Kellscraft
Studio |
Wallpaper
Images |
Nekrassoff |
Web
Text-ures© |
---|
|
IN the first act of The Blue Bird,
the fairy Bérylune send Mytyl and Tyltyl in search of happiness. Shepherded and
protected by Light, they explore the Past and the Future, the Palace of Night,
the Kingdoms of the Dead and of the Unborn. At one moment they find themselves
in a graveyard; and Mytyl grows fearful at her first contact with the great
mystery of Death. Yet the graveyard with its wooden crosses and grass-covered
mounds is moonlit and tranquil; and of a sudden, as the revealing diamond is
turned in Tyltyl’s fingers, even the tombstones and ‘all the grand investiture
of death’ disappear, to be replaced by luxuriant, swaying clusters of Madonna
lilies. “Where are the dead?” asks Mytyl, in amazement, searching in the grass for traces of even one tombstone. Her brother also looks: “There are no dead,” is his reply. Any one who was present on the first night of the play at the Haymarket Theatre, in 1909, will not easily forget the audience’s little gasp of delighted surprise. Yet the two lines of dialogue were more than a stage effect, more than an aspect of mysticism; almost they may be regarded as the essence of Maeterlinck’s later work. Since the Life of the Bee, since the earlier essays and such pure drama as Monna Vanna, The Blind and Pelléas and Mélisande, his mind seems to have been brooding more and more on the part which Death, the great twin mystery of the world, plays in the life of man and of the race. In The Death of Tintagiles there is a barred and studded door, through which, for all its studs and bars, there steals a miasma of dread. And, when the door opens, it is to release a spirit of annihilation which the concerted efforts of Tintagiles’ sisters can neither restrain nor force back. In The Blue Bird we are shown
that a man cannot die so long as he dwells in the memory of those who loved
him. In his latest work Maeterlinck gives to the dead an objective existence.
In part each generation survives its own death and transmits to its successors
the heritage of aspiration and achievement, of knowledge and passion, which it
has received from its predecessors; in greater part the objective existence is
founded on new modes of communication, a new study of psychic relationship and
a new belief in a subliminal state. I have collected in the present volume a selection of essays illustrating the later stages of Maeterlinck’s quest. Never in history have so many women and men, stricken suddenly and without warning, sought so unanimously and painfully to penetrate the veil wherein the world’s oldest mystery is shrouded. The finality of death was a challenge flung down and eagerly taken up by all whom the loss of son or brother had taken unawares. To Maeterlinck the war has brought in great part the annihilation of a people, his own people; it has inspired him to a splendour of indignation and pity; but, more gravely and urgently than ever before, it has demanded of him an answer to the question of the Sadducees, who “say there is no resurrection.” Readers wishing to study the
complete series of essays from which the sixteen in this volume are taken will
find them in the three books entitled, Our Eternity, The Unknown
Guest and The Wrack of the Storm, all of which are issued by the
present publishers. ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS. |