It is no coincidence that Robert Louis Stevenson,
the first British writer to be recognized as a specialist in the short story,
is also the champion of the romance form in the latter part of the nineteenth
century. Nor is it accidental that
Stevenson's interest in the short-story made him one of the first British
short-fiction writers to focus, as did Henry James, on technique and form
rather than on content. Both Lionel
Stevenson and Walter Allen say that the watershed for the modern short story
began in l878 with the publication of Stevenson's "A Lodging for the
Night," with Allen going so far as to claim that the change to the
specifically modern short story can be precisely dated at that point.
Other critics
and historians of the British short story, such as T. O. Beachcroft and Wendell
Harris agree that Stevenson's stories mark a true departure from previous
British short fiction and thus signal the beginning of the modern art of the
short story. However, with the exception of noting that Stevenson created a
tightly woven, well-made tale, critics have made little effort to explain
Stevenson's innovation and how it initiated the "golden age" of
British short fiction in the nineties.
In his essay, "A Gossip on Romance"
(l882), Stevenson makes it clear that he wished to return to the well-springs
of story, that is, to story for the sake of story, rather than story for the
sake of character and conversation--the usual focus of the nineteenth-century
novel. It is not for eloquence or
thought that the reader comes to a story, says Stevenson, but rather for a
certain sort of incident. In order to
clarify the nature of the short story incident, he argues that whereas drama is
is a poetry of conduct, the romance is a poetry of circumstance, reflecting two
basic kinds of pleasure in life: the active and the passive. In the former, we feel in command of our
destiny, while in the latter we feel "lifted up by circumstance, as by a
breaking wave, and dashed we know not how into the future."
Modern psychologists have argued that such a duality
between active and passive modes represent a breach between the so-called
active adult mode, which directs itself toward living in the real world, and
the so-called child-like mode, which is developed around a passive taking-in of
the environment. Many think that the
passive attitude is a primitive mode that focuses not on the phenomenal world,
but rather on the world as a product of the imagination. As Stevenson describes it, within this mode,
the imagination perceives the world not as an end in itself, but as an
opportunity for story; he notes, for example, how certain places fill one with
the notion either that something has happened here or else something must
happen here. The world becomes
transformed into the stimulus for some hidden meaning which it is the artist's
job to lay bare, a task he performs by developing some incident that seems
appropriate to the feeling and the place.
Stevenson calls this demand for the fit and striking incident one of the
natural appetites, as deeply seated as the desire for knowledge; it is the
desire for the realization and apotheosis of the day-dream.
Stevenson says that although the stories of the
great creative writers may be nourished with the realities of life, "their
true mark is to satisfy the nameless longings of the reader, and to obey the
ideal laws of the day-dream." This
focus on the transformation of ideal laws of the imagination into an as-if real
incident leads Stevenson to understand story in much the way that Poe and Henry
James did; that is, that fiction
objectifies the basic human desire that life have the unity and meaning
of narrative and that all circumstances in a narrative must come together like
a painting. As Stevenson says, "the
threads of a story come from time to time together and make a picture in the
web; the characters fall from time to time into some attitude to each other or
to nature, which stamps the story home like an illustration."
Stevenson knew that English readers in the latter
part of the l880s were "apt to look somewhat down on incident, and reserve
their admiration for the clink of teaspoons and the accents of the
curate," as if indeed such detail of everyday life constituted the only
reality. However, there is another
reality, says Stevenson, the reality of imagination and play; and indeed,
argues Stevenson, fiction is to the grown man what play is to the child. Such a point of view was not particularly
palatable to the temperament of the late nineteenth-century British reader, who
insisted that there must either moral earnestness or else minute realistic
detail in fiction for it to have any value.
Stevenson
continued his discussion on the nature of narrative in l884 when he joined his
own voice to the debate about the art of fiction then going on between Walter
Besant and Henry James. Taking the side
of James, Stevenson insisted that technique rather than content was the basis
for narrative as an art form, suggesting a notion that has since been developed
to significant theoretical lengths by the Russian Formalist critics of the
l920s--that is, if we wish to understand the secret of art, we must not focus
on its similarities to external reality, but rather on its basic differences--the
distance from life that technique and form create. The whole secret, says Stevenson, is that art
works do not compete with life, but rather like "arithmetic and geometry,
turn away their eyes from the gross, coloured and mobile nature at our feet,
and regard instead a certain figmentary abstraction."
Narrative flees from external reality and pursues
"an independent and creative aim," urges Stevenson. "So far as it imitates at all, it
imitates not life but speech: not the facts of human destiny, but the emphasis
and the suppressions with which the human actor tells of them." Stevenson
makes an important point here, for he suggests that story telling actually
imitates story telling--that its source is in language, the narrative impulse,
and what it depicts is not reality but the perception of reality made by one in
the process of making a story. For
Stevenson the work of art exists then not by its resemblance to life, "but
by its immeasurable difference from life, which is designed and significant,
and is both the method and the meaning of the work." Such a self-conscious awareness that story,
while bound to incident, is the formal embodiment of daydream and the process
of story itself, was essential before the "modern short story" could
become possible in the nineteenth century.
"A Lodging for the Night" is a strange
candidate for a landmark story that marks the shift to modern short
fiction. Although it is highly detailed
and focuses on a specific time-limited situation, it poses more questions about
its generic status than clear answers.
