<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>LÀ-BAS</h1>
<h2>(DOWN THERE)</h2>
<h4>by</h4>
<h2>J.K. HUYSMANS</h2>
<h5>Translated by</h5>
<h3>KEENE WALLACE</h3>
<h5>[Transcriber's note:<br/>
Original published 1891,<br/>
English translation privately published 1928.]<br/></h5>
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<h6>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>I</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>II</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>III</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>IV</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>V</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>VI</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>VII</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>VIII</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>IX</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>X</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>XI</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>XII</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>XIII</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>XIV</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>XV</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>XVI</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>XVII</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>XVIII</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>XIX</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XX"><b>XX</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXI"><b>XXI</b></SPAN>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXII"><b>XXII</b></SPAN>
</h6>
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<h2 style="padding-top: 4em;"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I" /><!-- Page 4 -->CHAPTER I</h2>
<p>"You believe pretty thoroughly in these things, or you wouldn't abandon
the eternal triangle and the other stock subjects of the modern
novelists to write the story of Gilles de Rais," and after a silence Des
Hermies added, "I do not object to the latrine; hospital; and workshop
vocabulary of naturalism. For one thing, the subject matter requires
some such diction. Again, Zola, in <i>L'Assommoir</i>, has shown that a
heavy-handed artist can slap words together hit-or-miss and give an
effect of tremendous power. I do not really care how the naturalists
maltreat language, but I do strenuously object to the earthiness of
their ideas. They have made our literature the incarnation of
materialism—and they glorify the democracy of art!</p>
<p>"Say what you will, their theory is pitiful, and their tight little
method squeezes all the life out of them. Filth and the flesh are their
all in all. They deny wonder and reject the extra-sensual. I don't
believe they would know what you meant if you told them that artistic
curiosity begins at the very point where the senses leave off.</p>
<p>"You shrug your shoulders, but tell me, how much has naturalism done to
clear up life's really troublesome mysteries? When an ulcer of the
soul—or indeed the most benign little pimple—is to be probed,
naturalism can do nothing. 'Appetite and instinct' seem to be its sole
motivation and rut and brainstorm its chronic states. The field of
naturalism is the region below the umbilicus. Oh, it's a hernia clinic
and it offers the soul a truss!</p>
<p>"I tell you, Durtal, it's superficial quackery, and that isn't <!-- Page 5 -->all.
This fetid naturalism eulogizes the atrocities of modern life and
flatters our positively American ways. It ecstasizes over brute force
and apotheosizes the cash register. With amazing humility it defers to
the nauseating taste of the mob. It repudiates style, it rejects every
ideal, every aspiration towards the supernatural and the beyond. It is
so perfectly representative of bourgeois thought that it might be sired
by Homais and dammed by Lisa, the butcher girl in <i>Ventre de Paris</i>."</p>
<p>"Heavens, how you go after it!" said Durtal, somewhat piqued. He lighted
his cigarette and went on, "I am as much revolted by materialism as you
are, but that is no reason for denying the unforgettable services which
naturalism has rendered.</p>
<p>"It has demolished the inhuman puppets of romanticism and rescued our
literature from the clutches of booby idealists and sex-starved old
maids. It has created visible and tangible human beings—after
Balzac—and put them in accord with their surroundings. It has carried
on the work, which romanticism began, of developing the language. Some
of the naturalists have had the veritable gift of laughter, a very few
have had the gift of tears, and, in spite of what you say, they have not
all been carried away by an obsession for baseness."</p>
<p>"Yes, they have. They are in love with the age, and that shows them up
for what they are."</p>
<p>"Do you mean to tell me Flaubert and the De Goncourts were in love with
the age?"</p>
<p>"Of course not. But those men were artists, honest, seditious, and
aloof, and I put them in a class by themselves. I will also grant that
