Jean-Arthur Rimbaud
In Honor of the Centenary of His Birth [1]
Ladies and gentlemen,
It is said that we honor
poets only when they are dead, when the lid of the tomb or the wet heap of
earth has effected the definitive separation of him from us, when the creator
of lyrical poems has been asphyxiated by misery and penury, when, in the
beautiful and distressing phraseology of memorial addresses penned by inferior
minds, he has given up the ghost.
Thereafter, God willing, some governmental department turns up and
begins leafing through his address book, and the work of posterity takes its
course. There are wreaths and
“wreathlets,” and an amusing commercial collaboration between his neighborhood
wine bar and the ministry develops, until at length the poet’s achievement
vanishes back into oblivion, or someone decides to publish a complete edition
of his works. There are festivals and
pageants, the dead man’s thematic agenda is discovered, brought to light—the
poet is “showcased”—mostly for the sake of staving off the showcasers’ own boredom,
the boredom for which they are ultimately paid.
And is it not true that on such occasions (like this one!) it is not the
poet who is being honored but rather the gentleman from the cultural office who
delivers the welcoming address, the worthy administrator of poetry, the actor,
the reciter? How many Hölderlins and
Georg Trakls would turn in their graves over so much simulated culture, over so
much art-market chit-chat from which nothing emerges but shamelessness!
We are gathered here to
reflect on Jean-Arthur Rimbaud. Thank
God he was a Frenchman! We therefore
believe in the power and the majesty of the poetic word, we believe in the
perduring life of spirit, in the indestructibility of such images (of images of
the dead and of visions), as surface between the pages written by a pair of
great men of the elements, as are begotten only once or twice in a
century. Let us be under no illusions[:]
that which is powerful, provocative, disruptive, and consoling, that which
endures, does not grow like sorrel and summer fields! Thus a significant line of verse, one that
vouchsafes mankind a glimpse into the depths, does not come into being every
day, or every year. Invariably several
thousand books must be printed out, before the machine makes even one such
elemental jolt, and preserves it for us, before it delivers even a single significant
work of world literature. These thousands
of books that always cling so tightly to the big bell and whose clang reverberates
as far as the besotted beer-halls, these newspaper-poets and export articles of
literature, which sometimes even garner Nobel prizes, are generally nothing but
tarted-up tittle-tattle and fashionable prefabrications. In literature originality, nay, elementality,
devolves only upon people like Jean Arthur Rimbaud.
This French poet was an
element in the truest sense, his verses were made out of flesh and blood. A hundred years are nothing for this master
of the word, for this untranslatable Rimbaud.
He tears into life itself, unconventionally, at the root, while at the
same time he crams it full of reverence and the thirst for death. His poetry is sealed off, at the age of
twenty-two, he slammed shut his book, his Drunken Boat, his Illuminations,
his Season in Hell. He no longer
touches a pen for the purpose of writing poetry, in the presence of literature
he is seized by fits of nausea. But he was
finished, enough was enough.
“Absurd! Ridiculous! Disgusting!”—with such exclamations did
Rimbaud ward off those who spoke of his verses with wonderment and tried to win
him back into the fold of French literature.
Rimbaud was born on October 20, 1854 in Charleville.
His father was an army officer, his mother a woman like every other
woman, mindful of the boy’s well-being, but mistrustful and reserved, when at
the age of nine he brings home his first verses from school, his first
“Essays,” his visions, his first poems, which number among the finest ever
produced in France . In July
1870 he receives first prize in a competition for the masterly Latin poem in
which he had recast “Sancho Panza’s Address to His Ass.” While still in school he writes for an Ardennes newspaper and impugns Napoleon III and Bismarck with equal
vehemence. In order to see and suffer human
poverty, he travels on foot to Paris , plunges into dread of humanity and a human
wilderness, and he throws himself into the arms of the distressed and destitute
among the solitary boulevards. During
this period his hair reputedly grew to be as long as a horse’s mane, a passerby
tendered him four sous to pass on to the barber, the “Bard of Charleville”
spends the money on tobacco. Then he
witnesses the revolution in the barracks of the Rue Babylon, in the dense
mélange of races and classes, and he fervidly cries out, “I will be a
worker! A warrior!” After an eight-day struggle, the governmental
troops storm the capital, the captured revolutionaries, his friends and
comrades, bleed to death. He himself,
who now has the first great convulsion of his life behind him, miraculously
escapes. But in Charleville he no longer
felt at home.
