<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h2>REMY DE GOURMONT</h2>
<h2 class="subh2">HIS IDEAS. THE COLOUR OF HIS MIND</h2>
<p class="quote center" align="center">"Je dis ce que je pense"—<span class="smcap">R. de G.</span></p>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>Those were days marked by a white stone
when arrived in the familiar yellow cover a
new book, with card enclosed from "Remy de
Gourmont, 71, rue des Saints-Pères, Paris."
Sometimes I received as many as two in a
year. But they always found me eager and
grateful, did those precious little volumes bearing
the imprint of the <i>Mercure de France</i>,
with whose history the name of De Gourmont
is so happily linked. And there were post-cards
too in his delicate handwriting on which were
traced sense and sentiment; yes, this man of
genius possessed sentiment, but abhorred sentimentality.
His personal charm transpired in
a friendly salutation hastily pencilled. He
played exquisitely upon his intellectual instrument,
and knew the value of time and space.
So his post-cards are souvenirs of his courtesy,
and it was through one, which unexpectedly
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
fell from the sky in 1897, I began my friendship
with this distinguished French critic. His
sudden death in 1915 at Paris (he was born
1858), caused by apoplexy, was the heroic ending
of a man of letters. Like Flaubert he was
stricken while at his desk. I can conceive no
more fitting end for a valiant soldier of literature.
He was a moral hero and the victim of
his prolonged technical heroism.</p>
<p>De Gourmont was incomparable. Thought,
not action, was his chosen sphere, but ranging
up and down the vague and vast territory of
ideas he encountered countless cerebral adventures;
the most dangerous of all. An aristocrat
born, he was, nevertheless, a convinced
democrat. The latch was always lifted on the
front door of his ivory tower. He did live in
a certain sense a cloistered existence, a Benedictine
of arts and letters; but he was not, as
has been said, a sour hermit nursing morose
fancies in solitude. De Gourmont, true pagan,
enjoyed the gifts the gods provide, and had,
despite the dualism of his nature, an epicurean
soul. But of a complexity. He never sympathised
with the disproportionate fuss raised by
the metaphysicians about Instinct and Intelligence,
yet his own magnificent cerebral apparatus
was a battle-field over which swept the
opposing hosts of Instinct and Intelligence, and
in a half-hundred volumes the history of this
conflict is faithfully set down. As personal as
Maurice Barrès, without his egoism, as subtle
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
as Anatole France, De Gourmont saw life
steadier and broader than either of these two
contemporaries. He was one who said "vast
things simply." He was the profoundest philosopher
of the three, and never, after his beginnings,
exhibited a trace of the dilettante.
Life soon became something more than a mere
spectacle for him. He was a meliorist in theory
and practice, though he asserted that Christianity,
an Oriental-born religion, has not become
spiritually acclimated among Occidental peoples.
