<h2><SPAN name="XXIX" id="XXIX"></SPAN>XXIX</h2>
<p>I feel that much might be made of my memories of Boulogne-sur-Mer had I
but here left room for the vast little subject; in which I should
probably, once started, wander to and fro as exploringly, as
perceivingly, as discoveringly, I am fairly tempted to call it, as might
really give the measure of my small operations at the time. I was almost
wholly reduced there to operations of that mere inward and superficially
idle order at which we have already so freely assisted; reduced by a
cause I shall presently mention, the production of a great blur,
well-nigh after the fashion of some mild domestic but quite considerably
spreading grease-spot, in respect to the world of action, such as it
was, more or less immediately about me. I must personally have lived
during this pale predicament almost only by seeing what I could, after
my incorrigible ambulant fashion—a practice that may well have made me
pass for bringing home nothing in the least exhibitional—rather than by
pursuing the inquiries and interests that agitated, to whatever
intensity, our on the whole widening little circle. The images I speak
of as matter for more evocation that I can spare them were the fruit<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_397" id="Page_397"></SPAN></span> of
two different periods at Boulogne, a shorter and a longer; this second
appearing to us all, at the time, I gather, too endlessly and
blightingly prolonged: so sharply, before it was over, did I at any rate
come to yearn for the Rue Montaigne again, the Rue Montaigne "sublet"
for a term under a flurry produced in my parents' breasts by a
"financial crisis" of great violence to which the American world, as a
matter now of recorded history, I believe, had tragically fallen victim,
and which had imperilled or curtailed for some months our moderate means
of existence. We were to recover, I make out, our disturbed balance, and
were to pursue awhile further our chase of the alien, the somehow
repeatedly postponed <i>real</i> opportunity; and the second, the
comparatively cramped and depressed connection with the classic refuge,
as it then was, of spasmodic thrift, when not of settled indigence, for
the embarrassed of our race in the largest sense of this matter, was to
be shuffled off at last with no scant relief and reaction. This is
perhaps exactly why the whole picture of our existence at the
Pas-de-Calais watering place pleads to me now for the full indulgence,
what would be in other words every touch of tenderness workable, after
all the years, over the lost and confused and above all, on their own
side, poor ultimately rather vulgarised and violated little sources of
impression: items and aspects these which while they in their degree
and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_398" id="Page_398"></SPAN></span> after their sort flourished we only asked to admire, or at least to
appreciate, for their rewarding extreme queerness. The very centre of my
particular consciousness of the place turned too soon to the fact of my
coming in there for the gravest illness of my life, an all but mortal
attack of the malignant typhus of old days; which, after laying me as
low as I could well be laid for many weeks, condemned me to a
convalescence so arduous that I saw my apparently scant possibilities,
by the measure of them then taken, even as through a glass darkly, or
through the expansive blur for which I found just above a homely image.</p>
<p>This experience was to become when I had emerged from it the great
reminiscence or circumstance of old Boulogne for me, and I was to regard
it, with much intelligence, I should have maintained, as the marked
limit of my state of being a small boy. I took on, when I had decently,
and all the more because I had so retardedly, recovered, the sense of
being a boy of other dimensions somehow altogether, and even with a new
dimension introduced and acquired; a dimension that I was eventually to
think of as a stretch in the direction of essential change or of living
straight into a part of myself previously quite unvisited and now made
accessible as by the sharp forcing of a closed door. The blur of
consciousness imaged by my grease-spot was not, I hasten to declare,
without its <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_399" id="Page_399"></SPAN></span>relenting edges and even, during its major insistence,
fainter thicknesses; short of which, I see, my picture, the picture I
was always so incurably "after," would have failed of animation
altogether—quite have failed to bristle with characteristics, with
figures and objects and scenic facts, particular passages and moments,
the stuff, in short, of that scrap of minor gain which I have spoken of
as our multiplied memories. Wasn't I even at the time, and much more
later on, to feel how we had been, through the thick and thin of the
whole adventure, assaulted as never before in so concentrated a way by
local and social character? Such was the fashion after which the
