no  very  sublime  or  pretentious  conclusion; 
only,  from  time  to  time,  to  some  contemplation  of  the  same  subject 


Images  of  Truth  •  214 

matter  as  that  of  the  long  novels,  the  same  sublimities:  health,  affec- 
tion, creation,  revolution,  destruction.  Today,  as  in  the  eighteenth 
century,  one  may  prefer  the  more  comfortable  and  negotiable  and 
human  aspects  of  both  nature  and  art  to  those  absolute  peaks  which 
arouse  the  somewhat  suicidal  zeal  and  courage  and  competitive 
sense  of  born  mountain  climbers. 

When  we  gaze  too  far  up  over  our  heads,  instead  of  the  challenge, 
the  flirtation  with  death,  and  possible  vainglory  that  mountaineers 
are  dazzled  by,  we  observe  the  hopeless  and  broken  aspects  of  the 
huge  pieces  of  rock  gnawing  at  the  heavens,  the  effects  of  infinite 
wind  blowing  from  all  sides  at  once,  the  clouds  swirling  like  insan- 
ity, and  dirty  glaciers  dully  perishing  of  their  snail's  pace  downward, 
and  murderous  avalanches  upon  occasion,  with  fanatic  carrion  birds 
obsessively  perched  and  patient  and  waiting  around.  Is  there  any- 
thing on  earth  so  disorderly  as  a  mountaintop? 

The  culture  of  small  England  and  perhaps  backward  France  is 
still  current  and  fervent,  even  in  the  undereducated  United  States, 
despite  the  inventions  of  the  metaphysicians.  An  altitudinous  valley 
rather  than  a  mountain — an  aspiring  hillside  or  a  flowery  hay- 
meadow  with  well-nourished  and  nourishing  flocks,  with  habita- 
tions of  beloved  and  loving  fellow  men  not  too  far  apart,  with  easy 
voices  and  small  bells  and  musical  instruments  in  the  leisure  hours, 
with  whitely  veiling  cascades  flourishing  down  amid  the  trees, 
rather  than  an  earthquake  or  a  landslide — constitute  for  us  an 
image  of  heaven  on  earth.  Furthermore,  it  is  from  these  more 
modest  standpoints,  looking  up,  looking  ahead,  that  the  peaks 
themselves  appear  most  godlike.  Divinity  and  beauty  both  derive 
in  some  measure  from  distance  and  perspective. 


"The  master  of  German  prose!"  was  Hermann  Hesse's  salute  to 
Mann  at  his  funeral.  I  have  read  only  a  small  part  of  Mann's  life- 
work  in  the  original,  years  ago;  and  my  knowledge  of  German  is  not 
exact  enough  or  comprehensive  enough  to  qualify  me  to  praise  his 


215  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

manner  of  writing  in  detail,  the  texture  and  temper  of  his  prose  as 
such.  No  doubt  it  is  praiseworthy.  The  vocabulary  is  large  and  also 
choice,  well  matched  in  its  several  tonalities  according  to  mode  and 
purpose.  The  formation  of  his  sentences  gives  pleasure,  an  almost 
dreamlike  pleasure,  as  though  one  were  watching  a  puzzle  solving 
itself,  putting  itself  together,  or  a  knot  tying  and  untying  itself. 
This  masterful  syntax,  with  an  effect  of  sinuous  movement  down 
the  page,  a  seemingly  tireless  continuity — in  so  far  as  it  is  proper  to 
reach  across  language  barriers  for  comparisons  of  this  kind — has 
sometimes  made  me  think  of  Andre  Gide,  though  Mann  never  has 
the  Frenchman's  sharp  focus  and  earnestness.  Gerhart  Hauptmann, 
when  Mann  read  a  chapter  of  The  Magic  Mountain  aloud  to  him, 
was  reminded  of  George  Meredith:  Mann  tells  us  this  with  a  nuance 
of  some  gratification  in  the  Entstehung.  Whereas  literary  German 
has  a  dark  tonality,  density,  ruggedness — at  least  it  seems  so  to  an 
Anglo-Saxon  reader — Mann  gave  it  a  unique  pearly  light  and  satiny 
sheen.  Unfortunately,  in  Mrs.  Lowe-Porter's  translation  it  comes 
out  woolly,  tweedy. 

Perhaps  one  ought  not  to  generalize  about  style,  as  to  the  orien- 
tation of  the  writer's  mind  indicated  by  it;  but  in  Mann's  case  one 
is  almost  irresistibly  tempted  to  do  so. — He  has  a  way  of  seeming  to 
joke  when  he  is  in  dead  earnest,  or  vice  versa;  a  somewhat  self- 
conscious,  almost  self-satisfied  manner  whenever  certain  subjects 
come  up,  not  at  all  the  manner  of  a  man  remembering  or  revealing 
or  explaining  things,  but  rather  of  one  putting  on  a  performance; 
a  certain  detachment  or  disengagement  even  in  passionate  advocacy 
or  in  indignation  about  something.  He  is  a  little  impersonal,  lawyer- 
like, no  matter  how  passionate  his  argument  may  be,  as  though 
warning  us  that  presently  he  may  find  himself  arguing  on  the  other 
side.  In  a  word  (and  it  is  one  of  his  key  words),  irony  is  his  pre- 
dominant mode. 

Do  you  remember  Emerson's  great  saying  about  insincerity? — "I 
am  always  insincere,  as  always  knowing  that  there  are  other  moods." 
It  expresses  a  major  part  of  the  ironic  disposition;  and  it  would 
seem  to  have  a  more  direct  applicability  to  the  art  of  the  novelist 


Images  of  Truth  •  216 

than  to  any  other  intellectual  endeavor  or  spiritual  condition, 
though  presumably  that  did  not  occur  to  Emerson. 

In  Mann's  case,  certainly,  the  multifarious  and  ever-alternating 
habit  of  mind  pertained  to  his  aesthetic  rather  than  to  his  real 
life.  His  temperament  was  better  regulated  than  his  diction  and 
imagery,  his  conduct  more  orderly  than  what  he  had  to  say  or 
tell.  But  in  ironic  thinking  and  writing,  there  must  always  be  an 
element  of  egotism,  at  least  egocentricity  and  self-concern,  whether 
or  not  this  meets  the  eye.  For  it  is  a  matter  of  overexactness,  of  too 
many  nuances  and  qualifications  with  some  quintessential  opinion 
at  the  back  of  one's  mind  at  all  times,  presumably  inexpressible  but 
to  be  hinted  at.  In  a  way  it  is  more  personal  and  introspective  than 
the  other  self-dramatizations  of  writers,  such  as  righteous  indigna- 
tion, impropriety,  rebelliousness,  devoutness. 

Referring  to  irony  in  general,  not  Mann's  particular  practice  of 
it,  Jacques  Barzun  has  called  it  "the  least  democratic  of  the  modes 
of  literature."  It  must  also  be  the  least  translatable.  Even  in  the 
original  language  it  interposes  itself,  it  intervenes  like  a  veil,  or  like 
a  shimmer  or  a  glitter,  between  the  author's  mind  and  the  reader's 
mind.  According  to  Erich  Heller,  one  of  the  most  interesting  and 
persuasive  of  the  Mann  experts,  it  is  a  peculiarly  or  at  least  pre- 
eminently German  style.  In  both  vocabulary  and  syntax  the  Ger- 
man language  itself,  he  says,  "is  better  suited  to  expressing  the 
mobile  confusions  and  dynamic  exasperations  of  the  mind  than  its 
stability  and  equipoise." 

We  must  not  try  to  simplify  the  ironic  concept.  Heller  says  that 
it  would  be  "unkind  to  ask  for  a  satisfying  definition";  and  indeed 
the  three  or  four  meanings  supplied  by  the  dictionaries  I  have  on 
hand  are  incommensurate  with  recent  literary  and  philosophical 
usage,  even  non-German  usage.  Mann  made  almost  a  trademark  of 
it,  especially  in  the  autumnal  production,  and  it  signified  many 
things  to  him,  lifelong  preoccupations,  inspirational  and  even  eso- 
teric. In  the  essay  on  Goethe  and  Tolstoi  he  speaks  of  it  as  a  kind 
of  simultaneous  glancing  at  both  sides  of  every  question,  "slyly  and 
irresponsibly."  Confronted  with  an  array  of  opposites,  what  it  likes 
to  do  is  to  play  back  and  forth  between  one  and  another;  it  is  never 


21  j  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

in  a  hurry  to  adhere  to  a  particular  creed  or  platform,  or  to  come  to 
a  conclusion.  Behind  it,  or  antecedent  to  it  in  the  mind  of  anyone 
ironically  inclined,  seems  to  lie  a  surmise  that,  in  matters  of  the 
utmost  human  interest,  simplification  almost  always  turns  out  to 
have  been  small-minded  and  immature.  The  goal  to  strive  toward, 
Mann  concludes  this  passage  by  saying,  is  not  decisiveness  but 
harmony,  synthesis. 

"Irony  must  be  brief,"  Jules  Renard  said.  "Sincerity  can  spin 
itself  out."  Obviously  Mann  never  felt  bound  by  any  such  rule  or 
regulation,  and  out  of  his  leisureliness,  every  now  and  then,  some- 
thing hasty  and  extravagant  sprang.  In  the  space  of  a  paragraph, 
even  in  a  single  sentence,  we  find  him  suddenly  slipping  into 
high  gear;  tyrannousness  of  mind  somehow  comes  over  him  for  no 
particular  reason;  he  can't  help  it  or  stop  it.  In  no  time,  almost  be- 
fore we  have  taken  notice,  he  has  gone  too  far,  made  nonsense  of 
his  thought. 

In  its  very  nature,  in  the  tension  that  it  represents  and  the  many- 
sidedness  that  it  enunciates,  irony  cannot  sustain  itself  very  long  in 
any  one  key.  Note  the  sudden  great  swoop  of  Mann's  mind,  up  and 
away  from  one  or  another  of  its  wise,  humorous  attitudes  into  in- 
discretion or  dogmatism  about  something,  at  times  just  for  the  en- 
livening rhetorical  effect,  the  change  of  pace,  but  at  other  times 
(one  senses)  under  a  strain,  perhaps  weary  of  his  reasonable  and 
superior  role.  Something  in  him  liked  to  be  swept  off  his  feet. 

There  is  a  tradition  of  this  kind  of  headstrong,  pell-mell  thinking 
in  German  literature.  Mann  gives  us  an  example  of  it  in  his  impor- 
tant late  essay  on  Schiller.  He  begins  by  reminding  us  that  the  artist 
is  a  child,  "to  whom  nothing  seems  nobler  than  play."  This  appeal- 
ing and  pertinent  observation  he  carries  to  extremes  in  the  next 
sentence:  "Man  alone  of  all  creatures  knows  how  to  play."  But 
what  about  dolphins?  what  about  raccoons?  Then  in  a  rush,  from 
bad  to  worse,  enjoying  his  thoughtlessness,  he  adds  a  foolish  third 
sentence,  perhaps  mainly  because  the  two  previous  sentences  seemed 
to  predicate  it  or  something  like  it:  "Man  is  wholly  man  only  when 
he  plays." 

One  could  just  as  aptly  say  the  opposite:  man  is  wholly  man 


Images  of  Truth  •  218 

only  when  he  works.  As  this  stands  in  Mann's  text  it  is  a  little  un- 
certain how  much  of  it  he  derived  from  Schiller,  how  much  he  him- 
self made  up  out  of  whole  cloth.  As  of  that  date,  Mann  had  worked 
harder  than  almost  anyone  on  earth  for  about  six  decades;  and  you 
would  have  expected  him  to  spot  any  such  nonsense. 

Alas,  I  am  afraid  that  if  one  had  challenged  him  about  it,  his 
answer  might  have  been  simply  that  literature  is  never  work,  always 
play;  or  worse  still,  with  the  ultimate  German  sophistry,  that  in  a 
profound  sense  work  and  play  are  alike,  identical,  interchangeable. 
An  important  rule  of  really  German  thinking  (I  guess)  is  that  one 
cannot  win. 

Even  in  his  work  of  obviously  tragic  concept,  this  most  ironic 
man  of  letters,  ineradicable  son  of  the  Fatherland,  amazes  us  by 
the  shiftiness  of  his  mind,  slipping  from  conviction  to  conviction, 
veering  like  a  weather  vane  from  idea  to  idea,  turning  from  things 
in  the  absolute  to  mere  showing  off,  from  the  law  and  the  prophets 
to  facetiousness  and  paradox.  It  is  but  a  detail  in  the  midst  of  great- 
ness, an  effect  of  sentences  and  paragraphs  here  and  there.  I  men- 
tion it  because  it  is  more  recurrent  than  any  other  of  his  failings; 
also  I  suspect  that  it  has  discouraged  and  deterred  more  readers 
than  anything  else  that  he  did  or  left  undone. 

In  his  youth  Mann  was  more  Schiller-like  than  anything  else,  or 
so  regarded  himself;  and  turned  to  Goethe  (as  Schiller  had  often 
turned)  as  an  alleviation  of  the  dreariness  of  his  immaturity,  a 
medicament  for  his  psychic  embarrassment  and  conflict.  But  in 
due  course,  as  the  Goethean  wisdom  and  his  own  native  power  and 
obstinacy  took  effect  and  bore  fruit,  I  think  he  must  have  wondered 
whether  he  was  not,  even  innately,  Goethe-like.  Perhaps  he  taught 
himself  to  pretend  to  be,  for  the  auto-suggestive  effect,  and  in  the 
end  felt  quite  comfortable  with  that  hypothesis,  in  that  posture.  A 
great  part  of  his  public  surely  liked  having  a  Goethe-like  image  of 
him,  fatherly,  Olympian. 

As  the  identification  of  himself  with  Goethe  developed,  in  ma- 
ture and  post-mature  years — when  he  was  more  preoccupied  with 
the  superman  of  Weimar  than  ever,  and  wrote  several  essays  on  him, 
as  well  as  the  pleasing  short  biographical  novel,  Lotte  in  Weimar 


2ig  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

— here  and  there  his  eulogy  and  euphoric  analysis  gave  way  to 
vigorous  faultfinding.  Doubtless  this  relieved  him  of  some  inner 
pressure  of  his  self-criticism.  Goethe  the  greatest  of  scapegoats! 

"He  had  an  ambiguous  impishness,  an  element  of  equivocation, 
negation,  and  all-embracing  doubt,  which  led  him  to  self-contradic- 
tory pronouncements."  I  think  that  this  was  as  true  of  Mann  him- 
self as  it  was  of  Goethe,  perhaps  truer,  and  I  think  that  he  meant 
this  to  be  understood  by  those  of  us  whom  it  fascinates  to  detect  his 
judgment  of  himself,  and  who  think  him  worthy  to  be  judged  by 
the  highest  standards.  Upon  occasion,  he  said,  it  amused  the  super- 
man "to  abandon  and  betray  his  followers;  to  confound  the  partisan 
of  this  or  that  principle  by  carrying  it  first  to  one  extreme,  then  to 
the  other  extreme."  This  way  of  playing  fast  and  loose  with  his 
disciples  and  hangers-on  perhaps  was  to  counteract  their  flattering, 
softening  influence  on  him;  perhaps  it  was  to  force  them  to  stand 
on  their  own  feet  and  to  think  for  themselves;  or  perhaps  it  signi- 
fied, more  simply,  boredom  and  contempt. 

It  enabled  him  to  extend  his  dominion  over  almost  everyone 
around  him,  and  to  play  as  great  a  part  at  the  court  of  Weimar  and 
in  Germany  at  large  as,  in  due  course,  in  the  realm  of  timeless 
civilization  to  which  his  genius  entitled  him.  This  procedure  in 
society  and  this  attitude  toward  his  fellow  men  were  treasonable 
and  nihilistic  in  a  way,  Mann  thought;  and  this,  too,  he  called  by 
the  dear  name,  the  dread  name  of  irony. 

It  is  perhaps  what  Americans  (and  some  Englishmen  and  French- 
men) find  most  worrisome  about  Germans,  or  I  should  say,  about 
the  German  nation  as  a  force  in  modern  history,  a  continuing 
force  with  ups  and  downs:  the  immense  old  sophistry  and  fatalism 
forever  ebbing  and  flowing  in  their  heads,  one  effect  of  which  is 
seemingly  to  authorize  and  justify  for  them  any  sort  of  national 
happening  whatever,  any  combination  of  willfulness  and  fantasy 
that  they  may  undertake.  At  the  back  of  their  minds  they  have  a 
certain  ever-ready  irresponsibility  and  all-round  exculpation.  As 
in  the  librettos  of  Wagner — surely  one  of  the  most  influential  forms 
of  folklore  ever  to  beguile  a  gifted  and  hard-working  people — there 
is  always  some  love  philter  or  mind-changing  headgear  or  self- 


Images  of  Truth  •  220 

propelling  sword  lying  about;  up  in  the  trees  there  are  articulate 
occult  birds  forever  singing  and  melodiously  rationalizing  things 
for  them,  giving  them  misinformation.  Whatever  the  passionateness 
or  the  barbarity  in  the  plot,  they  have  something  to  attribute  it  to. 
Again  and  again,  in  historic  crises,  that  same  great  irony  which 
Mann  exemplified  as  well  as  explained,  both  denounced  and  de- 
fended, has  taken,  in  the  collective  German  mind,  the  form  of  a 
really  harmful  changeableness  and  extreme  educability.  It  has  made 
them  the  least  reliable  nation  on  earth.  In  1914,  in  1933,  in  1939, 
as  you  might  say  intoxicated  by  it,  somewhat  enjoying  it,  with  the 
wildest  energy  on  record  in  the  modern  world,  their  eyes  tight  shut 
to  world-wide  probability  and  other  rational  considerations,  they 
responded  absolutely  to  the  Zeitgeist,  however  it  happened  to  blow 
in  them  and  upon  them,  with  destructive  results  abroad,  suicidal 
results  at  home. 


Probably  as  Mann  first  conceived  Dr.  Faustus,  and  made  initial  de- 
cisions about  its  form  and  technique,  he  was  concerned  to  give  it  a 
more  objective  tone  than  he  had  found  for  The  Magic  Mountain  or 
for  the  Joseph  tetralogy.  The  subtitle  is:  "The  Life  of  the  German 
Composer,  Adrian  Leverkuehn,  as  Told  by  a  Friend";  the  narrating 
to  be  done,  therefore,  neither  confidentially  by  the  protagonist,  as  in 
the  unfinished  make-believe  autobiography  of  the  swindler  Krull, 
nor  in  Mann's  own  unmistakable  though  unspecific  voice,  but  by  the 
composer's  schoolmate  and  lifelong  confidant,  Zeitblom;  as  you 
might  say,  Hamlet  narrated  by  Horatio. 

The  effect  of  this,  as  it  worked  out,  was  not  really  objective,  only 
bifocal  or  bipartite:  Mann's  opinion  of  his  own  character  divided 
in  half,  and  exaggerated  in  the  two  directions.  Zeitblom  is  the 
bourgeois  intellectual,  haunted  by  tradition  and  dreaming  of  pos- 
terity, indefatigably  observing  and  recording  everything,  sternly 
passing  judgment  on  his  friend,  and  at  the  same  time  finding 
excuses  for  him.  Leverkuehn  is  the  absolute  genius-type,  in  eternal 


22i  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

conflict  both  within  himself,  and  between  himself  and  the  rest  of 
mankind,  incapable  of  loving  anyone,  incapable  even  of  self-love, 
immolating  himself  as  thoroughly  as  possible,  making  a  kind  of 
compost  heap  of  his  life  for  the  nourishment  of  his  lifelong  produc- 
tion of  masterpieces  of  music.  What  tormented  him  above  all  was 
his  rivalry  with  the  great  geniuses  of  the  past,  and  that  itch  of  mod- 
ernism from  which  so  many  contemporary  minds  suffer,  which 
seemingly  nothing  but  absolute  originality,  innovation,  invention, 
ever  really  alleviates  or  counter-irritates.  Mann  himself  was  both  a 
Zeitblom  and  a  Leverkuehn. 

Leverkuehn,  as  I  have  said,  is  a  triply  composite  character:  he  is 
Faust  reborn,  he  contracts  Nietzsche's  sickness  and  succumbs  to 
Nietzsche's  madness,  he  writes  Schoenberg's  music — quadruply  com- 
posite, if  you  count  Mann's  identification  with  him.  Thus  he  goes 
to  his  death  aglitter  with  multiple  genius,  doomed  over  and  over, 
charged  also  with  Mann's  own  preoccupation  with  the  incompar- 
able misdeeds  and  further  guilty  potential  of  the  Fatherland,  in  its 
two-fold  aspects  of  creative  energy  and  destructiveness,  morbidity 
and  power. 

From  beginning  to  end  of  the  volume  we  seem  to  hear  that  all- 
important  dualistic  nation  at  the  heart  of  Europe  imploring  the 
other  nations  for  forgiveness,  as  indeed  it  always  has  done,  between 
wars,  and  somewhat  simultaneously  asking  to  be  admired  and  feared. 
Mea  culpa,  for  the  most  part,  in  affecting  low  tones;  and  in  the  same 
breath,  Achtung!  From  beginning  to  end,  with  what  might  be 
called  reverse  patriotism,  with  cruel  touches  that  only  genius  could 
devise,  weighty  implications  of  blame  and  regret  on  every  page, 
Mann  drives  his  protagonist  to  his  apotheosis  as  a  musician  of 
genius,  and  then  over  the  edge,  in  entire  deterioration  of  his  nerv- 
ous system,  general  paralysis  and  death,  due  to  the  neglected 
venereal  disease. 

However  it  may  have  been  in  Nietzsche's  case,  Mann  gives  us  to 
understand  that  Leverkuehn  chose  to  have  syphilis,  because  of  its 
supposed  glorious  effect  upon  the  brain,  a  heightening  of  the  crea- 
tive faculties  as  in  an  Indian  summer;  glorious  autumn  colors  be- 


Images  of  Truth  •  222 

fore  the  stormy  madness  and  the  ice-cold  terminal  deterioration  set 
in.  It  is  strongly  implied  throughout  the  volume  that  in  the  case  of 
other  great  men  also,  scientists  and  statesmen  and  soldiers  as  well  as 
creators,  the  extremes  of  cerebration  and  of  idealism,  revolutionary 
or  reactionary  as  the  case  may  be,  are  all  a  part  of  a  corresponding 
and  connecting  psychopathology;  the  greatness  aggravating  the  sick- 
ness, and  vice  versa,  in  a  truly  vicious  circle. 

All  this,  furthermore,  as  conceived  and  handled  by  Mann,  is  an 
image  or  symbol  of  political  history  as  well.  To  borrow  one  of  his 
phrases  from  a  very  early  essay  on  Nietzsche,  it  stands  for  "the  over- 
weening self-dramatization  of  the  German  world,"  which  also  comes 
to  a  climax  every  so  often,  in  extreme  stimulation  of  the  romantic 
imagination  and  tremendous  intellectual  effort,  then  subsides  in 
disorder  and  craziness — discipline  and  overwork  leading  to  self-de- 
struction; breakthrough  followed  by  breakdown;  the  mind  devour- 
ing itself  and  excreting  itself.  In  this  early  text  Mann  extends  his 
grievous  metaphor  beyond  the  reference  to  the  mere  dangerous 
fatherland,  to  a  view  of  the  entire  continent.  Gluttony  of  the  in- 
tellect, succeeded  by  retching  and  colic  of  the  soul,  he  says,  is  "the 
immortal  European  drama." 

We  Americans  do  not  often  frankly  express  our  feeling  about 
that  continent  of  our  origin,  as  to  its  immortal  drama.  Humbly  and 
appreciatively,  we  admit  that  not  only  has  it  the  greatest  con- 
centration of  masterpieces  of  the  arts  on  earth,  and  at  the  top, 
higher  standards  of  living  than  anything  enjoyed  by  even  the  rich- 
est of  our  compatriots,  but  that  it  is  almost  fabulously  inhabited  by 
intellectual  giants.  Stupendous  developments  in  Asia  and  Africa 
notwithstanding,  little  Europe  is  still  the  crucial  area,  the  fecunda- 
tion place,  the  world  womb.  Marx  (about  whom  I  feel  as  Martin 
Luther  felt  about  Aristotle)  was  a  refugee  German,  like  Mann,  like 
Schoenberg;  and  the  next  intellectual  savior  of  the  world,  or  deadly 
tempter  and  destroyer  as  the  case  may  be,  is  likely  to  come  from 
somewhere  in  Europe  once  more. 

It  has  been  at  peace  for  fifteen  years,  but  with  some  blackness 
and  whirlwind  still  going  on  in  it.  Its  host  of  intellectuals  notwith- 


22j  '  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

standing,  presumably  at  regular  intervals  in  the  future  (as  in  the 
past)  it  is  going  to  run  mad;  to  find  itself  spellbound  by  this  or  that 
obviously  evil  and  cheap  spell;  to  go  reeling  along  in  history  as 
though  it  had  no  head,  or  as  though  it  had  half  a  dozen  heads,  with 
concussion  or  aberration  in  every  one.  Despite  the  examples  set  by 
its  great  artists  and  various  saints,  what  especially  characterizes  it 
is  a  competitiveness  unparalleled  elsewhere  in  the  world;  pride  of 
race;  luxury  and  gluttony  and  avarice  (peculiarly  European  sins); 
reckless  defiance  of  the  poor;  insufficient  belief  in  the  future,  and 
consequent  reckless  exploitation  of  the  present  moment — apres 
nous  le  deluge! 

As  we  read  Dr.  Faustus  and  other  texts  of  the  conclusion  of 
Mann's  life,  it  is  disheartening  indeed  to  find  that  almost  sublimely 
calm  man,  uninterruptedly  fortunate,  powerful,  and  famous  even 
in  reduced  circumstances  in  exile,  taking  so  dark  a  view.  But  surely 
this  disheartenment  was  what  his  genius  was  peculiarly,  if  not 
uniquely,  suited  and  oriented  to  bring  about.  I  have  complained  at 
length,  perhaps  churlishly — and  from  what  you  might  call  a  paro- 
chially transatlantic  standpoint — of  his  immoderation  of  form,  of  his 
sometimes  pretentious  metaphysical  language,  of  the  affectation  and 
artfulness  in  the  detail  of  his  work  here  and  there.  Let  me  conclude 
with  a  more  positive  statement,  worthier  of  him.  He  had  the  courage 
and  the  prowess  to  tackle  really  self-transcending  themes  (rare  in 
the  modern  world),  and  for  better  or  worse,  he  made  them  a  matter 
of  his  self-concern.  Whatever  your  pleasure  may  be,  as  to  the 
subject  matter  that  you  come  upon  in  books,  certainly  there  has  not 
been  anything  in  the  century  of  greater  consequence  than  the 
German  paroxysm — almost  an  entire  national  mind  in  a  Faust-like, 
Nietzsche-like,  Leverkuehn-like  condition,  wrapped  round  and 
glimmering  with  hell-fire;  its  incomparable  collective  energy  explod- 
ing in  open  sores  as  in  dehydration  of  some  sort,  proliferating  and 
puffing  itself  out  like  malignancy,  foaming  at  the  mouth  like  rabies, 
drooling  like  paresis,  dooming  itself  in  every  way  at  once. 

Certainly  it  took  fantastic  bravery  and  strength  for  the  historic 
storyteller  to  involve  himself  in  this  diagnosis  and  indictment,  to 


Images  of  Truth  •  224 

give  authority  and  intimacy  to  what  he  had  to  prescribe  and  recom- 
mend. Better  than  anyone  in  our  time  he  knew  how  to  hate,  as  well 
as  to  sympathize  with,  various  decisive  and  timely  types  of  human 
beings,  and  to  corroborate  a  vision  of  the  evil  of  humanity  at  large 
with  a  pitiless  and  highly  dramatic  self-examination,  casting  him- 
self into  the  crucible  along  with  whatever  other  fuel  he  could  lay 
hands  on,  so  that  his  bronze  and  gold  should  be  molten  in  the  right 
way. 


Dr.  Faustus  is  Mann's  only  truly  tragic  work,  remorseful  and 
punitive,  and  yet  it  has  strange  childish  aspects.  His  superstitiousness 
is  not  just  a  blemish  here,  as  it  was  in  The  Magic  Mountain;  it  is 
featured  throughout  the  work,  whether  to  induce  in  us  an  unwhole- 
some half-sincere  anxiety,  or  to  make  us  laugh,  or  both.  The  turning 
point  of  the  entire  tale,  the  shift  in  Leverkuehn's  life  toward  his 
absolute  originality  as  a  composer  and  his  damnation  as  a  mortal 
man,  occurs  during  a  long  talk  with  the  Devil  (who,  by  the  way, 
quotes  a  bit  from  Nietzsche's  Ecce  Homo).  This  of  course  is  a  part 
of  the  old  Faust  folk  legend,  but  to  my  way  of  thinking,  an  un- 
assimilable,  indigestible  part. 

We  are  not  actually  present,  that  is  to  say,  Zeitblom  is  not  present, 
at  the  dialogue  or  parley  in  which  the  glory,  the  privilege,  the 
pleasure  of  revolutionizing  music  is  accorded  to  Leverkuehn.  The 
doomed  man  himself  notes  down  on  sheets  of  his  music  paper  what 
the  Devil  has  said  to  him;  which  his  biographer  transcribes  without 
editorial  alteration  and  without  quite  deciding  what  he  thinks. 
Throughout  the  second  half  of  the  novel  Zeitblom  keeps  recalling 
this,  blowing  hot  and  cold,  turning  the  possibilities  and  connota- 
tions over  in  his  mind.  Was  it  all  a  lie,  fabricated  by  Leverkuehn? 
Or  as  the  bedeviled  composer  is  non  compos  mentis,  or  soon  will  be, 
was  he  already  hallucinating  at  that  point?  To  the  reader,  in  the  last 
analysis,  it  seems  quite  possible  that  Zeitblom  is  merely  pretending 
to  be  skeptical  because  he  is  really  credulous  by  nature  and  is 
ashamed  of  it:  or  conversely,  that  he  is  pretending  to  be  credulous, 


22$  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

as  this  may  seem  to  palliate  the  implausibility  of  the  biography  of 
his  friend  in  some  particulars. 

To  my  way  of  thinking,  the  introduction  of  an  incarnate,  articu- 
late Devil  among  the  personages  of  so  realistic  and  up-to-date  a  tale 
was  a  mistake.  The  Devil  also  appears  in  Death  in  Venice,  does  he 
not?  but  in  1913  Mann  still  had  a  light  touch.  The  reader  is  allowed 
to  question  whether  the  figure  who  makes  a  devilish  appearance  in 
the  tale  of  Aschenbach  really  is  the  Devil,  in  successive  avatars: 
someone  wandering  in  the  cemetery  at  Munich,  a  guitarist  in  the 
hotel  in  Venice  who  keeps  making  an  ugly  face,  a  gondolier  with- 
out a  license. 

In  Gide's  autobiography,  Si  le  Grain  ne  Meurt,  when  he  leaves 
his  corrupting  friends,  Wilde  and  Douglas,  in  North  Africa,  and 
returns  to  Normandy  to  get  married,  he  too  complicates  the  tale 
by  bringing  the  Devil  (le  Malin)  into  it,  and  having  him  whisper 
this  and  that;  which  lamentably  lowers  the  tone  and  tension  of 
that  important  book.  If  one  has  any  sort  of  belief  in  a  harmful 
demigod  or  antigod,  the  mere  stock  figure  that  one  has  seen  in  a 
thousand  cartoons  and  posters,  the  bogeyman  encountered  at  a 
hundred  fancy-dress  balls  in  rented  red  garb  with  an  arrow-tipped 
tail,  is  bound  to  seem  inadequate,  impious,  and  irritating.  On  the 
other  hand,  if  one  is  a  disbeliever  and  what  one  is  reading  is 
otherwise  plausible  and  serious,  then  the  satanic  majesty  must  strike 
one  as  a  kind  of  joke,  not  in  the  best  of  taste,  and  a  distraction 
from  whatever  the  actual  wickedness  or  sickness  may  be,  en- 
throned in  the  protagonist's  mind  or  coiled  around  his  heart. 

The  old  scarecrow  of  our  race  having  been  brought  down  out  of 
the  attic  and  stationed  in  the  midst  of  things,  and  this  having  been 
made  the  decisive  event  in  Leverkuehn's  life,  the  pivot  on  which  the 
form  of  the  novel  chiefly  turns,  he  ought  to  have  been  taken  seriously 
by  someone,  to  deepen  the  impression,  to  stabilize  the  tale.  The 
reader  would  like  to  be  able  to  follow  some  straight  or  at  least  defi- 
nite line  about  it,  at  least  as  a  convention,  for  his  reading  purposes. 
Zeitblom's  attitude  really  is  too  timid  and  infatuated.  We  peer  and 
probe  into  the  dense,  darkling  pages,  through  the  provincialism 
and   the   medieval   pastiche,   amid   the   theology  and  musicology 


Images  of  Truth  •  226 

and  the  editorializing  of  all  sorts,  hoping  to  discover  and  par- 
take of  Mann's  own  view  to  some  extent.  Is  he  inculcating  some- 
thing or  advocating  something?  Or  is  he  fooling  us,  making  fun  of 
the  miserable  world?  Is  it  conceivable  that  he  himself  believed  in 
the  evil  personification  or  deification,  to  the  extent  of  at  least  having 
a  horror  of  it?  This  part  of  the  text  seems  not  to  convey  any 
very  definite  emotion,  certainly  not  horror.  On  the  one  hand,  as  to 
any  moot  point  or  riddlesome  matter,  our  sense  of  the  forceful 
mind  of  the  author  keeps  us  from  taking  his  stand-in  narrator 
seriously.  Mann,  on  the  other  hand,  seems  to  be  hiding  behind 
Zeitblom.  They  mask  each  other. 

