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The life of the bee- Maurice Maeterlinck |
6. The nuptial flight
We
will now consider the manner in which the impregnation of the queen-bee comes to
pass. Here again nature has taken extraordinary measures to favour the union of
males with females of a different stock; a strange law, whereto nothing would
seem to compel her; a caprice, or initial inadvertence, perhaps, whose
reparation calls for the most marvellous forces her activity knows.
If she had devoted half the genius she lavishes on crossed fertilisation and
other arbitrary desires to making life more certain, to alleviating pain, to
softening death and warding off horrible accidents, the universe would probably
have presented an enigma less incomprehensible, less pitiable, than the one we
are striving to solve. But our consciousness, and the interest we take in
existence, must grapple, not with what might have been, but with what is.
Around the virgin queen, and dwelling with her in the hive, are hundreds of
exuberant males, forever drunk on honey; the sole reason for their existence
being one act of love. But, notwithstanding the incessant contact of two desires
that elsewhere invariably triumph over every obstacle, the union never takes
place in the hive, nor has it been possible to bring about the impregnation of a
captive queen.(1) While she lives in their midst the
lovers about her know not what she is. They seek her in space, in the remote
depths of the horizon, never suspecting that they have but this moment quitted
her, have shared the same comb with her, have brushed against her, perhaps, in
the eagerness of their departure. One might almost believe that those wonderful
eyes of theirs, that cover their head as though with a glittering helmet, do not
recognise or desire her save when she soars in the blue. Each day, from noon
till three, when the sun shines resplendent, this plumed horde sallies forth in
search of the bride, who is indeed more royal, more difficult of conquest, than
the most inaccessible princess of fairy legend; for twenty or thirty tribes will
hasten from all the neighbouring cities, her court thus consisting of more than
ten thousand suitors; and from these ten thousand one alone will be chosen for
the unique kiss of an instant that shall wed him to death no less than to
happiness; while the others will fly helplessly round the intertwined pair, and
soon will perish without ever again beholding this prodigious and fatal
apparition.
I am not exaggerating this wild and amazing prodigality of nature. The
best-conducted hives will, as a rule, contain four to five hundred males. Weaker
or degenerate ones will often have as many as four or five thousand; for the
more a hive inclines to its ruin, the more males will it produce. It may be said
that, on an average, an apiary composed of ten colonies will at a given moment
send an army of ten thousand males into the air, of whom ten or fifteen at most
will have the occasion of performing the one act for which they were born.
In the meanwhile they exhaust the supplies of the city; each one of the
parasites requiring the unceasing labour of five or six workers to maintain it
in its abounding and voracious idleness, its activity being indeed solely
confined to its jaws. But nature is always magnificent when dealing with the
privileges and prerogatives of love. She becomes miserly only when doling out
the organs and instruments of labour. She is especially severe on what men have
termed virtue, whereas she strews the path of the most uninteresting lovers with
innumerable jewels and favours. "Unite and multiply; there is no other law, or
aim, than love," would seem to be her constant cry on all sides, while she
mutters to herself, perhaps: "and exist afterwards if you can; that is no
concern of mine." Do or desire what else we may, we find, everywhere on our
road, this morality that differs so much from our own. And note, too, in these
same little creatures, her unjust avarice and insensate waste. From her birth to
her death, the austere forager has to travel abroad in search of the myriad
flowers that hide in the depths of the thickets. She has to discover the honey
and pollen that lurk in the labyrinths of the nectaries and in the most secret
recesses of the anthers. And yet her eyes and olfactory organs are like the eyes
and organs of the infirm, compared with those of the male. Were the drones
almost blind, had they only the most rudimentary sense of smell, they scarcely
would suffer. They have nothing to do, no prey to hunt down; their food is
brought to them ready prepared, and their existence is spent in the obscurity of
the hive, lapping honey from the comb. But they are the agents of love; and the
most enormous, most useless gifts are flung with both hands into the abyss of
the future. Out of a thousand of them, one only, once in his life, will have to
seek, in the depths of the azure, the presence of the royal virgin. Out of a
thousand one only will have, for one instant, to follow in space the female who
desires not to escape. That suffices. The partial power flings open her treasury,
wildly, even deliriously. To every one of these unlikely lovers, of whom nine
hundred and ninety-nine will be put to death a few days after the fatal nuptials
of the thousandth, she has given thirteen thousand eyes on each side of their
head, while the worker has only six thousand. According to Cheshire's
calculations, she has provided each of their antennae with thirty-seven thousand
eight hundred olfactory cavities, while the worker has only five thousand in
both. There we have an instance of the almost universal disproportion that
exists between the gifts she rains upon love and her niggardly doles to labour;
between the favours she accords to what shall, in an ecstasy, create new life,
and the indifference wherewith she regards what will patiently have to maintain
itself by toil. Whoever would seek faithfully to depict the character of nature,
in accordance with the traits we discover here, would design an extraordinary
figure, very foreign to our ideal, which nevertheless can only emanate from her.