Boulogne of long ago—I have known next to nothing of it since—could
come forth, come more than half-way, as we say, to meet the imagination
open to such advances. It was, taking one thing with another, so verily
drenched in character that I see myself catching this fine flagrancy
almost equally in everything; unless indeed I may have felt it rather
smothered than presented on the comparatively sordid scene of the
Collège Communal, not long afterwards to expand, I believe, into the
local Lycée, to which the inimitable process of our education promptly
introduced us. I was to have less of the Collège than my elder and my
younger brother, thanks to the interrupting illness that placed me so
long, with its trail of after-effects, half complacently, half <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_400" id="Page_400"></SPAN></span>ruefully
apart; but I suffered for a few early weeks the mainly malodorous sense
of the braver life, produced as this was by a deeply democratic
institution from which no small son even of the most soapless home could
possibly know exclusion. Odd, I recognise, that I should inhale the air
of the place so particularly, so almost only, to that dismal effect;
since character was there too, for whom it should concern, and my view
of some of the material conditions, of the general collegiate presence
toward the top of the steepish Grand' Rue, on the right and not much
short, as it comes back to me, of the then closely clustered and
inviolate haute ville, the more or less surviving old town, the idle
grey rampart, the moated and towered citadel, the tree-shaded bastion
for strolling and sitting "immortalised" by Thackeray, achieved the
monumental, in its degree, after a fashion never yet associated for us
with the pursuit of learning. Didn't the Campaigner, suffering indigence
at the misapplied hands of Colonel Newcome, rage at that hushed victim
supremely and dreadfully just thereabouts—by which I mean in the <i>haute
ville</i>—over some question of a sacrificed sweetbread or a cold hacked
joint that somebody had been "at"? Beside such builded approaches to an
education as we had elsewhere known the Collège exhibited, with whatever
reserves, the measure of style which almost any French accident of the
administratively <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_401" id="Page_401"></SPAN></span>architectural order more easily rises to than fails
of; even if the matter be but a question of the shyest similitude of a
<i>cour d'honneur</i>, the court disconnecting the scene, by intention at
least, from the basely bourgeois and giving value to the whole effect of
opposed and windowed wall and important, or balanced and "placed,"
<i>perron</i>. These are many words for the dull precinct, as then presented,
I admit, and they are perhaps half prompted by a special association,
too ghostly now quite to catch again—the sense of certain Sundays,
distinct from the grim, that is the flatly instructional, body of the
week, when I seem to myself to have successfully flouted the whole
constituted field by passing across it and from it to some quite ideally
old-world little annexed <i>musée de province</i>, as inviolate in its way as
the grey rampart and bare citadel, and very like them in unrelieved
tone, where I repeatedly, and without another presence to hinder, looked
about me at goodness knows what weird ancientries of stale academic art.
Not one of these treasures, in its habit as it lived, do I recall; yet
the sense and the "note" of them was at the time, none the less, not so
elusive that I didn't somehow draw straight from them intimations of the
interesting, that is revelations of the æsthetic, the historic, the
critical mystery and charm of things (of such things taken altogether),
that added to my small loose handful of the seed of culture.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_402" id="Page_402"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>That apprehension was, in its way, of our house of learning too, and
yet I recall how, on the scant and simple terms I have glanced at, I
quite revelled in it; whereas other impressions of my brief ordeal
shrink, for anything in the nature of interest, but to three or four
recovered marks of the social composition of the school. There were the
sons of all the small shop-keepers and not less, by my remembrance, of
certain of the mechanics and artisans; but there was also the English
contingent, these predominantly <i>internes</i> and uniformed, blue-jacketed
and brass-buttoned, even to an effect of odd redundancy, who by my
conceit gave our association a lift. Vivid still to me is the summer
morning on which, in the wide court—as wide, that is, as I liked to
suppose it, and where we hung about helplessly enough for recreation—a
brownish black-eyed youth, of about my own degree of youthfulness,
mentioned to me with an air that comes back as that of the liveliest
informational resource the outbreak, just heard of, of an awful Mutiny
in India, where his military parents, who had not so long before sent
