Page Twelve PERSPECTIVES BOOK REVIEW "is complete madness"... Lester Wolfson THE STRANGER By Albert Camus MR. C. S. Lewis has recently issued a strong rebuke to the unrestrained belief that all materials can serve equal- ly well as the basis of art. He does not foolishly suppose that philosophic and aesthetic value are one and the same thing, that a negative belief must nec- essarily spell the form which encloses it: he would certainly prefer Thomas Hardy to Ann Campbell. Yet he indicates a truth that we are in danger of forget- ting--that there is a marked relation- ship between a poem's purely aesthetic value and its metaphysical or ethical value, which "can differ only to a limit- ed extent, so that every poem whose prosaic or intellectual basis is silly, shal- low, perverse, or illiberal, or even radi- cally erroneous, is in some degree crip- pled by that fact." Even now, when the battle for a broader conception of art, which frees it from narrowly didactic purposes, has been largely won, those who attack extreme singularity or even perversity in thought or execution are assailed by the descendants of the "art for art's sake" group as prim conventionalists who would make art a handmaiden to religion or ethics. But it is difficult to see how anyone can believe that a pro- duct of the human mind can exist as an entity in itself, completely apart from the individual human experience which inspired it and, more importantly, from the collective human experience to which it must speak. Since our reactions to life, and thus to art, are manifold, we cannot decide that we are going 'to enjoy only the imagery or only the idea or only the rhythm of a particular poem without vitiating the true nature of the artistic appreciation. If we were half men or even quarter-men, we could ex- plore conceptual and imagistic compo- nents in isolation, and assign prime im- portance to any work which either in whole or in part agrees with our belief or successfully welds execution to in- tention. But since most thinking men are concerned with science, aesthetics, ethics, and religion, it is quite impossible for them to respond completely to any work which cannot satisfy all their' higher needs. If we are whole men, we always question intention and cannot accept unreservedly any excellence in means which lead to eccentric ends. Mr. T. S. Eliot himself, who believes the success of the artistic "fusion' more conducive to great poetry than the par- ticular subject matter, admits that Shakespeare's "Ripeness Is All" :is of the highest order, not merely because it is dramatically appropriate, but also because it is suggestive of ethical truth and has a "profound emotional meaning." That Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, and Milton are supreme because their work represents an indissoluble union of science, aesthetics, ethics, and religion into a vast complex of affirmation needs no proof: that fads in art never produce anything of value unless the practice of their proponents surpasses the theory is instanced by what is worthwhile in the work of the Imagists. In short, the themes of great art are few and can be simply stated: the love of man for wo- man, of parent for child, the interrela- tionship of man and man, of man and nature, and of man and God; and though there has never been any exter- nal compulsion which forced them to do so, the best artists have expressed their reactions to life in a sane, central, uni- versal way, whose basic import is im- mediately apprehendable by the human race of which they are a part. If the thinking of the twentieth cen- tury which until only recently has ranged from the materialistic arrogncec of the Nazis to the vague, unrooted hu- manism of Bertrand Russell, challenges the reality of objective and qualitative value, the burden of proof for the worth of its pernicious substituted rests en- tirely with its various defenders. The. accumulated wisdom of every great cul- ture the world has known, the Chinese, the Indian, the Jewish, and the Chris- tian, the Tao, as Lewis so aptly puts it, has been the dynamism'which accounts for the few remnants of decency in our morally-tattered society. If anyone still believes that Albert Camus is a writer of first importance, he does not know that the road from "The Waste Land" to the regions filled by the supernal music of "Four Quartets" has been paved anew, and that to falter on that road is a confession of moral bankruptcy. The compartmentalizing of our in- stincts has.led to the sophistry that to tear down is necessarily good. When Mr. Max Lerner writes in PM that "Camus' pessimism has in it the ele- ments of a healthy purge; his doctrine is useful in clearing away a lot of the moral debris that has littered the land- and when the prosecutor brings evi- dence that he had behaved inhumanly at his mother's death, he is condemned to die. In the last moments before he is to be guillotined, he execrates the priest who attempts to console him, and evolves his own twisted philosophy, which Camus intends to be the focal point of the book. If we permit ourselves to dismember The Stranger, we find its worth on the lowest level of artistic meaning-the purely sensory. Anyone who appreciates close and fresh observation will not deny Camus' genius to create synaesthetic pictures which crawl along the nerves to the brain so that one can feel them each inch of the way. This is his description of the funeral procession: "Presently we struck a patch of freshly tarred road. A shimmer of heat played over it and one's feet squelched at each step, leaving bright black gashes. In front, the coach- man's glossy black hat looked like a lump of the same sticky substance, poised above the hearse. It gave one The Bells. The bells begin the burden of the song ending in sumac under river willow red beneath green and green beneath your laugh children that play in brain above your pillow shaping the cakedream from their hands in mud killing off father who became a god what about freud, you ask, your eyes an orchard blue beyond blue where the gold leaves crowd time will be snakes of joy, ourselves a garden the music hold us like a long embrace what other question than the elm trees singing what other answer than your asking face a stranger in life, a mere symbol for Camus' philosophy which is alien to all' our accepted values, he cannot be an- analyzed by the usual