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                <title>The Dial, Volume IV.&#8212;1896</title>
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                <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
                
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                        <editor>Charles Ricketts</editor>
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                        <author>John Gray</author>
                        <title>The Redemption of Durtal.</title>
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                            <publisher>L. Hacon and C. Ricketts</publisher>
                            <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
                            <date>1896</date>
                            <biblScope>Gray, John. "The Redemption of Durtal." <emph rend="italics">The
                                Dial</emph> vol. 4, 1896, pp. 7-11.
                                <emph rend="italics">Dial Digital Edition,</emph>
                                edited by Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2019-2020. <emph rend="italics">Yellow Nineties 2.0,</emph>  
                                Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2020. https://1890s.ca/dialv3-gray-hymn/
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            <head>
                <title level="a"><emph rend="bold"><emph rend="indent3">THE REDEMPTION OF DURTAL&#x2a;</emph></emph></title>
            </head>
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            <div type="prose">
                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>HUYSMANS has treated the subject of repentance;<lb/> 
rarest of all perhaps in pure literature. The <emph rend="italics">degree</emph><lb/> 
of the treatment, if such an expression may be used,<lb/>  
makes the new book peculiar; certainly as prose and<lb/>  
fiction: the penitent being a man of profound baseness;<lb/>  
the spiritual progress being narrated both as far as an<lb/>  
author dare, and as exhaustively as skill and patience are capable.</p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>The friends between whom he isolated himself intellectually, des Hermies <lb/>  
and Carhaix, dying within two months one of the other, Durtal is thrown<lb/> 
upon silence and solitude. From the desolation immediate upon his loss,<lb/>  
by way of a projected life of Blessed Lidwine, he comes to a point of<lb/> 
spiritual uncertainty, that is to say, to the only spiritual situation possible<lb/>  
for him. Then begins the story of any conversion in the world’s memory,<lb/>  
not restricted to the era of grace.</p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Durtal, with his history of the Mar&#xe9;chal Gilles de Rais, Durtal, who<lb/>  
goes the length of digging up the Satanism of the Middle Age from<lb/>  
modern cloaques of revolting depravity, whose vanity it would have been<lb/>  
to be the last possible recipient of grace, is the object of an “attouchement<lb/>  
divin.” This is the spiritual crisis well known to what is called Mysticism,<lb/>  
the science which, for want of a name, has taken this most misleading of<lb/>  
all names. The germ once planted grows with irresistible force, so assumes<lb/>  
the direction, so absorbs the attention, of Durtal, that suddenly he is aware<lb/>  
only of the fact that he <emph rend="italics">believes,</emph> as he says, with not a trace in his memory<lb/>  
of any step by which he has passed from the lethargy of decay to the<lb/>  
anxieties of a living growth.</p>
                
                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Then it is a ravenous pursuit of all the spiritual writings the Romance<lb/>  
languages hold, from Saint Denys the Areopagite to Father Faber (a<lb/>  
reservation later), a restless pilgrimage through all the churches of Paris.<lb/>  
The torment ensues; the struggle of habit with the inexorable, unknown<lb/>  
impulse; till agony drives Durtal to an earlier acquaintance, the abb&#xe9;<lb/>  
G&#xe9;vresin. Follow the conferences of the two men, the one deeply skilled<lb/>  
in the malady, the other floundering in all the helplessness such a patient<lb/>  
can exhibit. The great stage is reached when, through means of the<lb/>  
abb&#xe9;’s monitions, Durtal, at length pushed by a power he feels has taken<lb/>  
possession of his very will, goes into a retreat with the Trappistes, makes<lb/>  
his confession, is absolved and communicates. The ten days passed at<lb/>  
La Trappe occupy half the book.</p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>The record is closely consecutive; digressions are few and under the<lb/>  
    direct warranty of M. Huysmans’ art. The bridge-work from L&#xc0;-BAS<lb/>
is such as might be expected from so accomplished a writer; the<lb/>  
solidification of the setting in which Durtal has to move bears the cachet<lb/>  
of the Magician. Elaborate information, pitiless visual observation, a<lb/>  
rare sensibility, under the play of an obstinate method, which advances<lb/>  
fearlessly upon the longest category, ready at each shift with a more</p>
                
