Upon the sort of screen, patterned with different
states and impressions, which my consciousness would quietly unfold
while I was reading, and which ranged from the most deeply hidden
aspirations of my heart to the wholly external view of the horizon
spread out before my eyes at the foot of the garden, what was from
the first the most permanent and the most intimate part of me, the
lever whose incessant movements controlled all the rest, was my
belief in the philosophic richness and beauty of the book I was
reading, and my desire to appropriate these to myself, whatever the
book might be. For even if I had purchased it at Combray, having
seen it outside Borange's, whose grocery lay too far from our house
for Françoise to be able to deal there, as she did with Camus, but
who enjoyed better custom as a stationer and bookseller; even if I
had seen it, tied with string to keep it in its place in the mosaic
of monthly parts and pamphlets which adorned either side of his
doorway, a doorway more mysterious, more teeming with suggestion
than that of a cathedral, I should have noticed and bought it there
simply because I had recognised it as a book which had been well
spoken of, in my hearing, by the school-master or the school-friend
who, at that particular time, seemed to me to be entrusted with the
secret of Truth and Beauty, things half-felt by me,
half-incomprehensible, the full understanding of which was the
vague but permanent object of my thoughts.
Next to this central belief, which, while I was reading, would
be constantly a motion from my inner self to the outer world,
towards the discovery of Truth, came the emotions aroused in me by
the action in which I would be taking part, for these afternoons
were crammed with more dramatic and sensational events than occur,
often, in a whole lifetime. These were the events which took place
in the book I was reading. It is true that the people concerned in
them were not what Françoise would have called 'real people.' But
none of the feelings which the joys or misfortunes of a 'real'
person awaken in us can be awakened except through a mental picture
of those joys or misfortunes; and the ingenuity of the first
novelist lay in his understanding that, as the picture was the one
essential element in the complicated structure of our emotions, so
that simplification of it which consisted in the suppression, pure
and simple, of 'real' people would be a decided improvement. A
'real' person, profoundly as we may sympathise with him, is in a
great measure perceptible only through our senses, that is to say,
he remains opaque, offers a dead weight which our sensibilities
have not the strength to lift. If some misfortune comes to him, it
is only in one small section of the complete idea we have of him
that we are capable of feeling any emotion; indeed it is only in
one small section of the complete idea he has of himself that he is
capable of feeling any emotion either. The novelist's happy
discovery was to think of substituting for those opaque sections,
impenetrable by the human spirit, their equivalent in immaterial
sections, things, that is, which the spirit can assimilate to
itself. After which it matters not that the actions, the feelings
of this new order of creatures appear to us in the guise of truth,
since we have made them our own, since it is in ourselves that they
are happening, that they are holding in thrall, while we turn over,
feverishly, the pages of the book, our quickened breath and staring
eyes. And once the novelist has brought us to that state, in which,
as in all purely mental states, every emotion is multiplied
ten-fold, into which his book comes to disturb us as might a dream,
but a dream more lucid, and of a more lasting impression than those
which come to us in sleep; why, then, for the space of an hour he
sets free within us all the joys and sorrows in the world, a few of
which, only, we should have to spend years of our actual life in
getting to know, and the keenest, the most intense of which would
never have been revealed to us because the slow course of their
development stops our perception of them. It is the same in life;
the heart changes, and that is our worst misfortune; but we learn
of it only from reading or by imagination; for in reality its
alteration, like that of certain natural phenomena, is so gradual
that, even if we are able to distinguish, successively, each of its
different states, we are still spared the actual sensation of
change.
Next to, but distinctly less intimate a part of myself than this
human element, would come the view, more or less projected before
my eyes, of the country in which the action of the story was taking
place, which made a far stronger impression on my mind than the
other, the actual landscape which would meet my eyes when I raised
them from my book. In this way, for two consecutive summers I used
to sit in the heat of our Combray garden, sick with a longing
inspired by the book I was then reading for a land of mountains and
rivers, where I could see an endless vista of sawmills, where
beneath the limpid currents fragments of wood lay mouldering in
beds of watercress; and nearby, rambling and clustering along low
walls, purple flowers and red. And since there was always lurking
in my mind the dream of a woman who would enrich me with her love,
that dream in those two summers used to be quickened with the
freshness and coolness of running water; and whoever she might be,
the woman whose image I called to mind, purple flowers and red
would at once spring up on either side of her like complementary
colours.