him over thence, with such weakness of imagination, as I measured it, to
the poor spot on which we stood, were in mortal danger of their lives;
so that news of their having been killed would perhaps be already on the
way. They might well have been military, these impressively exposed
characters, since my friend's name<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_403" id="Page_403"></SPAN></span> was Napier, or Nappié as he was
called at the school, and since, I may add also, there attached to him,
in my eyes, the glamour of an altogether new emphasis of type. The
English boys within our ken since our coming abroad had been of the
fewest—the Fezandié youths, whether English or American, besides being
but scantly boys, had been so lost, on that scene, in our heap of
disparities; and it pressed upon me after a fashion of its own that
those we had known in New York, and all aware of their varieties and
"personalities" as one had supposed one's self, had in no case
challenged the restless "placing" impulse with any such force as the
finished little Nappié. They had not been, as he was by the very
perversity of his finish, resultants of forces at all—or comparatively
speaking; it was as if their producing elements had been simple and few,
whereas behind this more mixed and, as we have learnt to say, evolved
companion (his very simplicities, his gaps of possibility, being still
evolved), there massed itself I couldn't have said what protective
social order, what tangled creative complexity. Why I should have
thought him almost Indian of stamp and hue because his English parents
were of the so general Indian peril is more than I can say; yet I have
his exotic and above all his bold, his imaginably even "bad," young
face, finely unacquainted with law, before me at this hour quite
undimmed—announcing, as<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_404" id="Page_404"></SPAN></span> I conceived it, and quite as a shock, any
awful adventure one would, as well as something that I must even at the
time have vaguely taken as the play of the "passions." He vanishes, and
I dare say I but make him over, as I make everything; and he must have
led his life, whatever it was to become, with the least possible waiting
on the hour or the major consequence and no waste of energy at all in
mooning, no patience with any substitute for his very own humour. We had
another schoolmate, this one native to the soil, whose references were
with the last vividness local and who was yet to escape with brilliancy
in the aftertime the smallest shadow of effacement. His most direct
reference at that season was to the principal pastry-cook's of the town,
an establishment we then found supreme for little criss-crossed apple
tartlets and melting <i>babas</i>—young Coquelin's home life amid which we
the more acutely envied that the upward cock of his so all-important
nose testified, for my fancy, to the largest range of free familiar
sniffing. C.-B. Coquelin is personally most present to me, in the form
of that hour, by the value, as we were to learn to put it, of this nose,
the fine assurance and impudence of which fairly made it a trumpet for
promises; yet in spite of that, the very gage, as it were, of his long
career as the most interesting and many-sided comedian, or at least most
unsurpassed dramatic <i>diseur</i> of his time, I failed to doubt that,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_405" id="Page_405"></SPAN></span> with
the rich recesses of the parental industry for his background, his
subtlest identity was in his privilege, or perhaps even in his expertest
trick, of helping himself well.</p>
<p>These images, however, were but drops in the bucket of my sense of
catching character, roundabout us, as I say, at every turn and in every
aspect; character that began even, as I was pleased to think, in our own
habitation, the most spacious and pompous Europe had yet treated us to,
in spite of its fronting on the Rue Neuve Chaussée, a street of lively
shopping, by the measure of that innocent age, and with its own
ground-floor occupied by a bristling exhibition of indescribably futile
<i>articles de Paris</i>. Modern and commodious itself, it looked from its
balcony at serried and mismatched and quaintly-named haunts of old
provincial, of sedately passive rather than confidently eager, traffic;
but this made, among us, for much harmless inquisitory life—while we
were fairly assaulted, at home, by the scale and some of the striking
notes of our fine modernity. The young, the agreeable (agreeable to
anything), the apparently opulent M. Prosper Sauvage—wasn't it?—had
not long before, unless I mistake, inherited the place as a monument of
"family," quite modestly local yet propitious family, ambition; with an
ample extension in the rear, and across the clearest prettiest court,
for his own dwelling, which thus<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_406" id="Page_406"></SPAN></span> became elegant, <i>entre cour et
jardin</i>, and showed all the happy symmetries and proper conventions.
