allow one to call him a Meissonier in words.
The school of
romanticrealism which was founded by Merimee and
Balzac found its culmination in De Maupassant. He surpassed his
mentor, Flaubert, in the
breadth and vividness of his work, and
one of the greatest of modern French
critics has recorded the
deliberate opinion, that of all Taine's pupils Maupassant had the
greatest command of language and the most finished and incisive
style. Robust in
imagination and fired with natural
passion, his
psychological
curiosity kept him true to human nature, while at
the same time his
mental eye, when fixed upon the most ordinary
phases of human conduct, could see some new
motive or
aspect of
things
hitherto unnoticed by the
careless crowd.
It has been said by
casualcritics that Maupassant lacked one
quality
indispensable to the production of truly
artistic work,
viz: an
absolutely" target="_blank" title="ad.绝对地;确实">
absolutelynormal, that is, moral, point of view. The
answer to this
criticism" target="_blank" title="n.批评;评论(文)">
criticism is
obvious. No dissector of the gamut of
human pas- sion and folly in all its tones could present aught
that could be called new, if ungifted with a
viewpoint totally
out of the ordinary plane. Cold and
merciless in the use of this
point de vue De Maupassant
undoubtedly is, especially in such
vivid depictions of love, both
physical and
maternal, as we find
in "L'histoire d'une fille de ferme" and "La femme de Paul." But
then the surgeon's scalpel never hesitates at giving pain, and
pain is often the road to health and ease. Some of Maupassant's
short stories are sermons more forcible than any moral
dissertation could ever be.
Of De Maupassant's sustained efforts "Une Vie" may bear the palm.
This
romance has the
distinction of having changed Tolstoi from
an
adversecritic into a warm
admirer of the author. To quote the
Russian moralist upon the book:
" 'Une Vie' is a
romance of the best type, and in my judgment the
greatest that has been produced by any French
writer since Victor
Hugo penned 'Les Miserables.' Passing over the force and
directness of the
narrative, I am struck by the
intensity, the
grace, and the
insight with which the
writer treats the new
aspects of human nature which he finds in the life he describes."
And as if
gracefully to recall a former
adversecriticism" target="_blank" title="n.批评;评论(文)">
criticism,
Tolstoi adds:
"I find in the book, in almost equal strength, the three cardinal
qualities
essential to great work, viz: moral purpose, perfect
style, and
absolutesincerity. . . . Maupassant is a man whose
vision has penetrated the silent depths of human life, and from
that vantage- ground interprets the struggle of
humanity."
"Bel-Ami" appeared almost two years after "Une Vie," that is to
say, about 1885. Discussed and
criticised as it has been, it is
in
reality a
satire, an
indignantoutburst against the corruption
of society which in the story enables an ex-soldier,
devoid of
conscience, honor, even of the commonest regard for others, to
gain
wealth and rank. The
purport of the story is clear to those
who recognize the ideas that governed Maupassant's work, and even
the hasty reader or
critic, on
reading "Mont Oriol," which was
published two years later and is based on a
combination of the
motifs which inspired "Une Vie" and "Bel-Ami," will reconsider
former hasty judgments, and feel, too, that beneath the triumph
of evil which calls forth Maupassant's satiric anger there lies
the substratum on which all his work is founded, viz: the
persistent,
ceaseless questioning of a soul
unable to reconcile
or explain the
contradiction between love in life and inevitable
death. Who can read in "Bel-Ami" the
terriblygraphicdescriptionof the consumptive journalist's demise, his
frantic clinging to
life, and his
refusal to credit the slow and
merciless approach
of death, without feeling that the question asked at Naishapur
many centuries ago is still
waiting for the
solution that is
always promised but never comes?
In the
romances which followed, dating from 1888 to 1890, a sort
of calm
despair seems to have settled down upon De Maupassant's
attitude toward life. Psychologically acute as ever, and as
perfect in style and
sincerity as before, we miss the note of
anger. Fatality is the keynote, and yet, sounding low, we detect
a
genuine subtone of sorrow. Was it a prescience of 1893? So much
work to be done, so much work demanded of him, the world of
Paris, in all its
brilliant and
attractive phases, at his feet,
and yet--inevitable, ever advancing death, with the question of
life still unanswered.