Walter Allen says the story is ultimately not satisfying, for it depends
too much on being a story about Francis Villon and thus does not exist
aesthetically in its own right. And T. O. Beachcroft says that the two levels
of truth in the story--fact and fiction--interfere with each other. Critics who
have taken the story as fiction, such as Joseph Egan, see it as being an
embodiment of an irony between Villon's position as a poet and as a man. Eagan says the story is a "vivid
chronicle of the inevitable tragedy of a soul that, endowed though it is with
the loftiest powers of mind and imagination, so gravely lacks fidelity to
principles of human decency that the gifts are perverted; and instead of life
and growth, their fruit is self-injury and self-degradation."
There is no doubt that "A Lodging for the
Night" is filled with hate and horror, but the interesting question is why
it is not a hateful and horrifying story overall. The key to this irony is the character of
Villon himself and his basic situation.
Although the reader may have a conventional expectation that a poet's
life should not be focused on practical existence, the structure of the story
challenges this expectation. The basic
irony of the story is that it is a tale about a poet whose primary concern is
practical existence. When Villon reacts
according to the reader's conventional expectation of a poet, that is, with
sympathetic emotion, he gets his pockets picked. As the narrator of the story suggests,
"In many ways, an artistic nature unfits a man for practical
existence."
A central
question of the story is: in what way does Villon represent an artistic
nature? One might legitimately wonder
what is the point of a story about an artist who does not act like an
artist. This question raises the central
issue of the story, that is, the challenge to our conventional expectation of
what an artistic nature actually is. To
examine this issue, one need not go outside the story to refer to the life of
the real Villon, except to note that Stevenson chose him because of his known
vagabond existence. Such a figure offers
Stevenson the opportunity to examine in a single incident the hypothesis that
an artist's focus on survival has nothing to do with his art.
Villon's only concern in the tale is with life and
therefore inevitably with death.
However, in the beginning of the story, he mocks death by mocking the
sound of the wind blowing through the gibbet as he jokes that they are
"all dancing the devil's jig on nothing up there." After one of the men has been stabbed, Villon
breaks into hysterical laughter, "laughing bitterly, as though he would
shake himself to pieces." He then
says they will all be hanged and puts out his tongue and throws his head to one
side to counterfeit the appearances of one who has been hanged. After he leaves and tries to find some
shelter from the cold and the patrol, he stumbles over something both hard and
soft, firm and loose, and gives a little laugh when he discovers it is the body
of a dead prostitute. He indeed makes an
emotional response to this discovery later, but only after he takes the two
coins from her stocking and wonders at the "dark and pitiable mystery"
that she should have died before she spent the money. Villon himself thinks, "He would like to
use all his tallow before the light was blown out and the lantern
broken."
Villon
goes to his spiritual father but is driven away; he goes to his physical mother
and has slop dumped on him. After the
first rebuff, the humor of the situation strikes him and he laughs. After his mother rebuffs him, he thinks of
taking a lodging and being fed many favorite delicacies. When he thinks of "roast fish"--the
subject of the ballad he had been writing when the murder took place--the
phrase fills him with "an odd mixture of amusement and horror." Indeed this combination might well summarize
the mood of the story itself, for in a strange way it fills the reader with
just the same mixture.
When Villon enters the house of the old soldier, the
ambiguous mixture of amusement and horror becomes more obvious. Whereas the old man takes their little debate
seriously, Villon primarily uses it to stall, to allow more time for protection
from the cold and to eat and drink the old man's food. Point by point, Villon gets the old man to
admit that in many ways there is no difference between a soldier and a thief,
except that the soldier is a greater thief because he is allowed to take
more. Villon becomes quite comfortable
as the old man cannot decide to drive him out or to convert him. He admits there is something more than he can
understand in all of Villon's talk, but that he is convinced that Villon is one
who has lost his way and made an error in life.
"You are attending to the little wants, and you have totally
forgotten the great and only real ones.... For such things as honor and love
and faith are not only nobler than food and drink, but indeed I think we desire
them more, and suffer more sharply for their absence." Villon then delivers his own little sermon
about his honor which he says he keeps in a box until it is needed. He notes that he has had the opportunity of killing
and robbing the old man but has resisted out of a sense of honor. When the old man throws him out, Villon goes
out to meet the dawn, having indeed found a lodging for the night, thinking:
"A very dull old gentleman.... I wonder what his goblets may be
worth."
The secret of the story's ambiguous mixture of
horror and amusement depends solely on the nature of the poet Villon, who
alternates between attending to the immediate concerns of life to assure his
own preservation and taking an amused and distant view of reality which
indicates his own broad view of life.
Villon survives not only because of his concern with immediate things,
but also because he can take such an ironic view of life and death; this is
what allows him to continue and not give in to despair. The murdered man and the dead prostitute take
on a curious unreality to him, except for such details as the man's red hair
and the prostitute's two unspent coins.
Otherwise they do not impinge on Villon except to remind him that he may
meet the same fate unless he finds lodging for the night. The final irony is of course that it is his
scholarly and poetic nature which saves him, for only by engaging in debate
with the old man is he allowed to stay in safety until dawn. Thus the two basic
elements of the story--artistic nature and practical existence--are not so much
incompatible as they at first seem.
Indeed, it is both Villon's poetic nature and his concern for immediate
survival which save him. The secret of
the poetic nature lies in its ability to distance itself from life and death,
to mock it and scorn it, to transform it into the source of art.
It is Stevenson's acute self-consciousness of the
significance of structure and the problem of presenting psychic reality as if
it were externally manifested that makes critics refer to him as the first
"modern" short-story writer in British fiction. However, Stevenson does not represent a new
departure for the English short story; rather, he embodies a movement toward
the laying bare of the conventions that have dominated the form since its
beginnings.
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