hatred for the proudest and most insidious of all
authorities—the Roman Catholic Church.
It is odd to find some of the ‘Beylistes’
solemnly hailing the man whom the power of the Jesuits
haunted like a nightmare, and whose account of the
seminary in
Le Rouge et Le Noir is one of the
most scathing pictures of religious tyranny ever drawn,
as a prophet of the present Catholic movement in France.
For in truth, if Beyle was a prophet of anything he
was a prophet of that spirit of revolt in modern thought
which first reached a complete expression in the pages
of Nietzsche. His love of power and self-will,
his aristocratic outlook, his scorn of the Christian
virtues, his admiration of the Italians of the Renaissance,
his repudiation of the herd and the morality of the
herd—these qualities, flashing strangely
among his observations on Rossini and the Coliseum,
his reflections on the memories of the past and his
musings on the ladies of the present, certainly give
a surprising foretaste of the fiery potion of Zarathustra.
The creator of the Duchesse de Sanseverina had caught
more than a glimpse of the transvaluation of all values.
Characteristically enough, the appearance of this
new potentiality was only observed by two contemporary
forces in European society—Goethe and the
Austrian police. It is clear that Goethe alone
among the critics of the time understood that Beyle
was something more than a novelist, and discerned
an uncanny significance in his pages. ‘I
do not like reading M. de Stendhal,’ he observed
to Winckelmann, ’but I cannot help doing so.
He is extremely free and extremely impertinent, and
... I recommend you to buy all his books.’
As for the Austrian police, they had no doubt about
the matter. Beyle’s book of travel,
Rome,
Naples et Florence, was, they decided, pernicious
and dangerous in the highest degree; and the poor man
was hunted out of Milan in consequence.
It would be a mistake to suppose that Beyle displayed
in his private life the qualities of the superman.
Neither his virtues nor his vices were on the grand
scale. In his own person he never seems to have
committed an ‘espagnolisme.’ Perhaps
his worst sin was that of plagiarism: his earliest
book, a life of Haydn, was almost entirely ‘lifted’
from the work of a learned German; and in his next
he embodied several choice extracts culled from the
Edinburgh Review. On this occasion he
was particularly delighted, since the Edinburgh,
in reviewing the book, innocently selected for special
approbation the very passages which he had stolen.
It is singular that so original a writer should have
descended to pilfering. But Beyle was nothing
if not inconsistent. With all his Classicism
he detested Racine; with all his love of music he
could see nothing in Beethoven; he adored Italy, and,
so soon as he was given his Italian consulate, he was
usually to be found in Paris. As his life advanced
he grew more and more wayward, capricious, and eccentric.