Here flourished, or rather, I surmise at this time of day, here
languished, a domestic drama of which we enjoyed the murmurous overflow:
frankly astounding to me, I confess, how I remain still in sensitive
presence of our resigned proprietor's domestic drama, in and out of
which I see a pair of figures quite up to the dramatic mark flit again
with their air of the very rightest finish. I must but note these
things, none the less, and pass; for scarce another item of the whole
Boulogne concert of salient images failed, after all, of a significance
either still more strangely social or more distinctively spectacular.
These appearances indeed melt together for my interest, I once more
feel, as, during the interminable stretch of the prescribed and for the
most part solitary airings and outings involved in my slow convalescence
from the extremity of fever, I approached that straitened and somewhat
bedarkened issue of the Rue de l'Écu (was it?) toward the
bright-coloured, strongly-peopled Port just where Merridew's English
Library, solace of my vacuous hours and temple, in its degree too, of
deep initiations, mounted guard at the right. Here, frankly,
discrimination drops—every particular in the impression once so quick
and fresh sits interlinked with every other in the large lap of the
whole. The motley, sunny, breezy, bustling<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_407" id="Page_407"></SPAN></span> Port, with its classic, its
admirable fisher-folk of both sexes, models of type and tone and of what
might be handsomest in the thoroughly weathered condition, would have
seemed the straightest appeal to curiosity had not the old Thackerayan
side, as I may comprehensively call it, and the scattered wealth of
illustration of <i>his</i> sharpest satiric range, not so constantly
interposed and competed with it. The scene bristled, as I look back at
it, with images from Men's Wives, from the society of Mr. Deuceace and
that of fifty other figures of the same creation, with Bareacreses and
Rawdon Crawleys and of course with Mrs. Macks, with Roseys of a more or
less crumpled freshness and blighted bloom, with battered and bent,
though doubtless never quite so fine, Colonel Newcomes not less; with
more reminders in short than I can now gather in. Of those forms of the
seedy, the subtly sinister, the vainly "genteel," the generally damaged
and desperate, and in particular perhaps the invincibly impudent, all
the marks, I feel sure, were stronger and straighter than such as we
meet in generally like cases under our present levelling light. Such
anointed and whiskered and eked-out, such brazen, bluffing, swaggering
gentlemen, such floridly repaired ladies, their mates, all looking as
hard as they could as if they were there for mere harmless amusement—it
was as good, among them, as just <i>being</i> Arthur Pendennis to know so<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_408" id="Page_408"></SPAN></span>
well, or at least to guess so fearfully, who and what they might be.
They were floated on the tide of the manners then prevailing, I judge,
with a rich processional effect that so many of our own grand lapses,
when not of our mere final flatnesses, leave no material for; so that
the living note of Boulogne was really, on a more sustained view, the
opposition between a native race the most happily tempered, the most
becomingly seasoned and salted and self-dependent, and a shifting
colony—so far as the persons composing it <i>could</i> either urgently or
speculatively shift—inimitably at odds with any active freshness. And
the stale and the light, even though so scantly rebounding, the too
densely socialised, group was the English, and the "positive" and hardy
and steady and wind-washed the French; and it was all as flushed with
colour and patched with costume and referable to record and picture, to
literature and history, as a more easily amusing and less earnestly
uniform age could make it. When I speak of this opposition indeed I see
it again most take effect in an antithesis that, on one side and the
other, swallowed all differences at a gulp. The general British show, as
we had it there, in the artless mid-Victorian desert, had, I think, for
its most sweeping sign the high assurance of its dowdiness; whereas one
had only to glance about at the sea-faring and fisher-folk who were the
real strength of the place to feel them shed at every<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_409" id="Page_409"></SPAN></span> step and by their
every instinct of appearance the perfect lesson of taste. There it was
to be learnt and taken home—with never a moral, none the less, drawn
from it by the "higher types." I speak of course in particular of the
tanned and trussed and kerchiefed, the active and productive women, all
so short-skirted and free-limbed under stress; for as by the rule of the
dowdy their sex is ever the finer example, so where the sense of the
suitable, of the charmingly and harmoniously right prevails, they
preserve the pitch even as a treasure committed to their piety. To hit
that happy mean of rightness amid the mixed occupations of a home-mother
and a fishwife, to be in especial both so bravely stripped below and so