Rimbaud was a martyr and
“socialist,” but never a politician. He
had nothing to do or in common with politics, with [its] distaste for art. He was nothing less than a human being, and as
a human being he was incited by the violation of spirit. In Charleville he sat down and wrote the
fervid poem The Drunken Boat even though he had never been at sea—wrote,
“Paris is repopulating itself,” the orgy, the indictment of the tumor of
hatred, the poem of Parisian vice, everything within him was indignation, and
when he walked along the river, “he required hours to pacify himself
thoroughly.” He was seventeen years old
when he committed to paper that marvelous creation in verse, “The Poor People
in the Church,” “with pounding heart, right next to the dirty children who gaze
unwaveringly at the wooden angels and suppose that behind them stands God…”
Rimbaud was a communist, yes, but not one of those communists who wanted to set
fire to the palace on the Champs-Elysées, but rather a communist of the spirit,
a communist of his own lyricism and his eidetic prose.
When he sent his verses to
Verlaine, the only living French poet he admired, the latter replied with
the now-legendary sentence: “Venez, chère grande âme!” And with what astonishment does the “Bard of
Paris,” who enters and exits the smoke-filled salons like a god, discover, in
place of an “estimable” gentleman, the seventeen-year-old ragamuffin Jean
standing on his doorstep. This ragamuffin
already had his “Sensation,” that mighty incendiary poem, behind him. Ah, those were the days!
With his meeting of
Verlaine a new epoch began for Rimbaud, it was an epoch both imbued with
friendship and deeply human, and the two men set off together to England, in
order to acquaint themselves with London, with the noisome air of the largest
port city in the world, with the English midlands and their black factories,
they arrived in Brussels only—for a time!—to part company. Verlaine had to go “home,” to his family,
whom he had “ruthlessly,” as they say, abandoned one fine morning. How different from each other were the two
vagabonds, who were obliged to wander through Europe without passports, without
a single possession, the volatile, ever-fulminant Rimbaud, goaded onwards by
the monumental new reality that “awaited digestion in prose,” and the pliant, and
(in Rimbaud’s eyes) degenerate Verlaine, who was now making a beeline for
Catholicism, to salvation, who had Rimbaud to thank for those profound poems,
those sanctified lays of quiescent humanity, that the defeated man committed to
paper in prison, after shooting and seriously wounding his Charlevillian little
brother in the heat of a quarrel.
Verlaine was in Rimbaud’s eyes the great[est of] poets, but also
[excessively] pliant and needy. Rimbaud
on the other hand had become for Verlaine “the sole locus of value in my life
other than Jesus Christ.” One must not
misconstrue [this designation]: Verlaine’s enamorment with his “brother’s”
poetic power, and with Arthur’s miraculously fair features, was now a thing of
the past.
A poet’s life does not
deserve to be dragged on parade through the streets, but Rimbaud’s life is so
prodigious, so huge, so precipitous and yet so religious, like the life of a
saint. He stands before us like his
poetry: abominable, truthful, beautiful, and divine!
In Germany he was a private tutor in the house of Doctor
Wagner, a citizen of Stuttgart , he wandered through Belgium and from there to Holland . He
enlisted in the Dutch colonial army and after a seven week-long voyage arrived
in Java. But he took military service
not a jot more seriously than he had earlier taken the idea of “becoming a
missionary in order to see the world!”