But he missed its consoling function; religion,
the poetry of the poor, never had for him the
prime significance that it had for William
James; a legend, vague, vast, and delicious.</p>
<p>Old frontiers have disappeared in science and
art and literature. We have Maeterlinck, a
poet writing of bees, Poincaré, a mathematician
opening our eyes to the mystic gulfs of space;
solid matters resolved into mist, and the law
of gravitation questioned. The new horizons
beckon ardent youth bent on conquering the
secrets of life. And there are more false beacon-lights
than true. But if this is an age of specialists
a man occasionally emerges who contradicts
the formula. De Gourmont was at base
a poet; also a dramatist, novelist, raconteur,
man of science, critic, moralist of erudition, and,
lastly, a philosopher. Both formidable and bewildering
were his accomplishments. He is a
poet in his Hieroglyphes, Oraisons mauvaises,
Le Livre des Litanies, Les Saintes du Paradis,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
Simone, Divertissements—his last appearance
in singing robes (1914); he is a raconteur—and
such tales—in Histoires magiques, Prose
moroses, Le Pèlerin du silence, D'un Pays lointain,
Couleurs; a novelist in Merlette—his
first book—Sixtine, Le Fantôme, les Chevaux
de Diomède, Le Songe d'une Femme, Une Nuit
au Luxembourg, Un Cœur virginal; dramatist
in Théodat, Phénissa, Le vieux Roi, Lilith; as
master critic of the æsthetics of the French
language his supremacy is indisputable; it is
hardly necessary to refer here to Le Livre des
Masques, in two volumes, the five volumes of
Promenades littéraires, the three of Promenades
philosophiques; as moralist he has signed such
works as l'Idealisme, La Culture des Idées, Le
Chemin de Velours; historian and humanist,
he has given us Le Latin mystique; grammarian
and philologist, he displays his learning in Le
Problème du Style, and Esthétique de la Langue
française, and incidentally flays an unhappy
pedagogue who proposed to impart the secret
of style in twenty lessons. He edited many
classics of French literature.</p>
<p>His chief contribution to science, apart from
his botanical and entomological researches, is
Physique de l'Amour, in which he reveals himself
as a patient, thorough observer in an almost
new country. And what shall we say to
his incursions into the actual, into the field
of politics, sociology and hourly happenings
of Paris life; his Epilogues (three volumes),
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
Dialogues des Amateurs, the collected pages
from his monthly contributions to <i>Mercure
de France</i>? Nothing human was alien to him,
nor inhuman, for he rejected as quite meaningless
the latter vocable, as he rejected such clichés
as "organic and inorganic." Years before we
heard of a pluralistic universe De Gourmont
was a pragmatist, though an idealist in his
conception of the world as a personal picture.
Intensely interested in ideas, as he was in words,
he might have fulfilled Lord Acton's wish that
some one would write a History of Ideas. At
the time of his death the French thinker was
composing a work entitled La Physique des
Mœurs, in which he contemplated a demonstration
of his law of intellectual constancy.</p>
<p>A spiritual cosmopolitan, he was like most
Frenchmen an ardent patriot. The little
squabble in the early eighties over a skit of his,
Le Jou-jou—patriotisme (1883), cost him his
post at the National Library in Paris. As a
philosopher he deprecated war; as a man, though
too old to fight, he urged his countrymen to
victory, as may be noted in his last book, Pendant
l'Orage (1916). But the philosopher
persists in such a sorrowful sentence as: "In
the tragedy of man peace is but an entr'acte."
To show his mental balance at a time when
literary men, artists, and even philosophers,
indulged in unseemly abuse, we read in Jugements
his calm admission that the war has
not destroyed for him the intellectual values
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
of Goethe, Schopenhauer, or Nietzsche. He
owes much to their thought as they owed much
to French thought; Goethe has said as much;
and of Voltaire and Chamfort, Schopenhauer
was a disciple. Without being a practical musician,
De Gourmont was a lover of Beethoven
and Wagner. He paid his compliments to
Romain Rolland, whose style, both chalky
and mucilaginous, he dislikes in that overrated
and spun-out series Jean-Christophe. Another
little volume, La Belgique littéraire, was published
in 1915, which, while it contains nothing
particularly new about Georges Rodenbach,
Emile Verhaeren, Van Lerberghe, Camille
Lemonnier, and Maurice Maeterlinck, is excellent
reading. The French critic was also
editor of the <i>Revue des Idées</i>, and judging from
the bibliography compiled by Pierre de Querlon
as long ago as 1903, he was a collaborator of
numerous magazines. He wrote on Emerson,
English humour, or Thomas à Kempis with
the same facility as he dissected the mystic
Latin writers of the early centuries after Christ.
Indeed, such versatility was viewed askance by
the plodding crowd of college professors, his
general adversaries. But his erudition could
not be challenged; only two other men matched
his scholarship, Anatole France and the late
Marcel Schwob. And we have only skimmed
the surface of his accomplishments. Remy de
Gourmont is the Admirable Crichton of French
letters.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>Prodigious incoherence might be reasonably
expected from this diversity of interests, yet
the result is quite the reverse. The artist
in this complicated man banished confusion.