All  this  relates  closely  to  the  inartistic  effect  that  I  complained  of 
in  the  episode  of  The  Magic  Mountain  entitled  "Highly  Question- 
able"; the  seance  in  the  psychoanalyst's  room  at  which  the  spirit  of 
Joachim  is  made  to  materialize.  Here,  once  more,  Mann  makes 
rather  an  issue  of  a  matter  of  belief:  perhaps  believing  himself,  per- 
haps not;  perhaps  assuming  that  the  reader  is  a  believer;  or  simply 
wishing  to  delude  and  beguile,  but  going  about  his  craftiness  with 
a  somewhat  heavy  hand. 

I  repeat:  Mann  did  not  have  the  style  of  a  man  who  believes  in 
things.  Despite  his  occasional  archaism  and  skillful  mimicry,  he 
always  seems  well  educated  or  over-educated,  with  a  tone  and  an  im- 
plication of  the  ungullible  present  time.  How  much  more  easily 
material  of  this  kind  is  handled  by  the  Nordic  tale  writers,  Isak 
Dinesen  and  Par  Lagerkvist  and  others,  without  unseemly  levity 
or  old-timiness!  Their  short  forms  help  them,  whisking  their  super- 
natural and  improbable  personages  up  and  away  before  the  reader 
gets  into  his  logical  vein  or  his  captious  mood.  Also,  they  do  not 
interlard  the  supernatural  with  current  events,  or  vice  versa.  The 
reader  concentrates  on  what  they  themselves  are  chiefly  concerned 
with,  the  storytelling  per  se.  When  they  come  to  their  ghostliness 
or  devilishness  or  other  anomaly,  it  is  not  against  a  background  of 
their  having  set  themselves  up  for  hundreds  of  pages  as  serious 
thinkers,  digesters  of  the  sciences,  explainers  of  the  wisdom  of  the 
day  and  age. 

As  originally  published  in  German,  the  colloquy  of  Leverkuehn 


22 j  '  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

and  the  Devil  ends  on  page  386,  which  is  the  exact  center  of  the 
volume.  Think  what  fanatic  insistence  and  unrelenting  hard  work 
that  must  have  taken,  on  both  the  author's  part  and  the  printer's 
part!  I  have  neglected  to  inquire  whether  the  Fischer  Verlag  has 
reproduced  this  effect  in  subsequent  editions.  Understandably,  Mrs. 
Lowe-Porter  and  the  firm  of  Alfred  E.  Knopf,  Inc.,  gave  it  up.  Can 
you  imagine  a  writer  of  Mann's  mighty  and  essential  gifts,  a  thinker 
with  his  far-ranging  and  crucial  interests,  devoting  himself  to  a 
contrivance  so  minute  and  arbitrary?  It  does  notify  the  reader  that 
the  author  wants  him  to  pay  particular  attention  to  the  passage 
thus  fussed  over,  but  at  the  same  time  (I  think)  it  diminishes  the 
seriousness  of  what  page  386  has  to  say. 

Fritz  Kaufmann,  in  an  intensive  study  entitled  Thomas  Mann: 
the  World  as  Will  and  Representation,  which  pleased  Mann — he 
said  that  it  was  like  a  mirror,  and  that  he  enjoyed  looking  at  him- 
self in  it — has  called  our  attention  to  another  bit  of  symbolic 
virtuosity:  the  chapter  arrangement,  hocus-pocus!  I  must  admit 
that,  reading  in  my  amateur  way,  comfortable  and  contemplative, 
I  might  never  have  noticed  it  for  myself.  It  is  this:  twenty-one 
chapters  in  the  middle,  that  is,  three  times  seven;  flanked  by 
thirteen  chapters  on  either  side,  which  is  to  give  an  impression  of 
unluckiness,  if  you  are  impressionable  in  that  way  (I  am  not); 
forty-seven  chapters  in  all.  And,  most  magically  and  impressively, 
the  beginning  plus  the  middle  amounts  to  thirty-four  chapters,  and 
the  middle  plus  the  end  also  amounts  to  thirty-four  chapters. 

Spellbound  by  this,  temporarily  spellbound,  turning  from  Kauf- 
mann's  authorized  exegesis  to  the  portentous  fictive  biography  itself, 
I  discovered  that  in  fact  there  are  forty-nine  chapters;  not  forty- 
seven.  In  order  to  arrive  at  the  desired  superstitious  computation — 
thirteen  plus  thrice  seven  plus  another  thirteen  equals  forty-seven 
— three  chapters  had  to  be  given  the  same  number.  Was  the  nu- 
merically minded  author  cheating  a  little?  Not  exactly.  For  the 
thrice-used  number  is  thirty-four;  the  two  extra  chapters  are 
thirty-four  continued  and  thirty-four  concluded. 

Thirty-four,  let  me  tell  you — Kaufmann  having  told  me — is  the 
most  prestige-ful  number  in  all  arithmetic.  Do  you  remember  the 


Images  of  Truth  •  228 

old  magic  square  that  is  in  the  background  of  Durer's  famous 
engraving  "Melancholia,"  with  digits  arranged  on  it  in  such  a  way 
as  to  add  up  to  thirty-four,  however  you  go  about  the  addition, 
up  and  down,  or  from  side  to  side,  or  crossways?  In  The  Magic 
Mountain  it  hangs  over  Hans  Castorp's  hypochondriacal  sickbed 
in  the  International  Sanatorium  Berghof.  Here  in  Dr.  Faustus  it 
hangs  again,  in  the  room  in  which  poor  Leverkuehn,  in  spite  of 
(or  because  of)  his  accursedness  and  his  syphilis,  revolutionizes 
music. 

The  themes  of  the  misnumbered  chapters  are  the  heart  and  core 
of  the  meaning  of  Leverkuehn's  story;  Mann's  message  throughout 
the  book,  a  two-part  message,  perhaps  less  ironic  and  duplicitous 
than  any  corresponding  formal  pronouncement  in  his  fiction.  First: 
the  close  connection  between  an  immoderate  love  of  the  arts  (es- 
pecially music)  and  a  barbarous  collective  immorality,  to  be  ob- 
served in  Germany  at  its  worst,  that  is,  Nazi  Germany.  Second:  the 
deadly  peril  of  those  mysteries  and  mystifications  which  are  a  form 
of  calculatedness  gone  wrong,  the  ill  effect  of  those  exercises  of 
willful  intellect  which  are  a  preliminary  to  a  loosing  and  loosen- 
ing of  instinct,  wild  and  self-indulgent. 

This  second  principle  may  have  been  in  Goethe's  mind  when  he 
said:  "General  ideas  and  great  conceit  have  a  way  of  always  causing 
terrible  trouble."  Note  Goethe's  small  and  seemingly  almost  in- 
genuous way  of  wording  things;  absolutely  unlike  Mann's  way. 

Let  me  try  to  restate  the  lesson  of  Dr.  Faustus  as  it  applies  (I 
think)  to  Mann's  own  case:  A  farfetched  and  revolutionary  aesthet- 
icism  when  it  coincides  with  a  regression  into,  or  a  revival  of, 
medieval  interests  and  doctrines,  is  evil,  does  harm.  This  great 
cautionary  novel  is  an  example  of  what  it  portrays  and  excoriates. 
I  say  this  with  no  sense  of  wronging  the  noble  old  didactic  novelist, 
though  I  realize  that  I  may  be  provoking  his  admirers  grievously. 
He  himself  specifies  in  the  Entstehung,  "I  felt  clearly  that  my  book 
itself  would  have  to  become  the  thing  it  dealt  with:  namely  a 
musical  composition."  That  particular  nameliness  is  but  a  modicum 
of  what  happened,  a  superficiality  and  a  trifle. 


229  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

Dr.  Faustus  is  a  work  of  "sham  conservatism,"  as  Mann  described 
Schoenberg's  Harmonielehre.  More  than  any  other  creative  work 
that  I  can  think  of,  it  combines  up-to-date  extremities  of  style  and 
structure  with  an  idealism  of  olden  time,  a  headlong  willfulness 
with  an  abandonment  to  whim  and  mystery.  I  believe  that  Mann 
intended  us  to  observe  this,  and  to  give  him  credit  for  it,  and  to 
blame  him  as  well.  In  this  respect  as  in  other  more  general  German 
traits  of  intellect  and  temperament  he  was  willing  if  not  eager  to  be 
compared  to  Faust  and  Nietzsche,  to  be  confused  and  indeed  identi- 
fied with  his  doomed,  antipathetic  composer. 


Fritz  Kaufmann  has  called  our  attention  to  the  recurrence  of  the 
word  "Durchbruch,"  breakthrough,  here  and  there  in  Leverkuehn's 
life  story.  In  the  early  part  of  World  War  II,  the  so-called  Blitzkrieg, 
it  was  in  frequent  use  by  military  men,  or  at  least  by  war  corre- 
spondents, to  describe  the  breaching  of  enemy  lines  by  tanks  and 
other  vehicles  of  aggression,  and  their  entry  into  an  important  un- 
defended or  unsufficiently  defended  area,  as  it  were  virgin  territory. 
More  recently  it  has  been  reapplied  by  scientists,  physicians  and 
physicists  and  others,  to  the  sort  of  basic  research  that  opens  up 
great  sequences  of  new  therapies,  new  destructions,  new  utilities, 
such  as  cancer  treatment  and  missile  deterrents  and  weather  control. 
In  Dr.  Faustus  it  distinctly  refers  to  Leverkuehn's  (and  Schoen- 
berg's) creative  innovation,  dodecaphony.  Away  from  Wagner! 
down  with  Beethoven!  back  to  Bach,  or  still  further  back,  into  the 
Middle  Ages;  then  a  rebound  and  a  reconquest  of  the  musical 
world  in  a  new  way,  with  little  or  no  competition  of  other  con- 
temporary composers,  and  with  an  audience  all  one's  own  in  due 
course.  And  according  to  Kaufmann,  breaking  through  like  this  in 
some  way  is  an  innate  spiritual  craving,  at  least  in  Central  Europe; 
"a  watchword  of  German  life."  He  goes  on  to  say  that  "each  new 
work  of  Mann's  has  been  a  fresh  attempt  to  break  down  the  walls 
that  separate  being  from  being." 


Images  of  Truth  •  230 

What  being  from  what  other  being?  I  wonder.  Does  he  mean  to 
suggest  that  the  principal  purpose  of  Mann's  mighty  evolvements  of 
fictitious  form  and  style,  late  in  life,  was  to  speak  more  directly 
and  intimately  to  his  readers;  that,  likewise,  Schoenberg's  innova- 
tions in  musical  harmony  and  polyphony  were  for  the  sake  of  his 
audiences,  to  facilitate  their  listening? 

Champions  and  interpreters  of  modern  art  and  literature  often 
make  claims  of  this  kind;  and  I  almost  always  find  them  unaccept- 
able or  incomprehensible.  Certainly,  the  reading  public  and  music 
lovers  and  art  lovers  in  our  time — with  a  sense  of  the  importance 
and  the  uniqueness  of  modernistic  masterpieces  such  as  Dr. 
Faustus,  and  Joyce's  Finnegans  Wake,  and  Schoenberg's  Moss  and 
Aaron,  and  Kandinsky's  colorful,  amorphous  decorative  paintings, 
and  the  coarse  and  cruel  images  of  Picasso's  old  age — have  been 
gradually  taking  down  or  wearing  down  what  Kaufmann  calls 
"walls,"  stone  by  stone,  stake  by  stake,  strand  after  strand  of  barbed 
wire,  accustoming  themselves  to  every  kind  of  abstruseness,  caco- 
phony, and  deformation.  In  terms  of  extent  of  fame  and  amassment 
of  wealth,  Picasso  must  be  accounted  the  most  popular  painter  who 
ever  lived.  The  name  of  Joyce  is  more  glorious  than  any  other  in  the 
prose  literature  of  the  modern  world.  But  surely  it  is  a  sophistry  to 
argue  that  these  modernists  intended  to  make  their  several  cate- 
gories of  creative  work  more  popular,  more  democratic;  to  com- 
municate more  generally  or  more  exactly  or  more  movingly,  by 
easement  of  language,  simplification  of  idiom,  focusing  of  imagery; 
to  facilitate  and  sweeten  the  sights  and  sounds  of  art  for  everyone's 
or  anyone's  benefit. 

What  has  principally  preoccupied  and  excited  them  has  been 
to  withstand  and  shake  off  and  defy  the  dwarfing  influences  of 
their  perhaps  greater  predecessors.  Picasso  has  kept  looking  back  at 
Cezanne,  Schoenberg  at  Wagner,  Joyce  at  Ibsen  and  Dickens.  And, 
certainly,  the  walls  and  separations  and  restraints  that  Mann  was 
heroic  against,  especially  in  the  latter  half  of  his  lifework,  were 
those  that  differentiated  the  novel  writing  of  the  past — and  the  pro- 
ductions of  academicians  and  commercial  writers  of  his  own  day  who 


2j i  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

went  on  working  in  the  old  modes — and  that  ever-hypothetical, 
ever-expanding,  exalted  and  uneasy  artistry  which  was  (or  was  to 
be)  peculiar  to  himself;  between  the  epoch-making  novels  of  his 
giant  predecessors,  Goethe  and  Balzac  and  Zola  and  Dostoevski  and 
Tolstoi,  and  whatever  manuscript  he  happened  to  have  in  progress, 
or  perhaps  at  a  standstill,  on  his  desk. 


Now  to  recapitulate,  simplifying  my  thesis  as  best  I  can:  Mann's 
breakthrough  (to  use  Kaufmann's  word  for  it),  his  specialty  and 
innovation,  was  the  philosophical  novel.  Even  early  in  his  life,  when 
he  was  a  facile  young  genius,  the  author  of  only  Buddenbrooks 
and  Tonio  Kroeger,  one  could  tell  that  he  was  not  going  to  be 
content  to  have  his  future  protagonists  simply  reading  Schopen- 
hauer and  Nietzsche,  submitting  to  old  influences,  unhelped  by 
him.  Surely,  for  an  intellect  as  proud  and  swelling  as  his,  there 
must  be  more  serious  employment  in  works  of  fiction;  some  way  of 
keeping  all  the  significances  of  the  given  work  in  mind  at  all  times, 
so  that  the  component  parts  would  combine  to  say  one  thing,  and 
to  say  it  as  profoundly  as  possible. 

In  certain  essays  and  critical  studies,  and  here  and  there  in  short 
works  of  fiction  that  were  in  fact  preliminary  sketches  for  novels 
that  he  had  in  mind  (or  hoped  to  have  in  mind  presently)  his 
more  ambitious  and  independent  interests  began  to  appear  and 
to  develop:  a  kind  of  overarching  zenith  and  encircling  horizon 
and  all-embracing  climatic  condition  and  constant  well-focused 
bird's-eye  view  and  summarizing  spectrum.  In  his  future  novels, 
perhaps,  the  mere  moralizing  and  rationalizing  about  everyday  ac- 
tivities and  excitements  of  the  human  species,  all-important  in 
ordinary  novels,  could  be  relegated  to  the  lower  half  of  the  pic- 
ture, even  less  than  half,  as  in  one  of  those  painted  landscapes 
of  the  seventeenth-century  Dutch  masters  or  the  impressionists  in 
France  that  are  almost  all  sky:  small  patchwork  of  fields,  faint 
tracery  of  roads,  little  buildings  crouching  in  the  distance  in  the 


Images  of  Truth  •  232 

midst  of  indistinct  foliage,  and  almost  perfunctory,  scarcely  recog- 
nizable little  human  figures:  their  only  purpose  in  the  work,  or 
their  chief  purpose,  to  give  scale  and  contrast  to  the  vague  immensity 
of  the  air  overhead,  the  firmament,  the  world  prospect  or  Weltan- 
schauung, the  metaphysics! 

The  metaphysical  or  philosophical  novel  is  an  old,  even  old- 
fashioned  category  of  the  narrative  art,  but  few  practitioners  of 
the  large  forms  of  fiction  have  ever  buckled  down  and  actually  pro- 
duced any  such  thing.  The  eighteenth  century  gave  us  delectable 
contes,  hybrids  of  the  parable  and  the  fairy  tale,  inculcating  or 
combating  this  or  that  principle  of  outstanding  thinkers  of  the 
age:  Voltaire's  Candide,  for  example.  Goethe's  Elective  Affinities 
certainly  meant  to  be  philosophical,  but  it  too  is  a  fairy  tale  rather 
than  a  novel,  despite  its  giant  size.  In  its  mere  narrative  aspects, 
characterization,  motivation,  plot,  it  is  incoherent.  Wherever  talent 
or  genius  may  lead,  German  talent  or  genius,  Goethe  is  sure  to  have 
been  there  before  one. 

There  is  a  voluble  echoing  of  Swedenborg  and  Saint-Martin  and 
Lavater  in  Balzac,  is  there  not?  and  of  Bergson  in  Proust;  prin- 
cipally as  a  means  of  emotion  and  impressionistic  ambience. 
But  in  the  work  of  both  these  Frenchmen,  who  are  true  novelists, 
how  marginal  and  optional  the  abstract  ideas  seem,  amid  their  ag- 
glomeration of  data  of  human  nature;  how  much  more  fervent 
their  consideration  of  social  stratifications  and  tensions,  the  classes 
and  the  masses,  and  matters  legal  and  ecclesiastical! 

Modern  fiction  has  scarcely  been  characterized  by  abstract  in- 
tellectual interests.  There  are  some  recent  novels  about  philosophers 
that  are  worth  reading,  but  they  are  biographical,  historical,  with 
hardly  a  metaphysical  word.  A  few  bona  fide  philosophers  have 
written  novels,  mainly  as  an  outlet  for  the  autobiographical  im- 
pulse; Santayana's  The  Last  Puritan,  for  example.  The  Root  and 
the  Flower  by  L.  H.  Myers  used  to  have  enthusiastic  readers,  per- 
haps still  has.  Aldous  Huxley  is  brilliantly  thoughtful,  but  the 
thinking  in  his  novels  is  never  very  thorough,  because  of  his  eager- 
ness to  satirize.  The  flourishing  though  not  very  successful  existen- 
tialist school  of  French  fiction  writers  did  not  develop  until  after 


2^5  *  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

The  Magic  Mountain.  I  understand  that  in  Germany,  despite  the 
absolute  interruption  of  German  mental  life  for  twenty  years, 
philosophical  novelists  are  springing  up;  some  of  them  under 
Mann's  influence,  others  counteracting  him. 

Perhaps  The  Magic  Mountain  and  Dr.  Faustus  are  the  most 
specifically  and  authentically  philosophical  novels  ever  written. 
(Page  for  page,  the  greater  part  of  Joseph  and  His  Brothers  also  is 
cogitation  rather  than  mythology  or  anthropology  or  other  schol- 
arship.) But  I  make  this  assertion  less  happily  than  I  do  Mann's 
other  claims  to  fame.  For,  alas,  the  philosophical  novel  is  an  un- 
fortunate form,  with  inherent  defects.  Almost  by  definition  it  is 
not  apt  to  mean  as  much  to  the  reading  public  as  the  other  classifi- 
cations of  narrative  that  have  been  in  use  for  centuries,  in  and  out 
of  fashion — the  fable,  the  allegory,  the  cautionary  tale,  the  remi- 
niscence, the  adventure,  the  chronicle,  the  short  story,  the  nouvelle, 
and  the  true  novel,  with  its  account  of  everyman's  manners  and 
morals,  of  sociological  conditioning  and  divine  coincidence. 

The  very  thesis  and  premise  of  novel  writing  is  that  the  human 
condition  and  situation,  existence,  subsistence,  actuality,  all  hang 
together  and  can  be  imaginarily  encompassed  in  one  general  view, 
simultaneously  microscopic  and  telescopic;  as  it  were  one  universal 
substance,  with  little  differentiation  of  body  and  soul,  of  reason 
and  feeling,  of  the  momentary  and  the  immortal. 

Philosophizing  in  a  novel  always  seems  idiosyncratic  and  one- 
sided. It  pertains  to  the  mind  of  the  author  rather  than  to  the 
mind  of  any  reader  that  he  may  think  of  himself  as  writing  for,  or 
the  minds  of  the  characters  that  he  is  writing  about.  Human  beings, 
as  they  manifest  themselves  in  those  sequences  of  infatuation  and 
intrigue  and  competition  and  aggression  and  counterattack  and  rec- 
onciliation that  we  call  plots,  do  not  think  alike.  Even  a  small  novel 
contains  a  good  many  characters;  by  definition  it  is  a  long  and 
elaborate  and  multifarious  and  troublesome  structure,  hard  enough 
to  put  together  and  to  keep  clear  in  the  creative  mind.  If,  in  addi- 
tion to  identifying  all  and  sundry  in  it  and  providing  them  with  a 
background  of  previous  life,  and  establishing  their  contacts  and 
mutual  influences,  and  displaying  them  in  lifelike  action,  the  novel- 


Images  of  Truth  •  234 

ist  undertakes  (to  some  extent)  to  make  intellectuals  of  them  all, 
it  must  enormously  increase  his  responsibility  and  his  labor. 

If  he  is  not  to  bore  the  comparatively  unintelligent  or  anti- 
intellectual  type  of  reader,  all  his  thoughtfulness  will  have  to  be 
kept  light  and  clear.  Furthermore,  he  will  want  to  show  some  impar- 
tiality among  his  dramatis  personae,  to  let  them  all  have  their  say, 
that  is,  to  say  it  for  them,  fairly  and  squarely.  The  type  of  reader 
who  happens  to  be  philosophical  in  his  own  right  may  be  vexed  by 
this,  as  a  kind  of  promiscuity  of  intellect;  all  things  to  all  heroes 
and  heroines,  even  all  villains  and  villainesses. 

Speaking  for  the  ordinary  reader,  neither  highbrow  nor  lowbrow, 
somewhat  roughly  speaking:  if  you  provide  him  with  a  convincing 
record  of  someone's  existence  or  of  something  that  has  happened, 
an  equivalent  to  experience,  he  can  reason  for  himself  about  it. 
Whereas,  if  it  is  the  other  way  round — if  the  reading  matter  that 
he  has  in  hand  is  theoretical,  ideological,  impersonal — he  cannot 
reverse  the  process;  he  cannot  predicate  the  experience  with  which 
presumably  the  philosophical  writer  began;  he  cannot  personify 
the  abstraction,  incarnate  the  thesis.  It  is  a  dead  end  for  him. 

And  in  moral  and  political  philosophy,  nowadays,  there  are  issues 
so  desperate  on  the  one  hand,  so  blissful  and  glorious  on  the  other 
hand,  that  one  scarcely  wants  them  raised  by  the  shifting  and 
shifty  population  of  a  book  of  fiction,  dualistically  or  pluralistically 
argued  by  puppets,  each  in  his  way,  with  the  author  just  looming 
behind  them,  unwilling  or  unable  to  take  sides,  ironically  smiling, 
ambiguously  sad! 

For  my  part,  if  an  idea  is  of  that  caliber  and  consequence,  a  matter 
of  life  and  death  to  me — or  to  other  people  in  worse  circumstances 
than  mine  are  at  present — I  look  for  it  in  the  tersest,  clearest  aphor- 
istic form,  memorizable,  so  that  in  a  pinch,  or  at  a  turning  point 
someday,  I  may  be  able  to  utter  it  in  my  own  behalf:  password  or 
watchword  or  open  sesame,  motto  or  creed  or  prayer — not  in  ques- 
tionable dialectic,  page  after  page,  leisurely  and  discursive,  a  tourna- 
ment of  braininess.  Indeed,  if  a  given  author  is  a  great  man, 
I  like  him  to  do  his  thinking  for  me  in  his  own  words,  signed 
and  sealed;  in  his  own  tone  of  voice,  not  ventriloquously,  parceled 


255  *  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

out  to  all  sorts  of  mouthpieces;  and  in  earnest,  not  just  for  the 
loose  exercise  of  his  excess  of  intellectual  energy,  and  vain  pro- 
longation of  his  book.  As  Goethe  said,  "If  I  am  to  listen  to  another 
man's  opinion,  he  must  express  it  positively.  I  have  enough  of  the 
problematical  in  myself." 

I  often  wish  that  Mann  in  his  later  life  had  had  an  Eckermann,  to 
keep  him  from  expending  his  wisdom  in  a  wearisome  dialectic  and 
a  massive  playfulness,  pouring  his  mind  all  topsy-turvy  into  the 
great  gaping  last  manuscripts.  Let  me  cite  two  or  three  instances 
of  what  I  think  of  as  philosophical  frivolity,  coming  from  him;  ob- 
scure and  therefore  objectionable  matters. 

Almost  at  the  end  of  The  Magic  Mountain,  when  World  War  I 
begins,  and  Hans  rouses  from  his  long  hypochondria  and  sad 
leisurely  self-development  and  descends  into  the  grim  valley  of 
Europe  and  enlists  in  the  German  army,  Mann  refers  to  it  as  "a 
personal  mercy  and  grace"  for  his  young  everyman,  "a  manifesta- 
tion of  divine  goodness  and  justice."  I  want  to  know — indeed,  as  a 
national  of  one  of  the  nations  that,  twice  in  the  century,  have  been 
involved  in  war  due  to  Germany,  I  desperately  want  to  know — 
whether  Mann  really  means  this.  He  contrives  to  end  the  sentence — 
also,  come  to  think  of  it,  the  book's  final  sentence,  which  is 
about  the  renascence  of  love  after  the  sickness  and  necrophily  of 
the  battle — with  a  question  mark.  At  that  point  in  Hans's  life  story, 
he  says,  "rodomontade  is  out  of  place."  At  mid-point  in  the  twenti- 
eth century,  I  say,  contrived  or  evasive  expressions  of  opinion  about 
some  things  are  out  of  place.  Some  questions  come  to  mind  as 
naturally,  as  physically,  as  tears  to  our  eyes;  and  to  all  intents  and 
purposes,  irony  is  a  refusal  to  answer. 

Earlier  chapters  of  The  Magic  Mountain,  of  course,  raise  less 
painful  but  no  less  important  issues  with  the  same  extreme  alter- 
nativeness,  so  that  it  is  a  torment  not  to  know  which  side  Mann 
himself  is  on.  Lecturing  to  an  excited  and  sighing  audience  of  the 
patients  at  Berghof,  Krokowski,  the  antipathetic  psychoanalyst, 
says,  "Symptoms  of  disease  are  nothing  but  disguised  manifesta- 
tions of  the  power  of  love;  and  all  disease  is  only  love  transformed." 

A  couple  of  hundred  pages  further  on,  Hans's  good  mentor,  Set- 


Images  of  Truth  •  236 

tembrini,  declares  to  him  that  the  body  is  to  be  honored  only  when 
it  is  beautiful  and  free,  desirable  and  joyous,  but  despised  "in  so 
far  as  its  specific  essence  is  perversity,  decay,  sensuality,  and  death." 
Isn't  this  a  false  dichotomy?  Can  the  flesh  by  itself  be  un-innocent? 
Is  it  evil  of  the  body  to  have  to  die?  Are  not  senescence  and  mor- 
tality a  part  of  nature,  even  as  natural  as  the  flower  of  youth  and 
the  prime  of  life?  Throughout  The  Magic  Mountain,  as  we  have 
seen,  Settembrini  personifies  liberal  Mediterranean  humanism;  but 
here  surely  Mann  has  him  on  his  knee  and  is  ventriloquizing  with 
him,  perpetuating  the  old  Judeo-Christian  inner  conflict  and  arbi- 
trary sense  of  sin. 

Surely  Krokowski's  thesis  of  psychosomaticism  is  not  just  a  char- 
acterizing expression  of  his  individual  mentality  and  emotional 
prejudice.  All  these  are  themes  of  the  novel  as  a  whole,  and  as  one's 
reading  of  it  draws  to  a  close,  as  one  gazes  back  on  it  in  its  entirety, 
surely  these  main  dichotomies  seem  unresolved;  question  marks 
loom  over  it  all,  as  high  as  mountain  peaks,  as  dim  and  swirling 
and  disheartening  as  clouds.  They  are  matters  of  Mann's  personal 
lifelong  meditation,  and  he  has  expressed  them  in  various  essays 
even  more  plainly  and  responsibly  than  in  fiction. 

In  Dr.  Faustus  the  questions  are  more  complex.  Whether  Lever- 
kuehn's  music  is  good  or  bad,  beautiful  or  ugly,  is  unanswerable; 
indeed  it  is  not  asked.  What  we  want  to  know  is  something  about 
the  health  or  ill-health  of  his  mind  in  the  early  chapters  of  the 
book,  before  his  syphilitic  insanity  manifests  itself.  Was  it  not  a 
little  insane  of  him  to  contract  syphilis  in  the  first  place?  Is  it  true 
that  syphilis  is  conducive  to  great  explosive  spiritual  states,  to 
transports  of  intellect,  heightenings  of  creative  power?  Does  Mann 
expect  us  to  believe  that  the  Devil  as  such  exists?  Does  he  or  does 
he  not  mean  to  suggest  that  he  himself  believes  in  an  evil  demigod 
or  antigod?  Or  is  Leverkuehn's  interlocutor  at  the  turning  point  of 
the  work  just  a  metaphoric  man,  a  mouthpiece,  a  figure  of  fun?  The 
great  strength  of  the  Devil  (devout  Catholics  and  devout  Protestants 
both  say)  is  our  not  taking  him  seriously.  Leverkuehn  certainly  is  in- 
tended by  Mann  to  personify  Nazi  Germany;  but  does  not  Mann 


23J  •  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

also  identify  him,  here  and  there,  with  pre-Nazi  and  post-Nazi 
Germany,  and  with  general  German  psychology  and  creative  power? 

These  are  shocking  uncertainties.  However,  the  very  central 
subject  of  Dr.  Faustus  is  mental  wrongdoing,  Manichaeanism,  ques- 
tionableness.  Thus  perhaps,  although  it  has  none  of  the  youthful- 
ness  or  the  narrative  bewitchment  or  the  human  profusion  of  The 
Magic  Mountain,  it  seems  a  more  perfect  work  of  art.  It  is  abso- 
lutely unified;  it  is  long,  but  at  no  point  simply  for  lengthiness' 
sake;  it  never  meanders  or  trails  away  to  nothing;  and  although  it 
depresses  and  confounds  and  overburdens  and  baffles  the  mind  of 
the  reader,  it  does  not  contradict  itself. 

There  is  one  other  objection  to  the  philosophical  novel  that  I 
shall  make  superficially,  lightly.  If  any  qualified  philosopher  reads 
this,  he  may  want  to  chide  me  or  castigate  me  for  touching  upon  it 
at  all,  for  certainly  it  is  beyond  my  competence  and  beyond  the  in- 
tended scope  of  this  essay.  In  philosophy,  to  a  great  extent,  words 
themselves,  in  their  grammatical  relationship  and  syntactical  ar- 
rangements, are  the  subject  matter.  Even  more  than  in  the  obscur- 
est and  most  modern  poetry,  they  designate  and  connote  themselves. 

Now,  as  I  shall  be  hanged  for  a  lamb,  why  not  for  a  sheep?  A 
good  deal  of  the  obscurity  of  modern  philosophy  from  the  eight- 
eenth century  on,  especially  the  German  and  the  German-derived 
schools  of  thought  and  their  contemporary  by-products,  such  as 
Marxism  and  existentialism,  is  due  to  what  in  other  categories  of 
literature  would  be  called  bad  writing.  Philosophical  style  has  been 
rendered  doubly  difficult  in  our  time  by  the  necessity  for  incor- 
porating into  almost  every  treatise  or  discourse  certain  terms  and 
concepts  that  have  originated  in  the  realm  of  mathematics  and  the 
sciences.  The  Germans  of  course  have  greatly  specialized  in  all  these 
disciplines.  In  so  far  as  we  blame  them  for  their  writing  in  a  con- 
fused way,  one  other  excuse  for  them  ought  to  be  mentioned  (Heller 
does  mention  it):  the  German  language  itself  is  somewhat  more 
primitive  and  unfinished,  less  lucid  in  detail  and  less  expeditious 
than  English  or  the  several  languages  based  on  Latin.  But  in  so 
mysterious  an  area,  can  we  tell  what  is  cause  and  what  is  effect?  In 


.'-:- 


Images  of  Truth  •  238 

the  eighteenth  century  a  number  of  German  thinkers  and  writers 
tried  to  be  as  clear  and  brief  as  the  French;  Goethe  succeeded  in 
great  measure,  even  Schopenhauer  succeeded.  In  his  philosophical 
vein  Mann,  the  greatest  German  writer  of  the  twentieth  century, 
did  not  succeed. 

