MANIFESTO OF SURREALISM
BY ANDRE BRETON (1924)
So strong is the belief in life, in what is most fragile
in life – real life, I mean – that in the end this belief is lost. Man,
that inveterate dreamer, daily more discontent with his destiny, has
trouble assessing the objects he has been led to use, objects that his
nonchalance has brought his way, or that he has earned through his own
efforts, almost always through his own efforts, for he has agreed to work,
at least he has not refused to try his luck (or what he calls his luck!).
At this point he feels extremely modest: he knows what women he has had,
what silly affairs he has been involved in; he is unimpressed by his
wealth or his poverty, in this respect he is still a newborn babe and, as
for the approval of his conscience, I confess that he does very nicely
without it. If he still retains a certain lucidity, all he can do is turn
back toward his childhood which, however his guides and mentors may have
botched it, still strikes him as somehow charming. There, the absence of
any known restrictions allows him the perspective of several lives lived
at once; this illusion becomes firmly rooted within him; now he is only
interested in the fleeting, the extreme facility of everything. Children
set off each day without a worry in the world. Everything is near at hand,
the worst material conditions are fine. The woods are white or black, one
will never sleep.
But it is true that we would not dare
venture so far, it is not merely a question of distance. Threat is piled
upon threat, one yields, abandons a portion of the terrain to be
conquered. This imagination which knows no bounds is henceforth allowed to
be exercised only in strict accordance with the laws of an arbitrary
utility; it is incapable of assuming this inferior role for very long and,
in the vicinity of the twentieth year, generally prefers to abandon man to
his lusterless fate.
Though he may later try to pull
himself together on occasion, having felt that he is losing by slow
degrees all reason for living, incapable as he has become of being able to
rise to some exceptional situation such as love, he will hardly succeed.
This is because he henceforth belongs body and soul to an imperative
practical necessity which demands his constant attention. None of his
gestures will be expansive, none of his ideas generous or far-reaching. In
his mind’s eye, events real or imagined will be seen only as they relate
to a welter of similar events, events in which he has not participated,
abortive events. What am I saying: he will judge them in relationship to
one of these events whose consequences are more reassuring than the
others. On no account will he view them as his salvation.
Beloved imagination, what I most
like in you is your unsparing quality.
There remains madness, "the madness
that one locks up," as it has aptly been described. That madness or
another…. We all know, in fact, that the insane owe their incarceration to
a tiny number of legally reprehensible acts and that, were it not for
these acts their freedom (or what we see as their freedom) would not be
threatened. I am willing to admit that they are, to some degree, victims
of their imagination, in that it induces them not to pay attention to
certain rules – outside of which the species feels threatened – which we
are all supposed to know and respect. But their profound indifference to
the way in which we judge them, and even to the various punishments meted
out to them, allows us to suppose that they derive a great deal of comfort
and consolation from their imagination, that they enjoy their madness
sufficiently to endure the thought that its validity does not extend
beyond themselves. And, indeed, hallucinations, illusions, etc., are not a
source of trifling pleasure. The best controlled sensuality partakes of
it, and I know that there are many evenings when I would gladly that
pretty hand which, during the last pages of Taine’s L’Intelligence,
indulges in some curious misdeeds. I could spend my whole life prying
loose the secrets of the insane. These people are honest to a fault, and
their naiveté has no peer but my own. Christopher Columbus should have set
out to discover America with a boatload of madmen. And note how this
madness has taken shape, and endured.
It is not the fear of madness which
will oblige us to leave the flag of imagination furled.
The case against the realistic
attitude demands to be examined, following the case against the
materialistic attitude. The latter, more poetic in fact than the former,
admittedly implies on the part of man a kind of monstrous pride which,
admittedly, is monstrous, but not a new and more complete decay. It should
above all be viewed as a welcome reaction against certain ridiculous
tendencies of spiritualism. Finally, it is not incompatible with a certain
nobility of thought.
By contrast, the realistic attitude,
inspired by positivism, from Saint Thomas Aquinas to Anatole France,
clearly seems to me to be hostile to any intellectual or moral
advancement. I loathe it, for it is made up of mediocrity, hate, and dull
conceit. It is this attitude which today gives birth to these ridiculous
books, these insulting plays. It constantly feeds on and derives strength
from the newspapers and stultifies both science and art by assiduously
flattering the lowest of tastes; clarity bordering on stupidity, a dog’s
life. The activity of the best minds feels the effects of it; the law of
the lowest common denominator finally prevails upon them as it does upon
the others. An amusing result of this state of affairs, in literature for
example, is the generous supply of novels. Each person adds his personal
little "observation" to the whole. As a cleansing antidote to all this, M.
Paul Valery recently suggested that an anthology be compiled in which the
largest possible number of opening passages from novels be offered; the
resulting insanity, he predicted, would be a source of considerable
edification. The most famous authors would be included. Such a though
reflects great credit on Paul Valery who, some time ago, speaking of
novels, assured me that, so far as he was concerned, he would continue to
refrain from writing: "The Marquise went out at five." But has he kept his
word?
If the purely informative style, of
which the sentence just quoted is a prime example, is virtually the rule
rather than the exception in the novel form, it is because, in all
fairness, the author’s ambition is severely circumscribed. The
circumstantial, needlessly specific nature of each of their notations
leads me to believe that they are perpetrating a joke at my expense. I am
spared not even one of the character’s slightest vacillations: will he be
fairhaired? what will his name be? will we first meet him during the
summer? So many questions resolved once and for all, as chance directs;
the only discretionary power left me is to close the book, which I am
careful to do somewhere in the vicinity of the first page. And the
descriptions! There is nothing to which their vacuity can be compared;
they are nothing but so many superimposed images taken from some stock
catalogue, which the author utilizes more and more whenever he chooses; he
seizes the opportunity to slip me his postcards, he tries to make me agree
with him about the cliches:
The small room into which the young
man was shown was covered with yellow wallpaper: there were geraniums in
the windows, which were covered with muslin curtains; the setting sun cast
a harsh light over the entire setting…. There was nothing special about
the room. The furniture, of yellow wood, was all very old. A sofa with a
tall back turned down, an oval table opposite the sofa, a dressing table
and a mirror set against the pierglass, some chairs along the walls, two
or three etchings of no value portraying some German girls with birds in
their hands – such were the furnishings. (Dostoevski, Crime and
Punishment)
I am in no mood to admit that the
mind is interested in occupying itself with such matters, even fleetingly.
It may be argued that this school-boy description has its place, and that
at this juncture of the book the author has his reasons for burdening me.
Nevertheless he is wasting his time, for I refuse to go into his room.
Others’ laziness or fatigue does not interest me. I have too unstable a
notion of the continuity of life to equate or compare my moments of
depression or weakness with my best moments. When one ceases to feel, I am
of the opinion one should keep quiet. And I would like it understood that
I am not accusing or condemning lack of originality as such. I am only
saying that I do not take particular note of the empty moments of my life,
that it may be unworthy for any man to crystallize those which seem to him
to be so. I shall, with your permission, ignore the description of that
room, and many more like it.
Not so fast, there; I’m getting into
the area of psychology, a subject about which I shall be careful not to
joke.
The author attacks a character and,
this being settled upon, parades his hero to and fro across the world. No
matter what happens, this hero, whose actions and reactions are admirably
predictable, is compelled not to thwart or upset -- even though he looks
as though he is -- the calculations of which he is the object. The
currents of life can appear to lift him up, roll him over, cast him down,
he will still belong to this readymade human type. A simple game of chess
which doesn't interest me in the least -- man, whoever he may be, being
for me a mediocre opponent. What I cannot bear are those wretched
discussions relative to such and such a move, since winning or losing is
not in question. And if the game is not worth the candle, if objective
reason does a frightful job -- as indeed it does -- of serving him who
calls upon it, is it not fitting and proper to avoid all contact with
these categories? "Diversity is so vast that every different tone of
voice, every step, cough, every wipe of the nose, every sneeze...."*
(Pascal.) If in a cluster of grapes there are no two alike, why do you
want me to describe this grape by the other, by all the others, why do you
want me to make a palatable grape? Our brains are dulled by the incurable
mania of wanting to make the unknown known, classifiable. The desire for
analysis wins out over the sentiments.** (Barres, Proust.) The result is
statements of undue length whose persuasive power is attributable solely
to their strangeness and which impress the reader only by the abstract
quality of their vocabulary, which moreover is ill-defined. If the general
ideas that philosophy has thus far come up with as topics of discussion
revealed by their very nature their definitive incursion into a broader or
more general area. I would be the first to greet the news with joy. But up
till now it has been nothing but idle repartee; the flashes of wit and
other niceties vie in concealing from us the true thought in search of
itself, instead of concentrating on obtaining successes. It seems to me
that every act is its own justification, at least for the person who has
been capable of committing it, that it is endowed with a radiant power
which the slightest gloss is certain to diminish. Because of this gloss,
it even in a sense ceases to happen. It gains nothing to be thus
distinguished. Stendhal's heroes are subject to the comments and
appraisals -- appraisals which are more or less successful -- made by that
author, which add not one whit to their glory. Where we really find them
again is at the point at which Stendahl has lost them.
We are still living under the reign
of logic: this, of course, is what I have been driving at. But in this day
and age logical methods are applicable only to solving problems of
secondary interest. The absolute rationalism that is still in vogue allows
us to consider only facts relating directly to our experience. Logical
ends, on the contrary, escape us. It is pointless to add that experience
itself has found itself increasingly circumscribed. It paces back and
forth in a cage from which it is more and more difficult to make it
emerge. It too leans for support on what is most immediately expedient,
and it is protected by the sentinels of common sense. Under the pretense
of civilization and progress, we have managed to banish from the mind
everything that may rightly or wrongly be termed superstition, or fancy;
forbidden is any kind of search for truth which is not in conformance with
accepted practices. It was, apparently, by pure chance that a part of our
mental world which we pretended not to be concerned with any longer --
and, in my opinion by far the most important part -- has been brought back
to light. For this we must give thanks to the discoveries of Sigmund
Freud. On the basis of these discoveries a current of opinion is finally
forming by means of which the human explorer will be able to carry his
investigation much further, authorized as he will henceforth be not to
confine himself solely to the most summary realities. The imagination is
perhaps on the point of reasserting itself, of reclaiming its rights. If
the depths of our mind contain within it strange forces capable of
augmenting those on the surface, or of waging a victorious battle against
them, there is every reason to seize them -- first to seize them, then, if
need be, to submit them to the control of our reason. The analysts
themselves have everything to gain by it. But it is worth noting that no
means has been designated a priori for carrying out this undertaking, that
until further notice it can be construed to be the province of poets as
well as scholars, and that its success is not dependent upon the more or
less capricious paths that will be followed.
Freud very rightly brought his
critical faculties to bear upon the dream. It is, in fact, inadmissible
that this considerable portion of psychic activity (since, at least from
man's birth until his death, thought offers no solution of continuity, the
sum of the moments of the dream, from the point of view of time, and
taking into consideration only the time of pure dreaming, that is the
dreams of sleep, is not inferior to the sum of the moments of reality, or,
to be more precisely limiting, the moments of waking) has still today been
so grossly neglected. I have always been amazed at the way an ordinary
observer lends so much more credence and attaches so much more importance
to waking events than to those occurring in dreams. It is because man,
when he ceases to sleep, is above all the plaything of his memory, and in
its normal state memory takes pleasure in weakly retracing for him the
circumstances of the dream, in stripping it of any real importance, and in
dismissing the only determinant from the point where he thinks he has left
it a few hours before: this firm hope, this concern. He is under the
impression of continuing something that is worthwhile. Thus the dream
finds itself reduced to a mere parenthesis, as is the night. And, like the
night, dreams generally contribute little to furthering our understanding.
This curious state of affairs seems to me to call for certain
reflections:
1) Within the limits where they
operate (or are thought to operate) dreams give every evidence of being
continuous and show signs of organization. Memory alone arrogates to
itself the right to excerpt from dreams, to ignore the transitions, and to
depict for us rather a series of dreams than the dream itself. By the same
token, at any given moment we have only a distinct notion of realities,
the coordination of which is a question of will.* (Account must be taken
of the depth of the dream. For the most part I retain only what I can
glean from its most superficial layers. What I most enjoy contemplating
about a dream is everything that sinks back below the surface in a waking
state, everything I have forgotten about my activities in the course of
the preceding day, dark foliage, stupid branches. In "reality," likewise,
I prefer to fall.) What is worth noting is that nothing allows us to
presuppose a greater dissipation of the elements of which the dream is
constituted. I am sorry to have to speak about it according to a formula
which in principle excludes the dream. When will we have sleeping
logicians, sleeping philosophers? I would like to sleep, in order to
surrender myself to the dreamers, the way I surrender myself to those who
read me with eyes wide open; in order to stop imposing, in this realm, the
conscious rhythm of my thought. Perhaps my dream last night follows that
of the night before, and will be continued the next night, with an
exemplary strictness. It's quite possible, as the saying goes. And since
it has not been proved in the slightest that, in doing so, the "reality"
with which I am kept busy continues to exist in the state of dream, that
it does not sink back down into the immemorial, why should I not grant to
dreams what I occasionally refuse reality, that is, this value of
certainty in itself which, in its own time, is not open to my repudiation?
Why should I not expect from the sign of the dream more than I expect from
a degree of consciousness which is daily more acute? Can't the dream also
be used in solving the fundamental questions of life? Are these questions
the same in one case as in the other and, in the dream, do these questions
already exist? Is the dream any less restrictive or punitive than the
rest? I am growing old and, more than that reality to which I believe I
subject myself, it is perhaps the dream, the difference with which I treat
the dream, which makes me grow old.
2) Let me come back again to the
waking state. I have no choice but to consider it a phenomenon of
interference. Not only does the mind display, in this state, a strange
tendency to lose its bearings (as evidenced by the slips and mistakes the
secrets of which are just beginning to be revealed to us), but, what is
more, it does not appear that, when the mind is functioning normally, it
really responds to anything but the suggestions which come to it from the
depths of that dark night to which I commend it. However conditioned it
may be, its balance is relative. It scarcely dares express itself and, if
it does, it confines itself to verifying that such and such an idea, or
such and such a woman, has made an impression on it. What impression it
would be hard pressed to say, by which it reveals the degree of its
subjectivity, and nothing more. This idea, this woman, disturb it, they
tend to make it less severe. What they do is isolate the mind for a second
from its solvent and spirit it to heaven, as the beautiful precipitate it
can be, that it is. When all else fails, it then calls upon chance, a
divinity even more obscure than the others to whom it ascribes all its
aberrations. Who can say to me that the angle by which that idea which
affects it is offered, that what it likes in the eye of that woman is not
precisely what links it to its dream, binds it to those fundamental facts
which, through its own fault, it has lost? And if things were different,
what might it be capable of? I would like to provide it with the key to
this corridor.
3) The mind of the man who dreams is
fully satisfied by what happens to him. The agonizing question of
possibility is no longer pertinent. Kill, fly faster, love to your heart's
content. And if you should die, are you not certain of reawaking among the
dead? Let yourself be carried along, events will not tolerate your
interference. You are nameless. The ease of everything is priceless.
What reason, I ask, a reason so much
vaster than the other, makes dreams seem so natural and allows me to
welcome unreservedly a welter of episodes so strange that they could
confound me now as I write? And yet I can believe my eyes, my ears; this
great day has arrived, this beast has spoken.
If man's awaking is harder, if it
breaks the spell too abruptly, it is because he has been led to make for
himself too impoverished a notion of atonement.
4) From the moment when it is
subjected to a methodical examination, when, by means yet to be
determined, we succeed in recording the contents of dreams in their
entirety (and that presupposes a discipline of memory spanning
generations; but let us nonetheless begin by noting the most salient
facts), when its graph will expand with unparalleled volume and
regularity, we may hope that the mysteries which really are not will give
way to the great Mystery. I believe in the future resolution of these two
states, dream and reality, which are seemingly so contradictory, into a
kind of absolute reality, a surreality, if one may so speak. It is in
quest of this surreality that I am going, certain not to find it but too
unmindful of my death not to calculate to some slight degree the joys of
its possession.
