even attempts anything but the boldest character drawing,
the best of them, such as Les Trois Mousquetaires, Vingt ans
après, La Reine Margot, are probably the best specimens extant.
Dumas possesses, almost alone among novelists, the secret of
writing interminable dialogue without being tedious, and of
telling the story by it. Of something the same kind, but of a far
lower stamp, are the novels of Eugène Sue (1804–1857). Dumas
and Sue were accompanied and followed by a vast crowd of companions,
independent or imitative. Alfred de Vigny had already
attempted the historical novel in Cinq-Mars. Henri de La Touche
(1785–1851) (Fragoletta), an excellent critic who formed George
Sand, but a mediocre novelist, may be mentioned: and perhaps
also Roger de Beauvoir, whose real name was Eugène Auguste
Roger de Bully (1806–1866) (Le Chronique de Saint Georges),
and Frédéric Soulié (Les Mémoires du diable) (1800–1847).
Paul Féval (La Fée des grèves) (1817–1877) and Amédée Achard
(Belle-Rose) (1814–1875) are of the same school, and some of the
attempts of Jules Janin (1804–1874), more celebrated as a critic,
may also be connected with it. By degrees, however, the taste
for the novel of incident, at least of an historical kind, died out
till it was revived in another form, and with an admixture of
domestic interest, by MM. Erckmann-Chatrian. The last and
one of the most splendid instances of the old style was Le Capitaine
Fracasse, which Théophile Gautier began early and finished
late as a kind of tour de force. The last-named writer in his earlier
days had modified the incident novel in many short tales, a kind
of writing for which French has always been famous, and in
which Gautier’s sketches are masterpieces. His only other long
novel, Mademoiselle de Maupin, belongs rather to the class of
analysis. With Gautier, as a writer whose literary characteristics
even excel his purely tale-telling powers, may be classed Prosper
Mérimée (1803–1870), one of the most exquisite 19th-century
masters of the language. Already, however, in 1830 the tide
was setting strongly in favour of novels of contemporary life
and manners. These were of course susceptible of extremely
various treatment. For many years Paul de Kock (1793–1871),
a writer who did not trouble himself about Classics or Romantics
or any such matter, continued the tradition of Marivaux,
Crébillon fils, and Pigault Lebrun (1753–1835) in a series of not
very moral or polished but lively and amusing sketches of life,
principally of the bourgeois type. Later Charles de Bernard
(1804–1850) (Gerfaut) with infinitely greater wit, elegance,
propriety and literary skill, did the same thing for the higher
classes of French society. But the two great masters of the
novel of character and manners as opposed to that of history
and incident are Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850) and Aurore
Dudevant, commonly called George Sand (1804–1876). Their
influence affected the entire body of novelists who succeeded
them, with very few exceptions. At the head of these exceptions
may be placed Jules Sandeau (1811–1883), who, after writing
a certain number of novels in a less individual style, at last made
for himself a special subject in a certain kind of domestic novel,
where the passions set in motion are less boisterous than those
usually preferred by the French novelist, and reliance is mainly
placed on minute character drawing and shades of colour sober
in hue but very carefully adjusted (Catherine, Mademoiselle de
Penarvan, Mademoiselle de la Seiglière). In the same class of
the more quiet and purely domestic novelists may be placed
X. B. Saintine (1798–1865) (Picciola), Madame C. Reybaud
(1802–1871) (Clémentine, Le Cadet de Colobrières), J. T. de Saint-Germain
(Pour en épingle, La Feuille de coudrier), Madame Craven
(1808–1891) (Récit d’une sœur, Fleurange). Henri Beyle (1798–1865),
who wrote under the nom de plume of Stendhal and belongs
to an older generation than most of these, also stands by himself.
His chief book in the line of fiction is La Chartreuse de Parme, an
exceedingly powerful novel of the analytical kind, and he also
composed a considerable number of critical and miscellaneous
works. Of little influence at first (though he had great power
over Mérimée) and never master of a perfect style, he has exercised
ever increasing authority as a master of pessimist analysis.