Here  let  me  set  down  something  that  I  have  often  expressed  in 
casual  conversation,  anxiously  now,  as  Mann  devotees  may  resent 
my  light  epigrammatic  expression  even  more  than  the  idea  I  have 
to  express. — Mann  was  not  a  great  thinker,  though  he  felt  that  he 
was.  Certainly  his  feelings  were  great,  and  his  greatness  in  gen- 
eral developed  itself  by  means  of  the  initial  error  of  attaching 
too  much  importance  to  his  abstract  thoughts.  His  ideas  were  not 
powerful;  surely  a  host  of  German  postgraduate  university  men 
could  have  out-argued  him,  re-educated  him,  led  him  perhaps  on 
still  another  grim  German  divagation  and  sanguinary  wild-goose 
chase.  But  his  confusion  of  intellect  and  inspiration  resulted  in 
literary  power.  It  gave  him — as  a  simple  creative  man  of  good 
will — a  general  mental  athleticism  unusual  in  belles-lettres,  incom- 
parable in  fiction.  And  he  gives  wonderful  exercise  to  the  mind  of 
any  young  reader.  Even  to  overvalue  him  and  to  be  disillusioned 
by  him  in  due  course  is  educational.  In  this  regard  he  may  be  com- 
pared to  Gide;  another  sort  of  hero  of  the  intellect,  even  less  satis- 
factory as  a  novelist. 


The  writing  of  Dr.  Faustus  was  tiring  to  the  aged  author;  and  no 
wonder.  He  had  to  interrupt  it  just  before  the  end  to  undergo  a 
serious  surgical  operation,  and  returned  to  his  desk  with  a  great 
scar  halfway  around  his  chest.  But  then  evidently  he  felt  indomi- 
table, capable  of  no  matter  what,  not  to  be  baffled  or  frustrated  by 
any  sort  of  creative  hardship.  At  least  he  pretended  that  this  was 
the  case,  in  order  to  go  on  hopefully  working  until  the  end.  If  one 
can  manage  it,  a  constant  industriousness  doubtless  is  the  best  way 
of  shutting  one's  eyes  to  the  approach  of  death. 

In  the  spring  of   1947,  resident  in  Europe  again — in  German- 


239  *  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

speaking  Switzerland,  not  in  Germany  proper — he  produced  a  little 
historical  novel,  The  Holy  Sinner,  cunning  and  erudite  and  mean- 
ingful, and  after  that  The  Black  Swan,  the  postmature  love  story  of 
a  sort  of  female  counterpart  to  Aschenbach,  his  least  successful 
nouvelle;  and  then  he  resumed  work  on  that  fictitious  autobiogra- 
phy of  a  swindler,  Confessions  of  Felix  Krull,  which  he  had  left 
unfinished  in  1912.  I  cannot  think  of  any  instance  in  literary  history 
of  an  enterprise  so  obstinate  and  long  drawn  out.  Finally,  in  1955, 
his  daughter  Erika  has  informed  us,  he  conceived  a  sort  of  poetical 
drama  to  be  entitled  Martin  Luther's  Wedding,  for  which  he  piled 
up  a  quantity  of  notes  and  a  rough  draft. 

Goethe  said,  "He  is  the  most  fortunate  of  mortals  who  can  bring 
the  end  of  his  life  around  to  its  beginning  again."  In  more  ways 
than  one,  Mann  was  fortunate,  and  did  so,  most  surprisingly,  per- 
haps, in  a  short  and  simple  essay  on  Chekhov.  That  and  another 
work  of  criticism,  an  essay  on  Schiller  first  delivered  as  an  oration 
in  Stuttgart  upon  the  one  hundred  and  fiftieth  anniversary  of  his 
birth,  taken  together,  impart  to  us  in  strange  contrast  and  mel- 
ancholy harmony  some  of  his  important  final  thinking  about 
himself.  Hail  and  farewell!  Hail  to  Schiller,  the  great  neurotic 
prototype  and  inspirer  of  his  youth,  "universe-intoxicated,  and 
toward  his  fellow  men,  didactic!" 

The  Chekhov  essay  is  a  more  confidential  piece  of  writing,  not 
characteristic  of  him  at  all,  humble  and  fervent,  uncomplaining 
and  unexplaining.  Farewell  to  Chekhov  in  a  way,  but  mainly  fare- 
well to  himself,  and  to  his  immense  lifework,  and  to  certain  of  his 
lifelong  intentions  and  illusions  about  the  narrative  art. 

It  begins  with  his  confessing  that  the  death  of  Chekhov,  in  1904, 
only  fifteen  years  his  senior,  meant  very  little  to  him  because  he 
was  not  familiar  with  the  short  stories  and  romantic  comedies  of 
the  beloved  Russian.  What  was  the  cause  of  this  ignorance?  he 
asks,  and  answers  with  a  reiteration  of  his  old  interest  in  expan- 
siveness  and  bulk,  but,  this  time,  in  a  rueful  rather  than  a  boastful 
tone.  It  was  "probably  because  I  was  under  the  spell  of  the  magnum 
opus,  fascinated  by  those  monumental  epics,  which  are  the  fruit  of 
sustained  inspiration  and  are  brought  to  completion  by  the  power 


Images  of  Truth  •  240 

of  indomitable  patience;  for  I  worshiped  the  great  achievers  like 
Balzac,  Tolstoi,  and  Wagner,  and  it  was  my  dream  to  emulate  them 
if  I  could." 

This  was  published  in  East  Germany  in  1954,  then  broadcast  in 
English  in  a  somewhat  abridged  form  in  the  spring  of  1955.  I  quote 
from  the  anonymous  BBC  translation,  smoother  and  more  idio- 
matic than  that  afterward  published  in  book  form.  "Whereas 
Chekhov  (like  Maupassant,  whom  by  the  way  I  knew  much  better) 
confined  himself  to  the  modest  dimensions  of  the  short  story;  this 
did  not  call  for  heroic  endurance  throughout  years  and  decades, 
but  could  be  tossed  off  by  some  happy-go-lucky  artist  in  a  day  or 
two  or  a  week  or  two,  at  most.  I  felt  a  certain  disdain  for  this,  hardly 
realizing  then  that  genius  can  be  bounded  in  a  nutshell  and  yet 
embrace  the  whole  fullness  of  life  by  virtue  of  a  brevity  and  terse- 
ness deserving  of  the  highest  admiration.  Such  works  attain  to  full 
epic  stature  and  can  even  surpass  in  intensity  the  great  towering 
novels  which  inevitably  flag  at  times  and  subside  into  noble  bore- 
dom." 

I  believe  that  these  paragraphs  justify,  in  so  far  as  criticism 
needs  justifying,  what  I  have  had  to  say  about  the  somewhat  over- 
extended and  self-abandoned  form  of  his  principal  novels.  Here,  too, 
he  seems  to  be  informing  us,  implicitly,  of  the  work  that  he  would 
have  liked  to  do,  perhaps  after  another  volume  of  the  wild  and 
facetious  life  of  Krull,  and  perhaps  Martin  Luther's  Wedding,  if 
still  longer  life  had  been  vouchsafed  him.  Another  change  for  the 
changeable  one:  Bildung  and  Entwicklung  for  the  all  too  educable 
German! 

It  is  a  kind  of  information  that,  in  spite  of  science  and  my  better 
judgment,  inclines  me  to  believe  in  immortality:  the  instance  and 
good  example  of  a  dying  soul  still  so  limber,  and  free  from  vanity, 
and  eager  to  be  (and  capable  of  being)  original  all  over  again,  with 
mighty  acknowledged  immortals  of  the  arts  going  before,  showing 
the  way  to  his  originality. 

In  a  scientific  age,  it  is  hard  to  conceive  of  the  body  as  not  dying, 
but  easy  for  the  mind  to  conceive  of  itself  as  continuing  to  live. 
In  any  event — survive  what  may!  perish  what  must! — in  the  whil- 


241  -  Thomas  Mann:  Will  Power  and  Fiction 

ing  away  of  our  various  existences  on  earth,  we  have  to  die  a  good 
many  secondary  deaths,  as  in  a  ritual  or  a  simulacrum;  and  as 
Mann's  fictitious  Schiller  reminds  himself,  in  the  early  story  en- 
titled A  Weary  Hour,  in  which  so  much  of  Mann's  genius  does 
appear  "bounded  in  a  nutshell,"  there  is  a  certain  virtue  in  just 
bringing  things  to  a  conclusion,  even  a  life,  even  an  essay.  "For 
then  some  new  work  can  begin  to  struggle  into  being  and  into 
shape,  giving  out  light  and  sound,  ringing  and  shimmering,  hint- 
ing at  its  infinite  origin,  as  in  a  seashell  we  hear  the  sighing  of 
the  sea." 

One  or  another  of  Mann's  editors  having  had  the  bright  idea  of 
republishing  this  miniature  early  story  as  an  appendix  to  the  pon- 
derous Schiller  essay,  Versuch  iiber  Schiller — fifty  years  having 
elapsed  between  the  two  texts — this  lovely  sentence  appears  on  the 
last  page  of  his  Last  Essays. 


Chapter  Eight 

Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 


Whatever  we  succeed  in  doing  is  a  transformation  of  something  we  have 
failed  to  do.  Thus,  when  we  fail,  it  is  only  because  we  have  given  up. 

—PAUL    VALERY 


Did  you  happen  to  see,  on  the  front  page  of  the  New  York  Times 
dated  November  6,  1961,  a  two-column  article  announcing  the  pro- 
duction in  the  near  future  of  three  one-act  plays  by  Thornton 
Wilder,  part  of  a  double  cycle  of  fourteen,  The  Seven  Ages  of  Man 
and  The  Seven  Deadly  Sins,  long  rumored  and  hoped  for?  It  was 
an  important  piece  of  journalism,  the  work  of  a  good  writer  named 
Arthur  Gelb,  illustrated  by  a  flash  photograph  of  the  famed  novel- 
ist and  playwright,  based  in  large  part  on  an  interview  with  him, 
full  of  the  ethos  of  his  art,  and  of  those  technicalities  of  staging 
which  count  for  so  much  in  the  aesthetics  of  the  theatre.  "We  have 
to  kick  the  proscenium  down,"  he  told  the  Times. 

It  was  also  stated  in  the  Times  that  the  announced  triple  bill  at 
the  Circle  in  the  Square  was  to  be  Wilder' s  "first  new  stage  work  in 
nearly  twenty  years."  To  express  this  situation  more  precisely,  it 
was  his  first  entirely  new  stage  work  to  be  produced  in  this  country 
since  1942.  The  Matchmaker,  first  given  at  the  Edinburgh  Festival 
in  1954  and  brought  here  the  following  year,  was  a  revision  of  The 
Merchant  of  Yonkers,  a  comedy  somewhat  unsuccessfully  put  on 
stage  in  the  late  thirties.  In  1955  another  play  entitled  A  Life  in  the 
Sun  was  produced  in  Edinburgh,  and  subsequently,  in  a  German 
translation,  in  Zurich  and  elsewhere  on  the  continent  of  Europe, 
with  success.  This  has  been  regarded  by  the  pundits  and  potentates 
of  our  theatre  as  not  good  enough  for  Broadway.  For  the  past  three 
242 


243  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

years,  according  to  the  Times — longer  than  that,  friends  of  Wilder's 
tell  me — he  has  been  at  work  on  the  double  cycle  of  one-acters. 

Of  greater  significance — at  any  rate,  of  livelier  interest  to  me,  a 
book  reader  more  than  a  theatre-goer — is  the  fact  that  he  has  not 
published  a  novel  since  1948.  In  1952  he  spoke  of  a  novel  in  progress, 
which  he  has  not  published,  presumably  has  not  finished.  However, 
Arthur  Gelb  and  I  are  not  entitled  to  speak  sadly  of  an  actual  lapse 
in  his  creative  life,  certainly  not  of  any  idleness  or  indifference. 

What  happened  was  a  mysterious  lull,  or  a  number  of  lulls,  delays, 
hesitancies,  changes  of  plan.  And  I  have  ideas  about  this,  all  in 
chiaroscuro,  as  in  portraits  by  Rembrandt;  golden  in  the  center 
and  either  very  profound  or  strangely  empty  in  corners  of  the  can- 
vas. The  literary  creativity  of  the  day  and  age — it  has  been  a  good 
long  day,  a  glorious  enough  age — is  a  shadowy  theme,  and  it  gets 
harder  and  harder  to  expound  and  diagnose,  especially  American 
creativity,  with  our  culture  basically  changing  in  some  ways;  but 
let  me  try. 


Wilder  and  I  first  met  in  1928  in  the  South  of  France,  in  Ville- 
franche-sur-Mer.  I  was  in  my  late  twenties,  he  in  his  early  thirties, 
both  of  us  flourishing  and  promising,  neck  and  neck  in  literature  at 
that  point.  The  Bridge  of  San  Luis  Rey,  his  second  novel,  had  just 
won  the  Pulitzer  Prize,  and  my  publishers  had  given  their  prize  to 
my  second  novel  the  previous  year.  Though,  in  his  case,  allowance 
always  has  to  be  made  for  an  ebullient  good  nature  and  sometimes 
an  inclination  to  flatter  those  he  makes  friends  with,  I  think  it  can 
be  said  that  he  took  a  real  and  lively  interest  in  me  and  in  what 
might  be  expected  of  me  as  a  writer.  It  thrilled  me  to  make  his 
acquaintance. 

For  two  or  three  hours  on  successive  days  we  strolled  here  and 
there  in  and  around  Villefranche,  looking  down  upon  its  famous 
harbor  scooped  out  by  Hercules  on  his  way  from  one  of  his  more 
famous  labors  to  another,  with  anchorage  deep  enough  for  ocean 
liners  and  battleships,  including  our  battleships;  visiting  the  ceme- 


Images  of  Truth  •  244 

tery  where  some  nineteenth-century  U.S.  Navy  personnel  lie  eter- 
nally sleeping;  descending  into  the  Rue  Obscure  which  is  a  sort  of 
elongated  open-ended  cellar  under  the  tenement  houses  on  the  quay, 
coming  back  up  into  the  Riviera  sunshine,  gladly  exhaling  the  sour 
old  crypt-like  atmosphere,  and  inhaling  the  fragrance  of  the  com- 
mercial flower  beds,  carnations  and  stock,  distributed  upon  the 
shelving  foothills,  and  strolling  along  elsewhere,  I  have  forgotten 
where.  Perhaps  I  ought  not  to  say  strolling:  we  went  so  vigorously, 
and  at  intervals  stopped  and  stood  face  to  face,  in  a  rapture  of 
articulateness,  with  gestures. 

Perhaps  at  that  time  Wilder  himself,  as  a  man  of  literary  genius 
just  beginning,  and  possibly  a  new  friend,  appealed  to  me  more 
than  the  work  he  had  published.  Certainly  my  admiration  of  The 
Bridge  of  San  Luis  Rey  fell  somewhat  short  of  the  consensus.  To 
this  day,  with  my  over-all  appreciation  of  him  at  its  peak,  The 
Bridge  satisfies  me  less  than  his  other  novels.  To  be  sure,  it  is  well 
written,  with  a  soft  and  regular  brightness  like  a  string  of  matched 
pearls.  It  has  another  quality  of  his  style,  which,  since  then,  he  has 
developed  and  perfected  in  all  the  forms  of  his  writing,  in  drama  as 
well  as  narration  and  exposition:  an  effect  of  energy,  but  with  no 
nervousness,  no  hurry;  and  constant  enthusiasm,  though  always 
stopping  short  of  hyperbole  and  fatuity.  Is  all  this  somewhat  self- 
conscious  and  proud?  Yes,  but  are  those  not  favorable  characteristics 
in  a  young  or  youngish  writer? 

The  imperfection  in  The  Bridge  of  San  Luis  Rey,  I  thought  (and 
still  think),  is  the  subject  matter;  more  specifically,  the  plot,  which 
is  tight,  intentional,  functional,  with  the  function  above  all  of 
bringing  out  the  significance  and  the  importance  of  what  happens. 
Every  inch  of  the  way,  the  parts  keep  proving  and  reinforcing  the 
theme  of  the  whole.  The  theme  is,  roughly  speaking,  the  old  enigma 
of  how  hard  it  is  to  understand  the  will  of  God,  that  is,  the  ill  will 
of  God;  and  perhaps  one  cannot  take  a  great  interest  in  this  without 
some  simple  religious  belief. 

Also  (I  find)  the  atmospheres  of  two  or  three  different  cultures 
and  national  backgrounds  in  it  somewhat  neutralize  or  nullify  one 
another.  It  is  a  tale  of  South  America,  but  in  design  and  mode  and 


245  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

manner  it  is  quite  French;  and  with  the  author's  imagination  reach- 
ing, almost  straining,  in  those  two  directions  at  once,  his  own  North 
American  temperament  seems  somewhat  muted,  neglected.  You 
might  think  it  the  work  of  a  much  older  man,  and  a  more  profes- 
sional type  of  writer,  than  the  extraordinary  young  schoolmaster 
who  did  write  it. 

In  that  first  encounter  of  ours  in  Villefranche,  I  remember  ven- 
turing to  tell  him  that  I  personally  rather  favored  his  earlier  work 
of  fiction,  The  Cabala,  a  sort  of  intimate  portrait  gallery  of  various 
cosmopolitan  contemporary  Romans  who  presumably  had  been 
hospitable  to  him  during  a  sojourn  in  Rome,  with  a  glamorous 
light  of  his  youth  freshly  shining  on  them,  and  with  dark  touches 
of  a  worldly  wisdom  that  presumably  they  had  taught  him. 

But  no,  he  protested,  to  my  surprise,  none  of  them  were  per- 
sons that  he  had  known.  Just  as  in  The  Bridge  of  San  Luis  Rey  one 
could  discern  the  lovely  seventeenth-century  phantom  of  Mme. 
de  Sevigne,  and  relearn  a  lesson  from  Merimee,  and  rehear  a  lilt 
of  Offenbach,  The  Cabala  was  bookworm's  work. 

He  blushed  to  tell  me  this,  he  said,  but  then  corrected  himself 
for  blushing:  one  should  never  be  ashamed  of  any  method  one  may 
have  found  for  oneself,  if  it  works.  For  each  and  every  sophisticated 
up-to-date  Roman,  he  had  had  in  mind  some  hero  or  heroine  of 
bygone  fiction  or  drama,  or  haunting  figure  out  of  someone's  cor- 
respondence or  memoirs. 

"In  any  case,  surely,"  he  said,  "it  can't  have  fooled  you,  least  of 
all  you,  penetratingly  intelligent  as  you  are,  with  the  added  advan- 
tage of  expatriation.  You  must  have  recognized  my  little  deriva- 
tions, my  transparencies;  seen  right  through  them!" 

It  was  my  turn  to  blush,  somewhat  in  self-pity,  having  had  only 
about  half  a  college  education,  less  than  half.  In  his  lovely  fantasia 
of  the  Eternal  City  I  had  not  recognized  any  of  the  historical  proto- 
types or  the  timeless  themes  borrowed  from  the  past  reservoir  of 
culture,  the  world  library.  Come  to  think  of  it,  just  one  of  his  points 
of  departure  had  struck  me:  the  death  of  Keats,  which  he  had  ob- 
viously taken  and  modernized. 

One  major  difficulty  of  all  human  endeavor,  especially  of  literary 


Images  of  Truth  •  246 

endeavor,  he  reminded  me  that  day,  is  our  almost  invariably  getting 
started  with  our  lifework  before  we  have  achieved  maturity  in  any 
of  the  essentials.  What  fitfulness  and  zigzag  would  result  from  our 
having  to  begin  all  over  again,  from  scratch,  each  of  us  individually, 
or  for  that  matter  each  successive  generation!  But  we  do  not  have 
to.  Preceding  and  underlying  our  fragmentary  notions  and  ephem- 
eral feelings  are  the  effects  of  the  eternal  thoughtfulness,  the 
emotions  of  everyman,  the  ever-cumulative  encyclopedic  general 
experience. 

Inspiration  is  something  like  a  sap,  declared  Wilder,  which,  in 
its  season,  riseth  as  it  listeth  from  the  deep  old  roots  up  and  up 
into  the  twigs  of  today,  causing  the  budding  of  one's  limitedly  in- 
dividual mind,  the  blooming  and  fruit-bearing  of  the  particular 
talent  one  happens  to  have. 

Of  course  it  surprised  and  enchanted  me  to  hear  this,  especially 
to  think  that  characters  as  lively  as  those  cabalists  of  his — the  sex- 
stricken  teen-age  boy,  the  Wilder-like  youngish  American  with  a 
puritanical  eagerness  to  be  spiritually  helpful  to  the  boy  (which 
turns  almost  to  rage  when  the  boy  is  not  helped),  the  extremely 
romantic  and  foolish  little  French  princess,  the  demoralizing  So- 
cratic  old  Cardinal — could  be  derived  just  from  reading  matter 
and  from  creative  daydreaming;  not  necessarily  freebooted  out  of 
the  society  in  which  the  writer  has  to  live,  the  company  he  keeps 
and  wants  to  go  on  keeping,  the  family  he  is  anxious  not  to  hurt. 
How  this  would  simplify  the  novelist's  life!  Even  in  our  self-dis- 
ciplines, our  concentration  on  the  blessed  necessary  daily  grind- 
stone, our  resistance  to  the  temptations  of  society  and  other  gre- 
garious involvements,  it  would  strengthen  us  to  be  deprived  of  the 
excuse  of  having  to  pursue  subject  matter.  At  least  temporarily, 
as  I  listened  to  my  brilliant  confrere,  I  had  a  vision  of  a  really 
liberated  and  self-sufficient  literary  production.  It  reminded  me  of 
that  seventeenth-century  biologist  who  believed,  at  least  persuaded 
others  to  believe,  that  he  had  originated  life;  generated  a  mouse,  in 
fact,  out  of  an  accumulation  of  bits  and  pieces  of  old  clothing. 


247  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 


One's  memory  of  the  appearance  of  one's  friends  operates  strangely 
as  a  rule,  almost  akin  to  caprice  or  mischief.  When  I  happen 
not  to  see  this  or  that  friend  for  a  few  months,  images  of  bygone 
existence  and  outlived  physique  often  recur  in  my  mind,  just  as  the 
first  outline  of  an  oil  painting  will  sometimes  work  up  out  of  the 
underpaint,  through  the  glazes,  into  the  final  version;  and  when  I 
remeet  him  or  her,  or  when  I  encounter  an  up-to-date  photograph 
in  a  newspaper  or  a  periodical,  it  startles  me. 

Nothing  like  that  in  the  case  of  Wilder.  His  physical  aspect  has 
been  extraordinarily  constant,  perhaps  I  should  say  continuous. 
Photographers  do  not  metamorphose  him  much;  almost  every  pho- 
tograph is  a  good  enough  likeness.  The  years  have  not  made  a  great 
difference.  By  the  time  he  reached  man's  estate  he  had  ceased  to 
look  boyish,  and  he  still  is  rather  youthful.  Life  has  only  rough- 
ened his  features,  etched  his  expressions  deeper.  A  certain  stoutness 
in  the  last  few  years  has  saved  him  from  the  bleak,  intense  look 
that  comes  over  a  good  many  American  men  in  their  sixties. 

The  three  of  his  physical  characteristics  that  especially  please 
me  and  amuse  me  are  of  today  and  of  the  past  alike. — A  singular 
way  of  laughing,  forcible  but  not  loud,  expressing  as  a  rule  (I 
think)  a  general  joy  of  living  rather  than  a  sense  of  fun  at  the  time 
and  in  the  circumstances.  A  flashing  of  his  eyes  once  in  a  while;  the 
occasion  perhaps  suddenly  seeming  to  him  a  great  occasion,  or  an 
emergency  in  some  way.  Certain  emphatic  manual,  digital  gestures 
when  he  talks,  somewhat  in  the  manner  of  clergymen  of  a  past  gen- 
eration or  of  old-time  political  campaigners. 

Believe  me,  it  was  exciting  to  talk  to  him,  to  be  talked  to  by  him; 
an  excitement  not  really  easy,  not  exactly  recreational,  especially 
when  it  came  to  his  telling  any  sort  of  story,  which  often,  suddenly, 
would  be  fraught  with  tenseness,  responsibility,  restraint.  Much  of 
our  conversation  in  Villefranche  was  only  gossip,  great  gossip!  main 
natural  ingredient  of  the  art  of  fiction,  to  my  way  of  thinking.  My 
way  of  thinking  was  simpler  than  his. 

I  would  have  sworn  that  all  the  incidents  and  overheard  con- 


Images  of  Truth  •  248 

versations  and  synopsized  lives  with  which  he  regaled  me  in 
Villefranche  were  things  that  he  intended  to  write  about,  in  the  not- 
distant  future.  His  mind,  I  thought,  had  already  got  its  range,  taken 
aim.  Every  so  often  in  a  word  or  a  phrase  I  was  able  to  discern  his 
creative  processing,  even  vague  outlines  of  the  forms  of  fiction  to 
come.  But  this  was  almost  always  followed  by  a  word  or  phrase 
indicative  of  his  feeling  that  things  might  have  to  be  kept  in  con- 
fidence, or  changed  beyond  recognition,  or  postponed,  until  this 
or  that  disadvantage  or  danger  in  someone's  everyday  existence  had 
passed.  A  kind  of  conscientiousness  along  this  line  evidently  kept 
warring  against  his  impulsive  young  aspiration  and  inspiration  to 
write  fiction.  It  concerned  him  always  painfully  not  to  be,  or  not 
even  to  appear  to  be,  invasive  of  anyone's  privacy;  not  to  amuse 
himself  (or,  for  that  matter,  me)  at  anyone's  expense;  and  not  to 
take  either  a  moralistic  attitude  or  an  antisocial  attitude  about 
anything. 

At  times  he  made  me  think  of  a  boy  climbing  a  tree,  carefully 
placing  his  feet  on  limb  above  limb,  finally  peering  into  a  bird's 
nest  containing  eggs  or  little  birds,  and  holding  his  breath,  in  order 
not  to  sully  anything  with  his  human  odor,  not  to  disillusion  or 
disincline  the  parent  birds  when  they  got  back. 

I  remember  his  telling  me  the  story  of  the  self-destruction  of  a 
beautiful  girl  who  had  been  born  to  some  prominence  in  New 
York  society  and  at  an  early  age  was  successful  on  the  stage.  The 
man  whom  she  fatally  loved  was  a  friend  of  Wilder's;  therefore 
he  had  some  knowledge  of  the  miserable  event,  and  perhaps,  he 
thought,  it  was  wrong  of  him  to  inform  me  of  it.  "But  perhaps  not," 
he  said.  "As  literary  men,  I  think  we  must  feel  free  to  tell  one  an- 
other everything  that  has  interested  us  profoundly,  or  helped  us  or 
hindered  us  in  the  work  we  have  in  progress  or  in  mind.  Even 
things  that  have  harmed  or  destroyed  people;  even  things  that  may 
still  prove  harmful!" 

I  think  that,  except  for  the  discourtesy,  he  would  have  liked  to 
admonish  me  or  to  implore  me  not  to  retell  it  to  anyone  not  liter- 
ary. He  told  it  superbly,  in  a  nervous  and  dramatic  way,  accelerat- 
ing his  telling  from  point  to  point.  The  faster  the  words  came,  the 


249  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

more  exactly  he  was  able  to  select  them — sharpshooting  words! — 
and  the  more  he  lowered  and  softened  his  voice.  At  the  conclusion 
he  held  his  forefinger  up  straight  and  briefly  pressed  it  to  his  lips. 
(A  good  photographer  named  Rollie  McKenna  has  photographed 
him  doing  this.)  It  is  the  gesture  of  the  patron  saint  of  Czechoslo- 
vakia, St.  John  of  Nepomuk,  who  was  martyred  for  refusing  to 
divulge  secrets  of  the  confessional,  and  who  protects  pious  Roman 
Catholics  from  libel  and  slander. 

On  the  fatal  day  the  poor  compulsively  loving  girl  talked  and 
talked  on  the  telephone  to  her  poor  beloved  man,  threatening  to 
commit  suicide  unless  he  requited  her  love  more  satisfactorily.  She 
had  made  rather  a  habit  of  telephoning  him,  in  an  overwrought, 
unbelievable  way,  and  perhaps  his  disbelief  colored  the  tone  of  his 
voice  so  that  she  noticed  it.  "No,  dear.  No,  I'm  sorry.  Yes,  I  promise. 
Darling,  now  take  it  easy,  please  take  it  easy." 

Lamentable  universal  phrases!  Sometimes  the  suicidal  state  of 
mind  is  above  all  an  absolute  determination  to  be  believed,  to  be 
taken  seriously,  to  be  worried  about.  His  calmness,  meant  to  be  re- 
assuring, may  have  been  more  injurious  to  her  just  then  than  any- 
thing else  that  he  had  done  or  left  undone.  Even  to  be  reassured  may 
seem  insulting.  Sometimes  it  is  a  matter  of  our  suddenly  seeing  our- 
selves as  others  must  see  us,  hearing  ourselves  as  others  are  hearing 
us:  histrionic,  redundant,  boring! 

Suddenly  she  ceased  to  harangue  him  and  put  the  receiver  back 
on  the  hook — it  was  a  pay  telephone  in  a  hotel  lobby  or  a  drug- 
store or  a  railroad  station — and  later  that  evening  did  what  she  had 
been  threatening  to  do,  I  forget  by  what  means:  soporific  medicine 
of  some  sort  or  perhaps  defenestration. 

My  impression,  as  I  remember  it,  was  that  Wilder  sympathized 
with  the  presumably  destructive  man  more  than  with  the  destroyed 
girl.  This  puzzled  me.  Years  later  it  seemed  to  me  that  I  came  upon 
the  secret  of  it  in  his  superb  historical  novel,  The  Ides  of  March, 
wherein  Caesar  explains  his  having  lost  patience  with  Clodia 
Pulcher,  who  persistently  loved  him  for  years,  while  trailing  a 
wrecked  life  around  behind  her,  compensating  for  a  tragic  misfor- 
tune in  her  childhood  by  nonstop  mischievousness  and  cruelty  ever 


Images  of  Truth  •  250 

since,  acquitting  herself  of  every  charge  but  never  ceasing  to  feel 
guilty,  exhibiting  herself  as  the  victim,  the  victim,  whatever  has 
happened,  re-erecting  a  sacrificial  altar  at  every  turn  and  exhibit- 
ing herself  on  it,  striking  attitudes  on  it,  victimizing  herself  if  no 
one  else  is  available  to  do  it  for  her.  It  is  the  harshest  page  Wilder 
has  ever  written,  and  one  of  the  profoundest.  I  can  think  of  only 
one  other  outburst  or  outcry  as  passionate:  in  the  last  act  of  The 
Skin  of  Our  Teeth,  when,  immediately  after  one  war,  stirrings  and 
sproutings  of  another  begin,  and  the  Adam-like  father  reproves  his 
Cain-like  son,  eternal  incorrigible  war  instigator. 


I  also  told  him  a  love  story,  one  with  (so  to  speak)  a  happier  end- 
ing: matrimony  instead  of  self-murder.  It  involved  my  next-door 
neighbor  there  on  the  Riviera,  a  young  woman  from  New  Orleans 
somewhat  childish  of  mind  but  physically  perfect,  like  an  antique 
Venus,  in  and  out  of  the  water  all  day  long,  and  a  well-to-do  young 
man  also  from  the  South,  who  had  been  a  classmate  of  Scott  Fitz- 
gerald's at  Princeton.  They  had  grown  up  together,  and  at  an  early 
age  she  had  resolved  to  marry  him  and  had  persisted  in  this  dream. 

He  seemed  not  to  care  much  for  women,  and  kept  sailing  around 
the  Mediterranean  in  a  luxurious  little  sailing  vessel  with  two  or 
three  young  employees  to  help  him  navigate.  But  he  was  fond  of 
her  in  his  way,  and  at  intervals  he  would  drop  anchor  in  our  har- 
bor; whereupon  she  would  always  propose  and  repropose  marriage 
and  he  would  decline  in  a  friendly  way. 

One  day  she  grew  impatient,  and  as  he  was  putting  out  to  sea 
and  she  stood  on  the  sea  wall  waving  bon  voyage,  she  suddenly 
dove  off  and  swam  out  after  him.  As  the  wind,  to  start  with,  was 
blowing  fitfully  and  not  in  his  direction,  she  caught  up,  and  notic- 
ing a  rope  of  some  sort  hanging  overboard,  grasped  it  and  hung  on 
and  let  herself  be  towed  along  in  the  wake  of  the  boat,  like  a 
hooked  mermaid.  They  were  well  out  past  the  lighthouse,  in  dark 
active  water,  before  he  or  one  of  his  sailors  noticed  and  rescued  her. 

Not  long  after  that  he  married  her;  and,  oh,  how  it  appealed  to 


251  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

people's  imaginations  there  on  the  Riviera;  to  some  sentimentally, 
to  others  in  the  way  of  a  sense  of  humor.  A  marriage  definitely  not 
made  in  heaven;  only  in  the  sea,  which  brought  forth  Venus  in  the 
first  place! 

