<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
<h2>CROSS-CURRENTS IN MODERN FRENCH LITERATURE</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>They order certain things better in France
than elsewhere; I mean such teasing and unsatisfactory
forms of book-making known as
Inquiries ("Enquête," which is not fair to
translate into the lugubrious literalism, "Inquest"),
Anthologies, and books that masquerade
as books, as Charles Lamb hath it.
Without a trace of pedantry or dogmatism,
such works appear from time to time in Paris
and are delightful reminders of the good breeding
and suppleness of Gallic criticism. To
turn to favour and prettiness a dusty department
of literature is no mean feat.</p>
<p>What precisely is the condition of French
letters since Catulle Mendès published his
magisterial work on The French Poetic Movement
from 1867 to 1900? (Paris, 1903.) Nothing
so exhaustive has appeared since, though a
half-dozen Inquiries, Anthologies, and Symposiums
are in existence.</p>
<p>The most comprehensive recently is Florian-Parmentier's
Contemporary History of French
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</SPAN></span>
Letters from 1885 to 1914. The author is a
poet, one of les Jeunes, and an expert swimmer
in the multifarious cross-currents of the day. His
book is a bird's-eye view of the map of literary
France as far as the beginning of the war. He
is quite frank in his likes and dislikes, and always
has his reasons for his major idolatries
and minor detestations.</p>
<p>As a corrective to his enthusiasm and hatreds
there are several new Anthologies at hand
which aid us to form our own opinion of the
younger men's prose and verse. And, finally,
there is the significant Inquiry of Emile Henriot:
"A Quoi Rêvent les Jeunes Gens?" (1913);
of which more anon.</p>
<p></p>
<p>M. Florian-Parmentier is a native of Valenciennes,
a writer whose versatility and fecundity
are noteworthy in a far from barren literary
epoch. He has, with the facility of a lettered
young Frenchman, tried his hand at every
form. All themes, so they be human, are welcome
to him, from art criticism to playwriting.
He is seemingly fair to his colleagues. Perhaps
they may not admit this; but the question
may be answered in the affirmative: Is
he a safe critical guide in the labyrinth of latter-day
French letters?</p>
<p>He notes, with an unaccustomed sense of
humour in a critical barometer, the tendency
of youthful poets, prose penmen, and others
to form schools, to create cénacles, to begin
fighting before they have any defined ideal.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</SPAN></span>
It leads to a lot of noisy, explosive manifestoes,
declarations, and challenges, most of them
rather in the air; though it cannot be denied
that these ebullitions of gusty temperaments
do clear that same air, murky with theories
and traversed by an occasional flash of genius.</p>
<p>After paying his respects to the daily Parisian
press, which he belabours as venal, cynical,
and impure, our critic evokes a picture of the
condition of literary men; not a reassuring
one. Indeed, we wonder how young people
can dream of embracing such a profession,
with its heartaches, disappointments, inevitable
poverty. Unless these aspiring chaps have
a private income, how do they contrive to
live?</p>
<p>The answer is, they don't live, unless they
write twaddle for the Grand Old Public, which
must be tickled with fluff and flattery. You
say to yourself, after all Paris is not vastly
different in this respect from benighted New
York. Detective stories, melodrama, the glorification
of the stale triangle in fiction and drama,
the apotheosis of the Apache—what are all
these but slight variants of the artistic pabulum
furnished by our native merchants in mediocrity?
Consoled, because your mental and
emotional climate is not as inartistic as it is
painted, you return to Florian-Parmentier and
his divagations. He has much to say. Some
of it is not as tender as tripe, but none is salted
with absurdity.</p>
<p ><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</SPAN></span>
Then you make a discovery. There is in
France a distinct class, the Intellectuals, who
control artistic opinion because of its superior
claims; a class to which there is no analogy
either in England or in America. (The French
Academy is not particularly referred to just
now.) Poets, journalists, wealthy amateurs,
bohemians, and professors—all may belong
to it if they have the necessary credentials:
brains, talent, enthusiasm. It is the latter
quality that floats out on the sea of speculation
many adventuring barks. Each sports a tiny
pennant proclaiming its ideals. Each is steered
by some dreamer of proud, impossible dreams.