But too many things are unknown to man for him to essay such a portrait, wherein
all would be deep shadow save one or two points of flickering light.
Very few, I imagine, have profaned the secret of the queen-bee's wedding, which
comes to pass in the infinite, radiant circles of a beautiful sky. But we are
able to witness the hesitating departure of the bride-elect and the murderous
return of the bride.
However great her impatience, she will yet choose her day and her hour, and
linger in the shadow of the portal till a marvellous morning fling open wide the
nuptial spaces in the depths of the great azure vault. She loves the moment when
drops of dew still moisten the leaves and the flowers, when the last fragrance
of dying dawn still wrestles with burning day, like a maiden caught in the arms
of a heavy warrior; when through the silence of approaching noon is heard, once
and again, a transparent cry that has lingered from sunrise.
Then she appears on the threshold m in the midst of indifferent foragers, if she
have left sisters in the hive; or surrounded by a delirious throng of workers,
should it be impossible to fill her place.
She starts her flight backwards; returns twice or thrice to the alighting-board;
and then, having definitely fixed in her mind the exact situation and aspect of
the kingdom she has never yet seen from without, she departs like an arrow to
the zenith of the blue. She soars to a height, a luminous zone, that other bees
attain at no period of their life. Far away, caressing their idleness in the
midst of the flowers, the males have beheld the apparition, have breathed the
magnetic perfume that spreads from group to group till every apiary near is
instinct with it. Immediately crowds collect, and follow her into the sea of
gladness, whose limpid boundaries ever recede. She, drunk with her wings,
obeying the magnificent law of the race that chooses her lover, and enacts that
the strongest alone shall attain her in the solitude of the ether, she rises
still; and, for the first time in her life, the blue morning air rushes into her
stigmata, singing its song, like the blood of heaven, in the myriad tubes of the
tracheal sacs, nourished on space, that fill the centre of her body. She rises
still. A region must be found unhaunted by birds, that else might profane the
mystery. She rises still; and already the ill-assorted troop below are dwindling
and falling asunder. The feeble, infirm, the aged, unwelcome, ill-fed, who have
flown from inactive or impoverished cities, these renounce the pursuit and
disappear in the void. Only a small, indefatigable cluster remain, suspended in
infinite opal. She summons her wings for one final effort; and now the chosen of
incomprehensible forces has reached her, has seized her, and bounding aloft with
united impetus, the ascending spiral of their intertwined flight whirls for one
second in the hostile madness of love.
Most creatures have a vague belief that a very precarious hazard, a kind of
transparent membrane, divides death from love; and that the profound idea of
nature demands that the giver of life should die at the moment of giving. Here
this idea, whose memory lingers still over the kisses of man, is realised in its
primal simplicity. No sooner has the union been accomplished than the male's
abdomen opens, the organ detaches itself, dragging with it the mass of the
entrails; the wings relax, and, as though struck by lightning, the emptied body
turns and turns on itself and sinks down into the abyss.
The same idea that, before, in parthenogenesis, sacrificed the future of the
hive to the unwonted multiplication of males, now sacrifices the male to the
future of the hive.
