at the end of it.’ The Virgins of Guido
Reni sent him into ecstasies and the Goddesses of
Correggio into raptures. In short, as he himself
admitted, he never could resist ‘le Beau’
in whatever form he found it.
Le Beau! The
phrase is characteristic of the peculiar species of
ingenuous sensibility which so oddly agitated this
sceptical man of the world. His whole vision
of life was coloured by it. His sense of values
was impregnated with what he called his ’espagnolisme’—his
immense admiration for the noble and the high-sounding
in speech or act or character—an admiration
which landed him often enough in hysterics and absurdity.
Yet this was the soil in which a temperament of caustic
reasonableness had somehow implanted itself. The
contrast is surprising, because it is so extreme.
Other men have been by turns sensible and enthusiastic:
but who before or since has combined the emotionalism
of a schoolgirl with the cold penetration of a judge
on the bench? Beyle, for instance, was capable
of writing, in one of those queer epitaphs of himself
which he was constantly composing, the high-falutin’
words ’Il respecta un seul homme: Napoleon’;
and yet, as he wrote them, he must have remembered
well enough that when he met Napoleon face to face
his unabashed scrutiny had detected swiftly that the
man was a play-actor, and a vulgar one at that.
Such were the contradictions of his double nature,
in which the elements, instead of being mixed, came
together, as it were, in layers, like superimposed
strata of chalk and flint.
In his novels this cohabitation of opposites is responsible
both for what is best and what is worst. When
the two forces work in unison the result is sometimes
of extraordinary value—a product of a kind
which it would be difficult to parallel in any other
author. An eye of icy gaze is turned upon the
tumultuous secrets of passion, and the pangs of love
are recorded in the language of Euclid. The image
of the surgeon inevitably suggests itself—the
hand with the iron nerve and the swift knife laying
bare the trembling mysteries within. It is the
intensity of Beyle’s observation, joined with
such an exactitude of exposition, that makes his dry
pages sometimes more thrilling than the wildest tale
of adventure or all the marvels of high romance.
The passage in La Chartreuse de Parme describing
Count Mosca’s jealousy has this quality, which
appears even more clearly in the chapters of Le
Rouge et Le Noir concerning Julien Sorel and Mathilde
de la Mole. Here Beyle has a subject after his
own heart. The loves of the peasant youth and
the aristocratic girl, traversed and agitated by their
overweening pride, and triumphing at last rather over
themselves than over each other—these things
make up a gladiatorial combat of ‘espagnolismes,’
which is displayed to the reader with a supreme incisiveness.
The climax is reached when Mathilde at last gives
way to her passion, and throws herself into the arms
of Julien, who forces himself to make no response: