Fabrice kills a man in a duel, his first action is
to rush to a looking-glass to see whether his beauty
has been injured by a cut in the face; and Beyle does
not laugh at this; he is impressed by it. In
the same book he lavishes all his art on the creation
of the brilliant, worldly, sceptical Duchesse de Sanseverina,
and then, not quite satisfied, he makes her concoct
and carry out the murder of the reigning Prince in
order to satisfy a desire for amorous revenge.
This really makes her perfect. But the most striking
example of Beyle’s inability to resist the temptation
of sacrificing his head to his heart is in the conclusion
of
Le Rouge et Le Noir, where Julien, to be
revenged on a former mistress who defames him, deliberately
goes down into the country, buys a pistol, and shoots
the lady in church. Not only is Beyle entranced
by the
bravura of this senseless piece of brutality,
but he destroys at a blow the whole atmosphere of impartial
observation which fills the rest of the book, lavishes
upon his hero the blindest admiration, and at last,
at the moment of Julien’s execution, even forgets
himself so far as to write a sentence in the romantic
style: ’Jamais cette tete n’avait
ete aussi poetique qu’au moment ou elle allait
tomber.’ Just as Beyle, in his contrary
mood, carries to an extreme the French love of logical
precision, so in these rhapsodies he expresses in
an exaggerated form a very different but an equally
characteristic quality of his compatriots—their
instinctive responsiveness to fine poses. It
is a quality that Englishmen in particular find it
hard to sympathise with. They remain stolidily
unmoved when their neighbours are in ecstasies.
They are repelled by the ‘noble’ rhetoric
of the French Classical Drama; they find the tirades
of Napoleon, which animated the armies of France to
victory, pieces of nauseous clap-trap. And just
now it is this side—to us the obviously
weak side—of Beyle’s genius that seems
to be most in favour with French critics. To
judge from M. Barres, writing dithyrambically of Beyle’s
‘sentiment d’honneur,’ that is his
true claim to greatness. The sentiment of honour
is all very well, one is inclined to mutter on this
side of the Channel; but oh, for a little sentiment
of humour too!
The view of Beyle’s personality which his novels
give us may be seen with far greater detail in his
miscellaneous writings. It is to these that his
most modern admirers devote their main attention—particularly
to his letters and his autobiographies; but they are
all of them highly characteristic of their author,
and—whatever the subject may be, from a
guide to Rome to a life of Napoleon—one
gathers in them, scattered up and down through their
pages, a curious, dimly adumbrated philosophy—an
ill-defined and yet intensely personal point of view—le
Beylisme. It is in fact almost entirely in
this secondary quality that their interest lies; their
ostensible subject-matter is unimportant. An