Charles Baudelaire
from "The Painter of Modern
Life" (1863)
Discussion Questions:
1.) What is a "fl‰neur"? What is a "dandy?" How are they alike and
unlike?
2.) What is Baudelaire's definition of "modernity?" How
is it like and unlike other notions of "modernity" we have
encountered?
3.) What for Baudelaire is the modern relationship between style
and beauty, or between passing fashion and timeless aesthetic truth? How is
Baudelaire's sense of history like and unlike other views of history we have
encountered?
4.) Why are cities and the crowd so important for "Monsieur
G." (Baudelaire's personification of the painter of modern life)? How is
the city and the crowd connected to modernity?
5.) At one point, Baudelaire likens the painter of modern life to a
philosopher. How is Baudelaire's modern painter philosophical, or how is
painting a philosophical activity? What would a "modern philosopher"
be like according to Baudelaire's understanding of modern? How would this
conception of the philosopher compare to others we have encountered?
6.) For Baudelaire, the dandy is in some respects the archetypal
modern subject. In other words, it is in the stance, values, ethics, and
actions of the dandy that the self is most in tune with the condition of
modernity. Can you explain this connection? Why is the dandy the quintessential
modern subject? How do you evaluate this connection?
7.) Is Baudelaire's modern painter radical, liberal, conservative,
or something else? Explain your answer.
III. AN ARTIST,
MAN OF THE WORLD, MAN OF CROWDS, AND CHILD
Today I want to talk to my readers about a singular man, whose
originality is so powerful and clear-cut that it is self-sufficing, and does
not bother to look for approval. None of his drawings is signed, if by
signature we mean the few letters, which can be so easily forged, that compose
a name, and that so many other artists grandly inscribe at the bottom of their
most carefree sketches. But all his works are signed with his dazzling soul,
and art-lovers who have seen and liked them will recognize them easily from the
description I propose to give of them. M. C. G. loves mixing with the crowds
loves being incognito, and carries his originality to the point of modesty. M.
Thackeray, who, as is well known, is very interested in all things to do with
art, and who draws the illustrations for his own novels, one day spoke of M. G.
in a London review, much to the irritation of the latter who regarded the
matter as an outrage to his modesty. And again quite recently, when he heard
that I was proposing to make an assessment of his mind and talent, he begged
me, in a most peremptory manner, to suppress his name, and to discuss his works
only as though they were the works of some anonymous person. I will humbly obey
this odd request. The reader and I will proceed as though M. G. did not exist,
and we will discuss his drawings and his water-colours. for which he professes
a patrician's disdain, in the same way as would a group of scholars faced with
the task of assessing the importance of a number of precious historical
documents which chance has brought to light, and the author of which must for
ever remain unknown. And even to reassure my conscience completely, let my
readers assume that all the things I have to say about the artist's nature, so
strangely and mysteriously dazzling, have been more or less accurately
suggested by the works in question; pure poetic hypothesis, conjecture, or
imaginative reconstructions.
M.
G. is an old man. Jean-Jacques began writing, so they say, at the age of
forty-two. Perhaps it was at about that age that M. G., obsessed by the world
of images that filled his mind, plucked up courage to cast ink and colours on
to a sheet of white paper. To be honest, he drew like a barbarian, like a
child, angrily chiding his clumsy fingers and his disobedient tool. I have seen
a large number of these early scribblings, and I admit that most of the people
who know what they are talking about, or who claim to, could, without shame,
have failed to discern the latent genius that dwelt in these obscure
beginnings. Today, M. G., who has discovered unaided all the little tricks of
the trade, and who has taught himself, without help or advice, has become a
powerful master in his own way; of his early artlessness he has retained only
what was needed to add an unexpected spice to his abundant gift. When he
happens upon one of these efforts of his early manner, he tears it up or burns
it, with a most amusing show of shame and indignation.