He has told us that because of the diversity
of his aptitudes man is distinguished from his
fellow animals, and the variety in his labours is
a proof positive of his superiority to such fellow
critics as the mentally constipated Brunetière,
the impressionistic Anatole France, the agile
and graceful Lemaître, and the pedantic philistine
Faguet. But if De Gourmont always attains
clarity with no loss of depth, he sometimes
mixes his genres; that is, the poet peeps out
in his reports of the psychic life of insects, as
the philosopher lords it over the pages of his
fiction. A mystic betimes, he is a crystal-clear
thinker. And consider the catholicity evinced
in Le Livre des Masques. He wrote of such
widely diverging talents as Maeterlinck, Mallarmé,
Villiers de l'Isle Adam, and Paul Adam;
of <ins class="mycorr" title="changed from: Henri de Regnier" id="tnote2">Henri de Régnier</ins> and Jules Renard; of
Huysmans and Jules Laforgue; the mysticism
of Francis Poictevin's style and the imagery of
Saint-Pol-Roux he defined, and he displays an
understanding of the first symbolist poet, Arthur
Rimbaud, while disliking the personality of that
abnormal youth. But why recite this litany of
new talent literally made visible and vocal by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span>
our critic? It is a pleasure to record the fact
that most of his swans remained swans and
did not degenerate into tame geese. In this
book he shows himself a profound psychologist.</p>
<p>Insatiably curious, he yet contrived to drive
his chimeras in double harness and safely. His
best fiction is Sixtine and Une Nuit au Luxembourg,
if fiction they may be called. Never
will their author be registered among best-sellers.
Sixtine deals with the adventures of
a masculine brain. Ideas are the hero. In
Un Cœur virginal we touch earth, fleshly and
spiritually. This story shocked its readers. It
may be considered as a sequel to Physique de
l'Amour. It shows mankind as a gigantic
insect indulging in the same apparently blind
pursuit of sex sensation as a beetle, and also
shows us the "female of our species" endowed
with less capacity for modesty than the lady
mole, the most chaste of all animals. Disconcerting,
too, is the psychology of the heroine's
virginal soul, not, however, cynical; cynicism is
the irony of vice, and De Gourmont is never
cynical. But a master of irony.</p>
<p>Une Nuit au Luxembourg has been done
into English. It handles with delicacy and
frankness themes that in the hands of a lesser
artist would be banished as brutal and blasphemous.
The author knows that all our felicity
is founded on a compromise between the dream
and reality, and for that reason while he signals
the illusion he never mocks it; he is too much an
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</SPAN></span>
idealist. In the elaborately carved cups of his
tales, foaming over with exquisite perfumes and
nectar, there lurks the bitter drop of truth. He
could never have said with Proudhon that
woman is the desolation of the just; for him
woman is often an obsession. Yet, captain of
his instincts, he sees her justly; he is not subdued
by sex. With a gesture he destroys the
sentimental scaffolding of the sensualist and
marches on to new intellectual conquests.</p>
<p>In Lilith, an Adamitic Morality, he reveals
his Talmudic lore. The first wife of our common
ancestor is a beautiful hell-hag, the accomplice
of Satan in the corruption of the human race.
Thus mediæval play is epical in its Rabelaisian
plainness of speech. Perhaps the Manichean in
De Gourmont fabricated its revolting images.
He had traversed the Baudelairian steppes of
blasphemy and black pessimism; Baudelaire,
a poet who was a great critic. Odi profanum
vulgus! was De Gourmont's motto, but his soul
was responsive to so many contacts that he
emerged, as Barrès emerged, a citizen of the
world. Anarchy as a working philosophy did
not long content him, although he never relinquished
his detached attitude of proud individualism.
He saw through the sentimental
equality of J.J. Rousseau. Rousseau it was
who said that thinking man was a depraved
animal. Perhaps he was not far from the truth.
