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MEMOIR OF VICTOR MARIE HUGO

Towards the close of the First French Revolution, Joseph Leopold Sigisbert Hugo, son of a joiner at Nancy, and an officer risen from the ranks in the Republican army, married Sophie Trébuchet, daughter of a Nantes fitter-out of privateers, a Vendean royalist and devotee.

Victor Marie Hugo, their second son, was born on the 26th of February, 1802, at Besançon, France. Though a weakling, he was carried, with his boy-brothers, in the train of their father through the south of France, in pursuit of Fra Diavolo, the Italian brigand, and finally into Spain.

Colonel Hugo had become General, and there, besides being governor over three provinces, was Lord High Steward at King Joseph's court, where his eldest son Abel was installed as page. The other two were educated for similar posts among hostile young Spaniards under stern priestly tutors in the Nobles' College at Madrid, a palace become a monastery. Upon the English advance to free Spain of the invaders, the general and Abel remained at bay, whilst the mother and children hastened to Paris.

Again, in a house once a convent, Victor and his brother Eugène were taught by priests until, by the accident of their roof sheltering a comrade of their father's, a change of tutor was afforded them. This was General Lahorie, a man of superior education, main supporter of Malet in his daring plot to take the government into the Republicans' hands during the absence of Napoleon I. in Russia. Lahorie read old French and Latin with Victor till the police scented him out and led him to execution, October, 1812.

School claimed the young Hugos after this tragical episode, where they were oddities among the humdrum tradesmen's sons. Victor, thoughtful and taciturn, rhymed profusely in tragedies, "printing" in his books, "Châteaubriand or nothing!" and engaging his more animated brother to flourish the Cid's sword and roar the tyrant's speeches.

In 1814, both suffered a sympathetic anxiety as their father held out at Thionville against the Allies, finally repulsing them by a sortie. This was pure loyalty to the fallen Bonaparte, for Hugo had lost his all in Spain, his very savings having been sunk in real estate, through King Joseph's insistence on his adherents investing to prove they had "come to stay."

The Bourbons enthroned anew, General Hugo received, less for his neutrality than thanks to his wife's piety and loyalty, confirmation of his title and rank, and, moreover, a fieldmarshalship. Abel was accepted as a page, too, but there was no money awarded the ex-Bonapartist – money being what the Eaglet at Reichstadt most required for an attempt at his father's throne – and the poor officer was left in seclusion to write consolingly about his campaigns and "Defences of Fortified Towns."

Decidedly the pen had superseded the sword, for Victor and Eugène were scribbling away in ephemeral political sheets as apprenticeship to founding a periodical of their own.

Victor's poetry became remarkable in La Muse Française and Le Conservateur Littéraire, the odes being permeated with Legitimist and anti-revolutionary sentiments delightful to the taste of Madam Hugo, member as she was of the courtly Order of the Royal Lily.

In 1817, the French Academy honorably mentioned Victor's "Odes on the Advantages of Study," with a misgiving that some elder hand was masked under the line ascribing "scant fifteen years" to the author. At the Toulouse Floral Games he won prizes two years successively. His critical judgment was sound as well, for he had divined the powers of Lamartine.

His "Odes," collected in a volume, gave his ever-active mother her opportunity at Court. Louis XVIII. granted the boy-poet a pension of 1,500 francs.

It was the windfall for which the youth had been waiting to enable him to gratify his first love. In his childhood, his father and one M. Foucher, head of a War Office Department, had jokingly betrothed a son of the one to a daughter of the other. Abel had loftier views than alliance with a civil servant's child; Eugène was in love elsewhere; but Victor had fallen enamored with Adèle Foucher. It is true, when poverty beclouded the Hugos, the Fouchers had shrunk into their mantle of dignity, and the girl had been strictly forbidden to correspond with her child-sweetheart.

He, finding letters barred out, wrote a love story ("Hans of Iceland") in two weeks, where were recited his hopes, fears, and constancy, and this book she could read.

It pleased the public no less, and its sale, together with that of the "Odes" and a West Indian romance, "Buck Jargal," together with a royal pension, emboldened the poet to renew his love-suit. To refuse the recipient of court funds was not possible to a public functionary. M. Foucher consented to the betrothal in the summer of 1821.