A story is told according to which
Saint-Pol-Roux, in times gone by, used to have a notice posted on the door
of his manor house in Camaret, every evening before he went to sleep,
which read: THE POET IS WORKING.
A great deal more could be said, but
in passing I merely wanted to touch upon a subject which in itself would
require a very long and much more detailed discussion; I shall come back
to it. At this juncture, my intention was merely to mark a point by noting
the hate of the marvelous which rages in certain men, this absurdity
beneath which they try to bury it. Let us not mince words: the marvelous
is always beautiful, anything marvelous is beautiful, in fact only the
marvelous is beautiful.
In the realm of literature, only the
marvelous is capable of fecundating works which belong to an inferior
category such as the novel, and generally speaking, anything that involves
storytelling. Lewis' The Monk is an admirable proof of this. It is infused
throughout with the presence of the marvelous. Long before the author has
freed his main characters from all temporal constraints, one feels them
ready to act with an unprecedented pride. This passion for eternity with
which they are constantly stirred lends an unforgettable intensity to
their torments, and to mine. I mean that this book, from beginning to end,
and in the purest way imaginable, exercises an exalting effect only upon
that part of the mind which aspires to leave the earth and that, stripped
of an insignificant part of its plot, which belongs to the period in which
it was written, it constitutes a paragon of precision and innocent
grandeur.* (What is admirable about the fantastic is that there is no
longer anything fantastic: there is only the real.) It seems to me none
better has been done, and that the character of Mathilda in particular is
the most moving creation that one can credit to this figurative fashion in
literature. She is less a character than a continual temptation. And if a
character is not a temptation, what is he? An extreme temptation, she. In
The Monk the "nothing is impossible for him who dares try" gives it its
full, convincing measure. Ghosts play a logical role in the book, since
the critical mind does not seize them in order to dispute them. Ambrosio's
punishment is likewise treated in a legitimate manner, since it is finally
accepted by the critical faculty as a natural denouement.
It may seem arbitrary on my part,
when discussing the marvelous, to choose this model, from which both the
Nordic literatures and Oriental literatures have borrowed time and time
again, not to mention the religious literatures of every country. This is
because most of the examples which these literatures could have furnished
me with are tainted by puerility, for the simple reason that they are
addressed to children. At an early age children are weaned on the
marvelous, and later on they fail to retain a sufficient virginity of mind
to thoroughly enjoy fairy tales. No matter how charming they may be, a
grown man would think he were reverting to childhood by nourishing himself
on fairy tales, and I am the first to admit that all such tales are not
suitable for him. The fabric of adorable improbabilities must be made a
trifle more subtle the older we grow, and we are still at the age of
waiting for this kind of spider.... But the faculties do not change
radically. Fear, the attraction of the unusual, chance, the taste for
things extravagant are all devices which we can always call upon without
fear of deception. There are fairy tales to be written for adults, fairy
tales still almost blue.
The marvelous is not the same in
every period of history: it partakes in some obscure way of a sort of
general revelation only the fragments of which come down to us: they are
the romantic ruins, the modern mannequin, or any other symbol capable of
affecting the human sensibility for a period of time. In these areas which
make us smile, there is still portrayed the incurable human restlessness,
and this is why I take them into consideration and why I judge them
inseparable from certain productions of genius which are, more than the
others, painfully afflicted by them. They are Villon's gibbets, Racine's
Greeks, Baudelaire's couches. They coincide with an eclipse of the taste I
am made to endure, I whose notion of taste is the image of a big spot.
Amid the bad taste of my time I strive to go further than anyone else. It
would have been I, had I lived in 1820, I "the bleeding nun," I who would
not have spared this cunning and banal "let us conceal" whereof the
parodical Cuisin speaks, it would have been I, I who would have reveled in
the enormous metaphors, as he says, all phases of the "silver disk." For
today I think of a castle, half of which is not necessarily in ruins; this
castle belongs to me, I picture it in a rustic setting, not far from
Paris. The outbuildings are too numerous to mention, and, as for the
interior, it has been frightfully restored, in such manner as to leave
nothing to be desired from the viewpoint of comfort. Automobiles are
parked before the door, concealed by the shade of trees. A few of my
friends are living here as permanent guests: there is Louis Aragon
leaving; he only has time enough to say hello; Philippe Soupault gets up
with the stars, and Paul Eluard, our great Eluard, has not yet come home.
There are Robert Desnos and Roger Vitrac out on the grounds poring over an
ancient edict on duelling; Georges Auric, Jean Paulhan; Max Morise, who
rows so well, and Benjamin Peret, busy with his equations with birds; and
Joseph Delteil; and Jean Carrive; and Georges Limbour, and Georges
Limbours (there is a whole hedge of Georges Limbours); and Marcel Noll;
there is T. Fraenkel waving to us from his captive balloon, Georges
Malkine, Antonin Artaud, Francis Gerard, Pierre Naville, J. A. Boiffard,
and after them Jacques Baron and his brother, handsome and cordial, and so
many others besides, and gorgeous women, I might add. Nothing is too good
for these young men, their wishes are, as to wealth, so many commands.
Francis Picabia comes to pay us a call, and last week, in the hall of
mirrors, we received a certain Marcel Duchamp whom we had not hitherto
known. Picasso goes hunting in the neighborhood. The spirit of
demoralization has elected domicile in the castle, and it is with it we
have to deal every time it is a question of contact with our fellowmen,
but the doors are always open, and one does not begin by "thanking"
everyone, you know. Moreover, the solitude is vast, we don't often run
into one another. And anyway, isn't what matters that we be the masters of
ourselves, the masters of women, and of love too?
I shall be proved guilty of poetic
dishonesty: everyone will go parading about saying that I live on the rue
Fontaine and that he will have none of the water that flows therefrom. To
be sure! But is he certain that this castle into which I cordially invite
him is an image? What if this castle really existed! My guests are there
to prove it does; their whim is the luminous road that leads to it. We
really live by our fantasies when we give free reign to them. And how
could what one might do bother the other, there, safely sheltered from the
sentimental pursuit and at the trysting place of opportunities?
Man proposes and disposes. He and he
alone can determine whether he is completely master of himself, that is,
whether he maintains the body of his desires, daily more formidable, in a
state of anarchy. Poetry teaches him to. It bears within itself the
perfect compensation for the miseries we endure. It can also be an
organizer, if ever, as the result of a less intimate disappointment, we
contemplate taking it seriously. The time is coming when it decrees the
end of money and by itself will break the bread of heaven for the earth!
There will still be gatherings on the public squares, and movements you
never dared hope participate in. Farewell to absurd choices, the dreams of
dark abyss, rivalries, the prolonged patience, the flight of the seasons,
the artificial order of ideas, the ramp of danger, time for everything!
May you only take the trouble to practice poetry. Is it not incumbent upon
us, who are already living off it, to try and impose what we hold to be
our case for further inquiry?
It matters not whether there is a
certain disproportion between this defense and the illustration that will
follow it. It was a question of going back to the sources of poetic
imagination and, what is more, of remaining there. Not that I pretend to
have done so. It requires a great deal of fortitude to try to set up one's
abode in these distant regions where everything seems at first to be so
awkward and difficult, all the more so if one wants to try to take someone
there. Besides, one is never sure of really being there. If one is going
to all that trouble, one might as well stop off somewhere else. Be that as
it may, the fact is that the way to these regions is clearly marked, and
that to attain the true goal is now merely a matter of the travelers'
ability to endure.
We are all more or less aware of the
road traveled. I was careful to relate, in the course of a study of the
case of Robert Desnos entitled ENTREE DES MEDIUMS,* (See Les Pas perdus,
published by N.R.F.) that I had been led to" concentrate my attention on
the more or less partial sentences which, when one is quite alone and on
the verge of falling asleep, become perceptible for the mind without its
being possible to discover what provoked them." I had then just attempted
the poetic adventure with the minimum of risks, that is, my aspirations
were the same as they are today but I trusted in the slowness of
formulation to keep me from useless contacts, contacts of which I
completely disapproved. This attitude involved a modesty of thought
certain vestiges of which I still retain. At the end of my life, I shall
doubtless manage to speak with great effort the way people speak, to
apologize for my voice and my few remaining gestures. The virtue of the
spoken word (and the written word all the more so) seemed to me to derive
from the faculty of foreshortening in a striking manner the exposition
(since there was exposition) of a small number of facts, poetic or other,
of which I made myself the substance. I had come to the conclusion that
Rimbaud had not proceeded any differently. I was composing, with a concern
for variety that deserved better, the final poems of Mont de piété, that
is, I managed to extract from the blank lines of this book an incredible
advantage. These lines were the closed eye to the operations of thought
that I believed I was obliged to keep hidden from the reader. It was not
deceit on my part, but my love of shocking the reader. I had the illusion
of a possible complicity, which I had more and more difficulty giving up.