His  idea,  as  she  confided  to  me  some  time  after,  was  that  the 
reality  of  marriage  to  him  would  rid  her  of  her  foolish  fixation  of 
love,  but  it  had  no  such  effect.  Their  marriage  lasted  quite  a  few 
years.  They  were  scarcely  happy;  he  drank,  and  she  tagged  along 
after  him  on  his  rounds  of  dissipation,  unwisely.  However,  for  a 
few  years,  marriage  preserved  them  from  worse  unhappiness  to 
which  they  were  probably,  separately,  prone. 

In  response  to  this,  what  do  you  suppose  my  great  young  con- 
frere said?  "Isn't  it  a  pity  that  we  can't  write  stories  like  that?" 

That  surprised  me  even  more  than  what  he  had  confided  to  me 
about  the  bookish,  impersonal  origins  of  The  Cabala.  The  point 
of  the  story  of  my  Venus-like  neighbor,  I  should  have  thought, 
was  its  obvious  writability.  I  believed  indeed  that  she  wanted  it 
written  and  had  pursued  me  a  little  and  furnished  me  with  certain 
gratuitous  details,  to  inspire  me.  There  often  apparently  is  a  cer- 
tain magnetism  about  literary  men  for  girls  with  breaking  hearts, 
as  also  for  soldiers  between  battles,  and  presumably  for  Adonis- 
like men  in  luxury  sloops:  with  certain  emotions  at  their  height, 
or  in  intermissions  of  emotion,  a  sort  of  longing  to  be  somewhat 
immortalized.  Why  not?  What  harm? 

But  I  well  understood  what  it  was  that  troubled  my  conscien- 
tious fellow  writer:  the  thought  flashed  from  him  to  me  like  a  spark 
or,  alas,  the  opposite  of  a  spark:  the  great  moot  matter  of  the  in- 
vasion of  privacy  by  the  use  of  people's  idiosyncrasies  and  misfor- 
tunes in  our  fiction  writing.  Many  of  us  shrink  extremely  from  the 
risk  of  hurting  or  irresponsibly  influencing  people  with  whom  our 
lives  are  cast.  It  gives  us  the  best  excuse  in  the  world  for  avoiding 
certain  difficult  subjects;  an  excuse  most  welcome  to  any  of  us  who 
happen  to  find  ourselves  in  disagreement  or  in  conflict  or  in  mal- 
adjustment with  present  majority  morals  or  mores. 

Thus  Wilder  and  I  in  1931,  even  when  we  failed  to  see  eye  to 
eye,  were  contemplating  the  same  or  similar  problems;  and  at  that 


Images  of  Truth  •  252 

age  we  were  both  optimistic.  What  bliss  to  be  young,  especially 
to  be  a  young  novelist — what  price  glory  in  any  other  arena,  we 
thought — to  know  stories  of  suicidal  girls  telephoning,  of  chilcU 
minded  girls  towed  out  to  sea  by  men  they  loved,  and  to  see  no 
earthly  reason  why  one  should  not  write  them  as  they  deserve  to 
be  written,  fancying  that  one  understands  everything,  and  that  if 
there  are  difficulties  in  the  narrative  art,  one  can  learn  to  surmount 
them;  if  one  lacks  innate  ability  in  any  way,  it  can  be  compensated 
for  by  hard  work. 


Have  I  given  the  impression  that  Wilder  came  down  to  Villefranche 
just  to  see  me?  Of  course  he  did  not.  Even  at  the  time  I  didn't 
think  it,  but  I  felt  it;  and  something  of  the  excitement  of  his  visit 
has  continued  for  thirty-three  years,  blotting  from  my  remem- 
brance whatever  other  engagements  or  interests  drew  him  to  the 
Riviera. 

I  have  never  known  anyone  to  give  his  friends  so  much  satisfac- 
tion of  pride,  even  of  vanity.  He  has  continually  excelled  in  the 
important  though  slight  and  improvisatory  expressions  of  friend- 
ship, at  least  in  his  relations  with  his  fellow  writers.  He  is  conscious 
of  this  and  perhaps  occasionally  sorry  for  himself  about  it.  A  news 
weekly  once  quoted  him  as  having  said,  "On  my  grave  they  will 
write:  Here  lies  a  man  who  tried  to  be  obliging."  Doubtless  all  this 
manifestation  of  his  good  will  has  been  beneficial,  ego-enhancing, 
especially  in  the  cold,  uneasy,  touchy  literary  life.  In  so  far  as  he 
has  given  us  swelled  heads,  he  himself  has  counteracted  it  by 
taking  himself  away  every  time,  before  long.  Before  you  get  used 
to  it  you  have  to  undergo  a  kind  of  disintoxication,  withdrawal 
symptoms. 

Not  long  before  his  visit  to  me,  he  had  been  traveling  all  around 
Europe,  by  motor  and  on  foot,  down  through  France  and  Italy, 
accompanied  by  the  then  world's  champion  heavyweight  prize- 
fighter, Gene  Tunney,  who  was  passing  the  time  until  his  marriage 


2$3  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

in  Rome.  I  remember  Wilder's  saying  that  whenever  he  happened 
to  mention  good  books,  the  aspiring  young  athlete  bought  them, 
as  soon  as  they  came  to  a  city  with  an  English-language  bookshop, 
until  he  had  a  great  rucksackful,  Atlas-like.  And  the  more  heavily 
he  burdened  himself  with  a  world  of  reading  matter  all  the  day 
long,  the  drowsier  he  felt  in  the  evening  when  it  came  time  to  read. 

In  England  the  two  friends  had  called  on  Bernard  Shaw,  who  had 
also  boxed  in  his  young  manhood  and  written  a  novel  about  boxing. 
This  sociability  must  have  been  fraught  with  funniness,  I  imagined; 
but  my  confrere  seemed  not  to  have  found  it  so.  From  his  account 
of  it  I  got  a  somewhat  stylized  impression  of  the  mighty  youngster 
coming  up  in  the  world  at  a  great  rate,  and  of  the  aged  popular 
playwright  rather  affected  and  smug  in  his  patriarchal  role.  (A  little 
later  Robert  Benchley  wrote  an  excellent  take-off  on  this  encounter, 
with  the  pugilist  talking  highbrow,  the  dramatist,  Madison  Square 
Garden  jargon.) 

My  amusement  at  things  that  Wilder  told  me  sometimes  em- 
barrassed him,  I'm  afraid.  He  did  not  want  me  to  think  that  he 
was  making  fun  of  his  friends.  If  it  ever  sounded  so,  would  I  excuse 
it  and  forget  it,  please?  "To  the  laity,"  he  said,  "we  writers  must 
often  seem  malicious.  No  harm  in  it,  when  it  is  just  between  our- 
selves, in  a  whisper!" 

Sense  of  humor,  I  think,  may  be  defined  as  the  fun  that  we  re- 
frain from  making.  I  think  Wilder  often  refrains,  with  tactfulness  in 
the  subconscious  as  well  as  on  the  intentional  surface  of  his  mind. 
With  reference  to  something  else  that  we  had  laughed  in  unison 
about,  without  an  exact  identity  of  view,  he  said,  "Our  humor  is 
a  primary  color,  a  primary  color!  We  mix  it  even  into  our  convic- 
tions, and  into  our  sorrows." 

We  have  always  differed,  significantly,  I  suppose,  as  to  what 
amusement  we  find  in  the  life  around  us.  I  have  a  certain  feeling 
for  slapstick  and  surrealism,  and  for  the  equivalent  in  behavior,  even 
the  behavior  of  fond  friends.  When  things  strike  my  funny  bone, 
darker  emotions  perhaps  somewhat  underlie  my  glee:  sensuality, 
superstitiousness,  even  retribution  or  revenge  in  some  way.  People's 


Images  of  Truth  •  254 

oddities  and  extravagances  charm  Wilder,  but  he  never  seems  to 
long  for  their  frustration  or  their  downfall;  no  great  sense  of  rough- 
house  or  of  booby  trap. 

He  is  a  prouder  man  than  I,  and  takes  into  account,  perhaps  over- 
estimates, others'  pride,  and  even  in  his  conversation  behind  their 
backs,  is  careful  not  to  disgrace  any  of  them.  Irony,  furthermore, 
is  habitual  and  delightful  to  my  mind,  but  is  not  his  habit,  at  least 
not  his  forte. 


I  have  remembered  one  very  foolish  detail  of  our  conversation  in 
Villefranche.  Come  to  think  of  it,  what  he  said  was  not  foolish;  the 
folly  was  all  in  my  reaction,  overreaction.  It  has  stayed  in  my  mind 
as  it  were  a  feather  of  my  young  life,  wafted  up  by  both  his  breath 
and  mine,  and  never  wafted  down  again,  amusing  and  symbolical 
in  the  prevailing  air  for  years,  for  decades.  Memorableness  is  a  kind 
of  significance  in  itself,  I  think. 

It  was  a  matter  of  his  sense  of  his  own  early  celebrity  and  of  his 
belief  in  fame.  Having  expressed  his  generous  and  favorable  opin- 
ion of  my  two  novels,  he  wanted  to  influence  me,  for  my  part 
also,  to  get  to  be  more  successful  and  famous  in  the  near  future. 
As  I  had  been  awarded  a  prize  and  seen  the  title  of  that  prize  novel 
on  the  best-seller  list,  I  seemed  to  myself  quite  successful;  all  was 
well,  wasn't  it?  I  tried  to  convey  this  thought  or  feeling  to  my  well- 
wisher.  Oh,  the  fatuousness  of  that  time  of  life,  when  one  considers 
oneself  a  made  man,  a  self-made  man! 

My  new  friend,  my  thrilling  fellow  writer,  brushed  my  com- 
placency aside,  and  went  on  to  explain  the  facts  of  the  American 
literary  situation  to  me.  Earlier  in  the  year  he  had  gone  lecturing 
in  Texas  and  thereabouts.  The  Texans  and  others,  he  was  sad- 
dened and  irked  to  find,  had  never  heard  of  me.  Indeed  he 
realized  that  my  excellent  second  novel  had  made  a  reputation  for 
me,  but  what  I  did  not  realize  was  that  it  was  scarcely  a  national 
reputation.  Harper  &  Brothers  with  their  blessed  prize  doubtless 


255  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

had  sold  thousands  and  thousands  of  copies,  but  all  that  sale  must 
have  been  in  the  two  or  three  metropolitan  areas,  New  York,  Bos- 
ton, Chicago.  Which,  in  a  vast  democracy,  wasn't  good  enough. 

With  a  little  modesty  and  realism  beginning  to  dawn  on  me  as  he 
went  on  with  this  theme,  I  finally  asked,  in  a  voice  perhaps  peevish 
or  wistful,  what  was  to  be  done  about  it?  Did  he  really  think  that 
Albert  &  Charles  Boni,  his  publishers,  were  a  more  powerful  outfit 
than  Harper  &  Brothers,  my  publishers?  The  reviews  of  my  book,  I 
reminded  him,  had  been  nationwide  and  wonderfully  laudatory. 

"Wonderful,  wonderful,"  he  agreed,  but  went  on  to  say  that,  as 
to  the  development  of  real  reputation  and  as  to  the  marketability  of 
one's  books,  book  reviews  never  do  much  for  one.  Front-page  pub- 
licity is  the  desirable,  the  needful  thing;  some  mention,  at  least,  on 
a  page  mainly  devoted  to  news,  not  just  literary  criticism  and  paid 
publishers'  advertisements. 

At  that  point,  for  my  part,  the  balance  of  this  conversation  shifted. 
My  mind  seemed  to  strain,  to  quiver,  to  dip,  like  a  dowsing  rod.  I 
could  not  be  sure  what  the  underlying  emotion  had  become:  was 
it  laughter?  was  it  anger?  With  a  little  exertion  of  courtesy  and 
circumspection  I  changed  the  subject. 

I  had  seen  some  front-page  reports  of  his  hiking  around  Europe 
with  the  book-loving  boxer,  and  I  realized  suddenly  the  dis- 
similarity of  my  destiny,  incommensurability  of  my  problems.  For 
the  life  of  me  I  could  not  think  of  anyone  that  I  could  have  gone 
hiking  with  in  any  noticeable  or  publicizable  way,  or  of  any  other 
such  newsworthiness.  I  did  not  suppose  that  the  author  of  The 
Bridge  of  San  Luis  Rey,  my  new  friend,  who  amused  me  more 
than  anyone  else  I  had  ever  met,  had  gone  hiking  on  purpose. 
Having  somewhat  observed  him  in  the  decades  that  have  elapsed, 
I  know  that  every  sort  of  publicity  vexes  him  and  seems  a  constant 
inconvenience  and  waste.  But,  with  or  without  self-consciousness,  I 
think  that  literary  genius,  impulses  of  friendship  and  other  such 
informal  self-expressions,  and  literary  renown,  all  hang  together; 
and  this  is  as  it  should  be.  Perhaps  we  have  come  full  circle. — I  now 
believe  in  a  kind  of  cultural  patriotism  and  a  greater  degree  of  in- 


Images  of  Truth  •  256 

volvement  and  exposure  in  the  literary  life  than  I  ever  dreamed  of 
as  a  young  man.  Whereas  doubtless  Wilder  has  wearied  of  all  that; 
longs  for  modest  circumstances,  remoteness  from  the  Rialto,  rusti- 
cation. 

Now  in  retrospect  I  see  something  else  as  well. — Though  the 
newsworthy  novelist  may  not  have  been  aware  of  everything  that 
went  on  in  his  immense  young  intellect,  to  some  extent  surely  that 
hiking  companion  of  1928  served  as  a  model  for  the  protagonist  of 
the  novel  that  he  published  in  1934,  Heaven's  My  Destination,  his 
only  work  of  fiction  situated  in  present-day  America,  corresponding 
to  his  great  indigenous  comedies,  Our  Town  and  The  Matchmaker. 
One  fourth  of  George  Brush,  his  knowledgeable  sister  Isabel  tells 
me,  portrays  their  father;  one  fourth,  presumably,  is  Wilder  him- 
self; one  fourth  is  the  champion  boxer  (I  think);  and  one  fourth  is 
Voltaire's  Candide. 

It  was  that  surprising  front-page  story  in  the  New  York  Times, 
above-mentioned,  which  reminded  me  of  our  absurd  talk  about 
publicity  and  reputation  and  success,  so  long  ago.  Think  of  being 
able  to  command  that  kind  of  attention,  with  a  cheerful  flash 
photograph  and  headlines:  "Thornton  Wilder,  64,  Sums  up  Life 
and  Art.  Sees  Hope  for  Man's  Survival!" 

Still  more  recently,  when  he  wrote  to  a  high  school  junior  about 
an  amateur  production  of  The  Skin  of  Our  Teeth,  "a  two-page 
hand-written  letter,"  he  got  two  half-columns  entitled  "Wilder 
Advises  Long  Island  School  Cast."  Can  you  beat  that? 

Perhaps  I  have  been  envious  of  him  all  these  years  without  an 
entire  awareness  of  the  fact,  and  therefore  without  quite  the  phi- 
losophy and  the  humor  that  as  a  rule  I  pride  myself  on. 


<§> 


What  I  certainly  envy  now  is  his  having  written  The  Ides  of 
March,  a  novel  more  appealing  to  my  imagination,  more  relevant 
to  my  intellectual  interests,  than  any  other  novel  by  a  fellow  Ameri- 
can of  my  generation.  I  shall  never  forget  the  pleasure,  the  emotions 
more  and  more  mingled,  the  increasing  seriousness,  almost  solem- 


2$y  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

nity,  with  which  I  first  read  it,  hastening  on  from  page  to  page.  A 
part  of  my  excitement  was  just  selfishness;  I  kept  thinking  that  I 
would  give  five  years  of  my  life  to  have  written  it  myself. 

No  one,  no  one  with  any  literary  inclination  or  aptitude  for  read- 
ing, could  fail  to  enjoy  it,  I  felt  sure.  But  in  fact  a  number  of  the 
book  reviewers  to  whom  it  was  assigned  did  somewhat  fail,  mis- 
reading its  political  philosophy,  perhaps  disliking  its  morality,  and 
fussing  over  little  issues  of  its  factual  accuracy,  eagerly  displaying 
erudition  or  counter-erudition  of  their  own.  Wilder  had  facilitated 
this  last  function  for  them  by  specifying  in  a  foreword  certain  of 
his  independent  conceptions,  alterations  of  the  historic  record, 
especially  some  dates,  so  as  to  bring  the  lives  of  his  two  important 
secondary  characters  into  focus  with  the  final  fatalities  in  the  life  of 
his  protagonist. 

In  his  foreword  Wilder  calls  The  Ides  of  March  a  fantasia,  but 
that  word  does  not  (I  think)  exactly  suit  it.  It  is  composed  of  what 
appear  to  be,  but  are  not,  actual  materials  of  biography  and  history: 
simulated  letters  and  journals  and  commonplace  books,  confidential 
police  reports,  and  other  assorted  memoranda;  all  verisimilitudinous 
to  the  point  of  forgery.  No  descriptions  of  anything  or  anyone;  no 
overt  interpretation  or  commentary  by  the  author — his  principal 
personages  and  important  bystanders  comment  incessantly,  accord- 
ing to  their  several  levels  and  degrees  of  intelligence,  and  always  in 
character.  All  that  the  author  is  assumed  to  have  done  is  to  arrange 
and  annotate  the  pseudo-documents  as  to  points  of  fact,  dates  and 
identifications  and  cross  references. 

That  arrangement,  which  establishes  the  design  or  pattern  of  the 
work,  is  hard  to  describe;  it  is  most  original  and  even  arbitrary, 
but  not  at  all  hard  for  the  reader  to  follow.  It  is  in  four  parts,  or 
"books,"  covering  the  same  main  events  four  times  over,  starting  a 
little  earlier  in  each  part  and  ending  a  little  later.  By  means  of  this 
odd  recurring  and  expanding  chronology,  centered  upon  the  month 
of  September  45  B.C.,  turning  back  one  month  and  going  forward  six 
months,  concluding  with  March  15,  44  B.C.,  the  ides — on  which  date 
fanatic  lovers  of  the  old  Roman  liberties  finally  stab  the  Dictator, 
Julius  Caesar,  to  death — the  reader  is  given  an  extraordinary  im- 


Images  of  Truth  •  258 

pression  of  a  fate  running  its  course;  a  sort  of  bird's-eye  view,  con- 
stantly on  the  wing,  back  and  forth,  and  higher  and  higher;  and  the 
passing  of  the  historic  time  corresponds  to  the  gradual  increase  of 
our  understanding  of  the  great  matters  at  issue. 

With  the  exception  of  Heaven's  My  Destination — which  is  a 
cautionary  tale,  entirely  timely,  as  of  its  publication  date  and  the 
phase  or  stage  of  American  life  that  it  pictures:  roughly  speaking, 
the  depression — all  of  Wilder's  works  of  fiction  have  been  in  some 
way  historical  novels.  The  balance  of  past  and  present  in  them,  the 
interplay  of  the  tenses  of  the  narrated  lives  and  of  the  narrator's 
mind  and  the  reader's  mind,  differ  considerably.  In  The  Cabala 
everything  derives  from  the  past,  as  he  informed  me  upon  our  first 
meeting,  but  is  disguised  as  the  present.  In  The  Bridge  of  San  Luis 
Rey  and  The  Woman  of  Andros  he  gives  us  the  past  per  se,  the  past 
for  the  past's  sake;  a  matter  of  beauty  and  recreation  and  educative 
effect.  In  The  Ides  of  March  the  basic  themes  are  of  today,  or  so 
timeless  that  as  we  read  we  think  modernly;  the  characters  in  it  are 
important  types  of  humanity  alive  now,  recognizable  by  every  reader 
(I  suppose),  though  in  the  guise  and  habitat  and  behavior  patterns 
of  ancient  Romans,  noble  and  otherwise. 

The  following  Romans,  principally. — Caesar.  His  silly  young  wife 
Pompeia.  His  invalided  and  absent  friend  Turrinus,  to  whom  he 
addresses  a  continuous  account  of  his  life  and  his  thoughts  in  a 
journal-letter  (the  bulkiest  and  most  important  of  the  component 
parts  of  the  book).  The  glorious  poet  Catullus,  who  is  a  weak,  un- 
lucky, and  angry  man.  Clodia  Pulcher,  who  vainly  loves  Caesar, 
and  whom  Catullus  desperately  loves.  The  aging  great  actress 
Cytheris;  and  Cleopatra,  the  Egyptian  queen,  who  takes  Mark 
Anthony  away  from  Cytheris.  Also,  of  course,  a  quantity  of  less 
individualized,  subsidiary  humanity,  serving  and  influencing  these 
principals  and  witnessing  what  they  are  and  what  they  do. 

The  main  part  of  the  plot  is  the  thing  not  at  all  invented  or 
imaginary,  indicated  by  the  title:  the  conspiracy  and  the  propaganda 
leading  to  Caesar's  assassination;  the  swift,  almost  simple  transition 
in  Roman  politics  which  was  to  affect  all  of  humanity,  at  least  in 
the  Western  world,  for  centuries  to  come.  Therefore,  necessarily, 


259  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

the  main  theme  is  the  matter  of  political  philosophy:  mysterious 
dictatorship,  and  sorrowful  shortcomings  of  the  more  democratic 
forms  of  government;  noble  intentions  of  the  Dictator,  as  it  hap- 
pened indeed  paradoxically  in  that  olden  time  in  Rome,  and  mixed 
motives  of  his  opponents  and  assassinators,  who  were  an  oligarchy 
pretending  to  be  a  republic,  an  oligarchy  bringing  on  an  empire. 

The  other  themes  are  as  follows. — Religion,  both  pro  and  con. 
Love,  both  beneficial  and  harmful.  Two  kinds  of  great  friendship, 
that  which  is  built  upon  intimacies  of  childhood  and  early  life, 
exemplified  by  Caesar  and  Turrinus,  and  that  which,  with  good 
luck  and  good  management,  may  develop  along  with  sexual  at- 
traction and  may  outlast  it  when  it  is  spent,  exemplified  by  Caesar 
and  Cleopatra.  Extraordinary  unilateral  friendliness,  on  Caesar's 
part,  toward  Catullus,  who  hates  him.  Evil,  almost  in  the  absolute, 
done  to  Clodia  in  her  childhood — an  uncle  violated  her — and  visited 
by  her  upon  other  people  all  the  rest  of  her  life.  Heroism,  Caesar's 
heroism,  open-eyed  and  not  hopeful,  but  unprotesting  and  unfalter- 
ing, on  his  way  to  his  historic  end. 

Wilder's  Caesar  is  a  more  comprehensible  and  more  profound 
human  being  than  any  other  portrayal  of  the  supreme  Roman 
known  to  me.  Furthermore,  he  has  an  intellectual  power  and  a 
superiority  of  cultural  interests  somewhat  rarer  in  fiction  than  it 
has  been  in  fact  at  one  time  and  another  in  history.  He  takes  an 
almost  modern  interest  in  what  we  call  the  psyche,  but  as  the  deter- 
mining factor  in  morality  and  in  civic  and  creative  activity  rather 
than  as  a  matter  of  mental  health  and  mental  illness.  He  keeps 
dreaming  of  moral  perfection  as  it  might  be,  as  it  ought  to  be; 
hails  and  kindly  cherishes  various  instances  of  genuine  though 
imperfect  virtue  in  the  society  around  him;  but  is  not  fatuously 
optimistic  or  sentimental.  On  the  other  hand,  although  he  never 
shuts  his  eyes  to  wrongdoing,  his  realism  has  not  made  him,  cynical. 
In  his  every  utterance,  in  every  word  of  his  writing  that  we  read 
over  his  shoulder,  he  testifies  somehow  to  his  conviction  that  good- 
ness is  infinite  but  not  absolute,  not  invariable;  whereas  evil  is 
eternal  but  not  omnipotent. 

A  part  of  the  secret  of  his  deep,  peaceful,  humorous  nature,  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  260 

of  the  clarity  of  his  expression  of  what  he  thinks  and  feels,  is  simply 
courage.  While  his  life  seems  all  of  a  piece,  he  always  has  a  duality 
in  his  mind:  his  desires  on  the  one  hand,  things  he  dreads  on  the 
other  hand;  and  he  never  renounces  the  best  that  might  happen  or 
forgets  the  worst.  He  keeps  imagining  things  up  ahead,  so  as  to  make 
provision  of  understanding  and  pride  for  this  turn  of  events  or 
that;  he  is  not  going  to  be  surprised  by  anything.  This  gives  him 
his  stature;  a  certain  superiority  to  everything  that  happens,  whether 
it  is  a  necessity  or  an  accident  or  a  punishment,  even  impossible 
love,  even  violent  death.  As  Beethoven  queried  in  the  margin  of  his 
late  quartet:  Muss  es  sein?  must  things  be  as  they  are?  The  answer, 
of  course,  for  the  creative  artist,  is  the  work  of  art.  But  no  man,  as 
a  man — not  even  the  sublime  genius,  not  even  the  ruler  of  the  world 
— has  a  choice  of  answers;  the  only  thing  he  can  say  is  yes. 

What  an  array  of  the  glorious  though  often  sorrowful  variations 
of  love  there  is  in  this  novel!  how  instructive  and  helpful  to  any 
lover,  and  to  any  friend  or  relative  of  lovers!  In  Caesar's  case  a  spir- 
itual and  Platonic  feeling  predominates.  Though  we  see  him  in  a 
fond  and  sensual  relationship  with  Cleopatra,  Wilder  represents 
him  as  a  healthy-minded,  healthily  lustful  man,  not  particularly  sub- 
ject to  the  amorous  passion  in  the  romantic,  sex-linked  way.  Two 
things  he  feels  passionately:  his  devotion  to  Turrinus,  a  matter  of  re- 
membrance and  gratitude  and  never-sated  mutuality  of  mind,  and 
an  inconsolable  tenderness  toward  his  dead  daughter.  With  refer- 
ence to  the  latter,  but  perhaps  alluding  at  the  same  time  to  the 
more  secret,  earlier  affection,  he  says  of  himself,  "At  the  memory 
of  one  whisper,  one  pair  of  eyes,  the  pen  falls  from  my  hand,  the 
interview  in  which  I  am  engaged  turns  to  stone.  Rome  and  her 
business  become  a  clerk's  task,  arid  and  tedious,  with  which  I  fill 
my  days  until  death  relieves  me  of  it." 

Love  also  at  its  worst:  for  example,  the  rape  of  Clodia  at  the  age 
of  twelve,  "in  an  orchard,  at  noon,  in  the  blazing  sun,"  as  she  tells 
Catullus,  with  some  suggestion  of  her  having  responded  not  quite 
innocently  even  to  that  misfortune.  In  any  case  she  is  both 
damaged  in  spirit  and  perverted  in  intellect  after  that,  leading  a 


261  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

life  of  revenge,  obviously  enjoying  her  misbehavior  intensely,  though 
pretending  to  be  motivated  by  self-pity.  She  loves  Caesar,  because  he 
seems  to  her  sufficiently  free  from  old  moral  prejudice  to  under- 
stand her  wickedness  and  to  join  in  her  self-directed  pathos.  Perhaps 
he  has  yielded  to  her  a  little  in  the  past,  but  never  an  inch  within 
the  span  of  the  book.  Meanwhile  she  torments  the  life  out  of 
Catullus,  partaking  of  sexual  ecstasy  with  him  one  minute,  putting 
him  to  shame  next  minute,  and  doubtless  constantly  goading  him 
to  hate  Caesar. 

Various  secondary  instances  of  the  many-definitioned  thing  also, 
such  as  the  almost  incestuous  closeness  of  Clodia  and  her  brother, 
a  twinship  in  mischief,  on  the  whole  less  harmful  than  any  of  her 
other  relationships;  and  the  absurd  matrimony  of  Caesar  and 
Pompeia;  and  the  absolute  sadness  of  great-hearted  Cytheris,  letting 
her  darling  go  without  a  whimper,  without  even  disapprobation, 
because  she  truly  loves  him,  and  chooses  therefore  to  look  upon  his 
passionate  defection  as  just  a  part  of  the  general  incontrovertible 
process  and  prospect  of  old  age. 

Perhaps  in  these  synopsizing  paragraphs  I  have  intellectualized 
Wilder's  work  too  much.  In  fact  it  not  only  depicts  maximum  emo- 
tion at  several  points  in  the  entangled  tale,  but  imparts  to  the 
reader  great  sympathy  and  deep  natural  sentiment.  The  death  of 
Catullus,  especially,  only  half  a  page — Caesar,  the  greatest  of  his 
admirers  despite  his  virulent  opposition,  seated  at  his  bedside,  con- 
soling him  for  the  long  folly  of  his  love  of  fiendish  Clodia,  talking 
to  him  about  Sophocles,  reciting  one  of  the  choruses  from  Oedipus 
at  Colonnus — I  find  heartbreaking,  perhaps  because  of  someone 
whom  I  love,  or  on  my  own  account,  or  both. 

In  Richard  Goldstone's  Paris  Review  interview  with  him  in  1957, 
the  subject  of  which  was  the  art  of  fiction,  Wilder  gave  it  as  his 
opinion  that  no  "self-effacement"  on  the  part  of  the  fiction  writer 
can  keep  us  from  hearing  "his  voice  recounting,  recalling  events 
that  are  past  and  over."  I  say  that  this  is  not  true  of  The  Ides  of 
March.  I  hear  in  it  the  very  tone  and  the  warm  breath  of  life 
of  everyone  concerned  except  the  narrator.  What  this  invaluable 


Images  of  Truth  •  262 

colloquy  with  the  young  university  man  records  most  impressively 
is  one  of  Wilder's  fits  of  longing  to  be  back  in  the  theatre,  not  at 
the  novelist's  lonely,  uncertain,  haunted  desk. 

And  in  this  connection  let  me  point  out  something  about  this 
novel  that  may  not  occur  to  you  as  you  read  it.  More  than  any 
other  work  of  fiction  that  I  can  think  of,  its  singularity  of  structure 
and  power  of  execution  derive  from  Wilder's  experience  as  a  play- 
wright. Everyone  in  it  is  characterized  primarily  by  his  own  self- 
expression,  secondarily  by  others'  report  and  comment.  To  be  sure, 
all  this  takes  the  form  of  written  records  and  exchanges  instead  of 
dialogue,  but  all  the  narrating  in  it  is  like  that  of  characters  in  a 
play;  none  of  it  is  in  the  author's  voice,  speaking  to  us  directly. 

Even  Cornelius  Nepos,  the  panegyrical  Roman  biographer,  ex- 
tracts from  whose  commonplace  book  (simulated)  figure  impor- 
tantly through  the  volume,  little  by  little  becomes  a  person  in  his 
own  right,  dim  but  idiosyncratic  in  the  background,  messengering 
and  chorusing.  The  believability  and  the  differentiation  of  the 
entire  cast  of  characters,  the  servants,  the  police  spies,  ill-natured 
but  exquisitely  intelligent  Cicero,  the  old  Roman  ladies,  the  Egyp- 
tian queen,  are  uncanny;  each  and  every  one  with  his  or  her  general 
frame  of  mind,  momentary  state  of  mind,  and  peculiar,  non-negoti- 
able style  of  communication. 


Harper  &  Brothers,  his  publishers  (from  Heaven's  My  Destination 
on)  as  well  as  mine,  asked  me  for  a  written  opinion  of  The  Ides  of 
March,  and  used  this  in  an  advertisement.  (Not  having  the  least 
understanding  of  what  sells  books,  I  guess,  I  asserted  that  it  was  the 
finest  novel  in  the  language  since  Maugham's  Christmas  Holiday; 
a  decade.)  I  also  wrote  to  Wilder  personally  at  some  length,  which 
pleased  him,  and  led  in  the  course  of  1948  and  1949  to  an  exchange 
of  letters,  four  or  five  each;  happy  and  earnest  communications. 

This  mysterious  era  of  ours,  the  general  impression  notwithstand- 
ing, has  been  blessed  with  a  good  many  important  and  abundant 
letter  writers:  among  others,  E.  M.  Forster,  Katherine  Anne  Porter, 


263  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

Raymond  Mortimer,  Lewis  Mumford  (Van  Wyck  Brooks  tells  me), 
and  others.  Wilder  is  one  of  the  best.  Naturally  his  correspondence 
is  more  impulsive  in  style  than  anything  else  he  writes  (or  anything 
else  that  he  lets  us  see).  Its  brilliance  is  in  detail,  and  in  the  anima- 
tion of  his  ideas,  kaleidoscopic,  often  wth  several  kinds  of  writing 
in  the  same  envelope,  even  on  the  same  page:  sometimes  concise 
and  intense,  particularly  when  it  has  reference  to  some  piece  of  work 
that  he  has  in  hand;  sometimes  just  fluent  and  indulgent,  friendship- 
enhancing;  sometimes  with  an  explosive  brightness,  squandering 
energy  in  every  phrase,  as  it  were  bits  and  pieces  of  aphorism  and 
epigram  and  even  oracle. 

