Read Wm & H'ry: Literature, Love, and the Letters Between Wiliam and Henry James Online
Authors: J. C. Hallman
Tags: #History, #Philosophy, #Modern (16th-21st Centuries), #Biographies & Memoirs, #Politics & Social Sciences, #Arts & Literature, #Modern, #Philosophers, #Professionals & Academics, #Authors, #19th Century, #Literature & Fiction
thinking on consciousness. This can be measured in a
number of ways. First, just as Wm entertained “train”
and “chain” before settling on “stream” as the best
metaphor for thought, so do H’ry’s descriptions of
consciousness toy with trains and chains before fixing
on a wide range of hyperextended water metaphors.
(In
The Wings of the Dove
, for instance, thought is portrayed alternately as a “mixture,” a “current,” a “buoy-
ant medium,” etc.) Next, Wm’s claim that the frontier
of establishing the true nature of human thought
21
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 21
9/4/12 6:26 PM
belonged to those who in the future would be will-
ing “to adumbrate by at least some possible guess”
seems to be met with H’ry’s preface to
The Turn of the
Screw
, which describes the book’s inspiration as “the lively interest of a possible suggestion and process of
adumbration.
” H’ry borrowed introspection as well.
Wm once wrote that the simple experience of trying to
recall a forgotten name revealed the mind’s capacity for
dual personalities; a few years later,
The Tragic Muse
’s Nick Dormer experiences that very sensation: “He was
conscious of a double nature; there were two men in
him, quite separate . . . each of whom insisted on hav-
ing an independent turn at life.” And most important,
H’ry used Wm’s work to understand the creative pro-
cess. In 104, H’ry took careful note of a piece that Wm
produced on a case of automatic drawing for
Popular
Science Monthly
. Wm quoted the drawer at length: “I still think the drawings come from involuntary suggestion, that is, suggestion from the inner mind.” Barely
seven months later, H’ry produced “The Lesson of
Balzac,” in which he claimed that the most important
thing in fiction, an author’s particular “color of air,” is
“unconsciously suffused” into the work. It “proceeds
from the contemplative mind itself.”
22
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 22
9/4/12 6:26 PM
“The Lesson of Balzac” is perhaps the best example
of how H’ry also received lessons from his brother. Just
three years earlier, Wm’s treatise on religion (H’ry: “I
am reading
Varieties of R.E.
with . . . rapturous delibera-tion”) had divvied humanity into two categories of re-
ligious potential: the more numerous “healthy-minded
folk,” who tended to take life uncritically and see good
in all things, and the rarer and more mystically minded
“sick souls,” who struggled to reconcile themselves
to a complex world. H’ry retrofitted the bifurcation
to a literary community propelled by only “the stiff
breeze of the commercial.” Just as
The Varieties of Religious Experience
was more interested in unique mystical personalities than common, unblighted folk, so was
H’ry less moved by the great morass of popular writers
than by the “mystic process” of the more “monkish”
Balzac. Even writers of Wm’s French debauch received
H’ry’s cool dismissal. George Sand was “the pride of
a sweet-shop.” Jane Austen left us “hardly . . . curious
of her process.” And it was hard “to say where Zola is
fine” precisely to the same extent that it was “hard to
say where Balzac is . . . not.” The problem was that the
more popular category of writer, when not crippled
by “figures representing . . . ideas,” was limited to but a 23
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 23
9/4/12 6:26 PM
single color of air. Dickens, for example, could give us
only the feel of late morning through unwashed win-
dows. George Eliot only the yellowing day as the sun
sinks. Balzac, by comparison, had a “greater quantity
of ‘atmosphere.’” H’ry’s measure of Balzac’s greatness
harkens back to Wm’s discrete brains, sadly incapable
of knowing each other. The only way we could “know
given persons,” H’ry wrote, was to see them “from
their point of vision, that is from their point of press-
ing consciousness.” Balzac sought not to provide “the
image
of life” but to give life itself, to show “
how
we all are.” He achieved this by getting “into the constituted
consciousness, into . . . the very skin and bones, of
the habited, featured, colored, articulated form of life
that he desired to present.” And this, in turn, gave us
access to Balzac himself. H’ry’s description of com-
municating with Balzac’s mind, his consciousness,
elaborates on Stevenson’s “phantasmagoric chamber
of [the] brain”:
We thus walk with him in the great glazed gallery
of his thought; the long lighted and pictured
ambulatory where the endless series of windows,
on one side, hangs over his . . . reinstated garden
24
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 24
9/4/12 6:26 PM
of France, and where, on the other, the figures
and the portraits . . . take up position and
expression as he desired.
A chair in Stevenson’s house became known as the
“Henry James chair” in honor of H’ry’s frequent vis-
its—which maybe explains why Stevenson escaped
criticism in “The Lesson of Balzac.” Or perhaps there
was genuine admiration. In 1, H’ry claimed that
what was most delightful about Stevenson, like Balzac,
was his “constant variety of experiment.” H’ry never
responded to Wm’s commentary on “The Lantern
Bearers,” but he would have agreed with Stevenson’s
claim that the very best storytelling attempted to do
what poetry had always done: sink down into “the
mysterious inwards of psychology” so as to arrive at
the “true realism.”
H’ry likened both Balzac and Stevenson to paint-
ers—which is telling, in light of the fact that Wm actu-
ally
was
a painter. Wm, too, counted writing and painting in the same breath, but he did so in reverse order.