I had begun to cherish words excessively for the space they allow around
them, for their tangencies with countless other words which I did not
utter. The poem BLACK FOREST derives precisely from this state of mind. It
took me six months to write it, and you may take my word for it that I did
not rest a single day. But this stemmed from the opinion I had of myself
in those days, which was high, please don't judge me too harshly. I enjoy
these stupid confessions. At that point cubist pseudo-poetry was trying to
get a foothold, but it had emerged defenseless from Picasso's brain, and I
was thought to be as dull as dishwater (and still am). I had a sneaking
suspicion, moreover, that from the viewpoint of poetry I was off on the
wrong road, but I hedged my bet as best I could, defying lyricism with
salvos of definitions and formulas (the Dada phenomena were waiting in the
wings, ready to come on stage) and pretending to search for an application
of poetry to advertising (I went so far as to claim that the world would
end, not with a good book but with a beautiful advertisement for heaven or
for hell).
In those days, a man at least as boring as I,
Pierre Reverdy, was writing:
The image is a pure creation of the mind.
It cannot be born from a comparison
but from a juxtaposition of two more or less distant realities.
The more the relationship between
the two juxtaposed realities is distant and true, the stronger the image
will be -- the greater its emotional power and poetic reality...*
(Nord-Sud, March 1918)
These words, however sibylline for
the uninitiated, were extremely revealing, and I pondered them for a long
time. But the image eluded me. Reverdy's aesthetic, a completely a
posteriori aesthetic, led me to mistake the effects for the causes. It was
in the midst of all this that I renounced irrevocably my point of
view.
One evening, therefore, before I
fell asleep, I perceived, so clearly articulated that it was impossible to
change a word, but nonetheless removed from the sound of any voice, a
rather strange phrase which came to me without any apparent relationship
to the events in which, my consciousness agrees, I was then involved, a
phrase which seemed to me insistent, a phrase, if I may be so bold, which
was knocking at the window. I took cursory note of it and prepared to move
on when its organic character caught my attention. Actually, this phrase
astonished me: unfortunately I cannot remember it exactly, but it was
something like: "There is a man cut in two by the window," but there could
be no question of ambiguity, accompanied as it was by the faint visual
image* (Were I a painter, this visual depiction would doubtless have
become more important for me than the other. It was most certainly my
previous predispositions which decided the matter. Since that day, I have
had occasion to concentrate my attention voluntarily on similar
apparitions, and I know they are fully as clear as auditory phenomena.
With a pencil and white sheet of paper to hand, I could easily trace their
outlines. Here again it is not a matter of drawing, but simply of tracing.
I could thus depict a tree, a wave, a musical instrument, all manner of
things of which I am presently incapable of providing even the roughest
sketch. I would plunge into it, convinced that I would find my way again,
in a maze of lines which at first glance would seem to be going nowhere.
And, upon opening my eyes, I would get the very strong impression of
something "never seen." The proof of what I am saying has been provided
many times by Robert Desnos: to be convinced, one has only to leaf through
the pages of issue number 36 of Feuilles libres which contains several of
his drawings (Romeo and Juliet, A Man Died This Morning, etc.) which were
taken by this magazine as the drawings of a madman and published as such.)
of a man walking cut half way up by a window perpendicular to the axis of
his body. Beyond the slightest shadow of a doubt, what I saw was the
simple reconstruction in space of a man leaning out a window. But this
window having shifted with the man, I realized that I was dealing with an
image of a fairly rare sort, and all I could think of was to incorporate
it into my material for poetic construction. No sooner had I granted it
this capacity than it was in fact succeeded by a whole series of phrases,
with only brief pauses between them, which surprised me only slightly less
and left me with the impression of their being so gratuitous that the
control I had then exercised upon myself seemed to me illusory and all I
could think of was putting an end to the interminable quarrel raging
within me.* (Knut Hamsum ascribes this sort of revelation to which I had
been subjected as deriving from hunger, and he may not be wrong. (The fact
is I did not eat every day during that period of my life). Most certainly
the manifestations that he describes in these terms are clearly the same:
"The following day I awoke at an
early hour. It was still dark. My eyes had been open for a long time when
I heard the clock in the apartment above strike five. I wanted to go back
to sleep, but I couldn't; I was wide awake and a thousand thoughts were
crowding through my mind.
"Suddenly a few good fragments came
to mind, quite suitable to be used in a rough draft, or serialized; all of
a sudden I found, quite by chance, beautiful phrases, phrases such as I
had never written. I repeated them to myself slowly, word by word; they
were excellent. And there were still more coming. I got up and picked up a
pencil and some paper that were on a table behind my bed. It was as though
some vein had burst within me, one word followed another, found its proper
place, adapted itself to the situation, scene piled upon scene, the action
unfolded, one retort after another welled up in my mind, I was enjoying
myself immensely. Thoughts came to me so rapidly and continued to flow so
abundantly that I lost a whole host of delicate details, because my pencil
could not keep up with them, and yet I went as fast as I could, my hand in
constant motion, I did not lose a minute. The sentences continued to well
up within me, I was pregnant with my subject."
Apollinaire
asserted that Chirico's first paintings were done under the influence of
cenesthesic disorders (migraines, colics, etc.).)
Completely occupied as I still was
with Freud at that time, and familiar as I was with his methods of
examination which I had some slight occasion to use on some patients
during the war, I resolved to obtain from myself what we were trying to
obtain from them, namely, a monologue spoken as rapidly as possible
without any intervention on the part of the critical faculties, a
monologue consequently unencumbered by the slightest inhibition and which
was, as closely as possible, akin to spoken thought. It had seemed to me,
and still does -- the way in which the phrase about the man cut in two had
come to me is an indication of it -- that the speed of thought is no
greater than the speed of speech, and that thought does not necessarily
defy language, nor even the fast-moving pen. It was in this frame of mind
that Philippe Soupault -- to whom I had confided these initial conclusions
– and I decided to blacken some paper, with a praiseworthy disdain for
what might result from a literary point of view. The ease of execution did
the rest. By the end of the first day we were able to read to ourselves
some fifty or so pages obtained in this manner, and begin to compare our
results. All in all, Soupault's pages and mine proved to be remarkably
similar: the same overconstruction, shortcomings of a similar nature, but
also, on both our parts, the illusion of an extraordinary verve, a great
deal of emotion, a considerable choice of images of a quality such that we
would not have been capable of preparing a single one in longhand, a very
special picturesque quality and, here and there, a strong comical effect.
The only difference between our two texts seemed to me to derive
essentially from our respective tempers. Soupault's being less static than
mine, and, if he does not mind my offering this one slight criticism, from
the fact that he had made the error of putting a few words by way of
titles at the top of certain pages, I suppose in a spirit of
mystification. On the other hand, I must give credit where credit is due
and say that he constantly and vigorously opposed any effort to retouch or
correct, however slightly, any passage of this kind which seemed to me
unfortunate. In this he was, to be sure, absolutely right.* (I believe
more and more in the infallibility of my thought with respect to myself,
and this is too fair. Nonetheless, with this thought-writing, where one is
at the mercy of the first outside distraction, "ebullutions" can occur. It
would be inexcusable for us to pretend otherwise. By definition, thought
is strong, and incapable of catching itself in error. The blame for these
obvious weaknesses must be placed on suggestions that come to it from
without.) It is, in fact, difficult to appreciate fairly the various
elements present: one may even go so far as to say that it is impossible
to appreciate them at a first reading. To you who write, these elements
are, on the surface, as strange to you as they are to anyone else, and
naturally you are wary of them. Poetically speaking, what strikes you
about them above all is their extreme degree of immediate absurdity, the
quality of this absurdity, upon closer scrutiny, being to give way to
everything admissible, everything legitimate in the world: the disclosure
of a certain number of properties and of facts no less objective, in the
final analysis, than the others.