I  was  reminded  to  look  up  one  of  those  letters  of  1948  by  a  point 
that  he  made  about  his  new  one-act  plays  in  the  New  York  Times 
article  in  November,  1961.  The  note  of  happy  portentousness,  even 
jubilation,  in  his  replies  to  Arthur  Gelb's  questioning,  chiefly  re- 
ferred to  their  having  a  great  over-all  theme,  or  I  should  say,  two 
great  parallel  and  connecting  themes:  the  seven  stages  or  phases 
of  the  physical  life,  babyhood  and  childhood  and  immaturity  and 
maturity  and  postmaturity  and  senescence  and  ripeness  for  death, 
and  the  seven  key  weaknesses  and  errors  that  in  due  course  bring 
about  a  corresponding  decadence  and  breakdown  of  the  spirit — 
"things  that  repeat  and  repeat  and  repeat  in  the  lives  of  the  mil- 
lions." Pride  and  avarice  and  envy,  lust  and  anger  and  gluttony  and 
sloth,  are  in  every  home,  he  told  Gelb;  and  with  universal  subject 
matter  of  that  magnitude,  the  creative  man,  by  realizing  and  exte- 
riorizing the  public  consciousness  and  conscience,  can  help  everyone. 
The  creative  playwright  especially;  for  in  the  theatre,  as  Victor 
Hugo  said,  "the  mob  becomes  a  people." 

Century  after  century,  Wilder  said  to  Arthur  Gelb,  every  mature 
literary  artist  has  tried  to  forge  or  to  crystallize  some  definite  state- 
ment of  his  philosophy;  and  he  went  on  to  cite  various  instances  of 
summarizing,  culminating,  consummating  art,  the  lifelong  cerebra- 
tion and  passion  all  in  focus  and  in  one  structure:  Ibsen's  Peer  Gynt, 
Eugene  O'Neill's  vast  chronicle  play  (not  terminated  because  his 
health  failed),  Beethoven's  opuses  130,  131,  132,  and  135. 

In  his  letter  to  me  dated  May  23,  1948,  he  said  that  for  some  time 


Images  of  Truth  •  264 

he  had  been  seeking  or  at  least  desiring  a  large  and  fundamental 
concept  and  project  to  work  on,  and  asked  me  to  think  about  it,  so 
that  presently  he  could  come  and  discuss  it  with  me.  "A  writer 
spends  his  time  hunting  for  his  real  right  subject;  that  subject 
which  Meredith  never  found,  which  Cervantes  almost  missed, 
which  Henry  James  caught  three  times,  and  so  on — and  where  is 
mine?" 

Can  one,  he  wondered,  arrive  at  one's  principal  and  final  theme 
by  contemplation  or  calculation,  or  must  it  be  heaven-sent?  Can  one 
even,  by  taking  thought,  preserve  oneself  from  this  or  that  erro- 
neous undertaking  or  hollow,  infertile  concept?  All  this  was  what 
he  wanted  us  to  have  a  good  long  talk  about. 


Needless  to  say,  the  prospect  of  that  talk  pleased  me.  As  it  hap- 
pened, we  did  not  have  it  that  year.  One  of  his  sisters  succumbed 
to  a  painful  illness,  arthritis  or  perhaps  a  displaced  vertebral  disk. 
After  that  he  and  she  traveled  to  Dublin,  and  then  he  went  up 
into  the  Engadine  on  what  he  called  "a  Nietzsche  pilgrimage." 
Also  he  had  to  give  a  seminar  at  the  American -financed  post-war 
emergency  university  in  Frankfurt  am  Main.  German,  he  told  me, 
was  his  most  proficient,  lifelong  foreign  language,  and  he  had  never 
before  had  a  chance  to  use  it. 

Finally  he  asked  me  to  dine  alone  with  him  at  the  Hotel  Gotham 
in  New  York  in  April,  1949,  which  of  course  I  accepted  with  alacrity 
and  immense  expectation.  During  dinner,  served  to  us  on  a 
wheeled-in  table  in  his  sitting  room,  we  did  not  broach  any  of  our 
premeditated  professional  or  vocational  subject  matter.  We  have  a 
slight  family  connection:  one  of  his  cousins  is  married  to  one  of  my 
brother's  wife's  half-sisters.  One  of  my  sisters  is  an  upper-echelon 
employee  at  Harper's  and  from  time  to  time  concerns  herself  with 
his  published  work.  Another  of  my  sisters  was  then  in  psychoanaly- 
sis, with  complications  of  marriage  and  employment  and  place  of 
residence.  Of  this  assortment  of  kith  and  kin  we  gossiped  in  the 
mildest  and  most  ordinary  way,  moralizing  or  philosophizing  just 


265  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

a  little,  with  perhaps  one  shared  prejudice  running  through  it  all: 
the  feeling,  in  which  almost  all  creative  persons  indulge  occasion- 
ally, that  our  keeping  in  a  good  frame  of  mind  for  our  work's  sake 
is  more  important  than  any  of  the  aspirations,  the  anxieties,  or  the 
tribulations  of  the  bourgeois,  even  the  bourgeois  to  whom  we  be- 
long, whom  we  love. 

Then  the  room-service  waiter  wheeled  his  table  back  out  of  the 
room.  With  a  somewhat  stepped-up  or  keyed-up  hospitality  at 
that  point,  my  host  pushed  two  armchairs  into  a  sort  of  debating 
position,  catty-corner.  The  waiter  returned  with  two  bucketfuls  of 
ice,  and  Wilder  brought  out  of  his  bedroom  two  bottles  of  good 
whiskey,  to  each  of  us  his  own  bottle,  and  we  got  down  to  brass 
tacks — "burning  questions  of  metier,"  as  he  put  it. 

I  think  it  must  be  characteristic  of  him  to  express  a  considerable 
humility  about  what  he  has  written,  especially  his  novels,  but  to 
rouse  himself  up  in  a  very  different  temper,  courteous,  but  not  at 
all  submissive,  when  he  has  occasion  to  play  the  part  of  a  critic 
or  a  teacher.  As  to  the  theme  of  the  evening,  proposed  by  him 
almost  a  year  in  advance:  the  mature  artist's  having  to  discover  and 
decide  upon  a  major  subject  matter  for  the  latter  part  of  his  work- 
ing life,  it  was  connected  in  my  mind,  in  the  way  that  I  wanted 
to  expound  it,  with  my  enthusiasm  about  The  Ides  of  March. 

He  had  no  patience  with  that  approach  whatsoever.  Wilder  the 
proud  critic  wanted  not  to  have  to  hear  about  Wilder  the  modest 
creator.  Oh,  to  be  commended  generously  by  me,  he  said,  was 
bound  to  set  off  in  his  mind  "a  hurly-burly  of  self-examination,  self- 
reproach,  mixed  with  delight,  yes,  delight!" 

Not  entire  delight!  He  could  not  help  lamenting  the  negligences 
and  the  short  cuts  that  he  observed  in  the  novel  of  Julius  Caesar's 
Rome,  and  that  surely,  with  my  eagle  eye,  I  too  must  have  observed. 
"How  I  go  through  life,"  he  exclaimed,  "postponing  the  book  that 
I  shall  find  worthy  of  being  really  worked  at,  someday!" 

I  too  take  pride  in  my  criticism;  but  if  I  have  an  eagle  eye,  it  is  to 
see  merit  somewhat  more  clearly  than  demerit;  and  it  seemed  to 
me  that  I  could  vouch  for  the  immense  merit  of  The  Ides  of  March. 
In  my  almost  gluttonous  interest  and  enjoyment  I  had  put  it  to  the 


Images  of  Truth  •  266 

test.  Having  read  it  to  my  heart's  content  in  the  ordinary  way,  I  had 
immediately  reread  it  aloud  to  one  friend,  and  afterward  read  im- 
portant passages  to  a  number  of  friends  on  various  occasions. 

When  one  praises  Wilder,  he  takes  it  very  alertly  and  earnestly, 
as  though  he  mistrusted  one  about  it.  Thus  my  stating  that  I  had 
discovered  great  beauty  and  significance  in  his  novel  by  reading  and 
rereading  it  aloud  seemed  to  worry  him  more  than  it  pleased  him. 
"Indeed  you  could  do  what  a  good  actor  does  for  a  weak  play: 
subtly  right  the  balances,  tactfully  fill  the  hiatuses,  to  keep  it  from 
seeming  what  it  must  seem  to  any  inattentive  reader:  a  sedulous 
array  of  erudition,  a  painstakingly  assembled  mosaic!" 

During  this  self-deprecatory  talk,  gradually,  by  his  own  eloquence, 
he  cheered  himself  up;  and  he  gave  me  credit  for  his  pleasanter  feel- 
ing. "Heartwarming  it  is  to  know  that,  when  it  fell  into  place  in 
your  mind,  you  could  see  its  shortcomings,  and  yet,  as  you  say, 
love  it.  Because  with  all  its  incompleteness  it  asks  to  be  loved.  A  good 
many  of  its  critics  have  denied  that.  It  has  been  called  frigid,  when 
it  is  all  for  fun  and  all  about  the  passions.  It  has  been  called 
calculated,  when  it  is  recklessly  spontaneous.  It  has  been  called 
hard,  when  it  is  all  atremble." 

Now  let  me  interrupt  Wilder's  discourse  for  a  moment  to  say  to 
you  that  I  am  well  aware  of  the  improbability  of  my  having  re- 
membered the  things  he  said  to  me  twelve  years  ago,  word  for 
word,  with  his  very  punctuation,  his  pauses  for  breath,  and  the 
cadences  of  his  light  and  virile  voice.  Especially  in  case  of  a  literary 
conversation,  touching  upon  the  creative  insecurity  and  ambition, 
hope  and  bad  conscience,  a  writer's  memory  is  less  reliable  than  it 
is  retentive.  I  should  not  have  had  the  courage  to  put  in  quotation 
marks  so  important  a  part  of  his  hypotheses  and  beliefs  about  his 
writing  as  of  that  date,  save  for  the  fact  that  in  one  of  his  letters 
preliminary  to  our  dining  together  he  had  dealt  with  some  of  those 
same  thoughts.  I  have  let  my  memory  and  my  pen  be  guided  by  cer- 
tain of  those  written  sentences,  honorably  endeavoring  to  make 
this  a  truthful  record,  but  with  perhaps  a  fiction  writer's  truth- 
fulness rather  than  that  of  a  journalist  or  a  scholar. 

What  a  talker  he  was,  and  still  is!  What  a  performer!  It  amuses 


26j  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

me  to  find  that  in  this  evocation  of  him  I  cannot  exactly  recall  how 
he  sits  or  takes  a  chair.  In  my  mind's  eye  he  is  always  springing  to 
his  feet.  Every  time  I  opened  my  mouth,  or  almost  every  time,  he 
would  advance  upon  me  and  talk  me  down,  using  the  stiffest 
forefinger  in  the  world  for  emphasis,  beating  time  for  his  ideas, 
Toscanini-like! 

Sometimes,  perhaps  when  a  part  of  his  argument  seemed  to  him 
crucial  or  difficult,  he  would  pause  briefly,  and  his  upper  lip  would 
descend  rather  firmly  upon  his  lower  lip,  which  made  his  minimum 
mustache  bristle.  His  eyes  brightened  amazingly,  like  those  of  cer- 
tain small  animals,  such  as  shrewmice  and  porcupines,  which  have 
a  high  metabolism  and  consequently  extreme  appetite,  hunger 
pains,  morning  noon  and  night. 

Principally,  he  thought  of  the  novelist  as  what  the  Germans  call 
a  "Menschenkenner,"  an  instinctive  understander  of  the  workings 
of  the  mind  and  the  mysteries  of  emotion  of  all  sorts  of  humanity; 
and  he  believed  that  he  ought  to  be  omniscient,  or  to  feel  omnis- 
cient, or  at  least,  for  the  form's  sake,  to  pretend  to  be.  Tolstoi,  for 
example,  as  I  remember  his  eloquently  declaring  some  years  later, 
when  the  National  Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters  awarded  him  its 
Gold  Medal  for  Fiction,  "was  like  a  great  eye,  above  the  roof,  above 
the  town,  above  the  planet,  from  which  nothing  was  hid" — com- 
prehensive, steady,  blinking  at  nothing,  with  (so  to  speak) 
twenty-twenty  vision. 

The  idea  most  vigorously  expounded  by  him  at  the  Gotham  was 
that  the  development  of  introspective  psychology  and  other  such 
explorations  by  scientists  and  sociologists  of  our  human  causes  and 
effects,  motivations  and  miscarriages  and  violences — all  that  strong 
sequence  of  ideas  which  Balzac  suggested  to  Charcot,  and  which 
Freud  derived  from  Charcot  and  developed  in  his  revolutionizing 
world-wide  way,  followed  of  course  by  Watson  and  Kinsey  and 
other  American  researchers — have  profoundly  disturbed  and  over- 
thrown that  omniscience.  The  creative  writer  is  no  longer  regarded 
as  the  humanity  expert,  and  often  ceases  to  seem  authoritative  even 
to  himself. 

With  slight  amendments  or  emendations  I  could  adhere  to  this 


Images  of  Truth  •  268 

theory.  Not  even  Tolstoi  (I  thought),  certainly  not  Balzac  or 
Dostoevski  or  Dickens,  could  actually  know  and  understand  and, 
in  the  godlike  way,  rightly  evaluate  human  nature  in  its  entire 
extent  and  inner  profundity,  but  they  felt  able  to  do  so.  And, 
buoyed  up  by  that  feeling,  they  never  hesitated  to  invent  and  to  pre- 
sent and  to  set  in  motion,  in  the  midst  of  life,  all  types  of  men, 
women,  and  children;  to  reveal  and  expound  their  inarticulate 
thoughts  and  inexpressible  emotions,  putting  words  in  their  mouths, 
ventriloquizing  for  them;  and  thus  to  give  a  universal  or  at  least 
general  eloquence  to  their  crowded  scenes  and  complex  plots. 

Whereas,  in  fact,  since  the  turn  of  the  century,  novelists  for  the 
most  part  have  been  retreating  from  this  kind  of  maximum  and 
multifarious  enterprise,  evading  the  issues  of  the  all-round  creative 
power  and  all-embracing  characterization  and  universal  spokesman- 
ship,  by  means  of  various  modernizations  of  form,  complexities  of 
style,  concentrating  more  and  more  on  their  own  autobiographical 
substance,  as  to  which  they  can  be  as  authoritative  and  godlike  as 
they  please — who  is  to  gainsay  them?  And  thus  the  narrative  art  has 
been  weakened,  disembodied,  and  scaled  down;  self-consciousness 
prevailing  over  both  universality  and  popularity. 

It  was  superb.  We  were  like  a  couple  of  baritones  or  bassos  in  one 
of  those  rather  brawling  duets  of  conspiracy  and  challenge  which 
enrich  the  operas  of  Bellini  and  of  Verdi  in  his  youth;  and  as  it 
must  be  also  (I  suppose)  in  the  confraternity  of  vocalists,  there 
arose  a  feeling  of  perfect  friendship  between  us,  not  attentuated  or 
embarrassed  in  the  least  by  our  differences  of  opinion  about  those 
mysteries  of  the  literary  art:  authority  and  self-confidence,  charac- 
terization and  analysis,  psychology  and  morals. 

I  remember  voicing  a  few  objections  to  his  thesis  as  somewhat  too 
eloquently  and  too  simply  stated  that  night,  but  I  cannot  recall 
whether  he  accepted  or  refuted  them.  Toward  midnight,  perhaps 
we  both  began  talking  at  once,  in  fugue  rather  than  antiphon,  and 
more  or  less  nonstop.  The  evasion  of  the  responsibility  of  omnis- 
cient understanding,  I  said,  first  became  crucial  in  the  novels  of 
Henry  James;  that  novelist  in  the  important  autumnal  part  of  his 
colossal   lifework   situating   himself   always    at   a   remove   or   two 


2<5p  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

from  his  dramatis  personae,  mostly  just  overhearing  them  as  they 
gossip  with  and  about  one  another,  in  indefatigable  supposition 
and  subjunctiveness,  in  a  guessing  game.  Which  was  before  the 
influence  of  Freud  took  effect,  wasn't  it? 

A  great  deal  of  twentieth-century  novel  writing,  it  occurred  to  me 
— Henry  James  in  his  great  late  phase  as  aforesaid,  and  Joyce,  and 
Gertrude  Stein,  and  Kafka — fell  somewhat  farther  short  of  my 
expectations  and  requirements  than  of  Wilder's.  The  Golden  Bowl 
and  Finnegans  Wake  and  The  Making  of  Americans  and  The  Trial 
and  The  Castle  were  arch-examples  of  the  withering  away  or  fritter- 
ing away  of  the  novelist's  old  authoritativeness,  and  general  and 
objective  knowledge,  and  firm  grasp  of  human  nature.  As  the  author 
of  The  Ides  of  March  admired  these  modernistic  masterpieces,  what 
made  him  complain  so  fervently  of  the  decline  of  the  traditional 
forms  of  fiction? 

We  both  were  complaining  of  ourselves,  in  self-defense  and  for 
self-discipline,  mustering  up  courage  and  whistling  in  the  wind,  the 
immense  dark  eclectic  self-conscious  argumentative  modern  wind.  In 
this  connection  let  me  note  an  odd  thing  about  Wilder's  literary 
taste.  Surely  a  classicist  as  a  writer,  rational  and  liberal  in  meaning 
and  message,  lucid  and  moderate  and  almost  popular  in  style,  he  has 
always  been  something  of  a  romantic  as  a  reader.  Year  in  and  year 
out,  I  remember,  he  has  been  in  an  all-out  enthusiasm  about,  and 
more  or  less  actively  campaigning  to  promote,  this  or  that  extreme 
genius:  all  the  above-mentioned,  and  even  Sartre,  and  in  nineteenth- 
century  literature,  Kierkegaard  and  even  the  Marquis  de  Sade. 

That  year  of  our  great  debate  was  his  Kafka  year;  or  was  that 
1948?  "The  great  Jew  returning  to  the  realm  of  international  lit- 
erature," as  he  wrote  to  me,  "fiercely  honest  but  with  a  feather- 
light  subtlety,  splitting  hairs  but  never  trivial."  Indeed  he  proposed 
to  incorporate  some  of  the  influence  of  the  author  of  The  Trial  and 
The  Castle  in  a  play  to  be  entitled  The  Emporium,  which  I  think 
he  did  not  finish,  in  any  case  has  not  produced.  "I  am  never 
ashamed  of  my  imitations,"  he  said.  "I  reel  from  intoxication  to 
intoxication." 

We  kept  up  our  two-man  symposium  until  about  2:30  a.m.;  and 


Images  of  Truth  •  2jo 

then  my  blessed  friend,  inspirer,  tormentor,  followed  me  down  out 
of  the  hotel,  explaining  that  he  was  too  overstimulated  to  go  to 
bed;  he  would  have  to  take  a  long  walk;  and  away  he  went,  down 
Fifth  Avenue,  in  the  dimness  of  the  April  night,  under  the  glaring 
and  lonely  street  lights.  Unlike  him  in  this  respect  (as  in  other  re- 
spects) I  was  stumbling  with  fatigue,  and  my  head  had  begun  to 
ache.  But  I  too  felt  some  euphoria  in  my  way,  at  least  optimism,  as 
to  the  infinitudes  of  artistic  and  literary  form — is  there  anything 
more  cheering  to  a  man  of  the  arts  or  a  man  of  letters  than  that? — 
and  as  to  the  eternal  interestingness  of  human  nature;  no  one  more 
interesting  than  Wilder. 


Looking  backward  upon  that  night  at  the  Gotham,  mocking  my 
great  fellow  writer  a  little,  mocking  myself  quite  a  lot,  I  have  some- 
times said  to  myself,  and  perhaps  to  one  or  two  friends  with  a  par- 
ticular interest  in  the  literary  life  and  a  sense  of  humor  about  it, 
that  the  gist  of  our  conversation  was  simply,  on  my  part,  as  a  novel 
reader,  an  ardent  desire  to  have  another  historical  novel  by  him 
at  his  earliest  convenience,  or  sooner;  and  on  his  part,  somewhat 
less  simply,  a  challenge  and  a  directive  to  me  to  try  to  write  objec- 
tively, extravertedly,  in  the  great  tradition  somehow,  and  perhaps 
a  vague  wish  to  counteract  influences  that  Freud  and  Kinsey  and 
other  such  might  be  having  on  me,  as  to  the  possible  use  of  my 
private  life  as  raw  material  for  fiction  up  ahead. 

Allowing  fully  for  my  somewhat  extravagant  humorousness  and 
ironic  sense,  this  particular  backward  glance  has  troubled  me,  be- 
cause neither  of  us,  in  fact,  has  produced  a  novel  since  then. 

I  wonder  if  my  very  personal  reader-appetite  and  my  program  for 
him  vexed  him  in  his  pride  a  little.  For  historical  fiction,  even  the 
romantic  and  meaningful  kind,  which  is  the  nearest  thing  we  have 
to  the  poetical  chronicle  plays  of  the  Greeks  and  the  Elizabethans, 
has  declined  in  prestige  in  recent  years,  although  we  have  distin- 
guished exponents  of  the  form,  and  although  they  (and  the  host  of 
undistinguished  producers  of  what  may  be  called  costume  novels) 


2ji  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

cater  to  a  very  large  reading  public.  In  the  hierarchy  of  the  old 
masters  of  fiction,  Walter  Scott  himself  now  has  to  sit  well  below  the 
salt.  Everyone  loves  Madame  B  ovary,  while  no  one  cares  for 
Salammbo.  There  is  no  denying  the  sublime  general  power  and 
lovely  evocativeness  of  War  and  Peace,  but  the  chapters  about  Na- 
poleon, his  invasion  of  Russian  and  defeat  by  the  climate  and  the 
Russian  people  and  historic  bad  luck,  bore  us  now.  Mann's  tetralogy 
of  ancient  Israel  and  Egypt  is  less  rewarding  to  the  common 
reader  than  The  Magic  Mountain,  less  impressive  to  up-to-date  in- 
tellectuals than  Dr.  Faustus. 

In  so  far  as  Wilder  vaguely  imagined  my  embarking  on  an  indis- 
creet, inauspicious  kind  of  fiction  writing,  and  was  opposed  to  it,  I 
will  vouch  for  his  having  intended  this  opposition  kindly,  construc- 
tively. Just  as  he  had  keenly  felt  my  fatuity  about  the  extent  of  my 
success  when  I  was  a  young  prize-novelist,  perhaps  now  it  seemed  to 
him  that  I  had  no  idea  of  the  trouble  I  might  make  for  myself  and 
others  by  my  pen;  and  perhaps  he  thought  me  braver  in  that  way 
than  I  have  ever  been  in  fact. 

With  these  several  wonderments  in  mind,  and  all  the  while,  dili- 
gently though  not  effectively,  endeavoring  to  produce  first  one 
novel,  then  another,  naturally  I  gave  great  thought  to  our  Gotham 
subject  matter:  what  has  deterred  or  delayed  or  abashed  or  con- 
fused or  enfeebled  novelists  in  recent  years.  The  more  I  thought  of 
it,  the  more  closely  I  found  myself  agreeing  with  him  about  the 
anti-creative  side  effects  of  Freudian  psychotherapy  and  of  various 
other  social  sciences. 

But  I  also  developed  some  ideas  of  my  own,  which  let  me  mention 
with  as  little  elaboration  as  I  can  manage. — 

First,  journalism,  wonderful  modern  journalism,  has  had  a  worse 
impact  on  the  art  of  the  novel  than  any  of  the  sciences.  Not  only  has 
it  lured  away  a  great  personnel  of  talented  narrators,  it  has  moved 
into,  if  not  taken  over,  important  areas  of  subject  matter.  In  Balzac's 
time,  when  an  ambitious  and  serious  youngster  arrived  in  the  na- 
tional metropolis  and  capital,  needing  to  know  what  made  the 
wheels  go  round,  the  interworkings  of  love-life  and  fashion  and 
finance  and  politics  and  religion,  he  read  Balzac.  The  corresponding 


Images  of  Truth  •  2J2 

twentieth-century  youngster  in  New  York  or  Washington  reads 
mainly  newspapers  and  magazines.  Balzac  put  a  good  many  journal- 
ists in  the  Comedie  Humaine,  with  a  vision  of  their  future  magni- 
tude, but  they  gave  him  little  competition. 

Second,  Flaubert  has  haunted  literature  and  literary  criticism  for 
a  century  (somewhat  as  Aristotle  haunted  the  philosophy  and  the- 
ology of  the  Middle  Ages),  and  his  example  and  cult  have  made 
novel  writing  harder  for  the  serious,  self-respecting  writer.  It  had 
not  occurred  to  anyone  before  him  to  try  to  apply  the  perfectionism 
of  the  poets  to  the  vastest  form  of  fiction — even  a  small  novel  is 
longer  than  any  epic. 

Balzac,  as  his  indefatigably  corrected  proofs  attest,  wrote  as  well 
as  he  knew  how,  but  he  had  no  conception  of  the  tightness  of  con- 
struction, the  fine  focus,  the  mastery  of  language — the  unique  and 
exact  word  for  everything,  exactly  in  place  everywhere — and  the 
absolute  euphony,  as  it  were  someone  singing  in  a  dream,  that  Flau- 
bert attempted.  Fiction  was  Balzac's  livelihood,  in  an  extravagant, 
heroic  way.  Flaubert  was  a  man  of  means.  He  was  as  strong  as  an  ox 
and  he  dedicated  himself,  consecrated  himself,  to  his  work,  like  a 
mystic  or  a  saint;  but  produced  relatively  few  novels. 

The  great  fiction  writing  of  the  nineteenth  century  went  on 
rather  in  Balzac's  footsteps  or  Scott's  than  in  his,  but  meanwhile  his 
concept  of  the  art  gestated  or  incubated  in  the  minds  of  the  molders 
of  opinion,  the  arbiters  of  taste,  for  the  twentieth  century.  Some  of 
the  Flaubertian  fiction  writers,  those  who  descended  from  the  master 
of  Coppet  through  Maupassant,  have  systematized  their  novel  writ- 
ing and  narrowed  it  down,  in  order  to  combine  a  measure  of 
craftsmanship  and  fine  finish  with  a  desired  expeditiousness  and 
productivity:  Maugham  for  example;  Colette  for  example,  in  an- 
other way.  Others  have  engaged  in  herculean  minutiae  of  form  and 
style,  and  broken  their  hearts,  broken  their  backs:  Virginia  Woolf 
for  example,  whose  swift  and  copious  Balzac-like  journal,  when  it 
can  be  published,  will  surely  outweigh  Mrs.  Dalloway  and  The 
Waves. 

Third,  the  economics  of  writing  and  publishing  at  present  are 
unfavorable  to  the  art  of  the  novel.  Indeed  more  than  any  other 


273  *  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

classification  of  free-lance  literature  (except  the  drama),  it  lures  one 
with  the  possibility  of  making  a  good  living.  But  because  of  the 
lengthiness  and  laboriousness  and  slowness  of  the  form,  and  the 
concentration  of  mind  that  one  must  bring  to  bear  on  it,  novel  writ- 
ing is  a  full-time  occupation.  Talented  youngsters,  with  the  dyna- 
mism of  youth — their  minds  still  rather  uncluttered,  their  hearts 
not  too  full,  their  subject  matter  still  simple — can  demonstrate  their 
talent  well  enough,  while  at  the  same  time  gainfully  employed  in 
some  other  way.  But  often  this  kind  of  initial  success  is  a  mixed 
blessing,  because  the  successful  ones  expect  themselves  to  continue 
the  double  working  life,  and  others  expect  it  of  them.  But  in  the 
long  run,  as  a  rule,  if  one  makes  an  avocation  of  the  narrative  art, 
giving  it  only  evenings,  weekends,  vacations,  sabbaticals,  the  prod- 
uct weakens  or  worsens.  It  is  advisable  not  to  undertake  full-length 
fiction  writing  unless  one  is  sure  of  being  able  to  produce  a  great 
quantity  of  it  in  a  popular  vein,  or  unless  one  has  an  independent 
income. 

Fourth,  cosmopolitanism  and  social  mobility  have  complicated 
the  problem  of  narrative  realism.  To  be  sure,  writers  travel  around 
more  than  they  could  do  in  the  past,  and  they  are  not  likely  now- 
adays to  be  excluded  from  any  society  (unless  they  prefer  and  pro- 
voke exclusion).  But,  still,  the  best  plots  of  this  day  and  age  are 
farther  flung  and  more  comprehensive  and  heterogeneous  than  their 
experience  and  competence  as  a  rule.  The  old  novelists  wrote  about 
a  rather  compact  society  of  which  they  themselves  were  a  part,  born 
and  bred,  for  a  reading  public  which  was  homogeneous  and  which 
they  knew  well.  The  contemporary  writer  almost  never  achieves 
that  degree  of  "saturation"  with  his  material  (to  use  Van  Wyck 
Brooks's  fine  word),  or  that  degree  of  familiarity  with  his  public. 

But  this  is  a  challenge,  not  an  impediment;  a  problem  of  form  and 
technique,  soluble  surely.  Presently  someone  will  find  a  way  of  writ- 
ing these  characteristically  modern  stories — far-flung  as  they  are, 
fascinating  and  meaningful  as  they  are  (though  only  half  compre- 
hensible)— more  or  less  as  we  tell  them,  viva  voce;  not  buttressed 
with  expertness  about  business  matters  and  legal  matters  and  local 
conditions  and  politics  and  economics,  not  verisimilitudinous  with 


Images  of  Truth  •  274 

effects  of  diversified  conversation,  foreign  ways  of  talking,  dialects, 
and  mannerisms  of  the  classes  and  the  professions  and  the  proletar- 
iats, or  otherwise  developed  in  the  artful  nineteenth-century  way; 
but  simply  and  swiftly,  in  broad  outline,  in  neo-epic  fashion,  or  as 
it  were  another  Thousand  and  One  Nights. 

Fifth,  the  improvement  of  the  social  status  of  writers  in  our 
time,  while  certainly  pleasant  and  salubrious  for  us  as  human  beings, 
has  not  been  entirely  to  our  advantage  in  the  particular  enterprise 
of  recording  the  environing  contemporary  life.  Respectability  has 
been  conferred  upon  us,  indeed  wished  upon  us.  Our  families  almost 
never  thrust  us  out;  the  communities  in  which  we  reside  do  not 
snub  us  or  mistrust  us.  A  great  many  people  to  whom,  at  first  glance, 
or  at  a  distance,  we  would  have  assigned  villains'  parts  or  clowns' 
parts,  turn  out  to  be  quite  friendly  and  ordinary  and  amiable.  We 
develop  merits  and  moderations  that  are  irrelevant  to  our  calling. 

Sixth,  the  multifarious  anxiety  and  inhibition  having  to  do  with 
the  use  of  details  of  the  personality  and  the  experience  of  real  men 
and  women  of  the  writer's  acquaintance,  for  the  characterization  of 
the  creatures  of  his  fictive  world,  trouble  us  profoundly. 

If  one  is  to  understand  this  as  it  is  in  reality,  and  as  the  writer's 
inspiration  and  frame  of  mind  are  affected  by  it,  one  must  distin- 
guish between  libel  and  the  less  specific,  less  actionable  invasions 
of  privacy.  Libel,  in  so  far  as  it  may  be  within  the  competence  of  a 
man  of  letters  (without  legal  training)  to  define  it,  is  a  representa- 
tion of  something  in  a  man's  character  and/or  circumstances  which 
his  friends,  his  neighbors,  his  business  associates,  and  other  such,  will 
recognize;  which  therefore  will  be  of  assessable  damage  or  disadvan- 
tage to  him,  in  the  way  of  impairment  of  physical  or  mental  health, 
the  diminishment  of  earning  power,  the  devaluation  of  property, 
etc.  It  is  opening  a  window  into  a  man's  life,  exposing  him  to  dis- 
approbation and  interference.  As  a  rule,  with  advice  of  counsel  and 
a  modicum  of  literary  aptitude  and  practice,  one  can  remove  from  a 
given  work,  or  sufficiently  attenuate  in  it,  grounds  for  legal  action 
along  this  line. 

The  mind  of  man  is  a  mirror  holding  up  a  mirror,  looking 


275  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

at  itself.  Now  and  again  the  mind  of  the  fiction  writer,  especially, 
turns  the  mirror  around  and  holds  it  up  before  this  or  that  fellow 
man,  obliging  him  to  look  at  himself  whether  he  wishes  to  do  so  or 
not;  at  least  flashing  in  his  face  the  literary  brightness  and  pride  and 
qualitative  and  evaluative  power.  Often  this  seems  more  invasive  of 
his  private  life,  more  shocking  to  his  human,  all  too  human  nature 
than  any  of  the  other  functions  of  literature.  Most  people  have  no 
objection  to  being  portrayed  in  books — ask  their  permission,  they 
will  say  yes — but  they  want  the  portrayal  to  correspond  to  their  own 
view  of  themselves  and  to  their  code  of  morality  and  respectability 
and  good  taste. 