<p><emph rend="indent"><emph rend="note2">&#160;&#160;&#160;*J. K. Huysmans, “ La-Bas.” Paris : Tresse &#x26; Stock, 1891. J. K. Huysmans, “ En Route.” Paris : Tresse &#x26; Stock, 1895.</emph></emph></p>   
               
<fw type="footer"><fw type="pageNumCentre">7</fw></fw> 
    
                <p> exasperated epithet, lacerate every scene, make nervous and vibrant each<lb/>  
of the panorama before which the haggard, despicable hero is for ever<lb/>  
hounded.</p> 

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Above all, what is seen is through the eyes of Durtal; the comments<lb/>  
upon the scene are those of the deteriorated Sensitive. M. Huysmans<lb/>  
has not hesitated, in the enthusiasm of his subject, to expose the genus<lb/>  
scriptor as few who know the truth have the courage to do, priggish,<lb/> 
vulgar. Here is the perfection of the attempt less perfect before, to present the<lb/> 
baggage of the &#xe9;crivain with his finical person; M. Huysmans evidently<lb/> 
agreed with his friends’ verdict on L&#xc0;-BAS in this feature, for now<lb/> 
complete fusion has repaired the earlier fault.</p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Choice must be recognised in the circumstance of Durtal’s conversion<lb/>  
being brought about in the lap of the Church. Hence (and of course<lb/> 
it could have been effected <emph rend="italics">directly</emph>) applause falls to the judgment<lb/>  
of M. Huysmans. What a bait to his talent the modern, actual aspect<lb/> 
of the Church, its agglomerations of styles and traditions ! The sen¬<lb/>  
sitiveness of Durtal discerns a whole new facet of a mysterious gem<lb/>  
at any moment when he is set down to assist at an office. Hearing<lb/>  
the voice of a priest whom he cannot see, he can speak of “la vaseline<lb/>  
de son d&#xe9;bit;” and at the same time find the due expression of the<lb/> 
plain-chant a worthy pursuit of a life-time. Its architecture and<lb/> 
structural accessories; its images, music, liturgies ; the orders of religious,<lb/>  
their dress, rules, even pronunciation; the amount of light, the smell,<lb/> 
the quality of the worshippers; nothing about the Church which is not<lb/>  
of deep interest. But nearer yet to the author’s purpose the Church is of<lb/> 
vital importance to Durtal; during the period of his spiritual conval¬<lb/> 
escence it gives him <emph rend="italics">something to do</emph>. Without its insinuations, its<lb/> 
constant allurements, its demands upon the laborious attention of the<lb/> 
sufferer, it is safe to say EN ROUTE could not have been written; as it<lb/>  
is M. Huysmans is obliged to resort to a fully pardonable deceit, and<lb/>  
simply omit to mention what Durtal did with the great part of his day.</p> 

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Having chosen the Church, M. Huysmans shows further wisdom in<lb/>  
keeping his hero to an orthodox route. Here again he tacitly asks<lb/> 
indulgence of the interested reader, and surely not in vain. As a matter<lb/>  
of fact, Durtal, as we have been brought to know him, could not have<lb/>  
been kept away from the Heresies. M. Huysmans’ caution, in view of<lb/> 
this certainty, is extreme. Though one or two German mystics (out of<lb/>  
scores) are named, Dr. Tauler, Suso, the two Eckharts and Catherine<lb/>  
Emmerich, not one (save the last) is suffered more than a mention by<lb/> 
Durtal, for the reason that these are the door of ceremony to the most<lb/> 
absorbing of the heresies. Durtal among die Br&#xfc;der des freien Geistes!<lb/>  
Durtal with the history of der Gottesfreund vom Oberland in that valise<lb/> 
of his, with the chocolate and the laudanum! The most remarkable<lb/> 
“attouchement ” ever recorded, that of Tauler, cannot be alluded to.<lb/> 
Catherine Emmerich, for reasons, falls across the hard boundary; she is<lb/>  
almost alone in this century a mediaeval visionary and stigmatis&#xe9;e; the<lb/>  
passion of her life and utterances is all an excuse, in face of a tactic</p> 
    