For
ten whole years I wanted to make the acquaintance of M. G., who is by nature a
great traveller and very cosmopolitan. I knew that he had for a long time been
working for an English illustrated paper and that in it had appeared engravings
from his travel sketches (Spain, Turkey, the Crimea). Since then I have seen a
considerable mass of these on-the-spot drawings from life, and I have thus been
able to 'read' a detailed and daily account, infinitely preferable to any
other, of the Crimean campaign. The same paper had also published (without
signature, as before) a large quantity of compositions by this artist from the
new ballets and operas. When at last I ran him to ground I saw at once that I
was not dealing exactly with an artist but rather with a man of the world. In
this context, pray interpret the word 'artist' in a very narrow sense, and the
expression 'man of the world' in a very broad one. By 'man of the world', I
mean a man of the whole world, a man who understands the world and the
mysterious and legitimate reasons behind all its customs; by 'artist', I mean a
specialist, a man tied to his palette like a serf to the soil. M. G. does not
like being called an artist. Is he not justified to a small extent? He takes an
interest in everything the world over, he wants to know, understand, assess
everything that happens on the surface of our spheroid. The artist moves
little, or even not at all, in intellectual and political circles. If he lives
in the Breda quarter he knows nothing of what goes on in the Faubourg
Saint-Germain. With two or three exceptions, which it is unnecessary to name,
the majority of artists are, let us face it, very skilled brutes, mere manual
laborers, village pub-talkers with the minds of country bumpkins. Their talk;
inevitably enclosed within very narrow limits, quickly becomes a bore to the
man of the world, to the spiritual citizen of the universe.
Thus to begin to understand
M. G., the first thing to note is this. that curiosity may be considered the
starting point of his genius.
Do you remember a picture
(for indeed it is a picture!) written by the most powerful pen of this age and
entitled The Man of the Crowd? Sitting in a cafe, and looking through the shop
window, a convalescent is enjoying the sight of the passing crowd, and
identifying himself in thought with all the thoughts that are moving around
him. He has only recently come back from the shades of death and breathes in
with delight all the spores and odours of life; as he has been on the point of
forgetting everything, he remembers and passionately wants to remember
everything. In the end he rushes out into the crowd in search of a man unknown
to him whose face, which he had caught sight of, had in a flash fascinated him.
Curiosity had become a compelling, irresistible passion.
Now imagine an artist
perpetually in the spiritual condition of the convalescent, and you will have
the key to the character of M. G.
But convalescence is like a
return to childhood. The convalescent, like the child, enjoys to the highest
degree the faculty of taking a lively interest in things, even the most trivial
in appearance. Let us hark back, if we can, by a retrospective effort of our
imaginations, to our youngest, our morning impressions, and we shall recognize
that they were remarkably akin to the vividly coloured impressions that we
received later on after a physical illness, provided that illness left our
spiritual faculties pure and unimpaired. The child sees everything as a
novelty; the child is always 'drunk'. Nothing is more like what we call inspiration
than the joy the child feels in drinking in shape and colour. I will venture to
go even further and declare that inspiration has some connection with
congestion, that every sublime thought is accompanied by a more or less
vigorous nervous impulse that reverberates in the cerebral cortex. The man of
genius has strong nerves; those of the child are weak. In the one, reason has
assumed an important role; in the other, sensibility occupies almost the whole
being. But genius is no more than childhood recaptured at will, childhood
equipped now with man's physical means to express itself, and with the
analytical mind that enables it to bring order into the sum of experience,
involuntarily amassed. To this deep and joyful curiosity must be attributed that
stare, animal-like in its ecstasy, which all children have when confronted with
something new, whatever it may be, face or landscape, light, gilding, colours,
watered silk, enchantment of beauty, enhanced by the arts of dress. A friend of
mine was telling me one day how, as a small boy, he used to be present when his
father was dressing, and how he had always been filled with astonishment, mixed
with delight, as he looked at the arm muscle, the colour tones of the skin
tinged with rose and yellow, and the bluish network of the veins. The picture
of the external world was already beginning to fill him with respect, and to
take possession of his brain. Already the shape of things obsessed and
possessed him. A precocious fate was showing the tip of its nose. His damnation
was settled. Need I say that, today, the child is a famous painter.