When he disembarked in the Dutch East Indies ,
it seemed as though he had attained his goal: to be beyond the reach of the
abomination that was civilization! He
took to his heels, went to Batavia, lived on pocket change, slogged his way
through the new landscape, fraternized with animals and semi-idiots, in 1876 he
boarded a British ship with the intention of heading home. As they were sailing past the island of St. Helena , he asked if they could stop there.
As his request was not granted, he simply jumped into the sea with the
intention of swimming to the island. Only
with great difficulty was this man who wanted so desperately to see the lair of
Napoleon dragged back on board. Not a
day before or after December 31st he was back in Charleville. All his life he was an adventurer, and half his
existence was spent in transit. He had
long since strayed away from literature, and he no longer wrote the likes of:
For eight days I had been
tearing my boots to shreds
On highway pavements. Into Charleroi I strolled;
At the Green Cabaret, I
ordered some sliced bread
Layered with butter and
ham that were almost cold
Blissfully, I stretched my
legs out under the green
Table: I contemplated the
artless patterns
On the upholstery. And it was a charming scene
When the girl with huge
tits, a keen-eyed slattern
--a kiss alone wouldn’t
purify her state!—
Laughing, brought me a
parti-colored plate
Piled high with bread and
butter and lukewarm swine--
Pink and white-marbled ham
instinct with the perfume
Of garlic--and filled my towering
mug with her spume
To which a straggling sunbeam
imparted its gilt shine.[2]
He lived with all the more
gusto. Once again he is in Marseille and
selling key-rings, he comes to Egypt , returns to France and finally ships out to Arabia as a coffee-and-perfume salesman.
In November he leaves Arabia and reaches Zeila.
In the first half of December, after a twenty-day ride through the
Somali desert, he arrives in Harrar, an English colony. Here he became a general commercial agent of
an English trading company and earned “a salary of 330 francs, plus board,
travel expenses, and a 2% commission.”
But before leaving Aden ,
he had written to his mother about certain books on natural science. Art was thrown overboard, he strove for
achievement in other equally important intellectual domains, and hereafter he
studies metallurgy, the art of navigation, hydraulics, mineralogy, bricklaying,
carpentry, agricultural machinery, timber mills, the craft of metal casting in
Bergmann glasses and pots, artesian wells—he wants to make everything his own,
he is hungrier than ever, even as a general commercial agent! The Harrar branch of the company flourishes
under the leadership of Rimbaud the poet.
In his letters he writes of money and gold that must be sought out. Again he grows impatient and forms schemes of
moving to Tonking, to India , and to the Panama Canal . And from
then on out he engages in nothing but business activities, perhaps solely in
the hope of anaesthetizing himself, he deals in coffee and guns, which he
dispatches to the Red Sea, with cotton and fruit—he had already dispatched to
France the finest juvenilia in verse that it would ever see. And in a state of the utmost dejection, he
writes: “I am terribly bored, I have never met anybody as bored as I am.”
In 1890, just as he was
beginning to feel a hankering to get married, he sensed the sudden onset of a
kind of gout, of a form of corporeal pain, something this storm-tossed
individual had never experienced. Far
from France , among slaves and negroes, in the noisome
desert. The end was approaching with
colossal rapidity. He himself wrote of
his illness: “The climate of Harrar is cold, and I generally wear next to
nothing, a simple pair of [cotton] trousers and a wool shirt, and thus dressed,
every day I senselessly go riding for 15 to 40 kilometers at a stretch through
the rugged, hilly terrain of the region.
It seems that on my knee there has developed some sort of malignant complaint
brought on by fatigue, heat, and cold.
In actual fact it began with a sort of throbbing hammering sensation
under my kneecap: a slight throbbing that I suddenly began noticing every
single minute. I continued riding around
and working with my wonted diligence, because I thought I was simply coming
down with an ordinary cold…” His
examination by the English doctor at the hospital in Aden yielded a diagnosis of a dangerously advanced
inflammation of the joint. Rimbaud
decided to have himself carried on to a Mediterranean-bound steamer.