    <fw type="footer"><fw type="pageNumCentre">8</fw></fw>

                <p>however severe. But doubled discretion has to forbear carefully from<lb/>  
mention of Clemens Brentano; lest Durtal, studying the voluminous diary<lb/>  
of nine years’ daily intercourse with the illuminated sister, should recog-<lb/>  
nise himself in Clemens, himself with more aplomb, more verve, and lose<lb/> 
his road beyond hope.<lb/></p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>The whole scheme of this history required a certain harshness, dryness,<lb/>  
poverty. Much had to be sacrificed to the purpose of making a novel<lb/> 
of such a subject. This accounts for here and there the begging of a<lb/>  
question. M. Huysmans holds the novel form to be almost as exacting<lb/>  
as that of the sonnet. The length of the book determined from the<lb/>  
outset within the limit of half a page, the need for proper balance of<lb/>  
all the considerations the novelist has to bear compels him to set his<lb/>  
face sternly against any but the most urgent situations. Add to all the<lb/> 
proper restrictions of the form M. Huysmans’ deliberate rejection of the<lb/>  
symbol. This is the writer of MARTHE, EN M&#xc9;NAGE,the unflinching<lb/> 
realist, whose faith is that his system can employ all possible subtlety.<lb/></p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>One example of dexterity in turning humble circumstance to beauty,<lb/>  
of skilful determination, by simple refinement of observation, of the<lb/>  
hour, the vibration of the atmosphere, the pulse even of the supposed<lb/>  
observer: Le temps &#xe9;tait ti&#xe9;de, ce matin-l&#xe0;; le soleil se tamisait dans le<lb/>  
crible remu&#xe9; des feuilles ; et le jour, ainsi blut&#xe9;, se muait au contact du<lb/>
blanc, en rose. Durtal, qui s'appr&#xea;tait &#xe0; lire son paroissien, vit les pages<lb/>
rosir et, par la loi des compl&#xe9;mentaires, toutes les lettres, imprim&#xe9;es &#xe0;<lb/>
l’encre noire, se teindre en vert.</p>
 
                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>One brilliant episode suffers quotation by its shortness:</p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>II faisait nuit noire; &#xe0; la hauteur d’un premier &#xe9;tage, un &#x153;il de b&#x153;uf<lb/>  
ouvert dans la mur de l’&#xe9;glise trouait les t&#xe9;n&#xe8;bres d’une lune rouge.</p> 

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Durtal tira quelques bouff&#xe9;es d’une cigarette, puis il s’achemina vers la<lb/>  
chapelle. II tourna doucement le loquet de la porte; le vestibule o&#xf9;; il<lb/> 
p&#xe9;n&#xe9;trait &#xe9;tait sombre, mais la rotonde, bien qu’elle f&#xfb;t vide, &#xe9;tait illumin&#xe9;e<lb/>  
par de nombreuses lampes.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Il fit un pas, se signa et recula, car il venait de heurter un corps; il<lb/>  
regarda &#xe0; ses pieds.</p>

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Il entrait sur un champ de bataille.</p>  
    
                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Par terre, des formes humaines &#xe9;taient couch&#xe9;es dans des attitudes de<lb/>  
combattants fauch&#xe9;s par la mitraille; les unes &#xe0; plat ventre, les autres &#xe0;<lb/>  
genoux; celles-ci, affaiss&#xe9;es les mains par terre, comme frapp&#xe9;es dans le<lb/>  
dos, celles-l&#xe0; &#xe9;tendues les doigts crisp&#xe9;s sur la poitrine, celles-l&#xe0; encore se<lb/>  
tenant la t&#xea;te ou tendant les bras.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Et, de ce groupe d’agonisants, ne s’&#xe9;levaient aucun g&#xe9;missement, aucune<lb/>  
plainte.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>This can only delight, not surprise, coming from the master of this mode.<lb/>  
And though it will inform no one, the flawlessness must be noted of the<lb/>  
nevropathy which is so important a feature of the book.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Of the study of Durtal himself one feels that, isolated, it would have<lb/>  
been more interesting than the whole presentment as it stands. The frag-<lb/>  
ment of a spiritual career is exact enough to support the application of the</p>  
       