This idea is always astounding; and the further we penetrate into it, the fewer
do our certitudes become. Darwin, for instance, to take the man of all men who
studied it the most methodically and most passionately, Darwin, though scarcely
confessing it to himself, loses confidence at every step, and retreats before
the unexpected and the irreconcilable. Would you have before you the nobly
humiliating spectacle of human genius battling with infinite power, you have but
to follow Darwin's endeavours to unravel the strange, incoherent, inconceivably
mysterious laws of the sterility and fecundity of hybrids, or of the variations
of specific and generic characters. Scarcely has he formulated a principle when
numberless exceptions assail him; and this very principle, soon completely
overwhelmed, is glad to find refuge in some corner, and preserve a shred of
existence there under the title of an exception.
For the fact is that in hybridity, in variability (notably in the simultaneous
variations known as correlations of growth), in instinct, in the processes of
vital competition, in geologic succession and the geographic distribution of
organised beings, in mutual affinities, as indeed in every other direction, the
idea of nature reveals itself, in one and the same phenomenon and at the very
same time, as circumspect and shiftless, niggard and prodigal, prudent and
careless, fickle and stable, agitated and immovable, one and innumerable,
magnificent and squalid. There lay open before her the immense and virgin fields
of simplicity; she chose to people them with trivial errors, with petty
contradictory laws that stray through existence like a flock of blind sheep. It
is true that our eye, before which these things happen, can only reflect a
reality proportionate to our needs and our stature; nor have we any warrant for
believing that nature ever loses sight of her wandering results and causes.
In any event she will rarely permit them to stray too far, or approach illogical
or dangerous regions. She disposes of two forces that never can err; and when
the phenomenon shall have trespassed beyond certain limits, she will beckon to
life or to death- which arrives, re-establishes order, and unconcernedly marks
out the path afresh.
She eludes us on every side; she repudiates most of our rules and breaks our
standards to pieces. On our right she sinks far beneath the level of our
thoughts, on our left she towers mountain-high above them. She appears to be
constantly blundering, no less in the world of her first experiments than in
that of her last, of man. There she invests with her sanction the instincts of
the obscure mass, the unconscious injustice of the multitude, the defeat of
intelligence and virtue, the uninspired morality which urges on the great wave
of the race, though manifestly inferior to the morality that could be conceived
or desired by the minds composing the small and the clearer wave that ascends
the other. And yet, can such a mind be wrong if it ask itself whether the whole
truth -- moral truths, therefore, as well as non-moral -- had not better be
sought in this chaos than in itself, where these truths would seem comparatively
clear and precise?
The man who feels thus will never attempt to deny the reason or virtue of his
ideal, hallowed by so many heroes and sages; but there are times when he will
whisper to himself that this ideal has perhaps been formed at too great a
distance from the enormous mass whose diverse beauty it would fain represent. He
has, hitherto, legitimately feared that the attempt to adapt his morality to
that of nature would risk the destruction of what Was her masterpiece. But
to-day he understands her a little better; and from some of her replies, which,
though still vague, reveal an unexpected breadth, he has been enabled to seize a
glimpse of a plan and an intellect vaster than could be conceived by his unaided
imagination; wherefore he has grown less afraid, nor feels any longer the same
imperious need of the refuge his own special virtue and reason afford him. He
concludes that what is so great could surely teach nothing that would tend to
lessen itself. He wonders whether the moment may not have arrived for submitting
to a more judicious examination his convictions, his principles, and his dreams.
Once more, he has not the slightest desire to abandon his human ideal. That even
which at first diverts him from this ideal teaches him to return to it. It were
impossible for nature to give ill advice to a man who declines to include in the
great scheme he is endeavouring to grasp, who declines to regard as sufficiently
lofty to be definitive, any truth that is not at least as lofty as the truth he
himself desires. Nothing shifts its place in his life save only to rise with him;
and he knows he is rising when he finds himself drawing near to his ancient
image of good. But all things transform themselves more freely in his thoughts;
and he can descend with impunity, for he has the presentiment that numbers of
successive valleys will lead him to the plateau that he expects. And, while he
thus seeks for conviction, while his researches even conduct him to the very
reverse of that which he loves, he directs his conduct by the most humanly
beautiful truth, and clings to the one that provisionally seems to be highest.