So encloistered had Mdlle. Adèle been, her reading "Hans" the exceptional intrusion, that she only learnt on meeting her affianced that he was mourning his mother. In October, 1822, they were wed, the bride nineteen, the bridegroom but one year the elder. The dinner was marred by the sinister disaster of Eugène Hugo going mad. (He died in an asylum five years later.) The author terminated his wedding year with the "Ode to Louis XVIII.," read to a society after the President of the Academy had introduced him as "the most promising of our young lyrists."

In spite of new poems revealing a Napoleonic bias, Victor was invited to see Charles X. consecrated at Rheims, 29th of May, 1825, and was entered on the roll of the Legion of Honor repaying the favors with the verses expected. But though a son was born to him he was not restored to Conservatism; with his mother's death all that had vanished. His tragedy of "Cromwell" broke lances upon Royalists and upholders of the still reigning style of tragedy. The second collection of "Odes" preluding it, showed the spirit of the son of Napoleon's general, rather than of the Bourbonist field-marshal. On the occasion, too, of the Duke of Tarento being announced at the Austrian Ambassador's ball, February, 1827, as plain "Marshal Macdonald," Victor became the mouthpiece of indignant Bonapartists in his "Ode to the Napoleon Column" in the Place Vendôme.

His "Orientales," though written in a Parisian suburb by one who had not travelled, appealed for Grecian liberty, and depicted sultans and pashas as tyrants, many a line being deemed applicable to personages nearer the Seine than Stamboul.

"Cromwell" was not actable, and "Amy Robsart," in collaboration with his brother-in-law, Foucher, miserably failed, notwithstanding a finale "superior to Scott's 'Kenilworth.'" In one twelvemonth, there was this failure to record, the death of his father from apoplexy at his eldest son's marriage, and the birth of a second son to Victor towards the close.

Still imprudent, the young father again irritated the court with satire in "Marion Delorme" and "Hernani," two plays immediately suppressed by the Censure, all the more active as the Revolution of July, 1830, was surely seething up to the edge of the crater.

(At this juncture, the poet Châteaubriand, fading star to our rising sun, yielded up to him formally "his place at the poets' table.")

In the summer of 1831, a civil ceremony was performed over the insurgents killed in the previous year, and Hugo was constituted poet-laureate of the Revolution by having his hymn sung in the Pantheon over the biers.

Under Louis Philippe, "Marion Delorme" could be played, but livelier attention was turned to "Nôtre Dame de Paris," the historical romance in which Hugo vied with Sir Walter. It was to have been followed by others, but the publisher unfortunately secured a contract to monopolize all the new novelist's prose fictions for a term of years, and the author revenged himself by publishing poems and plays alone. Hence "Nôtre Dame" long stood unique: it was translated in all languages, and plays and operas were founded on it. Heine professed to see in the prominence of the hunchback a personal appeal of the author, who was slightly deformed by one shoulder being a trifle higher than the other; this malicious suggestion reposed also on the fact that the quasi-hero of "Le Roi s'Amuse" (1832, a tragedy suppressed after one representation, for its reflections on royalty), was also a contorted piece of humanity. This play was followed by "Lucrezia Borgia," "Marie Tudor," and "Angelo," written in a singular poetic prose. Spite of bald translations, their action was sufficiently dramatic to make them successes, and even still enduring on our stage. They have all been arranged as operas, whilst Hugo himself, to oblige the father of Louise Bertin, a magazine publisher of note, wrote "Esmeralda" for her music in 1835.

Thus, at 1837, when he was promoted to an officership in the Legion of Honor, it was acknowledged his due as a laborious worker in all fields of literature, however contestable the merits and tendencies of his essays.

In 1839, the Academy, having rejected him several times, elected him among the Forty Immortals. In the previous year had been successfully acted "Ruy Blas," for which play he had gone to Spanish sources; with and after the then imperative Rhine tour, came an unendurable "trilogy," the "Burgraves," played one long, long night in 1843. A real tragedy was to mark that year: his daughter Léopoldine being drowned in the Seine with her husband, who would not save himself when he found that her death-grasp on the sinking boat was not to be loosed.

