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Villa Rubein and Other Stories


by John Galsworthy







Contents:

Villa Rubein

A Man of Devon

A Knight

Salvation of a Forsyte

The Silence









PREFACE





Writing not long ago to my oldest literary friend; I expressed in a

moment of heedless sentiment the wish that we might have again one of

our talks of long…past days; over the purposes and methods of our

art。  And my friend; wiser than I; as he has always been; replied

with this doubting phrase 〃Could we recapture the zest of that old

time?〃



I would not like to believe that our faith in the value of

imaginative art has diminished; that we think it less worth while to

struggle for glimpses of truth and for the words which may pass them

on to other eyes; or that we can no longer discern the star we tried

to follow; but I do fear; with him; that half a lifetime of endeavour

has dulled the exuberance which kept one up till morning discussing

the ways and means of aesthetic achievement。  We have discovered;

perhaps with a certain finality; that by no talk can a writer add a

cubit to his stature; or change the temperament which moulds and

colours the vision of life he sets before the few who will pause to

look at it。  And sothe rest is silence; and what of work we may

still do will be done in that dogged muteness which is the lot of

advancing years。



Other times; other men and modes; but not other truth。  Truth; though

essentially relative; like Einstein's theory; will never lose its

ever…new and unique quality…perfect proportion; for Truth; to the

human consciousness at least; is but that vitally just relation of

part to whole which is the very condition of life itself。  And the

task before the imaginative writer; whether at the end of the last

century or all these aeons later; is the presentation of a vision

which to eye and ear and mind has the implicit proportions of Truth。



I confess to have always looked for a certain flavour in the writings

of others; and craved it for my own; believing that all true vision

is so coloured by the temperament of the seer; as to have not only

the just proportions but the essential novelty of a living thing for;

after all; no two living things are alike。  A work of fiction should

carry the hall mark of its author as surely as a Goya; a Daumier; a

Velasquez; and a Mathew Maris; should be the unmistakable creations

of those masters。  This is not to speak of tricks and manners which

lend themselves to that facile elf; the caricaturist; but of a

certain individual way of seeing and feeling。  A young poet once said

of another and more popular poet: 〃Oh! yes; but be cuts no ice。

〃And; when one came to think of it; he did not; a certain flabbiness

of spirit; a lack of temperament; an absence; perhaps; of the ironic;

or passionate; view; insubstantiated his work; it had no edgejust a

felicity which passed for distinction with the crowd。



Let me not be understood to imply that a novel should be a sort of

sandwich; in which the author's mood or philosophy is the slice of

ham。  One's demand is for a far more subtle impregnation of flavour;

just that; for instance; which makes De Maupassant a more poignant

and fascinating writer than his master Flaubert; Dickens and

Thackeray more living and permanent than George Eliot or Trollope。

It once fell to my lot to be the preliminary critic of a book on

painting; designed to prove that the artist's sole function was the

impersonal elucidation of the truths of nature。  I was regretfully

compelled to observe that there were no such things as the truths of

Nature; for the purposes of art; apart from the individual vision of

the artist。  Seer and thing seen; inextricably involved one with the

other; form the texture of any masterpiece; and I; at least; demand

therefrom a distinct impression of temperament。  I never saw; in the

flesh; either De Maupassant or Tchekovthose masters of such

different methods entirely devoid of didacticismbut their work

leaves on me a strangely potent sense of personality。  Such subtle

intermingling of seer with thing seen is the outcome only of long and

intricate brooding; a process not too favoured by modern life; yet

without which we achieve little but a fluent chaos of clever

insignificant impressions; a kind of glorified journalism; holding

much the same relation to the deeply…impregnated work of Turgenev;

Hardy; and Conrad; as a film bears to a play。



Speaking for myself; with the immodesty required of one who hazards

an introduction to his own work; I was writing fiction for five years

before I could master even its primary technique; much less achieve

that union of seer with thing seen; which perhaps begins to show

itself a little in this volumebinding up the scanty harvests of

1899; 1900; and 1901especially in the tales: 〃A Knight;〃 and

〃Salvation of a Forsyte。〃  Men; women; trees; and works of fiction

very tiny are the seeds from which they spring。  I used really to see

the 〃Knight〃in 1896; was it?sitting in the 〃Place〃 in front of

the Casino at Monte Carlo ; and because his dried…up elegance; his

burnt straw hat; quiet courtesy of attitude; and big dog; used to

fascinate and intrigue me; I began to imagine his life so as to

answer my own questions and to satisfy; I suppose; the mood I was in。

I never spoke to him; I never saw him again。  His real story; no

doubt; was as different from that which I wove around his figure as

night from day。



As for Swithin; wild horses will not drag from me confession of where

and when I first saw the prototype which became enlarged to his bulky

stature。  I owe Swithin much; for he first released the satirist in

me; and is; moreover; the only one of my characters whom I killed

before I gave him life; for it is in 〃The Man of Property〃 that

Swithin Forsyte more memorably lives。



Ranging beyond this volume; I cannot recollect writing the first

words of 〃The Island Pharisees〃but it would be about August; 1901。

Like all the stories in 〃Villa Rubein;〃 and; indeed; most of my

tales; the book originated in the curiosity; philosophic reflections;

and unphilosophic emotions roused in me by some single figure in real

life。  In this case it was Ferrand; whose real name; of course; was

not Ferrand; and who died in some 〃sacred institution〃 many years ago

of a consumption brought on by the conditions of his wandering life。

If not 〃a beloved;〃 he was a true vagabond; and I first met him in

the Champs Elysees; just as in 〃The Pigeon〃 he describes his meeting

with Wellwyn。  Though drawn very much from life; he did not in the

end turn out very like the Ferrand of real lifethe; figures of

fiction soon diverge from their prototypes。



The first draft of 〃The Island Pharisees〃 was buried in a drawer;

when retrieved the other day; after nineteen years; it disclosed a

picaresque string of anecdotes told by Ferrand in the first person。

These two…thirds of a book were laid to rest by Edward Gar
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