But they float, do these frail boats, laden with
visions and captained by noble ambitions.</p>
<p>Or, another image; a long, narrow street,
on either side houses of manifold styles—fantastic
or sensible, castellated or commonplace,
baroque, stately, turreted, spired, and lofty,
these eclectic architectures reflect the souls of
the dwellers within. The ivory tower is not
missing, though a half-century ago it was more
in evidence; the church is there, though sadly
dwarfed—France is still spiritually crippled
and flying on one wing (this means previous
to 1914); and a host of other strange and familiar
houses that Jack the poet built.</p>
<p>On the doors of each is a legend; it may be
Neo-Symbolism, Neo-Classicism, Free-Verse,
Sincerism, Intenseism, Spiritualists, Floralism
or the School of Grace, Dramatism and Simultanism,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</SPAN></span>
Imperialism, Dynamism, Futurism, Regionalism,
Pluralism, Sereneism, Vivantism,
Magism, Totalism, Subsequentism, Argonauts,
Wolves, Visionarism, and, most discussed of
all, Unanimism, headed by that fiery propagandist
and poet, Jules Romains.</p>
<p>Now, every one of these cults in miniature
has its following, its programmes, sometimes
its special reviews, monthly or weekly. They
are the numerous progeny of the elder Romantic,
Realistic, and Symbolistic schools,
long dead and gathered to their fathers.</p>
<p>Charles Baudelaire, from whose sonnet Correspondences
the Symbolists dated; Baudelaire,
the precursor of so much modern, is to-day
chiefly studied in his prose writings, critical
and æsthetic. His Little Poems in Prose are
a breviary for the youths who are turning out
an amorphous prose, which they call Free.
Paul Verlaine's influence is still marked, for he
is a maker of Debussy-like music; moonlit,
vapourish, intangible, subtle, and perverse. The
very quintessence of poetry haunts the vague
terrain of his verse; but his ideas, his morbidities,
these are negligible, indeed, abhorred.</p>
<p>The new schools, whether belonging to the
Extreme Right or Extreme Left, are idealistic
in their aim and practice; that or nothing.
The brutalities of Zola and the Naturalistic
School, the frigid perfection and metallic impassibility
of the Parnassians are over and
done with. Cynical cinders no longer blind the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</SPAN></span>
eye of the ideal. There is a renaissance of
sensibility. The universe is become pluralistic,
sentimental pantheism is in the air. Irony
has ceased to be a potent weapon in the armoury
of poets and prosateurs. It is replaced by an
ardent love of humanity, by a socialism that
weeps on the shoulder of one's neighbour, by
a horror of egoism—whether masquerading
as a philosophy such as Nietzsche's, or a poesy
such as the Parnassians. For these poetlings
issues are cosmical.</p>
<p>Coeval with this revival of sentiment is a
decided leaning toward religion; not the "white
soul of the Middle Ages," as Huysmans would
say; not the mediæval curiosities of Hugo,
Gautier, Lamartine; but the carrying aloft
of the banner of belief; the opposition to sterile
agnosticism by the burning tongues of the
holy spirit. No dilettante movement this
return to Roman Catholicism. The time came
for many of these neophytes when they had
to choose at the cross-roads. Either—Or?
The Button-Moulder was lying in wait for such
adolescent Peer Gynts, and, outraged and
nauseated by the gross license of their day and
hour, by the ostentation of evil instincts, they
turned to the right—some, not all of them.
The others no longer cry aloud their pagan
admiration of the nymph's flesh in the brake,
of the seven deadly arts and their sister sins.</p>
<p>In a word, since 1905 a fresher, a more tonic
air has been blowing across the housetops of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</SPAN></span>
French art and literature. Science is too positive.
Every monad has had its day. Pictorial
impressionism is without skeleton. Mysticism
is coming into fashion again; only, the youngsters
wear theirs with a difference. Even the
Cubists are working for formal severity, despite
their geometrical fanaticism. Youth will have
its fling, and joys in esoteric garb, in flaring
colours, and those doors in the narrow street
called "Perhaps," do but prove the eternal
need of the new and the astounding. Man
cannot live on manna alone. He must, to keep
from volplaning to the infinite, go down and
gnaw his daily bone. The forked human radish
with the head fantastically carved has underpinnings
also; else his chamber of dreams
might overflow into reality, and then we should
be converted in a trice to angels, pin-feathers
and all.</p>
<p>What were the controlling factors in young
French literature up to the greatest marking
date of modern history, 1914? The philosophy
of Henri Bergson is one; that philosophy, full
of poetic impulsion, graceful phrasing, and
charming evocations; a feminine, nervous,
fleshless philosophy, though deriving, as it
does, from an intellectual giant, Emile Boutroux.