For distraction, Hugo plunged into politics. A peer in 1845, he sat between Marshal Soult and Pontécoulant, the regicide-judge of Louis XVI. His maiden speech bore upon artistic copyright; but he rapidly became a power in much graver matters.

As fate would have it, his speech on the Bonapartes induced King Louis Philippe to allow Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte to return, and, there being no gratitude in politics, the emancipated outlaw rose as a rival candidate for the Presidency, for which Hugo had nominated himself in his newspaper the Evènement. The story of the Coup d'État is well known; for the Republican's side, read Hugo's own "History of a Crime." Hugo, proscribed, betook himself to Brussels, London, and the Channel Islands, waiting to "return with right when the usurper should be expelled."

Meanwhile, he satirized the Third Napoleon and his congeners with ceaseless shafts, the principal being the famous "Napoleon the Little," based on the analogical reasoning that as the earth has moons, the lion the jackal, man himself his simian double, a minor Napoleon was inevitable as a standard of estimation, the grain by which a pyramid is measured. These flings were collected in "Les Châtiments," a volume preceded by "Les Contemplations" (mostly written in the '40's), and followed by "Les Chansons des Rues et des Bois."

The baffled publisher's close-time having expired, or, at least, his heirs being satisfied, three novels appeared, long heralded: in 1862, "Les Misérables" (Ye Wretched), wherein the author figures as Marius and his father as the Bonapartist officer: in 1866, "Les Travailleurs de la Mer" (Toilers of the Sea), its scene among the Channel Islands; and, in 1868, "L'Homme Qui Rit" (The Man who Grins), unfortunately laid in a fanciful England evolved from recondite reading through foreign spectacles. Whilst writing the final chapters, Hugo's wife died; and, as he had refused the Amnesty, he could only escort her remains to the Belgian frontier, August, 1868. All this while, in his Paris daily newspaper, Le Rappei (adorned with cuts of a Revolutionary drummer beating "to arms!"), he and his sons and son-in-law's family were reiterating blows at the throne. When it came down in 1870, and the Republic was proclaimed, Hugo hastened to Paris.

His poems, written during the War and Siege, collected under the title of "L'Année Terrible" (The Terrible Year, 1870-71), betray the long-tried exile, "almost alone in his gloom," after the death of his son Charles and his child. Fleeing to Brussels after the Commune, he nevertheless was so aggressive in sheltering and aiding its fugitives, that he was banished the kingdom, lest there should be a renewal of an assault on his house by the mob, supposed by his adherents to be, not "the honest Belgians," but the refugee Bonapartists and Royalists, who had not cared to fight for France in France endangered. Resting in Luxemburg, he prepared "L'Année Terrible" for the press, and thence returned to Paris, vainly to plead with President Thiers for the captured Communists' lives, and vainly, too, proposing himself for election to the new House.

In 1872, his novel of "'93" pleased the general public here, mainly by the adventures of three charming little children during the prevalence of an internecine war. These phases of a bounteously paternal mood reappeared in "L'Art d'être Grandpère," published in 1877, when he had become a life-senator.

"Hernani" was in the regular "stock" of the Théâtre Français, "Rigoletto" (Le Roi s'Amuse) always at the Italian opera-house, while the same subject, under the title of "The Fool's Revenge," held, as it still holds, a high position on the Anglo-American stage. Finally, the poetic romance of "Torquemada," for over thirty years promised, came forth in 1882, to prove that the wizard-wand had not lost its cunning.

After dolor, fêtes were come: on one birthday they crown his bust in the chief theatre; on another, all notable Paris parades under his window, where he sits with his grandchildren at his knee, in the shadow of the Triumphal Arch of Napoleon's Star. It is given to few men thus to see their own apotheosis.