I was asking you just now
to think of M. G. as an eternal convalescent; to complete your idea of him,
think of him also as a man-child, as a man possessing at every moment the
genius of childhood, in other words a genius for whom no edge of life is
blunted.
I told you that I was
unwilling to call him a pure artist, and that he himself rejected this title,
with a modesty tinged with aristocratic restraint. I would willingly call him a
dandy, and for that I would have a sheaf of good reasons; for the word 'dandy'
implies a quintessence of character and a subtle under-standing of all the
moral mechanisms of this world; but, from another aspect, the dandy aspires to
cold detachment, and it is in this way that M. G, who is dominated, if ever
anyone was, by an insatiable passion, that of seeing and feeling, parts company
trenchantly with dandyism. Anabam amare, said St Augustine. 'I love passion,
passionately,' M. G. might willingly echo. The dandy is blase, or affects to
be, as a matter of policy and class attitude. M. G. hates blase people.
Sophisticated minds will understand me when I say that he possesses that
difficult art of being sincere without being ridiculous. I would confer on him
the title of philosopher, to which he has a right for more than one reason; but
his excessive love of visible, tangible things, in their most plastic form,
inspires him with a certain dislike of those things that go to make up the
intangible kingdom of the metaphysical. Let us therefore reduce him to the
status of the pure pictorial moralist, like La Bruyere.
The crowd is his domain,
just as the air is the bird's, and water that of the fish. His passion and his
profession is to merge with the crowd. For the perfect idler, for the
passionate ob-server it becomes an immense source of enjoyment to establish his
dwelling in the throng, in the ebb and flow, the bustle, the fleeting and the
infinite. To be away from home and yet to feel at home anywhere; to see the
world, to be at the very centre of the world, and yet to be unseen of the
world, such are some of the minor pleasures of those independent, intense and
impartial spirits, who do not lend themselves easily to linguistic definitions.
The observer is a prince enjoying his incognito wherever he goes. The lover of
life makes the whole world into his family, just as the lover of the fair sex
creates his from all the lovely women he has found, from those that could be
found, and those who arc impossible to find, just as the picture-lover lives in
an enchanted world of dreams painted on canvas. Thus the lover of universal
life moves into the crowd as though into an enormous reservoir of electricity.
He, the lover of life, may also be compared to a mirror as vast as this crowd:
to a kaleidoscope endowed with consciousness, which with every one of its
movements presents a pattern of life, in all its multiplicity, and the flowing
grace of all the elements that go to compose life. It is an ego athirst for the
non-ego, and reflecting it at every moment in energies more vivid than life
itself, always inconstant and fleeting. 'Any man', M. G. once said, in one of
those talks he rendered memorable by the intensity of his gaze, and by his
eloquence of gesture, 'any man who is not weighed down with a sorrow so
searching as to touch all his faculties, and who is bored in the midst of the
crowd, is a fool! A fool ! and I despise him!'
When, as he wakes up, M. G.
opens his eyes and sees the beating vibrantly at his window-panes, he says to
himself with remorse and regret: 'What an imperative command! What a fanfare of
light! Light everywhere for several hours past! Light I have lost in sleep !