All that may add to beneficent virtue enters his heart at once; all that would
tend to lessen it remaining there in suspense, like insoluble salts that change
not till the hour for decisive experiment. He may accept an inferior truth, but
before he will act in accordance therewith he will wait, if need be for
centuries, until he perceive the connection this truth must possess with truths
so infinite as to include and surpass all others.
In a word, he divides the moral from the intellectual order, admitting in the
former that only which is greater and more beautiful than was there before. And
blameworthy as it may be to separate the two orders in cases, only too frequent
in life, where we suffer our conduct to be inferior to our thoughts, where,
seeing the good, we follow the worse--to see the worse and follow the better, to
raise our actions high over our idea, must ever be reasonable and salutary; for
human experience renders it daily more clear that the highest thought we can
attain will long be inferior still to the mysterious truth we seek. Moreover,
should nothing of what goes before be true, a reason more simple and more
familiar would counsel him not yet to abandon his human ideal. For the more
strength he accords to the laws which would seem to set egoism, injustice, and
cruelty as examples for men to follow, the more strength does he at the same
time confer on the others that ordain generosity, justice, and pity; and these
last laws are found to contain something as profoundly natural as the first, the
moment he begins to equalise, or allot more methodically, the share he
attributes to the universe and to himself.
Let us return to the tragic nuptials of the queen. Here it is evidently nature's
wish, in the interests of crossed fertilisation, that the union of the drone and
the queen-bee should be possible only in the open sky. But her desires blend
network-fashion, and her most valued laws have to pass through the meshes of
other laws, which, in their turn, the moment after, are compelled to pass
through the first.
In the sky she has planted so many dangers -- cold winds, storm-currents, birds,
insects, drops of water, all of which also obey invincible Jaws- that she must
of necessity arrange for this union to be as brief as possible. It is so, thanks
to the startlingly sudden death of the male. One embrace suffices; the rest all
enacts itself in the very flanks of the bride.
She descends from the azure heights and returns to the hive, trailing behind her,
like an oriflamme, the unfolded entrails of her lover. Some writers pretend that
the bees manifest great joy at this return so big with promise--Bfichner, among
others, giving a detailed account of it. I have many a time lain in wait for the
queen-bee's return, and I confess that I have never noticed any unusual emotion
except in the case of a young queen who had gone forth at the head of a swarm,
and represented the unique hope of a newly founded and still empty city. In that
instance the workers were all wildly excited, and rushed to meet her. But as a
rule they appear to forget her, even though the future of their city will often
be no less imperilled. They act with consistent prudence in all things, till the
moment when they authorise the massacre of the rival queens. That point reached,
their instinct halts; and there is, as it were, a gap in their foresight. --
They appear to be wholly indifferent. They raise their heads; recognise,
probably, the murderous tokens of impregnation; but, still mistrustful, manifest
none of the gladness our expectation had pictured. Being positive in their ways,
and slow at illusion, they probably need further proofs before permitting
themselves to rejoice. Why endeavour to render too logical, or too human, the
feelings of little creatures so different from ourselves? Neither among the bees
nor among any other animals that have a ray of our intellect, do things happen
with the precision our books record. Too many circumstances remain unknown to
us. Why try to depict the bees as more perfect than they are, by saying that
which is not? Those who would deem them more interesting did they resemble
ourselves, have not yet truly realised what it is that should awaken the
interest of a sincere mind. The aim of the observer is not to surprise, but to
comprehend; and to point out the gaps existing in an intellect, and the signs of
a cerebral organisation different from our own, is more curious by far than the
relating of mere marvels concerning it.
