<SPAN name="morte"></SPAN>
<h3> FEUILLET'S "LA MORTE" </h3>
<p>[219] IN his latest novel M. Octave Feuillet adds two charming people
to that chosen group of personages in which he loves to trace the
development of the more serious elements of character amid the
refinements and artifices of modern society, and which make such good
company. The proper function of fictitious literature in affording us
a refuge into a world slightly better—better conceived, or better
finished—than the real one, is effected in most instances less through
the imaginary events at which a novelist causes us to assist, than by
the imaginary persons to whom he introduces us. The situations of M.
Feuillet's novels are indeed of a real and intrinsic
importance:—tragic crises, inherent in the general conditions of human
nature itself, or which arise necessarily out of the special conditions
of modern society. Still, with him, in the actual result, they become
subordinate, as it is their tendency to do in real life, to the
characters they help to form. Often, his most attentive reader will
have forgotten the actual details of his plot; while [220] the soul,
tried, enlarged, shaped by it, remains as a well-fixed type in the
memory. He may return a second or third time to Sibylle, or Le Journal
d'une Femme, or Les Amours de Philippe, and watch, surprised afresh,
the clean, dainty, word-sparing literary operation (word-sparing, yet
with no loss of real grace or ease) which, sometimes in a few pages,
with the perfect logic of a problem of Euclid, complicates and then
unravels some moral embarrassment, really worthy of a trained dramatic
expert. But the characters themselves, the agents in those difficult,
revealing situations, such a reader will recognise as old acquaintances
after the first reading, feeling for them as for some gifted and
attractive persons he has known in the actual world—Raoul de Chalys,
Henri de Lerne, Madame de T�cle, Jeanne de la Roche-Ermel, Maurice de
Fr�meuse, many others; to whom must now be added Bernard and Aliette de
Vaudricourt.</p>
<p>"How I love those people!" cries Mademoiselle de Courteheuse, of Madame
de S�vign� and some other of her literary favourites in the days of the
Grand Monarch. "What good company! What pleasure they took in high
things! How much more worthy they were than the people who live
now!"—What good company! That is precisely what the admirer of M.
Feuillet's books feels as one by one he places them on his book-shelf,
to be sought again. What is proposed here is not to tell his last
story, [221] but to give the English reader specimens of his most
recent effort at characterisation.</p>
<p>It is with the journal of Bernard himself that the story opens,
September 187-. Bernard-Maurice Hugon de Montauret, Vicomte de
Vaudricourt, is on a visit to his uncle, the head of his family, at La
Savini�re, a country-house somewhere between Normandy and Brittany.
This uncle, an artificial old Parisian in manner, but honest in
purpose, a good talker, and full of real affection for his heir
Bernard, is one of M. Feuillet's good minor characters—one of the
quietly humorous figures with which he relieves his more serious
company. Bernard, with whom the refinements of a man of fashion in the
Parisian world by no means disguise a powerful intelligence cultivated
by wide reading, has had thoughts during his tedious stay at La
Savini�re of writing a history of the reign of Louis the Fourteenth,
the library of a neighbouring ch�teau being rich in memoirs of that
period. Finally, he prefers to write his own story, a story so much
more interesting to himself; to write it at a peculiar crisis in his
life, the moment when his uncle, unmarried, but anxious to perpetuate
his race, is bent on providing him with a wife, and indeed has one in
view.</p>
<p>The accomplished Bernard, with many graces of person, by his own
confession, takes nothing seriously. As to that matter of religious
beliefs, "the breeze of the age, and of science, has blown [222] over
him, as it has blown over his contemporaries, and left empty space
there." Still, when he saw his childish religious faith departing from
him, as he thinks it must necessarily depart from all intelligent male
Parisians, he wept. Since that moment, however, a gaiety, serene and
imperturbable, has been the mainstay of his happily constituted
character. The girl to whom his uncle desires to see him united—odd,
quixotic, intelligent, with a sort of pathetic and delicate grace, and
herself very religious—belongs to an old-fashioned, devout family,.
