In a turn of
uncharacteristic succinctness, Gioachino Rossini, himself the composer of
long-winded and often empty vocal gymnastics undertaken because they were
possible - or not! - rather than apposite or even aesthetic, uttered a remark,
probably between courses, probably apocryphally, somewhere sandwiched between
the tournedos Rossini and the baked Alaska, which wasn’t
called by that name at the time because the Americans, who put the dish and the
state on the map, had not yet purchased the real estate, a remark that became
an oft-quoted opinion on Richard Wagner, a fellow composer, who was actually
writing music at the time, rather than being a professional whipped cream
spreader on the back of cigarette packets. “Wagner‘s
music,” said the composer, “has its moments. It’s
the hours in between that are the problem.” No doubt the other guests, also
choking by now on the strozzapreti, probably guffawed their recognition of the
maestro’s wit. And that was two sentences.
It is a sentiment
that is often associated with the so-called task of reading A la recherche
de temps perdu of Marcel Proust. He does go on, doesn’t he? Well, yes, a
bit like life really, until the end. It’s where we go along the way that forms
the point, a point of departure, a point of destination, a point of return and
eventually no point at all. And that is the point, at least for one reader of
this work.
Marcel Proust
lives amongst an elite. He describes them in detail. He brushes shoulders,
bellies and other parts on a regular, even daily basis, with members of
“society”. It was Margaret Thatcher who claimed there was no such thing as
society, only the individuals who constitute it. It is wonderful how something
can be defined not to exist in terms of an agglomeration of things that
unquestionably do. I digress, and so does Marcel Proust, regularly, but not
because digression is an end in itself, rather because digression is all we
have. Of course, when one is bored with such society one can always retire to other parts and brush
bellies with one of those working women - never ladies! - who have a little
time for digression. For them, it's the
matter in hand that takes precedence, but usually not in the hand, itself.
Times, it seems, have changed. Perhaps…
“Oh, my dear Charles,"
she went on, "what a bore it can be, dining out.
There are evenings when one would sooner die! It is true that dying may be
perhaps just as great a bore, because we don't know what it's like." A
servant appeared. It was the young lover who used to have trouble with the
porter, until the Duchess, in her kindness of heart, brought about an apparent
peace between them. "Am I to go up this evening to inquire for M. le
Marquis d'Osmond?" he asked. "Most certainly not, nothing before
to-morrow morning. In fact I don't want you to remain in the house to-night.
The only thing that will happen will be that his footman, who knows you, will
come to you with the latest report and send you out after us. Get off, go
anywhere you like, have a woman, sleep out, but I don't want to see you here
before to-morrow morning." An immense joy overflowed from the footman's
face. He would at last be able to spend long hours with his ladylove, whom he
had practically ceased to see ever since, after a final scene with the porter,
the Duchess had considerately explained to him that it would be better, to
avoid further conflicts, if he did not go out at all. He floated, at the
thought of having an evening free at last, in a happiness which the Duchess saw
and guessed its reason
In The Guermantes Way, Marcel
Proust describes these creatures of society, upper crust, titled, even royal,
certainly rich if we ignore the debts, propertied, (no doubt proprietarian in
Piketty’s terms), conceited, racist, learned yet ignorant, self-obsessed,
selfish. They even have the odd good point. I could go on. They do. But at the
root, they are pretty ordinary rather than pretty.
But in the other boxes, everywhere almost, the white deities who
inhabited those sombre abodes had flown for shelter against their shadowy walls
and remained invisible. Gradually, however, as the performance went on, their
vaguely human forms detached themselves, one by one, from the shades of night
which they patterned, and, raising themselves towards the light, allowed their
semi-nude bodies to emerge, and rose, and stopped at the limit of their course,
at the luminous, shaded surface on which their brilliant faces appeared behind
the gaily breaking foam of the feather fans they unfurled and lightly waved,
beneath their hyacinthine locks begemmed with pearls, which the flow of the
tide seemed to have caught and drawn with it…
They dress to the
nines, but for many of the species adornment makes little difference.
The Marquis de Palancy, his face bent downwards at the end of his long
neck, his round bulging eye glued to the glass of his monocle, was moving with
a leisurely displacement through the transparent shade and appeared no more to
see the public in the stalls than a fish that drifts past, unconscious of the
press of curious gazers, behind the glass wall of an aquarium. Now and again he
paused, a venerable, wheezing monument, and the audience could not have told
whether he was in pain, asleep, swimming, about to spawn, or merely taking
breath
This society is
certainly snobbish, but it is also deeply racist. But then that was the norm of
the time, wasn’t it? They were, after
all, professedly Christian in an era where, in order to claim this allegiance,
it may have been almost expected to be anti-Semitic. But a theme that underpins
this society’s ever-competitive camaraderie deals with opposing and divisive views
on the Dreyfus affair, the details of which may now be referenced with ease
across a democratic internet, noted for its thorough fair-mindedness,
disinterest and impartiality.