But this indifference is not shared by all; and when the breathless queen has
reached the alighting-board, some groups will form and accompany her into the
hive; where the sun, hero of every festivity in which the bees take part, is
entering with little timid steps, and bathing in azure and shadow the waxen
walls and curtains of honey. Nor does the new bride, indeed, show more concern
than her people, there being not room for many emotions in her narrow, barbarous,
practical brain. She has but one thought, which is to rid herself as quickly as
possible of the embarrassing souvenirs her consort has left her, whereby her
movements are hampered. She seats herself on the threshold, and carefully strips
off the useless organs, that are borne far away by the workers; for the male has
given her all he possessed, and much more than she requires. She retains only,
in her spermatheca, the seminal liquid where millions of germs are floating,
which, until her last day, will issue one by one, as the eggs pass by, and in
the obscurity of her body accomplish the mysterious union of the male and female
element, whence the worker-bees are born. Through a curious inversion, it is she
who furnishes the male principle, and the drone who provides the female. Two
days after the union she lays her first eggs, and her people immediately
surround her with the most particular care. From that moment, possessed of a
dual sex, having within her an inexhaustible male, she begins her veritable
life; she will never again leave the hive, unless to accompany a swarm; and her
fecundity will cease only at the approach of death.
Prodigious nuptials these, the most fairy-like that can be conceived, azure and
tragic, raised high above life by the impetus of desire; imperishable and
terrible, unique and bewildering, solitary and infinite. An admirable ecstasy,
wherein death supervening in all that our sphere has of most limpid and
loveliest, in virginal, limitless space, stamps the instant of happiness in the
sublime transparence of the great sky; purifying in that immaculate light the
something of wretchedness that always hovers around love, rendering the kiss one
that can never be forgotten; and, content this time with moderate tithe,
proceeding herself, with hands that are almost maternal, to introduce and unite,
in one body, for a long and inseparable future, two little fragile lives.
Profound truth has not this poetry, but possesses another that we are less apt
to grasp, which, however, we should end, perhaps, by understanding and loving.
Nature has not gone out of her way to provide these two "abbreviated atoms," as
Pascal would call them, with a resplendent marriage, or an ideal moment of love.
Her concern, as we have said, was merely to improve the race by means of crossed
fertilisation. To ensure this she has contrived the organ of the male in such a
fashion that he can make use of it only in space. A prolonged flight must first
expand his two great tracheal sacs; these enormous receptacles being gorged on
air will throw back the lower part of the abdomen, and permit the exsertion of
the organ. There we have the whole physiological secret--which will seem
ordinary enough to some, and almost vulgar to others--of this dazzling pursuit
and these magnificent nuptials.
"But must we always, then," the poet will wonder, "rejoice in regions that are
loftier than the truth?"
Yes, in all things, at all times, let us rejoice, not in regions loftier than
the truth, for that were impossible, but in regions higher than the little
truths that our eye can seize. Should a chance, a recollection, an illusion, a
passion,--in a word, should any motive whatever cause an object to reveal itself
to us in a more beautiful light than to others, let that motive be first of all
dear to us. It may only be error, perhaps; but this error will not prevent the
moment wherein this object appears the most admirable to us from being the
moment wherein we are likeliest to perceive its real beauty. The beauty we lend
it directs our attention to its veritable beauty and grandeur, which, derived as
they are from the relation wherein every object must of necessity stand to
general, eternal, forces and laws, might otherwise escape observation. The
faculty of admiring which an illusion may have created within us will serve for
the truth that must come, be it sooner or later. It is with the words, the
feelings, and ardour created by ancient and imaginary beauties, that humanity
welcomes today truths which perhaps would have never been born, which might not
have been able to find so propitious a home, had these sacrificed illusions not
first of all dwelt in, and kindled, the heart and the reason where into these
truths should descend. Happy the eyes that need no illusion to see that the
spectacle is great! It is illusion that teaches the others to look, to admire,
and rejoice. And look as high as they will, they never can look too high. Truth
rises as they draw nearer; they draw nearer when they admire. And whatever the
heights may be whereon they rejoice, this rejoicing can never take place in the
void, or above the unknown and eternal truth that rests over all things like
beauty in suspense.