This may
account for some of the
strained situations we find in
his later
romances. Vigorous in frame and
hearty as he was, the
atmosphere of his
mental processes must have been vitiated to
produce the
dainty but dangerous pessimism that pervades some of
his later work. This was
partly a
consequence of his
honesty and
partly of
mentaldespair. He never accepted other people's views
on the questions of life. He looked into such problems for
himself, arriving at the truth, as it appeared to him, by the
logic of events, often
finding evil where he wished to find good,
but never hoodwinking himself or his readers by adapting or
distorting the
reality of things to suit a preconceived idea.
Maupassant was
essentially a
worshiper of the
eternal feminine.
He was persuaded that without the
continual presence of the
gentler sex man's
existence would be an emotionally silent
wilderness. No other French
writer has described and analyzed so
minutely and comprehensively the many and various
motives and
moods that shape the conduct of a woman in life. Take for
instance the
wonderfully subtle
analysis of a woman's heart as
wife and mother that we find in "Une Vie." Could aught be more
delicately incisive? Sometimes in describing the apparently
inexplicable conduct of a certain woman he leads his readers to a
point where a false step would destroy the spell and bring the
reproach of banality and
ridicule upon the tale. But the
catastrophe never occurs. It was necessary to stand poised upon
the brink of the
precipice to realize the depth of the abyss and
feel the
terror of the fall.
Closely
allied to this phase of Maupassant's nature was the
peculiar feeling of
loneliness that every now and then breaks
irresistibly forth in the course of some short story. Of kindly
soul and
genial heart, he suffered not only from the oppression
of spirit caused by the lack of
humanity, kindliness, sanity, and
harmony which he encountered daily in the world at large, but he
had an ever abiding sense of the invincible, unbanishable
solitariness of his own inmost self. I know of no more poignant
expression of such a feeling than the cry of
despair which rings
out in the short story called "Solitude," in which he describes
the insurmountable
barrier which exists between man and man, or
man and woman, however
intimate the friendship between them. He
could picture but one way of destroying this terrible
loneliness,
the
attainment" target="_blank" title="n.达到;得到;造诣">
attainment of a spiritual--a divine--state of love, a
condition to which he would give no name utterable by human lips,
lest it be profaned, but for which his whole being yearned. How
acutely he felt his
failure to
attain his
deliverance may be
drawn from his wail that mankind has no UNIVERSAL
measure of
happiness.
"Each one of us," writes De Maupassant, "forms for himself an
illusion through which he views the world, be it poetic,
senti
mental,
joyous,
melancholy, or
dismal; an
illusion of
beauty, which is a human convention; of ugliness, which is a
matter of opinion; of truth, which, alas, is never immutable."
And he concludes by asserting that the happiest artist is he who
approaches most closely to the truth of things as he sees them
through his own particular
illusion.
Salient points in De Maupassant's
genius were that he possessed
the rare
faculty of
holding direct
communion with his gifts, and
of
writing from their dictation as it was interpreted by his
senses. He had no
patience with
writers who in striving to
present life as a whole purposely omit episodes that reveal the
influence of the senses. "As well," he says, "refrain from
describing the effect of intoxicating perfumes upon man as omit
the influence of beauty on the
temperament of man."
De Maupassant's
dramaticinstinct was supremely powerful. He
seems to select unerringly the one thing in which the soul of the
scene is prisoned, and, making that his keynote, gives a picture
in words which haunt the memory like a
strain of music. The
description of the ride of Madame Tellier and her companions in a
country cart through a Norman
landscape is an
admirable example.
You smell the masses of the colza in
blossom, you see the yellow
carpets of ripe corn spotted here and there by the blue coronets
of the cornflower, and rapt by the red blaze of the poppy beds
and bathed in the fresh greenery of the
landscape, you share in
the emotions felt by the happy party in the country cart. And yet
with all his vividness of
description, De Maupassant is always