"In the first place because at heart all these people are anti-Semites," replied
Swann, who, all the same, knew very well from experience that certain of them
were not, but, like everyone who supports any cause with ardour, preferred, to
explain the fact that other people did not share his opinion, to suppose in
them a preconceived reason, a prejudice against which there was nothing to be
done, rather than reasons which might permit of discussion. Besides, having
come to the premature term of his life, like a weary animal that is goaded on,
he cried out against these persecutions and was returning to the spiritual fold
of his fathers. "Yes, the Prince de Guermantes," I said, "it is
true, I've heard that he was anti-semitic." "Oh, that fellow! I wasn't even thinking about him. He
carries it to such a point that when he was in the army and had a frightful
toothache he preferred to grin and bear it rather than go to the only dentist
in the district, who happened to be a Jew, and later on he allowed a wing of
his castle which had caught fire to be burned to the ground, because he would have
had to send for extinguishers to the place next door, which belongs to the
Rothschilds."
Like the
contemporary and newly enacted Brexit in the United Kingdom, the Dreyfus affair
began in untruths married to conceit and racism, peddled by those with ideological
interest in pursuing it, perpetrated by others who found their own identity in
an insane bigotry that appealed to inane prejudice, and, unlike Brexit at least
thus far, was eventually revealed as utter untruth. What it did do was bring to
the fore the ideological cleavages born of racism that cut through this
otherwise apparently monolithic society, revealing its inhabitants’ penchant
for competition rather than the cooperation their decorum tried to advertise.
For all their apparent politeness, for all their overt adherence to manners,
these people are vicious cynics capable of waging war to achieve their
interests. And that is precisely what they would do.
And the concerns
of difference are so small minded that, like Remainers and Brexiteers, these
Dreyfusards and their opponents cannot conceive that anything of interest might
live outside their own myopic ambit. The universe, it seems, consists of my
parlour and the rest.
…at this point in the social year, when people invited the Duchesse de
Guermantes to dinner, making every effort to see that she was not already
engaged, she declined, for the one reason of which nobody in society would ever
have thought; she was just starting on a cruise among the Norwegian fjords,
which were so interesting. People in society were stupefied, and, without any
thought of following the Duchess's example, derived nevertheless from her
action that sense of relief which one has in reading Kant when after the most
rigorous demonstration of determinism one finds that above the world of
necessity there is the world of freedom. Every invention of which no one has
ever thought before excites the interest even of people who can derive no
benefit from it. That of steam navigation was a small thing compared with the
employment of steam navigation at that sedentary time of year called 'the
season.' The idea that anyone could voluntarily renounce a hundred dinners or
luncheons, twice as many afternoon teas, three times as many evening parties,
the most brilliant Mondays at the Opera and Tuesdays at the Français to visit
the Norwegian fjords seemed to the Courvoisiers no more explicable than the
idea of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea…
But just how
self-obsessed and selfish these people are is indicated by the Guermantes’ reaction
to Swann’s revelation that he has just three months to live.
"I don't know why I am telling you this; I have never said a word
to you before about my illness. But as you asked me, and as now I may die at
any moment. But whatever I do I mustn't make you late; you're dining out,
remember," he added, because he knew that for other people their own
social obligations took precedence of the death of a friend, and could put
himself in her place by dint of his instinctive politeness. But that of the
Duchess enabled her also to perceive in a vague way that the dinner to which
she was going must count for less to Swann than his own death. And so, while
continuing on her way towards the carriage, she let her shoulders droop,
saying: "Don't worry about our dinner. It's not of any importance!"
But this put the Duke in a bad humour, who exclaimed: "Come, Oriane, don't
stop there chattering like that and exchanging your jeremiads with Swann; you
know very well that Mme. de Saint-Euverte insists on sitting down to table at
eight o'clock sharp. We must know what you propose to do; the horses have been
waiting for a good five minutes. I beg your pardon, Charles," he went on,
turning to Swann, "but it's ten minutes to eight already. Oriane is always
late, and it will take us more than five minutes to get to old
Saint-Euverte's."
I mean, Darling, doesn’t the man realise
that in society there is a time and place for everything? And this, surely, is
neither the time nor the place to talk of dea… of such things! Get a move on!
We’ll be late! Our friend’s demise will have to wait until after liqueurs,
dessert at least. Bid him goodbye and come along! But then there are things
that are just not done, Darling. Such as…
"You know, we can talk about that another time; I don't believe a
word you've been saying, but we must discuss it quietly. I expect they gave you
a dreadful fright, come to luncheon, whatever day you like" (with Mme. de
Guermantes things always resolved themselves into luncheons), "you will
let me know your day and time," and, lifting her red skirt, she set her
foot on the step. She was just getting into the carriage when, seeing this foot
exposed, the Duke cried in a terrifying voice: "Oriane, what have you been
thinking of, you wretch? You've kept on your black shoes! With a red dress! Go
upstairs quick and put on red shoes, or rather," he said to the footman,
"tell the lady's maid at once to bring down a pair of red shoes."
I mean, black
shoes with a red dress… What could she be thinking of? Well he was
Jewish, after all… Perhaps she should just have kept talking… The need to
speak prevents one not merely from listening but from seeing things, and in
this case the absence of any description of my external surroundings is
tantamount to a description of my internal state… I bet she talked quickly and, at the same
time, said very little. Just how little Marcel Proust says in the five hundred
pages that constitute The Guermantes Way might just be its point. And,
in the grand run of time, we have yet to reach perhaps the crowning absurdity
of the century, The Great War, the apparently heroic event of unquestioned and
racist imperialism we have all recently been honouring after its centenary.
Times change, perhaps also assumptions.