Zola is a master of backgrounds and masses and that his tricky handling
of people is unequalled. Then, too, thank God, he has never followed
out, in his novels, the theories enunciated in his magazine articles,
adulating the intrusion of positivism upon art. But in the works of his
best pupil, Rosny, the only talented novelist who <!-- Page 6 -->is really imbued with
the ideas of the master, naturalism has become a sickening jargon of
chemist's slang serving to display a layman's erudition, which is about
as profound as the scientific knowledge of a shop foreman. No, there is
no getting around it. Everything this whole poverty-stricken school has
produced shows that our literature has fallen upon evil days. The
grovellers! They don't rise above the moral level of the tumblebug. Read
the latest book. What do you find? Simple anecdotes: murder, suicide,
and accident histories copied right out of the newspaper, tiresome
sketches and wormy tales, all written in a colorless style and
containing not the faintest hint of an outlook on life nor an
appreciation of human nature. When I have waded through one of these
books its insipid descriptions and interminable harangues go instantly
out of my mind, and the only impression that remains is one of surprise
that a man can write three or four hundred pages when he has absolutely
nothing to reveal to us—nothing to say!"</p>
<p>"If it's all the same to you, Des Hermies, let's speak of something
else. We shall never agree on the subject of naturalism, as the very
mention of it makes you see red. What about this Mattei system of
medicine? Your globules and electric phials at least relieve a few
sufferers?"</p>
<p>"Hmph. A little better than the panaceas of the Codex, though I can't
say the effects are either lasting or sure. But, it serves, like
anything else. And now I must run along. The clock is striking ten and
your concierge is coming to put out the hall light. See you again very
soon, I hope. Good night."</p>
<p>When the door closed Durtal put some more coke in the grate and resumed
a comfortless train of thought aggravated by this too pertinent
discussion with his friend. For some months Durtal had been trying to
reassemble the fragments of a shattered literary theory which had once
seemed inexpugnable, and Des Hermies's opinions troubled him, in spite
of their exaggerated vehemence.</p>
<p><!-- Page 7 -->Certainly if naturalism confined one to monotonous studies of mediocre
persons and to interminable inventories of the objects in a drawing-room
or a landscape, an honest and clear-sighted artist would soon cease to
produce, and a less conscientious workman would be under the necessity
of repeating himself over and over again to the point of nausea.
Nevertheless Durtal could see no possibilities for the novelist outside
of naturalism. Were we to go back to the pyrotechnics of romanticism,
rewrite the lanuginous works of the Cherbuliez and Feuillet tribe, or,
worse yet, imitate the lachrymose storiettes of Theuriet and George
Sand? Then what was to be done? And Durtal, with desperate
determination, set to work sorting out a tangle of confused theories and
inchoate postulations. He made no headway. He felt but could not define.
He was afraid to. Definition of his present tendencies would plump him
back into his old dilemma.</p>
<p>"We must," he thought, "retain the documentary veracity, the precision
of detail, the compact and sinewy language of realism, but we must also
dig down into the soul and cease trying to explain mystery in terms of
our sick senses. If possible the novel ought to be compounded of two
elements, that of the soul and that of the body, and these ought to be
inextricably bound together as in life. Their interreactions, their
conflicts, their reconciliation, ought to furnish the dramatic interest.
In a word, we must follow the road laid out once and for all by Zola,
but at the same time we must trace a parallel route in the air by which
we may go above and beyond.... A spiritual naturalism! It must be
complete, powerful, daring in a different way from anything that is
being attempted at present. Perhaps as approaching my concept I may cite
Dostoyevsky. Yet that <i>exorable</i> Russian is less an elevated realist
than an evangelic socialist. In France right now the purely corporal
recipe has brought upon itself such discredit that two clans have
arisen: the liberal, which prunes naturalism of all its boldness of
subject <!-- Page 8 -->matter and diction in order to fit it for the drawing-room, and
the decadent, which gets completely off the ground and raves
incoherently in a telegraphic patois intended to represent the language
of the soul—intended rather to divert the reader's attention from the
author's utter lack of ideas. As for the right wing verists, I can only
laugh at the frantic puerilities of these would-be psychologists, who
have never explored an unknown district of the mind nor ever studied an
unhackneyed passion. They simply repeat the saccharine Feuillet and the
saline Stendhal. Their novels are dissertations in school-teacher style.