perfectly enveloped above as the deep-wading, far-striding,
shrimp-netting, crab-gathering matrons or maidens who played,
waist-high, with the tides and racily quickened the market, was to make
grace thoroughly practical and discretion thoroughly vivid. These
attributes had with them all, for the eye, however, a range too great
for me to follow, since, as their professional undress was a turn-out
positively self-consistent, so their household, or more responsibly
public, or altogether festal, array played through the varied essentials
of fluted coif and folded kerchief and sober skirt and tense, dark,
displayed stocking and clicking wooden slipper, to say nothing of long
gold ear-drop or solid short-hung <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_410" id="Page_410"></SPAN></span>pectoral cross, with a respect for
the rigour of conventions that had the beauty of self-respect.</p>
<p>I owe to no season of the general period such a preserved sense of
innumerable unaccompanied walks—at the reason of which luxury of
freedom I have glanced; which as often as not were through the steep and
low-browed and brightly-daubed <i>ruelles</i> of the fishing-town and either
across and along the level sea-marge and sustained cliff beyond; this
latter the site of the first Napoleon's so tremendously mustered camp of
invasion, with a monument as futile, by my remembrance, as that
enterprise itself had proved, to give it all the special accent I could
ask for. Or I was as free for the <i>haute ville</i> and the ramparts and the
scattered, battered benches of reverie—if I may so honour my use of
them; they kept me not less complacently in touch with those of the so
anciently odd and mainly contracted houses over which the stiff citadel
and the ghost of Catherine de Médicis, who had dismally sojourned in it,
struck me as throwing such a chill, and one of which precisely must have
witnessed the never-to-be-forgotten Campaigner's passage in respect to
her cold beef. Far from extinct for me is my small question of those
hours, doubtless so mentally, so shamelessly wanton, as to what human
life might be tucked away in such retreats, which expressed the last
acceptance whether of desired or of imposed quiet; so <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_411" id="Page_411"></SPAN></span>absolutely
appointed and obliged did I feel to make out, so far as I could, what,
in so significant a world, they on their part <i>represented</i>. I think the
force mainly sustaining me at that rather dreary time—as I see it can
only show for—was this lively felt need that everything should
represent something more than what immediately and all too blankly met
the eye; I seem to myself to have carried it about everywhere and,
though of course only without outward signs that might have betrayed my
fatuity, and insistently, quite yearningly applied it. What I wanted, in
my presumption, was that the object, the place, the person, the
unreduced impression, often doubtless so difficult or so impossible to
reduce, should give out to me something of a situation; living as I did
in confused and confusing situations and thus hooking them on, however
awkwardly, to almost any at all living surface I chanced to meet. My
memory of Boulogne is that we had almost no society of any sort at
home—there appearing to be about us but one sort, and that of far too
great, or too fearful, an immediate bravery. Yet there were occasional
figures that I recover from our scant circle and that I associate,
whatever links I may miss, with the small still houses on the rampart;
figures of the quaintest, quite perhaps the frowsiest, little English
ladies in such mushroom hats, such extremely circular and bestriped
scarlet petticoats, such perpetual tight gauntlets,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_412" id="Page_412"></SPAN></span> such explicit
claims to long descent, which showed them for everything that everyone
else at Boulogne was not. These mid-Victorian samples of a perfect
consistency "represented," by my measure, as hard as ever they
could—and represented, of all things, literature and history and
society. The literature was that of the three-volume novel, then, and
for much after, enjoying its loosest and serenest spread; for they
separately and anxiously and awfully "wrote"—and that must almost by
itself have amounted in them to all the history I evoked.</p>
<p>The dreary months, as I am content that in their second phase especially
they should be called, are subject, I repeat, to the perversion, quite
perhaps to the obscuration, of my temporarily hindered health—which
should keep me from being too sure of these small <i>proportions</i> of
experience—I was to look back afterwards as over so grey a desert;
through which, none the less, there flush as sharp little certainties,
not to be disallowed, such matters as the general romance of Merridew,
the English Librarian, before mentioned, at the mouth of the Port; a
connection that thrusts itself upon me now as after all the truest
centre of my perceptions—waylaying my steps at the time, as I came and
went, more than any other object or impression. The question of what
<i>that</i> spot represented, or could be encouraged, could be aided<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_413" id="Page_413"></SPAN></span> and