“Your article on Historical novels was very good,”
25
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 25
9/4/12 6:26 PM
Wm wrote on September 2, 1, in the same letter
in which he attested to his French debauch. He was
twenty-five years old, bored in Berlin. He was eating
out a lot (he complained that waiters “dressed in cast
off wedding suits” were the plague of his life), and he
begged H’ry to list his recent reading and to explain
a stray comment he’d made about having found no
good books of late. H’ry’s short piece in the
Nation
had surveyed the territory between history and lit-
erature, and discussed works that fell in between. He
argued that artistically poor books can nevertheless
have instructive historical value and that, by contrast,
good books can prove themselves worthless by failing
to comport with recognizable truth. The latter was
more lamentable. “It is, of course, not well for people
of imagination to have the divine faculty constantly
snubbed and cross-questioned and held to account . . .
but it is very well that it should hold itself responsible to certain uncompromising realities.” What realities?
Wm may have had an idea, as scarcely a month later
it struck him that he might try his hand at reviewing
Herman Grimm’s latest novel. He had nothing else
to do—why not try? He related to H’ry how the work
went—“sweating fearfully for three days, erasing, tear-
26
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 26
9/4/12 6:26 PM
ing my hair, copying, recopying &c, &c. . . . Style is not my forte”—and he enclosed the finished product
such that H’ry might correct it and see it through to
publication (which he did). Wm’s letter was harder on
Grimm than the review had been: “[He has] an extreme
belief in the existence and worth of truth . . . [but] a
want of careless animal spirits—wh. by the bye seem
to be rather characteristics of the rising generation.” In other words, Grimm and many others sacrificed vivid
depictions of their passionate minds, so like sanctuar-
ies or museums, so as to aspire to the salts and acids,
to a rigid objectivity that was both unattainable and
unrealistic.
For Wm, the problem harked back to a drama that
had played out in art hundreds of years earlier. Six
months later—in a letter from Dresden reflecting
on Italian painting, a missive at one moment inter-
rupted by a dinner of Kalbsbraten, a performance of
Beethoven’s
Ninth Symphony
, and a bowl of choco-
late—he began to rethink his French debauch. He’d
seen quite a bit of art in the meantime, and he was
now weighing the damage that tended to result from
battling artistic schools. Old masters like José Ribera
and Guido Reni surely had talent, he claimed, but to
27
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 27
9/4/12 6:26 PM
anyone standing “outside of the race course of school-
competition” they appeared cold and heartless. Lit-
erature had a similar problem. “I’ve no doubt that the
present school of novel-writing, I mean the french
realistic school,” he wrote H’ry, “will strike people
hereafter just as the later Roman & Bolognese pic-
tures strike us.” Though earnest, both painters and
novelists missed “the one thing needful.” They strove
after “mere fact, truth of detail,” and thereby passed
over the “higher and more intellectual harmony” that
was evident in the work of the schools’ founders, if
not their students. Wm would later import this basic
dynamic to religion—something essential was lost in
the attempt to transmit the experience of religious
mystics to their followers—but for now he ended his
treatise with a request that he be excused for his “vague tirade of unripe . . . impressions.”
If Wm was unripe, H’ry was fresh from the vine. No
letter from H’ry survives for a year after Wm’s tirade,
but he likely would have seen the current crop of real-
ists as secondhand, second-rate inheritors of Balzac,
the mystic of French literature and “the father of us
all.” The brothers’ theories on realism would continue
to evolve in exhaustive exchanges about George El-
28
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 28
9/4/12 6:26 PM
iot and George Sand. Wm had mixed feelings about
Eliot, considering
Middlemarch
a “blasted artistic failure” but also a “well of wisdom.” To his mind, Eliot
had the problem of many female writers: they were
so surprised to discover that they had
any
faculty to philosophize that they did it until it became tedious.
This was so apparent in
Daniel Deronda
that
Wm confessed to “a sort of tender pity for the . . . authoress.”
H’ry liked
Middlemarch
more, though he praised Wm’s criticism of it, and he called
Daniel Deronda
“a dead, though amiable failure.” He elaborated in the
Atlantic
Monthly
, claiming that
Daniel Deronda
lacked “current,”
and
Romola
“absolutely stagnat[ed].” This captured, to his mind, a basic difference between Eliot and Sand:
“George Eliot is solid and George Sand is liquid.” If this seemed to aim at streams of consciousness, Wm wasn’t
buying it. “G.S. babbles her improvisations on,” he
wrote H’ry, “so that I never begin to believe a word of
what she says.” He called for demonstrative extracts in
whatever H’ry planned to write of Sand, which proved
difficult because H’ry found “it impossible to re-read
her.” He, too, had a hard time believing her, and even-
tually claimed that she lacked a “method of truth.” Her
real problem was that she was an “optimist,” which,
29
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 29
9/4/12 6:26 PM
while admirable, put her at odds with the world as it
actually stood. “Something even better in a novelist,”
H’ry wrote, “is that tender appreciation of actuality
which makes even the application of a single coat of
rose color seem an act of violence.”
For H’ry, the search for a better kind of realism had
begun long before Wm sat down to Kalbsbraten in Ber-
lin. The problem must have loomed for him: how could
one follow in Balzac’s footsteps without merely dilut-
ing him? How could one absorb his lessons without
becoming a mere disciple? His solution was to aim for
a realism that remained loyal to more than mere facts
and truths of detail, a realism that held true to what
was both apparent and poignant: we were all stuck
in our skulls, and the world was in nowise better de-
scribed than as frustrating, confusing, and ambiguous.
Just a week and a half after his tirade, Wm seemed
to glimpse that this was what H’ry was up to. Reacting
to “An Extraordinary Life,” he offered an admission:
[I] think I may have partly misunderstood your
aim heretofore, and that one of the objects you
have in view has been to give an impression like
that we often get of people in life. Their orbits
30
Hallman_firstpages5x.indd 30
9/4/12 6:26 PM
come out of space and lay themselves for a short