Whilst he was dying, in May, 1885, Paris was but the first mourner for all France; and the magnificent funeral pageant which conducted the pauper's coffin, antithetically enshrining the remains considered worthy of the highest possible reverence and honors, from the Champs Elysées to the Pantheon, was the more memorable from all that was foremost in French art and letters having marched in the train, and laid a leaf or flower in the tomb of the protégé of Châteaubriand, the brother-in-arms of Dumas, the inspirer of Mars, Dorval, Le-maître, Rachel, and Bernhardt, and, above all, the Nemesis of the Third Empire.

EARLY POEMS

MOSES ON THE NILE

("Mes soeurs, l'onde est plus fraiche.")

{TO THE FLORAL GAMES, Toulouse, Feb. 10, 1820.}

 
     "Sisters! the wave is freshest in the ray
       Of the young morning; the reapers are asleep;
     The river bank is lonely: come away!
       The early murmurs of old Memphis creep
     Faint on my ear; and here unseen we stray, —
       Deep in the covert of the grove withdrawn,
       Save by the dewy eye-glance of the dawn.
 
 
     "Within my father's palace, fair to see,
       Shine all the Arts, but oh! this river side,
     Pranked with gay flowers, is dearer far to me
       Than gold and porphyry vases bright and wide;
     How glad in heaven the song-bird carols free!
       Sweeter these zephyrs float than all the showers
       Of costly odors in our royal bowers.
 
 
     "The sky is pure, the sparkling stream is clear:
       Unloose your zones, my maidens! and fling down
     To float awhile upon these bushes near
       Your blue transparent robes: take off my crown,
     And take away my jealous veil; for here
       To-day we shall be joyous while we lave
       Our limbs amid the murmur of the wave.
 
 
     "Hasten; but through the fleecy mists of morn,
       What do I see? Look ye along the stream!
     Nay, timid maidens – we must not return!
       Coursing along the current, it would seem
     An ancient palm-tree to the deep sea borne,
       That from the distant wilderness proceeds,
       Downwards, to view our wondrous Pyramids.
 
 
     "But stay! if I may surely trust mine eye, —
       It is the bark of Hermes, or the shell
     Of Iris, wafted gently to the sighs
       Of the light breeze along the rippling swell;
     But no: it is a skiff where sweetly lies
       An infant slumbering, and his peaceful rest
       Looks as if pillowed on his mother's breast.
 
 
     "He sleeps – oh, see! his little floating bed
       Swims on the mighty river's fickle flow,
     A white dove's nest; and there at hazard led
      By the faint winds, and wandering to and fro,
     The cot comes down; beneath his quiet head
       The gulfs are moving, and each threatening wave
       Appears to rock the child upon a grave.
 
 
     "He wakes – ah, maids of Memphis! haste, oh, haste!
       He cries! alas! – What mother could confide
     Her offspring to the wild and watery waste?
       He stretches out his arms, the rippling tide
     Murmurs around him, where all rudely placed,
       He rests but with a few frail reeds beneath,
       Between such helpless innocence and death.
 
 
     "Oh! take him up! Perchance he is of those
       Dark sons of Israel whom my sire proscribes;
     Ah! cruel was the mandate that arose
       Against most guiltless of the stranger tribes!
     Poor child! my heart is yearning for his woes,
       I would I were his mother; but I'll give
       If not his birth, at least the claim to live."
 
 
     Thus Iphis spoke; the royal hope and pride
       Of a great monarch; while her damsels nigh,
     Wandered along the Nile's meandering side;
       And these diminished beauties, standing by
     The trembling mother; watching with eyes wide
       Their graceful mistress, admired her as stood,
       More lovely than the genius of the flood!
 
 
     The waters broken by her delicate feet
       Receive the eager wader, as alone
     By gentlest pity led, she strives to meet
       The wakened babe; and, see, the prize is won!
     She holds the weeping burden with a sweet
       And virgin glow of pride upon her brow,
       That knew no flush save modesty's till now.
 
 
     Opening with cautious hands the reedy couch,
       She brought the rescued infant slowly out
     Beyond the humid sands; at her approach
       Her curious maidens hurried round about
     To kiss the new-born brow with gentlest touch;
       Greeting the child with smiles, and bending nigh
       Their faces o'er his large, astonished eye!
 
