they exhibit. In pure literary criticism more particularly,
Joubert, though exhibiting some inconsistencies due to his time,
is astonishingly penetrating and suggestive. Of science and
erudition the time was fruitful. At an early period of it appeared
the remarkable work of Pierre Cabanis (1757–1808), the Rapports
du physique et du morale de l’homme, a work in which physiology
is treated from the extreme materialist point of view but with
all the liveliness and literary excellence of the Philosophe movement
at its best. Another physiological work of great merit
at this period was the Traité de la vie et de la mort of Bichat,
and the example set by these works was widely followed; while
in other branches of science Laplace, Lagrange, Haüy, Berthollet,
&c., produced contributions of the highest value. From the
literary point of view, however, the chief interest of this time
is centred in two individual names, those of Chateaubriand and
Madame de Staël, and in three literary developments of a more
or less novel character, which were all of the highest importance
in shaping the course which French literature has taken since
1824. One of these developments was the reactionary movement
of Maistre and Bonald, which in its turn largely influenced
Chateaubriand, then Lamennais and Montalembert, and was
later represented in French literature in different guises, chiefly
by Louis Veuillot (1815–1883) and Mgr Dupanloup (1802–1878).
The second and third, closely connected, were the immense
advances made by parliamentary eloquence and by political
writing, the latter of which, by the hand of Paul Louis Courier
(1773–1825), contributed for the first time an undoubted masterpiece
to French literature. The influence of the two combined
has since raised journalism to even a greater pitch of power in
France than in any other country. It is in the development of
these new openings for literature, and in the cast and complexion
which they gave to its matter, that the real literary importance
of the Revolutionary period consists; just as it is in the new
elements which they supplied for the treatment of such subjects
that the literary value of the authors of René and De l’Allemagne
mainly lies. We have already alluded to some of the beginnings
of periodical and journalistic letters in France. For some time,
in the hands of Bayle, Basnage, Des Maizeaux, Jurieu, Leclerc,
periodical literature consisted mainly of a series, more or less
disconnected, of pamphlets, with occasional extracts from
forthcoming works, critical adversaria and the like. Of a more
regular kind were the often-mentioned Journal de Trévoux and
Mercure de France, and later the Année littéraire of Fréron and
the like. The Correspondance of Grimm also, as we have pointed
out, bore considerable resemblance to a modern monthly review,
though it was addressed to a very few persons. Of political
news there was, under a despotism, naturally very little. 1789,
however, saw a vast change in this respect. An enormous
efflorescence of periodical literature at once took place, and a
few of the numerous journals founded in that year or soon afterwards
survived for a considerable time. A whole class of authors
arose who pretended to be nothing more than journalists, while
many writers distinguished for more solid contributions to literature
took part in the movement, and not a few active politicians
contributed. Thus to the original staff of the Moniteur, or, as
it was at first called, La Gazette Nationale, La Harpe, Lacretelle,
Andrieux, Dominique Joseph Garat (1749–1833) and Pierre
Ginguené (1748–1826) were attached. Among the writers of
the Journal de Paris André Chénier had been ranked. Fontanes
contributed to many royalist and moderate journals. Guizot
and Morellet, representatives respectively of the 19th and the
18th century, shared in the Nouvelles politiques, while Bertin,
Fievée and J. L. Geoffroy (1743–1814), a critic of peculiar
acerbity, contributed to the Journal de l’empire, afterwards
turned into the still existing Journal des débats. With Geoffroy,
François Bénoit Hoffman (1760–1828), Jean F. J. Dussault
(1769–1824) and Charles F. Dorimond, abbé de Féletz (1765–1850),
constituted a quartet of critics sometimes spoken of as
“the Débats four,” though they were by no means all friends.
Of active politicians Marat (L’Ami du peuple), Mirabeau (Courrier
de Provence), Barère (Journal des débats et des décrets), Brissot
(Patriote français), Hébert (Père Duchesne), Robespierre (Défenseur de la constitution), and Tallien (La Sentinelle) were the most
remarkable who had an intimate connexion with journalism.