They don't seem to realize that there is more spiritual revelation in
that one reply of old Hulot, in Balzac's <i>Cousine Bette</i>, 'Can't I take
the little girl along?' than in all their doctoral theses. We must
expect of them no idealistic straining toward the infinite. For me,
then, the real psychologist of this century is not their Stendhal but
that astonishing Ernest Hello, whose unrelenting unsuccess is simply
miraculous!"</p>
<p>He began to think that Des Hermies was right. In the present
disorganized state of letters there was but one tendency which seemed to
promise better things. The unsatisfied need for the supernatural was
driving people, in default of something loftier, to spiritism and the
occult.</p>
<p>Now his thoughts carried him away from his dissatisfaction with
literature to the satisfaction he had found in another art, in painting.
His ideal was completely realized by the Primitives. These men, in
Italy, Germany, and especially in Flanders, had manifested the amplitude
and purity of vision which are the property of saintliness. In authentic
and patiently accurate settings they pictured beings whose postures were
caught from life itself, and the illusion was compelling and sure. From
these heads, common enough, many of them, and these physiognomies, often
ugly but powerfully evocative, emanated celestial joy or acute anguish,
spiritual calm or turmoil. The effect was of matter transformed, by
being distended or compressed, to afford an escape <!-- Page 9 -->from the senses into
remote infinity.</p>
<p>Durtal's introduction to this naturalism had come as a revelation the
year before, although he had not then been so weary as now of <i>fin de
siècle</i> silliness. In Germany, before a Crucifixion by Matthæus
Grünewald, he had found what he was seeking.</p>
<p>He shuddered in his armchair and closed his eyes as if in pain. With
extraordinary lucidity he revisualized the picture, and the cry of
admiration wrung from him when he had entered the little room of the
Cassel museum was reechoing in his mind as here, in his study, the
Christ rose before him, formidable, on a rude cross of barky wood, the
arm an untrimmed branch bending like a bow under the weight of the body.</p>
<p>This branch seemed about to spring back and mercifully hurl afar from
our cruel, sinful world the suffering flesh held to earth by the
enormous spike piercing the feet. Dislocated, almost ripped out of their
sockets, the arms of the Christ seemed trammelled by the knotty cords of
the straining muscles. The laboured tendons of the armpits seemed ready
to snap. The fingers, wide apart, were contorted in an arrested gesture
in which were supplication and reproach but also benediction. The
trembling thighs were greasy with sweat. The ribs were like staves, or
like the bars of a cage, the flesh swollen, blue, mottled with
flea-bites, specked as with pin-pricks by spines broken off from the
rods of the scourging and now festering beneath the skin where they had
penetrated.</p>
<p>Purulence was at hand. The fluvial wound in the side dripped thickly,
inundating the thigh with blood that was like congealing mulberry juice.