and endless numbers of things bathed in light that I could have seen and have
failed to!' And off he goes ! And he watches the flow of life move by, majestic
and dazzling. He admires the eternal beauty and the astonishing harmony of life
in the capital cities, a harmony so providentially maintained in the tumult of
human liberty. He gazes at the landscape of the great city, landscapes of
stone, now swathed in the mist, now struck in full face by the sun. He enjoys
handsome equipages, proud horses, the spit and polish of the grooms, the
skilful handling by the page boys, the smooth rhythmical gait of the women, the
beauty of the children, full of the joy of life and proud as peacocks of their
pretty clothes; in short, life universal. If in a shift of fashion, the cut of
a dress has been slightly modified, if clusters of ribbons and curls have been
dethroned by rosettes, if bonnets have widened and chignons have come down a
little on the nape of the neck, if waist-lines have been raised and skirts
become fuller, you may be sure that from a long way off his eagle's eye will
have detected it. A regiment marches by, maybe on its way to the ends of the
earth, filling the air of the boulevard with its martial airs, as light and
lively as hope; and sure enough M. G. has already seen, inspected and analysed
the weapons and the bearing of this whole body of troops. Harness, highlights,
bands, determined mien, heavy and grim mustachios, all these details flood
chaotically into him; and within a few minutes the poem that comes with it all
is virtually composed. And then his soul will vibrate with the soul of the
regiment, marching as though it were one living creature, proud image of joy
and discipline!
But evening comes. The witching hour, the
uncertain light, when the sky draws its curtains and the city lights go on. The
gaslight stands out on the purple background of the setting sun. Honest men or
crooked customers, wise or irresponsible, all are saying to themselves: 'The
day is clone at last!' Good men and bad turn their thoughts to pleasure, and
each hurries to his favourite haunt to drink the cup of oblivion. M G. will be
the last to leave any place where the departing glories of daylight linger,
where poetry echoes, life pulsates, music sounds; any place where a human
passion offers a subject to his eye where natural man and conventional man
reveal themselves in strange beauty, where the rays of the dying sun pay on the
fleeting pleasure of the 'depraved animal!' 'Well, there, to be sure, is a day
well filled,' murmurs to himself a type of reader well-known to all of us;
'each one of us has surely enough genius to fill it in the same way.' No! few
men have the gift of seeing; fewer still have the power to express themselves.
And now, whilst others are sleeping, this man is leaning over his table, his
steady gaze on a sheet of paper, exactly the same gaze as he directed just now
at the things about him, brandishing his pencil, his pen, his brush, splashing
water from the glass up to the ceiling, wiping his pen on his shirt, hurried,
vigorous, active, as though he was afraid the images might escape him,
quarrelsome though alone, and driving himself relentlessly on. And things seen
are born again on the paper, natural and more than natural, beautiful and
better than beautiful, strange and endowed with an enthusiastic life, like the
soul of their creator. The weird pageant has been distilled from nature. All
the materials, stored higgledy-piggledy by memory, are classified, ordered,
harmonized, and undergo that deliberate idealization, which is the product of a
childlike perceptiveness, in other words a perceptiveness that is acute and
magical by its very ingenuousness.
IV.
MODERNITY
And so, walking or
quickening his pace, he goes his way, for ever in search. In search of what? We
may rest assured that this man, such as I have described him, this solitary
mortal endowed with an active imagination, always roaming the great desert of
men, has a nobler aim than that of the pure idler, a more general aim, other
than the fleeting pleasure of circumstance. He is looking for that indefinable
something we may be allowed to call 'modernity', for want of a better term to
express the idea in question. The aim for him is to extract from fashion the
poetry that resides in its historical envelope, to distil the eternal from the
transitory. If we cast our eye over our exhibitions of modern pictures, we
shall be struck by the general tendency of our artists to clothe all manner of
subjects in the dress of the past. Almost all of them use the fashions and the
furnishings of the Renaissance, as David used Roman fashions and furnishings,
but there is this difference, that David, having chosen subjects peculiarly
Greek or Roman, could not do otherwise than present them in the style of
antiquity, whereas the painters of today, choosing, as they do, subjects of a
general nature, applicable to all ages, will insist on dressing them up in the
fashion of the Middle Ages, of the Renaissance, or of the East. This is
evidently sheer laziness; for it is much more convenient to state roundly that
everything is hopelessly ugly in the dress of a period than to apply oneself to
the task of extracting the mysterious beauty that may be hidden there, however
small or light it may be. Modernity is the transient, the fleeting, the
contingent; it is one half of art, the other being the-eternal and the
immovable. There was a form of modernity for every painter of the past; the
majority of the fine portraits that remain to us from former times arc clothed
in the dress of their own day. They are perfectly harmonious works because the
dress, the hairstyle, and even the gesture, the expression and the smile (each
age has its carriage, its expression and its smile) form a whole, full of
vitality. You have no right to despise this transitory fleeting element, the
metamorphoses of which arc so frequent, nor to dispense with it. If you do, you
inevitably fall into the emptiness of an abstract and indefinable beauty, like
that of the One and only woman of the time before the Fall. If for the dress of
the day, which is necessarily right, you substitute another, you are guilty of
a piece of nonsense that only a fancy-dress ball imposed by fashion can excuse.