In  the  nineteenth  century,  I  fancy,  one  frequented  novelists 
(Balzac,  Dickens,  even  Tolstoi)  at  one's  own  risk  and  peril.  And  per- 
haps a  good  many  of  those  who  did  so  fearlessly,  and  whom  novelists 
took  to  be  representative  of  their  several  social  classifications  and 
castes,  typical  and  normal,  were  in  fact  exhibitionistic  in  some  way, 
eager  to  be  fictionalized,  immortalized.  Others  were  rather  bohemian 
and  disclassed,  and  had  nothing  to  lose  or  did  not  care. 

Likewise,  today,  it  may  be  observed  that  the  concentration  and  the 
brunt  of  our  strong,  serious,  realistic  fiction  writing  falls  upon  the 
weak,  unfortunate,  marginal,  and  even  criminal  segments  of  our 
society;  those  who  cannot  strike  back  at  the  writer.  Secrets  of  his 
own,  if  he  has  any,  may  also  entail  some  self-intimidation — what  in 
depth  psychology  is  called  "schamfurcht,"  shame-fright — but  as  a 
rule,  novelists'  good  qualities  are  more  incapacitating  than  their 
fears. 

A  number  of  the  great  novelists  have  seen  eye  to  eye  with  the 
majority  of  their  contemporaries  and  fellow  countrymen  about 
moral  matters  and  social  problems,  which  has  simplified  their  rela- 
tionship to  society.  Jane  Austen,  for  example,  doted  on  the  little 
world  that  was  hers  to  portray.  Trollope  believed  in  the  rise  of  the 
great  nineteenth-century  British  middle  class,  and  gladly,  helpfully, 
whitewashed  it  from  top  to  bottom.  Even  Proust  passionately  cared 
about  society,  the  fierce  and  cynical  and  snobbish  aristocratic  society 
of  Paris,  and  in  the  composition  of  his  masterpiece  prevaricated  to 


Images  of  Truth  •  276 

some  extent,  to  protect  his  own  worldly  position.  This  disfigured 
the  work  slightly  here  and  there,  but  his  self-respect  was  not  at  all 
undermined  or  his  creativity  enfeebled  by  his  having  done  it.  For 
he  believed  in  the  collective  living  myth  that  he  did  it  for. 

The  difference  between  Proust  and  Gide  in  this  respect  marks 
another  important  change  in  the  ethos  and  the  art  of  fiction.  In  the 
order  of  beliefs  in  Gide's  mind,  truth  took  precedence  over  every- 
thing; nothing  in  the  world  was  worth  a  lie.  When  he  had  to  bypass 
the  reality  in  any  respect,  it  cost  him  his  self-esteem.  He  devised 
some  rather  abstract,  devious,  diagonal  forms  of  fiction,  so  that  his 
truth-telling  would  not  disgrace  persons  near  or  dear  to  him,  or 
break  the  heart  of  Mme.  Gide,  whom  he  quixotically  loved.  I  be- 
lieve that  he  deserved  the  Nobel  Prize,  but  his  novels  are  not  first- 
rate. 

I  sometimes  say  to  myself:  Ora  pro  nobis,  David  Graham  Phillips! 
That  most  gifted  narrator  of  his  generation  (certainly  more  gifted 
than  Dreiser)  wrote  a  story  of  a  poor  dishonored  girl  in  a  small 
town,  and  a  poor  foolish  young  man  in  a  small  town  read  it,  and 
jumped  to  the  conclusion  that  it  referred  to  a  misfortune  of  his  own 
sister's,  and  in  a  turmoil  of  family  feeling  and  morbidity  came  to 
New  York,  discovered  where  Phillips  lived,  rented  a  room  in  that 
same  street,  watched  and  waited,  with  a  crazier  and  crazier  mind, 
and  finally  shot  and  killed  the  author.  As  it  appeared  afterward,  it 
was  an  error.  Phillips's  story  either  referred  to  some  other  girl  in 
some  other  place  or  it  was  a  figment,  I  forget  which. 

I  have  a  realistic  mind;  the  chances  of  being  murdered  seem  to  me 
not  worth  considering.  (Automobile  accidents  and  infectious  hepa- 
titis are  my  bugbears.)  The  thought  of  hurting  any  man  enough  to 
make  him  murderous  horrifies  me. 

I  sometimes  say  to  myself:  Ora  pro  nobis,  Vesalius!  At  the  close 
of  his  career,  the  epoch-making  first  great  anatomist  performed  an 
autopsy  upon  the  body  of  one  of  his  patients  whose  disease  and 
death  had  baffled  him,  and  came  upon  a  living,  beating  heart,  and 
thus  accidentally  stopped  its  beating  forever. 

Now,  to  recapitulate. — The  inspiration  of  a  work  of  fiction  and 
its  primary  and  principal  content  are  the  easy  part.  Subject  matter  is 


2yj  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

apt  to  be  in  every  man's  mind  as  much  as  in  one's  own;  it  comes  to 
us  out  of  the  soul  of  the  world.  Polymorphous  love,  and  the  univer- 
sal disasters,  tyranny  and  anarchy  and  the  chaos  within,  and  the 
irresistible  laughing  matters,  and  the  fantasies  and  romanticisms 
that  most  effectively  ravish  one  away,  despite  one's  stupors  and 
fatigues  and  the  ruts  in  one's  life — those  great  themes  are  common 
knowledge.  Narcissus  knows  them  by  heart;  are  you  not  he,  to  some 
extent,  some  of  the  time?  Yes,  certainly,  if  you  are  a  writer.  The 
great  plots  are  on  every  shelf  of  the  library;  borrow  them  (as  indeed 
Wilder  advised  me  to  do,  decades  ago). 

However,  as  Mann  noted  in  his  diary  at  an  early  stage  of  the 
work  on  Dr.  Faustus,  when  you  have  the  concept  and  plot  of  a  novel 
well  in  mind,  you  come  to  the  difficult  matter  of  "stuffing  the  book 
with  characters."  For  which  purpose,  he  said,  "much  full-bodied 
reality  is  needed";  one  suffers,  and  the  work  of  narrative  art  suffers, 
from  "a  deficiency  of  concrete  observation." 

Plot  in  itself  and  by  itself  is  never  (or  almost  never)  a  very  strong 
or  convincing  aspect  of  a  novel.  Even  things  that  we  see  reported 
in  the  newspapers  every  day  of  our  lives,  and  accept  at  their  face 
value  without  a  second  thought,  will  not  be  believable  in  fiction  un- 
less you  have  substantiated  them  with  minute  particulars,  "thefts 
from  reality"  (Mann's  phrase),  imprints  of  living  flesh. 

As  I  have  noted  elsewhere,  Balzac  himself,  who  wound  up  his 
plots  like  an  Elizabethan  or  a  Jacobean  dramatist — now  like  Shakes- 
peare, now  like  Ben  Jonson,  now  like  Webster  or  Ford— said  that 
what  interests  one  in  a  novel,  in  the  last  analysis,  is  the  quantity  of 
glimpsed  detail,  the  asides  and  the  incidents  along  the  way;  not  the 
over-all  turn  of  events  or  the  holocaust  at  the  close  or  the  happy 
ending. 

Somehow  the  modern  creative  mind,  though  inarticulate,  though 
inhibited,  seems  more  in  love  with  the  creations  (so  to  speak)  of  the 
Creator  than  great  writers  have  been  in  the  past.  Perhaps  this  is  be- 
cause the  concept  of  a  supernatural  author  of  the  world  is  no  longer 
very  convincing  or  clear  to  us.  We  fall  back  on  the  particulars.  Only 
the  whole  seems  able  to  invent  a  detail,  we  think.  Only  the  al- 
mighty, the  inexorable,  the  arch-creator,  can  come  up  with  a  face,  an 


Images  of  Truth  •  2j8 

outcry,  a  body  odor,  a  footprint,  and  other  minutiae  that  give  life 
to  a  universal  theme.  Gide  used  to  say  that,  even  to  change  the 
color  of  the  iris  of  someone's  eye,  in  the  transposition  from  human 
actuality  to  the  fictitious  form  of  it  or  substitute  for  it,  falsified  the 
record.  Nothing  that  could  ever  be  invented  or  fabricated,  he 
thought — and  many  of  us  also  think — could  compare  with  what  we 
have  seen,  heard,  touched,  enjoyed,  embraced  or  been  embraced  by, 
hurt  or  been  hurt  by.  This  does  not  make  novel  writing  easier  for 
us.  It  seems,  sometimes,  to  make  it  impossible. 

Blessed  or  sacrosanct  uninventible  detail!  When  it  is  human  de- 
tail, by  virtue  of  its  uninventibility,  verging  on  uniqueness  or  at 
least  great  idiosyncrasy,  it  points  to  the  source,  the  model,  the  in- 
dividual prototype.  And  the  trouble  with  the  old  true  form  of  the 
novel,  in  this  as  in  other  respects,  is  its  length  and  breadth.  It  covers 
so  much  ground,  it  eats  up  so  vast  an  amount  of  raw  material. 

The  drama  does  not  require  this  high  degree  of  plausibility  and 
closely  knit  sequence  of  motivations.  The  physical  presence  of  the 
actor,  for  one  thing,  has  a  unifying  effect;  it  binds  up  implausibili- 
ties  and  non  sequiturs  that  in  a  mere  narration  would  break  the 
spell.  Furthermore,  a  play  is  a  short  work — only  a  little  longer  than 
a  short  story,  a  little  less  long  than  a  nouvelle — and  it  requires  far 
less  of  the  precious  and  perishable  human  substance. 

The  crux  of  the  matter  of  the  novel  is  character,  characterization, 
portraiture.  The  very  significant  point  made  by  Wilder  that  night 
at  the  Gotham  was  the  undermining  of  the  authority  and  self- 
assurance  of  the  novelist,  even  that  questionable  opinionatedness 
which  once  served  him  well.  If  you  feel  authoritative  enough,  you 
can  start  with  a  theme,  a  hypothesis,  a  passage  of  history,  or  an 
item  of  the  day's  news,  and  concoct  or  formulate  (true  or  false)  the 
persons  involved,  that  is,  to  be  involved,  as  the  work  progresses.  If 
you  do  not  feel  authoritative,  and  you  want  your  portraits  to  be 
verisimilitudinous,  your  plot  to  be  plausible — the  causes  and  effects 
in  your  cross  section  of  human  nature  to  work,  to  convince,  and  to 
edify — you  probably  will  have  to  start  with  characteristics  of  actual 
humanity,  flesh  and  blood. 

But  must  characters  in  a  novel  always  be  convincing?  The  human 


279  *  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

comedians  of  Balzac  really  never  fooled  anyone,  except  Balzac.  The 
essential  appears  to  be  the  entrancement  and  the  hallucination  of 
the  novelist  himself.  Balzac  carried  around  in  his  head  some  two 
thousand  men,  women,  and  children,  and  seems  never  to  have  made 
any  listing  of  their  names,  their  dates,  their  various  shifting  resi- 
dences and  other  vital  statistics,  and  scarcely  ever  made  a  mistake. 
On  his  deathbed  he  cried  out,  "Bianchon!  Send  for  Bianchon!  He 
alone  can  cure  me!"  Bianchon  was  the  fictitious  great  doctor  in  the 
Comedie  Humaine. 

The  great  and  grave  questions  for  the  novelist  are:  What  persons 
can  you  get  to  pose  for  your  portraits?  Can  you  paint  them  as  you 
see  them,  or  do  they  look  over  your  shoulder,  and  protest  and 
lament,  and  flee  away?  To  what  extent  does  your  anxiety  about  por- 
traying people  reflect  and  disguise  a  fear  of  self-portraiture,  self- 
betrayal?  Do  you  feel  free  to  use  the  human  material  that  appeals 
most  strongly  to  your  imagination?  Or  have  you  had  to  give  a  lien 
or  a  mortgage  on  it  to  those  who  provided  it  in  the  first  place?  Must 
you  work  only  with  your  second-string  experience,  second-hand 
knowledge  of  the  world? 


This  has  no  great  bearing  on  The  Ides  of  March  because  there  is  a 
minimum  of  portraiture  a  clef  in  it.  I  have  spoken  of  that  beautiful 
lovelorn  girl,  self-destroyed  so  many  years  ago,  of  whom  Wilder  at 
the  time  seemed  to  disapprove,  perhaps  finding  it  difficult,  as  his 
Caesar  coldly  explains  to  Clodia,  "to  be  indulgent  to  those  who 
despise  and  condemn  themselves."  A  female  friend  of  mine  believes 
that  the  character  of  the  wise  and  tender  aging  actress,  Cytheris,  was 
modeled  upon  a  certain  friend  of  hers  and  of  Wilder's.  Her  reasons 
for  believing  it  are  not  convincing  to  me.  But  if  I  were  Wilder  I 
should  have  no  objection  to  the  lady's  thinking  of  herself  as  Cytheris 
to  some  extent,  if  it  seemed  to  her  a  happy  thought. 

There  is  almost  always  some  derivation  of  that  sort  in  novels. 
When  someone  questioned  Proust  about  the  sources  of  certain 
characterizations  in  A  la  Recherche  du  Temps  Perdu,  the  supreme 


Images  of  Truth  •  280 

masterpiece  of  modern  fiction,  he  said,  "A  book  is  a  great  cemetery 
in  which,  on  most  of  the  gravestones,  the  names  have  worn  smooth 
and  are  indecipherable."  And,  as  a  rule,  I  may  add,  the  novelist 
buries  a  number  of  his  dead  in  the  same  grave. 

The  political  resemblances  in  The  Ides  of  March  are  of  obvious 
interest.  Even  as  late  as  1948,  one  could  not  read  any  account  of  the 
life  and  death  of  Caesar  without  being  reminded  of  Mussolini. 
Wilder  must  have  intended  to  allude  to  some  of  the  recent  his- 
tory of  our  transatlantic  democracy  as  well,  perhaps  to  point  a  moral 
to  well-meaning  men  in  politics  and  in  the  government  service. 
With  scarcely  an  incongruity,  Cicero's  criticism  of  Caesar,  perspicu- 
ously bracketing  the  private  personality  and  the  public  exercise  of 
power,  might  have  been  applied  to  Franklin  D.  Roosevelt  by  Senator 
Taf  t  or  some  other  respectable  conservative  of  that  generation. 

The  dedication  page  of  The  Ides  of  March  reads  as  follows:  "To 
two  friends:  Lauro  de  Bosis,  Roman  poet,  who  lost  his  life  marshal- 
ing a  resistance  against  the  absolute  power  of  Mussolini:  his  aircraft 
pursued  by  those  of  the  Duce  plunged  into  the  Tyrrhenian  Sea; 
and  to  Edward  Sheldon,  who  though  immobile  and  blind  for  over 
twenty  years  was  the  dispenser  of  wisdom,  courage,  and  gaiety  to  a 
large  number  of  people." 

Thus  avowedly  the  novelist's  admiration  of  those  two  modern 
personages  entered  into  his  portrayals  of  the  poet  Catullus  and  of 
Caesar's  invalid  friend  Turrinus.  Which  enables  me,  for  what  lit- 
tle light  it  may  shed  on  the  processes  of  fiction,  to  compare  and 
contrast  Wilder's  characters  with  a  few  superficial  remembrances  of 
my  own,  legendry  of  a  society  in  which  I  too  have  moved  slightly, 
as  it  were  a  juxtaposition  of  two  painted  or  sculptured  figures,  nobly 
posed  and  costumed,  toga-clad  and  sandal-shod,  richly  framed  or 
loftily  pedestaled,  with  a  handful  of  snapshot  photographs. 

Lauro  de  Bosis  translated  some  plays  by  Sophocles  and  Frazer's 
The  Golden  Bough,  and  wrote  the  prize  poem  for  the  Olympic 
Games  in  1928,  the  subject  of  which  was  the  fall  of  Icarus.  After 
that  he  came  to  New  York  in  the  employ  of  an  Italian-American 
cultural  organization,  and  a  little  later  taught  at  Columbia  Univer- 


281  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

sity.  In  New  York  he  met  and  was  loved  by  an  older  woman,  the 
greatly  gifted  and  successful  monologuist,  Ruth  Draper. 

In  1930  he  revisited  his  native  land,  by  which  time  the  Fascist 
regime  had  bitterly  disappointed  him;  and  he  wrote  a  diatribe 
against  Mussolini,  to  be  mimeographed  and  mailed  to  hundreds  of 
sympathetic  persons  all  over  Italy,  all  of  whom  presumably  would 
forward  copies  to  their  friends,  snowballing  in  every  direction  with 
perhaps  devastating  effect.  Reportedly,  it  was  Bernard  Shaw  who 
suggested  to  Ruth  Draper's  young  friend  that  this  be  done. 

He  himself  returned  to  New  York,  leaving  the  further  handling 
of  the  campaign  to  two  associates.  Someone  tipped  off  the  Fascist 
police.  The  mimeograph  machine  having  been  discovered  in  the 
apartment  of  Signora  Adolfo  de  Bosis,  the  poet's  American-born 
mother,  she  and  the  associates  were  arrested  and  brought  to  trial. 
She  made  a  personal  appeal  to  the  Duce  and  escaped  punishment. 
The  associates  were  given  long  prison  sentences. 

I  never  heard  Ruth  Draper  tell  any  part  of  this  story.  R.  L.  Cot- 
tenet,  an  old  friend  of  hers  and  mine,  used  to  say  that  in  all  prob- 
ability Signora  Adolfo  de  Bosis  gave  some  information  prejudicial 
to  her  son's  associates,  perhaps  unwittingly;  that  in  any  case  Lauro 
de  Bosis  believed  that  this  had  happened,  and  felt  dishonored  by  it 
and  bitterly  undeserving  of  his  own  good  fortune,  safe  and  sound 
in  exile.  He  considered  returning  to  Italy  in  defiance  of  the  dicta- 
torship, but  Ruth  Draper  and  other  friends  persuaded  him  not  to. 
It  would  have  meant  immediate  arrest  and  imprisonment,  while 
serving  no  particular  purpose;  and  doubtless  it  would  have  rein- 
volved  his  mother  and  other  sympathetic  and  blameless  persons. 

Then,  at  his  wit's  end,  he  decided  to  manifest  his  convictions  and 
emotions  from  the  air  over  Rome,  somewhat  as  d'Annunzio  had 
done  over  Vienna  toward  the  end  of  World  War  I.  He  composed 
another  subversive  text  and  had  it  printed  in  great  quantity  on 
featherweight  paper.  Ruth  Draper  made  him  a  present  of  a  small 
airplane.  He  took  flying  lessons  in  England,  and  with  a  minimum 
number  of  hours  of  solo  flying  to  his  credit,  started  toward  his 
native  land.  That  first  flight  was  unsuccessful.  He  came  down  in 


Images  of  Truth  •  282 

Corsica,  doing  himself  no  injury,  but  smashing  his  plane  and  strew- 
ing his  manifesto  around  the  wild  irrelevant  Corsican  countryside. 
This  mishap  only  intensified  his  feelings,  both  patriotic  and  per- 
sonal. 

Therefore  he  had  a  second  edition  of  his  manifesto  printed,  and 
persuaded  his  famous  friend  to  buy  him  another  airplane,  and  on 
a  Saturday  afternoon  in  October,  1933,  did  reach  the  Eternal  City 
and  showered  it  with  the  provocative  slips  of  paper.  It  was  rumored 
that  some  slips  descended  upon  the  Duce  personally,  irritating  him 
so  that  he  broke  an  armchair.  Planes  of  the  Fascist  air  force  were 
alerted  and  pursued  the  poet  out  to  sea,  and  in  due  course  came 
back  to  their  bases,  presumably  licking  their  chops,  but  declaring 
that  he  had  outdistanced  them.  No  trace  of  him  or  of  the  second 
plane  was  ever  found. 

Now  that  he  is  dead  and  gone,  one  is  aware  of  a  dark  or  at  least 
cloudy  aspect  of  his  character  and  fate,  with  his  great  distress  like  a 
lightning-flash  at  the  heart  of  it,  and  the  flashing  seems  almost  aim- 
less; at  any  rate  he  never  aimed  it  very  well.  Perhaps  ambiguity  was 
a  part  of  his  charm:  as  a  man  of  literary  temperament  bravely  but 
ineffectually  engaged  in  the  life  of  action;  as  an  expatriate  (to  some 
extent)  even  before  it  became  necessary  for  him  to  think  of  himself 
as  an  exile;  as  the  Italian  son  of  an  American  mother,  bitterly  re- 
sentful of  her  helpfulness  but  also  profoundly  appreciative  of  it, 
with  another  mature  American  woman  close  to  him,  willing  and 
able  to  help  him  vindicate  himself,  though  probably  not  seeing  eye 
to  eye  with  him  about  his  situation.  In  Italy  and  in  England  there 
have  been  some  controversial  magazine  articles  about  all  this.  I  am 
inclined  to  think  that  the  moral  of  his  story  is  a  matter  of  cosmo- 
politanism rather  than  patriotism  and  political  idealism. 

Now  that  we  have  seen  what  it  took  in  fact  to  dislodge  Mus- 
solini: a  huge  and  desperate  and  extremely  harmful  war,  Lauro  de 
Bosis'  Icarus-like,  Catullus-like,  d'Annunzio-like  deed — and  likewise 
the  masterminding  of  Bernard  Shaw,  in  this  as  in  other  connections 
during  his  long  lifetime — may  strike  us  as  foolish  and  unreal.  The 
whole  of  his  life,  climaxed  by  that,  would  serve  as  the  plot  of  a 


283  '  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

Balzac  type  of  novel,  if  any  modern  novelist  happened  to  have  in- 
ternational journalistic  experience  enough  to  handle  its  foreign 
scenes  and  the  several  heterogeneous  societies  involved  in  it,  and  at 
the  same  time  sufficiently  understood  the  odd  combination  of  po- 
litical principle  and  problematical  psychology. 

Certainly  I  do  not  altogether  understand  it.  Perhaps  it  is  not  even 
exactly  true,  as  I  have  heard  it  told  and  have  now  retold  it.  Both 
Signora  de  Bosis  and  Ruth  Draper  are  dead;  whom  else  could  an 
ambitious  but  scrupulous  novelist  question?  whose  exact  knowledge 
of  their  secrets  would  put  a  stop  to  one's  speculation  and  fantasy? 
Tales  that  everyone  has  respectfully  refrained  from  telling,  during 
the  lifetime  of  those  concerned,  sometimes  go  on  forever,  with  a  kind 
of  ashamed  half-life,  unverified,  but  at  the  same  time  unrefuted,  un- 
scotched. 

It  pleases  me  to  recall  that  I  was  just  lightly  brushed  by  one 
feather  of  the  wing  of  the  twentieth-century  Icarus,  the  first  time  he 
fell,  in  Corsica.  In  those  days  Barbara  Harrison,  my  brother's  wife, 
had  a  little  house  in  Paris,  in  the  Rue  de  Vaugirard,  across  the 
street  from  the  Senate;  and  an  English  friend  of  hers  and  of  Lauro 
de  Bosis'  brought  the  first  edition  of  his  manifesto  there,  and  he 
picked  it  up  there.  When  it  all  came  down  as  though  out  of  a  celes- 
tial wastebasket  over  Corsica,  a  piece  of  the  wrapping  paper  was 
still  plainly  labeled:  32  Rue  de  Vaugirard,  which  the  Corsican  gen- 
darmes spotted  and  reported  to  the  Surete  in  Paris.  She  and  Monroe 
Wheeler  had  been  publishing  their  little  series  of  de  luxe  books  at 
that  address,  and  in  due  course  they  were  summoned  and  lengthily 
and  tediously  interrogated.  The  French  notion  was  that  possibly 
"Harrison  of  Paris"  was  a  front  for  undesirable  international  prop- 
aganda. Bureaucracy  in  France  is  a  vast  pack-rat,  my  French  friends 
tell  me;  so  perhaps  in  a  cellar  or  an  attic  in  Paris  my  dear  ones' 
names  are  still  on  file,  annotated  with  the  official  suspicion  and  dis- 
approval, as  of  that  date. 

During  World  War  II  our  Federal  Bureau  of  Inquiry  sometimes 
categorized  people  as  having  been  "prematurely  anti-Fascist."  Thus, 
half  concealed  and  half  revealed  by  petty  and  picturesque  details  of 


Images  of  Truth  •  284 

one's  own  life,  one  can  glimpse  the  vast  understandings  and  mis- 
understandings of  the  nations  going  on  in  the  century,  bringing 
about  war  and  peace. 


I  am  a  portrait  lover,  that  is,  a  believer  in  what  one  can  learn  about 
people  by  giving  attention  to  their  physiognomy,  indeed  their  entire 
physical  being.  The  beauty  of  Ruth  Draper  meant  a  great  deal  to 
me;  a  gypsy  sort  of  beauty,  but  with  a  soft  kindly  expression  and 
laughing  eyes.  You  could  see  that  she  took  the  greatest  pleasure  in 
her  perceptions  of  people,  but  that  she  was  not  sure  enough  of 
herself  to  criticize  them  or  judge  them  severely.  As  a  performer  she 
had  very  proud  and  commanding  postures  and  movements,  but  her 
manner  in  private  was  modest,  almost  ordinary.  It  is  because  I  have 
her  fond,  keen  face  in  my  mind's  eye  that  I  understand  her 
affection  and  loyalty  and  (in  the  end)  absolute  sadness  better  than 
anything  else  in  the  romantic  story  of  de  Bosis. 

There  is  a  bust  of  him  in  Rome,  up  on  the  Janiculum,  near  the 
American  Academy;  it  is  said  not  to  be  a  good  likeness.  I  might  have 
caught  sight  of  him  in  New  York  or  in  London;  I  never  did. 

The  other  extraordinary  personage  praised  by  Wilder  on  the 
dedication  page  of  The  Ides  of  March  I  did  see  during  the  winter 
of  1941-42  and  remember  vividly.  Somerset  Maugham,  as  an  old 
friend,  suggested  his  inviting  me  to  lunch,  and  urged  or  com- 
manded me  to  accept  the  invitation.  As  a  young  man  of  romantic 
appearance  and  lovable  character,  so  described  by  Maugham,  he 
had  written  two  triumphantly  successful  plays,  Romance,  played  by 
Doris  Keane,  and  Salvation  Nell,  played  by  Mrs.  Fiske.  When 
scarcely  middle-aged,  he  suffered  a  sudden  appalling  breakdown  of 
his  health,  and  for  many  years  after  that,  bedridden  and  blind,  he 
lived  on  in  a  rather  grand  though  tragic  way,  with  his  devoted 
mother  near  at  hand,  and  with  competent  and  devoted  employees 
caring  for  him  and  enabling  him  to  extend  hospitality  to  an  elite 
of  the  theatre  and  to  other  friends,  whom  (as  Wilder's  dedication 
attests)  he  inspired,  advised,  and  influenced.  Playwrights  read  sue- 


2#5  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

cessive  versions  of  their  plays  aloud  to  him;  actors  and  actresses 
performed  important  scenes  at  the  foot  of  his  bed,  on  a  make- 
believe  stage,  forever  dark,  but  doubtless  illumined  for  him  by  his 
past  experience  of  the  theatre  and  his  subtle  intelligence. 

His  knowledge  of  literature  and  the  arts  and  whatever  else  was 
going  on  in  the  metropolis,  with  a  natural  emphasis  on  the  per- 
forming arts,  was  extensive  and  definite.  One  could  scarcely  imagine 
his  deriving  so  much  just  from  friends  visiting  him,  secretaries  read- 
ing aloud;  and  a  New  Yorker  of  my  acquaintance  believed,  or  pre- 
tended to  believe,  to  make  a  good  story  and  a  point,  that  his 
blindness  and  paralysis  were  in  some  measure  an  artifice;  that 
occasionally  in  the  middle  of  the  night  he  would  arise  and  disguise 
himself  and  slip  out  into  the  city.  What  for?  not  in  any  case  to  make 
mischief  or  simply  to  pursue  pleasure — according  to  everyone  he 
was  a  saint  as  well  as  a  martyr,  an  ascetic  as  well  as  an  aesthete — but 
conceivably  to  find  out  about  things  and  to  make  himself  useful  to 
people  he  cared  for,  at  rehearsals,  first  nights,  vernissages,  and  pub- 
lishers' parties,  or  perhaps  to  visit,  inspirationally  or  consolingly, 
someone  else's  sickbed  even  cruder  than  his  own. 

Lunching  with  him  was  an  odd  and  uneasy  experience.  He  lived 
in  a  penthouse  apartment,  and  as  I  remember,  a  separate  elevator 
deposited  me  up  there  in  a  small  square  foyer,  where  I  was  asked  to 
wait,  surrounded  by  doors  and  by  voices  beyond  the  doors;  perhaps 
a  secretary's  voice,  a  nurse's  voice,  a  cook's  voice.  Presently  one  of 
them  summoned  me  through  one  of  the  doors  and  left  me  standing 
in  the  center  of  a  large  room,  facing  a  richly  draped  bed;  and  there 
lay  Sheldon's  handsome  head  on  a  small  black  pillow,  wearing  a 
black  half-mask;  and  his  sweet,  strong  voice  told  me  to  approach 
and  to  sit  in  an  armchair  exactly  placed,  near  him. 

The  way  the  bed  was  draped  contributed  to  the  uncanny,  I  am 
tempted  to  say  occult,  impression  that  Edward  Sheldon  made  on 
the  unaccustomed  visitor.  A  Persian  rug,  or  it  may  have  been  just 
a  heavy  brocade,  was  drawn  quite  smooth  and  flat  across  it,  and 
hung  foursquare  to  the  floor,  with  not  the  least  mound  or  hump  or 
other  indication  of  the  crippled  body  stretched  out  under  it.  In  fact 
it  must  not  have  been  stretched  out,  but  curled  up  in  a  hollow  space 


Images  of  Truth  •  286 

contrived  for  it  by  the  upholsterer's  art,  as  it  were  a  precious  bibe- 
lot in  a  jeweler's  box  or  a  delicate  scientific  or  surgical  instrument 
in  a  fitted  case. 

It  was  like  a  dream;  or  like  something  in  a  surrealist  painting, 
or  in  an  existentialist  play  or  in  one  of  Isak  Dinesen's  Gothic 
tales.  I  was  struck  by  the  fine  healthy  texture  of  his  cheeks  and 
mouth  beneath  the  half-mask,  by  the  rosiness  of  his  complexion. 
He  told  me  that  in  clement  weather,  even  in  winter,  he  had  his  bed 
wheeled  out  on  the  penthouse  terrace,  which  kept  him  agreeably 
sunburned.  Just  then  a  manservant  happened  to  be  out  there, 
feeding  pigeons.  Presently  the  vast  banshee  sound  of  the  air-raid 
siren  arose  over  the  city,  and  it  was  either  the  first  test  of  it,  or  the 
first  time  that  I  happened  to  be  in  town  to  hear  it  tested.  As  we 
spoke  of  this  I  was  impressed  by  Sheldon's  lack  of  interest;  certainly 
the  oncoming  of  the  war  did  not  frighten  him  or  worry  him. 

Some  weeks  after  that  I  called  on  him  again,  and  then  the  contact 
between  us  lapsed.  As  one  of  his  familiar  friends  explained,  he 
never  wanted  anyone  to  visit  him  out  of  a  sense  of  duty  or  sympathy, 
and  perhaps  I  had  not  sufficiently  pressed  for  another  invitation.  In 
fact,  I  had  not  enjoyed  my  two  visits. 

Mrs.  Flint,  the  great-lady  professor  at  the  University  of  Chicago 
who,  in  1917  or  1918,  first  told  me  that  I  had  literary  ability — in 
fact  she  went  a  little  further  than  that,  in  the  over-enthusiastic  style 
of  the  higher  education  of  those  days — was  a  cousin  of  Sheldon's.  I 
remember  his  asking  me  why  I  had  left  the  university  without  even 
a  B.A.,  what  had  motivated  my  long  sojourn  in  France,  what  was 
the  ratio  of  fact  and  fiction  in  The  Grandmothers,  and  what  had 
caused  me  to  become  interested  in  falconry.  I  guessed  that  he  had 
done  a  little  homework  about  me,  aided  by  a  secretary. 

The  intensity  of  my  interest  in  him,  perhaps  I  should  say  curios- 
ity about  him,  made  me  shy.  For  some  reason  I  often  feel  disinclined 
to  ask  direct  questions;  it  is  easier  for  me  to  be  questioned.  But  I 
take  very  little  pleasure  in  hearing  myself  talk  about  myself,  unless 
the  theme  is  something  that  has  just  occurred  to  me  or  just  hap- 
pened to  me. 

When  I  reported  back  to  Somerset  Maugham  that  I  had  failed  to 


28y  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

make  friends  with  his  strange,  wonderful  fellow  playwright,  he  ex- 
pressed disappointment  but  not  astonishment.  He  was  never  a  man 
easy  to  astonish.  The  next  time  I  saw  him  he  confided  to  me  a 
theory  that  he  had  hit  upon,  as  to  the  cause  and  nature  of  Sheldon's 
ill-health. 