Does this mean that we should attach ourselves to falsehood, to an unreal and
factitious poetry, and find our gladness therein for want of anything better? Or
that in the example before us--in itself nothing, but we dwell on it because it
stands for a thousand others, as also for our entire attitude in face of divers
orders of truths--that here we should ignore the physiological explanation, and
retain and taste only the emotions of this nuptial flight, which is yet, and
whatever the cause, one of the most lyrical, most beautiful acts of that
suddenly disinterested, irresistible force which all living creatures obey and
are wont to call love? That were too childish; nor is it possible, thanks to the
excellent habits every loyal mind has today acquired.
The fact being incontestable, we must evidently admit that the exsertion of the
organ is rendered possible only by the expansion of the tracheal vesicles. But
if we, content with this fact, did not let our eyes roam beyond it; if we
deduced therefrom that every thought that rises too high or wanders too far must
be of necessity wrong, and that truth must be looked for only in the material
details; if we did not seek, no matter where, in uncertainties often far greater
than the one this little explanation has solved, in the strange mystery of
crossed fertilisation for instance, or in the perpetuity of the race and life,
or in the scheme of nature; if we did not seek in these for something beyond the
current explanation, something that should prolong it, and conduct us to the
beauty and grandeur that repose in the unknown, I would almost venture to assert
that we should pass our existence further away from the truth than those, even,
who in this case wilfully shut their eyes to all save the poetic and wholly
imaginary interpretation of these marvellous nuptials. They evidently misjudge
the form and colour of the truth, but they live in its atmosphere and its
influence far more than the others, who complacently believe that search the
most strenuous, daring efforts of our heart and our reason. And should the last
word of all this be wretched, it will be no little achievement to have laid bare
the inanity and the pettiness of the aim of nature.
"There is no truth for us yet," a great physiologist of our day remarked to me
once, as I walked with him in the country; "there is no truth yet, but there are
everywhere three very good semblances of truth. Each man makes his own choice,
or rather, perhaps, has it thrust upon him; and this choice, whether it be
thrust upon him, or whether, as is often the case, he have made it without due
reflection, this choice, to which he clings, will determine the form and the
conduct of all that enters within him. The friend whom we meet, the woman who
approaches and smiles, the love that unlocks our heart, the death or sorrow that
seals it, the September sky above us, this superb and delightful garden, wherein
we see, as in Corneille's 'Psyche,' bowers of greenery resting on gilded
statues, and the flocks grazing yonder, with their shepherd asleep, and the last
houses of the village, and the sea between the trees, all these are raised or
degraded before they enter within us, are adorned or despoiled, in accordance
with the little signal this choice of ours makes to them. We must learn to
select from among these semblances of truth. I have spent my own life in eager
search for the smaller truths, the physical causes; and now, at the end of my
days, I begin to cherish, not what would lead me from these, but what would
precede them, and, above all, what would somewhat surpass them."
We had attained the summit of a plateau in the "pays de Caux," in Normandy,
which is supple as an English park, but natural and limitless. It is one of the
rare spots on the globe where nature reveals herself to us unfailingly wholesome
and green. A little further to the north the country is threatened with
barrenness, a little further to the south, it is fatigued and scorched by the
sun. At the end of a plain that ran down to the edge of the sea, some peasants
were erecting a stack of corn. "Look," he said, "seen from here, they are
beautiful. They are constructing that simple and yet so important thing, which
is above all else the happy and almost unvarying monument of human life taking
root M a stack of corn. The distance, the air of the evening, weave their joyous
cries into a kind of song without words, which replies to the noble song of the
leaves as they whisper over our heads. Above them the sky is magnificent; and
one almost might fancy that beneficent spirits, waving palm-trees of fire, had
swept all the light towards the stack, to give the workers more time. And the
track of the palms still remains in the sky. See the humble church by their side,
overlooking and watching them, in the midst of the rounded lime trees and the
grass of the homely graveyard, that faces its native ocean. They are fitly
erecting their monument of life underneath the monuments of their dead, who made
the same gestures and still are with them. Take in the whole picture. There are
no special, characteristic features, such as we find in England, Provence, or
Holland. It is the presentment, large and ordinary enough to be symbolic, of a
natural and happy life. Observe how rhythmic human existence becomes in its
useful moments. Look at the man who is leading the horses, at that other Who
throws up the sheaves on his fork, at the women bending over the corn, and the
children at play .... They have not displaced a stone, or removed a spadeful of
earth, to add to the beauty of the scenery; nor do they take one step, plant a
tree or a flower, that is not necessary. All that we see is merely the
involuntary result of the effort that man puts forth to subsist for a moment in
nature; and yet those among us whose desire is only to create or imagine
spectacles of peace, deep thoughtfulness, or beatitude, have been able to find
no scene more perfect than this, which indeed they paint or describe whenever
they seek to present us with a picture of beauty or happiness. Here we have the
first semblance, which some will call the truth."