Maurice Barrès is another name to
conjure with; once the incarnation of a philosophical
and slightly cruel egoism; then the
herald of regionalism, replacing the flinty determinism
of Taine with the watch-words: Patriotism,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</SPAN></span>
reverence for the dead—a reverence
perilously near ancestor-worship—the prose-master
Barrès went into the political arena,
and became, notwithstanding his rather aggressive
"modernism," an idealistic reactionary.</p>
<p>He is more subtle in his intellectual processes
than his one-time master, Paul Bourget, from
whom his psychology stemmed, and, if his
patriotism occasionally becomes chauvinistic,
his sincerity cannot be challenged. That sincerest
form of insincerity—"moral earnestness,"
so called—has never been his. He is
no more a sower of sand on the bleak and barren
shore of negation. Little wonder he is accepted
as a vital teacher.</p>
<p>Other names occur as generators of present
schools. Stendhal, Mallarmé, Georges Rodenbach,
Rimbaud—that stepfather of symbolism
—Emil Verhaeren—who is truly an elemental
and disquieting force—Paul Adam, Maeterlinck,
the late Remy de Gourmont—who contributed
so much to contemporary thought in
the making—Francis Jammes, Villiers de l'Isle
Adam, Renard, Samain, Saint-Georges de Bouhelier,
Jules Laforgue—and how many others,
to be found in the pages of Vance Thompson's
French Portraits, which valuable study dates
back to the middle of the roaring nineties.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>When we are confronted by a litany of
strange names, by the intricate polyphony of
literary sects and cénacles, the American lover
of earlier French poets is bewildered, so swiftly
does the whirligig of time bring new talents.
Already the generation of 1900 has jostled from
their place the "elders" of a decade previous:
you read of Paul-Napoléon Roinard, Maurice
Beaubourg, Hans Ryner—a remarkable writer—André
Gide, Charles-Louis Philippe, of Paul
Fort, Paul Claudel, André Suarès, Stéphane Servant,
André Spire, Philéas Lebesgue, Georges
Polti (whose Thirty-six Dramatic Situations
deserves an English garb), and you recall some
of them as potent creators of values.</p>
<p>But if London, a few hours from Paris, only
hears of these men through a few critical intermediaries,
such as Arthur Symons, Edmund
Gosse, and other cultivated and cosmopolitan
spirits, what may we not say of America, a
week away from the scene of action? As a
matter of fact, we are proud of our provincialism,
and for those who "create"—as the jargon
goes—that same provincialism is a windshield
against the draughts of too tempting
imitation; but for our criticism there is no
excuse. A critic will never be a catholic critic
of his native literature or art if he doesn't know
the literatures and arts of other lands, paradoxical
as this may sound. We lack æsthetic
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</SPAN></span>
curiosity. Because of our uncritical parochialism
America is comparable to a cemetery of clichés.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, those of us who went as far
as the portraits by Vance Thompson and Amy
Lowell must feel a trifle strange in the long,
narrow street of Florian-Parmentier, with its
alternations of Septentrional mists and the
blazing blue sky of the Midi. This critic, by
the way, is a staunch upholder of the Gaul. He
will have no admixture of Latin influence. He
employs what has jocosely been called the
"Woad" argument; he goes back not to the
early Britons, but to Celticism. He is a sturdy
Kymrist, and believes not in literatures transalpine
or transpyrenean. He loathes the "pastiche,"
the purveyors of "canned" classics, the
chilly rhetoricians who set too much store on
conventional learning. A Frank, a northerner,
and the originator of Impulsionism is Florian-Parmentier.
In his auscultation of genius,
La Physiologie Morale du Poète (1904), may
be found the germs of his doctrine. This doctrine
seems familiar enough now, as does the
flux of Heraclitus and the Becoming of Renan,
in the teachings of Bergson. Unanimism has
had some influence. M. Florian-Parmentier
does not admire this movement or its prophet,
Jules Romains. Unanimism. Ah! the puissant
magic of the word for these budding poets and
philosophers. It ought to warm the cockles of
the heart of critics.</p>
<p>And then the generation of 1900—Alexander
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</SPAN></span>
Mercereau, Henri Hertz, Sébastien Voirol,
Pierre Jaudon, Jacques Nayral, Fernand Divoire,
Tancrède Visan, Strentz, Giraudoux,
Mandin, Guillaume Apollinaire—all workers
in the vast inane, dwellers on the threshold of
the future. The past and present bearings of
the Academy Goncourt are carefully indicated.
Thus far nothing extraordinary has come from
it. Balzac is still the mighty one in fiction.