Thus the goddesses, the nymphs, and sultanas of the eighteenth century are
portraits in the spirit of their day.
No doubt it is an excellent
discipline to study the old masters, in order to learn how to paint, but it can
be no more than a superfluous exercise if your aim is to understand the beauty
of the present day. The draperies of Rubens or Veronese will not teach you how
to paint watered silk d ['antique, or satin a la reine, or any other fabric
produced by our mills, supported by a swaying crinoline, or petticoats of
starched muslin. The texture and grain are not the same as in the fabrics of
old Venice, or those worn at the court of Catherine. We may add that the cut of
the skirt and bodice is absolutely different, that the pleats are arranged into
a new pattern, and finally that the gesture and carriage of the woman of today
give her dress a vitality and a character that are not those of the woman of
former ages. In short, in order that any form of modernity may be worthy of
becoming antiquity, the mysterious beauty that human life unintentionally puts
into it must have been extracted from it. It is this task that M. G.
particularly addresses himself to.
I have said that every age
has its own carriage, its expression, its gestures. This proposition may be
easily verified in a large portrait gallery (the one at Versailles, for
example). But it can be yet further extended. In a unity we call a nation, the
professions, the social classes, the successive centuries, introduce variety
not only in gestures and manners, but also in the general outlines of faces.
Such and such a nose, mouth, forehead, will be standard for a given interval of
time, the length of which I shall not claim to determine here, but which may
certainly be a matter of calculation. Such ideas are not familiar enough to
portrait painters; and the great weakness of M. Ingres, in particular, is the
desire to impose on every type that sits for him a more or less complete
process of improvement, in other words a despotic perfecting process, borrowed
from the store of classical ideas.
In a matter such as this, a
priori reasoning would be easy and even legitimate. The perpetual correlation
between what is called the soul and what is called the body is a quite
satisfactory explanation of how what is material or emanates from the spiritual
reflects and will always reflect the spiritual force it derives from. If a
painter, patient and scrupulous but with only inferior imaginative power, were
commissioned to paint a courtesan of today, and, for this purpose, were to get
his inspiration (to use the hallowed term) from a courtesan by Titian or
Raphael, the odds are that his work would be fraudulent, ambiguous, and
difficult to understand. The study of a masterpiece of that date and of that
kind will not teach him the carriage, the gaze, the come-hitherishness, or the
living representation of one of these creatures that the dictionary of fashion
has, in rapid succession, pigeonholed under the coarse or light-hearted rubric
of unchaste, kept women, Lorettes.
The same remark applies
precisely to the study of the soldier, the dandy, and even animals, dogs or
horses, and of all things that go to make up the external life of an age. Woe
betide the man who goes to antiquity for the study of anything other than ideal
art, logic and general method! By immersing, himself too deeply in it, he will
no longer have the present in his mindÕs eye; he
throws away the value and the privileges afforded by circumstance; for nearly
all our originality comes from the stamp that t~ impresses upon our
sensibility. The reader will readily understand that I could easily verify my
assertions from innumerable objects other than women. What would you say, for
example, of a marine painter (I take an extreme case) who, having to represent
the sober and elegant beauty of a modern vessel, were to tire out his eyes in
the study of the overloaded, twisted shapes, the monumental stern, of ships of
bygone ages, and the complex sails and rigging of the sixteenth century? And
what would you think of an artist you had commissioned to do the portrait of a
thorough-bred, celebrated in the solemn annals of the turf, if he were to
restrict his studies to museums, if he were to content himself with looking at
equine studies of the past in the picture galleries, in Van Dyck, Bourguignon,
or Van der Meulen?