 
     Haste thou who, from afar, in doubt and fear,
       Dost watch, with straining eyes, the fated boy —
     The loved of heaven! come like a stranger near,
       And clasp young Moses with maternal joy;
     Nor fear the speechless transport and the tear
       Will e'er betray thy fond and hidden claim,
       For Iphis knows not yet a mother's name!
 
 
     With a glad heart, and a triumphal face,
       The princess to the haughty Pharaoh led
     The humble infant of a hated race,
       Bathed with the bitter tears a parent shed;
     While loudly pealing round the holy place
       Of Heaven's white Throne, the voice of angel choirs
       Intoned the theme of their undying lyres!
 
 
     "No longer mourn thy pilgrimage below —
       O Jacob! let thy tears no longer swell
     The torrent of the Egyptian river: Lo!
       Soon on the Jordan's banks thy tents shall dwell;
     And Goshen shall behold thy people go
       Despite the power of Egypt's law and brand,
       From their sad thrall to Canaan's promised land.
 
 
     "The King of Plagues, the Chosen of Sinai,
       Is he that, o'er the rushing waters driven,
     A vigorous hand hath rescued for the sky;
       Ye whose proud hearts disown the ways of heaven!
     Attend, be humble! for its power is nigh
       Israel! a cradle shall redeem thy worth —
       A Cradle yet shall save the widespread earth!"
 
Dublin University Magazine, 1839

ENVY AND AVARICE

("L'Avarice et l'Envie.")

{LE CONSERVATEUR LITÉRAIRE, 1820.}

 
     Envy and Avarice, one summer day,
         Sauntering abroad
         In quest of the abode
     Of some poor wretch or fool who lived that way —
     You – or myself, perhaps – I cannot say —
     Along the road, scarce heeding where it tended,
     Their way in sullen, sulky silence wended;
 
 
     For, though twin sisters, these two charming creatures,
     Rivals in hideousness of form and features,
     Wasted no love between them as they went.
         Pale Avarice,
         With gloating eyes,
     And back and shoulders almost double bent,
     Was hugging close that fatal box
         For which she's ever on the watch
         Some glance to catch
     Suspiciously directed to its locks;
     And Envy, too, no doubt with silent winking
         At her green, greedy orbs, no single minute
     Withdrawn from it, was hard a-thinking
         Of all the shining dollars in it.
 
 
     The only words that Avarice could utter,
     Her constant doom, in a low, frightened mutter,
         "There's not enough, enough, yet in my store!"
     While Envy, as she scanned the glittering sight,
     Groaned as she gnashed her yellow teeth with spite,
         "She's more than me, more, still forever more!"
 
 
     Thus, each in her own fashion, as they wandered,
     Upon the coffer's precious contents pondered,
         When suddenly, to their surprise,
         The God Desire stood before their eyes.
     Desire, that courteous deity who grants
     All wishes, prayers, and wants;
     Said he to the two sisters: "Beauteous ladies,
     As I'm a gentleman, my task and trade is
         To be the slave of your behest —
     Choose therefore at your own sweet will and pleasure,
     Honors or treasure!
         Or in one word, whatever you'd like best.
     But, let us understand each other – she
     Who speaks the first, her prayer shall certainly
         Receive – the other, the same boon redoubled!"
 
 
     Imagine how our amiable pair,
     At this proposal, all so frank and fair,
         Were mutually troubled!
     Misers and enviers, of our human race,
     Say, what would you have done in such a case?
     Each of the sisters murmured, sad and low
         "What boots it, oh, Desire, to me to have
         Crowns, treasures, all the goods that heart can crave,
     Or power divine bestow,
     Since still another must have always more?"
 
 
     So each, lest she should speak before
     The other, hesitating slow and long
     Till the god lost all patience, held her tongue.
         He was enraged, in such a way,
         To be kept waiting there all day,
     With two such beauties in the public road;
         Scarce able to be civil even,
         He wished them both – well, not in heaven.
 
 
     Envy at last the silence broke,
         And smiling, with malignant sneer,
         Upon her sister dear,
           Who stood in expectation by,
     Ever implacable and cruel, spoke
           "I would be blinded of one eye!"
 
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