In homage to Guillaume Apollinaire,
who had just died and who, on several occasions, seemed to us to have
followed a discipline of this kind, without however having sacrificed to
it any mediocre literary means, Soupault and I baptized the new mode of
pure expression which we had at our disposal and which we wished to pass
on to our friends, by the name of SURREALISM. I believe that there is no
point today in dwelling any further on this word and that the meaning we
gave it initially has generally prevailed over its Apollinarian sense. To
be even fairer, we could probably have taken over the word SUPERNATURALISM
employed by Gerard de Nerval in his dedication to the Filles de feu.* (And
also by Thomas Carlyle in Sartor Resartus ([Book III] Chapter VIII,
"Natural Supernaturalism"), 1833-34.) It appears, in fact, that Nerval
possessed to a tee the spirit with which we claim a kinship, Apollinaire
having possessed, on the contrary, naught but the letter, still imperfect,
of Surrealism, having shown himself powerless to give a valid theoretical
idea of it. Here are two passages by Nerval which seem to me to be
extremely significant in this respect:
I am going to explain to you, my
dear Dumas, the phenomenon of which you have spoken a short while ago.
There are, as you know, certain storytellers who cannot invent without
identifying with the characters their imagination has dreamt up. You may
recall how convincingly our old friend Nodier used to tell how it had been
his misfortune during the Revolution to be guillotined; one became so
completely convinced of what he was saying that one began to wonder how he
had managed to have his head glued back on.
...And since you have been
indiscreet enough to quote one of the sonnets composed in this
SUPERNATURALISTIC dream-state, as the Germans would call it, you will have
to hear them all. You will find them at the end of the volume. They are
hardly any more obscure than Hegel's metaphysics or Swedenborg's
MEMORABILIA, and would lose their charm if they were explained, if such
were possible; at least admit the worth of the expression....** (See also
L'Idéoréalisme by Saint-Pol-Roux.)
Those who
might dispute our right to employ the term SURREALISM in the very special
sense that we understand it are being extremely dishonest, for there can
be no doubt that this word had no currency before we came along.
Therefore, I am defining it once and for all:
SURREALISM, n. Psychic automatism in
its pure state, by which one proposes to express -- verbally, by means of
the written word, or in any other manner -- the actual functioning of
thought. Dictated by the thought, in the absence of any control exercised
by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern.
ENCYCLOPEDIA. Philosophy. Surrealism
is based on the belief in the superior reality of certain forms of
previously neglected associations, in the omnipotence of dream, in the
disinterested play of thought. It tends to ruin once and for all all other
psychic mechanisms and to substitute itself for them in solving all the
principal problems of life. The following have performed acts of ABSOLUTE
SURREALISM: Messrs. Aragon, Baron, Boiffard, Breton, Carrive, Crevel,
Delteil, Desnos, Eluard, Gerard, Limbour, Malkine, Morise, Naville, Noll,
Peret, Picon, Soupault, Vitrac.
They seem to be, up to the present
time, the only ones, and there would be no ambiguity about it were it not
for the case of Isidore Ducasse, about whom I lack information. And, of
course, if one is to judge them only superficially by their results, a
good number of poets could pass for Surrealists, beginning with Dante and,
in his finer moments, Shakespeare. In the course of the various attempts I
have made to reduce what is, by breach of trust, called genius, I have
found nothing which in the final analysis can be attributed to any other
method than that.
Young's Nights are Surrealist from
one end to the other; unfortunately it is a priest who is speaking, a bad
priest no doubt, but a priest nonetheless.
Swift is Surrealist in malice,
Sade is Surrealist in sadism.
Chateaubriand is Surrealist in exoticism.
Constant is Surrealist in politics.
Hugo is Surrealist when he isn't stupid.
Desbordes-Valmore is Surrealist in love.
Bertrand is Surrealist in the past.
Rabbe is Surrealist in death.
Poe is Surrealist in adventure.
Baudelaire is Surrealist in morality.
Rimbaud is Surrealist in the way he lived, and
elsewhere.
Mallarme is Surrealist when he is
confiding.
Jarry is Surrealist in absinthe.
Nouveau is Surrealist in the kiss.
Saint-Pol-Roux is Surrealist in his use of symbols.
Fargue is Surrealist in the atmosphere.
Vache is Surrealist in me.
Reverdy is Surrealist at home.
Saint-Jean-Perse is Surrealist at a distance.
Roussel is Surrealist as a storyteller.
Etc.
I would like to stress the point:
they are not always Surrealists, in that I discern in each of them a
certain number of preconceived ideas to which -- very naively! -- they
hold. They hold to them because they had not heard the Surrealist voice,
the one that continues to preach on the eve of death and above the storms,
because they did not want to serve simply to orchestrate the marvelous
score. They were instruments too full of pride, and this is why they have
not always produced a harmonious sound.* (I could say the same of a number
of philosophers and painters, including, among the latter, Uccello, from
painters of the past, and, in the modern era, Seurat, Gustave Moreau,
Matisse (in "La Musique," for example), Derain, Picasso, (by far the most
pure), Braque, Duchamp, Picabia, Chirico (so admirable for so long), Klee,
Man Ray, Max Ernst, and, one so close to us, Andre Masson.)
But we, who have made no effort
whatsoever to filter, who in our works have made ourselves into simple
receptacles of so many echoes, modest recording instruments who are not
mesmerized by the drawings we are making, perhaps we serve an even nobler
cause. Thus do we render with integrity the "talent" which has been lent
to us. You might as well speak of the talent of this platinum ruler, this
mirror, this door, and of the sky, if you like.
We do not have any talent; ask Philippe
Soupault:
"Anatomical products of manufacture
and low-income dwellings will destroy the tallest cities."
Ask Roger Vitrac:
"No sooner had I called forth the
marble-admiral than he turned on his heel like a horse which rears at the
sight of the North star and showed me, in the plane of his two-pointed
cocked hat, a region where I was to spend my life."
Ask Paul Eluard:
"This is an oft-told tale that I
tell, a famous poem that I reread: I am leaning against a wall, with my
verdant ears and my lips burned to a crisp."
Ask Max Morise:
"The bear of the caves and his
friend the bittern, the vol-au-vent and his valet the wind, the Lord
Chancellor with his Lady, the scarecrow for sparrows and his accomplice
the sparrow, the test tube and his daughter the needle, this carnivore and
his brother the carnival, the sweeper and his monocle, the Mississippi and
its little dog, the coral and its jug of milk, the Miracle and its Good
Lord, might just as well go and disappear from the surface of the
sea."
Ask Joseph Delteil:
"Alas! I believe in the virtue of
birds. And a feather is all it takes to make me die laughing."
Ask Louis Aragon:
"During a short break in the party,
as the players were gathering around a bowl of flaming punch, I asked a
tree if it still had its red ribbon."
And ask me, who was unable to keep
myself from writing the serpentine, distracting lines of this preface.
Ask Robert
Desnos, he who, more than any of us, has perhaps got closest to the
Surrealist truth, he who, in his still unpublished works* (NOUVELLES
HEBRIDES, DESORDRE FORMEL, DEUIL POUR DEUIL.) and in the course of the
numerous experiments he has been a party to, has fully justified the hope
I placed in Surrealism and leads me to believe that a great deal more will
still come of it. Desnos speaks Surrealist at will. His extraordinary
agility in orally following his thought is worth as much to us as any
number of splendid speeches which are lost, Desnos having better things to
do than record them. He reads himself like an open book, and does nothing
to retain the pages, which fly away in the windy wake of his life.