In Marseille his leg is
amputated. Old Madame Rimbaud is by his
side. “I am a cripple,” he writes in
despair, “of what use to the world is a cripple? Death is preferable to this, after all I have
put up with so far…” He wrote this after
months of excruciating pains that had left him bedridden. He is suffering from cancer. On July 23, according to his sister, he had
himself brought to Roche, where his nearest relations had settled. There he hoped to find peace and sleep at
last. The year was 1891. He arrived to find the local grain harvest
blighted by frost, and at the sight of the room that had been prepared for him,
he exclaimed, “This room is a Versailles in itself!”
The following month was the most harrowing of his life. In October the first signs of death become
perceptible. Once again he is of a mind
to take off, with one leg, for India , or, failing that, for Harrar and its negroes. He is even bundled into a carriage and
dragged on to a train, but he has to be dragged right back out again at the
first station stop. He had reached the
utmost depths of human despair. He
checks into the “Hôpital de la Conception” under the name Jean Rimbaud. From that point onwards, everything was a
struggle between life, which he craved, and death. He has miraculous visions, his
“Illuminations,” his enlightenments, come back to him. In his death agony the poet returns, suddenly
he is back where he left off at the age of twenty-three, when he was spat upon
from every corner and quarter as the “literary barbarian,” the “intellectual
epicene.” He is once again a poet—even
if he no longer writes anything down. He
is once again present—but he was never absent, rather in Harrar, in Egypt , in England , in Java.
It was only a detour, he now clearly beheld the poetic corpus from
Charleville and saw it for what it was: a creation of genius! It descended upon him as a wonderful
consolation. “On November 10, at 2 p.m. , he died,” his sister Isabelle noted. The parish priest, convulsed by a plethora of
piety, gave him the benediction. “Never
before have I seen such a strong attestation of faith,” he said. Thanks to Isabelle’s assistance Rimbaud was
conveyed to Charleville and interred with great ceremony in the town cemetery. To this day he lies there beside his sister
Vitalie, under a simple monument of marble.
Rimbaud’s work was always
opposed by those with little respect for truth, nevertheless his corpus begins
with the salutary, revolutionary, thoroughly literary new year’s school
composition “The Sun Was Still Warm…,” which his teacher and friend Izambard
held in safekeeping. His work ranks
among the most prodigious of all poetic corpora and it is the most original
that has ever been composed in the French language, more original than that of
any of the French giants, Racine, Verlaine, Valéry, Gide, and more recently Claudel. His poetry is not exclusively French, but
more broadly European, it is poetry for a global readership, full of epigrams
and prophecies, emotions and deliria of uncanny sorcery.
One mustn’t talk Rimbaud
to death, one must read him, one must let him take effect in his entirety like
a dream of the entire earth, one must enter his world as he entered it, with
dirty shoes and an empty stomach, one must be on the road to Mézières one
minute, and the next minute in Paris, steeped in ineluctability. One must, like Rimbaud himself, look into his
church, one must not merely contemplate his work but rather fraternize and
empathize with it, simply regard it as a young girl regards any object that
happens to flutter into her path.
“As four a.m. in summer takes its leave / The sleep of love
itself restates / Beneath the shrubs the dawn evaporates / The fêted smell of
eve…” Something comparable to this is
only seldom said at all and is never said in verse. It is pure, discomposing, solitary, cosmopolitan
Rimbaud. Or take “Ophelia,” the two
poems that encapsulate the whole world and God along with it. In them may be found all that is lacking in
poems written today: beauty and awe in the truest sense of those words, and
therein also resides bereavement and within it the eternal and single God, the
great father, however strongly bereavement desires to banish him from Rimbaud’s
verses. In order to be religious, one
need not swallow communion wafers, one need not go to confession twice a year
every year. It is enough if one gazes at
the countenance of the world, if one gazes deep into its heart—like Rimbaud. One ought never to make fun of the Church,
but one is licensed to describe its corrupt priests as corrupt and its depraved
nuns as depraved. But one must also glorify
God in all his wholeness and goodness, as Rimbaud did from beginning to end,
with elemental authority. For what makes
his work so great is its unbroken uniformity.