resident at Varaville, near by. M. Feuillet, with half a dozen fine
touches of his admirable pencil makes us see the place. And the
enterprise has at least sufficient interest to keep Bernard in the
country, which the young Parisian detests. "This piquant episode of my
life," he writes, "seems to me to be really deserving of study; to be
worth etching off, day by day, by an observer well informed on the
subject."</p>
<p>Recognising in himself, though as his one real fault, that he can take
nothing seriously in heaven or earth, Bernard de Vaudricourt, like all
M. Feuillet's favourite young men, so often erring or corrupt, is a man
of scrupulous "honour." He has already shown disinterestedness in
wishing his rich uncle to marry again. His friends at Varaville think
so well-mannered a young man more of a Christian than he really is;
and, at all events, he will never owe his happiness to a falsehood. If
he has great faults, [223] hypocrisy at least is no part of them. In
oblique paths he finds himself ill at ease. Decidedly, as he thinks,
he was born for straight ways, for loyalty in all his enterprises; and
he congratulates himself upon the fact.</p>
<p>In truth, Bernard has merits which he ignores, at least in this first
part of his journal: merits which are necessary to explain the
influence he is able to exercise from the first over such a character
as Mademoiselle de Courteheuse. His charm, in fact, is in the union of
that gay and apparently wanton nature with a genuine power of
appreciating devotion in others, which becomes devotion in himself.
With all the much-cherished elegance and worldly glitter of his
personality, he is capable of apprehending, of understanding and being
touched by the presence of great matters. In spite of that happy
lightness of heart, so jealously fenced about, he is to be wholly
caught at last, as he is worthy to be, by the serious, the generous
influence of things. In proportion to his immense worldly strength is
his capacity for the immense pity which breaks his heart.</p>
<p>In a few life-like touches M. Feuillet brings out, as if it were indeed
a thing of ordinary existence, the simple yet delicate life of a French
country-house, the ideal life in an ideal France. Bernard is paying a
morning visit at the old turreted home of the "prehistoric" Courteheuse
family. Mademoiselle Aliette de Courteheuse, a studious girl, though a
bold and excellent rider [224] —Mademoiselle de Courteheuse, "with her
hair of that strange colour of fine ashes"—has conducted her visitor
to see the library:</p>
<p>One day she took me to see the library, rich in works of the
seventeenth century and in memoirs relating to that time. I remarked
there also a curious collection of engravings of the same period.
"Your father," I observed, "had a strong predilection for the age of
Louis the Fourteenth."</p>
<p>"My father lived in that age," she answered gravely. And as I looked
at her with surprise, and a little embarrassed, she added, "He made me
live there too, in his company."</p>
<p>And then the eyes of this singular girl filled with tears. She turned
away, took a few steps to suppress her emotion, and returning, pointed
me to a chair. Then seating herself on the step of the book-case, she
said, "I must explain my father to you."</p>
<p>She was half a minute collecting her thoughts: then, speaking with an
expansion of manner not habitual with her, hesitating, and blushing
deeply, whenever she was about to utter a word that might seem a shade
too serious for lips so youthful:—"My father," she proceeded, "died of
the consequences of a wound he had received at Patay. That may show
you that he loved his country, but he was no lover of his own age. He
possessed in the highest degree the love of order; and order was a
thing nowhere to be seen. He had a horror of disorder; and he saw it
everywhere. In those last years, especially, his reverence, his
beliefs, his tastes, all alike were ruffled to the point of actual
suffering, by whatever was done and said and written around him.
Deeply saddened by the conditions of the present time, he habituated
himself to find a refuge in the past, and the seventeenth century more
particularly offered him the kind of society in which he would have
wished to live—a society, well-ordered, polished, lettered, believing.
More and more he loved to shut himself up in it. More and more also he
loved to make the moral discipline and the literary tastes of that
favourite age prevail in his own household. You may even have remarked
that he carried his predilection into minute matters of arrangement and
decoration. You can see from this window the straight paths, the box
in [225] patterns, the yew trees and clipped alleys of our garden. You
may notice that in our garden-beds we have none but flowers of the
period—lilies, rose-mallows, immortelles, rose-pinks, in short what
people call parsonage flowers—des fleurs de cur�. Our old silvan
tapestries, similarly, are of that age. You see too that all our
furniture, from presses and sideboards, down to our little tables and
our arm-chairs, is in the severest style of Louis the Fourteenth. My
father did not appreciate the dainty research of our modern luxury. He
maintained that our excessive care for the comforts of life weakened
mind as well as body. That," added the girl with a laugh,—"that is
why you find your chair so hard when you come to see us."</p>
<p>Then, with resumed gravity—"It was thus that my father endeavoured, by
the very aspect and arrangement of outward things, to promote in
himself the imaginary presence of the epoch in which his thoughts
delighted. As for myself—need I tell you that I was the confidant of
that father, so well-beloved: a confidant touched by his sorrows, full
of indignation at his disappointments, charmed by his consolations.