methods. We know that Hamlet was paralyzed be- cause values dear to him were sorely shaken, and we know too that he repre- sents Shakespeare's belief that reason does not suffice. But Cherault neither thinks nor feels; he had been a student once, soon realized that ambition of any kind was futile, and finally concluded that "one life was as good as another." Even if we are not to judge him by normal standards, Camus fails to give us what we have a right to demand, the reasons for the hero's apathy. He will marry Marie, not because he loves her, but because she wants him to; he agrees to whatever Raymond says because it is easier to say yes than no. Only in his last outburst against the priest does Cherault voluntarily galvanize into ac- tion. And it is the expression of the foolish philosophy toward which' the whole book has been moving that the final merit of The Stranger must rest. Compare Cherault's approach to death with Hamlet's, or Hector's, or Othello's, or even Sydney Carton's. Fortunately, Cherault had been a rather likeable fellow, if one can like a rag dressed up as a man, but his final justification of himself is absurd and has dangerous implications. This is what The Stranger has to tell us: I'd been right, I was still right, I was always right. I'd passed my life in a certain way, and I might have passed it in a different way, if I'd felt like it. I'd acted thus, and I hadn't acted otherwise; I hadn't done "x" whereas I had done "y" or "z". And what did that mean? :That, all the time, I'd been waiting for this pre- sent moment, for the dawn, tomor- row s or another day's, which was to justify me. Nothing, nothing had the least. importance, and I know quite well why--From the dark hori- zon of my future a sort of slow, per- sistent breeze had been blowing to- ward me, all my life long, from the years that were to come. And on its way that breeze had leveled out all the ideas that people tried to foist on me in the equally unreal years I then was living through. What difference could they make to me, the deaths of others, or a mother's love, or his God; or the way a man decides to live, the fate he thinks he chooses, since one and the same fate was bound to "choose" not only me but thousands of millions of privileged people . . . What did it matter if Raymond was as much my pal as Celeste, who was a far worthier man? man? This is complete madness, a negation of all value, a denial of the truth ou age above all others has been called upon to acknowledge-that we are born one for the other. It is the old claim that Death is reality and that the only kind of kinship we can have is a dia- bolic brotherhood of despair. It justi- fies Hitler, who chose "x" instead of "y", abrogates the Christian belief that God gave us the power of choice so that we can bless or damn ourselves, echoes Anna Christie's desperate cry: "Don't bawl about it. There ain't nothing to forgive anyway. It ain't your fault and it ain't mine and it ain't his neither. We're all poor nuts. And things happen. And we just get mixed in wrong, that's all." And now, when it is particularly dif' ficult to avoid lives of quiet despera- tion, we must aver that it is Camus, the pessimist, who claims le does not have to live like one, and Sartre, who are the "poor nuts." Our best thinking has left them far behind. scape . . ." he is either guilty of mis- reading or else he honestly thinks that human affection is nothing but "moral debris." And when Newsweek reports that Camus' The Stranger "is executed with such fine artistry that the reader cannot fail to appreciate its daring and profound moral message," it fails to realize that the message is part of the artistry. It is the purpose of this review to state that The Stranger is seriously weakened because its in- tellectual basis is "radically erroneous," that it is diseased at the heart in spite of excellences- which make one regret that so much talent has gone astray. Monsieur Cherault, the hero of the novella, is an undistinguished Algerian clerk who fails to cry at his mother's funeral. He does not merely repress his grief-throughout the story he suffers from a kind of moral paralysis which prevents him'from feeling any of the finer human sentiments which make the unique glory of man. Almost immedi- ately after his mother has been buried, he sleeps with Marie, whose only dis- cernable virtue is her good looks. But Cherault remains strangely passive even in his sexual relationships, totally devoid of the fierce lusts which give warped affirmation to the characters of O'Hara or Farrell. Raymond, an unsavory pimp, and an 'acquaintance of Cherault's, beats his mistress, and Cherault be- comes involved. Finally the clerk kills the Arab brother of the beaten girl and is arrested for-murder. He languishes in jail for several months, keenly sensi- tive to all odors and sounds. No remorse for what he has done ever assails him. -Harold V. Witt a queer, dreamlike impression, that blue-white glare overhead and all the blackness 'round one: the sleek black of the hearse, the dull black of the men's clothes, and the silvery-black gashes in the road. And then there were the smells, smells of hot leather and horse dung from the hearse, veined with whiffs of incense smoke." And if there is something slightly deca- dent about all this, Camus can be vernal, too, and we have this description of the coming night: "Just then the street lamps came on, all together, and they made the stars that were beginning to glimmer in the night sky paler still. I felt my eyes -getting tired, what with the lights and all the movement I'd been watch- ing in the street. There were little pools of brightness under the lamps, and now and then a streetcar passed, lighting up a girl's hair, or a smile, or a silver bangle. In many places, the reader heels almost too sharply the crushing heat of the Algerian seashore, and the murder of the Arab is committed in a heat-induced frenzy. When he does not become mor- bidly preoccupied with tastes and odors, Camus is an imagist of rich suggestiveness. But The Stranger is not an imagist poem: it is a story with a message, and it is the characters who must convey that message. Yet with the exception of the dead mother's old friend, all the subsidiary characters are merely scoops of life-and low life, at that. Cherault, who tells the story, demands any re- viewer's full attention, and since he is