M.G., guided by nature,
tyrannized over by circumstance, has followed a quite different path. He began
by looking at life, and only later did he contrive to learn how to express
life. The result has been a striking originality, in which whatever traces of
untutored simplicity may still remain take on the appearance of an additional
proof of obedience to the impression, of a flattery of truth. For most of us,
especially for businessmen, in whose eyes nature does not exist, unless it be
in its strict utility relationship with their business interests, the fantastic
reality of life becomes strangely blunted. M.G. registers it constantly; his
memory and his eyes are full of it. .......... IX. V. THE DANDY
The wealthy man, who, blase
though he may be, has no occupation in life but to chase along the highway of
happiness, the man nurtured in luxury, and habituated from early youth to being
obeyed by others, the man, finally, who has no profession other than elegance,
is bound at all times to have a facial expression of a very special kind.
Dandyism is an ill-defined social attitude as strange as duelling; it goes back
a long way, since Caesar, Catilina, Alcibiades provide us with brilliant
examples of it; it is very widespread, since Chateaubriand found examples of it
in the forests and on the lake-sides of the New World. Dandyism, which is an
institution outside the law, has a rigorous code of laws that all its subjects
are strictly bound by, however ardent and independent their individual
characters may be.
The English novelists, more
than others, have cultivated the 'high life' type of novel, and their French
counterparts who, like M. de Custine, have tried to specialize in love novels
have very wisely taken care to endow their characters with purses long enough
for them to indulge without hesitation their slightest whims; and they freed
them from any profession. These beings have no other status but that of
cultivating the idea of beauty in their own persons, of satisfying their
passions, of feeling and thinking. Thus-they possess, to their hearts' content,
and to a vast degree,. both time and money, without which fantasy, reduced to
the state of ephemeral reverie, can scarcely be translated into action. It is
unfortunately very true that, without leisure and money, love can be no more
than an orgy of the common man, or the accomplishment of a conjugal duty.
Instead of being a sudden' impulse full of ardour and reverie, it becomes a
distastefully utilitarian affair.
If I speak of love in the
context of dandyism, the reason is that love is the natural occupation of men
of leisure. But the dandy does not consider love as a special aim in life. If I
have mentioned money, the reason is that money is indispensable to those who
make an exclusive cult of their passions, but the dandy does not aspire to wealth
as an object in itself; an open bank credit could suit him just as well; he
leaves that squalid passion to vulgar mortals. Contrary to what a lot of
thoughtless people seem to believe, dandyism is not even an excessive delight
in clothes and material elegance. For the perfect dandy, these things are no
more than the symbol of the aristocratic superiority of his mind. Thus, in his
eyes, enamoured as he is above all of distinction, perfection in dress consists
in absolute simplicity, which is, indeed, the best way of being distinguished.
What then can this passion be, which has crystallized into a doctrine, and has
formed a number of outstanding devotees, this unwritten code that has moulded
so proud a brotherhood? It is, above all, the burning desire to create a
personal form of originality, within the external limits of social conventions.
It is a kind of cult of the ego which can still survive the pursuit of that
form of happiness to be found in others, in woman for example; which can even
survive what are called illusions. It is the pleasure of causing surprise in
others, and the proud satisfaction of never showing any oneself. A dandy may be
blase, he may even suffer pain, but in the latter case he will keep smiling,
like the Spartan under the bite of the fox.