"Let us draw nearer. Can you distinguish the song that blended so well with the
whispering of the leaves? It is made up of abuse and insult; and when laughter
bursts forth, it is due to an obscene remark some man or woman has made, to a
jest at the expense of the weaker,- of the hunchback unable to lift his load,
the cripple they have knocked over, or the idiot whom they make their butt.
"I have studied these people for many years. We are in Normandy; the soil is
rich and easily tilled. Around this stack of corn there is rather more comfort
than one would usually associate with a scene of this kind. The result is that
most of the men, and many of the women, are alcoholic. Another poison also,
which I need not name, corrodes the race. To that, to the alcohol, are due the
children whom you see there: the dwarf, the one with the hare-lip, the others
who are knock-kneed, scrofulous, imbecile. All of them, men and women, young and
old, have the ordinary vices of the peasant. They are brutal, suspicious,
grasping, and envious; hypocrites, liars, and slanderers; inclined to petty,
illicit profits, mean interpretations, and coarse flattery of the stronger.
Necessity brings them together, and compels them to help each other; but the
secret wish of every individual is to harm his neighbour as soon as this can be
done without danger to himself. The one substantial pleasure of the village is
procured by the sorrows of others. Should a great disaster befall one of them,
it will long be the subject of secret, delighted comment among the rest. Every
man watches his fellow, is jealous of him, detests and despises him. While they
are poor, they hate their masters with a boiling and pent-up hatred because of
the harshness and avarice these last display; should they in their turn have
servants, they profit by their own experience of servitude to reveal a harshness
and avarice greater even than that from which they have suffered. I could give
you minutest details of the meanness, deceit, injustice, tyranny, and malice
that underlie this picture of ethereal, peaceful toil. Do not imagine that the
sight of this marvellous sky, of the sea which spreads out yonder behind the
church and presents another, more sensitive sky, flowing over the earth like a
great mirror of wisdom and consciousness--do not imagine that either sea or sky
is capable of lifting their thoughts or widening their minds. They have never
looked at them. Nothing has power to influence or move them save three or four
circumscribed fears, that of hunger, of force, of opinion and law, and the
terror of hell when they die. To show what they are, we should have to consider
them one by one. See that tall fellow there on the right, who flings up such
mighty' sheaves. Last summer his friends broke his right arm in some tavern row.
I reduced the fracture, which was a bad and compound one. I tended him for a
long time, and gave him the wherewithal to live till he should be able to get
back to work. He came to me every day. He profited by this to spread the report
in the village that he had discovered me in the arms of my sister-in-law, and
that my mother drank. He is not vicious, he bears me no ill-will; on the
contrary, see what a broad, open smile spreads over his face as he sees me. It
was not social animosity that induced him to slander me. The peasant values
wealth far too much to hate the rich man. But I fancy my good corn-thrower there
could not understand my tending him without any profit to myself. He was
satisfied that there must be some underhand scheme, and he declined to be my
dupe. More than one before him, richer or poorer, has acted in similar fashion,
if not worse. It did not occur to him that he was lying when he spread those
inventions abroad; he merely obeyed a confused command of the morality he saw
about him. He yielded unconsciously, against his will, as it were, to the
all-powerful desire of the general malevolence .... But why complete a picture
with which all are familiar who have spent some years in the country? Here we
have the second semblance that some will call the real truth. It is the truth of
practical life. It undoubtedly is based on the most precise, the only, facts
that one can observe and test."