Here, precisely—surrounded by those books which we read together, and
which he taught me to love—it is here that I have passed the
pleasantest hours of my youth. In common we indulged our enthusiasm
for those days of faith; of the quiet life; its blissful hours of
leisure well-secured; for the French language in its beauty and purity;
the delicate, the noble urbanity, which was then the honour and the
special mark of our country, but has ceased to be so."</p>
<p>She paused, with a little confusion, as I thought, at the warmth of her
last words.</p>
<p>And then, just to break the silence, "You have explained," I said, "an
impression which I have experienced again and again in my visits here,
and which has sometimes reached the intensity of an actual illusion,
though a very agreeable one. The look of your house, its style, its
tone and keeping, carried me two centuries back so completely that I
should hardly have been surprised to hear Monsieur le Prince, Madame de
la Fayette, or Madame de S�vign� herself, announced at your
drawing-room door."</p>
<p>"Would it might be!" said Mademoiselle de Courteheuse. [226] "Ah!
Monsieur, how I love those people! What good company! What pleasure
they took in high things! How much more worthy they were than the
people who live now!" I tried to calm a little this retrospective
enthusiasm, so much to the prejudice of my contemporaries and of
myself. "Most truly, Mademoiselle," I said, "the age which you regret
had its rare merits—merits which I appreciate as you do. But then,
need one say that that society, so regular, so choice in appearance,
had, like our own, below the surface, its troubles, its disorders? I
see here many of the memoirs of that time. I can't tell exactly which
of them you may or may not have read, and so I feel a certain
difficulty in speaking."</p>
<p>She interrupted me: "Ah!" she said, with entire simplicity, "I
understand you. I have not read all you see here. But I have read
enough of it to know that my friends in that past age had, like those
who live now, their passions, their weaknesses, their mistakes. But,
as my father used to say to me, all that did but pass over a ground of
what was solid and serious, which always discovered itself again anew.
There were great faults then; but there were also great repentances.
There was a certain higher region to which everything conducted—even
what as evil." She blushed deeply: then rising a little suddenly, "A
long speech!" she said: "Forgive me! I am not usually so very
talkative. It is because my father was in question; and I should wish
his memory to be as dear and as venerable to all the rest of the world
as it is to me."</p>
<p>We pass over the many little dramatic intrigues and misunderstandings,
with the more or less adroit interferences of the uncle, which raise
and lower alternately Bernard's hopes. M. Feuillet has more than once
tried his hand with striking success in the portraiture of French
ecclesiastics. He has drawn none better than the Bishop of Saint-M�en,
uncle of Mademoiselle de Courteheuse, to whose interests he is devoted.
Bernard feels that to gain the influence of this prelate [227] would be
to gain his cause; and the opportunity for an interview comes.</p>
<p>Monseigneur de Courteheuse would seem to be little over fifty years of
age: he is rather tall, and very thin: the eyes, black and full of
life, are encircled by a ring of deep brown. His speech and gesture
are animated, and, at times, as if carried away. He adopts frequently
a sort of furious manner which on a sudden melts into the smile of an
honest man. He has beautiful silvery hair, flying in vagrant locks
over his forehead, and beautiful bishop's hands. As he becomes calm he
has an imposing way of gently resettling himself in his sacerdotal
dignity. To sum up: his is a physiognomy full of passion, consumed
with zeal, yet still frank and sincere.</p>
<p>I was hardly seated, when with a motion of the hand he invited me to
speak.</p>
<p>"Monseigneur!" I said, "I come to you (you understand me?) as to my
last resource. What I am now doing is almost an act of despair; for it
might seem at first sight that no member of the family of Mademoiselle
de Courteheuse must show himself more pitiless than yourself towards
the faults with which I am reproached. I am an unbeliever: you are an
apostle! And yet, Monseigneur, it is often at the hands of saintly
priests, such as yourself, that the guilty find most indulgence. And
then, I am not indeed guilty: I have but wandered. I am refused the
hand of your niece because I do not share her faith—your own faith.