Indeed much of his work was never published till towards the
close of the century. Last among the independents must be
mentioned Henry Murger (1822–1861), the painter of what is
called Bohemian life, that is to say, the struggles, difficulties and
amusements of students, youthful artists, and men of letters.
In this peculiar style, which may perhaps be regarded as an
irregular descendant of the picaroon romance, Murger has no
rival; and he is also, though on no extensive scale, a poet of great
pathos. But with these exceptions, the influences of the two
writers we have mentioned, sometimes combined, more often
separate, may be traced throughout the whole of later novel
literature. George Sand began with books strongly tinged with
the spirit of revolt against moral and social arrangements,
and she sometimes diverged into very curious paths of pseudo-philosophy,
such as was popular in the second quarter of the
century. At times, too, as in Lucrezia Floriani and some other
works, she did not hesitate to draw largely on her own personal
adventures and experiences. But latterly she devoted herself
rather to sketches of country life and manners, and to novels
involving bold if not very careful sketches of character and more
or less dramatic situations. She was one of the most fertile
of novelists, continuing to the end of her long life to pour forth
fiction at the rate of many volumes a year. Of her different
styles may be mentioned as fairly characteristic, Lélia, Lucrezia
Floriani, Consuelo, La Mare au diable, La Petite Fadette, François
le champi, Mademoiselle de la Quintinie. Considering the shorter Balzac the younger.
length of his life the productiveness of Balzac was
almost more astonishing, especially if we consider that
some of his early work was never reprinted, and that
he left great stores of fragments and unfinished sketches. He is,
moreover, the most remarkable example in literature of untiring
work and determination to achieve success despite the greatest
discouragements. His early work was worse than unsuccessful,
it was positively bad. After more than a score of unsuccessful
attempts, Les Chouans at last made its mark, and for twenty
years from that time the astonishing productions composing the
so-called Comédie humaine were poured forth successively.
The sub-titles which Balzac imposed upon the different batches,
Scènes de la vie parisienne, de la vie de province, de la vie
intime, &c., show, like the general title, a deliberate intention
on the author’s part to cover the whole ground of human, at
least of French life. Such an attempt could not succeed wholly;
yet the amount of success attained is astonishing. Balzac has,
however, with some justice been accused of creating the world
which he described, and his personages, wonderful as is the
accuracy and force with which many of the characteristics of
humanity are exemplified in them, are somehow not altogether
human. Since these two great novelists, many others have
arisen, partly to tread in their steps, partly to strike out independent
paths. Octave Feuillet (1821–1890), beginning his
career by apprenticeship to Alexandre Dumas and the historical
novel, soon found his way in a very different style of composition,
the roman intime of fashionable life, in which, notwithstanding
some grave defects, he attained much popularity and showed
remarkable skill in keeping abreast of his time. The so-called
realist side of Balzac was developed (but, as he himself acknowledged,
with a double dose of intermixed if somewhat transformed
Romanticism) by Gustave Flaubert (1821–1880), who
showed culture, scholarship and a literary power over the language
inferior to that of no writer of the century. No novelist of his
generation has attained a higher literary rank than Flaubert.
Madame Bovary and L’Éducation sentimentale are studies of contemporary
life; in Salammbô and La Tentation de Saint Antoine
erudition and antiquarian knowledge furnish the subjects for
the display of the highest literary skill. Of about the same date
Edmond About (1828–1885), before he abandoned novel-writing,
devoted himself chiefly to sketches of abundant but not always
refined wit (L’Homme à l’oreille cassée, Le Nez d’un notaire),
and sometimes to foreign scenes (Tolla, Le Roi des montagnes).
Champfleury (Henri Husson, 1829–1889), a prolific critic,
deserves notice for stories of the extravaganza kind. During the
whole of the Second Empire one of the most popular writers was
Ernest Feydeau (1821–1873), a writer of great ability, but morbid
and affected in the choice and treatment of his subjects (Fanny,
Page:EB1911 - Volume 11.djvu/160
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
148
FRENCH LITERATURE
[PROSE FICTION