第 1 节
作者:男孩不逛街      更新:2021-02-18 23:24      字数:9322
  Selected Writings
  by Guy De Maupassant
  A SELECTION from the WRITINGS of GUY DE MAUPASSANT
  SHORT STORIES of the TRAGEDY AND COMEDY OF LIFE
  WITH A CRITICAL PREFACE BY PAUL BOURGET of the French Academy
  AND AN INTRODUCTION BY ROBERT ARNOT; M。A。
  TABLE OF CONTENTS。
  VOLUME I。
  1。   MADEMOISELLE FIFI
  2。   AN AFFAIR OF STATE
  3。   THE ARTIST
  4。   THE HORLA
  5。   MISS HARRIET
  6。   THE HOLE
  7。   LOVE
  8。   THE INN
  9。   A FAMILY
  10。  BELLFLOWER
  11。  WHO KNOWS?
  12。  THE DEVIL
  13。  EPIPHANY
  14。  SIMON'S PAPA
  15。  WAITER; A 〃BOCK〃
  16。  THE SEQUEL TO A DIVORCE
  17。  THE MAD WOMAN
  18。  IN VARIOUS ROLES
  19。  THE FALSE GEMS
  20。  COUNTESS SATAN
  21。  THE COLONEL'S IDEAS
  22。  TWO LITTLE SOLDIERS
  23。  GHOSTS
  24。  WAS IT A DREAM?
  25。  THE DIARY OF A MADMAN
  26。  AN UNFORTUNATE LIKENESS
  27。  A COUNTRY EXCURSION
  GUY DE MAUPASSANT
  Of the French writers of romance of the latter part of the
  nineteenth century no one made a reputation as quickly as did Guy
  de Maupassant。 Not one has preserved that reputation with more
  ease; not only during life; but in death。 None so completely
  hides his personality in his glory。 In an epoch of the utmost
  publicity; in which the most insignificant deeds of a celebrated
  man are spied; recorded; and commented on; the author of 〃Boule
  de Suif;〃 of 〃Pierre et Jean;〃 of 〃Notre Coeur;〃 found a way of
  effacing his personality in his work。
  Of De Maupassant we know that he was born in Normandy about 1850;
  that he was the favorite pupil; if one may so express it; the
  literary protege; of Gustave Flaubert; that he made his debut
  late in 1880; with a novel inserted in a small collection;
  published by Emile Zola and his young friends; under the title:
  〃The Soirees of Medan〃; that subsequently he did not fail to
  publish stories and romances every year up to 1891; when a
  disease of the brain struck him down in the fullness of
  production; and that he died; finally; in 1893; without having
  recovered his reason。
  We know; too; that he passionately loved a strenuous physical
  life and long journeys; particularly long journeys upon the sea。
  He owned a little sailing yacht; named after one of his books;
  〃Bel…Ami;〃 in which he used to sojourn for weeks and months。
  These meager details are almost the only ones that have been
  gathered as food for the curiosity of the public。
  I leave the legendary side; which is always in evidence in the
  case of a celebrated man;that gossip; for example; which avers
  that Maupassant was a high liver and a worldling。 The very number
  of his volumes is a protest to the contrary。 One could not write
  so large a number of pages in so small a number of years without
  the virtue of industry; a virtue incompatible with habits of
  dissipation。 This does not mean that the writer of these great
  romances had no love for pleasure and had not tasted the world;
  but that for him these were secondary things。 The psychology of
  his work ought; then; to find an interpretation other than that
  afforded by wholly false or exaggerated anecdotes。 I wish to
  indicate here how this work; illumined by the three or four
  positive data which I have given; appears to me to demand it。
  And first; what does that anxiety to conceal his personality
  prove; carried as it was to such an extreme degree? The answer
  rises spontaneously in the minds of those who have studied
  closely the history of literature。 The absolute silence about
  himself; preserved by one whose position among us was that of a
  Tourgenief; or of a Merimee; and of a Moliere or a Shakespeare
  among the classic great; reveals; to a person of instinct; a
  nervous sensibility of extreme depth。 There are many chances for
  an artist of his kind; however timid; or for one who has some
  grief; to show the depth of his emotion。 To take up again only
  two of the names just cited; this was the case with the author of
  〃Terres Vierges;〃 and with the writer of 〃Colomba。〃
  A somewhat minute analysis of the novels and romances of
  Maupassant would suffice to demonstrate; even if we did not know
  the nature of the incidents which prompted them; that he also
  suffered from an excess of nervous emotionalism。 Nine times out
  of ten; what is the subject of these stories to which freedom of
  style gives the appearance of health? A tragic episode。 I cite;
  at random; 〃Mademoiselle Fifi;〃 〃La Petite Roque;〃 〃Inutile