But, Monseigneur, unbelief is not a crime, it is a misfortune. I know
people often say, a man denies God when by his own conduct he has
brought himself into a condition in which he may well desire that God
does not exist. In this way he is made guilty, or, in a sense,
responsible for his incredulity. For myself, Monseigneur, I have
consulted my conscience with an entire sincerity; and although my youth
has been amiss, I am certain that my atheism proceeds from no sentiment
of personal interest. On the contrary, I may tell you with truth that
the day on which I perceived my faith come to nought, the day on which
I lost hope in God, I shed the bitterest tears of my life. In spite of
appearances, I am not so light a spirit as people think. I am not one
of those for whom God, when He disappears, [228] leaves no sense of a
void place. Believe me!—a man may love sport, his club, his worldly
habits, and yet have his hours of thought, of self-recollection. Do
you suppose that in those hours one does not feel the frightful
discomfort of an existence with no moral basis, without principles,
with no outlook beyond this world? And yet, what can one do? You
would tell me forthwith, in the goodness, the compassion, which I read
in your eyes; Confide to me your objections to religion, and I will try
to solve them. Monseigneur, I should hardly know how to answer you.
My objections are 'Legion!' They are without number, like the stars in
the sky: they come to us on all sides, from every quarter of the
horizon, as if on the wings of the wind; and they leave in us, as they
pass, ruins only, and darkness. Such has been my experience, and that
of many others; and it has been as involuntary as it is irreparable."</p>
<p>"And I—Monsieur!" said the bishop, suddenly, casting on me one of his
august looks, "Do you suppose that I am but a play-actor in my
cathedral church?"</p>
<p>"Monseigneur!"</p>
<p>"Yes! Listening to you, one would suppose that we were come to a
period of the world in which one must needs be either an atheist or a
hypocrite! Personally, I claim to be neither one nor the other."</p>
<p>"Need I defend myself on that point, Monseigneur? Need I say that I
did not come here to give you offence?"</p>
<p>"Doubtless! doubtless! Well, Monsieur, I admit; not without great
reserves, mind! for one is always more or less responsible for the
atmosphere in which he lives, the influences to which he is subject,
for the habitual turn he gives to his thoughts; still, I admit that you
are the victim of the incredulity of the age, that you are altogether
guiltless in your scepticism, your atheism! since you have no fear of
hard words. Is it therefore any the less certain that the union of a
fervent believer, such as my niece, with a man like yourself would be a
moral disorder of which the consequences might be disastrous? Do you
think it could be my duty, as a relative of Mademoiselle de
Courteheuse, her spiritual father, as a prelate of the Church, to lend
my hands to such disorder, to preside over the shocking union of two
souls separated by the whole width of heaven?"</p>
<p>[229] The bishop, in proposing that question, kept his eyes fixed
ardently on mine.</p>
<p>"Monseigneur," I answered, after a moment's embarrassment, "you know as
well as, and better than I, the condition of the world, and of our
country, at this time. You know that unhappily I am not an exception:
that men of faith are rare in it. And permit me to tell you my whole
mind. If I must needs suffer the inconsolable misfortune of renouncing
the happiness I had hoped for, are you quite sure that the man to whom
one of these days you will give your niece may not be something more
than a sceptic, or even an atheist?"</p>
<p>"What, Monsieur?"</p>
<p>"A hypocrite, Monseigneur! Mademoiselle de Courteheuse is beautiful
enough, rich enough, to excite the ambition of those who may be less
scrupulous than I. As for me, if you now know that I am a sceptic, you
know also that I am a man of honour: and there is something in that!"</p>
<p>"A man of honour!" the bishop muttered to himself, with a little
petulance and hesitation. "A man of honour! Yes, I believe it!"
Then, after an interval, "Come, Monsieur," he said gently, "your case
is not as desperate as you suppose. My Aliette is one of those young
enthusiasts through whom Heaven sometimes works miracles." And Bernard
refusing any encouragement of that hope (the "very roots of faith are
dead" in him for ever) "since you think that," the bishop answers, "it
is honest to say so. But God has His ways!"</p>
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