Milky pus, which yet was somewhat reddish, something like the colour of
grey Moselle, oozed from the chest and ran down over the abdomen and the
loin cloth. The knees had been forced together and the rotulæ touched,
but the lower legs were held wide apart, though the feet were placed one
on top of the other. These, <!-- Page 10 -->beginning to putrefy, were turning green
beneath a river of blood. Spongy and blistered, they were horrible, the
flesh tumefied, swollen over the head of the spike, and the gripping
toes, with the horny blue nails, contradicted the imploring gesture of
the hands, turning that benediction into a curse; and as the hands
pointed heavenward, so the feet seemed to cling to earth, to that ochre
ground, ferruginous like the purple soil of Thuringia.</p>
<p>Above this eruptive cadaver, the head, tumultuous, enormous, encircled
by a disordered crown of thorns, hung down lifeless. One lacklustre eye
half opened as a shudder of terror or of sorrow traversed the expiring
figure. The face was furrowed, the brow seamed, the cheeks blanched; all
the drooping features wept, while the mouth, unnerved, its under jaw
racked by tetanic contractions, laughed atrociously.</p>
<p>The torture had been terrific, and the agony had frightened the mocking
executioners into flight.</p>
<p>Against a dark blue night-sky the cross seemed to bow down, almost to
touch the ground with its tip, while two figures, one on each side, kept
watch over the Christ. One was the Virgin, wearing a hood the colour of
mucous blood over a robe of wan blue. Her face was pale and swollen with
weeping, and she stood rigid, as one who buries his fingernails deep
into his palms and sobs. The other figure was that of Saint John, like a
gipsy or sunburnt Swabian peasant, very tall, his beard matted and
tangled, his robe of a scarlet stuff cut in wide strips like slabs of
bark. His mantle was a chamois yellow; the lining, caught up at the
sleeves, showed a feverish yellow as of unripe lemons. Spent with
weeping, but possessed of more endurance than Mary, who was yet erect
but broken and exhausted, he had joined his hands and in an access of
outraged loyalty had drawn himself up before the corpse, which he
contemplated with his red and smoky eyes while he choked back the cry
which threatened to rend his quivering throat.</p>
<p>Ah, this coarse, tear-compelling Calvary was at the oppo<!-- Page 11 -->site pole from
those debonair Golgothas adopted by the Church ever since the
Renaissance. This lockjaw Christ was not the Christ of the rich, the
Adonis of Galilee, the exquisite dandy, the handsome youth with the
curly brown tresses, divided beard, and insipid doll-like features, whom
the faithful have adored for four centuries. This was the Christ of
Justin, Basil, Cyril, Tertullian, the Christ of the apostolic church,
the vulgar Christ, ugly with the assumption of the whole burden of our
sins and clothed, through humility, in the most abject of forms.</p>
<p>It was the Christ of the poor, the Christ incarnate in the image of the
most miserable of us He came to save; the Christ of the afflicted, of
the beggar, of all those on whose indigence and helplessness the greed
of their brother battens; the human Christ, frail of flesh, abandoned by
the Father until such time as no further torture was possible; the
Christ with no recourse but His Mother, to Whom—then powerless to aid
Him—He had, like every man in torment, cried out with an infant's cry.</p>
<p>In an unsparing humility, doubtless, He had willed to suffer the Passion
with all the suffering permitted to the human senses, and, obeying an
incomprehensible ordination, He, in the time of the scourging and of the
blows and of the insults spat in His face, had put off divinity, nor had
He resumed it when, after these preliminary mockeries, He entered upon
the unspeakable torment of the unceasing agony. Thus, dying like a
thief, like a dog, basely, vilely, physically, He had sunk himself to
the deepest depth of fallen humanity and had not spared Himself the last
ignominy of putrefaction.</p>
<p>Never before had naturalism transfigured itself by such a conception and
execution. Never before had a painter so charnally envisaged divinity
nor so brutally dipped his brush into the wounds and running sores and
bleeding nail holes of the Saviour. Grünewald had passed all measure. He
was the most uncompromising of realists, but his morgue Redeemer, his
sewer Deity, let the observer know that realism <!-- Page 12 -->could be truly
transcendent. A divine light played about that ulcerated head, a
superhuman expression illuminated the fermenting skin of the epileptic
features. This crucified corpse was a very God, and, without aureole,
without nimbus, with none of the stock accoutrements except the
blood-sprinkled crown of thorns, Jesus appeared in His celestial
super-essence, between the stunned, grief-torn Virgin and a Saint John
whose calcined eyes were beyond the shedding of tears.</p>
<p>These faces, by nature vulgar, were resplendent, transfigured with the
expression of the sublime grief of those souls whose plaint is not
heard. Thief, pauper, and peasant had vanished and given place to
supraterrestial creatures in the presence of their God.</p>
<p>Grünewald was the most uncompromising of idealists. Never had artist
known such magnificent exaltation, none had ever so resolutely bounded
from the summit of spiritual altitude to the rapt orb of heaven. He had
gone to the two extremes. From the rankest weeds of the pit he had
extracted the finest essence of charity, the mordant liquor of tears. In
this canvas was revealed the masterpiece of an art obeying the
unopposable urge to render the tangible and the invisible, to make
manifest the crying impurity of the flesh and to make sublime the
infinite distress of the soul.</p>
<p>It was without its equivalent in literature. A few pages of Anne
Emmerich upon the Passion, though comparatively attenuated, approached
this ideal of supernatural realism and of veridic and exsurrected life.