This was not only because an image of which we dream remains for
ever distinguished, is adorned and enriched by the association of
colours not its own which may happen to surround it in our mental
picture; for the scenes in the books I read were to me not merely
scenery more vividly portrayed by my imagination than any which
Combray could spread before my eyes but otherwise of the same kind.
Because of the selection that the author had made of them, because
of the spirit of faith in which my mind would exceed and anticipate
his printed word, as it might be interpreting a revelation, these
scenes used to give me the impression—one which I hardly ever
derived from any place in which I might happen to be, and never
from our garden, that undistinguished product of the strictly
conventional fantasy of the gardener whom my grandmother so
despised—of their being actually part of Nature herself, and worthy
to be studied and explored.
Had my parents allowed me, when I read a book, to pay a visit to
the country it described, I should have felt that I was making an
enormous advance towards the ultimate conquest of truth. For even
if we have the sensation of being always enveloped in, surrounded
by our own soul, still it does not seem a fixed and immovable
prison; rather do we seem to be borne away with it, and perpetually
struggling to pass beyond it, to break out into the world, with a
perpetual discouragement as we hear endlessly, all around us, that
unvarying sound which is no echo from without, but the resonance of
a vibration from within. We try to discover in things, endeared to
us on that account, the spiritual glamour which we ourselves have
cast upon them; we are disillusioned, and learn that they are in
themselves barren and devoid of the charm which they owed, in our
minds, to the association of certain ideas; sometimes we mobilise
all our spiritual forces in a glittering array so as to influence
and subjugate other human beings who, as we very well know, are
situated outside ourselves, where we can never reach them. And so,
if I always imagined the woman I loved as in a setting of whatever
places I most longed, at the time, to visit; if in my secret
longings it was she who attracted me to them, who opened to me the
gate of an unknown world, that was not by the mere hazard of a
simple association of thoughts; no, it was because my dreams of
travel and of love were only moments—which I isolate artificially
to-day as though I were cutting sections, at different heights, in
a jet of water, rainbow-flashing but seemingly without flow or
motion—were only drops in a single, undeviating, irresistible
outrush of all the forces of my life.
And then, as I continue to trace the outward course of these
impressions from their close-packed intimate source in my
consciousness, and before I come to the horizon of reality which
envelops them, I discover pleasures of another kind, those of being
comfortably seated, of tasting the good scent on the air, of not
being disturbed by any visitor; and, when an hour chimed from the
steeple of Saint-Hilaire, of watching what was already spent of the
afternoon fall drop by drop until I heard the last stroke which
enabled me to add up the total sum, after which the silence that
followed seemed to herald the beginning, in the blue sky above me,
of that long part of the day still allowed me for reading, until
the good dinner which Françoise was even now preparing should come
to strengthen and refresh me after the strenuous pursuit of its
hero through the pages of my book. And, as each hour struck, it
would seem to me that a few seconds only had passed since the hour
before; the latest would inscribe itself, close to its predecessor,
on the sky's surface, and I would be unable to believe that sixty
minutes could be squeezed into the tiny arc of blue which was
comprised between their two golden figures. Sometimes it would even
happen that this precocious hour would sound two strokes more than
the last; there must then have been an hour which I had not heard
strike; something which had taken place had not taken place for me;
the fascination of my book, a magic as potent as the deepest
slumber, had stopped my enchanted ears and had obliterated the
sound of that golden bell from the azure surface of the enveloping
silence. Sweet Sunday afternoons beneath the chestnut-tree in our
Combray garden, from which I was careful to eliminate every
commonplace incident of my actual life, replacing them by a career
of strange adventures and ambitions in a land watered by living
streams, you still recall those adventures and ambitions to my mind
when I think of you, and you embody and preserve them by virtue of
having little by little drawn round and enclosed them (while I went
on with my book and the heat of the day declined) in the gradual
crystallisation, slowly altering in form and dappled with a pattern
of chestnut-leaves, of your silent, sonorous, fragrant, limpid
hours.