Thus far the names of Anatole France, Paul
Adam, the brothers Rosny, Pierre Mille—a
brilliant, versatile man—still maintain their
primacy.</p>
<p>Thus far, among the essayists, Remy de
Gourmont, Camille Mauclair, Maeterlinck, Romain
Rolland, J. H. Fabre, Jules Bois—now
sojourning in America and a thinker of verve
and originality—and Henry Houssaye, hold
their own against the younger generation.</p>
<p>In the theatre there are numerous and vexing
tendencies: Maeterlinck, loyally acknowledging
his indebtedness to gentle Charles van
Lerburghe, created a spiritual drama and has
disciples; but the theatre is the theatre and
resists innovation. Ibsen, who had his day in
Paris, and Antoine of the Free Theatre were
accepted not because of their novelty, but in
spite of it. They both were men of the theatre.
There is a school of Ideo-realism, and there are
Curel, Bataille, Porto-Riche, Maeterlinck, Trarieux,
and Marie Leneru; but the technique of
the drama is immutable.</p>
<p ><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</SPAN></span>
In the domain of philosophy and experimental
science we find Emile Boutroux, and
such collective psychologists as Durckheim,
Gustave le Bon, and Gabriel Tarde; names
such as Binet, Ribot, Michel Savigny, Alfred
Fouillée, and the eminent mathematician, Henri
Poincaré—who finally became sceptical of his
favourite logic, philosophy, and mathematics.
This intellectual volte-face caused endless discussion.
The truth is that intuition, the instinctive
vs. intellectualism—what William
James called "vicious intellectualism"—is
swaying the younger French thinkers and poets.</p>
<p>There is, if one is to judge by the anthologies,
far too much of metaphysics in contemporary
poetry. Poetry is in danger of suffocating in a
misty mid-region of metaphysics. The vital impulse,
intuitionalism, and rhythmic flow of time
in Bergson caught the fancy of the poets. Naturally
enough. Literary dogmatism had prevailed
too long in academic centres. Now it is
the deliquescence of formal verse that is to be
feared. Vers-libre, which began with such initiators
as that astonishing prodigy, Arthur Rimbaud,
has run the gamut from esoteric illuminism
to sonorous yawping from the terrace of the
brasseries. Have frogs wings? we are tempted
to ask. Voices they have, but not bird-like
voices.</p>
<p>That fascinating philosopher and friend of
Remy de Gourmont—who practically introduced
him—must not be overlooked, for he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</SPAN></span>
had genuine influence. I refer to brilliant
Jules Gaultier, who evolved from Flaubert's
Madame Bovary the idea of his Bovarysme—which,
succinctly stated, is the instinct in mankind
to appear other than it is; from the philosopher
to the snob, from the priest to the
actor, from the duchess to the prostitute.</p>
<p>Of the influence of politics upon art and literature—which
happily are no cloistered virtues
in France—we need not speak here. M.
Florian-Parmentier does so in his admirable and
bulky book, of which we have only exposed the
high lights.</p>
<p>Since Jules Huret's Enquête sur l'Evolution
Littéraire (1890), followed by similar works of
Vellay, Jean Muller, and Gaston Picard (1913),
we recall no such pamphlet as Emile Henriot's,
mentioned above. He put the questions:
"Where are we? Where are we going?" in <i>Le
Temps</i> of Paris, June, 1912, to a number of
representative thinkers and poets, and reprinted
between covers their answers in 1913.</p>
<p>The result is rather confusing, a cloud of
contradictory witnesses are assembled, and
what one affirms the other denies. There are
no schools! Yes, there are groups! We are
going to the devil headlong! The sky is full
of rainbows and the humming of harps celestial!
Better the extravagances of the decayed
Romanticists than the debasing realism of the
modern novel, cry the Symbolists. A plague
on all your houses! say the Unanimists. One
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</SPAN></span>
fierce Wolf (Loup) admitted that at the banquets
of his cénacle he and his fellow poets
always ate in effigy the classic writers. Or was
it at the Symbolists'? Does it much matter?
The gesture counts alone with these youthful
"Fumistes"—as Leconte de Lisle had christened
their predecessors.</p>
<p>Verlaine, in his waggish mood, persisted in
spelling as "Cymbalists" the Symbolists, his
own followers. Gongs would have been a better
word. A punster speaks of Theists as those
who love "le bon Dieu and tea." The new
critical school, at its head Charles Maurras,
do not conceal their contempt for all these
"arrivistes" and revolutionary groups, believing
that only a classic renaissance will save
Young France. Barnums, the entire lot! pronounces
in faded accents the ultra-academic
group. Three critics of wide-reaching influence
are dead since the war began: Emile Faguet,
Jules Lemaître, and Remy de Gourmont.