Perhaps, too, certain effusions of Ruysbroeck, seeming to spurt forth in
twin jets of black and white flame, were worthy of comparison with the
divine befoulment of Grünewald. Hardly, either. Grünewald's masterpiece
remained unique. It was at the same time infinite and of earth earthy.</p>
<p>"But," said Durtal to himself, rousing out of his revery, "if I am
consistent I shall have to come around to the Catholicism of the Middle
Ages, to <i>mystic</i> naturalism. Ah, <!-- Page 13 -->no! I will not—and yet, perhaps I
may!"</p>
<p>Here he was in the old dilemma. How often before now had he halted on
the threshold of Catholicism, sounding himself thoroughly and finding
always that he had no faith. Decidedly there had been no effort on the
part of God to reclaim him, and he himself had never possessed the kind
of will that permits one to let oneself go, trustingly, without reserve,
into the sheltering shadows of immutable dogma.</p>
<p>Momentarily at times when, after reading certain books, his disgust for
everyday life was accentuated, he longed for lenitive hours in a
cloister, where the monotonous chant of prayers in an incense-laden
atmosphere would bring on a somnolence, a dreamy rapture of mystical
ideas. But only a simple soul, on which life's wear and tear had left no
mark, was capable of savouring the delights of such a self-abandon, and
his own soul was battered and torn with earthly conflict. He must admit
that the momentary desire to believe, to take refuge in the timeless,
proceeded from a multitude of ignoble motives: from lassitude with the
petty and repeated annoyances of existence, quarrels with the laundress,
with the waiter, with the landlord; the sordid scramble for money; in a
word, from the general spiritual failure of a man approaching forty. He
thought of escaping into a monastery somewhat as street girls think of
going into a house where they will be free from the dangers of the
chase, from worry about food and lodging, and where they will not have
to do their own washing and ironing.</p>
<p>Unmarried, without settled income, the voice of carnality now
practically stilled in him, he sometimes cursed the existence he had
shaped for himself. At times, weary of attempting to coerce words to do
his bidding, he threw down his pen and looked into the future. He could
see nothing ahead of him but bitterness and cause for alarm, and,
seeking consolation, he was forced to admit that only religion could
heal, but religion demanded in return so arrant a desertion of common
sense, so pusillanimous a willingness to be aston<!-- Page 14 -->ished at nothing, that
he threw up his hands and begged off.</p>
<p>Yet he was always playing with the thought, indeed he could not escape
it. For though religion was without foundation it was also without limit
and promised a complete escape from earth into dizzy, unexplored
altitudes. Then, too, Durtal was attracted to the Church by its intimate
and ecstatic art, the splendour of its legends, and the radiant naïveté
of the histories of its saints.</p>
<p>He did not believe, and yet he admitted the supernatural. Right here on
earth how could any of us deny that we are hemmed in by mystery, in our
homes, in the street,—everywhere when we came to think of it? It was
really the part of shallowness to ignore those extrahuman relations and
account for the unforeseen by attributing to fate the more than
inexplicable. Did not a chance encounter often decide the entire life of
a man? What was love, what the other incomprehensible shaping
influences? And, knottiest enigma of all, what was money?</p>
<p>There one found oneself confronted by primordial organic law, atrocious
edicts promulgated at the very beginning of the world and applied ever
since.</p>
<p>The rules were precise and invariable. Money attracted money,
accumulating always in the same places, going by preference to the
scoundrelly and the mediocre. When, by an inscrutable exception, it
heaped up in the coffers of a rich man who was not a miser nor a
murderer, it stood idle, incapable of resolving itself into a force for
good, however charitable the hands which fain would administer it. One
would say it was angry at having got into the wrong box and avenged
itself by going into voluntary paralysis when possessed by one who was
neither a sharper nor an ass.</p>
<p>It acted still more strangely when by some extraordinary chance it
strayed into the home of a poor man. Immediately it defiled the clean,
debauched the chaste, and, acting simultaneously on the body and the
soul, it insinuated into its possessor a base selfishness, an ignoble
pride; it suggested <!-- Page 15 -->that he spend for himself alone; it made the humble
man a boor, the generous man a skinflint. In one second it changed every
habit, revolutionized every idea, metamorphosed the most deeply rooted
passions.</p>
<p>It was the instigator and vigilant accomplice of all the important sins.