<fw type="footer"><fw type="pageNumCentre">9</fw></fw>
 
                <p>gauge, the maxim actually cited : La Mystique est une science absolument<lb/>  
exacte. It is necessary to remember that what is given us is really only a frag-<lb/>  
ment ; not, as the ignorant are certain to say, the whole course and exhaustion<lb/>  
of spiritual operation in a man; a fragment, to speak truly, quite elementary,<lb/>  
and scarcely spiritual at all in results.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>All through, Durtal remains deeply ignorant of what is taking place,<lb/> 
when a very small amount of insight in the study of the books with which he<lb/>  
thinks himself saturated should at least sometimes inform him. All the<lb/>  
utterances of the saints he has the fortune to fall among are servilely<lb/>  
reported by him, with never a word of spiritual criticism on his part, not<lb/>  
even the most rudimentary. We do not find him ever admitted to the<lb/>  
simplest “communion of saints; “the impulse within him, the “touche<lb/>  
divine,” the “angelic influx,” the “Kingdom of God,” Goethe’s “d&#xe4;mon-<lb/>  
ische,” to cite a few of its thousand names, never says to Durtal directly<lb/>  
anything more complicated than: Do what this man tells you. He is always<lb/>  
in the wretchedness of his spiritual beggary. What really surprises is that<lb/>  
he should not blunder upon the first truth of an awakening, that he must<lb/> 
go back over the way by which he came. Usually this is easy to a man<lb/>  
who has been so wicked as Durtal; the keen quest of infamy being extra<lb/>  
physical in some aspects, a mode of inverted spiritism, in a manner to make a<lb/>  
spiritual process seem known already the moment it is suggested.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>He is found constantly looking, stupidly, for a miracle to take place in<lb/>  
him, a violent destruction of his past, the swift summoning to being of<lb/>  
some fruit of long, laborious growth. The “attouchement” is not miracle<lb/>  
enough for him. He craves, in his peculiar vulgarity, in the vanity of his<lb/>  
worthlessness, a theatrical sign, an explosion of redemption and miraculous<lb/>  
repair, an alchemistic operation in favour of his rag of spiritual disposition.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>The only reflection he can make upon the contemptuous refusal of the<lb/>  
abb&#xe9; to work in his behalf as he considers himself entitled is a culinary:<lb/>  
tons ses conseils se r&#xe9;duisent &#xe0; celui-ci; cuisez dans votre jus et attendez.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Herein is seen the fidelity of the author already remarked, not to let<lb/> 
wriggle out of sight the radical vulgarity of Durtal. His basest sophistry<lb/>  
does not make him contemptible enough; the real bitter drop he is forced to<lb/> 
swallow again is his vulgarity: . . . ces messes gargot&#xe9;es comme l'on en cui-<lb/>  
sine tant &#xe0; Paris . . . ils me verseront &#xe0; pleins bols leur bouillon de veau<lb/> 
pieux! . . . Ses chantres y barattent une margarine de sons vraiment ranees!</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>Durtal has much to say upon all the graces and exquisitenesses, a great<lb/> 
deal about the Primitives; for every sound he will have an epithet at all<lb/> 
hazards, often drawn from a mute source. But at every few pages the<lb/>  
reader falters upon the reiterated signature of one of these unpleasant<lb/> 
metaphors. Durtal, further, had exhausted the <emph rend="italics">paregoric</emph> virtues of the<lb/> 
Gospels. Saint Bonaventura condense en unesorte d’<emph rend="italics">of meat</emph> des modes pour<lb/>  
m&#xe9;diter sur la communion. The reward of translating this criticism upon<lb/> 
Saint Bonaventura is the image of a little tin box containing a disgusting<lb/> 
chemical aliment.</p>  

                <p><emph rend="indent2"></emph>The Trappistes were right who told Durtal that every wonder was small<lb/>  
beside the fact of his being in any disposition of penitence soever. The</p>  
   
                    <fw type="footer"><fw type="pageNumCentre">10</fw></fw>


                <p>great thing for Durtal was to be kept ignorant of his real state and pros-<lb/>  
pect; it would have been very little encouraging for him to know. His<lb/> 
confessor at La Trappe told him that he had been so sick that one might<lb/>  
say of his soul: Jam f&#x153;tet; he did not tell him that no other thing could<lb/> 
be said of his body. The body of Durtal is as lost as is possible; there<lb/>  
is no more hope for that. The soul of Durtal has to make a journey so<lb/>  
long that a view of it would ruin him. At the point of utmost progress<lb/>  
in EN ROUTE he is at the beginning of the purgative life. In a very long<lb/>  
time he will still be at the beginning.</p>  
    
                    <p> <emph rend='indent7'><ref target='#JGR'> JOHN GRAY.</ref></emph></p>
                         
                    <fw type="footer"><fw type="pageNumCentre">11</fw></fw>      
    
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