SECRETS OF THE MAGICAL SURREALIST ART
Written Surrealist composition or first and last
draft
After you have settled yourself in a
place as favorable as possible to the concentration of your mind upon
itself, have writing materials brought to you. Put yourself in as passive,
or receptive, a state of mind as you can. Forget about your genius, your
talents, and the talents of everyone else. Keep reminding yourself that
literature is one of the saddest roads that leads to everything. Write
quickly, without any preconceived subject, fast enough so that you will
not remember what you're writing and be tempted to reread what you have
written. The first sentence will come spontaneously, so compelling is the
truth that with every passing second there is a sentence unknown to our
consciousness which is only crying out to be heard. It is somewhat of a
problem to form an opinion about the next sentence; it doubtless partakes
both of our conscious activity and of the other, if one agrees that the
fact of having written the first entails a minimum of perception. This
should be of no importance to you, however; to a large extent, this is
what is most interesting and intriguing about the Surrealist game. The
fact still remains that punctuation no doubt resists the absolute
continuity of the flow with which we are concerned, although it may seem
as necessary as the arrangement of knots in a vibrating cord. Go on as
long as you like. Put your trust in the inexhaustible nature of the
murmur. If silence threatens to settle in if you should ever happen to
make a mistake -- a mistake, perhaps due to carelessness -- break off
without hesitation with an overly clear line. Following a word the origin
of which seems suspicious to you, place any letter whatsoever, the letter
"l" for example, always the letter "l," and bring the arbitrary back by
making this letter the first of the following word.
How not to be bored any longer when with
others
This is very difficult. Don't be at
home for anyone, and occasionally, when no one has forced his way in,
interrupting you in the midst of your Surrealist activity, and you,
crossing your arms, say: "It doesn't matter, there are doubtless better
things to do or not do. Interest in life is indefensible Simplicity, what
is going on inside me, is still tiresome to me!" or an other revolting
banality.
To make speeches
Just prior to the elections, in the
first country which deems it worthwhile to proceed in this kind of public
expression of opinion, have yourself put on the ballot. Each of us has
within himself the potential of an orator: multicolored loin cloths, glass
trinkets of words. Through Surrealism he will take despair unawares in its
poverty. One night, on a stage, he will, by himself, carve up the eternal
heaven, that Peau de l'ours. He will promise so much that any promises he
keeps will be a source of wonder and dismay. In answer to the claims of an
entire people he will give a partial and ludicrous vote. He will make the
bitterest enemies partake of a secret desire which will blow up the
countries. And in this he will succeed simply by allowing himself to be
moved by the immense word which dissolves into pity and revolves in hate.
Incapable of failure, he will play on the velvet of all failures. He will
be truly elected, and women will love him with an all-consuming
passion.
To write false novels
Whoever you may be, if the spirit
moves you burn a few laurel leaves and, without wishing to tend this
meager fire, you will begin to write a novel. Surrealism will allow you
to: all you have to do is set the needle marked "fair" at "action," and
the rest will follow naturally. Here are some characters rather different
in appearance; their names in your handwriting are a question of capital
letters, and they will conduct themselves with the same ease with respect
to active verbs as does the impersonal pronoun "it" with respect to words
such as "is raining," "is," "must," etc. They will command them, so to
speak, and wherever observation, reflection, and the faculty of
generalization prove to be of no help to you, you may rest assured that
they will credit you with a thousand intentions you never had. Thus
endowed with a tiny number of physical and moral characteristics, these
beings who in truth owe you so little will thereafter deviate not one iota
from a certain line of conduct about which you need not concern yourself
any further. Out of this will result a plot more or less clever in
appearance, justifying point by point this moving or comforting denouement
about which you couldn't care less. Your false novel will simulate to a
marvelous degree a real novel; you will be rich, and everyone will agree
that "you've really got a lot of guts," since it's also in this region
that this something is located.
Of course, by an analogous method,
and provided you ignore what you are reviewing, you can successfully
devote yourself to false literary criticism.
How to catch the eye of a woman you
pass in the street
Against death
Surrealism will usher you into
death, which is a secret society. It will glove your hand, burying therein
the profound M with which the word Memory begins. Do not forget to make
proper arrangements for your last will and testament: speaking personally,
I ask that I be taken to the cemetery in a moving van. May my friends
destroy every last copy of the printing of the Speech concerning the
Modicum of Reality.
Language has been given to man so
that he may make Surrealist use of it. To the extent that he is required
to make himself understood, he manages more or less to express himself,
and by so doing to fulfill certain functions culled from among the most
vulgar. Speaking, reading a letter, present no real problem for him,
provided that, in so doing, he does not set himself a goal above the mean,
that is, provided he confines himself to carrying on a conversation (for
the pleasure of conversing) with someone. He is not worried about the
words that are going to come, nor about the sentence which will follow
after the sentence he is just completing. To a very simple question, he
will be capable of making a lightning-like reply. In the absence of minor
tics acquired through contact with others, he can without any ado offer an
opinion on a limited number of subjects; for that he does not need to
"count up to ten" before speaking or to formulate anything whatever ahead
of time. Who has been able to convince him that this faculty of the first
draft will only do him a disservice when he makes up his mind to establish
more delicate relationships? There is no subject about which he should
refuse to talk, to write about prolifically. All that results from
listening to oneself, from reading what one has written, is the suspension
of the occult, that admirable help. I am in no hurry to understand myself
(basta! I shall always understand myself). If such and such a sentence of
mine turns out to be somewhat disappointing, at least momentarily, I place
my trust in the following sentence to redeem its sins; I carefully refrain
from starting it over again or polishing it. The only thing that might
prove fatal to me would be the slightest loss of impetus. Words, groups of
words which follow one another, manifest among themselves the greatest
solidarity. It is not up to me to favor one group over the other. It is up
to a miraculous equivalent to intervene -- and intervene it does.
Not only does this unrestricted
language, which I am trying to render forever valid, which seems to me to
adapt itself to all of life's circumstances, not only does this language
not deprive me of any of my means, on the contrary it lends me an
extraordinary lucidity, and it does so in an area where I least expected
it. I shall even go so far as to maintain that it instructs me and,
indeed, I have had occasion to use surreally words whose meaning I have
forgotten. I was subsequently able to verify that the way in which I had
used them corresponded perfectly with their definition. This would leave
one to believe that we do not "learn," that all we ever do is "relearn."
There are felicitous turns of speech that I have thus familiarized myself
with. And I am not talking about the poetic consciousness of objects which
I have been able to acquire only after a spiritual contact with them
repeated a thousand times over.
The forms of Surrealist language
adapt themselves best to dialogue. Here, two thoughts confront each other;
while one is being delivered, the other is busy with it; but how is it
busy with it? To assume that it incorporates it within itself would be
tantamount to admitting that there is a time during which it is possible
for it to live completely off that other thought, which is highly
unlikely. And, in fact, the attention it pays is completely exterior; it
has only time enough to approve or reject -- generally reject -- with all
the consideration of which man is capable. This mode of language,
moreover, does not allow the heart of the matter to be plumbed. My
attention, prey to an entreaty which it cannot in all decency reject,
treats the opposing thought as an enemy; in ordinary conversation, it
"takes it up" almost always on the words, the figures of speech, it
employs; it puts me in a position to turn it to good advantage in my reply
by distorting them. This is true to such a degree that in certain
pathological states of mind, where the sensorial disorders occupy the
patient's complete attention, he limits himself, while continuing to
answer the questions, to seizing the last word spoken in his presence or
the last portion of the Surrealist sentence some trace of which he finds
in his mind.
Q. "How old are you?" A. "You."
(Echolalia.)
Q. "What is your name?" A.
"Forty-five houses." (Ganser syndrome, or beside-the-point replies.)
There is no conversation in which
some trace of this disorder does not occur. The effort to be social which
dictates it and the considerable practice we have at it are the only
things which enable us to conceal it temporarily. It is also the great
weakness of the book that it is in constant conflict with its best, by
which I mean the most demanding, readers. In the very short dialogue that
I concocted above between the doctor and the madman, it was in fact the
madman who got the better of the exchange. Because, through his replies,
he obtrudes upon the attention of the doctor examining him -- and because
he is not the person asking the questions. Does this mean that his thought
at this point is stronger? Perhaps. He is free not to care any longer
about his age or name.