Man is an affective animal more interested in
the immediate testimony of his senses than in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</SPAN></span>
his intellectual processes. His metaphysic may
be but the reverberation of his sensations on
the shore of his subliminal self, the echo of the
sounding shell he calls his soul. And our critic
had his scientific studies to console him for the
inevitable sterility of soul that follows egoism
and a barren debauch of the sensations. He
did not tarry long in the valley of excess. His
artistic sensibility was his saviour.</p>
<p>Without being a dogmatist, De Gourmont
was an antagonist of absolutism. A determinist,
(which may be dogmatism à rebours), a relativist,
he holds that mankind is not a specially
favoured species of the animal scale; thought
is only an accident, possibly the result of rich
nutrition. An automaton, man has no free
will, but it is better for him to imagine that he
has; it is a sounder working hypothesis for the
average human. The universe had no beginning,
it will have no end. There is no first link
or last in the chain of causality. Everything
must submit to the law of causality; to explain
a blade of grass we must dismount the stars.
Nevertheless, De Gourmont no more than
Renan, had the mania of certitude. Humbly
he interrogates the sphinx. There are no isolated
phenomena in time or space. The mass
of matter is eternal. Man is an animal submitting
to the same laws that govern crystals
or brutes. He is the expression of matter in
physique and chemistry. Repetition is the
law of life. Thought is a physiological product;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</SPAN></span>
intelligence the secretion of matter and is amenable
to the law of causality. (This sounds like
Taine's famous definition of virtue and vice.)
And who shall deny it all in the psychochemical
laboratories? It is not the rigid old-fashioned
materialism, but a return to the more
plastic theories of Lamarck and the transformism
of the Dutch botanist, Hugo de Vries.
For De Gourmont the Darwinian notion that
man is at the topmost notch of creation is as
antique and absurd as most cosmogonies; indeed,
it is the Asiatic egocentric idea of creation.
Jacob's ladder repainted in Darwinian
symbols. Voilà l'ennemi! said De Gourmont
and put on his controversial armour. What
blows, what sudden deadly attacks were his!</p>
<p>Quinton has demonstrated to the satisfaction
of many scientists that bird life came later on
our globe than the primates from whom we stem.
The law of thermal constancy proves it by the
interior temperature of birds. Man preceded
the carnivorous and ruminating animals, of
whom the bodily temperature is lower than
that of birds. The ants and bees and beavers
are not a whit more automatic than mankind.
Automatism, says Ribot, is the rule. Thought
is not free, wrote William James, when to it
an affirmation is added; then it is but the
affirmation of a preference. "L'homme," asserts
De Gourmont, "varie à l'infini sa mimique.
Sa supériorité, c'est la diversité immense de ses
aptitudes." He welcomed Jules de Gaultier
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</SPAN></span>
and his theory of Bovaryisme; of the vital lie,
because of which we pretend to be what we are
not. That way spells security, if not progress.
The idea of progress is another necessary illusion,
for it provokes a multiplicity of activities. Our
so-called free will is naught but the faculty of
making a decision determined by a great and
varied number of motives. As for morality,
it is the outcome of tribal taboos; the insect
and animal world shows deepest-dyed immorality,
revolting cruelty, and sex perversity.
Rabbits and earthworms through no fault of
their own suffer from horrible maladies. From
all of which our critic deduces his law of intellectual
constancy. The human brain since
prehistoric times has been neither diminished
nor augmented; it has remained like a sponge,
which can be dry or saturated, but still remains
itself. It is a constant. In a favourable environment
it is enriched. The greatest moment
in the history of the human family was the discovery
of fire by an anthropoid of genius.
Prometheus then should be our god. Without
him we should have remained more or less
simian, and probably of arboreal habits.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>A synthetic brain is De Gourmont's, a sower
of doubts, though not a No-Sayer to the universe.