abetted, to represent, may well have supremely engaged me—for depth
within depth there could only open before me. The place "meant," on
these terms, to begin with, frank and licensed fiction, licensed to my
recordedly relaxed state; and what this particular luxury represented it
might have taken me even more time than I had to give to make out. The
blest novel in three volumes exercised through its form, to my sense, on
grounds lying deeper for me to-day than my deepest sounding, an appeal
that fairly made it do with me what it would. Possibly a drivelling
confession, and the more drivelling perhaps the more development I
should attempt for it; from which, however, the very difficulty of the
case saves me. Too many associations, too much of the ferment of memory
and fancy, are somehow stirred; they beset me again, they hover and
whirl about me while I stand, as I used to stand, within the positively
sanctified walls of the shop (so of the <i>vieux temps</i> now their aspect
and fashion and worked system: by which I mean again of the frumpiest
and civillest mid-Victorian), and surrender to the vision of the shelves
packed with their rich individual trinities. Why should it have affected
me so that my choice, so difficult in such a dazzle, could only be for a
trinity? I am unable fully to say—such a magic dwelt in the mere rich
fact of the trio. When the novel of that age was "bad," as it so
helplessly, so<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_414" id="Page_414"></SPAN></span> abjectly and prevailingly consented to be, the three
volumes still did something for it, a something that was, all strangely,
not an aggravation of its case. When it was "good" (our analysis, our
terms of appreciation, had a simplicity that has lingered on) they made
it copiously, opulently better; so that when, after the span of the
years, my relation with them became, from that of comparatively artless
reader, and to the effect of a superior fondness and acuteness, that of
complacent author, the tradition of infatuated youth still flung over
them its mantle: this at least till <i>all</i> relation, by one of the very
rudest turns of life we of the profession were to have known, broke off,
in clumsy interfering hands and with almost no notice given, in a day,
in an hour. Besides connecting me with the lost but unforgotten note of
waiting service and sympathy that quavered on the Merridew air, they
represented just for intrinsic charm more than I could at any moment
have given a plain account of; they fell, by their ineffable history,
every trio I ever touched, into the category of such prized phenomena as
my memory, for instance, of fairly hanging about the Rue des Vieillards,
at the season I speak of, through the apprehension that something vague
and sweet—if I shouldn't indeed rather say something of infinite future
point and application—would come of it. This is a reminiscence that
nothing would induce me to verify, as<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_415" id="Page_415"></SPAN></span> for example by any revisiting
light; but it was going to be good for me, good, that is, for what I was
pleased to regard as my intelligence or my imagination, in fine for my
obscurely specific sense of things, that I <i>should</i> so have hung about.
The name of the street was by itself of so gentle and intimate a
persuasion that I must have been ashamed not to proceed, for the very
grace of it, to some shade of active response. And there was always a
place of particular arrest in the vista brief and blank, but inclusively
blank, blank <i>after</i> ancient, settled, more and more subsiding things,
blank almost, in short, with all Matthew Arnold's "ennui of the middle
ages," rather than, poorly and meanly and emptily, before such states,
which was previously what I had most known of blankness. This determined
pause was at the window of a spare and solitary shop, a place of no
amplitude at all, but as of an inveterate cheerful confidence, where,
among a few artists' materials, an exhibited water-colour from some
native and possibly then admired hand was changed but once in ever so
long. That was perhaps after all the pivot of my revolution—the
question of whether or no I should at a given moment find the old
picture replaced. I made this, when I had the luck, pass for an
event—yet an event which would <i>have</i> to have had for its scene the
precious Rue des Vieillards, and pale though may be the recital of such<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_416" id="Page_416"></SPAN></span>
pleasures I lose myself in depths of kindness for my strain of
ingenuity.</p>
<p>All of which, and to that extent to be corrected, leaves small allowance
for my service to good M. Ansiot, rendered while my elder and younger
brothers—the younger completing our group of the ungovernessed—were
continuously subject to collegial durance. Their ordeal was, I still
blush to think, appreciably the heavier, as compared with mine, during
our longer term of thrifty exile from Paris—the time of stress, as I
find I recall it, when we had turned our backs on the Rue Montaigne and
my privilege was so to roam on the winter and the spring afternoons.