Poetic Surrealism, which is the
subject of this study, has focused its efforts up to this point on
reestablishing dialogue in its absolute truth, by freeing both
interlocutors from any obligations and politeness. Each of them simply
pursues his soliloquy without trying to derive any special dialectical
pleasure from it and without trying to impose anything whatsoever upon his
neighbor. The remarks exchanged are not, as is generally the case, meant
to develop some thesis, however unimportant it may be; they are as
disaffected as possible. As for the reply that they elicit, it is, in
principle, totally indifferent to the personal pride of the person
speaking. The words, the images are only so many springboards for the mind
of the listener. In Les Champs magnétiques, the first purely Surrealist
work, this is the way in which the pages grouped together under the title
Barrières must be conceived of -- pages wherein Soupault and I show
ourselves to be impartial interlocutors.
Surrealism does not allow those who
devote themselves to it to forsake it whenever they like. There is every
reason to believe that it acts on the mind very much as drugs do; like
drugs, it creates a certain state of need and can push man to frightful
revolts. It also is, if you like, an artificial paradise, and the taste
one has for it derives from Baudelaire's criticism for the same reason as
the others. Thus the analysis of the mysterious effects and special
pleasures it can produce -- in many respects Surrealism occurs as a new
vice which does not necessarily seem to be restricted to the happy few;
like hashish, it has the ability to satisfy all manner of tastes -- such
an analysis has to be included in the present study.
1. It is true of Surrealist images
as it is of opium images that man does not evoke them; rather they "come
to him spontaneously, despotically. He cannot chase them away; for the
will is powerless now and no longer controls the faculties."*
(Baudelaire.) It remains to be seen whether images have ever been
"evoked." If one accepts, as I do, Reverdy's definition it does not seem
possible to bring together, voluntarily, what he calls "two distant
realities." The juxtaposition is made or not made, and that is the long
and the short of it. Personally, I absolutely refuse to believe that, in
Reverdy's work, images such as
In the brook, there is a song that
flows
or:
Day unfolded like a white
tablecloth
or:
The world goes back into a sack
reveal the slightest degree of
premeditation. In my opinion, it is erroneous to claim that "the mind has
grasped the relationship" of two realities in the presence of each other.
First of all, it has seized nothing consciously. It is, as it were, from
the fortuitous juxtaposition of the two terms that a particular light has
sprung, the light of the image, to which we are infinitely sensitive. The
value of the image depends upon the beauty of the spark obtained; it is,
consequently, a function of the difference of potential between the two
conductors. When the difference exists only slightly, as in a comparison,*
(Compare the image in the work of Jules Renard.) the spark is lacking.
Now, it is not within man's power, so far as I can tell, to effect the
juxtaposition of two realities so far apart. The principle of the
association of ideas, such as we conceive of it, militates against it. Or
else we would have to revert to an elliptical art, which Reverdy deplores
as much as I. We are therefore obliged to admit that the two terms of the
image are not deduced one from the other by the mind for the specific
purpose of producing the spark, that they are the simultaneous products of
the activity I call Surrealist, reason's role being limited to taking note
of, and appreciating, the luminous phenomenon.
And just as the length of the spark
increases to the extent that it occurs in rarefied gases, the Surrealist
atmosphere created by automatic writing, which I have wanted to put within
the reach of everyone, is especially conducive to the production of the
most beautiful images. One can even go so far as to say that in this
dizzying race the images appear like the only guideposts of the mind. By
slow degrees the mind becomes convinced of the supreme reality of these
images. At first limiting itself to submitting to them, it soon realizes
that they flatter its reason, and increase its knowledge accordingly. The
mind becomes aware of the limitless expanses wherein its desires are made
manifest, where the pros and cons are constantly consumed, where its
obscurity does not betray it. It goes forward, borne by these images which
enrapture it, which scarcely leave it any time to blow upon the fire in
its fingers. This is the most beautiful night of all, the lightning-filled
night: day, compared to it, is night.
The countless kinds of Surrealist
images would require a classification which I do not intend to make today.
To group them according to their particular affinities would lead me far
afield; what I basically want to mention is their common virtue. For me,
their greatest virtue, I must confess, is the one that is arbitrary to the
highest degree, the one that takes the longest time to translate into
practical language, either because it contains an immense amount of
seeming contradiction or because one of its terms is strangely concealed;
or because, presenting itself as something sensational, it seems to end
weakly (because it suddenly closes the angle of its compass), or because
it derives from itself a ridiculous formal justification, or because it is
of a hallucinatory kind, or because it very naturally gives to the
abstract the mask of the concrete, or the opposite, or because it implies
the negation of some elementary physical property, or because it provokes
laughter. Here, in order, are a few examples of it:
The ruby of champagne.
(LAUTREAMONT)
Beautiful as the law of arrested
development of the breast in adults, whose propensity to growth is not in
proportion to the quantity of molecules that their organism assimilates.
(LAUTREAMONT)
A church stood dazzling as a bell.
(PHILIPPE SOUPAULT)
In Rrose Selavy's sleep there is a
dwarf issued from a well who comes to eat her bread at night. (ROBERT
DESNOS)
On the bridge the dew with the head
of a tabby cat lulls itself to sleep. (ANDRE BRETON)
A little to the left, in my
firmament foretold, I see - but it's doubtless but a mist of blood
and murder - the gleaming glass of liberty's disturbances. (LOUIS
ARAGON)
In the forest aflame
The lions were fresh. (ROBERT
VITRAC)
The color of a woman's stockings is
not necessarily in the likeness of her eyes, which led a philosopher who
it is pointless to mention, to say: "Cephalopods have more reasons to hate
progress than do quadrupeds."
(MAX MORISE)
1st. Whether we like it or not,
there is enough there to satisfy several demands of the mind. All these
images seem to attest to the fact that the mind is ripe for something more
than the benign joys it allows itself in general. This is the only way it
has of turning to its own advantage the ideal quantity of events with
which it is entrusted.* (Let us no forget that, according to Novalis'
formula, "there are series of events which run parallel to real events.
Men and circumstances generally modify the ideal train of circumstances,
so that is seems imperfect; and their consequences are also equally
imperfect. Thus it was with the Reformation; instead of Protestantism, we
got Lutheranism.") These images show it the extent of its ordinary
dissipation and the drawbacks that it offers for it. In the final
analysis, it's not such a bad thing for these images to upset the mind,
for to upset the mind is to put it in the wrong. The sentences I quote
make ample provision for this. But the mind which relishes them draws
therefrom the conviction that it is on the right track; on its own, the
mind is incapable of finding itself guilty of cavil; it has nothing to
fear, since, moreover, it attempts to embrace everything.
2nd. The mind which plunges into
Surrealism relives with glowing excitement the best part of its childhood.
For such a mind, it is similar to the certainty with which a person who is
drowning reviews once more, in the space of less than a second, all the
insurmountable moments of his life. Some may say to me that the parallel
is not very encouraging. But I have no intention of encouraging those who
tell me that. From childhood memories, and from a few others, there
emanates a sentiment of being unintegrated, and then later of having gone
astray, which I hold to be the most fertile that exists. It is perhaps
childhood that comes closest to one's "real life"; childhood beyond which
man has at his disposal, aside from his laissez-passer, only a few
complimentary tickets; childhood where everything nevertheless conspires
to bring about the effective, risk-free possession of oneself. Thanks to
Surrealism, it seems that opportunity knocks a second time. It is as
though we were still running toward our salvation, or our perdition. In
the shadow we again see a precious terror. Thank God, it's still only
Purgatory. With a shudder, we cross what the occultists call dangerous
territory. In my wake I raise up monsters that are lying in wait; they are
not yet too ill-disposed toward me, and I am not lost, since I fear them.
Here are "the elephants with the heads of women and the flying lions"
which used to make Soupault and me tremble in our boots to meet, here is
the "soluble fish" which still frightens me slightly. POISSON SOLUBLE, am
I not the soluble fish, I was born under the sign of Pisces, and man is
soluble in his thought! The flora and fauna of Surrealism are
inadmissible.
3rd. I do not believe in the
establishment of a conventional Surrealist pattern any time in the near
future. The characteristics common to all the texts of this kind,
including those I have just cited and many others which alone could offer
us a logical analysis and a careful grammatical analysis, do not preclude
a certain evolution of Surrealist prose in time. Coming on the heels of a
large number of essays I have written in this vein over the past five
years, most of which I am indulgent enough to think are extremely
disordered, the short anecdotes which comprise the balance of this volume
offer me a glaring proof of what I am saying. I do not judge them to be
any more worthless, because of that, in portraying for the reader the
benefits which the Surrealist contribution is liable to make to his
consciousness.
