life in Paris, went to Brittany, studied new rhythms,
new forms, studied the moon; and then people began
to touch their foreheads knowingly. I was suspected
simply because I did not want to turn out sweet sonnets
about the pretty stars. Why, man, I have a star
in my stomach! Every poet has. We are of
the same stuff as the stars. It was Marlowe who
said, ’A sound magician is a mighty god.’
He was wrong. Only the mentally unsound are really
wise. This the ancients knew. Even if Gerard
de Nerval did walk the boulevards trolling a lobster
by a blue ribbon—that is no reason for judging
him crazy. As he truly said, ’Lobsters
neither bark nor bite; and they know the secrets of
the sea!’ His dreams simply overflowed into his
daily existence. He had the courage of his dreams.
Do you remember his declaring that the sun never appears
in dreams? How true! But the moon does,
‘sexton of the planets,’ as the crazy poet
Lenau called it—the moon which is the patron
sky-saint of men with brains. Ah, brains!
What unhappiness they cause in this brainless world,
a world rotten with hypocrisy. A poet polishes
words until they glitter with beauty, charging them
with fulminating meaning—straightway he
is called mad by men who sweat and toil on the stock
exchange. Have you ever, my dear Quell, watched
those little, grotesque brokers on a busy day?
No? Well, you will say that no lunatic grimacing
beneath the horns of the moon ever made such ludicrous,
such useless, gestures. And for what? Money!
Money to spend as idiotically as it is garnered.
The world is crazy, I tell you, crazy, to toil as
it does. How much cleverer are the apes who won’t
talk, because, if they did, they would be forced to
abandon their lovely free life, put on ugly garments,
and work for a living. These animals, for which
we have such contempt, are freer than men; they are
the Supermen of Nietzsche—Nietzsche whose
brain mirrored both a Prometheus and a Napoleon.”
Quell listened to this speech with indifference.
Arved continued:—
“Nor was Nietzsche insane when he went to the
asylum. His sanity was blinding in its brilliancy;
he voluntarily renounced the world of foolish faces
and had himself locked away where he would not hear
its foolish clacking. O Silence! gift of the
gods, deified by Carlyle in many volumes and praised
by me in many silly words! My good fellow, society,
which is always hypocritical, has to build lunatic
asylums in self-defence. These polite jails keep
the world in countenance; they give it a standard.
If you are behind the bars—”
“Speak for yourself,” growled Quell.
“Then the world knows that you are crazy and
that it is not. There is no other way
of telling the difference. So a conspiracy of
fools, lawyers, and doctors is formed. If you
do not live the life of the stupid: cheat, lie,
steal, smirk, eat, dance, and drink—then
you are crazy! That fact agreed upon, the hypocrites,
who are quite mad, but cunning enough to dissemble,
lock behind bolted doors those free souls, the poets,
painters, musicians—artistic folk in general.
They brand our gifts with fancy scientific names,
such as Megalomania, Paranoia, Folie des grandeurs.
Show me a genius and I’ll show you a madman—according
to the world’s notion.”