Tuesday, November 15, 2016

My Year With Proust - Day 293

. . . This invigoration may, however, prove excesive, and the species develop out of all proportion; then, as an anti-toxin protects us against disease, as the thyroid gland regulates our adiposity, as defeat comes to punish pride, as fatigue follows indulgence, and as sleep in turn brings rest from fatigue, so an exceptional act of self-fertilisation comes at the crucial moment to apply its turn of the screw, its pull on the curb, brings back within the norm the flower that has exaggeratedly overstepped it.  My reflexions had followed a trend which I shall describe in due course, and I had already drawn form the visible stratagems of flowers a conclusion that bore upon a whole unconscious element of literary production, when I saw M. de Charlus coming away from the Marquise's door.  Only a few minutes had passed since his entry.  Perhaps he had learned from his elderly relative herself, or merely from a servant, or a great improvement in her condition, or rather her complete recovery from what had been nothing more than a slight indisposition.  At this moment, when he did not suspect that anyone was watching him, his eyelids lowered as a screen against the sun, M. de Charlus had relaxed that artificial tension, softened that artificial vigour in his face which were ordinarily sustained by the animation of his talk and the force of his will.  Pale as a marble statue, his fine features with the prominent nose no longer received from an expression deliberately assumed a different meaning which altered the beauty of their contours; no more now than a Guermantes, he seemed carved in stone, he, Palamede XV, in the chapel at Combray.  These general features of a whole family took on, however, in the face of M. de Charlus a more spiritualised, above all a softer refinement.  I regretted for his sake that he should habitually adulterate with so many violent outbursts, offensive eccentricities, calumnies, with such harshness, touchiness and arrogance, that he should conceal beneath a spurious brutality the amenity, the kindness which, as he emerged from Mme de Villeparisis's, I saw so innocently displayed upon his face.  Blinking his eyes in the sunlight, he seemed almost to be smiling, and I found in his face seen then in repose and as it were in its natural state something so affectionate, so defenceless, that I could not help thinking how angry M. de Charlus would have been could he have known that he was being watched; for what was suggested to me by the sight of this man who was so enamoured of, who so prided himself upon, his virility, to whom all other men seemed odiously effeminate, what he suddenly suggested to me, to such an extent had he momentarily assumed the features, the expression, the smile thereof, was a woman.
Marcel Proust, Cities of the Plain, pp. 625-626

Marcel suddenly sees a very different side of M. de Charlus, Instead of the "violent outbursts, offensive eccentricities, calumnies, with such harshness, touchiness and arrogance" we instead see a "kindness."  To Marcel, M. de Charlus had so "prided himself upon, his virility, to whom all other men seemed odiously effeminate," had "momentarily assumed the features, the expression, the smile" of "a woman." As you might guess, this is an essential transitional section to what is to follow - and also as a foundation for some classic Proustian analysis.  However, at this point I guess it's enough to say that this is a wonderful passage describing the masks that we all wear, especially M. de Charlus at this point.  As we've discussed, Remembrance of Things Past was written during the absolutely high point of Freud's influence, and one could certainly see the concepts that formed a classic defense mechanism.
  

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