Mild M. Ansiot, "under" whom I for some three hours each forenoon sat
sole and underided—and actually by himself too—was a curiosity, a
benignity, a futility even, I gather; but save for a felt and remembered
impulse in me to open the window of our scene of study as soon as he had
gone was in no degree an ideal. He might rise here, could I do him
justice, as the rarest of my poor evocations; for he it was, to be
frank, who most literally smelt of the vieux temps—as to which I have
noted myself as wondering and musing as much as might be, with recovered
scraps and glimpses and other intimations, only never yet for such a
triumph of that particular sense. To be still frank, he was little less
than a monster—for mere unresisting or unresilient mass<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_417" id="Page_417"></SPAN></span> of personal
presence I mean; so that I fairly think of him as a form of bland
porpoise, violently blowing in an age not his own, as by having had to
exchange deep water for thin air. Thus he impressed me as with an
absolute ancientry of type, of tone, of responsible taste, above all;
this last I mean in literature, since it was literature we sociably
explored, to my at once charmed and shamed apprehension of the several
firm traditions, the pure proprieties, the discussabilities, in the
oddest way both so many and so few, of that field as they prevailed to
his pious view. I must have had hold, in this mere sovereign sample of
the accidentally, the quite unconsciously and unpretentiously, the all
negligibly or superfluously handed-down, of a rare case of the
provincial and academic <i>cuistre</i>; though even while I record it I see
the good man as too helpless and unaggressive, too smothered in his poor
facts of person and circumstance, of overgrown time of life alone, to
incur with justness the harshness of classification. He rested with a
weight I scarce even felt—such easy terms he made, without scruple, for
both of us—on the cheerful innocence of my barbarism; and though our
mornings were short and subject, I think, to quite drowsy lapses and
other honest aridities, we did scumble together, I make out, by the aid
of the collected extracts from the truly and academically great which
formed his sole resource and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_418" id="Page_418"></SPAN></span> which he had, in a small portable and
pocketed library rather greasily preserved, some patch of picture of a
saving as distinguished from a losing classicism. The point remains for
me that when all was said—and even with everything that might directly
have counted unsaid—he discharged for me such an office that I was to
remain to this far-off hour in a state of possession of him that is the
very opposite of a blank: quite after the fashion again in which I had
all along and elsewhere suffered and resisted, and yet so perversely and
intimately appropriated, tutoring; which was with as little as ever to
show for my profit of his own express showings. The blank he fills out
crowds itself with a wealth of value, since I shouldn't without him have
been able to claim, for whatever it may be worth, a tenth (at that let
me handsomely put it), of my "working" sense of the vieux temps. How can
I allow then that we hadn't planted together, with a loose felicity,
some of the seed of work?—even though the sprouting was so long put
off. Everything, I have mentioned, had come at this time to be
acceptedly, though far from braggingly, put off; and the ministrations
of M. Ansiot really wash themselves over with the weak mixture that had
begun to spread for me, to immensity, during that summer day or two of
our earlier residence when, betraying strange pains and apprehensions, I
was with all decision put to bed. Present to me still<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_419" id="Page_419"></SPAN></span> is the fact of my
sharper sense, after an hour or two, of my being there in distress and,
as happened for the moment, alone; present to me are the sounds of the
soft afternoon, the mild animation of the Boulogne street through the
half-open windows; present to me above all the strange sense that
something had begun that would make more difference to me, directly and
indirectly, than anything had ever yet made. I might verily, on the
spot, have seen, as in a fading of day and a change to something
suddenly queer, the whole large extent of it. I must thus, much
impressed but half scared, have wanted to appeal; to which end I
tumbled, all too weakly, out of bed and wavered toward the bell just
across the room. The question of whether I really reached and rang it
was to remain lost afterwards in the strong sick whirl of everything
about me, under which I fell into a lapse of consciousness that I shall
conveniently here treat as a considerable gap.</p>
<h4>THE END</h4>
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