On the other hand, the type of the journalist pure and simple
is Camille Desmoulins (1759–1794), one of the most brilliant, in a
literary point of view, of the short-lived celebrities of the time.
Of the same class were Pelletier, Durozoir, Loustalot, Royou.
As the immediate daily interest in politics drooped, there were
formed periodicals of a partly political and partly literary
character. Such had been the décade philosophique, which
counted Cabanis, Chénier, and De Tracy among its contributors,
and this was followed by the Revue française at a later period,
which was in its turn succeeded by the Revue des deux mondes.
On the other hand, parliamentary eloquence was even more
important than journalism during the early period of the Revolution.
Mirabeau naturally stands at the head of orators of this
class, and next to him may be ranked the well-known names of
Malouet and Meunier among constitutionalists; of Robespierre,
Marat and Danton, the triumvirs of the Mountain; of Maury,
Cazalès and the vicomte de Mirabeau, among the royalists;
and above all of the Girondist speakers Barnave, Vergniaud,
and Lanjuinais. The last named survived to take part in the
revival of parliamentary discussion after the Restoration. But
the permanent contributions to French literature of this period
of voluminous eloquence are, as frequently happens in such cases,
by no means large. The union of the journalist and the parliamentary
spirit produced, however, in Paul Louis Courier a Courier.
master of style. Courier spent the greater part of
his life, tragically cut short, in translating the classics
and studying the older writers of France, in which study he
learnt thoroughly to despise the pseudo-classicism of the 18th
century. It was not till he was past forty that he took to political
writing, and the style of his pamphlets, and their wonderful
irony and vigour, at once placed them on the level of the very
best things of the kind. Along with Courier should be mentioned
Benjamin Constant (1767–1830), who, though partly a romance
writer and partly a philosophical author, was mainly a politician
and an orator, besides being fertile in articles and pamphlets.
Lamennais, like Lamartine, will best be dealt with later, and the
same may be said of Béranger; but Chateaubriand and Madame
de Staël must be noticed here. The former represents, in the
influence which changed the literature of the 18th century into
the literature of the 19th, the vague spirit of unrest and “Weltschmerz,”
the affection for the picturesque qualities of nature,
the religious spirit occasionally turning into mysticism, and the
respect, sure to become more and more definite and appreciative,
for antiquity. He gives in short the romantic and conservative Madame
de Staël.
element. Madame de Staël (1766–1817) on the other
hand, as became a daughter of Necker, retained a
great deal of the Philosophe character and the traditions
of the 18th century, especially its liberalism, its sensibilité, and
its thirst for general information; to which, however, she
added a cosmopolitan spirit, and a readiness to introduce into
France the literary and social, as well as the political and philosophical,
peculiarities of other countries to which the 18th century,
in France at least, had been a stranger, and which Chateaubriand
himself, notwithstanding his excursions into English literature,
had been very far from feeling. She therefore contributed to
the positive and liberal side of the future movement. The
absolute literary importance of the two was very different.
Madame de Staël’s early writings were of the critical kind,
half aesthetic half ethical, of which the 18th century had been
fond, and which their titles, Lettres sur J. J. Rousseau, De l’influence
des passions, De la littérature considérée dans ses rapports
avec les institutions sociales, sufficiently show. Her romances,
Delphine and Corinne, had immense literary influence at the time.
Still more was this the case with De l’Allemagne, which practically
opened up to the rising generation in France the till then unknown Chateaubriand.
treasures of literature and philosophy, which during
the most glorious half century of her literary history
Germany had, sometimes on hints taken from France
herself, been accumulating. The literary importance of Chateaubriand
(1768–1848) is far greater, while his literary influence
Page:EB1911 - Volume 11.djvu/154
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
142
FRENCH LITERATURE
[1789–1830