Rimbaud was simply the first person who wrote like Rimbaud. He knew as nobody else of his time knew that
“no thing exists, but HE exists, and HE eternally exists.”
He
is “l’enfant Shakespeare”—and not just because Victor Hugo said so. His “Bateau ivre,” that fantastic dream, is
imperishable. To what spot did he
commend his aesthetic legacy? Why, to
the internally self- devouring rubbish heap of literature, which broadcasts its
perfumic stench to every period of history: nothing could be less like him than
the surrealities, the vitreosities of, for example, the late Rilke. He was virginal and bestial at the same time,
and from him spring the most beautiful, the most emotionally heartfelt
reflections. He did not write on
hand-molded paper, but rather on malodorous cheese-wrappers—and yet, for all
that, his writings were the quintessence of poetry. The “Season in Hell” was the only work that he
published himself during his lifetime.
After Rimbaud’s death, Verlaine supervised the publication of a complete
edition. Stefan Zweig later said of him that
poetry had been for him “nothing more than an attempt to escape,” a “safety
valve for the management of high-pressure surplus vitality.” But into such channels no one can discharge
mere raw vitality, and certainly not Rimbaud, for whom poetry was no refuge but
rather his own private homeland.
“Religion never brought him to his knees,” writes the aforesaid Zweig
(who deeply admired Rimbaud!). And yet the
literature he lived was a unique, frankly cosmopolitan, historically frank, unbound,
unrefined religion, triumphant in its filthy, shredded boots. And this religion truly brought about his
downfall, it really did bring him to his knees!— his entire life was at the
mercy of his “Season in Hell,” his very heartbeat at the mercy of his “Illuminations”—the
valuables in Harrar were utterly useless, all the money was utterly useless, everything,
everything was utterly useless, he sinks to the ground, in the end to all outward
appearances he dwindles into quite a tiny thing, he falls to his knees in a
delirium and takes orbit around the final illumination: around the eternal
father!
Only
he who orbits the eternal father has any prospect of enduring, can get away
with saying, as Rimbaud said: I am for the ages!
THE END
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[1] Editors’
note. The typescript in the Thomas Bernhard Archive
in Gmunden bears the title Thomas Bernhard: Jean-Arthur Rimbaud. In Honor of the Sesquicentenary (sic
[DR]) of His Birth. This is the
text of a lecture that Bernhard delivered at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, 9 November 1954 at the Hotel Pitter
in Salzburg, at a meeting of the “Mountain Circle” commemorating the hundredth
anniversary of the birth of Rimbaud (10 October 1854-10 November 1891). The “Mountain Circle ,” organized by Renée Bergen and Hildegard Brenner,
provided a public forum (exclusively at the Hotel Pitter) for artists and
literati in the mid-1950s. Posthumously
published in Die Zeit on 14 May 2009 .
[2] Unlike the quotations from
Rimbaud’s letters, this poem and the excerpt from “Bonne pensée du matin” below
I have translated from Rimbaud’s French originals, not from the German
translations used (or composed [the editors do not specify which]) by
Bernhard.
Translation unauthorized but Copyright ©2013 by Douglas Robertson
Source: Der Wahrheit auf der Spur. Reden,
Leserbriefe, Interviews, Feuilletons. Herausgegeben von Wolfram Bayer, Raimund
Fellingerund und Martin Huber [Stalking the Truth.
Speeches, Open Letters, Interviews, Newspaper Articles. Edited
by Wolfram Bayer et al.](Frankfurt : Suhrkamp, 2011).
1 comment:
This is cool!
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