Surrealist methods would, moreover,
demand to be
heard. Everything is valid when it
comes to obtaining the desired suddenness from certain associations. The
pieces of paper that Picasso and Braque insert into their work have the
same value as the introduction of a platitude into a literary analysis of
the most rigorous sort. It is even permissible to entitle POEM what we get
from the most random assemblage possible (observe, if you will, the
syntax) of headlines and scraps of headlines cut out of the
newspapers:
POEM
A burst of laughter
of sapphire in the island of Ceylon
The most beautiful straws
HAVE A FADED COLOR
UNDER THE
LOCKS
on an isolated farm
FROM DAY TO DAY
the
pleasant
grows worse
coffee
preaches for its
saint
THE DAILY ARTISAN OF YOUR BEAUTY
MADAM,
a pair
of silk stockings
is not
A leap into space
A STAG
Love above all
Everything
could be worked out so well
PARIS IS A BIG
VILLAGE
Watch out for
the
fire that covers
THE PRAYER
of fair weather
Know that
The ultraviolet rays
have
finished their task
short and sweet
THE FIRST WHITE PAPER
OF
CHANCE
Red will be
The
wandering singer
WHERE IS HE?
in memory
in his house
AT THE SUITORS’ BALL
I do
as I dance
What people did,
what they’re going to do
And we could offer many many more examples. The
theater, philosophy, science, criticism would all succeed in finding their
bearings there. I hasten to add that future Surrealist techniques do not
interest me.
Far more serious, in my opinion*
(Whatever reservations I may be allowed to make concerning responsibility
in general and the medico-legal considerations which determine an
individual's degree of responsibility -- complete responsibility,
irresponsibility, limited responsibility (sic) -- however difficult it may
be for me to accept the principle of any kind of responsibility, I would
like to know how the first punishable offenses, the Surrealist character
of which will be clearly apparent, will be judged. Will the accused be
acquitted, or will he merely be given the benefit of the doubt because of
extenuating circumstances? It's a shame that the violation of the laws
governing the Press is today scarcely repressed, for if it were not we
would soon see a trial of this sort: the accused has published a book
which is an outrage to public decency. Several of his "most respected and
honorable" fellow citizens have lodged a complaint against him, and he is
also charged with slander and libel. There are also all sorts of other
charges against him, such as insulting and defaming the army, inciting to
murder, rape, etc. The accused, moreover, wastes no time in agreeing with
the accusers in "stigmatizing" most of the ideas expressed. His only
defense is claiming that he does not consider himself to be the author of
his book, said book being no more and no less than a Surrealist concoction
which precludes any question of merit or lack of merit on the part of the
person who signs it; further, that all he has done is copy a document
without offering any opinion thereon, and that he is at least as foreign
to the accused text as is the presiding judge himself.
What is true for the publication of
a book will also hold true for a whole host of other acts as soon as
Surrealist methods begin to enjoy widespread favor. When that happens, a
new morality must be substituted for the prevailing morality, the source
of all our trials and tribulations.) -- I have intimated it often enough
-- are the applications of Surrealism to action. To be sure, I do not
believe in the prophetic nature of the Surrealist word. "It is the oracle,
the things I say."* (Rimbaud.) Yes, as much as I like, but what of the
oracle itself?** (Still, STILL.... We must absolutely get to the bottom of
this. Today, June 8, 1924, about one o'clock, the voice whispered to me:
"Béthune, Béthune." What did it mean? I have never been to Béthune, and
have only the vaguest notion as to where it is located on the map of
France. Béthune evokes nothing for me, not even a scene from The Three
Musketeers. I should have left for Béthune, where perhaps there was
something awaiting me; that would have been to simple, really. Someone
told me they had read in a book by Chesterton about a detective who, in
order to find someone he is looking for in a certain city, simply scoured
from roof to cellar the houses which, from the outside, seemed somehow
abnormal to him, were it only in some slight detail. This system is as
good as any other.
Similarly, in 1919, Soupault went
into any number of impossible buildings to ask the concierge whether
Philippe Soupault did in fact live there. He would not have been
surprised, I suspect, by an affirmative reply. He would have gone and
knocked on his door.) Men's piety does not fool me. The Surrealist voice
that shook Cumae, Dodona, and Delphi is nothing more than the voice which
dictates my less irascible speeches to me. My time must not be its time,
why should this voice help me resolve the childish problem of my destiny?
I pretend, unfortunately, to act in a world where, in order to take into
account its suggestions, I would be obliged to resort to two kinds of
interpreters, one to translate its judgements for me, the other,
impossible to find, to transmit to my fellow men whatever sense I could
make out of them. This world, in which I endure what I endure (don’t go
see), this modern world, I mean, what the devil do you want me to do with
it? Perhaps the Surrealist voice will be stilled, I have given up trying
to keep track of those who have disappeared. I shall no longer enter into,
however briefly, the marvelous detailed description of my years and my
days. I shall be like Nijinski who was taken last year to the Russian
ballet and did not realize what spectacle it was he was seeing. I shall be
alone, very alone within myself, indifferent to all the world’s ballets.
What I have done, what I have left undone, I give it to you.
And ever since I have had a great
desire to show forbearance to scientific musing, however unbecoming, in
the final analysis, from every point of view. Radios? Fine. Syphilis? If
you like. Photography? I don’t see any reason why not. The cinema? Three
cheers for darkened rooms. War? Gave us a good laugh. The telephone?
Hello. Youth? Charming white hair. Try to make me say thank you: "Thank
you." Thank you. If the common man has a high opinion of things which
properly speaking belong to the realm of the laboratory, it is because
such research has resulted in the manufacture of a machine or the
discovery of some serum which the man in the street views as affecting him
directly. He is quite sure that they have been trying to improve his lot.
I am not quite sure to what extent scholars are motivated by humanitarian
aims, but it does not seem to me that this factor constitutes a very
marked degree of goodness. I am, of course, referring to true scholars and
not to the vulgarizers and popularizers of all sorts who take out patents.
In this realm as in any other, I believe in the pure Surrealist joy of the
man who, forewarned that all others before him have failed, refuses to
admit defeat, sets off from whatever point he chooses, along any other
path save a reasonable one, and arrives wherever he can. Such and such an
image, by which he deems it opportune to indicate his progress and which
may result, perhaps, in his receiving public acclaim, is to me, I must
confess, a matter of complete indifference. Nor is the material with which
he must perforce encumber himself; his glass tubes or my metallic
feathers… As for his method, I am willing to give it as much credit as I
do mine. I have seen the inventor of the cutaneous plantar reflex at work;
he manipulated his subjects without respite, it was much more than an
"examination" he was employing; it was obvious that he was following no
set plan. Here and there he formulated a remark, distantly, without
nonetheless setting down his needle, while his hammer was never still. He
left to others the futile task of curing patients. He was wholly consumed
by and devoted to that sacred fever.
Surrealism, such as I conceive of
it, asserts our complete nonconformism clearly enough so that there can be
no question of translating it, at the trial of the real world, as evidence
for the defense. It could, on the contrary, only serve to justify the
complete state of distraction which we hope to achieve here below. Kant’s
absentmindedness regarding women, Pasteur’s absentmindedness about
"grapes," Curie’s absentmindedness with respect to vehicles, are in this
regard profoundly symptomatic. This world is only very relatively in tune
with thought, and incidents of this kind are only the most obvious
episodes of a war in which I am proud to be participating. "Ce monde n’est
que très relativement a la mesure de la pensee et les incidents de ce
genre ne sont que les episodes jusqu'ici les plus marquants d’une guerre
d’indépendence à laquelle je me fais gloire de participer." Surrealism is
the "invisible ray" which will one day enable us to win out over our
opponents. "You are no longer trembling, carcass." This summer the roses
are blue; the wood is of glass. The earth, draped in its verdant cloak,
makes as little impression upon me as a ghost. It is living and ceasing to
live which are imaginary solutions. Existence is elsewhere.