He delights in challenging accepted
"truths." Of all modern thinkers a master of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</SPAN></span>
Vues d'ensembles, he smiles at the pretensions,
usually a mask for poverty of ideas, of so-called
"general ideas." He dissociates such conventional
grouping of ideas as Glory, Justice,
Decadence. The shining ribs of disillusion
shine through his psychology; a psychology of
nuance and finesse. Disillusioning reflections,
these. Not to be put in any philosophical
pigeonhole, he is as far removed from the
eclecticism of Victor Cousin as from the verbal
jugglery and metaphysical murmurings of Henri
Bergson. The world is his dream; but it is a
tangible dream, charged with meaning, order,
logic. The truest reality is thought. Action
spoils. (Goethe said: "Thought expands, action
narrows.") Our abstract ideas are metaphysical
idols, says Jules de Gaultier. The
image of the concrete is De Gourmont's touchstone.
Théophile Gautier declared that he was
a man for whom the visible world existed. He
misjudged his capacity for apprehending reality.
The human brain, excellent instrument in a
priori combinations is inept at perceiving realities.
The "Sultan of the Epithet," as De
Goncourt nicknamed "le bon Théo," was not
the "Emperor of Thought," according to Henry
James, and for him it was a romantic fiction
spun in the rich web of his fancy. A vaster,
greyer world is adumbrated in the books of De
Gourmont. He never allowed symbolism to
deform his representation of sober, every-day
life. He pictured the future domain of art and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span>
ideas as a fair and shining landscape no longer
a series of little gardens with high walls. A
hater of formulas, sects, schools, he teaches
that the capital crime of the artist, the writer,
the thinker, is conformity. (Yet how serenely
this critic swims in classic currents!) The artist's
work should reflect his personality, a
magnified reflection. He must create his own
æsthetic. There are no schools, only individuals.
And of consistency he might have said
that it is oftener a mule than a jewel.</p>
<p>Sceptical in all matters, though never the
fascinating sophist that is Anatole France, De
Gourmont criticised the thirty-six dramatic
situations, reducing the number to four. Man
as centre in relation to himself; in relation to
other men; in relation to the other sex; in
relation to God, or Nature. His ecclesiastical
<i>fond</i> may be recognised in Le Chemin de
Velours with its sympathetic exposition of
Jesuit doctrine, and the acuity of its judgments
on Pascal and the Jansenists. The latter section
is as an illuminating foot-note to the history
of Port-Royal by Sainte-Beuve. The younger
critic has the supple intellect of the supplest-minded
Jesuit. His bias toward the order is
unmistakable. There are few books I reread
with more pleasure than this Path of Velvet.
Certain passages in it are as silky and sonorous
as the sound of Eugène Ysaye's violin.</p>
<p>The colour of De Gourmont's mind is stained
by his artistic sensibility. A maker of images,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span>
his vocabulary astounding as befits both a poet
and philologist, one avid of beautiful words,
has variety. The temper of his mind is tolerant,
a quality that has informed the finer intellects
of France since Montaigne. His literary equipment
is unusual. A style as brilliant, sinuous,
and personal as his thought; flexible or massive,
continent or coloured, he discourses at ease in
all the gamuts and modes major, minor, and
mixed. A swift, weighty style, the style of a
Latinist; a classic, not a romantic style. His
formal sense is admirable. The tenderness of
Anatole France is absent, except in his verse,
which is less spontaneous than volitional. A
pioneer in new æsthetic pastures, De Gourmont
is a poet for poets. He has virtuosity, though
the gift of tears nature—possibly jealous because
of her prodigality—has denied him.
But in the curves of his overarching intellect
there may be found wit, gaiety, humour, the
Gallic attributes, allied with poetic fancy, profundity
of thought, and a many-sided comprehension
of life, art, and letters. He is in the
best tradition of French criticism only more
versatile than either Sainte-Beuve or Taine;
as versatile as Doctor Brandes or Arthur Symons,
and that is saying much. With Anatole France
he could have exclaimed: "The longer I contemplate
human life, the more I believe that
we must give it, for witnesses and judges, Irony
and Pity...."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span></p>
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