I  remember  that  we  were  sitting  in  his  sitting  room  at  the  Hotel 
Ritz-Carlton,  and  just  as  he  broached  this  topic,  the  room  waiter 
came  in  with  a  martini  or  perhaps  a  gimlet;  he  gave  an  emphatic 
discreet  look  and  waited  until  we  were  alone;  then  he  heard  the 
chambermaid  in  the  adjacent  bedroom,  and  rose  and  softly  closed 
that  door.  What  he  was  about  to  tell  me  evidently  seemed  to  him 
a  serious  matter  or  a  scandal. 

It  had  never  satisfied  poor  Sheldon,  he  said,  to  be  well-known  and 
successful  along  with  the  other  accomplished  comedy- writers  and 
melodrama-writers  of  those  days,  such  as  Maugham  himself,  and 
Clyde  Fitch  and  Henry  Arthur  Jones  and  Pinero  and  Barrie  and 
Sardou.  He  wanted  to  be  great,  great  like  (let  us  say)  Shakespeare; 
that  is  to  say,  in  contemporary  terms,  like  Rostand,  like  d'Annunzio, 
or  at  least  like  Stephen  Phillips.  Perhaps  these  assorted  turn-of- 
the-century  dramatists  were  not  the  ones  Maugham  mentioned; 
but  their  names  will  sufficiently  suggest  the  point  that  he  was  mak- 
ing: Sheldon's  dissatisfaction  with  his  early  career,  and  his  perilous 
further  aspiration. 

He  was  a  man  of  independent  means.  Romance  especially,  which 
was  a  perfect  vehicle  for  Doris  Keane,  who  was  a  perfectly  beautiful 
actress — I  saw  her  in  it — had  enriched  him.  He  borrowed  a  theme 
and  a  plot  from  Hans  Christian  Andersen,  the  tale  of  the  heartless 
and  immortal  mermaid:  how  she  fell  in  love  and  then  died  of  a 
broken  heart.  Adapting  it  to  suit  his  own  original  imagination,  he 
labored  away  at  it  for  a  long  while,  taking  great  pains,  doing  his 
level  best,  mustering  up  his  every  resource  of  talent  and  culture, 
endeavoring  to  bring  out  all  the  significance  and  emotion  that,  in 
his  opinion,  pervaded  it. 

His  reputation  in  the  theatre  at  that  point  was  something  to  con- 
jure with.  A  new  play  by  him,  especially  a  more  poetical  play  than 
his  previous  contributions  to  the  repertory,  was  eagerly  looked  for- 


Images  of  Truth  •  288 

ward  to,  as  a  great  event  in  show  business  and  possibly  in  American 
theatrical  history.  Nothing  is  so  likely  to  succeed,  theatre-going 
New  Yorkers  think,  as  the  work  of  writers  who  have  already  been 
successful.  Furthermore,  they  delight  in  any  prospect  of  a  more  se- 
rious type  of  drama-writing  than  the  usual  box-office  fodder,  though 
as  a  rule,  when  the  curtain  goes  up,  they  get  bored  suddenly. 

At  last  Sheldon  finished  his  work,  and  after  the  usual  negotia- 
tions and  intrigues  and  changes,  turned  it  over  to  an  agent  and  a 
producer  and  a  director  and  a  stage  designer,  and  to  various  per- 
forming artists,  and  to  the  necessary  numerous  theatrical  proletariat. 
In  due  course  it  was  presented  under  good  auspices  in  a  fashionable 
new  theatre,  with  eclat,  painstakingly  produced,  not  counting  the 
cost,  and  with  a  cast  of  able  and  popular  actors;  and  it  flopped. 

Not  long  after  this*  the  dreadful  series  of  Edward  Sheldon's  ail- 
ments began:  mysterious  arthritis,  perhaps  a  mysterious  virus  in- 
fection, or  a  cerebral  vascular  accident,  or  two  or  three  successive 
cerebral  vascular  accidents,  and  presently,  either  retinal  detach- 
ments or  an  atrophy  of  the  optic  nerve  in  both  eyes.  Maugham 
could  not  remember  exactly  the  various  conflicting  diagnoses  that 
had  been  reported  to  him  at  the  time. 

Possibly  Sheldon's  doctors  did  not  discover  what  the  matter  was, 
what  the  several  successive  matters  were;  if  they  did,  it  was  never 
made  clear  or  convincing  to  his  friends  and  admirers.  Perhaps  a 
physiological  syndrome  and  the  crisis  of  talent  and  disillusionment 
just  happened  to  coincide.  In  some  cases,  we  are  told,  when  the 
initial  breakdown  has  been  spiritual,  hysterical,  the  poor  body  lit- 
tle by  little  actually  and  irremediably  assumes  the  role  assigned  to 
it  by  the  terrible  psyche.  Things  that  were  not  even  noticeable  in 
the  first  instance  get  to  be  undiagnosable.  Body  and  soul  inter- 
mingle; nothing  is  worse. 

Maugham's  talk  about  all  this  was  prosaic  and  dry  and  a  little 
violent,  in  his  way;  but  obviously  it  touched  him  to  the  heart,  and 
indeed  agitated  in  him  something  that  might  be  called  the  fear  of 
God. 

It  probably  was  easier  for  Sheldon  to  become  a  genuine  martyr 


28p  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

than  simply  to  go  on  as  a  lost  or  lapsed  genius,  a  man  of  mere  talent, 
a  Broadway  professional,  a  has-been  or  a  hack.  What  might  be 
called  the  finger  of  God  having  put  his  eyes  out,  twisted  him,  dead- 
ened him,  he  could  forgive  himself  for  the  pretentiousness  and  the 
weakness  of  his  Hans  Christian  Andersen  play.  With  the  excuse  and 
the  disguise  of  his  half-dead  body  and  the  endless  midnight  in  his 
eyes,  he  could  go  on  believing  in  the  other,  better,  and  still  more 
poetical  plays  that  he  might  have  written. 

"Pride  is  the  dangerous  sin,"  Maugham  said,  "beyond  all  the 
other  sins." 


♦ 


Now  reopen  The  Ides  of  March  and  consider  what  inspiration 
Wilder  derived  from  these  two  twentieth-century  men  in  the  crea- 
tion of  his  two  corresponding  Roman  characters:  in  the  bright 
light  of  his  history  lesson,  the  shadows  cast  by  them;  amid  the  im- 
memorial passionate  colloquy  and  philosophical  discourse,  the 
echoing  of  their  recently  departed  voices.  With  his  imagination 
moved  by  the  heroism  of  the  anti-Fascist  Italian  poet,  especially 
his  harassment  of  Mussolini  with  seditious  texts,  and  by  the  help- 
less, vicarious,  inspiring  way  of  life  of  the  New  York  playwright, 
he  sea-changed  them,  ennobled  them,  and  above  all,  simplified 
them,  in  the  way  of  epic  poetry  and  dramatic  poetry;  not  in  the 
usual  fictitious  way. 

Indeed  Wilder's  character  creation,  in  The  Bridge  of  San  Luis 
Rey  and  The  Woman  of  Andros  as  well  as  in  this  Roman  novel,  is 
the  furthest  thing  in  the  world  from  the  principles  and  techniques  of 
eighteenth-  and  nineteenth-century  novel  writing  which  so  many  of 
us  still  follow:  imitation  and  transposition  and  combination  and 
amplification;  every  matter  of  individual  humanity  and  particular 
circumstance  to  be  substantiated  by  a  quantity  of  learned  and  ob- 
served fact,  and  quantitative  hallucinating  small  talk  also  (vide  Jane 
Austen);  every  conceivable  protagonist  to  be  situated  in  the  midst 
of  an  almost  scientific  ecology,  with  a  substratum  of  persons  less 


Images  of  Truth  •  290 

fortunate  than  he,  and  a  superstructure  of  persons  more  fortunate 
(vide  Trollope),  and  powerful  and  voluble  arguments  to  prove  that 
he  exists,  or  could  have  existed  (vide  Balzac),  and  a  vast  sampling  of 
his  ideas,  and  of  the  author's  own  ideas  (vide  George  Eliot),  sociol- 
ogy and  theology  and  uplift  and  worldliness  and,  of  course,  snob- 
bery. 

Neither,  for  that  matter,  does  the  author  of  The  Ides  of  March 
ever  remind  us  of  Walter  Scott  and  his  multitudinous  progeny 
throughout  the  nineteenth  century  and  flourishing  still;  nor  does 
he  conform  to  the  standards  of  truthfulness  and  artistry  of  the  more 
sophisticated  present-day  practitioners  of  the  historical  novel:  their 
mountainous  evidences  of  research,  and  reflections  of  and  reper- 
cussions from  the  work  of  previous  workers  in  their  area  and 
period,  all  in  a  sort  of  counterpoint  of  scholarliness,  augmenting 
and  inverting  and  counterstating  and  resolving  things.  Rather,  he 
reminds  us  of  Plutarch  and  Lucian,  of  the  medieval  fabulists,  and 
of  Voltaire. 

Wilder's  Catullus  must  be  closer  to  the  actual  biographical,  his- 
torical man  than  any  of  his  other  Romans  (except  perhaps  Caesar). 
For  one  thing,  he  had  the  mighty,  black,  and  fiery  love  lyrics,  Odi 
et  ami  and  Nox  est  perpetua  and  the  rest,  and  some  of  the  doggerel 
against  the  Dictator,  to  go  by.  (Caesar's  Commentarii  de  hello 
Galileo  is  an  oddly  impersonal  work,  almost  characterless.) 

The  perfectionism  and  puritanism  of  the  Roman  poet  from 
Verona,  his  willingness  to  be  fooled  part  of  the  time,  and  then  vio- 
lently disillusioned,  and  other  fluctuations  of  the  psyche,  may  be 
observed  in  a  good  many  men  of  amorous  disposition,  especially 
those  not  so  highly  sexed  physically  as  they  would  like  to  be.  But  if 
Catullus  has  feelings  of  inferiority  as  a  man,  they  are  soon  swal- 
lowed up  in  the  certainty  of  his  power  and  glory  as  a  poet.  When 
Clodia  deals  with  him  cruelly,  he  rages  back  at  her  in  perhaps  a 
worse  way:  immortal  versification  worsens  it. 

To  state  the  matter  in  its  simplest,  most  obvious  aspect:  it  is  a 
sado-masochistic  relationship,  in  which  they  both  play  both  roles. 
Let  me  remind  you  that  the  rather  ugly  modern  word  has  a  wider 


2gi  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

reference  than  mere  inflictions  of  pain,  dances  of  death.  For  ex- 
ample, it  may  be  said  to  be  sadistic  to  try  to  compel  one's  beloved 
to  be  more  virtuous  (or,  for  that  matter,  more  talented  or  more 
beautiful)  than  he  or  she  is  capable  of  being.  Certainly  in  this  sense, 
as  well  as  in  his  occasional  abusive  verses,  Catullus  cruelly  torments 
Clodia. 

Love  most  ill-advised  and  incorrigible;  love  spellbound  for  a 
while,  then  infuriated  for  a  while,  drunk  on  its  every  satisfaction, 
and  vomiting  itself  back  up  when  frustrated!  It  is  all  a  folie  a  deux, 
to  borrow  an  old  term  of  jurisprudence,  perhaps  no  longer  in  use: 
a  crime  that  might  never  have  happened  but  for  the  chance  meet- 
ing of  two  unique  persons,  thus  a  kind  of  accident. 

However,  Clodia  is  not  to  be  thought  of  as  a  passive  person,  either 
in  love  or  in  her  general  morality.  In  a  sense,  all  her  life  she  has 
looked  back  in  envy  of  that  uncle  who  raped  her,  and  somewhat 
imitated  him.  All  her  misbehavior  is  an  aggression  against  people 
whom  she  somewhat  admires,  a  violation  of  traditions  and  rules 
that  she  somewhat  believes  in.  Her  very  reveling  in  her  own  wicked- 
ness is  an  indication  of  her  moral,  indeed  moralistic  feeling. 

On  the  other  hand,  in  a  city  the  size  of  ancient  Rome  there  are 
bound  to  be  a  good  number  of  virtuous  women,  and  it  never  occurs 
to  Catullus  to  pay  court  to  i  lem.  What  interests  him  is  the  far- 
fetched, improbable,  impossible  potential  of  virtue  in  the  mind  and 
heart  of  just  that  one  mature,  post-mature  great  lady,  although  she 
takes  pride  in  her  viciousness,  or  because  she  takes  pride  in  it. 

Furthermore,  if  one  thinks  of  oneself  as  a  wronged  lover,  and 
makes  a  moral  issue  of  it,  as  Catullus  did,  surely  there  must  be  some 
complacency  in  letting  oneself  be  wronged  over  and  over  again. 
Even  the  murderee,  with  his  last  gasp,  can  be  thankful  pharisaically 
for  not  having  been  murderous,  though  perhaps  he  brought  on  his 
fate  to  some  extent.  To  some  extent  the  mouse  seduces  the  cat. 

This  ambivalence  of  course  appears  in  Catullus'  lifework  not 
only  as  subject  matter  but  as  style.  The  bluntness  and  nakedness  of 
his  language  almost  belie  his  amorous  idealism.  Righteous  indigna- 
tion gives  him  an  excuse  for  passages  of  feverish  and  biased  erotic 


Images  of  Truth  •  2p2 

writing,  and  he  so  exploits  it,  pretending  to  be  shocked  in  order  to 
be  shocking.  As  Wilder  points  out  also,  he  sometimes  expresses  his 
detestation  of  Caesar's  politics  in  terms  of  a  kind  of  inverted  sensu- 
ality. Certainly  a  part  of  his  political  thinking  was  just  his  jealousy 
and  competitiveness  about  Clodia. 

The  truth  of  the  matter  of  poetry  is  this. — The  important  poet  is 
one  whose  endowment  of  vocabulary  and  imagery  and  style  happens 
to  suit  the  kind  of  experience  that  he  has  had,  and  keeps  on  having; 
or  is  it  the  other  way  round?  Does  he  set  out  in  life  to  have  the  ex- 
periences that  his  talent  or  genius  is  meant  for?  Catullus  as  a 
poet  would  have  been  lost  without  a  Clodia,  without  a  Caesar.  With 
all  the  energy  and  intellect  that  his  mastery  of  expression  indicates, 
he  seems  not  to  have  experienced  anything  very  intensely  or  pro- 
foundly, except  subject  matter. 

What  a  poet  wants,  I  guess,  is  to  be  an  everyman  in  his  life,  a 
superman  when  he  takes  pen  in  hand;  and  as  a  rule,  needless  to  say, 
he  is  neither.  He  is  a  combination  of  the  abstract  and  the  animal,  of 
devotion  and  disgust,  flame  and  flood,  truth  and  delusion,  knack 
and  hazard;  and  it  may  be  a  good  combination  or  a  bad  combina- 
tion, humanly  speaking,  but  either  way  the  dualities  are  favorable 
to  his  lifework. 


Just  as  Wilder's  Catullus  personifies  poetry,  his  Turrinus  personi- 
fies friendship.  Presumably  his  personal  familiarity  with  Edward 
Sheldon  provided  the  basic  concept  of  the  great  incapacitated 
absentee  friend,  the  man  of  broken  body  but  unvanquished  spirit, 
partaking  of  others'  lives  in  lieu  of  a  life  of  his  own,  worth  living. 
Save  for  this  essential,  Turrinus  is  more  imaginary,  less  historic  than 
the  other  principal  figures  in  The  Ides  of  March. 

Or  is  this  another  of  the  errors  that,  as  an  autodidact,  I  naturally 
fall  into?  My  education  in  the  matter  amounts  to  only  a  few  refer- 
ence books,  a  few  translations,  and  certain  other  works  of  historical 
fiction;  none  of  the  recondite  source  materials  and  off-beat  proto- 
types. I  am  reminded  of  my  blessed  innocence  about  The  Cabala 


2^5  *  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

years  ago,  Wilder's  correction  of  which  was  the  first  interesting 
thing  I  ever  heard  him  say. 

At  any  rate,  while  counting  on  his  readers'  having  some  slight 
background  about  Caesar  and  Cicero  and  Cleopatra  and  even 
Clodia,  he  starts  from  scratch  about  Turrinus.  In  the  very  first  notes 
of  the  supposed  compiler  and  editor  of  the  fictitious  documents  of 
which  the  book  consists,  we  are  given  essential  information:  he  is 
a  man  haplessly  taken  prisoner  and  terribly  injured  just  at  the  end 
of  the  Gallic  Wars,  now  resident  on  the  Island  of  Capri,  to  whom, 
in  the  interval  of  five  or  six  years,  Caesar  has  written  several  letters 
a  week.  A  little  farther  along,  Caesar's  Aunt  Julia  and  another 
elderly  aristocratic  woman  wonder  about  him,  reminisce  about  him, 
and  ask  the  Dictator  questions  that  he  does  not  see  fit  to  answer. 
Toward  the  close  of  the  work  we  are  given  two  letters  written  to 
him  by  the  Lady  Julia,  and  two  by  the  actress  Cytheris,  which  add  a 
little  perspective  to  the  shadowy  portrait. 

In  the  entire  mass  of  imaginary  documents  there  is  not  one  page 
or  paragraph  written  or  dictated  by  Turrinus  himself.  For  the  most 
part  we  deduce  his  qualities  from  Caesar's  correspondence,  re- 
flecting their  intellectual  interests  in  common. — Poetry  and  prosody 
and  indeed  etymology.  The  psychology  and  psychopathology  of 
love,  and  the  ethical  issues  that  arise  in  this  connection.  The  rites 
of  the  old  Roman  state  religion  (though  neither  of  them  is  a  be- 
liever). Political  science,  particularly  the  tremendous  and  insoluble 
problems  of  Caesar's  rule,  historic  (and  brand-new  in  history  then). 
The  great  premonition  of  the  fate  awaiting  the  Dictator  at  the 
hands  of  the  anti-Caesar  faction,  and  all  the  issues  of  philosophy 
that  the  near  prospect  of  death  raises  for  the  man  under  sentence 
of  death  and  for  those  whom  he  loves  and  who  love  him.  It  is  like 
looking  at  the  mold  of  clay  or  wax  appertaining  to  a  distant  or 
lost  work  of  art,  bronze  or  terra  cotta;  and  indeed,  in  friendship,  the 
mind  of  each  one  molds  and  cools  and  hardens  the  other. 

He  was  Caesar's  intimate,  chum,  pal,  buddy,  in  their  boyhood. 
They  studied  together,  swam  and  hunted  together,  traveled  to 
Greece  and  Crete  together.  Wilder  says  nothing  about  the  nature 
and  custom  of  the  relationship  in  their  prime  of  life;  it  must  have 


Images  of  Truth  •  2p^ 

been  close  and  continuous,  for  in  51  B.C.,  when  they  were  middle- 
aged,  they  went  to  war  together  in  Gaul,  that  is  to  say,  France  and 
Belgium,  pitching  their  tents  side  by  side.  There  presently  Turrinus 
was  captured  by  the  Belgians,  and  because  he  would  not  inform 
against  Caesar,  had  his  ears  cropped  and  his  eyes  put  out,  and  one 
arm  and  one  leg  cut  off,  and  other  unspecified  parts  of  his  body 
mutilated.  Caesar  counter-attacked  and  rescued  him,  almost  an- 
nihilating one  of  his  regiments  in  so  doing.  Since  then,  with  no 
further  capability  for  the  public  service,  and  no  interest  in  any 
sociability  or  expectation  of  pleasure,  he  has  been  living  secludedly 
in  a  walled  villa  on  Capri,  where  Cytheris  sometimes  goes  to  read 
classical  literature  to  him,  and  where  Caesar  spends  a  few  days 
every  spring. 

We  are  given  to  understand  that  his  sufferings  and  mutilations 
have  not  impaired  his  faculties  of  mind  and  spirit.  Caesar  speaks  of 
him  as  the  only  man  alive  with  an  intelligence  as  important  and 
vigorous  as  his  own  and  Cleopatra's  and  Catullus';  and  of  these 
three  peers,  certainly  the  maimed  man  is  the  one  he  loves  best.  One- 
sided friendship  is  a  painful  and  almost  an  ugly  thing.  It  can't  be 
helped:  the  Dictator's  devotion  to  Catullus  is  rather  dutiful  and 
cold,  a  matter  of  almost  ritual  observance  of  the  sacredness  of  great 
verse,  the  impunity  of  the  poet.  There  is  an  excess  of  pride  in  it, 
even  on  Caesar's  part,  for  he  must  keep  reminding  himself  not  to 
return  Catullus'  hostility,  tit  for  tat. 

Cleopatra  delights  him:  a  creature  more  royal  than  he,  less 
civilized  than  he,  incorrigibly  foreign,  and  the  most  feminine  of 
women.  In  his  very  last  letter  to  Turrinus  he  speaks  of  her  enchant- 
ing animality  combined  with  rare  human  qualities.  Of  the  great 
gulf  between  the  two  realms,  he  says,  she  has  no  inkling;  and  often 
he  seems  to  think  of  her  as  on  the  far  side  of  that  gulf. 

Perhaps  in  his  youth  and  young  manhood  Turrinus  had  an 
animal  side;  all  butchered  away  now,  and  the  spirit  distilled  and 
strengthened.  Is  there  anything  more  essentially  human  than  self- 
sacrifice?  Also,  in  the  nature  of  his  martyrdom,  in  the  persistence 
of  his  cerebral  and  affective  capacities  in  a  body  half-dead,  there  is 
an  image  of  our  absolutely  human  dream  of  immortality,  which  in- 


2p5  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

deed  distinguishes  us  from  the  other  mammals  in  so  far  as  we  are 
able  to  believe  in  it. 

Philosophizing  at  midnight,  in  the  very  first  of  the  journal-letters, 
Caesar  is  reminded  how  he  and  Turrinus  used  to  theorize  and  argue 
when  they  were  teen-agers,  and  quotes  Plato's  saying  that  new- 
bearded  boys  are  the  best  philosophers  in  the  world.  And  he,  Caesar, 
the  weary  and  doomed  principal  chief  of  state  of  the  known  world 
at  that  time,  writing  to  the  maimed  recluse,  feels  like  a  boy  again. 

In  the  philosophical  way  surely  Turrinus  set  Caesar  a  good  ex- 
ample, as  to  fidelity  and  fortitude  and  submissiveness  to  fate.  As 
the  ides  approached,  it  was  a  lesson  very  applicable  to  his  different 
ordeal  and  end.  If  he  felt  tempted  to  dicker  with  his  murderers 
gradually  grouping  around  him,  the  thought  of  the  atrocity  of  the 
Belgians  must  have  shamed  him.  His  friend  having  endured  so 
much  for  his  sake,  could  he  now  jib  at  mere  assassination? 

Very  great  men  as  a  rule  seem  incapable  of  any  very  satisfactory 
self-love.  They  tire  themselves  out  incessantly,  and  a  great  part  of 
their  work  is  inward,  another  part  is  self-expression  and  acting  out 
the  role  of  self.  Naturally  they  weary  of  themselves  to  the  point  of 
surfeit,  of  dangerous  revulsion.  The  mind  of  the  ideal  friend  pro- 
vides a  holiday  from  their  drudgery,  a  shield  against  their  self- 
criticism  and  self-bedevilment,  a  hidden  pool  in  which  to  wash 
away  whatever  has  put  them  to  shame,  a  cool  pillow  for  the  hot 
cheek. 

Is  this  a  poor  concept  of  friendship?  Indeed  I  have  stated  it 
gloomily,  in  terms  of  the  extraordinary  understanding  between  the 
great  statesman  and  that  most  miserable  casualty  of  the  most  im- 
portant of  his  wars;  and  certainly  it  is  inequitable  in  a  way.  All  the 
sacrificing  in  it  is  on  Turrinus'  part.  There  appears  never  to  have 
been  any  question  of  Caesar's  really  devoting  himself  to  his  friend, 
except  in  thought  and  correspondence,  or  of  his  spending  much 
time  in  Capri,  or  ever  letting  his  worldly  power  and  pleasure  go. 

It  corresponds  to  a  perhaps  old-fashioned  concept  of  the  relations 
between  men  and  women  also,  even  marital  relations,  when  the 
man's  position  or  function  or  vocation  or  services  to  general  hu- 
manity have  seemed  worth  while  to  the  woman  concerned.  Once  in 


Images  of  Truth  •  296 

a  while,  for  the  sake  of  some  female  genius,  a  man  has  assumed  the 
role  of  helpmate.  I  have  in  mind,  for  example,  a  widow  in  Germany 
and  a  widower  in  France,  whom  I  need  not  designate  by  name  to 
any  reader  of  this  volume,  to  whom  everyone  in  the  world  who  loves 
literature  must  be  thankful.  It  is  safe  to  say  that  they  have  never 
regretted  their  overshadowed  way  of  life. 

The  oddest  and  most  meaningful  detail  of  the  character  of 
Caesar's  friend  as  conceived  and  narrated  by  Wilder  is  his  appar- 
ently not  having  any  particular  talent.  Presumably  when  he  had 
his  health  he  was  a  political  man,  a  civil  servant,  a  soldier;  some- 
thing of  that  sort  he  would  have  had  to  be,  or  make  a  pretense  of 
being,  to  keep  close  to  his  dear  one.  In  any  passage  of  narration 
having  to  do  with  someone's  ability  or  lack  of  ability,  ambition  or 
lack  of  ambition,  if  one  is  not  told  what  his  exact  status  or  under- 
taking or  employment  is  or  has  been,  I  think  one  may  detect  a 
reference  to  the  literary  life.  For  writing  is  written  by  writers,  and 
their  creative  temperament  rushes  into  any  little  void  in  their  work. 
And  if  you  consider  Turrinus  in  this  light,  you  will  see  that  he  is 
the  very  type  and  ideal  and  exemplar  of  the  man  who  happens  not 
to  possess,  or  who  happens  to  have  lost,  the  expressive  gift  and 
technical  facility  to  do  important  creative  work,  but  who  greatly  in- 
spires and  allures  and  challenges  and  assists  others  to  do  it. 

Paul  Valery,  the  most  penetrating  aphorist  of  the  century,  said, 
"Talent  without  genius  is  nothing  much.  Genius  without  talent  is 
nothing  at  all."  It  is  not  easy  to  differentiate  between  those  two 
big  words.  Genius  in  the  abstract,  genius  by  itself,  as  Valery  refers 
to  it,  is  the  more  obscure  and  dubious  condition;  it  may  be  some- 
what morbid.  But  obviously  the  man  who  has  it,  though  he  may  be 
inarticulate,  unskilled,  perhaps  sensually  cold,  or  physically  feeble 
— or  in  the  case  of  Caesar's  friend  Turrinus  and  of  Maugham  and 
Wilder's  friend  Sheldon,  prostrate  with  injury  and  illness — can  give 
or  lend  to  the  man  of  mere  talent,  even  great  talent,  something  that 
is  essential  to  a  great  lifework:  vision!  incentive!  spark!  drive! 

Indeed,  blind  and  disfigured  and  broken  and  vicarious  Turrinus 
is  nothing,  in  his  own  right.  But  Wilder  suggests  that,  without  him, 


2p7  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

Caesar's  intellect  and  skill  and  energy  and  physical  and  mental 
health  might  have  gone  for  naught.  The  ideas  that  preoccupy  them 
mutually  must  be  mainly  Caesar's  ideas;  all  we  know  of  them  is 
what  Caesar  expresses;  but  save  for  Turrinus'  ardent  interest  and 
valuation,  they  might  not  seem  to  the  Dictator  worth  expressing. 
Despite  blindness  and  distance  and  detachment,  or  because  of  these 
disadvantages,  Turrinus'  watchfulness  from  afar,  his  vicariousness, 
his  secondhand  participation  in  Caesar's  daily  life  and  innermost 
preoccupations  and  historic  destiny,  are  the  mirror  before  which 
the  easy  journalistic  writer,  the  busy  man  of  the  world,  the  respon- 
sible and  insecure  chief  of  state,  chiefly  contemplates  himself,  judges 
what  he  has  done,  and  decides  what  to  do  next.  Caesar  rescued  him 
just  when  the  Belgians  had  cropped  his  ears  and  were  about  to 
pierce  his  eardrums;  and  now  he  is  the  listener  par  excellence,  to 
whom  the  lonely  worldling  confides  his  innermost  processes  of 
thought  and  sentiment,  even  his  disbeliefs,  and  his  weariness  unto 
death,  his  readiness  to  die,  and  his  dread  of  dying. 

I  have  known  one  such  man  well,  for  half  a  lifetime;  and  perhaps 
this  accounts  for  a  certain  irony,  almost  bitterness,  about  not  having 
made  friends  with  the  author  of  Romance  and  Salvation  Nell  and 
of  the  Hans  Christian  Andersen  play  that  failed. 


Note  that  Wilder's  handling  of  these  two  character  creations,  Catul- 
lus (de  Bosis)  and  Turrinus  (Sheldon),  is  more  closely  comparable 
to  what  is  called  mythopoeism,  the  hero-making  and  saint-making 
and  indeed  god-making  process,  than  it  is  to  the  usual  artistry  of 
the  novel  or  the  deductive  and  reconstructive  techniques  of  his- 
torial  scholarship. 

In  my  resume  of  the  life  and  self-sacrifice  of  Lauro  de  Bosis  and 
my  slight  reminiscence  of  lunching  with  Edward  Sheldon  I  have 
emphasized  everything  that  (I  thought)  might  lend  itself  to  ficti- 
tious re-creation  in  the  ordinary  way;  in  reconsidering  Wilder's 
Catullus  and  Turrinus  I  have  stretched  every  point  that  might  be 


Images  of  Truth  •  298 

taken  to  indicate  a  biographical  or  autobiographical  impulse.  But 
obviously  there  is  a  great  gap  or  gulf  between  the  two  men,  as  I 
understand  them,  and  Wilder's  two  heroic  figures.  Likewise  there  is 
an  essential  difference  between  the  aesthetic  of  the  nineteenth-cen- 
tury novel  and  its  derivatives  in  our  present  literature,  and  Wilder's 
more  poetical  and  dramatic  purpose.  In  a  nutshell:  he  isn't  a  novel- 
ist in  the  ordinary  way;  he  has  scarcely  tried  to  be  one;  even  with 
an  effort,  he  might  not  have  been  an  especially  good  one. 

Nevertheless,  for  a  good  while  after  the  publication  of  The  Ides 
of  March  I  kept  on  wondering  and  worrying  about  his  novel  writ- 
ing; with  a  kind  of  phantom  creativity,  loosely  imagining  what  he 
might  do,  tyrannously  deciding  what  he  ought  to  be  doing. 

What  hurry  was  there?  None,  except  that  the  minutes  and  the 
hours  and  the  years  of  Wilder's  life,  likewise  the  life  expectancy  of 
his  eager  readers,  were  passing.  As  the  Stage  Manager  in  his  early 
one-act  play,  Pullman  Car  Hiawatha,  oracularly  remarks:  the  min- 
utes are  gossips,  the  hours  are  philosophers,  all  except  noon  and 
twelve  midnight,  which,  like  the  years,  are  theologians.  Gossip 
about  creative  matters  always  worsens  them  a  little.  Philosophy 
having  to  do  with  the  arts  is  either  an  oversimplification  or  a  compli- 
cation. Every  sort  of  teleological  concept,  even  metaphor  along 
that  line,  in  literary  criticism  as  in  other  connections,  bring*  on 
hastiness  and  tyrannousness. 

What  more  has  he  to  tell,  I  would  ask  myself,  in  conjecture  and 
daydream,  with  this  or  that  familiar  volume  by  him  in  hand;  what 
else  does  he  think?  O  unmapped  buried  treasure,  oracle  tongue-tied! 
O  unheard  notes  of  the  language,  grammar  without  effort,  syntax 
without  a  patch  or  a  seam!  Thoughts  about  him,  drifting  back  and 
forth — gratitude  and  frustration,  selfishness  and  hope — made  a  kind 
of  suspense  in  the  mid-century  literary  life,  pleasant  in  a  way. 

Indeed,  in  the  case  of  a  man  like  that — with  energy  to  burn; 
with  a  mind  of  uncanny  liveliness,  an  intellect  both  playful  and 
helpful,  and  of  course,  as  a  man  of  the  world  in  his  fifties,  any 
amount  of  pent-up  experience,  and  a  crystal-clear  view  of  the  facts 
of  life  in  the  Western  world;  with  a  better  education  than  any  of  the 
rest  of  us,  and  a  real  command  of  the  language,  perfect  English 


2^p  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

that  is  at  the  same  time  lifelike  American,  and  a  natural  popular 
touch — is  there  any  sort  of  literary  work  that  one  could  not  plaus- 
ibly have  expected  him  to  be  able  to  produce,  if  he  but  chose  to  do 
so?  Three  or  four  times,  in  The  Cabala  and  Heaven's  My  Destina- 
tion and  The  Ides  of  March,  has  he  not  opened  doors  into  the  fu- 
ture of  fiction,  then  chosen  not  to  go  on  through  them?  What  held 
his  foot  back  on  those  thresholds? 