"Let us sit on these sheaves," he continued, "and look again. Let us reject not
a single one of the little facts that build up the reality of which I have
spoken. Let us permit them to depart of their own accord into space. They cumber
the foreground, and yet we cannot but be aware of the existence behind them of a
great and very curious force that sustains the whole. Does it only sustain and
not raise? These men whom we see before us are at least no longer the ferocious
animals of whom La Bruyère speaks, the wretches who talked in a kind of
inarticulate voice, and withdrew at night to their dens, where they lived on
black bread, water, and roots.
"The race, you will tell me, is neither as strong nor as healthy. That may be;
alcohol and the other scourge are accidents that humanity has to surmount;
ordeals, it may be, by which certain of our organs, those of the nerves, for
instance, may benefit; for we invariably find that life profits by the ills that
it overcomes. Besides, a mere trifle that we may discover to-morrow may render
these poisons innocuous. These men have thoughts and feelings that those of whom
La Bruyère speaks had not." "I prefer the simple, naked animal to the odious
half-animal," I murmured. "You are thinking of the first semblance now," he
replied, "the semblance dear to the poet, that we saw before; let us not confuse
it with the one we are now considering. These thoughts and feelings are petty,
if you will, and vile; but what is petty and vile is still better than that
which is not at all. Of these thoughts and feelings they avail themselves only
to hurt each other, and to persist in their present mediocrity; but thus does it
often happen in nature. The gifts she accords are employed for evil at first,
for the rendering worse what she had apparently sought to improve; but, from
this evil, a certain good will always result in the end. Besides, I am by no
means anxious to prove that there has been progress, which may be a very small
thing or a very great thing, according to the place whence we regard it. It is a
vast achievement, the surest ideal, perhaps, to render the condition of men a
little less servile, a little less painful; but let the mind detach itself for
an instant from material results, and the difference between the man who marches
in the van of progress and the other who is blindly dragged at its tail ceases
to be very considerable. Among these young rustics, whose mind is haunted only
by formless ideas, there are many who have in themselves the possibility of
attaining, in a short space of time, the degree of consciousness that we both
enjoy. One is often struck by the narrowness of the dividing line between what
we regard as the unconsciousness of these people and the consciousness that to
us is the highest of all.
"Besides, of what is this consciousness composed, whereof we are so proud? Of
far more shadow than light, of far more acquired ignorance than knowledge; of
far more things whose comprehension, we are well aware, must ever elude us, than
of things that we actually know. And yet in this consciousness lies all our
dignity, our most veritable greatness; it is probably the most surprising
phenomenon this world contains. It is this which permits us to raise our head
before the unknown principle, and say to it: ' What you are I know not; but
there is something within me that already enfolds you. You will destroy me,
perhaps, but if your object be not to construct from my ruins an organism better
than mine, you will prove yourself inferior to what I am; and the silence that
will follow the death of the race to which I belong will declare to you that you
have been judged. And if you are not capable even of caring whether you be
justly judged or not, of what value can your secret be? It must be stupid or
hideous. Chance has enabled you to produce a creature that you yourself lacked
the quality to produce. It is fortunate for him that a contrary chance should
have permitted you to suppress him before he had fathomed the depths of your
unconsciousness; more fortunate still that he does not survive the infinite
series of your awful experiments. He had nothing to do in a world where his
intellect corresponded to no eternal intellect, where his desire for the better
could attain no actual good.
"Once more, for the spectacle to absorb us, there is no need of progress. The
enigma suffices; and that enigma is as great, and shines as mysteriously, in the
peasants as in ourselves. As we trace life back to its all-powerful principle,
it confronts us on every side. To this principle each succeeding century has
given a new name. Some of these names were clear and consoling. It was found,
however, that consolation and clearness were alike illusory. But whether we call
it God, Providence, Nature, chance, life, fatality, spirit, or matter, the
mystery remains unaltered; and from the experience of thousands of years we have
learned nothing more than to give it a vaster name, one nearer to ourselves,
more congruous with our expectation, with the unforeseen. That is the name it
bears today, wherefore it has never seemed greater. Here we have one of the
numberless aspects of the third semblance, which also is truth."
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