  Beaute;〃 〃Le Masque;〃 〃Le Horla;〃 〃L'Epreuve;〃 〃Le Champ
  d'Oliviers;〃 among the novels; and among the romances; 〃Une Vie;〃
  〃Pierre et Jean;〃 〃Fort comme la Mort;〃 〃Notre Coeur。〃 His
  imagination aims to represent the human being as imprisoned in a
  situation at once insupportable and inevitable。 The spell of this
  grief and trouble exerts such a power upon the writer that he
  ends stories commenced in pleasantry with some sinister drama。
  Let me instance 〃Saint…Antonin;〃 〃A Midnight Revel;〃 〃The Little
  Cask;〃 and 〃Old Amable。〃 You close the book at the end of these
  vigorous sketches; and feel how surely they point to constant
  suffering on the part of him who executed them。
  This is the leading trait in the literary physiognomy of
  Maupassant; as it is the leading and most profound trait in the
  psychology of his work; viz; that human life is a snare laid by
  nature; where joy is always changed to misery; where noble words
  and the highest professions of faith serve the lowest plans and
  the most cruel egoism; where chagrin; crime; and folly are
  forever on hand to pursue implacably our hopes; nullify our
  virtues; and annihilate our wisdom。 But this is not the whole。
  Maupassant has been called a literary nihilistbut (and this is
  the second trait of his singular genius) in him nihilism finds
  itself coexistent with an animal energy so fresh and so intense
  that for a long time it deceives the closest observer。 In an
  eloquent discourse; pronounced over his premature grave; Emile
  Zola well defined this illusion: 〃We congratulated him;〃 said he;
  〃upon that health which seemed unbreakable; and justly credited
  him with the soundest constitution of our band; as well as with
  the clearest mind and the sanest reason。 It was then that this
  frightful thunderbolt destroyed him。〃
  It is not exact to say that the lofty genius of De Maupassant was
  that of an absolutely sane man。 We comprehend it to…day; and; on
  re…reading him; we find traces everywhere of his final malady。
  But it is exact to say that this wounded genius was; by a
  singular circumstance; the genius of a robust man。 A physiologist
  would without doubt explain this anomaly by the coexistence of a
  nervous lesion; light at first; with a muscular; athletic
  temperament。 Whatever the cause; the effect is undeniable。 The
  skilled and dainty pessimism of De Maupassant was accompanied by
  a vigor and physique very unusual。 His sensations are in turn
  those of a hunter and of a sailor; who have; as the old French
  saying expressively puts it; 〃swift foot; eagle eye;〃 and who are
  attuned to all the whisperings of nature。
  The only confidences that he has ever permitted his pen to tell
  of the intoxication of a free; animal existence are in the
  opening pages of the story entitled 〃Mouche;〃 where he recalls;
  among the sweetest memories of his youth; his rollicking canoe
  parties upon the Seine; and in the description in 〃La Vie
  Errante〃 of a night spent on the sea;〃to be alone upon the
  water under the sky; through a warm night;〃in which he speaks
  of the happiness of those 〃who receive sensations through the
  whole surface of their flesh; as they do through their eyes;
  their mouth; their ears; and sense of smell。〃
  His unique and too scanty collection of verses; written in early
  youth; contains the two most fearless; I was going to say the
  most ingenuous; paeans; perhaps; that have been written since the
  Renaissance: 〃At the Water's Edge〃 (Au Bord de l'Eau) and the
  〃Rustic Venus〃 (La Venus Rustique)。 But here is a paganism whose
  ardor; by a contrast which brings up the ever present duality of
  his nature; ends in an inexpressible shiver of scorn:
  〃We look at each other; astonished; immovable;
  And both are so pale that it makes us fear。〃
  *    *    *    *    *    *    *
  〃Alas! through all our senses slips life itself away。〃
  This ending of the 〃Water's Edge〃 is less sinister than the
  murder and the vision of horror which terminate the pantheistic
  hymn of the 〃Rustic Venus。〃 Considered as documents revealing the
  cast of mind of him who composed them; these two lyrical essays
  are especially significant; since they were spontaneous。 They
  explain why De Maupassant; in the early years of production;
  voluntarily chose; as the heroes of his stories; creatures very
  near to primitive existence; peasants; sailors; poachers; girls
  of the farm; and the source of the vigor with wh