I  was  not  alone  in  this  vicariousness  about  him.  There  were  oc- 
casional expressions  of  it  in  the  literary  supplements,  hints  of  it 
in  schoolbooks  having  to  do  with  the  appreciation  of  contemporary 
reading  matter,  harangues  about  it  in  the  midst  of  intellectuals' 
convivialities.  There  have  been,  indeed,  a  number  of  deplorable 
developments  in  our  civilization  of  late,  in  education,  in  journalism, 
in  the  economics  of  publishing  and  the  theatre,  shadows  stealing 
across  the  cultural  scene;  and  some  people  talked  as  though,  by 
not  writing  more,  more  and  more,  more  of  same,  Wilder  personally 
was  casting  some  of  them.  It  may  well  have  appeared  to  him  also 
that  there  were  shadows  stealing  across  the  cultural  scene,  but 
toward  him,  not  from  him,  cast  by  his  well-wishers  and  his  critics. 
A  number  of  us  who  were  pretentious  for  him,  confusing  his  true 
potential  with  just  an  imaginary  cloud  of  maximum  collected  works, 
or  with  the  optimum  great  American  novel,  or  with  other  hypo- 
thetical literature  of  a  never-never  land,  indulged  in  a  very  dubious 
humility  about  our  own  work.  American  modesty  gives  one  an  ex- 
cuse for  American  lack  of  real  ambition,  and  hedonism  and  softness. 

Imaginative  readers  indulge  in  this  kind  of  bear-baiting  as  well  as 
fellow  writers.  So  many  of  us  in  this  country  at  present  have  a  latent 
creativity.  Furthermore,  in  our  love  of  life  and  prevailing  felicity, 
we  sincerely  feel  that  experiences  which  we  have  had  are  worth 
perpetuating;  why  should  not  the  actual  work  of  creation  be  done 
by  a  man  we  admire,  a  creative  expert?  Very  often,  when  you  re- 
proach a  writer  for  not  writing,  this  is  the  significance  of  it,  un- 
beknown to  you:  he  has  left  unwritten  something  that,  in  fact,  has 
never  entered  his  mind,  something  that  you  yourself  have  wanted 
or  half-wanted  to  write. 

It  is  a  bothering,  troubling  thing  for  a  man  of  talent  or  genius  to 


Images  of  Truth  •  300 

have  others'  imaginativeness  visited  upon  him  like  this,  delegated  to 
him.  If  he  is  a  responsive  and  outgoing  person,  it  may  prompt  him 
or  inspire  him  to  be  productive,  perhaps  to  overproduce.  If  he  is  not, 
it  will  make  a  melancholy  impression.  He  will  take  it  to  mean  that 
you  are  not  really  interested  in  what  he  has  to  tell  or  to  expound;  all 
you  want  of  him  is  to  be  a  mouthpiece.  In  any  case,  if  you  wish  him 
well,  bear  your  disappointment  patiently;  don't  scold. 

Adverse  criticism  as  to  sins  of  commission  will  not  trouble  the 
creative  man  so  much  as  to  have  his  sins  of  omission  roughly  com- 
mented on.  He  knows  that  his  wrongdoing,  that  is,  wrong- writing, 
will  not  be  held  against  him  long;  indeed  some  literary  vocations 
consist  of  a  lifelong  revision  and  correction  of  previously  expressed 
errors  and  evils.  His  bugaboo  is  impotence  as  a  writer.  Among  the 
causes  of  impotence,  in  literature  as  in  love  and  war  and  govern- 
ment, are  the  dread  of  it  and  the  rumor  of  it. 

One  ought  not  to  specify  too  much  about  the  creative  process.  For 
surely  it  is  a  question  of  processes  (plural):  a  good  many  separate 
little  faculties  and  indeed  peculiarities  in  simultaneous  operation, 
intertangled  and  arcane.  They  change  from  time  to  time  in  any 
given  working  life;  and  what  works  for  one  creative  man  or  woman 
will  fail  in  another's  case. 

Generally  speaking,  the  cycle  of  the  creator's  mind  in  which,  with 
some  regularity,  first  one  of  his  memories,  then  another,  metamor- 
phoses itself  into  something  tellable,  something  that  he  feels  like 
telling — in  which  experiences  of  his  own  are  transformed  in  such  a 
way  as  to  be  applicable  to  the  psychology  and  the  circumstances  and 
the  weal  and  woe  of  other  people — requires  a  rather  relaxed,  un- 
specific,  optimistic  atmosphere.  On  the  whole  it  is  best  not  to  ask  a 
sensitive  or  self-respecting  author  certain  questions,  i.e.,  why  have 
your  novels  not  been  forthcoming  as  expected,  as  promised,  as  an- 
nounced, and  why  couldn't  you  make  a  book  of  what  you  have  just 
been  telling  us?  Why  do  you  not  write  as  well  as  you  talk?  As  you 
certainly  need  a  Boswell,  can't  you  Boswellize  yourself?  In  general 
as  in  particular,  why  have  you  just  generally  failed  to  fulfill  your 
promise?  Whose  fault  was  it,  or  is  it?  What  has  gone  wrong? 

In  Wilder's  case,  as  we  now  know,  all  this  was  a  fantasy;  nothing 


30i  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

had  gone  wrong.  Only  his  interest  and  energy  had  turned  more  and 
more  in  the  direction  of  the  stage,  riskier  perhaps  but  (I  suppose) 
less  difficult,  and  in  any  event  (I  conclude)  better  suited  to  his  dis- 
position, his  ethics  and  aesthetics,  and  the  greater  part  of  the  the- 
matic material  of  which  his  mind  is  possessed,  the  subject  matter 
that  he  has  to  work  with. 

In  the  Paris  Review  interview  he  said,  "I  regard  the  theatre  as  the 
greatest  of  all  art  forms,  the  most  immediate  way  in  which  a  human 
being  can  share  with  another  the  sense  of  what  it  is  to  be  a  human 
being."  It  would  be  hard  to  declare  oneself  more  warmly  and  plainly 
than  that. 

Only  recently  he  told  an  interviewer,  "Our  plays  get  happier  the 
older  we  grow.  That  has  been  my  experience." 

The  theatre  probably  is  the  art  form  best  suited  to  the  summing 
up  of  experience,  the  synthesis  of  character,  the  retelling  of  old 
myths,  and  the  mythopoetizing  of  present  and  recent  happenings. 
The  novel  is  an  imitation  of  people  or  a  more  or  less  total  recall  of 
things  they  have  done  and  things  they  have  said.  The  theatre  is  most 
apt  to  express  the  world  memory  and  to  reiterate  and  re-use  inher- 
ited wisdom.  By  means  of  it,  eternal  metaphor  and  polymorphous 
love  come  winding  down  out  of  the  distant  past  and  ever  onward 
into  everyone's  living  mind,  as  it  were  the  sacred  river  in  Kubla 
Khan.  The  novel  is  the  form  for  politics  and  finance  and  sex  life 
and  regional  differences  and  class  consciousness  and  race  prejudice, 
and  other  such  modes  and  issues  and  emergencies  and  revolutions  of 
the  present  day  (to  be  outmoded  tomorrow,  and  to  become  entranc- 
ingly  romantic  day  after  tomorrow).  The  theatre  is  able  to  dispense 
with  all  that,  or  to  make  of  it  a  game,  or  a  high  abstraction  or  a 
sorrowful  rite.  Nowadays  it  has  emancipated  itself  from  investiture, 
from  scenery  and  setting  and  lighting,  which  it  cannot  afford  in 
any  case.  Whereas  the  novel  virtually  consists  of  hallucinating  fur- 
nishings and  fashions  and  properties  and  atmospheres  (literal  and 
figurative).  Its  realm  is  immediacy.  The  theatre  is,  relatively  speak- 
ing, timeless. 

The  wonder  is  that  anyone  who  knew  Wilder  (even  I)  should 
ever  have  expected  him  to  make  novel  writing  his  exclusive  or  even 


Images  of  Truth  •  302 

his  principal  lifework.  From  the  start,  various  profundities  and 
intricacies  of  his  way  of  writing,  corresponding  surely  to  fine  strands 
and  textures  of  his  inner  being,  predestined  him  to  dramaturgy. 


If  I  remember  rightly,  when  we  first  met  in  Villefranche  I  thought 
of  Wilder  as  only  a  novelist;  I  was  unaware  of  his  having  written  and 
published  a  number  of  one-act  plays;  certainly  I  did  not  foresee  his 
present  eminence  in  the  theatre.  It  is  well  known  that  a  man's  begin- 
ning is  often  prophetic  of  his  end.  I  have  never  been  much  of  a 
prophet,  least  of  all  in  matters  theatrical. 

A  friend  of  mine  in  those  days  was  an  actress  who,  having  made  a 
reputation  in  the  art  theatres  in  Greenwich  Village,  had  bad  luck, 
got  bypassed,  and  fell  ill;  and  she  not  only  needed  work  but  knew 
and  loved  dramatic  literature  and  especially  admired  Wilder.  In  the 
goodness  of  his  heart,  and  to  please  me,  he  got  her  a  walk-on  part 
in  his  play:  one  of  the  townswomen  at  the  wedding  in  the  second  act 
and  seated  ghostly  in  the  cemetery  in  the  third  act. 

On  the  opening  night  I  went  backstage  to  see  her.  The  stage  door 
opened  into  a  sort  of  alleyway,  and  as  I  came  back  out  of  it,  whom 
did  I  encounter  but  the  playwright,  who  had  been  too  nervous  to  sit 
it  out  inside  the  theatre.  He  was  wearing  an  old  trench  coat,  and 
looked  as  though  he  had  walked  for  miles  in  haste.  As  I  learned 
afterward,  the  reaction  of  the  press  and  the  public  in  Boston  had 
been  disappointing.  In  fact,  they  had  had  to  reduce  the  intended 
run  of  a  fortnight  to  just  one  week. 

Rapid-fire,  the  uneasy  playwright  questioned  me  about  the  per- 
formance I  had  just  seen.  "How  did  it  go?  Was  it  worth  doing?  You 
didn't  feel,  I  hope,  that  I  had  disgraced  myself?  Did  it  make  you 
laugh?  Did  you  feel  that  the  emotions  in  it  were  too  outspoken  and 
common?" 

Characteristically,  his  nervousness  expressed  itself  in  a  series  of 
pseudo-questions,  with  exclamation  points  rather  than  question 
marks.  We  were  somewhat  blocking  the  alley,  as  one  or  two  parties 
of  friends  of  the  cast  were  proceeding  to  the  stage  door.  Drawing 


305  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

back  out  of  their  way,  I  took  his  arm  and  noticed  that  he  was  trem- 
bling slightly,  all  the  way  up  from  his  knees. 

Of  course  I  intensely  appreciated  the  originality  and  the  courage 
and  the  subtlety  and  the  importance  of  what  he  had  done,  and  told 
him  so.  The  wedding  scene,  when  the  bride  and  groom  suddenly 
find  themselves  not  mature  enough  to  marry  and  bolt  downstage  on 
either  side  and,  close  to  the  footlights,  cling  to  their  respective 
parents  in  childish  changeableness  and  dismay,  had  brought  tears  to 
my  eyes. 

"Fine!  fine!"  Wilder  exclaimed,  "if  you  don't  mind  shedding  tears. 
Most  men  do  mind,  nowadays,  I'm  afraid.  Even  some  women 
mind!" 

I  also  ventured  to  praise  the  scene  in  the  cemetery,  perhaps  sug- 
gested by  a  famous  last  act  by  Shaw,  who  conceived  of  immortality  as 
a  rebuttal,  a  chance  to  argue  some  more,  and  to  have  the  last  word, 
the  word  after  the  last.  Wilder's  wraiths  seated  around  in  their 
kitchen  chairs  with  the  imaginary  rain  falling  during  the  burial  of 
the  daughter-in-law  of  one  of  them,  are  still  loving  and  anxious, 
but  they  are  peaceable.  They  are  subject  to  vestiges  of  earthly  suffer- 
ing, but  with  no  fuss,  no  false  rhetoric.  It  is  a  glorious  and  tender 
image  of  the  afterlife;  a  matter  of  memory  diminishing  into  indiffer- 
ence, passing  into  insensibility. 

I  was  all  enthusiasm,  but  I  felt — and  told  my  tired,  impatient 
friend  there  all  atremble  inside  his  trench  coat,  in  that  Broadway 
sidestreet  which  made  me  think  of  the  corridors  in  slaughter- 
houses along  which  the  livestock  are  driven  to  their  appointed 
demise,  and  of  the  little  runways  in  circuses  between  the  wild  ani- 
mals' cages  and  the  ring — that  probably  it  would  not  be  a  great 
success  at  the  box  office.  Too  delicate,  I  said,  too  philosophical,  too 
sad. 

The  instant  I  said  it  I  was  sorry,  realizing  how  passionately  he 
desired  to  have  it  succeed.  But  the  next  instant  I  felt  excused  or 
consoled  by  his  obviously  not  having  believed  one  word  that  I  had 
said. 

I  often  make  a  fool  of  myself,  with  a  mind  too  energetic  for  its 
own  good — little  flash  floods,  little  brush  fires,  and  what  you  might 


Images  of  Truth  •  304 

call  quickness  on  the  trigger — but  perhaps  this  was  my  masterpiece. 
As  you  know,  Our  Town  has  been  one  of  the  most  successful  plays 
of  the  day  and  age,  everywhere  in  the  world  except  in  France  and 
England;  even  in  the  Balkans;  even  on  television. 

My  thought  was  that,  when  people  are  to  be  reconciled  to  fate 
and  death — which  in  oversimplified  terms  is  the  theme  of  Our  Town 
— they  expect  a  somewhat  fuller  orchestra;  at  least  a  pipe  organ. 
What  Wilder  concludes  this  play  with  is  chamber  music,  as  in  one 
of  Beethoven's  late  slow  movements,  opus  130  (I  think  it  is):  the 
string  quartet  playing  softly,  softly,  the  pianissimo  and  the  retar- 
dando  gradually  building  up  tension,  gradually  reducing  partici- 
pation, until  one  begins  to  feel  hard  of  hearing;  whereupon 
suddenly  there  is  nothing  more  to  hear.  Evidently  this  did  not  im- 
press the  ordinary  theatregoer  as  an  anticlimax;  how  come? 

I  have  often  wondered  whether  Edgar  Lee  Masters's  Spoon  River 
Anthology  did  not  also  inspire  this  last  act  to  some  extent: 

Where  are  Ella,  Kate,  Mag,  Lizzie  and  Edith, 
The  tender  heart,  the  simple  soul,  the  loud,  the 

proud,  the  happy  one? — 
All,  all,  are  sleeping  on  the  hill.* 

But  I  have  been  shy  about  putting  this  question  to  Wilder  directly. 
People  have  pestered  him  so  wearisomely  about  his  bookish  inspira- 
tions, borrowings  and  mirrorings  and  echoings,  though  all  that  was 
standard  procedure  in  the  literature  of  the  past,  especially  dramatic 
literature,  and  though  the  neoclassicist  poets  and  musicians  of  our 
time,  notably  Eliot  and  Stravinsky,  have  accustomed  us  to  some- 
thing of  the  sort. 

It  is  an  interesting  issue  in  criticism,  and  one  of  the  riddles  of  the 
creative  process.  Valery  stated  it  unforgettably,  somewhat  jokingly: 
"Nothing  is  more  original,  nothing  truer  to  oneself,  than  to  feed 
upon  others'  minds.  Only  be  sure  that  you  digest  them.  The  lion 
consists  of  assimilated  sheep." 

Thomas  Mann,  who  was  also  a  great  borrower  (but  not  so  thor- 

*  From  "The  Hill"  in  Spoon  River  Anthology  by  Edgar  Lee  Masters  (Mac- 
millan,  1914,  1915,  1942). 


305  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

ough  a  digester),  in  his  account  of  the  writing  of  Dr.  Faustus,  spoke 
of  his  own  "mental  alacrity  in  appropriating  what  I  felt  to  be  my 
own."  Over  the  page  he  states  categorically:  "An  idea  as  such  will 
never  possess  much  personal  and  proprietary  value  in  the  eyes  of 
an  artist."  I  agree.  If  a  thing  clearly  appertains  to  his  subject,  and 
will  function  within  the  framework  that  he  has  created,  he  may 
think  of  it  as  his.  I  approve. 


Sometimes  in  recent  years  Wilder  has  acted  in  his  own  plays  in 
summer  theatres.  I  wish  he  would  do  so  again.  In  my  theatregoing 
experience,  not  assiduous  but  lifelong  and  international,  I  have 
seen  only  about  twenty  ideal  performances  of  leading  roles  in  plays 
of  great  importance:  Otis  Skinner's  Falstaff  in  The  Merry  Wives, 
Feraudy  as  Moliere's  miser,  Werner  Krauss's  Lear,  Chaliapin's 
Boris,  Olivier's  Coriolanus,  Laurette  Taylor  in  The  Glass  Menag- 
erie, Uta  Hagen  in  The  Cocktail  Party — I  name  the  first  that  come 
to  mind — and  whenever  I  recall  them  or  list  them,  I  include  Wild- 
er's  Mr.  Antrobus  in  The  Skin  of  Our  Teeth. 

That  symbolic  comedy  was  his  contribution  to  our  morale  and 
our  vision  of  the  future  during  World  War  II.  If  I  remember  rightly 
he  did  not  undertake  the  role  himself  until  four  or  five  years 
later.  Of  course  world  history  had  scarcely  gone  beyond  it  or  super- 
seded it;  still  has  not.  He  played  it  with  no  effect  of  author's  afflatus; 
on  the  other  hand,  with  none  of  the  vanity  or  the  cajolery  of  the 
amateur  actor.  Even  in  passages  of  serious  reference  to  the  destruc- 
tiveness  then  going  forward  in  the  world  and  to  other  ever-possible 
future  holocausts,  he  was  able  to  characterize  his  Antrobus  with 
humor,  temperamentally:  a  familiar  type  of  tired  but  sturdy,  more 
or  less  indomitable  man  in  a  raincoat  or  a  trench  coat,  universal 
male  raiment  of  our  particular  time  of  troubles.  As  he  came  on  stage 
he  immediately  established  the  reality  of  the  scene  by  glancing  all 
around  it,  taking  possession  of  it,  flashing  his  eyes;  then  turned  and 
faced  the  audience  and  immediately  began  his  portrayal  of  himself, 


Images  of  Truth  •  306 

gesturing  strongly,  as  though  wielding  a  brush,  painting  great 
everyman's  portrait  on  the  canvas  of  air  between  him  and  the 
audience,  up  over  our  heads. 

It  occurs  to  me  that  it  was  the  kind  of  playing  that  Ruth  Draper 
might  have  done  if  she  could  ever  have  submitted  her  uncanny  solo 
power  to  the  restraints  of  ordinary  theatre,  in  full-length  three- 
dimensional  drama  not  written  by  herself.  It  was  rather  vehement 
and  exalted,  and  yet  it  had  an  ordinary  aspect.  It  was  curiously 
self-assured,  with  a  soft  and  rapturous  tone  in  certain  passages;  and 
the  mimicry  in  it  was  broader  and  simpler  than  that  of  the  present- 
day  psychological  school  of  acting.  Never  for  a  moment  did  he 
seem  self-concerned,  although  one  couldn't  help  thinking  of  his 
Antrobus  as  autobiographical. 

It  made  the  oddest  evening's  entertainment.  Most  plays  in  which 
the  human  race  is  personified  in  any  way  are  weak  in  performance, 
though  with  virtuoso  techniques  and  the  best  will  in  the  world. 
Everyman  as  a  rule  turns  out  to  be  just  anyone,  and  the  audience 
couldn't  care  less.  Wilder  prevented  this  by  the  intensities  that  I 
have  just  mentioned,  by  humorous  simplifications  of  his  movements 
and  facial  expressions,  and  by  his  absorption  and  self-absorption, 
which  is  the  opposite  of  self-concern.  At  every  point  he  was  able  to 
infuse  the  simple  text  with  strange  temperament;  it  was  his  own 
temperament. 

In  the  letter  to  the  sixteen-year-old  schoolboy  about  how  to  play 
Antrobus,  he  advised  specifically:  "Pick  out  a  few  places  where  you'll 
be  real  loud."  That  is  his  way,  keeping  all  the  intervening  places 
clearly  in  mind  the  while,  with  constant  earnestness. 

Throughout  his  performance  he  kept  contrasting  the  explicit 
and  the  implicit,  as  though  for  every  scene,  every  speech,  he  had 
decided  in  advance  what  part  of  the  meaning  and  the  emotion 
he  could  best  express,  and  let  everything  inexpressible  in  it  go.  And 
one  felt  that  it  was  just  this  simple  aspect  of  the  play  that  he  had  re- 
hearsed, practiced,  perfected,  so  that  he  could  have  rendered  it  in 
his  sleep,  if  asked  to.  But  then,  wide  awake,  when  the  curtain  went 
up,  he  apparently  concentrated  all  of  his  intelligence  and  spirit  on 
those  things  that  he  could  not  exactly  express.  In  timbres  and  in- 


3oj  •  Talks  with  Thornton  Wilder 

flections  one  heard  significances  that  he  was  reading  between  the 
lines.  Thus  something  in  the  play  seemed  to  be  striving  to  express 
itself,  through  him.  I  do  not  suppose  that  any  such  impressions  as 
these  passed  through  the  mind  of  his  audience  at  the  time — it  has 
taken  me  a  long  while  to  figure  them  out,  perhaps  with  some  preci- 
osity— but  we  felt  the  vital  effect;  an  overflow,  rather  than  an  un- 
dertone or  an  undercurrent. 

Clear  as  a  bell,  but  with  a  haunted  clarity;  plain  as  day,  but  cast- 
ing a  shadow!  In  that  emphatic  voice,  with  its  little  barking  tones 
now  and  then,  earnestly  projecting  the  lines,  some  humorous,  some 
sententious,  some  oracular,  there  was  an  intensely  urgent  Utopian 
spirit,  almost  a  wild  spirit,  expressive  of  that  desirousness  which 
above  all  else  characterizes  the  human  race,  which  stops  at  nothing 
and  which  never  ends;  that  anarchy  inherent  in  our  nature  which 
necessitates  our  will  power;  that  strange  habit  of  forgiving  or  at 
least  forgetting,  which  causes  us  to  pull  our  punches  to  some  extent 
every  blessed  time,  for  better  or  worse,  preventing  the  entire  victory 
of  any  one  aspect  of  our  humanity  over  any  other  aspect,  even  of 
good  over  evil,  or  evil  over  good. 

As  you  may  gather,  I  am  a  believer  in  style.  Often,  I  think,  a 
writer's  handling  of  language,  vocabulary  and  diction  and  syntax, 
irony  and  imitation  and  colloquialism  and  rhetorical  effects  and 
figures  of  speech,  and  some  degree  of  courteousness  and  ceremony 
in  his  writing  according  to  his  love  of  literature,  express  his  knowl- 
edge of  the  world  and  his  feeling  about  his  life  and  his  responsive- 
ness to  the  environing  world  more  originally  and  fundamentally 
than  what  he  thinks  of  as  his  subject  matter,  his  learnedness  or 
cogitation  or  experience,  as  the  case  may  be. 

You  see,  the  manner  of  his  acting  bears  a  relation  to  the  pre- 
dominant, prevailing  quality  of  his  prose  style,  in  dramatic  prose 
and  narrative  prose  alike,  polished  and  purposeful  but  also  some- 
what plain  and  modest;  not  presuming  to  tell  everything  or  to 
give  proof  of  anything  incontrovertibly;  not  particularly  aiming  at 
anything  unknowable  or  occult,  but  never  disavowing  or  turning 
away  from  things  irrepressible  and  unruly,  things  chaotic,  even 
things  inchoate. 


Images  of  Truth  •  308 

He  is  a  man  of  singular  temperament,  often  delighting  in  para- 
dox, willing  and  able  to  challenge  us  and  disturb  us.  But  he  likes 
things  to  seem  traditional,  that  is,  to  be  stated  within  the  traditional 
frame  of  reference,  though  they  may  be  somewhat  new  or  idiosyn- 
cratic. He  likes  every  present  expression  to  hark  back  to  the  entirety 
of  beloved  accumulated  literature,  and  constantly  shows  or  suggests 
that  every  current  thought  is  based  on  someone  else's  thinking,  every 
day  of  our  lives  is  rooted  in  olden  time. 

The  moderation  and  correctness  of  Wilder's  way  of  writing  are 
so  reposeful  that  at  times  one  can  imagine  them  lulling  us  too  much, 
but  they  never  do.  His  definiteness  and  dispatch  and  his  natural 
popular  touch,  and  the  bravery  of  his  sudden  little  assertions  every 
so  often — as  though  for  percussiveness,  for  punctuation — animate 
his  every  page  and  every  scene.  Verily,  as  he  himself  tells  us,  what 
he  offers  a  good  deal  of  the  time  is  only  fantasy  and  spirituality,  il- 
lusion and  hypnosophy.  But  we  dance  in  his  dream,  throughout;  it 
is  active  and  bright.  It  is  an  art  on  the  side  of  Apollo,  though  ever 
respectful  of  Dionysus. 


Acknowledgments 


Of  the  six  famous  writers  whom  I  have  chiefly  ventured  to  portray  and 
praise  in  this  volume,  the  first  is  a  lifelong  intimate  friend;  the  second  is 
a  close  friend  of  many  years'  standing;  with  the  sixth  also  I  have  enjoyed 
lifelong  friendship,  though  not  particular  intimacy;  and  with  the  other 
three  I  have  had  the  honor  of  acquaintance  based  on  my  admiring  them 
greatly  and  marked  by  kind  attentiveness  on  their  parts.  I  have  tried  to 
make  these  differing  degrees  of  personal  connection  clear  in  my  successive 
chapters,  without  either  boasting  of  my  good  fortune  or  shrinking  from 
the  friendly  responsibility.  It  has  been  a  labor  of  love,  or  more  specifically, 
of  enjoyment  and  thanksgiving. 

Doing  unto  others  as  I  should  like  to  be  done  unto,  I  did  not  ask  any 
of  them  to  read  and  approve  my  text.  If  this  or  that  in  it  were  to  irk 
them,  I  thought,  it  might  seem  beneath  their  dignity  to  protest.  On  the 
other  hand,  their  not  protesting  might  be  construed  as  approbation,  or  as 
a  commitment  not  to  protest  at  a  later  date;  too  much  to  ask.  Therefore  I 
decided  to  publish  and  let  myself  be  damned.  In  due  course  they  can 
speak  their  minds  against  me,  or  direct  their  friends  to  do  so. 

For  almost  two  decades  Mrs.  W.  Murray  Crane  has  arranged  for  me  to 
speak  to  the  well-read  ladies  of  the  Monday  Class,  four  or  five  times  a 
year;  and  Professor  Henry  Leffert  of  City  College  has  invited  me  annually 
to  address  his  students  of  contemporary  literature.  Those  happy  occasions 
were  greatly  instrumental  in  interesting  me  in  critical  writing;  and  I  thank 
the  two  sponsors. 

It  has  impressed  and  pleased  me  to  recall  the  particular  starting  points 
and  first  uses  of  important  portions  of  this  book,  and  a  brief  account 
of  this  may  seem  worth  while  to  certain  of  my  readers.  I  give  it  not  in 
self-importance  or  in  bibliographical  zeal,  but  as  a  bird's-eye  view — or 
rather,  a  series  of  bird's-eye  glimpses — of  the  somewhat  internationalized 
American  literary  life  of  the  mid-twentieth  century. — 

A  first  version  of  Chapter  One  was  commissioned  by  Mrs.  Crane  at  Mr. 
Maugham's  suggestion,  and  read  aloud  to  guests  of  hers  one  evening  in 
the  spring  of  1942.  I  note  that,  for  better  or  worse,  my  convictions  about 
fiction  writing  have  changed  very  little  in  the  intervening  years. 

3°9 


Acknowledgments  •  310 

The  passages  in  Chapter  Two  having  to  do  with  Miss  Porter's  volume 
of  three  nouvelles,  Pale  Horse,  Pale  Rider,  were  written  to  Robert  Penn 
Warren's  order  when  he  was  editing  the  Southern  Review,  and  published 
in  that  excellent  magazine  in  the  summer  of  1939.  About  half  of  this 
chapter  appeared  in  the  Book-of-the-Month  Club  News  and  the  Atlantic 
Monthly  in  March  and  April,  1962. 

In  1947  Mr.  Maugham  suggested  to  Doubleday  and  Co.  that  I  be  en- 
gaged to  edit  and  introduce  an  omnibus  volume  of  his  work  entitled  The 
Maugham  Reader.  That  introduction  reappears  here  as  Chapter  Three, 
with  some  additions  and  revisions  according  to  the  further  passage  of  his 
lifetime  and  mine. 

Most  of  Chapter  Four  is  to  be  found  in  the  Dial  Press's  Short  Novels  of 
Colette  (1951).  This,  too,  I  have  brought  up  to  date.  At  that  time  Vogue 
asked  me  for  a  page  or  two  about  "Gigi,"  and  later  H.  D.  Vursell  of  the 
firm  of  Farrar,  Straus  and  Cudahy  commissioned  a  foreword  for  their  edi- 
tion of  Break  of  Day  (1961),  which  I  have  inserted  where  they  belong  in 
the  sequence  of  Colette's  life  and  work.  Chapter  Five  was  commissioned 
by  Town  and  Country  as  a  compliment  to  her  upon  her  eightieth  birth- 
day (January,  1953). 

When  Isak  Dinesen  first  came  to  this  country  in  1959,  Mrs.  Crane  pre- 
vailed upon  her  to  read  two  or  three  of  her  stories  one  evening,  or  to  be 
precise,  to  tell  two  or  three;  and  as  many  guests  knew  her  only  by  reputa- 
tion, I  introduced  her  at  some  length.  Jacques  Barzun  was  there,  and  he 
suggested  to  Russell  Lynes  that  I  be  asked  to  commit  my  remarks  to  writing 
for  Harper's  Magazine  (March,  i960).  Hence  Chapter  Six;  my  compliments 
to  them  both. 

Miss  Caroline  Newton,  who  presented  me  to  Thomas  Mann  when  he 
was  living  in  this  country  during  World  War  II,  years  later  arranged  for 
me  to  deliver  an  address  of  commemoration  at  Haverford  College,  October 
9,  1959.  This  led  to  further  study  of  Mann's  fiction  and  the  subsequent 
composition  of  Chapter  Seven.  Two  German-born  friends,  George  Albert  von 
Ihering  and  Mrs.  Hedwig  Leser,  also  encouraged  me  to  write  about  Mann, 
despite  my  limited  competence  in  German  literature;  and  the  latter  kindly 
reviewed  my  pages  and  made  certain  corrections. 

As  for  Chapter  Eight,  Miss  Isabel  Wilder,  friendly  to  me  always,  gladly 
and  authoritatively  answered  some  questions  about  the  circumstances  and 
the  chronology  of  her  brother's  life  and  lifework  but  she  is  not  to  be  held 
responsible  for  any  of  my  notions  and  judgments,  or  for  matters  of  fact 
that  I  neglected  to  submit  to  her. 


Autobiographical  Note 


I  was  born  in  April,  1901,  on  a  farm  in  Wisconsin,  near 
Milwaukee,  of  restless  and  long-lived  pioneer  stock.  Slightly 
but  inspiringly  educated  in  Wisconsin  public  schools  and 
at  the  University  of  Chicago  (no  degree) ,  I  afterward 
traveled  to  New  Mexico  and  England  and  Germany,  and 
expatriated  myself  for  a  decade  in  France.  Since  1936  I 
have  resided  in  rural  New  Jersey,  close  enough  to  the 
metropolis  to  be  counted  a  New  Yorker. 

By  temperament  a  talker  perhaps  more  than  a  writer,  I 
began  writing  almost  by  chance,  without  great  illusions  of 
ability,  but  I  was  lucky  from  the  start.  Others  have  believed 
in  me,  always  to  some  effect.  My  literature-loving  sister-in- 
law  especially  has  enabled  me  to  engage  in  the  literary  art 
as  a  vocation  (rather  than  as  a  profession  or  a  livelihood); 
to  express  myself  and  to  develop  my  convictions  quite  fear- 
lessly and  blithely,  and  to  take  all  the  time  for  each  volume 
that  it  seemed  to  require.  Alas,  not  everything  that  I  have 
written  has  been  excellent,  but  (I  gladly  point  out)  no 
two  of  my  books  have  been  alike.  If  I  live  as  long  as  my 
forefathers,  perhaps  I  shall  do  as  much  as  has  been  expected 
of  me. 

I  believe  that,  as  Francis  Bacon  stated,  a  man  is  a  debtor 
to  his  calling.  In  recent  years,  ardently  desiring  to  have 
illustrious,  unsuccessful  creative  men  and  women  pensioned 
off,  and  to  have  copyright  legislation  improved,  the  taxa- 
tion of  authors  alleviated,  and  literary  censorship  entirely 
abolished,  I  have  acted  with  some  public  spiritedness  on  the 
Council  of  the  Authors  Guild,  and  as  a  member  of  the  Na- 
tional Commission  for  unesco  (1948-50),  and  as  President 
of  the  National  Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters   (1958-61) . 


■ 


Date    Due 
Due  Returned  Due  Returned 


1 

r  —  -   "1 

M 

^ ,^ wm wm m ^ H^^— 

[10ft 


5W.  3 


a