Clearly, then, dandyism in
certain respects comes close to spirituality and to stoicism, but a dandy can
never be a vulgar man. If he were to commit a crime, he might perhaps be
socially damned, but if the crime came from some trivial cause, the disgrace
would be irreparable. Let the reader not be shocked by this mixture of the
grave and the gay; let him rather reflect that there is a sort of grandeur in
all follies, a driving power in every sort of excess. A strange form of
spirituality indeed! For those who are its high priests and its victims at one
and the same time, all the complicated material conditions they subject
themselves to, from the most flawless dress at any time of day or night to the
most risky sporting feats, are no more than a series of gymnastic exercises
suitable to strengthen the will and school the soul. Indeed I was not far wrong
when I compared dandyism to a kind of religion. The most rigorous monastic
rule, the inexorable commands of the Old Man of the Mountain, who enjoined
suicide on his intoxicated disciples, were not more despotic or more slavishly
obeyed than this doctrine of elegance and originality, which, like the others,
imposes upon its ambitious and humble sectaries, men as often as not full of
spirit, passion, courage, controlled energy, the terrible precept: Perinde ac
cadaver!
Fastidious, unbelievables,
beaux, lions or dandies: which ever label these men claim for themselves, one
and all stem from the same origin, all share the same characteristic of opposition
and revold; all are representatives of what is best in human pride, of that
need, which is too rare in the modern generation, to combat and destroy
triviality. That is the source, in your dany, of that haughty, patrician
attitude, agressive even in its coldness. Dandyism appears especially in those
periods of transition when democracy has not yet become all-powerful, and when
aristocracy is only partially weakened and discredited. In the confusion of
such times, a certain number of men, disenchanted and leisured 'outsiders', but
all of them richly endowed with native energy, may conceive the idea of
establishing a new kind of aristocracy, all the more difficult to break down
because established on the most precious, the most indestructible faculties, on
the divine gifts that neither work nor money can give. Dandyism is the last
flicker of heroism in decadent ages; and the sort of dandy discovered by the
traveller in Northern America in no sense invalidates this idea; for there is
no valid reason why we should not believe that the tribes we call savage are
not the remnants of great civilizations of the past. Dandyism is a setting sun;
like the declining star, it is magnificent, without heat and full of
melancholy. But alas! the rising tide of democracy, which spreads everywhere
and reduces everything to the same level, is daily carrying away these last
champions of human pride, and submerging, in the waters of oblivion, the last
traces of these remarkable myrmidons. Here in France, dandies are be-coming
rarer and rarer, whereas amongst our neighbours in England the state of society
and the constitution (the true constitution, the one that is expressed in
social habits) will, for a long time yet, leave room for the heirs of Sheridan,
Brummell and Byron, always assuming that men worthy of them come forward.
What to the reader may have
seemed a digression is not one in fact. The moral reflections and musings that
arise from the drawings of an artist are in many cases the best interpretation
that the critic can make of them; the notions they suggest are part of an
underlying idea, and, by revealing them in turn, we may uncover the root idea
itself. Need I say that when M.G. commits one of his dandies to paper, he
always gives him his historical character, we might almost say his legendary
character, were it not that we are dealing with our own day and with things
that are generally held to be light-hearted? For here we surely have that ease
of bearing, that sureness of manner, that simplicity in the habit of command,
that way of wearing a frock-coat or controlling a horse, that calmness
revealing strength in every circumstance, that convince us, when our eye does
pick out one of those privileged beings, in whom the attractive and the
formidable mingle so mysteriously: 'There goes a rich man perhaps, but quite
certainly an unemployed Hercules.'
The specific beauty of the dandy consists
particularly in that cold exterior resulting from the unshakeable determination
to remain unmoved; one is reminded of a latent fire, whose existence is merely
suspected, and which, if it wanted to, but it does not, could burst forth in
all its brightness. All that is expressed to perfection in these illustrations.
Baudelaire:
Selected Writings on Art and Literature, trans. P.E. Charvet (Viking 1972) pp. 395-422.