Sometimes I would be torn from my book, in the middle of the
afternoon, by the gardener's daughter, who came running like a mad
thing, overturning an orange-tree in its tub, cutting a finger,
breaking a tooth, and screaming out "They're coming, they're
coming!" so that Françoise and I should run too and not miss
anything of the show. That was on days when the cavalry stationed
in Combray went out for some military exercise, going as a rule by
the Rue Sainte-Hildegarde. While our servants, sitting in a row on
their chairs outside the garden railings, stared at the people of
Combray taking their Sunday walks and were stared at in return, the
gardener's daughter, through the gap which there was between two
houses far away in the Avenue de la Gare, would have spied the
glitter of helmets. The servants then hurried in with their chairs,
for when the troopers filed through the Rue Sainte-Hildegarde they
filled it from side to side, and their jostling horses scraped
against the walls of the houses, covering and drowning the
pavements like banks which present too narrow a channel to a river
in flood.
"Poor children," Françoise would exclaim, in tears almost before
she had reached the railings; "poor boys, to be mown down like
grass in a meadow. It's just shocking to think of," she would go
on, laying a hand over her heart, where presumably she had felt the
shock.
"A fine sight, isn't it, Mme. Françoise, all these young fellows
not caring two straws for their lives?" the gardener would ask,
just to 'draw' her. And he would not have spoken in vain.
"Not caring for their lives, is it? Why, what in the world is
there that we should care for if it's not our lives, the only gift
the Lord never offers us a second time? Oh dear, oh dear; you're
right all the same; it's quite true, they don't care! I can
remember them in '70; in those wretched wars they've no fear of
death left in them; they're nothing more nor less than madmen; and
then they aren't worth the price of a rope to hang them with;
they're not men any more, they're lions." For by her way of
thinking, to compare a man with a lion, which she used to pronounce
'lie-on,' was not at all complimentary to the man.
The Rue Sainte-Hildegarde turned too sharply for us to be able
to see people approaching at any distance, and it was only through
the gap between those two houses in the Avenue de la Gare that we
could still make out fresh helmets racing along towards us, and
flashing in the sunlight. The gardener wanted to know whether there
were still many to come, and he was thirsty besides, with the sun
beating down upon his head. So then, suddenly, his daughter would
leap out, as though from a beleaguered city, would make a sortie,
turn the street corner, and, having risked her life a hundred times
over, reappear and bring us, with a jug of liquorice-water, the
news that there were still at least a thousand of them, pouring
along without a break from the direction of Thiberzy and Méséglise.
Françoise and the gardener, having 'made up' their difference,
would discuss the line to be followed in case of war.
"Don't you see, Françoise," he would say. "Revolution would be
better, because then no one would need to join in unless he
liked."
"Oh, yes, I can see that, certainly; it's more
straightforward."
The gardener believed that, as soon as war was declared, they
would stop all the railways.
"Yes, to be sure; so that we sha'n't get away," said
Françoise.
And the gardener would assent, with "Ay, they're the cunning
ones," for he would not allow that war was anything but a kind of
trick which the state attempted to play on the people, or that
there was a man in the world who would not run away from it if he
had the chance to do so.
But Françoise would hasten back to my aunt, and I would return
to my book, and the servants would take their places again outside
the gate to watch the dust settle on the pavement, and the
excitement caused by the passage of the soldiers subside. Long
after order had been restored, an abnormal tide of humanity would
continue to darken the streets of Corn-bray. And in front of every
house, even of those where it was not, as a rule, 'done,' the
servants, and sometimes even the masters would sit and stare,
festooning their doorsteps with a dark, irregular fringe, like the
border of shells and sea-weed which a stronger tide than usual
leaves on the beach, as though trimming it with embroidered crape,
when the sea itself has retreated.
Except on such days as these, however, I would as a rule be left
to read in peace. But the interruption which a visit from Swann
once made, and the commentary which he then supplied to the course
of my reading, which had brought me to the work of an author quite
new to me, called Bergotte, had this definite result that for a
long time afterwards it was not against a wall gay with spikes of
purple blossom, but on a wholly different background, the porch of
a gothic cathedral, that I would see outlined the figure of one of
the women of whom I dreamed.
I had heard Bergotte spoken of, for the first time, by a friend
older than myself, for whom I had a strong admiration, a precious
youth of the name of Bloch.
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