If it permitted one of its detainers to forget himself and bestow a boon
it awakened hatred in the recipient, it replaced avarice with
ingratitude and re-established equilibrium so that the account might
balance and not one sin of commission be wanting.</p>
<p>But it reached its real height of monstrosity when, concealing its
identity under an assumed name, it entitled itself capital. Then its
action was not limited to individual incitation to theft and murder but
extended to the entire human race. With one word capital decided
monopolies, erected banks, cornered necessities, and, if it wished,
caused thousands of human beings to starve to death.</p>
<p>And it grew and begot itself while slumbering in a safe, and the Two
Worlds adored it on bended knee, dying of desire before it as before a
God.</p>
<p>Well! money was the devil, otherwise its mastery of souls was
inexplicable. And how many other mysteries, equally unintelligible, how
many other phenomena were there to make a reflective man shudder!</p>
<p>"But," thought Durtal, "seeing that there are so many more things
betwixt heaven and earth than are dreamed of in anybody's philosophy,
why not believe in the Trinity? Why reject the divinity of Christ? It is
no strain on one to admit the <i>Credo quia absurdum</i> of Saint Augustine
and Tertullian and say that if the supernatural were comprehensible it
would not be supernatural, and that precisely because it passes the
faculties of man it is divine.</p>
<p>"And—oh, to hell with it! What's it all about, anyway?"</p>
<p>And again, as so often when he had found himself before this
unbridgeable gulf between reason and belief, he recoiled <!-- Page 16 -->from the leap.</p>
<p>Well, his thoughts had strayed far from the subject of that naturalism
so reviled by Des Hermies. He returned to Grünewald and said to himself
that the great Crucifixion was the masterpiece of an art driven out of
bounds. One need not go far in search of the extra-terrestrial as to
fall into perfervid Catholicism. Perhaps spiritualism would give one all
one required to formulate a supernaturalistic method.</p>
<p>He rose and went into his tiny workroom. His pile of manuscript notes
about the Marshal de Rais, surnamed Bluebeard, looked at him derisively
from the table where they were piled.</p>
<p>"All the same," he said, "it's good to be here, in out of the world and
above the limits of time. To live in another age, never read a
newspaper, not even know that the theatres exist—ah, what a dream! To
dwell with Bluebeard and forget the grocer on the corner and all the
other petty little criminals of an age perfectly typified by the café
waiter who ravishes the boss's daughter—the goose who lays the golden
egg, as he calls her—so that she will have to marry him!"</p>
<p>Bed was a good place, he added, smiling, for he saw his cat, a creature
with a perfect time sense, regarding him uneasily as if to remind him of
their common convenience and to reproach him for not having prepared the
couch. Durtal arranged the pillows and pulled back the coverlet, and the
cat jumped to the foot of the bed but remained humped up, tail coiled
beneath him, waiting till his master was stretched out at length before
burrowing a little hollow to curl up in.</p>
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