unshifting
background, which by art may be relieved, but never
refined away
wholly. He cannot escape from it if he would. Here,
too, as George MacDonald has neatly and
nicely said: We are the
victims of our own past, and often a hand is put forth upon us from
behind and draws us into life
backward. Here was Stevenson, with
his half-hedonistic theories of life, the duty of giving pleasure,
of making eyes brighter, and casting
sunshine around one
whereverone went, yet the
creator of gloom for us, when all the world was
before him where to choose. This fateful shadow pursued him to the
end, often giving us, as it were, the very justificative ground for
his own father's despondency and gloom, which the son rather too
decisively reproved, while he might have sympathised with it in a
stranger, and in that most
characteristic" target="_blank" title="a.特有的 n.特性">
characteristic letter to his mother,
which we have quoted, said that it made his father often seem, to
him, to be ungrateful - "HAS THE MAN NO GRATITUDE?" Two selves
thus
persistently and
constantly struggled in Stevenson. He was
from this point of view, indeed, his own Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, the
buoyant, self-enjoying, because pleasure-conferring, man, and at
the same time the
helpless yet
fascinating "dark interpreter" of
the
gloomy and gloom-inspiring side of life, viewed from the point
of view of dominating
character and inherited influence. When he
reached out his hand with desire of pleasure-conferring, lo and
behold, as he wrote, a hand from his forefathers was stretched out,
and he was pulled
backward; so that, as he has confessed, his
endings were apt to shame, perhaps to
degrade, the beginnings.
Here is something pointing to the
hidden and secret springs that
feed the deeper will and bend it to their service. Individuality
itself is but a mirror, which by its inequalities transforms things
to odd shapes. Hawthorne confessed to something of this sort. He,
like Stevenson, suffered much in youth, if not from disease then
through accident, which kept him long from
youthful company. At a
time when he should have been
running free with other boys, he had
to be
lonely,
reading what books he could lay his hands on, mostly
mournful and puritanic, by the borders of lone Sebago Lake. He
that hath once in youth been touched by this Marah-rod of
bitterness will not easily escape from it, when he essays in later
years to paint life and the world as he sees them; nay, the hand,
when he deems himself freest, will be laid upon him from behind, if
not to pull him, as MacDonald has said, into life
backward, then to
make him a
mournfulwitness of having once been touched by the
Marah-rod, whose
bitterness again declares itself and wells out its
bitterness when set even in the rising and the
stirring of the
waters.
Such is our view of the "gloom" of Stevenson - a gloom which well
might have justified something of his father's despondency. He
struggles in vain to escape from it - it narrows, it fatefully
hampers and limits the free field of his art, lays upon it a
strange
atmosphere,
fascinating, but not favourable to true
dramaticbreadth and force, and
spontaneous natural
simplicity,
invariably l
ending a certain touch of
weakness, inconsistency, and
inconclusiveness to his
endings; so that he himself could too often
speak of them afterwards as apt to "shame, perhaps to
degrade, the
beginnings." This is what true
dramatic art should never do. In
the
ending all that may raise
legitimate question in the process -
all that is confusing, perplexing in the separate parts - is met,
solved, reconciled, at least in a way
satisfactory to the general,
or ordinary mind; and thus such unity is by it so gained and
sealed, that in no case can the true artist,
whatever faults may
lie in portions of the process-work, say of his
endings that "they
shame, perhaps
degrade, the beginning." Wherever this is the case
there will be "gloom," and there will also be a sad, tormenting
sense of something
wanting. "The evening brings a 'hame';" so
should it be here - should it especially be in a
dramatic work. If
not, "We start; for soul is
wanting there;" or, if not soul, then
the last halo of the soul's
serenetriumph. From this side, too,
there is another cause for the un
dramaticcharacter, in the
stricter sense of Stevenson's work generally: it is, after all,
distressful, unsatisfying, egotistic, for fancy is led at the beck
of some pre-established disharmony which throws back an abiding and
irremovable gloom on all that went before; and the free
spontaneousgrace of natural
creation which ensures natural
simplicity is, as
said already, not quite
attained.
It was well
pointed out in HAMMERTON, by an unanonymous author
there quoted (pp. 22, 23), that while in the story, Hyde, the worse
one, wins, in Stevenson himself - in his real life - Jekyll won,
and not Mr Hyde. This
writer, too, might have added that the
Master of Ballantrae also wins as well as Beau Austin and Deacon
Brodie. R. L. Stevenson's
dramatic art and a good deal of his
fiction, then, was
untrue to his life, and on one side was a lie -
it was not in consonance with his own practice or his
belief as
expressed in life.
In some other matters the test laid down here is not difficult of
application. Stevenson, at the time he wrote THE FOREIGNER AT
HOME, had seen a good deal; he had been
abroad; he had already had
experiences; he had had differences with his father about Calvinism
and some other things; and yet just see how he applies the standard
of his earlier knowledge and
observation to England - and by doing
so, cannot help exaggerating the
outstanding differences, always
with an almost
provincialaccent of unwavering
conviction due to
his early associations and knowledge. He cannot help paying an
excessive
tribute to the Calvinism he had
formally rejected, in so
far as, according to him, it goes to form
character - even national
character, at all events, in its production of types; and he never
in any really
effective way glances at what Mr Matthew Arnold
called "Scottish manners, Scottish drink" as elements in any way
radically qualifying. It is not, of course, that I, as a Scotsman,
well acquainted with rural life in some parts of England, as with
rural life in many parts of Scotland in my youth, do not heartily
agree with him - the point is that, when he comes to this sort of
comparison and
contrast, he writes exactly as his father would or
might have done, with a full
consciousness, after all, of the
tribute he was paying to the practical
outcome on
character of the
Calvinism in which he so
thoroughly believed. It is, in its way, a
very
peculiar thing - and had I space, and did I believe it would
prove interesting to readers in general, I might write an essay on
it, with instances - in which case the Address to the Scottish
Clergy would come in for more notice, citation and
application than
it has yet received. But
meanwhile just take this little snippet -
very
characteristic" target="_blank" title="a.特有的 n.特性">
characteristic and very
suggestive in its own way - and tell
me whether it does not justify and bear out fully what I have now
said as illustrating a certain side and a strange uncertain
limitation in Stevenson:
"But it is not alone in
scenery and
architecture that we count
England foreign. The
constitution of society, the very pillars of
the empire, surprise and even pain us. The dull neglected peasant,
sunk in matter,
insolent, gross and servile, makes a startling
contrast to our own long-legged, long-headed,
thoughtful, Bible-
loving
ploughman. A week or two in such a place as Suffolk leaves
the Scotsman gasping. It seems impossible that within the
boundaries of his own island a class should have been thus
forgotten. Even the educated and
intelligent who hold our own
opinions and speak in our own words, yet seem to hold them with a
difference or from another reason, and to speak on all things with
less interest and
conviction. The first shock of English society
is like a cold plunge." (8)
As there was a great deal of the "John Bull element" (9) in the
little
dreamer De Quincey, so there was a great deal, after all, of
the rather
conceited Calvinistic Scot in R. L. Stevenson, and it is
to be traced as clearly in certain of his fictions as anywhere,
though he himself would not perhaps have seen it and
acknowledged
it, as I am here forced now to see it, and to
acknowledge it for
him.
CHAPTER XVII - PROOFS OF GROWTH
Once again I quote Goethe:
"Natural
simplicity and
repose are the acme of art, and hence it
follows no youth can be a master." It has to be confessed that