They leave no successors worthy of
their mettle.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>The three volumes of anthology of French
Contemporary Poets from 1866 to 1916 have
been supplemented by a fourth entitled Poets
of Yesterday and To-day (1916). Edited by
the painstaking M. G. Walch, it comprises the
verse of poets born as late as 1886. Among
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</SPAN></span>
the rest is the gifted Charles Dumas, who fell
in battle, 1914. As epigraph to the new collection
the editor has used a line from this poet's
testament: "Ce désir d'être tout que j'appelle
mon âme!" Another anthology of the new poets
is prefaced by M. Gustave Lanson, but the
Walch collection reveals more promising talents,
or else the poems are more representative.</p>
<p>Signor Marinetti, who is bilingual, is eccentrically
amusing. But are his contortions
on the tripod art? The auto and aeroplane
are celebrated, also steam, speed, mist, and
the destruction of all art prior to 1900. The
new schools are wary of rhetoric, thus following
Paul Verlaine's injunction: Take Eloquence
by the neck and wring it! Imagists abound,
but they are in an aristocratic minority. The
watchword is: sobriety in thinking and expression.</p>
<p>Strangely enough, two names emerge victoriously
from the confusing lyric symphony
and they are those of Belgian-born poets—Emile
Verhaeren, whose tragic death last year
was a loss to literature, and Maurice Maeterlinck.
What living lyric poet has the incomparable
power of that epical Verhaeren, unless
it be that of the more sophisticated Gabriele
d'Annunzio, or the sumptuous decorative verse
of Henri de Régnier, whose polished art is the
antithesis of the exuberant, lawless, resonant
reverberations of Verhaeren?</p>
<p>What thinker and dramatist is known like
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</SPAN></span>
Maeterlinck, except it be the magical Gerhart
Hauptmann? Rough to brutality—for Verhaeren
at one time emulated Walt Whitman
(variously spelled as "Walth" and "Withman");
with the names of foreigners Paris has
ever been careless in its orthography, witness
"Litz" and "Edgard Poë"; he can boast the
divine afflatus. His personality is of the centrifugal
order. He has a tumultuous rhythmic
undertow that sweeps one irresistibly with him.
But his genius is disintegrating, rather than
constructive.</p>
<p>Of what French poet among the younger
group dare we say the same? Grace, lyric
sweetness, subtlety in ideas, facile technique—all
these, yes, but not the power of saying great
things greatly.</p>
<p>As for Maeterlinck, he owes something to
Emerson; but his mellow wisdom and clairvoyance
are his own. He is a seer, and his
crepuscular pages are pools of glimmering incertitudes,
whereas of Verhaeren we may say,
as Carlyle said of Landor's prose: "The sound
of it is like the ring of Roman swords on the
helmets of barbarians."</p>
<p>Henry James tells a story of an argument
between Zola, Flaubert, and Turgenev, the
Russian novelist declaring that for him
Châteaubriand was not the Ultima Thule of
prose perfection. This insensibility to the finer
nuances of the language angered and astounded
Zola and Flaubert. They set it down
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</SPAN></span>
to the fact that none but a Frenchman can
quite penetrate the inner sanctuary of his own
language; which may be true, though I believe
that for Turgenev the author of Atala was temperamentally
distasteful.</p>
<p>Therefore, when an American makes the
statement that the two Belgians are superior
to the living Frenchmen it may be classed as
a purely personal judgment. But the proposition
first mooted by a distinguished critic,
Remy de Gourmont, that Maeterlinck and
Verhaeren be elected to the French Academy,
was not a bizarre one. The war has effaced
many artistic frontiers. The majority of the
little circles that once pullulated in Paris no
longer exist. Both Verhaeren and Maeterlinck
are now Frenchmen of the French. Their inclusion
in the Academy would have honoured
that venerable and too august body as much
as the Belgian poets.</p>
<p>As to the war's influence on French letters,
that question is for soothsayers to decide, not
for the present writer. After 1870 certain
psychiatrists pretended that a degeneration of
body and soul had blighted artistic and literary
Europe. Well, we can only wish for the
new France of 1920 and later such a galaxy
of talents and genius as the shining groups from
1875 to 1914. No need to finger the chaplet
of their names and achievements. Such books
as those by Catulle Mendès, Florian-Parmentier,
Lanson, and Walch prove our contention.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p ><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />