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Sollers 1
Strange solitude
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A
Strange Solitude
*
A
Strange Solitude by Philippe Sollers
Translated by Richard
GROVE PRESS
INC.
•
Howard
New
York
Copyright
© 1959 by Grove Press, Inc.
Originally published in France by Editions as Une Curieuse Solitude 1958
du
Seuil
,
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 59-12221
A
Strange Solitude
is
published in two editions:
A cloth bound edition A specially bound and signed copies lettered A through Z and commerce numbered ,
1
edition
of
26
4 copies, hors
through 4
Grove Press Books and Evergreen Books are published by Barney Rosset at Grove Press Inc., 64 University Place, New York 3, N.Y. ,
Distributed in
Canada by McClelland
6-
Stewart Ltd.,
25 Hollinger Road, Toronto 16
Manufactured
in the
United States of America
1090185 “The most beautiful courage of the courage to be happy.”
—Joubert
all ,
— From
Philippe Sollers’ meteoric rise
the awk-
fame is probably without equal ward impatience of youthful in French postwar literary his- desire, to the final dissolution of
to
tory.
A
22-year-old student
when
love
new awareness
a
into
of
—
everyman’s eternal solitude published late in 1958, Sollers thing in this novel converges immediately won the enthusiastic toward the revelation of a gen-
A STRANGE SOLITUDE was
human truth. A STRANGE SOLITUDE, in its Proustian de-
acclaim of the foremost French eral
Mauriac, Henriot, Ara-
critics
gon
— who hailed
as a masterpiece
his first novel scription of love,
extraordinary
its
worthy of com- maturity, and poetic insight,
among
places Sollers
parison with Proust.
A STRANGE SOLITUDE an exquisitely told story of
is
six-
the front
ranks of today’s novelists.
T predicted
François Mauriac:
a
teen-year-old Philippe’s love for glorious career for Philippe Sol-
Concha, a Spanish beauty almost
lers,
and
book confirms
this
my
twice his age. In a narrative sufpredictions.” fused with poetry, Sollers gradually unfolds
an astounding vision Robert Kemp: “His language has
finesse Reflecting him- a rare perfection. The the self in his desire for Concha as and the tenderness constitute before a mirror, Philippe holds original character of the work.”
of love
and
.
life.
transfixed each
moment
of carnal Louis Aragon:
”It
passion and tender emotion, each day that a young
moment of happiness and despair. “I
touched,
I
groped,
back the walls of
made hands I
sure of .
.
.”
my
I
sensations,
them with my own Separated from
man
rises
STRANGE SOLITUDE it
is
a blessing, like the
and
appears,
coming
of spring.”
Henriot:
"A very good
book, an outstanding talent
STRANGE
—a
revealed in A SOLITUDE bv the
writer. This fiction.
not every
women. In my pushed opinion, when a book like A
ecstasy of feeling rarely portrayed
modern
.
speaks so well of
Concha, Philippe finds a feverish Emile communion with the world in an in
is
.
is
twenty-two-year-old author Philippe Sollers
.
.
.
draws me, with an ex-
Sollers
he speaks directly, quisite exactness!’”
I’ve
always planned to write to someone thou-
sands of years and miles from
my own
someone with no duties, illusions, or passions, someone capable of feeling no emotion except for what matters:
human
the
adventure.
I
know how
life,
ridiculous
even grotesque such a notion seems.
Still, if
tion needs excuses
I
its first
justification
(which of course
and
imagina-
don’t believe),
should be the solace
it
provides.
My words would be merely inspirations cast into the void
when
everything
is
over, unrecognizable. This
mind I think of as emerging from retreat, would be concerned with antici-
person, this pure
some
ripe
pation alone; patiently and scrupulously weighed, his
every quality would expect a performance that
was always the same though
infinitely various, like
wave sustained by the same necessity though with more or less vigor and insolence. a
1
Philippe Sollers
would begin writing him without too much preparation. I would count on time, fatigue, and I
habit to provide the kind of conscientious banality that might keep
would
my
sentences orderly.
realize that such discipline
that the extreme limit of tual site of
my
my
investigation,
pen-point and violently
is
And
then
I
impossible—
consciousness, the ac-
happens
to
resists expression:
be
at
my
a curious
would conquer me if there were music near. “I find myself,” I would write, “in a strange solitude, the kind you would like, but different enough, I suppose, to leave you with a feeling of contempt. As a matter of fact ( don't laugh) it seems as if the world has disappeared, though I recall a few silhouettes, several odors, one or two landscapes, here and there the shadow of a feeling. But I cannot believe that my life (I mean whatever was least habitual for me) can still cling to what is called
delight
reality. Besides,
describing the sort of person
I
am
have reached a point of vantage— but it seems to me I am far from that. Exceptions can never be explained, but I am an exception; that is,
presumes
I try
my
I
best to be. Nevertheless,
I
should like to
summon up what energy and insight I have left and hurl them into the battle. What battle? The combat is a strange one when you take every blow for fear your own might fall wide! 2
A
Strange Solitude
You know, still
be
me
binds
light ?
tried to find
if I
one word for
to the world, I think that
all
that
word would
Probably light means something— asks for
our participation, our violence. The luminous mo-
ments
can serve, even by contradicting them,
I still
are speaking to
a sign that
me
memory As
radiant, magical? tion of life? I
—by what
now, half whispering. itself if it
must look
(in
me,
at
Isn’t this
any rate)
is
were an inspired correc-
for the reasons, find out
how
devious ways, what imperceptible move-
ments— I have reached this somewhat too perfect domain, where everything that doesn’t matter is still
S
shuddering
.
.
.
But then?
x
La cam con poca sangre los noche I think Concha must have ,
ojos con
,
after I did, that vacation.
mucha
arrived the day
During dinner the night
(when the combination of the two words seemed so comical) there had been a long discusbefore
sion of the
new
Spanish nurse. Although disap-
knows how unapproachable Spanish women are, I had remarked— quite casually —that it might be a good chance for me to practice my Spanish. But the next morning I stayed in my room, peering out of the window and attributing a thousand faces to the woman, not to mention all kinds of forward behavior. You can't imagine how the mere mention of somebody new arouses a character like mine. Beforehand, in the most harmless pointed, for everyone
remarks of the night before— even a disapproving tone was
5
enough— I had discovered
reasons for be-
Philippe S oilers
ing in love with Concha, reasons that surrendered
her to
me more
ence: such
is
fully than her appearance, her pres-
makes you
the shyness that
desire
someone without ever having seen her. And I was at the age when you fling yourself on every victim in the vague hope of finding someone who imprisons you in her unresisting consent, which happens to be what you fear most of all. I could not think of a
woman
without imagining that
I
possessed her—
though ignorant of the nature of such happiness. dreamed of Concha's breasts.
She arrived.
window
I
It
was raining hard, and from
I
my
could see only the tops of several um-
brellas, the
hem
of her skirt, her ankles— things that
moved me
only
much
was dying
later. I
to
come
downstairs but afraid of looking presumptuous, out
The babble of raised voices continued, though everything depended on just one, and I
of place.
strained to distinguish
its
uncertain progress,
its
was laughing, would rather have
pauses, interruptions, cascades! She
she was searching for words.
died than leave tion I
my room
feared— it was that
I
and betray a preoccupadifficult to
wrest myself
from it— was transparent. She was coming up the
stairs.
This time,
I
could
6
A
Strange Solitude
no longer. Crossing the landing, at least I would seem to be doing something perfectly natural. But suddenly we were face to face. I saw stand
it
nothing but her eyes. They took irony that
I
me
could barely stammer out
in with such
my
greeting,
bow, smile. They were eyes that looked at you something I was quite unused to, probably because ,
was unwilling to give anyone else this power. There was no time to discover their color or what kind of face they sparkled in. She was wearing black, dim as a priestess— someone very severe and imposing. Even today I can’t see a woman in mourning without seeing Concha again, black-haired and somber with the sparkle of impertinence in her eyes. I
Later
I
discovered that her sadness, as in
many un-
constrained sensibilities, was a thousand miles from
her surface feelings, and concealed
itself,
out of
modesty or merely manners, behind a casual gaiety that reveals its possessor to be widely experienced
and
utterly detached.
She must have
felt
that seri-
ousness was something to be kept to herself.
At dinner,
I
examined Concha openly, without
and she returned my stares. A woman could scarcely be less concerned: she neither refused nor joined battle, and her eyes rested on my subterfuge,
my being able to against my desire. Like
own, curious and cold, without decide
7
if
they were for or
Philippe S oilers
all fine
eyes, I discovered their color
was
difficult to
brown nor green, with a slight purshe seemed to use to good advantage. I
identify, neither
plish cast
hated having to talk to her, for
my
observation was
was the only person who spoke Spanish well enough, and since she pronounced French so badly, I had to serve as her interpreter.
curtailed, but I
This linguistic complicity immediately created am other that seemed to me to go deeper. When her face,
after registering the assault of a
me
question,
mute appeal, I was happy. Everyone liked Concha for different reasons. Men felt her force of character, which they interpreted as temturned to
perament.
in
Women
regarded her as exiled bv her
pride and therefore, in their terms, harmless.
When,
at sixteen,
you are a poet and the
least
bit
good looking, there are certain kinds of behav-
ior,
certain airs that
you
are.
make people
Concha had glanced
a
an
new
how
me two
stupid
or three
my
imagination had taken
invitation. I stared at
myself in mirrors with
times with an insistence for
at
forget
That she should be so pretty and not yet have married— at thirty— that she was. self-satisfaction.
8
.
A
Strange Solitude
found
as I soon
out, so unambitious, I set
down
to
no passion that suits a woman better than indifference; yet Concha seemed to triher fatalism. There
umph
in
it
is
without deliberate
effort,
merely because
was delighted and in despair that she should seem so remote, and that her glances were belied by her composure. I invented mysteries for her just where more lucidity would have recognized an immense capacity for unconcern. She was elsewhere perpetually, irrevocably, and it was really a pity to treat her like an her nature so inclined her.
I
,
inhabitant of this world, since she remained so ap-
parently alien to
it.
“Do you go out a lot, “I
in Spain?”
never leave the house. There’s nothing to do.
Sometimes friends come by.
I
spend the
rest of the
time waiting.”
“For what?”
“Oh nothing. The next day.” Or again: “Do you have a lot of friends?” “No. I don’t like having the same faces around me very long. Besides I don’t know why, but I al.
.
ways seem “But
.
to attract bores.
why come
don’t have to at
9
to
home?”
.
work
in
France when you
Philippe S oilers
“I
was too fond of my don’t know how to do any-
was bored ... or
own way. And
since I
else I
Some people prefer the that of their
own
family.
subjection of strangers to
At
least they don’t
have to
participate in the difficult gymnastic of switching
from
irritation to affection
are, after all,
every other minute. There
people dear to our hearts
cannot bear having on our nerves.
probably
less sensitive
when
And
the heart
is
whom
we.
nerves are
no longer
involved.
Concha explained it to me very well: In Spain, a strict
woman
alone
and too old-fashioned
is lost.
People are too
to stand for a situation
they consider so abnormal. Instead of listening to
my family’s
complaints, I’d rather be in France, put
up with a few (Looking
obligations,
at me.)
But
it
and do what
I
want.
seems pretty dull around
here!”
What confused me was
that she said all this
without the slightest irony, the least trace of bitterness. For the first time in my life I had met some-
one who asked for nothing, and
I
was too used
to
feelings that ran all the higher for being lower to
understand
this
absolute calm that was neverthe-
less linked, in flashes, to so
much
sensitivity.
This
indifference, moreover, extended to every domain.
10
A
Strange Solitude
even to those where she might be supposed to protect herself— to her reputation. Later she committed
which only the proverbial es igual can explain. And what had to happen happened. She would never have intervened to avoid danger or to insure pleasure. There is a nobility of bearing which is merely apathy. Yet in Concha a series of imprudences
was no sign of such inhibition upon her physical being. She was spirited, in fact, save when she had to argue, or answer questions, or make any there
kind of decision. Then her face dissolved, she with-
drew
into her shell, se metia
en su concha
how
knowing
of looking for a lover than of
to repulse one.
And
as I
She was no
told her in a carefully prepared pun.
more capable
,
people interpreted as cold-
what was only uncertainty, a longing to be determined by events, to yield to them with that talent for catastrophe that all the Spanish seem to possess. I’m not entirely certain the fact that Conness
cha was Spanish made helped.
When we
me
love her, but
are very
it
doubtless
young we want love
have an ambiguous, unfamiliar character, as if everything derived from a magical tradition, and speaking to Concha in Spanish, making love to her to
in
Spanish— being unable to wound
her, rouse her,
please her except in Spanish— gave this language a
sacred and incantatory value. But
11
I
soon realized
Philippe Rollers
Concha also escaped me by this means, was concealed by protecting shadows where I couldn’t that
grasp the sense of her remarks, her choice of words being too personal or too subtle.
Yet for Concha there was certainly one advantage in speaking a language that was not my own: everything which, in French, might have annoyed or disappointed me assumed, in Spanish, a new color,* a depth that dazzled me.
The conversation one
of
hei compati iots might have found vulgar or insipid had for me the importance of a revelation, offering so
many
secret correspondences, so
latable formulas that
seemed
natuie of a iace. Besides, discipline
it
and perhaps a
many
untrans-
to express the
whole
would be a praiseworthv
crucial
one — if
men
tired
of speech to the point of obsession
were suddenly to change languages, using only a borrowed vocabulary, creating a new, closed world with no links to their childhood, their fatigue.
edy
is
Although such a remprobably illusory — and would function, more-
over, only as a sedative— it
would doubtless choose some language other than Spanish, which offers to those unfortunate enough to have studied Latin certain evident relations,
certain analogies
that are
always deceptive. But at the period when approaching Spain and Concha, it was as if
I I
was had
landed on an island of fugitive and verbal treasures
12
!
A
Strange Solitude
which I always identified with the same being, and which disappeared with her, all the more precious because there was so little time to evaluate them. And when Concha talked, the contrast between the
warm and
cold of words, between the harsh tonal-
and the pulpy softness of the cs and z’s (when the tongue moves against the teeth as if to line them with felt) the confusion of ity of
b’s
the
and
r’s
v’s,
or the jota
produced a kind of equilibrium that
opposed extremes, reconciling them in a ragged music of storms and calms, heights and depths, attacks and concessions. Which is why Spanish, a nervous, uneven tongue
ceaselessly
.
.
.
(exhausting and mingling every register) that forces the voice to adopt an apparent rage but also a dan-
gerous sweetness (always armed),
is
the language of
fascination.
And
the changes in Concha’s voice
seemed
to
depend on whether she was speaking for herself (when she would whisper: an invocation) or abandoning the bother of
civility
to
an unconscious
machinery of ready-made expressions.
How peat
it,
I
I
loved her to say / Ojala
To make
her re-
invented endless conditionals to which she
would answer with a "Would some classic tirade
to
Heaven" worthy
.
"But IS
if
(some catastrophe) were to happen?"
of
.
Philippe Sollers iOjalâ ! ...”
And
I
never tired of
word, of any borrowing from what did not touch her too closely, from this imperious music. .
this
.
have said that at my age any victim seemed likely, provided she resisted my inexperience. With Concha, I soon had to adopt an equivocal attitude. I
was always with her, and others besides myself might have been surprised we were so free with each I
other.
But a
little
nerve
is all
the insolence the better noticed.
And my
to see nothing,
since
its
My
own
its
you need. The greater chances of going un-
family, seeing nothing or wanting
was probably inclined
to
indulgence
interests weren't at stake.
friendship with Concha,
which had developed spontaneously (she had no one else to talk to), relieved everyone else of troubling about her, made things easier for her (for though she was supposed
be taking care of the children, she was more of a chamber maid— like chamber music) and ultito
mately became a kind of tutor to prepare
me
for
mv
coming examination. One of my aunts gravely reminded me that the study of an idiom (this was the word she used) is an extra string to your bow.” But what kind of wood I was going to use for 14
A
Strange Solitude
my arrow— to scarcely
risk a
seemed
remark in doubtful taste— she
willing to suspect.
Often in the afternoons, Beatrice, a childhood friend with whom I was supposed to be on flirting terms,
came by
to play tennis.
Concha would an-
swer the door, serve refreshments. I always enjoyed the contrast between them: the blond girl in her tennis skirt, the pale dark-haired woman always dressed in black (to the point of deserving this piro po, that
is,
a dandy’s compliment à Y espagnole:
tQuién ha muerto en el cielo Tara que la virgen vaya de luto? Beatrice,
my
who was no fool, had
feelings about
smile at
me and
probably guessed
Concha, for not only did she
recite:
dans Séville une enfant brune et tendre Nous n eûmes aucun mal, hélas ! à nous entendre
yai connue
—verses she must have picked out of some anthology
and which
I
stupidly scowled at— after
volved only me; but another day,
15
all,
that in-
when Concha
*
Philippe Sollers
brought in a tell
tray, Beatrice
her to put
dissatisfied,
move I
it
was brazen enough
to
down, and then, pretending to be even showing impatience, asked her to it
three or four times.
thought Concha would throw the glasses in
her face. Beatrice must have thought so too, since she suddenly thanked her a little too warmly and
never played such a trick again. "What’s the matter with her? She looks sick,” Beatrice hissed at me, disappointed at not having upset Concha. Yet
this
was not
hadn t the presence
their last skirmish,
of
mind
to relish to
which
I
my own
advantage. But the next convinced me I was in love with Concha, and you will see how, later on, though
she never suspected
it,
I
thanked Beatrice for
that.
Sometimes a sentence or even a tone is all that two people need to create a fatality they can no longer
was at a party my sisters were giving and which Concha had helped to prepare. Her position, escape. It
her age, her mourning, which lectures to
appear of
modify so that
in the living
chasm around
had taken many she would even agree to
room— all
it
this
created a kind
her, sitting, or rather
perched on
an armchair, eyes blank, her expression utterly woe-
begone-a way she had of looking at the slightest disappointment. Her hair made her bare neck into something
fragile
and
inviting, faintly grooved.
I
16
A
Strange Solitude
walked toward her and she looked up, smiled, and said eagerly: ‘‘Did you see all those dances, Felipe? My God! I couldn’t do the first step. Ive forgotten so quickly!”
She watched indulgently, enjoying her own memories, soon indifferent.
I
offered her a cigarette
which she accepted. She smoked unselfconsciously, breathing the smoke out her nose with a sudden familiarity that was not at all habitual in her. She must have noticed my surprise, for no sooner had she begun than she nervously stubbed out the cigarette.
Beatrice walked toward us with a telltale
smile, holding a glass she
even looking offered
at
handed
Concha, to
whom
to I
me
without
immediately
it.
“Ma parole
,
he’s
paying court!”
Her voice embarrassed me even more than her innuendo: a shrill, disastrous tone which trembled slighdy on the last words. “If
it
weren’t true,”
Concha
said with a
little
thrust of her chin, stumbling over her words, “you’d
be annoying him, and me. So in any case
it
if it
was
were, you’d be annoying
silly.”
had to admit she was only joking, and walked away with a wink. I felt nothing, yet it seemed something had unraveled in my desire and Beatrice
my 17
fear to approach Concha.
Philippe S oilers
we?”
“Let's go outside, shall
As we stepped hand she held out tainty that
I
me.
to
I
of concern for me.
hand, thinking
how we
And
I
squeezed her
often need things to
a play for us to behave dramatically.
prised
me
took the
was moved by the cerConcha had answered Beatrice as she
had only out like
dark terrace,
off the
in Concha's attitude
was
seem
What
sur-
that she wasn't
the least bit angiy with Beatrice, questioned
me
about her with every sign of the most secret—
though the warmest— admiration in her voice.
The house became as busy as a hotel. My family had asked some relatives to visit— an old, blind, halfdeaf man who spent the day sitting in a comer of the living room. Then chance, which has a vulgar
made everyone Spain. I thanked God
imagination,
decide to spend ten
days in
for
ures,
me
which obliged
exams. So
we
stayed at
man, Concha, and
I,
my
academic
to prepare
home
fail-
for the next
together, the blind
without counting the two
chil-
Today such coincidences seem wonderful to me. But nothing that moves in the direction of our dren.
desire surprises us at the time
would be scandalized
if
itself.
Instead
we
nothing happened.
18
A
Strange Solitude
Any was
would have to be mine. Concha enough not to take offense at a situ-
hesitation
intelligent
ation others might have considered scabrous.
The
could have deterred her?
What
difference in our
ages? Obviously, she already regarded the gap as a delicious twinge of conscience. Fear of scandal?
She was too unconcerned to pay much attention. On the contrary, her past, which I thought I glimpsed one evening in the way she smoked (any man who knows something of Spanish women will understand how this behavior might surprise me) must
have encouraged her
may be As
in this
weakness — if the word
permitted.
for myself, entirely
concerned with realizing
an experience so ardently longed for, I paid scarcely any attention to Concha’s problems. It is only afterwards
always
we
discover
for in desire
we
listen to ourselves.
Besides, everything I
women,
much
learned
later.
was decided beforehand,
Had
I
known
it
as
at the time, I
should probably have been afraid of succeeding.
But
how
could
ends— on the grossly,
it
At
first I
guess that everything begins— or
far side of pleasure. I
with
all
to
moved toward
the impulsiveness of ignorance.
thought sleeping with a
had a chance 19
I
brag about
it.
woman meant you
But
I
was
to discover
a Philippe Sollexs
meaning— so much do we live olf the appearances a bed reduces to their nothingness. The first day we were alone seemed to last forever. Would it never get dark! Concha soon noticed the way I was hovering over her. In the first stages of desire— though we still don’t know what we dethe trap of
its
real
sire— we are afraid even our breath
may
designs of chance. Concha, sewing,
had caught*
white thread in her it
out,
making
all
hair,
and
I
kinds of faces.
we perform around
a
woman
spoil the
was trying to pick The childish dances
are an attempt to re-
duce the distance separating her from us without altogether losing face (later, consciousness of this
absurdity makes us prefer being coarse and miserable in our adventures). But Concha,
who
I
thought
was being indulgent when she simply desired me, did not repulse
me
with those terrifying glances her
pride could muster.
Once the
dishes
were washed, the children
bed, the old relative installed in his
comer
in
of the
room (always motionless and mute, like an automaton which only some sort of machinery kept alive), we found ourselves alone in the study. I was soon bringing in my records and some old photographs I had found in the attic; I spread them out on the carpet and we knelt beside each other, laugh-
living
ing hilariously as
we examined
them. The singer
20
A
Strange Solitude
played his guitar and endlessly expired in a long provocation
full of
darkness and despair. Sometimes
Concha stared at me was so rapt by her face, by
smiling, sometimes earnest,
without a word, and
I
her secret verdict, that these sudden tossed
me
about
(in turn) like
shifts in
the sea.
I
mood
took her
hand as if to escape the exaltation of the music, which was too beautiful not to provoke an attack of hysteria. The record was just over when the old man called. Concha sprang up and ran toward the living room. She was there long enough for me to join her where she sat, pensively contemplating the blind man, his blank face raised toward the ceiling. I sat down on a Recamier sofa which, since she was still sitting on the floor, was slightly above her. Sometimes the old man spoke to her, and she answered him with kind words or even comforting noises. My face hung over hers, which I was seeing so close for the first time. The darkness fell on this Suddenly Concha, raising herself slightly on the palms of her hands, kissed me, exclaimed something, and ran into the other room. The old
strange
trio.
man, hearing a
noise, stood
ing incoherently, while
She was back
I
in the
up
in terror, jabber-
ran after Concha.
study where she was pre-
tending to examine the pictures. This time, no longer hesitating,
21
I
fondled her, having heard that
Philippe Sollers
if
you
tickle a
woman you
can
how how
tell
aroused
beyond my understanding, did not react, played dead. Even when I began caressing her small round breasts beneath she
But Concha,
is.
“
natural”
her black jersey— the antipodes of is,
my
dreams; that
of obscene picture-magazines— she failed to
that
movement
have doubled bling,
my
would
of defense which, of course,
my
pleasure.
And
face blank, she coolly
while
I
make
was trem-
went on looking
some ancestor wearing a straw hat. I wanted to kiss her, or rather to bring
my
at
face
near hers. But either because she decided she could
become a
punctilious after yielding, or be-
little
cause she was
now
afraid of the results, she fled
again, laughing, elusive: ‘‘Be formal, be formal” she
shrieked
during
(
all
desires, I
formal
in Spanish,
,
the time
we were
means
serious).
And
running, disrupting our
covered her face with clumsy kisses that
missed their mark and merely brushed against her skin. still,
But when the kisses
I
I
succeeded in making her hold
gave her,
my
burst out laughing, spattering
first kisses,
me
made
with her
her
saliva.
f
on a balcony overlooking the garseemed—unless I was inventing it— as if the
Later, leaning
den,
it
22
A
Strange Solitude
garden was night cast
among
remember
the branches, the occasional pur-
my me
breathing beside
emotion at hearing a for the
first
this intimate interval separating first
out of the chaos
if,
a flower exploded.
ity of I
moonlight,, as
full of
time, there
is
something
time in
my
two bodies
like a
woman life.
In
for the
magnetic
field
which suddenly— and without our being aware of it —makes us discover the desire or the danger of the other
.
We
kissed each other, clumsily.
have no
taste at
all,
actually,
only as shocks. Yet they ure,
one
we had
The
first
kisses
one experiences them
become an unknown
pleas-
never suspected.
Concha was in such a yielding mood— although so playful— I was dying to ask permission to come to her room. With a little experience, I would have gone without asking. But I had just reached that first stage of love when you imagine that agreements can be reached by words. I Thrilled that
asked Concha, who, of course, answered no. Then, with an instinctive gesture proving that I deserved
no other answer and that first love swells the defects of any age to its extreme consequences (and mine consisted of sulks, the tantrums of a spoiled child), I
gave her a look
I
hoped was
slapped her. As a matter of
23
terrifying
and
I
fact, falling in at this
Philippe Sollers
point with the incessant farce self, I
would have
was acting
I
my-
for
liked the moral right to slap her
without really hurting her
must have supposed that was “how you took a woman”). But Concha seemed so startled she didn't even think of slapping me back, and rushed away without a word. Infuriated
by
(I
this incident,
more
seeming so
for
ridiculous than for having “missed an opportunity,’’
went back to my room, began taking off my clothes. The choice was up to her, I’m not going to beg. But once these melodramatic words were I
uttered I
I
realized
how
silly
and stagey they were.
ran to Concha’s room.
She was so kind refuse
my
me
her bed.
it
I
incoherence and
did not even occur to her to think she even pitied
me
my
already
clumsiness, as
loving me, she regarded
me
as
if,
for
not responsible.
“Venga, venga ,” she whispered as I came in, trying not to make any noise. But I was so upset that I couldn’t even tell if she was ordering me to stay or leave.
As f>
“/V en ga!
I
hesitated she
Then
I
repeated impatiently:
quickly took
off
trembling, slipped between the
my
pyjamas and,
warm
sheets.
She
dared not move, as though the same fear paralyzed her, as though the same desire made her solemn. I smelled the strange perfume of her hair— her face
was turned away from me: by strange
I
mean
that
24
”
!
A I
Strange Solitude
could never compare
it
to anything real. I soon lay
upon her without trying to possess her, hesitating upon her lips with shudders and giggles. Inquisitive, her mouth became cooler the deeper I penetrated within
We
made
my
mented
it.
love as well as
we
could, for she aug-
ignorance by her repeated and an-
quished / cuidado to such a point that
I
withdrew
too soon, experiencing only an incomplete sensation.
me this permission (to possess her only much later, one day when she saw
Yet she granted completely) I
was
happy
so
moment
that she decided
on
this
recompense
mute yet meaningful questioning that precedes pleasure. It was then, looking straight into my eyes and smiling to see me so satisfied, that “ she whispered in my ear that Echad which no for the
of
man, once he has heard
it,
can ever forget (and her
Concha spoke
it,
was a sudden
voice, as is
groan). It
how rich the vocabulary of loveSpanish, how evocative in imagery and
remarkable, too,
making
sonority. desire,
in
is
For desire
is
above
and anyone might
fill
all
the vocabulary of
pages with these sa-
vory, quite untranslatable expressions
the
power
of
making us imagine
which have
love.
was nothing more than her breathing, her warmth in which I was beginning to live. Yet once aware of pleasure, I sensed I would But that night
25
it
Philippe Sollers
become aware of
also
that love,
when you
pain.
Fori had
just discovered
are not prepared for
and
it
your imagination struggles with the phantoms of feeling,
cannot resolve the enigma of a face,
enough
to free us
the
moment
to suffer
from our habitual
lies.
is
not
Yes, from
came near her, I felt all I would have from Concha (I should have realized: from I
myself).
The next day Concha put on a blue skirt and a white blouse and (it was Sunday) went off to Mass. I was going to have lunch with Beatrice, at her home. By what miracle I was able to get up, dress, and assume a decent countenance,
see people,
cannot say. tional
It’s
moments
I
when we live through excepour own that we learn to meas-
only of
ure the extent of other people’s inattention.
No
one notices that our mood borders on indecency or scandal, even when we are convinced it must leap to
every eye. The world
are gratified fort in I
fact,
blind,
and
if
our vanity takes
our secrets little
com-
it.
heard nothing anyone said to
tounded less.
by the
is
My
to
hear
my own
me and was
as-
voice answering neverthe-
mind was wondering where she could
be,
26
A
Strange Solitude
imagining her movements, the smile that bloomed
on her
Gradually,
face.
somewhere
else, tasting
of distraction
I
even pretended to be
simultaneously the pleasure
and the pleasure
of not concealing
it.
wanted Concha to think only of me, to concentrate on seducing me, on maintaining the already mythical image I had of her. But she prob-
Of course
I
ably had better things to think about than pleasing
me, and better things to do than thinking about me.
‘
iQué escuela
edly, while
I
tienes!”
tried to
Concha
said to
seduce her with
me
all
wick-
the re-
and smirks of my character which I considered irresistible and which would have made me die laughing if I had sources, the twitches, the affectations
to
endure them.
added I
sadly,
“who
“If
no one loves you now,” she
will, ojos
chinos ? But
why
should
love you?”
Her hand hovered a moment over her face, trembled, ringed the words she had just spoken as if to give them shape, and finally fell back after two or three hesitations. “Why should I love you? Words are silly when they try to speak for the heart. ...”
But precisely because of 27
my
inexperience with
Philippe S oilers
would have preferred a well-put lie to inarticulate truth: I needed that commonplace expression more than all the silent certainty of her affection and her desire. I had what I wanted of her body, of course, but nothing of her memory, her mind— supposing it existed—was accessible to me. betrayal,
I
And instead of being content with pleasure as so many others would have been, I could not help thinking she was somehow concealing her memories and emotions from me. I have always suffered from a lack of indifference toward other people. In love, I advanced slowly, exasperated to find her so calm. The wise choice would have been to take her and —for the rest— keep
still. I
knew
it,
without wanting
to.
Always, between lovers, occur those interminable conversations getting nowhere, effacing every-
thing that
is
not a confidence, a secret, recounting
adventures of no interest, interminable details avidly listened to.
But Concha told such strange
stories.
An orphan
wandered through the streets of Pamplona, ran beneath machine-gun fire, was wounded in the right leg where a drv, precise scar corroboat eight, she
28
A
Strange Solitude
rated the past she referred to in a strangely calm
voice— a certain amount of suffering or doubt deprives the voices tion.
Never had
which I
interpret
listened to
them of all intonaa monologue with
more attention. But this was because the world Concha talked about had that fabulous qualitystrange, antique as well as the
— of the generations that precede us,
mystery of her race which, though
had some Spanish blood, would never be mine. From the names occurring in our conversations and I
serving as pretexts for arguments different
we
are from those
who
we
discover
how
are not our age.
These involuntary manifestations of language, these references to names of an unknown period (famous
movie stars forgotten a few years later)— such things, had I yielded to my mind, which must judge according to appearances, would have warned me that Concha and I were far from understanding actors,
each other. There was in her bearing, of pain so intense (an ineffable,
pain) that,
knew how
young bourgeois
too,
an image
somehow
eternal
as I was, I scarcely
to act with her.
Every hiding-place was in our favor. I discovered diat a house can be more than a site of habits
and memories, can suddenly change— like any ting
once you love someone in it— can become a
kind of shadowy castle
29
set-
full of fears
and
pleasures,
Philippe Sollers
and more intense than those I remembered from the little wars of childhood, the
more
terrible
ambiguous experiments of schoolmates.
Most frequently we met in the kitchen, whose cupboards had always lured my preferences, my reveries, though what led me there was quite the opposite of self-communion. Even today I know nothing of a house
I
if
haven’t visited
its
pantry.
not only the odors that linger there— chlorine,
It’s
grease— but even more the spectacle so varied that —visually— nothing
I
can think of pleases
me
so
much: the cupboards, the shelves, the pans hanging on the wall, the sink, the stove Pleasure changes a person’s character in propor-
my own
was enormous. I was constantly hovering over Concha, compelling her to endure caresses which the danger of discovery, the unaccustomed nature of the setting, and her unacknowledged fear must have made so thrilling for me. I came to understand how vanity makes tion to his imagination,
and
we could enjoy without danger. when we might have been seen, we
us risk pleasures
One
evening,
walked out
been
left
into the garden.
on,
and
whispers, rustles,
sprinklers
had
in the twilight, these whirling
fountains looked as join in the dance.
The lawn
if
they were beckoning us to
The garden was full of murmurs, like someone turning over and 30
A
Strange Solitude
over before going to sleep.
My
hand, beneath Con-
was lying on her thigh, not moving from the one place. She had thrown her head back, her long hair hanging behind the bench we were sitting on, and I could see the profile of her luminous neck, cha’s dress,
her thin
lips.
.
.
.
Another time, in the
attic
crowded with old
books and furniture:
“Can you hear me breathe?” «XT
No.
“I
»
have very quiet breathing
.
.
.”
Everything in
Her body seemed an astonishing object to her, and she referred to her physical qualities in an amused tone of voice, tossConcha flowed
at half speed.
ing her head, as
one
all right!”
if
she were saying: “She’s a queer
Often she mentioned her power of
not losing her breath. Running, stairs: ity.
As
lifting,
or climbing
nothing in her breathing betrayed her activif it
scorned any manifestation, the rhythm
and she grew someone else, sub-
of her respiration stayed the same,
impatient— did not understand— if
same test, began panting even slightly. Thus Concha seemed guided by superior principles and decisions, so that her appearance became a mystery which could perpetuate her in this equiva-
ject to the
lence of
all
sensation. Yet sometimes, in panic haste,
she would strip off her clothes while at the same
31
Philippe S oilers
time preserving— for form's sake— her minor
reti-
cences: “Did she really have to be stark naked?"
knows she does." stretched out on the bed, with
“Yes, of course, she
And
then,
that
vacant look of unknown realms already in her eyes,
my weight to fall upon of my expectation. But I
she waited for full
burden
compass her with caresses
until she
her with the liked to en-
shuddered with
impatience.
The
light,
the pictures half-covered with bed-
sheets, the dark carpets disappeared.
And we skillfully mingled fear with pleasure: who was hammering so loudly on the first floor? The bed creaked: who knew we had agreed to meet each other here?
and my own swift desire seethed, gradually rising, moving blindly toward its goal. Like sudden lulls among the leaves, Concha's breathing separated from mine, while our shoulders met, our hips and haunches made sure of each other and (by imperceptible But she soon became quite
.
.
frantic,
.
shocks) of our satisfaction.
«
How
fast those
hours passed
warning— from the deep sense
I
learned— it was a
of never being the
32
A
Strange Solitude
same
at
even a few minutes'
recognize myself,
I
Unable to
interval.
labored to give
my
actions that
which would exclude all correction. I forced myself upon the present with all my strength. With Concha I multiplied every risk and whim. Sometimes, after lunch, I went to her room. sign of definition
She was napping, the shutters closed, in a half-
and vague. The sun, through the top panes of the window, composed submarine landscapes on the ceiling. And Concha herself seemed abandoned on her bed as if deep light that
made
the
room
cool
within some ocean grotto.
my
knees, thrust
my
I
stood beside her, bent
face against the nape of her
neck. She pretended to be asleep, even beneath
my
caresses.
not quite
Suddenly
wake
I
seized her, yet she could
up, endlessly turning in
my
arms,
her legs, her arms, her sluggishness.
stretching
Gently, so as not to seem importunate,
I
kissed her
moist palms, her bare shoulders. Often she kept on
was a special trick to make her take it off as if her sleep and not I were responsible. At last I held her against me, naked beneath her long shift (whose whiteness made her brown skin all the more brilliant), her cool mouth upon my own her brassiere, and
which, in
its
moments,
I
it
inexperience, found
wasn't sure whether
further or withdraw, so great did
33
itself I
invaded. At
should advance
my
boldness seem
Philippe S oilers
to
me.
was
I
afraid of seeing her
wake up
again,
having reached the point where she could no longer claim sleep as an
have
on our
to decide
the point where
alibi,
roles,
we would
consider each other as
two strangers— who knows?— as two enemies.
And
yet
I
found
it
quite natural that she should
never seem awkard or embarrassed or
was with the with masks.
truth that
And how
I
began;
artificial:
It
have continued
I
describe that drooping pos-
complex union of sensuality and indul-
ture, that
gence occasionally carried extremes? But what
I
to deliciously perverse
liked best of
all
was her face
which I have never seen since among all the faces I have borrowed. It is no exaggeration to say that it bloomed. By some mysterious transfusion her face was flooded with an unknown color, restored in the sweetness of a sigh. But what always amazed me most of all was an incredible sureafter love ,
ness that
seemed
to spread in the film of tenderness
across her face, blurring her eyes, her nose, her smile, a certitude that welled (for she I
loved only pleasure).
did not separate— I have never separated— the
fact of living
from that of experiencing pleasure.
Sensual pleasure press
up from her pleasure
its
will in
is
me.
always the
And
first
welcome its not only do I hope for
not only do
recollections with gratitude,
instinct .to exI
34
A
Strange Solitude
their help at the
moment
pacify and reassure life,
they exalt
ments
I
bring to
And if
my
so,
me
of
death, but they
as to the usefulness of
my
love of conquest and the refine-
1 S 8
it.
when
my
I
f
•
1.
0
^>
find myself thinking of
the same pleasures
me
fill
that I
seem
Concha, to
have
known
before, then this illusion— perhaps not an
illusion
but a reality mysteriously located on equal
footing with the old illusion— this exaltation of reliving the
same
intensity that once transported
me the key all my being.
to that
finally offers
yearn with
.
.
me,
world for which
I
.
Yet Concha always appeared to be considering
me
with an amusement which was doubtless only her surprise at finding me so in love with her, so careful to hide it from her, and so clumsy in both roles.
the
She cocked her head a
way you
little,
look at children or pets.
looking at
me
Though not
a
muscle of her face moved, she was so obviously smiling that her eyes
filled
with that vague, cruel
dance they so often showed me. Yet
Conchas was ticed
it
this cruelty of
neither spiteful nor noisy: she prac-
with a gentleness which gave her judgments
that definitive tone people use for bores
35
and imbe-
Philippe S oilers
She had a way of approving, “Yes, of course,
ciles.
yes, yes,”
which
thought) ought to have given
(I
me the creeps. Even when
she was in a good humor,
happy— it seemed— to be with me, suddenly, and not by coldness but instead by a somewhat ex-
quite
cessive gaiety,
I felt all
the distance separating
me
from her, the whole possible measure of her disdain.
amuse herself with me, by me, apropos of herself. She would no more have been able to distinguish strength from among my weaknesses than I was capable of appreciating her motives. One was only as good as one looked, and Concha offered little credit. One was clumsy, riShe was here
to
diculous, boring, with (one imagined) the better
mind and the more been smart
to
would not have worth.” How she would
subtle heart. It
“show
one’s
have laughed, careful to maintain this
modesty,
this
come over you? to those farces
tastes
this
expression that said:
And
distance,
“What’s
no attention by which we carefully magnify our ’
then, she paid
and even our incapacities
in order to acquire
a special “sympathetic” quality to account for ourselves as a personality.
We
defects, claiming that
if
must be
to
as extreme:
insist
on certain of our
they are so absolute,
compensate for certain virtues
it
at least
a dreamer likes saying he “can’t do
36
A
Strange Solitude
anything with his hands’’ because his family, surprised to find
miringly told
him him
so meditative, has always ad-
so until he supposes that the
proposition “can’t do anything with his hands,” necessarily leads to
mind!
”
An
artist
'yes,
but what a wonderful
proclaims his fondness for music
and exaggerates
his indifference to painting, sup-
posing that
exclusivity ennobles his passion.
this
show off what they contain, each of us believes he makes himself “touching,” “human,” comprehensible and yet mysInsisting
on
limits the better to
terious for being so peculiarly unbalanced.
Such ingenuity
left
Concha with nothing but
the impression there were things you didn’t like,
from discovering, as you might have hoped, those of your tastes which were thereby reinforced, she held these incapacities against you and thought
and
far
that
you were a
No
“effect”
fool not to
keep quiet about them.
impressed her: she was really an im-
possible person.
Not
that she
was
stupid, but she
had neither the time nor the inclination to seem intelligent, always pressed by some crucial issue— she
who seemed
was too natural thing.
37
so purposeless. to
want anyone
And
besides, she
to think
such a
Philippe S oilers
During those eight days we were alone,
I
took
her to a bullfight. For some reason, the streetcars weren't running that day. Concha had invited one of her friends, a fidgety
monster
little
stopped wiggling, chirping, laughing. Concha's serenitv and balance j pervious to the other
girl's
with a look that convinced
We
walked
fast,
all
I
never
appreciated
the more: im-
excesses,
me
who
she smiled
she wasn’t listening.
accompanied by the
still
little
and impatient to find a cab. Soldiers passed, glanced at Concha, and shouted some obSpanish
girl
scenities at It
me.
I
turned beet-red,
had never occurred
to
me
like a simpleton.
our intimacy could
be guessed or even speculated about— that’s how much, when you’re in love, you conceal love's ob-
Concha smiled contemptuously. Five o’clock aheady— we were going to miss the first bull. Notic-
ject.
ing a taxi turning on our
shoved her
inside,
left, I
took Concha’s arm,
and shouted the address
bull ring to the driver.
He
drove
off at
of the
top speed.
Back on the sidewalk, the monster screamed after us and waved her tiny arms. Concha scolded me a long time, smiling.
The
when
bull ring
she saw
it.
was
and Concha grimaced There were many Spaniards in small,
the audience, their wild taunts unmistakable. Con-
cha made fun of the bare shoulders of a
girl in
38
A
Strange Solitude
front
of
us— in
she
Spain,
said,
such effrontery
would be hooted out
of the stands.
bull ran into the ring,
dazed
at
first,
The second then furious,
throwing himself against the barriers, spoiling his horns against the wood.
Few
use the cape and have a real talent passes
were
determined
Gloomy now, her
face
set,
put the entire responsibility for
this
disastrous. to
know how to for it. The first
toreros
mediocre exhibition on
my
swered none of
my
smiles.
shoulders,
Concha an-
She was bored, but
I
took comfort in the thought that she probably en-
joyed letting faint,
me know
forced /ole! that
Then a
The audience offered a tried to seem spontaneous. it.
real shout greeted the picadors (the
are soft-hearted).
The
bull,
French
a thin, supple, cunning-
looking animal, apparently seized with the same terror that ran start,
through the audience, took a running
jumped,
fell
and with the help
on
his belly across the barrier,
of his hind legs
managed
to
Everyone was stand-
scramble over to the other
side.
ing, shouting, or hooting,
while the spectators
who
happened to be in the narrow alley between the ring and the seats ran, jumped over the side, waved their* handkerchiefs as if they were trying to rouse their
own
fear.
back in the
him a 39
little,
Someone managed
ring,
for
to get the bull
I’m not sure how. They stuck
something
to do.
Everyone shouted.
Philippe Sollers
By
the tercio de mnerte the torero had done noth,
ing but wind his bull, leading ring.
He was
a
tall
him
all
devil with a tired look, a kind of
Quixote, and he must have
spiritless
around the
known what so little. The
he was doing if he exposed himself sword went straight into the lungs: the cuadrilla
made
the animal, spitting blood
from side
to side.
A
Quixote decided
few graceful to
saliva,
turn
wretched silence weighed on
the ring. Since the bull couldn't to die, despite a
and
make up
his
mind
genuflections,
Don
use his puntilla. Once. Twice.
Three times. Squeamish spectators began to stir. Four times. Five. The shouting on the sun side was deafening; it swept across the sand and seemed to revive the blood-spattered torero,
who began
run. People laughed, people shouted, people
to
began
to get angry.
Very simply, Concha stood up and
moved toward
the
exit.
Two
or three people around
us followed her example. “Even so," thinking of the bulls, “there are
Hard
as I tried to
mal side of from which Yet
this
my my
still
be innocence
love for Concha,
I
murmured,
four to go."
itself, I
the abnor-
mean
the side
vanity could suffer, bothered me.
uneasiness was quite superficial and did
40
A
Strange Solitude
me to modify my relations with her very deeply. Had I heard of '‘ancillary loves?” I don't know. In any case, it was inevitable that one of my
not oblige
friends, visiting the
house on some school errand
and noticing Concha, who was ceremoniously serving tea, risked a joke which her beauty made inevitable. I was very careful to contain myor other
self, to
control
my
face so that
revealed nothing
it
but a vague though ribald satisfaction. For told
my
friends
I
loved her,
if I
had
don't think they
I
would have laughed: they would have pitied me for being naive enough to be caught by what they regarded as an accident. Never having had much taste for confidences, I made so few about my feelings that even my best friends couldn’t tell I had fallen in love, and I had to force myself to match their jokes. Not that I was opposed to crudity: in fact I suppose it's one of the few subjects boys can still communicate about. But, loving Concha without knowing it, I found it hard to endure exposing
my
feelings,
lowest
sort.
even unexpressed, Later, suspecting
to
my
language of the
friends of attach-
ments they employed considerable clumsiness conceal,
I
actually forced
them
denials current
among boys
pleasure being
all
to
41
to
make
to
those verbal
of a certain age,
my
the stronger because they had
humble themselves
to satisfy
it
(adolescents are
Philippe Sollers
doubtless so coarse in love only to protect themselves
from
feeling,
ness). If lovers only
those
who have
guessed
my
which they know
their
weak-
knew how obvious they
are to
already loved! But that no one had
feelings for
loved me, led
is
me
Concha save
to believe that
Beatrice,
being in love
who is
a
and that it is only derided because it is so little known. I was inventing an old saw with which I was extremely pleased. Of course, I realized that to an uninformed mind this adventure might seem quite banal and vulgar, easily summed up in the (very naturalistic) expression: “the so-and-so boy is sleeping with the maid”; if doubts as to what might have been called Con-
rare condition
cha’s
“morality” were objectively justified,
swered
all
such hypotheses which
my
an-
I
passion for
lucidity put forward with absolute confidence
and
calm. There was not the slightest trace of duplicity in
her— such
is
the indulgence the practice of pleas-
which their detractors are far from possessing. This is what made Concha irreplaceable in my eyes. And yet she was always amused by what she called my “snobbery.” ure gives
its
enthusiasts,
“You think
I
don’t
know you?
You’re scared to
death someone might see you with me!”
Perhaps what she said was too often assume our
true, for
own bad
we must
all
faith against our-
42
A
Strange Solitude
selves.
But
taken
who
I
think she
insist
was mistaken,
on attributing
ordinary vanity finds
it
her,
to us the defects
logical for us to possess.
In love with Concha, tion,
as all are mis-
I
could only pity her situa-
and when I couldn’t keep from talking about I always emphasized her delicacy, the respec-
tability of
her family, the exceptional nature of her
position— without,
however, anyone’s paying the
slightest attention; a valet,
even
enter
its
if
maid was a maid, a
he was Jean- Jacques.
Pity,
valet a
when you
apprenticeship, provides along with
ways savory sympathies, the
satisfaction of believ-
ing yourself the only one to feel them. like Cinderella,
its al-
busy with menial
my God!) which Prince Charming
I
saw
her,
tasks (sweeping,
(guess
who) came
along from time to time to sweeten with his kind-
Love is supposed to be the poor man’s wealth. We were poor: she in money, I in spirit. Yet I was often genuinely moved by this impossibility for Concha and me to have a normal life, a normal ness.
love. I didn’t realize yet that all these peculiarities, all
these barriers served in fact only to
passion for her, to drape
When, 43
for instance,
it
augment
my
in inestimable secrets.
Concha came
to
my room
to
Philippe S oilers
open the bed, close the cold drink, could
we
shutters,
me
and bring
a
really understand the intimacy
I
shared, that sudden, temporary solitude
my
united us in the house of
which
childhood against a
background of music and daydreams; my joy in looking up from a book and seeing her open the door, that
my
come toward me,
all this, far,
as
I
kiss
me; could
I
perceive
then thought, from frustrating
Of course these moments were not painful for me. But I was prevented from tasting them to the full by the instalove,
bility of
rapture
gave
it its
true measure?
my character; instead of yielding of my youth, I wanted to pursue
imaginary ones, and beneath the Concha
my
I
to the others,
had
in
arms, beneath her smile, her attentiveness—how
she forced herself to seem happy!— I
divined a Concha
Concha
I
I
would never
must find out
Yet, as I
.
.
possess, a secret
.
have already explained,
myself with these moments as
if
I
I
waited for Concha’s evening
pale carpeting that set off the
intoxicated
they were never
to reoccur, so inimitable did they seem.
where
invariably
My
room,
visits,
had
handsome mahogany
Empire furniture with its brass dragons, strange crowned heads, flying muses holding lyres, creatures out of some fairy tale. The room’s colors were red and green— red for the hangings, the two little chairs 44
A
Strange Solitude
at the foot of the bed, the
Green
for the
lampshades, and the
bedspreads and the armchairs. The
bookcase added a note of variety,
filled
lows, whites, ochres, browns. There paintings,
sofa.
which
I
had chosen
with yel-
were only two
for their insignifi-
which Concha, suddenly and soundlessly appearing, seemed to step into the room (and I was pleased her charcance. But the better of the two, out of
harmonized so well with her surroundings; it permitted me to love her twice as much), showed acter
a rather stocky
woman whose
dark
hair, sparkling
and pale skin always surprised me. And I liked Concha to wear those rather extravagant tortoiseshell combs that set a cool gleam at the nape of her neck. She herself— que tal?”— seemed to glide across the floor without a sound (she often startled me) and as I watched her advance toward me from eyes,
end of the room with the freedom, the ease of manner that was the first thing you noticed about her, I remembered Baudelaire's lines: the other
Tes nobles jambes sous
les volants
Tourmentent
obscurs et les agacent
les désirs
quelles chassent
Comme deux sorcières qui font Tourner un philtre noir dans un vase profond.
Then
I
turned
down
the radio until
it
unheard, stood up, went toward her to
45
played on kiss her,
Philippe Sollers
which seemed
to surprise her
knew whether
this
each time.
never
I
astonishment was feigned
(a
kind of coquetry) or genuine (which would be a disaster). In
any
case,
it
unpredictable quality,
gave our kisses a clumsy,
when
for
was waiting
I
against her cheek, breathing the odor of her hair,
me
she suddenly turned her head and kissed
with
an expression of indulgence or casualness, except when she produced all sorts of refinements, folding
my
back
lip
and lapping,
cat-like,
with the
tip of
her cold, sweet tongue.
One
of
my
traps,
was
to ask her to
her.
We began
when
change
my
I
wanted
to catch her,
bed, promising to help
very earnestly, taking
off the sheets
and folding them up. Then, when the mattress, thus exposed, revealed
its
to find a hole in
it;
Concha leaned over
we
it
together, soon inextricably inter-
rolled across
hideous
stripes, I
pretended
to look,
and
laced.
To
take revenge, she once
the sleeves and legs of skill;
another time, to
fill
managed
to
my pajamas with infinite my bed with thistles that
she had picked on purpose in the garden. she
left
on
my
sew up
One dav
pillow a tiny figurine— a dwarf from
46
A
Strange Solitude
Snow White, with
a funny yellow cap and a blue
which hung an interminable beard. I still have it. These jokes irritated or touched me— to tears. I would have enjoyed them more if I had known you tease only those you love, a character-
jacket over
of Southern peoples that often reaches cruel
istic
proportions.
And when I felt a sudden desire for her in dark hallways, when I pressed her into a comer, caressed her feverishly without provoking any objec-
her face, not disapproving— as
tion,
consider
me
responsible— turned
if
she didn’t
perhaps
blank,
from pleasure. But in our lovemaking, her eyes, a little
lust
bloodshot, turned green, disturbing, wild (with
or—was
I
wrong?— pain,
at the point
where pain
and pleasure are inseparable).
On
the other hand,
if
she was angry,
“jVéte a freir esparragosC— or, better didn’t
know where
me, laughing,
if it
this
it
was:
for she
still,
country was and would ask
wasn’t “in Russia or somewhere
“jVéte al Congo Belga!” a phrase up there. which incessantly recurred in her conversation, (Moretinging it with an involuntary exoticism. over, supposing it to be an idiomatic expression, I took some time to realize that she was talking about .
.
.
the Belgian Congo.)
47
.
Philippe Sollers
My cha’s
family soon after engaged a cook on Con-
recommendation; she was a friend of Concha’s,
a heavy-set, naive girl with nothing attractive about
her except, years.
suppose, the freshness of her twenty
I
Concha
treated her like a younger
sister,
petted her, teased her with an hauteur which convinced me that the social categories persist even within a caste regarded as inferior. This farmer’s daughter, for Concha (whose family included doc-
and lawyers), was a friend to be endured with condescension. And yet there was a constant amiability between them which Concha tried to explain by saying that Andalusians like to sing even when tors
they go without food or freedom. (Yet the
from
Seville,
lowing her
with her
s’s,
way
girl
was
of systematically swal-
asking Concha: “jEre vaca?” instead
of “tEres vasca ?”
which would have avoided the
bad pun!) We respond to certain unfavorable situations by what is deepest in ourselves: Concha and her friend
made
liveliest gaiety. I
to
them laughing
it
a point of honor to parade the
would go
into ecstasies listening
in carcajadas
,
Concha’s voice
al-
warmly with the other girl’s shrilled tones; her own had a velvet patina, a darkness that made ternating
it
seem more
exotic
and remote,
its
carefully
modu48
A
Strange Solitude
lated expression subjecting soft
all
her words to a single
measure. don’t
I
know what
it
was
that
seemed ambigu-
ous in the case of their manner. Perhaps love gives us a false sensitivity which occasionally guesses right because of
came
its
very audacity. Laughing as
into the kitchen to
I
admire them, they swiftly
caressed each other with a composure I considered forced. In moments like these I discovered a Con-
had never imagined, no longer hunted but in pursuit of a consenting prey almost dazed by the
cha
I
upon her. (Yet perhaps without my being aware of it— and I discovered the possibility only after witnessing this spectacle— I had attentions lavished
been a victim of the For all Concha s
enough its
to gain the
strategy.)
ease, girl’s
I
sensed she was subtle
consent while concealing
importance. Mingled with this uneasiness of mine
was the obscure consciousness that Concha had a an uncertainty about her past. I rather resented her experimenting with the pleasure she gave me with such extraordinary skill; I sensed that as long as she desired him her partner could be changed
secret,
without her satisfaction being affected.
49
Philippe S oilers
The
girls
were
in the habit of taking their siesta
together on Sunday.
from morning
The house was empty
that
day
was the only time I could be alone, make whatever noise I wanted to, play the piano, put on a record whose tune I followed slowly through every room in the house, all the doors wide open. You can imagine how much I worked. And probably not at what you might think, to evening. It
but at something which, in slightly pretentious terms,
was no
important:
less
worked
I
at myself.
Those long daydreams, those uninterrupted hours of reading, and especially this affair (which brought
me
into the world), did
my
place— for
more—forgive
happiness than
the world. But
my wits when
how do I
all
I
common-
the studiousness in
know, having always used wanted to and only then? I
me
Empty, the house invited Concha.
the
didn’t
let
to
make
the opportunity
love to
slip.
After
lunch, the siesta substituted for the one essential
intimacy
we
lacked: nights together.
infatuation for her friend, our cook,
But Concha’s
became
so ex-
treme that she insisted on having her in the room,
even
day
at a
moment
we met on
I
imagined
Concha’s bed
abandon the pleasure for a
mere impulse
had asked me
my (I
own. So one Sun-
was reluctant
of feeling her lying near
of vanity,
to
me
and besides, Concha
to stay in a tone that should
have 50
A
Strange Solitude
me
led
to suspect a certain exhibitionism).
game began, and
the caresses under cover of dark-
me
ness reminded
Soon the
power
of that evening during a
had taken so long to find candles that Concha and I had had a chance to embrace in the darkness; except that by mistake I had embraced the other girl, who, thinking I was Concha, had burst out laughing though letting me do what-
failure
ever
I
when
it
But the
liked.
movements
to
siesta
permitted
all
these
seem involuntary, merely a playful
innocence.
Toward
the end of the afternoon, both
girls
dressed to go out. Then, after Concha said good-
bye with a pitying smile that was supposed to mean: “There, there, it doesn’t matter, you know I have to go out once in a while,” and after I had sulkily refused to kiss her (although, conscious of
her
frivolity,
she tried to
make up
for
it
by
offering
me her lips), I hid behind the curtains of my window to watch her leave, then ran to her room which she
still
had not grown accustomed to locking. I sat down on the bed, and stared at the
went in, dormer window, the gray skylight, the cheap carpet and the raw wood wardrobe I was now going to 51
Philippe S oilers
Overwhelmed by an extraordinaiy sense
open.
wealth in
wretched
this
setting, I didn’t
enough, imagination enough to take
impregnate myself with everything.
wardrobe and buried
my
it
I
of
have eyes in,
all
to
opened the
face in her dresses, her
bathrobe, her panties, her brassieres.
I
was excited
by anything that could give me an unexpected image of her, anything she abandoned to habit or negligence. So
where odors
searched through
I
all
her clothes
feverishly anticipated lingered as in
were—reassuring, not didn’t forget to rummage
her hair (ordinary odors, they at all provocative).
through the
little
letters. I didn’t
But
I
bureau where
I
hoped
to find
have the sense of being jealous— for
nothing in her adventures would have
made me
suffer— only infinitely curious about eveiything that
could share and count in her lover
who
of a
work he admires.
Concha,
I
also felt I
had created the woman her past, her
more
vice,
So
I
had reached
present Concha, by mediation of a
thousand touches, a thousand
it
like the poetry-
pays dearly for the manuscript variants
my
know
life,
unknown
I
loved. For far
from hating
would have liked to love her more subtly, with
life, I
better in order to
more
which
futile attempts,
delicacy.
*
searched through her papers with the ardor
of a critic about to say something startling about
52
A
Strange Solitude
a personality so famous that 'even able, his
remark
only give
it
if it is
will not diminish that
more depth or ambiguity.
I
unfavor-
fame but spread out
her snapshots on the table, eliminating those that seemed too innocent, searching for the face, the attitude,
would
the relative, the friend, the lover,
yield
me
this
woman;
who
leafed through her
I
perfumed papers. Among letters otherwise insignificant (and which merely confirmed her republican convictions) I discovered poems and songs
naive,
clipped from newspapers— or even rather clumsily
copied out on note paper. This find surprised
more than
if
I
had read
in
some
that he believed in God. It
is
me
libertine’s diary
always a painful
discovery— painful for our vanity— but also thrilling —to learn by accident that our beloved can live extraneous to our power, to our best hypotheses about her. And confronted with these poems, I had the
more about Concha than from any confidence, even if (and perhaps because) they were
sense of learning
nothing but an accident in her
That was how Concha.
And
I
in her
spent
my
life.
first
vacation with
name which meant both cove
and shell— and the beach itself-I glimpsed a rough, full beauty that rasped like sand rubbed between 53
Philippe S oilers
wet
fingers,
a beauty chiselled by some unsuspected
stubbornness, isolated until
has the faded charm
it
up by chance. But so perfect do they come to seem, endowed with a power severed from the world and yet secreted by it, that soon we can no longer do without them. Inaccessible of objects picked
as they are,
them
life
seems to have withdrawn from
to leave their architecture in peace.
there like traces of
many
They
alterations— which
we
are will
never know. Trembling in our hand, they can be only caressed or destroyed now. But nothing can
modify them without diminishing them. Thus the name Concha, whose accented first syllable rang out like a furious trumpet
subsided with an unexpected satisfac-
final “tcha,”
tion clasped within its
various
thickening with the
call,
it.
And
this
word, coated with
pronunciations— sometimes
clumsy—rested deep within me tion enriched at every
like
deliciously
an old imagina-
moment by new
woman who bore it seemed to fit it so
finds.
The
closely I could
not separate the two, could not possess her save
by
its
intermediary.
And
I
decided, with a certain
grandiloquence, that just as empty
them
to our ears, bring us the
were
bom
in,
illusion?— if
so certain
we
murmur of the
shells, if
we
hold
sound of the sea they
women— by what
beneficent
take them in our arms, restore the
infinite.
54
Two In October
Concha,
I
went back
briefly, at
And then
I
to school. I
was
to see
Christmas and again at Easter.
learned that she had suddenly
left, in
a
mysterious rage which was never explained.
At
first,
didn’t feel
during vacation, I
oblivion and silence
I
am
to recognize
my
attachments.
in self-possession (not
I
needed
How
knowing how
to decide
sometimes uselessly — just to know what the time,
I feel
you knew
if
me
a
little
them so
think,
better.
At
distinctly, that
being unable to choose one because of sion of perceiving
them
provisation. Later, once
55
I
and
every possibility of an opinion or an
attitude so clearly, foresee
to
to
deficient
anything), obliged to wait, to wait endlessly
would be funny
I
how
missed Concha yet-that was
much agony and be able
loose ends.
I felt at
reach a decision,
my
all, I
my
confu-
yield to a kind of im-
my mind forgets
that
preferences speak.
it
had
Philippe S oilers
Beatrice,
who had been
married
a
off to
man
of
(though an agreeable person, and shrewd enough to give her a child almost at once), lived thirty-five
on an estate a few miles from our own property. Guessing that I would be lonely, she fondly assured
me
When
of her friendship.
I
visited her after her
baby was bom, she was already up, eager again
to
be as seductive as ever. Maternity gave her a calm expression that transformed her former nervousness. Carefully dressed in a gray suit which set off her
blond hair
to
advantage,
skillfully
perfumed and
decorated (wearing extraordinary jewels, the kind she could ask you to admire at close range), she circled about
school had
me, discovering
made me.
I
how clumsy and rude
found nothing
to say that
could provoke our old, almost hysterical laughter. I realized I had once been so unselfconscious only
because
I
hadn’t
known
certain secrets.
prefers us to be spontaneous,
please
is
why we
more than when we are not trying
used to it
which
like
me when
I
The world to.
never
Beatrice
didn’t desire her, for I
found
easy to be natural. But
thousand visions
Concha had awakened a which made me discover I had
never really seen other people before. help thinking about this as
who was culty
subtle
enough
I
I
couldn’t
looked at Beatrice,
to enjoy increasing
by a thousand innuendos. But
my
my
diffi-
astonish-
56
A
Strange Solitude
ment reached its peak when the conversation turned on Concha and Beatrice complimented me on my friend and showed me a letter from her (and she had written nothing to me!), assuring me Concha sent me her best regards. Later, by cross-checking, as well as by a long confession from Beatrice, full of hesitations and retractions, I learned they had been close enough friends
my
during
to cause talk. All this
absence at school.
Beatrice
actually
claimed that Concha had taken her marriage as a pretext to leave. This seemed an excessive reason
my
me:
to
family was fond of Concha, and she
couldn’t be that jealous of her
new
friend.
.
.
.
Beatrice insisted on this explanation, assumed airs in talking
her old (I
to
about Concha, assured
But all
me
knew all too well where she got the recipe) that make her eyes sparkle she endured the torture
“à
l’
espagnole
’
of salt-water. I asked her
had mentioned me. But she wouldn’t
own
other hand, she lavished her
if
say.
attentions
Concha
On
the
on me.
women love us only because we have been And who knows whether Beatrice, by pro-
Certain loved.
voking me, didn’t long to
live vicariously
in
the
knew— or guessed— I felt for Concha. Sensiwho have loved the same person produce a
love she bilities
kind of cloudy complicity, finding out at
57
last,
I
think— a faint hope of
of discovering a different
and
.
Philippe Sollers
perhaps the true face of the love stranger.
It
.
who was
such a
.
me
was September, and Beatrice asked during the afternoon.
several times,
countryside the
way
it
looked at the
I
over
liked the
city’s
edge.
Surrounded by vineyards and orchards, the house
seemed the
capital of a mysterious realm.
for hours at a time, heedless of
danger
I
walked
as I crossed
the skeet-shooting ranges where the shots seemed to
explode inside
my ears. Delighted by a risk so easy to an adventurous
take, I fabricated this
spirit for
myself:
calm broken only by gunfire, these heavy vines
solidly planted in the yellow earth, these odors of
foliage in the dew. ...
my
a sweat,
We
came back
my
feet soaked,
clay. Beatrice
o’clock.
I
had
took
lit
tea.
a
to the
house in
trousers covered with
fire in
the living room. Five
She stood up to put on a
re-
on a great red sofa where her black dress suddenly looked like a threat. She raised cord, then reclined
her arms over her head with such emphasis that
was obliged
to
consider this capital of flesh above
her forehead. Eager for
sumed to
I
me
to
admire her, she
as-
the most unexpected poses, evidently pleased
watch
me
judge them.
Still
out of breath from
58
A
Strange Solitude
my walk, my hand
I
remained
following some musical phrase
old record, Back
though it
on the edge of a
sitting
my
o’
Town
was an
Blues that Beatrice liked), ,
only interest in the tune was to see
changed the expressions of her face. We stayed there for an hour or two,
nard and
(it
chair,
my
father arrived; the latter
company me back
to town.
The
interval
how
until Ber-
would acwas sweet
and ambiguous. I glanced at Beatrice, at her bare shoulders, and her eyes sought mine, though I pretended not to see them. The wonderful approaches of desire! We spoke little: had there been more conversation
we would have
trembled.
The French
doors opened onto the garden, and the twilight
smelled of slipped by, face.
warm wet meadows. As I
saw the
She darkened with
toward habit, and
I
light fade this
the minutes
from Beatrice's
afternoon that flowed
could no longer surprise in her
gaze, in her bearing, the promise that
had been
yielded to nostalgia.
Bernard and
my
father arrived,
and Beatrice
immediately became too nice, too kind. After a cer-
becomes more disturbing than restful. Beatrice and Bernard embraced with a passion that looked overdone, for I found it in-
tain dose, attentiveness
conceivable that someone could be in love and not
be me. As convinced as 59
I
was
of Beatrice’s
skill, I
Philippe Sollers
wondered whether she was a clumsy amusing,
need
And
me
or only de-
Bernard simply did not see me. In
sire.
ally
love for
felt
little
boy, a
whom
he invited
if
occasion-
to satisfy his wife’s
though not
for child’s play, I
boring
trifle
his eyes I
in his presence.
found myself so absent from the world he
lived in
was an absence
that
in every regard)
that
(it
powering
was already overI
topped
off
my
innocence with a somewhat forced naïveté (feeling justified as I
at stake),
son
who
always did whenever
my
pleasure was
imagining myself as an entirely could have an
affair
evening,
we
per-
with Beatrice which
would have no consequences: the comedy has no parts for other people.
One
new
of desire
waited for Bernard and
my
seemed nervous, and stirred up the fire with furious jerky movements. At eight, she ordered my dinner to be served. Somehow the conversation took a somewhat literary turn (Beatrice greatly enjoyed what are called ideas). We were discussing— I remember it all perfectly— eroticism (she liked her ideas to have a certain spice).
father in vain. Beatrice
“For me,” she sentence
when
said, “it’s all in Juliet’s
one simple
she wakes up in the tomb and finds
60
A
Strange Solitude
Romeo and
beside her. She leans over him, kisses him,
all
she says
is:
'Thy
lips are
that’s extraordinary!” I agreed,
literature for
some
time.
I
warm!'
cunningly tried to talk “It’s like
—her ghost hovering between
... No,
she
else, please!”
was— she too— by
think
and we stayed on
about Concha. Beatrice laughed:
about something
I
us.
How
a novel let’s
talk
well protected
her ironic gaiety! The
tele-
phone rang, finally. Bernard was busy in town with a client and would be home late. My father had told him he wouldn’t be coming out to call for me. They could put me up in the spare bedroom, and I could stay
till
the next day. Beatrice, out of breath
(had she been running?) came in the room, her face luminous, and announced this news standing very
near me, so near and so eager that our foreheads met, our
lips,
our happy looks. “Thy
she whispered.
what
And we
lips are
warm,”
burst out laughing, some-
hysterically.
The window opened out onto the garden. Sometimes, as her hair fell
perceive the contrary cool,
breezy
down over my face, I could movement of a plane-tree, its
oscillations.
In the courtyard a dog
barked, and a woman’s voice reprimanded
61
it
grum-
Philippe S oilers
blingly.
A
thousand sounds
could not distinguish
I
from our breathing, our careful caresses, struck up clumsy concert around
their
gleamed above her nocturnal spoke in the half-darkness, half-forgotten language.
We
isfy tive,
it
.
face,
it
was
patch of sky
and when she like
a distant,
.
gave each other pleasure with a marvelous
exactitude. desire,
.
A
us.
Ï
discovered that affection mingled with
when it speaks to the imagination, can satmuch better than love, for it is more atten-
and
freer to choose
unhoped-for partner youth, that of pleasure.
is,
as
Not
its effects.
who
loved
Beatrice was an
me
as
one loves
one loves the untutored innocence that
I
had
either time or desire to
draw comparisons, but the body has its memories, which memory knows nothing about. I reinvented the games with which Concha and I had thronged our discoveries. That had been the approach to an unknown realm, a mysterious and yet trustful excursion which had led me to the first woman, and the last too, to occupy in
me
the inestimable place
on the other hand, was all even courtesy. She would not have
of surprise. Beatrice, light, facility,
dreamed childish
of interesting
comedy
me
except by the rather
of desire to which, at the
first
even
62
A
Strange Solitude
slightly serious skirmish, she
had known
I
would
succumb. I felt
an emotional interest
in Beatrice
because
always been cast as mutual accomplices. Accomplices, with that intense feeling of belonging
we had
same
to the
race, created for pleasure
and enjoy-
ment, the race of splendid animals accustomed to with their whims and to having reality comply them. In love, Beatrice was simple, eager for her own pleasure but concerned for mine, speaking of it with that almost dissolving
longer
felt,
comradely laugh of
some movement
of panic intensity,
but only to separate myself— to find in the
sweet proximity of
Beatrice, then,
ure
in,
where
I
no
Concha, the distressing obliga-
as with
tion to achieve
hers. I
my own warmth
this other friendly
was the world
I
took
glow.
my
pleas-
recognized myself with a delight
tinged with irritation-a walled garden (perfect, too
But with Concha, I had approached some dangerous adventure, with the glamor of a fable, a myth. perfect)
My
of confidence.
head was resting on
hands on
my
sweating temples, her face on the
battered bolster,
63
Beatrice’s belly, her
when
the sound of a car,
all
the
Philippe Sollers
more disturbing because
of our calm,
made
her
was dressed again, her hair combed, unconcerned. I saw her transform herself in the half-light, assume the face which Bernard would perhaps question with the same passion I brought to Concha’s. The situation suddenly seemed funny to me, and I laughed loudly, as I spring up. In an instant she
always do, despite
my
frightened Beatrice’s furious
“Shut up! Will you shut up!” She
left
the
and I heard her run Bernard slammed the door, revealing great caution,
room with
to her his
presence
with surprising slowness, heavily climbed the case.
But a
lot I
own.
stair-
cared for Bernard or for Beatrice!
had learned nothing of what Concha might have confided to her young friend. I wanted only sleep, the companionship of my pleasure. I
The sun that gives the vines a particular soft glow in autumn wakened me through the curtains of my unfamiliar bedroom. I guessed it was late from the voices of the grape-pickers,
now
quite
near the house (the day before, they had been far away).
I
didn’t
move, so as not to break
this ice of
wakening that could reconcile the strangest elements caught in it. The world was assuming its 64
A
Strange Solitude
order, preparing
itself,
but without insistence, in a
kind of delicate dance, a
movement
like
oars in
smooth water.
A I
closed
me
Someone was opening
furtive noise.
my
eyes, irritated that
and what I
so clearly
in
my
door.
anyone should see
such disorder: I’ve always be-
dreamed was apparent to the first glance that took me by surprise. Out of the comer of my eye I saw Beatrice, naked, her blond hair tied in a black ribbon which
lieved that
made
it
secretly thought or
look less rebellious. She was carrying
my
probably
re-
breakfast on a tray so curious that
member birds,
it
I
best of all— a blue tray with dragons,
and white flowers painted on
were arranged the
it,
on which
coffee-pot, the sugar,
and
hot,
savory toast.
In Beatrice's posture, as she stood holding her two arms slightly bent against her chest, it was impossible not to think of Gauguin's or rather of
its
pale but
more
famous
picture,
insipid opposite (the
same difference doubtless existed between Concha and Beatrice). I smiled to think that by an undeniable sense of theater which she made a rule of life and pleasure alike, Beatrice had succeeded only in provoking an unfavorable comparison. She stood in the door, watchful, probably expecting me to come
and take her or the 65
tray,
but
I
stayed where
I
was,
Philippe Sollers
wondering what would happen
next.
she took a few steps into the room, as
Hesitating, if
to
be ad-
make sure I was asleep. Then, putting the tray down on the table, she stepped through the sunbeam that fil-
mired, suddenly turning her head to
more desirable in this light, and leaned over the bed where I was still stubbornly pretending to be asleep. Gently, as if she had accepted the lovers’ game which requires them to approach each other withtered through the high blue shutters,
out seeming
to,
all
the
each isolated in the blind anticipa-
drew apart the sheets with a cold, bold hand which was soon caressing me with an almost brutal skill. Between the silk of Bernard’s pajamas and my skin that was still warm from sleep Beatrice’s fingers floated, coming to a halt from time to time when polarization would have become inevitable. Between my lashes I could just tion of desire, she
glimpse her inquisitive face leaning over me, aroused
and
all
the
more
legible since she thought herself
always a terrible discovery
the only observer.
It is
to surprise a stare.
But Beatrice’s rather strong per-
fume helped me compose a pleasure of rare violence, animated as I was by elementary movements like stretching, turning over in my sleep, which I postponed, however, beneath her caresses. Finally, giving a great
start, I
drew her
to
me
as she gig-
66
A
Strange Solitude
glingly tried to smother me.
We
were soon
on the bedside rug in a storm of exclamations, and then murmurs.
rolling
kisses, tickling,
moments of amusement, short and deceitful as they were (I was never to see Beatrice again), had not been wasted, would transform themselves— I had all the time in the world! —into a future truth. For you must know how to do something with the liberties you take with life.
And
A
I
know
that these
certain degree of isolation,
you enjoy a must be the most adven-
turous thing in the world.
And when
mine,
student’s existence in Paris,
Ï
began one
if
I
returned to
of those periods which,
when
you reach a state of relative equilibrium for a while, makes you doubt your sanity in retrospect. Since Concha, I had gently let myself drift. Everything can be avoided, but the character who deserves to do so is rare: what I had deserved was most likely a lesson.
Concha and sometimes not, supposing my freedom was all the more impregnable without her. I had had the weakness of thinking this separation was the best conclusion to Sometimes
I
regretted
an adventure which could lead nowhere. Reason67
Philippe Boilers
would have done for me had I asked advice, I produced with great satisfaction one
ing as others their
of those spurious formulas which, in contact with reality,
sumed
seem
as absurd as ourselves
to apply
and
situations,
pre-
it.
we
In youth
who have
if
are reluctant to accept clear-cut
we
bring ourselves to do so
it's
always with a touch of tragedy that manages to
man who moves projected ahead of me
blur their meanings. So, like a blind
hands trembling,
hesitantly, all
I
the uncertainty, the incoherence, the pretentious-
ness
I
could muster, creating a zone of insecurity
and mystery which
I
thought came from the world
and which would have thrown me into despair had I understood its real causes. Thus the most various objects, the most disparate persons all seemed enclosed in that carapace of absences by which I should have recognized
what— who— separated me
from them. With antlike stubbornness, obscurity.
And
discoveries
the legends
is
we have
secreted
life’s
most painful
people
exist outside
of course, one of
to realize other
I
given them. They care noth-
ing for our thoughts, our fantasies, our calculations.
Disappointed, and doubtless so as not to be entirely in the
wrong,
we
write books.
68
A
Strange Solitude
At
I
first,
prepared
my
expeditions with the
precision of an explorer or a scholar.
chosen day to be
at
all. I
idiotic
the to
I
felt I
admited chance into
my
tactics after taking
had washed away an
week and was once again ready
unknown. Already
an availability
with
if I
established
a shower, for then
all
I
my
to confront
fatigue left me, yielding
could feel flowing through
the soft complicity of water
out programs and
wanted the
with pleasure, with noth-
brilliant
ing concealed or omitted,
my plans
I
itself. I
me
spread
maps on my bed, made my choice
many
among
these
—to be
really thirsty before drinking— between
possibilities, vacillating
a
little
one
amusement and another, even if I knew in advance the one I would choose. Or I would submerge myself in some department store or other. The brilliant, many-colored counters heaped with cheap clothes; the uniformed sales-girls who are always prettier at the perfume counter (I soon had a collection of bottles), the women, the smells, the soft music— this was freedom, desire, Aladdin’s cave! I must have spent hours in that fluorescent
light,
walking from one
counter to another so no one would notice me.
be unknown and yet
to
be looked
time with an indifference which,
69
To
at for the first
when
it
assumes
Philippe Sellers
a
nuance
tense,
(or
of interest,
more
seems only
the
all
more
in-
precious!
These distractions did not last long. The custom the condemnation) of endlessly wandering the
was soon inflicted; Ï could not settle anywhere, form any attachments, stop in my course. So, believing myself to be some sublime streets
from cafe
to cafe
mystery, enjoying
my
anonymity
the point of
to
crowd and discovered myself all the more a part of it when it most isolated me. I had withdrawn only on account of the humiliations I imagined it heaped on me. Each human contact was painful to me, though I approached it
betrayals, I scorned the
beneath an agreeable mask, an explosion of high spirits and sarcasm which was only the underside of
my
me.
I
sadness.
A
knew only
extremes, but
smile, a
little
peace were denied
laughter and fury.
still
A
prey to such
strong enough to desire them,
was nothing more than an exhausting
oscillation,
I
an
irremediable transition.
used to walk, interminably. That my intoxication with the streets of Paris was banal beyond belief I learned only much later. I soon became a I
student of their nightly comedy, of this world en-
trenched against the world, of the thousand adven-
and annihilates, of the stares are both permission and refusal, of the fantasies
tures chance proposes
that
70
A
Strange Solitude
on a pursuit whose futility we know in advance. Any street was inevitable, provided there was a desirable woman on it. But today I know that that send us
desire
is
we can fasten to our unknown. And once desire is satbody with it— we discover that in
only the best excuse
longing for the isfied— and our
almost every case (but wasn’t ception?) nothing is
our mind and
into the
is
its
from
settled, far
lonely quest
world again. Even love
this passion,
looking for an ex-
I
which often
and
it,
which is
that
fling us
it
out
no proof against
seizes us just
when anyone
would think we are perfectly happy. And my delight in being approached by whores, pretending to believe they had mysterious reasons for speaking to
me, was only an excuse:
appreciate the spirit at least
rows in the
flesh!”
But such
what
of finding greatness in
one truth
we can be
sure
I
can drown
women is
“If
left
I
cannot
my
sor-
me no hope
called evil. If there
is
that stupidity
is
of, it is
same everywhere. These half-conscious walks sometimes led me far afield and I took the métro home, confronted by the spectacle of the faces across the aisle. The warm the
ail*
of the tunnels, the stale hospital odors, the con-
fusion
and the proximity— close enough
reminded
me
of a trainful
some catastrophe. 71
to
of refugees
touch!— escaping
Philippe Sollers
would make pointless, incoherent trips in the sole hope of a favorable opportunity. I found no landscape more desolate than—on the MontparI
nasse-Etoile line— the surface part of the ride before
you get
to Passy.
And
I
always promised myself to
abandoned banks,
take a winter walk along those appropriate, tion.
Yet
I
thought, for a really serious medita-
lingered most of
—the marvel hour,
I
all
around Saint-Lazare
of the Galeries Printemps during rush
women
crushed together, overflowing in great
clusters onto the street (impossible to follow the
same figure long)— or, in the evening, in that garden which begins the Champs-Elysées. And always walking, stopping in cafes, afraid of returning to a dark,
anonymous room where nothing was the way I liked it, nothing was going to smile at me. But I was tireless as long as I imagined something was waiting for me. “Never go back for any one,”
I
told myself, “never get up, dress, take trouble for
anyone; drag around
like
without the least
this
.”
relief.
.
And I remembered how I used to come home when Concha was there, how she had watched for
me from
the linen-room window, raised the curtain,
and waved. And glass, staring at
made her run
to
saw her
by the me with, perhaps, that joy which open the door. I
face, distorted
.
.
.
72
A
Strange Solitude
was walking. Nothing seemed real: to see something, I had to begin with someone. The memory of Concha obsessed me. There is an important lesson to be learned from whatever it is we are willing to give up last of all. And, doubtI
loyalty to
less,
someone means keeping a certain
emotional room
intact. I
almost always visualized
her in the attitude of pleasure, but aureoled with that gentleness she was expert at perpetuating— or
me, mimicking: for then her face lit up as if she were playing some very difficult game. Her mystery belonged to an age when I must have been
else teasing
charming because of what I hadn myself and odious because of what people to know. I
had been
And
able, I
always more.
was sure
this accusation:
Remember
known about
I
wanted other
yet, for all this sickly vanity, (I
put myself to the hardest
to
t
wanted tests.
What moment !” .
.
the day you didn't
make
love to
much
time.
a price time has set on that negligible
I
found
in this
make still more which made me curse the
this solitude I tried to
complete, an intoxication realization of
my
more about than 73
sure),
“You could have loved her
Sometimes, on the other hand,
abandon,
be
But there was
her because you thought there was so .
to
desire— what could this
I
have cared
new, unforeseeable tide of
Philippe Sollers
happiness. Although they were of a rare violence, as
if
they were precursors of a magical world,
I
welcomed such moments whenever they occurred, and made no attempt to induce them. For I saw only Concha’s absence and
all
the doubts and dis-
appointments that followed from
was more moved by the thought that I should be moved, by the imagination of what I was losing, than by an unforeseeable pain which I nevertheless felt: it threw
me
on
my
it.
I
bed, absurd, helpless, incapable
of the slightest gesture. But
if
my
solitary ecstasy
was upon me, and Concha happened to come into my room (a solution that was uppermost in my mind for I scorned constructing rational hypotheses which, everyone knows, are never those which are
uppermost sorry,
for
would have been incredible happiness would have
in the mind), I think
that
I
overlapped a happiness different in essence but
less
and which left me quite unprepared to receive any other. I also told myself: “Who knows frivolous,
if I
Concha— or
really miss
when
could
just that security, that
be idle?” (But the two were inseparable.) For what I had dreamed of in comfort,
I
still
my moments of passion was as much Concha as, to my shame, the comfort of breakfast in bed, a fragrant afternoon surrounded by books, troubled
evenings, and perhaps even that spurious seating—
74
A
Strange Solitude
where there was always a murmur of complicity, a sense of protection from the world. My sensibility I in those days, reinforced by my certainty that owned what lay around me, augmented my com-
my
placency,
taste for coddling. In the mornings,
was wondering whether I should wake up, Concha used to come into my room and open the long red curtains I liked to draw even in the day-
when
I
time because of the vague light they bathed the room in. Then, depending on how she felt, she kissed
my
me
or left at once, caressing
inviting gestures. If she
me
was going
or eluding
to caress
me,
her face would hang over mine, endowed with scarcely perceptible signs and perfumes. I had the
impression of a tremendous fruit about to squash
me
beneath
its
affection often
ripe flavor.
shows
itself
And remembering by a
desire to eat
that
ones
would be no exaggeration to say that Concha was “a mouthful.'” I wanted to chew her up, to sip and swallow her, stopping at nothing.
partner,
it
saw her every night, wandering through those enormous rooms where our love had assumed that wonderful “far country” quality: great cold salons full of furniture, where a In
75
my
dreams now
1
Philippe Sollers
dusty draft came up from under the doors and
walked
we
in the evening,
brushed by the long fingers of potted palms. These dreams were particularly
showed pride and sometimes a kind of trust as well. But I always lost her, and had to look for her a long time. She seemed so removed from reality— from concrete things such as painful. Concha's face
getting up, dressing,
washing— that
was always afraid, and probably mistakenly so (for she was very skillful), that she would get lost in some forsaken place without knowing how to leave in the I
simplest way, such as taking the train, going some-
where
else.
Awakened,
I
But what
tried to read, to work.
did these pathetic distractions have to do with
on days when every face
by surprise? stares,
How many
still
times
I
seemed
questioned people's
eager to see the tumult that
ing there.
New
people!
told
I
to take
me me
me
filled
myself— but
I
form-
choked
back the gestures that would have brought them me. Gradually (accidentally)
no purpose except
I
amuse myself (for my memory would have resisted any drug).
never had so
nights when, with
began drinking, with
to
was indestructible, These bouts had nothing suppose
I
to
tragic about them,
much
and
I
fun as during those
two or three boys
I
knew,
we 76
A
Strange Solitude
hung around the little whores' bars, talking to everyone, making a thousand friends a minute, falling in the middle of the street after a scuffle, laughing at
nonsense, at admirable foolishness. People talk of the drunkard's despair, but
we
gay and unconcerned
began
to cure
me by
how
how
enthusiastic,
The
were!
stabilizing
me
alcohol even a
Our
little.
drunkenness was methodical, with an invention which, had we applied it to something else, would
have earned us universal admiration.
whole nights finding
new
tary puns.
.
pleasures in confusion, in our involun.
.
But the
was
really
remarkable quality of
their systematic aspect.
friends burst into
my
to live
knew that this time at least I wouldn't be And I realized that in the worst situations I
had and
had always found some
lasted only a its
each
man
it
it
up!”
bored. of
diversion, even
my if
it
while. In school, friendship
excesses; today this camaraderie
preferred because oric,
little
When
room, armed with bottles
and shouting: “Tonight we're going
life I
spent
in the streets, never tired, constantly
these evenings
my
We
was without
enclosed in his
which
I
illusions or rhet-
own
pleasure and
contemptuous of any attempt to share. ... We finished such evenings with some gills we had picked up or, when we had money enough, in a whorehouse. At dawn,
77
we walked home
braying mournful
Philippe S oilers
Bums were
songs about unhappy lovers.
through garbage near where
with the
and
I
I lived, I
dew.
first
bathed
Finally
pails.
my
I
I
stopped in a
had
all
was
picking
alone. Quite
little
square,
wet
the time in the world,
face in this coolness.
was waiting for some intervention to tear me from my habits and my sloth; and it was almost enough to feel its nearness to long for it to Actually
I
vanish again.
My left
health grew worse.
me
in
The asthma which had
peace for several years suddenly reap-
peared, for reasons that were
while others imagined literary reasons
thing at
all), I
(if
I
all
And
too good.
prided myself on
it
for
they bothered to imagine any-
was v^aking up
at three
every morn-
and a night I slept through was a victory, an old dream that probably would not come again for a long time. Already the first wheezing had begun and I could breathe only by raising a terrible weight ing,
off
my chest, with
like
shrill
pathetic noises that sounded
rubber toys being squeezed— something plain-
and
Then
would have to turn on the light, hurriedly swallow some useless pill, prop myself up against the pillow, and wake up for good tive
thirsty.
in order to
I
endure the obsessive exhaustion that
throbbed behind
my
eyes.
Then each minute
pre-
78
A
Strange Solitude
sumed on
the one before
it,
my
breathing gained
in depth, in breadth, in calm.
Then
gradually, thanks to the sedative— unless
the attack
was
went away by
re-established,
itself— a regular
rescuing
me
rhythm
from that high,
found myself on between breathing and breathing no longer. Other times, the attack lasted longer— the kind with long, deep wheezes swaying perch
that rose
from deep
Afterwards fill
to shrill,
from harsh
to melodi-
sounds remained unpredictable.
ous. Yet the
tating to
I
my
I
tried to
draw a deep
breath, hesi-
lungs for fear of finding
I
could not.
would die of strangulation from trying to find out if I were drawing breath for the last time. If I wanted to stop and rest (I was often forced to by exhaustion) the hurried attempt to catch up with the broken rhythm was most painful of all. It was I
imagined
I
best to breathe slowly in tiny, intermittent gasps.
There was no other way, in fact, to silence the terrible musicians. Finally peace returned. Only a few
and indulgent harmonies subsisted, my breathing returned to its normal course— like a river in spate returning to its bed— and there was nothing left to do but try to recover a sleep that had unfordiscrete
tunately
made good
At seven 79
in the
its
escape for several hours.
morning,
I
had
to get
up and
Philippe Sollers
perhaps despair was that exhausting walk
dress;
the
in
November rain.
I
when my
slept in the afternoons,
mitted
it.
But these
artificial
courses per-
naps (though
such intermediate and uncertain
I
loved
states, brief incur-
sions in a half-mad
world of uneasy adventure),
were
restorative.
far
from being
At about exhaustion,
this time,
was subject
I
remember the
first
onto the pillow,
And
move.
I
revelation of so
and probably because
I
time
didn’t even
my body— which if
this
my
blood pouring
have the strength
I
my
nose, then another.
and
I
sudden
customarily valued
I
was a
rising
held one handkerchief
The blood continued it
in
to
my
stared through the reddened cloth,
alarmed yet pleased color. I
I
tasted the faint sweetness of
throat while
to
simple hemorrhage were try-
from deep within myself. flow,
saw
I
warn me by a testimony, an accusation
ing to
to
to violent nosebleeds. I
lay there helpless before this
cheaply— as
my
of
little
to
possess
such a precious
upset to be alone,
I
didn’t
know
what I should do. Finally, with handkerchief stuffed up my nose, I managed to get to a drugstore where they gave me a tampon and a shot. 80
A
Strange Solitude
The afternoons
I
my room (Tuesfrom my chair to
could spend in
went my bed, from my bed to the window, without ever being able to stay in one place for more than five minutes. There was music though, which saved days, Saturdays, Sundays)
everything.
A
record, a radio concert, the surprise
of a forgotten
cate
and
I
symphony whose provenance,
so familiar,
I
deli-
hesitated to identify— some-
how, that took the place of happiness. And even the calmest
some
moments
of
violin passage
rolling,
my
life,
when
hear again
(where the sea has
solemnly breaking) which by
tremes had exhausted
I
my
agony and
its
filled
with tears (the height of absurdity!),
I
due,
its
very ex-
my
eyes
can’t help
returning to that ecstasy, that anxious delight write such words only because
I
in
know no
(I
others
which eventually saved me from my mediocrity. For I have never despaired of the world, that will do)
only of seeing myself so ill-adjusted to
whelmed with
And
in
my
trivialities
it,
and ready-made
overideas.
longing to break through to things, to
create at last— though without betraying that childish
phrase so often repeated through clenched teeth:
“They won’t get me”— to create a mind based only on reality, I fell back on this music, this lace of old concertos that assured
achieved without too
81
me
that a joyful rigor can
much
melancholy.
be
Philippe Sollers
In Mozart's
Don
Giovanni,
Donna Anna's
great
(when she has just recognized Don Giovanni and entrusts her fate to Ottavio), with its recitative
foreshadowings, gropings,
its
myself
I
I
run
if I
knew
steps taken in
all
directions,
its
muted, anguished struggle— this pas-
sage echoed in
could
its
to,
was
me like a call whom relieve,
for help. I
But
whom
wondered, except
lost?
that our moods,
though changing, are so
decisive in our conception of the world that fort (supposing I
brought myself
to
my
ef-
undertake one)
would depend on an anticipation of their transformations that must be as precise as possible. “Probably," I reminded myself, “happiness can be gained like knowledge, and what other is worth acquiring? A knowledge exact only for itself, by which you create your tastes, your sensations, your variations, your virtues, and your vices so mechanicallv and so indisputably that it becomes a habit. There must be a law. I shall find it. It will be my secret victory. Yes, a law of immediate and interior compensation, making allowances even for vanity, no longer suffering from
its
contradictions, a law
by 82
A
Strange Solitude
which events and encounters, accidents and obligations will be resolved at last. “All this, of course, will be too personal, too imperceptible ever to be set down as doctrine. But writing will at least nourish the intention, which I
by contriving a few effects. I this is possible. I must begin where others have off, profit (is this ever possible?) by their con-
shall feel left
perhaps
clusions,
I
fulfill
work
should
fast
and
like to
rigorously.
.” .
.
apply to Paris what Chateau-
briand remarked in Mirabeaus eyes: pride, vice, and genius. But during those wanderings of mine,
day and night, through the crowded parts of the city, I despised reaching easy solutions. “Out of all this
number,”
woman who
I
thought, “there
can make
me
is
certainly one
happy.” But that would
probably be too easy. There would have been the horror of choosing. And as soon as I began to feel the benefits of habit
made every
and
security,
effort to get rid of
I
would have
them, with, even, a
kind of fury. Everything that restored
me
tude, even the loss of love, of friendship,
to soli-
was wel-
come. Each time, an exaltation, a sense of victory.
83
Philippe Sollers
And
yet
knew what
I
was part of any longer.
my I
lay in wait for
method. People did not
did
autonomy.
I
I
words. But at no
should have whispered to someone if
you were
to you, as
if I
lost to
me,
as
if
thought the worst
I
*of
remembered how I could listen endlessly Concha s chatter. “But today you couldn’t en-
you.” to
certain
suppose they were endowed with
beside me: “Act as
were nothing
me
exist for
saw them only when they bore
signs, certain functions, certain
moment
me: but waste
dure
I
it
a moment.’’ There remained
whom the best with whom it’s yourself:
back
to
it
manners mean having
women with none, women
wise not to form too high an idea of
would
from them.
suffer
I
Concha. By thinking of her,
least to recover the old intensity.
memory: the defeats and
I
kept coming I
wanted
searched
at
my
were never absolute. Like the diver surfacing objects which seem quite different from those which had attracted him under water, I sank into my past life, my depths,
by means moment.
to produce,
priceless
victories
of a fugitive sensation,
i
The
first
time,
I
lasted only an instant.
•
have the impression that
But
a
it
to recapture that instant,
84
A
Strange Solitude
how many
useless efforts! until— sudden, unforesee-
able— it suddenly appeared within
me
like a
mys-
terious signal. I
rain
was walking down the Champs-Elysées. The melted into a glow around the sudden silhou-
ettes, the
dim
faces, the shiny street, the gravel of
the sidewalks. Everything shimmered, wavered be-
gaze in the November grayness. Suddenly was as if I were being projected from the top of
neath it
my
an observatory in a
whose
fit
widened
circles
of uncontrollable laughter
crowd, the
to include the
shopwindows, the passing automobiles. I stumbled, ecstatic, against an unknown obstacle. Here I am— I thought— here I am, "me,” mind and body, sauntering, tracing
these ghosts
wanted
my
who
purposeless oblige
my
attention.
to cry out, to laugh:
route like
stroller’s I
the farce
suddenly
was
over!
nothing would have surprised me less than that everything should come to a standstill in mute contemplation. “The world is coming apart,” I mur-
And
mured, intensely
satisfied that things
should have
gone so quickly and without more effort on my part. I must have made a curious figure as I stood there, for I recall several ironic glances.
walking, ashamed of having tacle
85
continued
so gross a spec-
apprehensive that someone else
of myself,
might have seen.
made
I
.
.
.
Philippe Sollers
Back
in
my
room, stretched out on
decided there was nothing or
some unknown
left to
sensation.
And
hope I
my
bed,
I
for but sleep
lay there, in the
semi-consciousness of daydream and fatigue, listen-
my
ing to
my
watch against
sounds of the building, the
mumble
of the elevator,
the squeak of a faucet being turned of the
murmur
of a voice.
of clothes (as I
around
off,
smelled the
had once done— how
seemed— with Concha), tiered
I
me
knew
I
thousand
ear, to the
the clatter
human odor away it world was
far
that the
like a gigantic enterprise of ex-
haustion from which nothing could ever keep
away. But sometimes
the light
if
fell
through the cracks of the shutters,
I
into
me
my room
imagined
I
was
by the noise the complicity inhabitants made around me— a village which,
in a village, delighted
of
its
to increase
sun-baked
my
pleasure,
village.
My
I set
room,
on the ocean,
itself
yes, a
an object of
my
was actually on the fifth floor, to open onto a cool, fragrant alley. I was lying there, waiting only for twilight, for someone to take me on our daily stroll. This longing to find myself somewhere else, somewhere entirely imaginary, in reverie,
seemed, though
it
an ideal place that was different each time
(to in-
crease the intensity); this special faculty of
imme-
diately falling back into a state of paralysis,
hebetude or ecstasy
(in
of
which, body and mind im-
86
A
Strange Solitude
mobilized,
it
was about
to
seemed be
not only rescued
that
leak into imaginary space)
lost, to
me
some unknown quality
my
from
melancholy but pro-
voked a thousand pleasures. Yet these moments of rare and rapid joy did not keep the others from being more frequent— those
occupied by a purely morbid obsession. I could think of no other remedy than to fling myself on my bed, letting
my
shoes
fall
on the
floor,
and feverishly
several times,
Then I closed my eyes, stretched made room for that murmur of the
mind which
simply a
try to fall asleep.
is
field of battle
where a thou-
sand stupidities clash without ever diminishing each other.
awoke from such sleep only at twilight, quite rested. The light had disappeared. The landscape stretched to a horizon edged with “inky clouds.” But what was astonishing, above the steeple, was a blue of faded sweetness, as if it had been
One day
I
flung there long ago.
“Well,”
I
decided, “are things going to be bet-
ter?”
or
My my
ringed
sleep
had scarcely
stupidity
my
when my
eyelids,
while a gentle, vague
me
of
my
clumsiness
joy rose to
swelled them
movement
with, gradually— yes, that
87
rid
was
my
eyes,
from beneath
started in
my
chest
it!— all the tensions of
Philippe Sollers
a magical uncertainty.
not
.
.
How many
.
ness, seeking a familiar clarity!
had happened,
was
I
sitting in front of
with that prodigious journey
so far from
It
it.
was upholstered
not very comfortable
frieze,
when this my window
Often,
armchair that will remain associated in
my memory making
I
incomprehensible emotion in the dark-
felt this
in a little
had
times
and— how
say it— looked surprised. But
who knows, perhaps
it
in green
can you
else
accompanied me,
interceded for me.
it
was
I
.
.
.
You must use yourself like an instrument, I decided, you must know how to play yourself. Colors, light— certain iridescences—were not alien to me. As for the great its
machinery of the clouds,
most intimate movements,
mauves,
its
I
I
became
entered into a part of
its
gold-fringed pinks, to the point where,
putting on a record,
I
was going
to rush to the
window
to delight in this inexpressible
Unless
laughed, there was something to cry about.
I
was
my
by the sky. It was burst, the suns merest
seized, bathed, diffused
business— the
tempt. that
I
harmony.
What
same
penetration
feeling
standing quite
tiniest
I
I
at-
granted myself (with
have sometimes had when
still,
all
I
was
of entering certain landscapes,
of walking, without seeing them, into their
most
in-
had noticed, in connection with such exceptional moments, certain exterior constants timate comers)!
I
88
A
Strange Solitude
—which
it
would be quite /futile
invoke— but
to
which one might reasonably regard as necessary. For instance: distant, familiar, continuous noises, An or— better still— sounds that summoned. .
aspect of neglect, of casualness. But
happen
that
I
was
how
.
.
did
it
so implacably gripped?
And now, here in my room, the infinite seemed within my own grasp, reassured— it seemed— encouraged to appear. And in this feverish communion with the world drifting.
sorriest
And
I felt as if I
were released, insensibly
was at one of the that I had the luck and
realized that
I
moments
of
my
life
it
the strength to express— no, to grasp, at least to tap
moment
or to glimpse— that famous
when
everything
is
absolutely interchangeable.
thought paraded before me; putatiously spinning out
its
capable not only of seeing
my own
it.
.
.
.
And
The
person, dis-
sour wit, and the “me”
all this in
nous absence, but of weighing laughing at
of attention
it,
a kind of lumi-
of judging
it,
of
in this passionate detach-
ment from myself, the absurd
at last
became mar-
velous: a reality marvelously absurd. I
terior
89
knew
I
must be on
music that delights
my
guard against
this in-
in arranging the universe
Philippe S oilers
was responsible for whatever value I had; thanks to it I had achieved a perspective, and with it a little of that immobility (when the
too well; yet
it
watchful mind
commands
the breath, remaining
which projected me into the rare comprehend like a shooting pain.
tirelessly alert)
was
state I
to
.
Then, rustling about thing
As
I
me
like foliage, I
.
.
sensed every-
could satisfy and comprehend.
moments
for all these
ance with the world, cation which,
illuminated
in
my
might be able
all
of surprise, of conniv-
these
moments
of gratifi-
the mathematics of happiness,
life
so hastily— one day, I knew, I
to forge myself a clear consciousness
out of them.
And
them, and so
I
I
also felt I could never exhaust
loved them almost more as a virtually
voluntary defeat of
my
sensibility.
These moments
couldn’t be put to any use. In any case, at the peri-
od I’m talking about, I was too concerned with my solitude to grant them much attention. My life was spent unsuccessfully trying to
women from whom
make
contact with
was doubtless separated most them; aware of this, they must I
by my desire for have found me intolerable. Besides,
I
would have
been incapable of explaining myself. Which
is
why, 90
A
Strange Solitude
my mind permitted me to glimpse some my sensations, my first impulse was to an-
whenever truth in
swer: “Probably, but I need a mistress I
do
Now,
truth.”
ing for a
woman
of course,
not to find
enough to be lookone. I was going round it is
in circles, accomplishing nothing,
one.
Yet
which
own
more than
annoying every-
remember an extraordinary moment
I
illustrates perfectly
when
my
amused
attachment for
my
by revealing a country I could never reach, after which visions I would fall back on the shadow— and also on the desire (simulated, of course) that these moments be more important than my search— for a woman, solitude,
it
itself
a snare, or a motive. I
was
in a
bus going over the Pont de
corde, staring at a
la
Con-
bank of red clouds streaked
across the sky (oddly enough, the other side of the
bridge was in absolute darkness).
moment
I
And
“entered” the landscape,
leap
up from my
sity,
possess the city,
seat, hurl
bend
I
at the very felt
myself
myself into the immenit
beneath an imperious
saw its history, its former inhabitants, even its monuments, like an army that marched toward me, and deep within its song permitted me to accede at last to this sovereign joy. I was invulnerable, inaccessible, nothing could happen that I discipline. I
had not commanded; 91
this state lasted
some
thirty
I
Philippe S oilers
seconds, after which
phoria which that evening.
me was
I
remained
in a
promising eu-
made my mind exceptionally clear I took this phenomenon— which for
a unique source of greatness— very seriously,
same time
knew
and
at the
this
remark of Henri Brulard’s came back
“Only greatness
fills
I
why
perfectly well
the soul, not
women.”
Alone, sick, and self-destructive as
recipe— and the talent— for being
me:
to
if I
had the
so, I finally
found
was groping toward: the loss of every project, its utter denial, at the same time as a cold contemplation. Once more I found in myself that the extreme
I
presence neither anxiety nor betrayal nor imaginary conquests had been able to dislodge; that “invariable” presence which composes, judges, weighs, decides,
and
sighs.
I
reached the
certainty of absolute emptiness.
final ecstasy,
And
I felt
the
that life
was this wonderful, forever inexpressible abeyance to which I yielded myself utterly, as if I were rushing to my ruin in some childish and temporary enthusiasm. “This cided, “which
of consciousness,”
must be destroyed on pain
ziness, this shrill
know
moment
phenomenon
I
de-
.of diz-
of interrogation—
quite well they have no future. In them, start-
92
.
A
Strange Solitude
ing from them, everything ' can be considered as resolved. So
I
must
establish
my
intimate resolution
as a preparation for nothingness,
ward these obscure
must grope
must passionately
limits,
solve myself in this effort.
I
todis-
.” .
.
was abandoned, but every possibility postponed by the world and the society of bores awakened, grew rich and strange: began to flow within me. The important thing was not so much to ‘"think” as to be conscious of my own thirst: I watched I
myself covet the world.
And
I
began
to realize that I
must seek out ev-
erything that put me, vis-à-vis the world, in a state of laughing amazement so that the distance be-
tween
me and
the object which aroused
though entirely
as great as possible,
me
filled.
me was .
.
.
For
was more sensitive to things, to climates, to people, by the astonishment I felt —more than ever now— in regard to them. Every sensation that spread its wings within me was abso-
it
seemed
to
that
I
lute— yet without surprising that; I
mean, strong enough
remote enough for
me
93
.
.
to the
girl
much
make me
my
for all
fall, fall.
but
The
most commonplace
a street-cleaner and his
around each other, a etc.
to
too
to delight in
amazement then applied events:
me
broom whirled
walked mechanically,
Philippe Sollers
As a matter of fact, I no longer knew if it were really ecstasy which provoked my longing to overflow, or if it were the urge to have experienced it which led me on, in order to make me believe in it, to recount it. For I had longings for ecstasy. This particular life, this life itself, I wanted in spite of everything to give
—how shall I express it?— a
it
a rhythm, a cadence
(mathematical) rationale,
was often on the point of abandoning everything. It was usually while I was getting up in the morning that the absurd lay in wait for me, as if sleep had dissipated false security, as if the clearest eyes must also be most desperate.) I was existing in a noisy little circle whose whole history I saw clearly. A circle which enlarged, contracted, or blurred depending on whether I fell into this lake. No boat: the crossing interested no one. I would have to meet, by accident, in someone else, some demand. But I still didn’t know that if you can’t find women of character, you can still love those who have wit enough to make you forgive though
them
I
for this deficiency.
The weather changed, grew clearer. The anxieties of the winter had yielded— one of the causes for this
was the
state of
my
health— to a kind of
94
A
Strange Solitude
wanted to find the key to this country I had come to, where nothing spoke to me, where the slightest contact was forbidden, where everything happened in the intimacy of an open window. torpor.
But
Happy
at least I
or wretched, full of desire or despair, I
could only turn in circles as
and
of siege
I I
to extend
transfixed
retreat,
me
have made
if
my
state
by what should
burst with joy or pain. I touched,
pushed back the walls of my sensations, And, made sure of them with my own hands. groped,
I
.
against
.
.
odds, I persisted in believing that
all
we
obscurely deserve our opportunities, that reality
and happiness ultimately let themselves be seized by our invocations, that nothing, finally, is ever wasted in
desire.
was only twenty, I knew that what I wrote would be bad at first, and that it would probably have to be bad if I ever wanted to began
I
writing. I
achieve the perfection of
But
I
struggled
my
interim enthusiasm.
word by word, the way you
shoulder to shoulder.
struggle
found out about discourage-
I
disgust). I lived only a
ment and doubt (even
few
favorable minutes a day, the rest were spent in pro-
ducing these. At energy,
all
last I
the anxiety
knew I
I
would employ
was capable
behalf on this exhausting question:
95
all
the
of in the world's is
so
much
ob-
Philippe Sollers
worth so intermittent a
scurity
though so
light,
priceless?
My
book would be a
battle narrative, a history
of labor with myself in order to reach that one
quality which
had been refused me:
when
a
ing
or being swelled
it
work develops
oscillation,
you can
the imaginary, then
room, at
last, to
parallel to
by
your
life,
when, caught
my
in this
real nor
There was
that not freedom?
is
And
influenc-
back on neither the
fall
open
it;
simplicity.
eyes.
wanted to feel the days pass. And everything happened to me as if I must take my courage in my hands and clear a path for myself through Yet
I
everything
was
I
loved most, convinced that
no importance
of
haps give
it its
in itself— which
marvelous
fragility, its
this effort
would per-
luminous, nat-
Whether I succeeded or not (though depended on it: perhaps I couldn’t win
ural character.
my
life
everything, but
I
knew that only make me happy. I
could certainly lose everything), this
“What’s the use,” write?
Can you even
search would be enough to
I
decided, “of bothering to
write, feeling ‘what’s the use?’
every three lines? Pleasure claims
ducement
me by
of this brilliant landscape as
if
every inthis
were
be the last time.” But that was precisely why I had to double this pleasure, provide it a reverse to
96
A
Strange Solitude
side,
which was language.
I
would write quite
At the very most, when
found myself in those moods bordering on the sacred I might permit myself a music which would include somedryly at
first.
I
,
thing of the world’s decay.
From now on nothing mattered any more
ex-
cept for a rigor, a discipline, a decisive immobility
had talent enough— some soluThe latter would provoke a tion could appear. number of reactions which without it— just as if one failed to use a dangerous acid on the surface through which— if
I
.
of things— would
.
.
be impossible.
Thus this security— which I could not do without and which I wanted to reconstruct— led me to precise exercises, reflections which insisted on a purpose, a progression.
with myself,
why
Which
is
why
I
everything that passed for an im-
portant problem could not engage me.
had was not to by creating a life which
mission
I
reluctant to leave as
(hence irrepressible) to alienate
me
from
it
suffer, to I
should otherwise be too
was. Such was
belief. it
The only
withdraw myself
my instinctive
Everything that tended
would be
my
rest (behavior, opinion, sympathies)
to chance. It
dealt only
was not caprice
if,
enemy. The
could be
left
after eveiy activity/
(save those which, like love, writing, music, or con-
templation, restored
97
me
to
my own
space,
my
ob-
Philippe Sollers
scure present), I
wakened
from a
as
longer to attach any importance to
what
I
wanted
sickness.
my
No
life—that
is
to achieve, at the limits of this some-
times disturbing sensation: to be infinitely replaceable.
.
.
.
disappear.
Yes,
it
would take
And probably
there
me
a long time to
was a kind
in the fact that since the beginning of
my
of irony
life I
had
be concerned with my death. Yet I had never stopped, I never would stop thinking about my death: it was this point of departure which I must reach without baggage— a ratification, an accord. I
had
to
was willing
to die
if
I
had
expectation of this death.
to
And
have lived
in the
everything was pro-
which did not correspond to my pleasure. (Even writing, on the day I could admit it was superfluous!) A simple conclusion, like everything that approaches what is important. Perhaps digiously devalued
was foolish to set myself all these obstacles so soon. But there was an urgency, as I felt only too well. It is our bodies we most willingly ask the secret of our fives, inquiring what they have retained of those moments when they understood life, when they felt they possessed Grace, and that is why our effort is a perpetual failure. Once past, our sensations are no longer of any use to us. We it
are alone, then, with an error that
been one once, without knowing,
may
not have
at a decisive
mo98
A
Strange Solitude
ment
our death,
like that of
if
we have
lived at
all.
agony of death must proceed from that we reach them as an event among
Suffering, the
the fact
others, the
ego
we
voicelessly
summon
individual
and subordinate instead of universal and total. That was what I must overcome if I wanted to achieve a death like the joy I was living. And as for this imagination which I had scattered before myself (whether to invent a state of
pure happiness
on the contrary, to describe the agony in advance)—why would it
or,
my not serve my interior discipline? And I longed to shut myself in my room and compose a clear, dense work whose passion, unlike my person, could touch the minds of my own kind whom I had neither the moments
of
time nor the strength to look
One morning,
I
went out
for.
the sweetness of the air took trated me, left
me
me by
surprise, pene-
motionless there on the sidewalk
with a strange pain in
my
breast.
advertently appeared inside
make room
than usual, and
earlier
for herself within
Concha had
in-
my heart, trying to my expectation. Later
same day, glancing through Remembrance of Things Past (to which more ties bind me than I
that
99
Philippe Sollers
could ever acknowledge any more), sentence which, for
this
much
as for the
its
emotion
it
my
tactical
gave
eyes
fell
on
importance as
me
then,
I
copy
out here:
And
after
all,
one way
as
good
as
any of resolving the
problem of existence is to bring people and things which at a distance have seemed beautiful and mys-
*
enough together for us to realize that they have no mystery and no beauty; this is one discipline among others we might choose, a discipline which is perhaps not very recommendable, but which terious close
gives us a certain tranquillity in order to get through life
and also— since
it
permits us to regret nothing
by convincing us we have achieved the best and that the best was of no great significance— to resign ourselves to death.
Unfortunately, other “best!”
And
I
decided, there
yet
I
is
always an-
liked this notion that took
both enthusiasm and disappointment into account.
To Deceive: time. self its
But
this
had been my motto for a long deception meant applying it to my-
that
and, in order to destroy wretchedness, to attack
mean to me, if and painful— the memory of
images. Yet what did “the best”
not— brief, Concha?
And
indistinct,
since
I
had made a mistake,
since
what
I
100
A
Strange Solitude
had always taken for a liberation had succeeded, by abandoning me to my desires, only in forcing me to experience nothingness, in imprisoning
me
in the
was understood before beginning this labor ( of which I had only the famous archetype) that I would turn back, restore old connections, write letters, sound out society, play the obsession of misery,
it
somewhat cowardly liaisons, my contempts, my disappearances were over. Before withdrawing myself altogether, I would have to make this experiment, burn this last boat. Besides, I was defeated, since I wasn't happy. I would summon Concha, whose absence had, absurdly enough, seemed preferable to my reason. But what was she doing? Where was she? Surely she was lost forever, she game.
My
would not answer. I love the kind bottles thrown into the sea.
101
of letters that are
*
%
.
Three
by a kind of compensation or harmony, some of whose effects can be anticipated by application and patience, our life abates, marks time only to sweep us along all the faster later on. What a price we have paid for certain moments of equiAs
if
librium and lucidity! But after
dear which procures them for
all,
nothing
is
too
us.
had written Concha several days before Easter, before coming home for vacation. What incident -which made me pity myself-made me go back earlier? I remember only that interminable trip of which I knew each moment and each mile, that I
train,
those landscapes, and, soaring above them,
already insipid, the thought of a Spring in Paris without friends (though that mattered little), without a mistress (though having one of attitudes ), without
103
demanded a
lot
any more enjoyment of drink-
Philippe Sollers
ing, of
walking, of watching people.
And always
those same fields where only the floods added a
note of brightness in winter. terly that I
would have
nights studying for
lucky
if
my
to
my
I
reflected rather bit-
spend a week of sleepless
examinations.
I
would be
health got no worse!
To crown my
disgrace, a girl
who
believed in
the poetry of casual encounters felt obliged to speak to
me. She was an
was
artist: I
was overwhelmed. Then
on an April evening, leafy Paris full of perfumes and pale women, Paris whose Spring had taken it by surprise, Montparnasse packed with there
Paris
and then, seen from the door, resting docilely on the little copper tray, snatched and run with to my room and opened lying flat on my stomach on the bed: Concha’s letter! And it was not the
tourists
Generalissimo’s shrewd face on the stamp, but the
innocent République française.
was pleased and surprised to hear from me! My letter had reached her after some delay in Seville where she had spent the winter. But she was in Paris now, working as a nursemaid with a little room to herself that was quite comfortable. Many Spanish friends. She was delighted with Paris and wondered whether it was a good idea for us to see each other. But anyway she would give me her address, and it would be up to me to decide.” “Goodness
yes, she
104
A
Strange Solitude
The rible;
salutation, “Apreciable Senorito,”
was
ter-
the end, too, shuddered, remained enigmatic:
que mas g listes de esta. Tu ami «a. Concha .” Yet all it had taken was a letter, the O simplest gesture, to arrange this meeting I had so longed for. And Concha answered in the most con-
“sin mas, reciba lo
versational tone! “That’s just like her,”
I
told myself,
with the smile you show your old friends to indicate
your
infallible sense of their continuity.
would satisfaction were
In the past, out of mere self-esteem,
I
have wasted time wondering if this opportune, if I really wanted it. I would even have
carried greatness to the point of pouting, in a gesture of indifference though everything within
hurled to
itself
toward
this
moment. But
be suspicious of such
sidered,
my
I
me had
had learned
subtleties. All things con-
anxiety has taught
me more
than
my
jumped into a taxi. It would never get there, the driver was going to have a heart attack. Ecstasy of these rare moments when madness becomes possible! I was in such a state of nerves that before I could ring I had to stand perfectly still on
reasoning.
I
the doorstep, scarcely breathing.
had anticipated everything except that she would open the door for me. There she was. Two hours later, she was still complaining about the scare I had given her. As for me, during that extraI
105
Philippe Sollers
ordinary
and
I
moment when
saw her appear,
the varnished door opened at first indifferent, then her
face suddenly changing,
I
almost failed to recog-
had on a pink apron I had never seen —I could only remember her wearing black. Her color seemed higher, her hair blacker, her eyes deeper, her person more mysterious— and I more naive. I don’t remember what we said. We stood there facing each other on the doorstep, neither one nize her. She
able to smile or speak, stripped of ness, to the point of tears.
she was not there, for
I
all false
hearti-
There she was and yet
not only had to cross the
which separated our two bodies, but even my desire, my forgetting, my long anxiety, and all the errors I had wrapped her in to conjure up an ideal image. She told me to come in, and I waited
barrier
for her out in the
There
is
garden where she soon joined me.
nothing to say
when
there
is
too much.
We
stood there stammering, she with a slightly pained
way
moving her hand across her face, carefully, as if to chase away some evil spirit. We plucked nervously at leaves, and Consmile and her old
of
cha’s face looked green in the light. I kissed her gently.
ination
Happiness was certainly impossible if
it
beginning to
was impossible rain. I
in
imag-
was remember
in reality too. It
walked beside
her, I
106
A
Strange Solitude
and the wind that cooled our faces with the same breath. I no longer needed to be moved, the rain
happily
inert.
me
than
our relation had assumed
new
And Concha seemed more in the past,
as
if
sensitive to
dimensions. In the taxi she took of affection
my
hand, a gesture
which she would probably never have
dared to make before.
It is
had become “grownups,”
true that
that
we— at
we were
least
I—
going to be
who knows, fall into the vulgarity of an ordinary “affair.” And yet, a woman you're sure is not indifferent to you, a woman who loves you, I mean: who loves to kiss you, with whom you're “lovers,”
about
to try recovering that ancient truth.
We were in a Spanish cabaret. sitting
on a kind of
beside him.
On
The
dais, the singer
.
.
.
guitarist
was
was standing
the floor, two dancers in Andalusian
costume were weaving their brilliant web of steps. One girl was a pure Castilian type, but the other,
though Catalan
(as
we found
out
later),
had
that
frenzied gypsy grace which cannot endure repose.
Her name was Dolores, and Concha could not take her eyes off her from the start. Dark and imperious, her lashes fluttering, her green-pleated dress whirling, Dolores danced only for us. In the zapateado she
reached the limit of her strength, her feet attacking
107
Philippe SoUers
the steps with savagery and utter control, keeping the rhythm with a kind of despair. “Imagine seeing this in Paris !” I
whispered
taunt her conceit a
little.
to
Concha, hoping to
She smiled vaguely, not
turning her head. “I haven't seen her in two years,
I'm with her for ten minutes,"
me already.
forgotten I
I
realized,
“and
she's
." .
.
watched her watching, and
it
was
as
if I
had
surprised her at last in her astonishment, her ad-
miration— her desire. Dolores began to sing (her
mouth
half-open, as
if
for a kiss).
The
voice
was
between bitterness and tenderness, dead— one might have said —if that meant it was haunted; “a voice to make
harsh, imperfect, tense; badly placed
nice girls blush" (Concha murmured). this voice
And what
was proclaiming was that there was no
truth save in the difficulty of expression; that at
you must stumble and weigh your words, separate them with difficulty (there are so many ties), not take pleasure in them but accept them with all their possibilities and weaknesses (seeking that rare state of intensity and control); that you must be simple and passionate, and if you permit yourself first
to use a
language at
all,
it is
almost in despair of
the result.
108
A
Strange Solitude
Las
flores
no valen nada
Los que valen son Tus hrazos Cuando de noche
me
me abrazan
these words
had
all
the repose of a conviction.
And
I
And
for
the suffering,
all
watched Concha
which only a great talent could wring from her, for she was from the North and not expansive by nature. Happy, probably oblivious of me (/Eso es! jVaya guapa!), but what did that matter, since I was looking at her, since I was sure of offering that Ole!
seeing her as she was, and since she
showed me the
truth of ecstasy in her face.
The song But once
over, Dolores sat
we were
down
at
our table.
obliged to speak, no one was sure
what to say. The girl had a laugh, and a beauty, that were slightly vulgar, and in any case had eyes of
only for Concha.
I left
the table for a
moment
so
they could arrange a meeting without embarrass-
ment. Several days
later,
when we were making
and mimicking the stops and starts of the dance, Concha, seeing that I had understood, gigIt was a gled as she murmured: “Ole, Dolores! compliment, and I took it as such. But she did not ask me to come home with her. I didn’t insist and
love
waited for the afternoon of the following day.
109
Philippe Sollers
had no need of invoking an immortal soul to immerse itself and me in felicity! My natural being had only to acquire every power in order to shed its own stupidities. But if, after that first evening, I had wanted to express my feelings, I should probably have said no more than ‘Tm the happiest man alive,” an expression which would have contained none of my happiness. In fact, I would have liked to recover, bind together all those moments I had thought of her, despaired of seeing her again— like that afternoon beside the sea, like that morning beneath the already despoiled trees of the countryside at home, and, above all, like all those unconscious and forgotten moments when she had flashed across my memory like a light, and not only my memory but, in fever and chills, my arms, my chest and stomach, even my lips. Doubtless Concha had, as they say, “deceived” me. She had given herself to anyone who had manifested a warm enough desire. But having a taste for women, she had only yielded to men, while with her mistresses she amused herself (there was Unlike Saint-Preux,
I
nothing in her character of hysteria, none of the disturbing obsessiveness of vice). She
her
life
moved through
with an absolute availability and an abso-
110
A
Strange Solitude
lute detachment. Yes, in a sense she
was
solitude,
the transition between two incommunicable worlds.
De
mis soledades vengo
A mis soledades voy Y para vivir conmigo
Me bastan mis pensamientos
How well Lope s lines suited her! I come from my solitudes , 1 go to
my
solitudes. ... It
was Concha s
face that flickered through these four lines for me,
by an almost imperceptible quivering. Of course I had suffered from one of her adventures which I learned of after she had left: a much older man— whom she had mocked with Beatrice. I had suffered, yes, but not from jealousy. For I was angry at no one. Ive always been fatalist enough to have a “now or never, that’s the way it is, you can’t do a thing about it” side to me, which Concha
seized
had developed
still
come only from sation of having
further.
So
my
suffering could
the inevitable, from the acute sen-
no remedy against
it.
There had
been, of course, the disagreeable fantasy of a wrinkled face trailing a short mustache over Concha’s delicate, inaccessible features. Naturally there had
been
others,
younger ones, with
have found her pleasure 111
too.
whom
she
But wasn’t that
may
my
Philippe S oilers
fault, since I
had loved her
ture, everything
over
is
the darkness; the hero,
has every
when the lovers vanish into when he is not the narrator,
a love-maker.
gift as
being
fallibility, for
so badly? ... In litera-
still
I
admired
young
too
this in-
to divine the
someone as learned in pleasure as Concha, it was not seldom that she remained— or seemed to remain— unsatisfied (and her face was then quite spoiled). Beatrice, who had told me about Concha’s liaison with her old lover, had insisted on its comic subtleties of
the
aspects:
man
dropping
his glasses, failing to
Concha because of his huge belly. All of which was disgusting or ridiculously funny. But there was no forgetting that some women make possess
love only to humiliate their partner— when to get rid of him. I
thought
when
it’s
not
was reassuring myself with
this
Beatrice added, speaking of the old
fool:
“Apparently he knew some pretty exciting
ways
to get
is
around
his
problem.” The true mystery
never where you think:
it is
in our bodies.
could Concha have experienced that
known how with her
to give her?
girl friends?
foot in, prowling
What
had not
did she experience
Realms we
never set
shall
around them, setting our
Problems that change with each
we can
I
What
traps.
.
.
.
sensibility, so that
And as a For we always
never use the same formulas.
consequence, in ourselves: darkness.
.
.
.
112
A
Strange Solitude
know ily
ourselves
by a system
of self-opposition, hast-
verifying our hypotheses.
Of
course,
.
.
.
Concha's pleasures with her
girl
friends had, in comparison, a grace and, particularly for
me, something unimaginable about them
which
preferred.
with
I
And
me Concha was
preferred to think that
I
interested in something else
had always presome reason or other
besides love-making (though she ferred not to see
me than— for
—to see me and not make love). “But it's true, I reminded myself, “she's always bored and yet not bored.
.
.
It’s
.
a kind of secondary state she's
noiselessly loitering.
She hibernates,
that's
in,
the word.
Why seek any further?”
“A month
of happiness will teach
you more than
This was Concha s antwo years of questions. swer _I could hear the irony in her voice— when I .
revealed
how much
I
.
.
desired her.
And when
I
was one of her favorite proverbs: “La vida es un tango y el que no lo baila es un tonto .” Of course you have to dance, but the tempo. ... She kept her amused stupidly risked a sigh about “life,” this
expression
Nothing her
US
when
to
profile.
she thought about our separation.
be done. Sometimes
I stole
a glance at
The observed eye quickly brightened
Philippe S oilers
beneath the tremulous lashes, a ring of tiny wrinkles
and
secrets
formed about
her head turned,
it,
and a silent smile flashed across her face. And when I leaned over her, whether she carefully put out her tongue at me or suddenly shrank back with a quick impulse of gaiety which had gradually risen to her face, I thought how, whatever it costs our heart ought to
we
(whatever
it
enough
anyone who has spared us the grimaces
to
How
of feeling. ing,
feel),
beautiful
are never grateful
Concha was, how bloom-
always with that slight indifference somehow
concentrated at the edge of her eyelids and the hol-
low of her
throat!
Her warm
flowered cushions as
face
was buried
approached her,
I
in the
listened,
breathed her breath, trying to surprise the principle of her
enchantment
What
I
at
its
found again
source.
at last
was
that complicity
two bodies used to each other— Concha's warmth and that cool pause upon her face, her security, her of
breath against little
my
ear, the
pleasure.
it
of her
mouth a
twisted and, at moments, those sudden waves
of gratitude for her,
made
comer
And
this
who had
me
always given
pleasure was not only carnal;
love to her, so to speak, with
all
was Concha's body, our old way
my
of
soul.
I
And
coming
to-
gether, the interlacing of our legs, her odor (fresh at the nape, bitter at the temples,
warm
at the
114
A
Strange Solitude
mouth), her long hair which was always caught
beneath an arm, a shoulder, and passed, disordered, between our faces like a last refusal (I would have to
brush
all,
it
aside to possess her mouth);
her old indulgence.
I
and above
had the impression
of liv-
ing the same adventure again, but this time as a
conqueror, correcting
hear her whisper:
my own
clumsiness.
Ay, que bueno!
dejar sin labios, vas a ver tu!” filled
pride that
I
had
cured myself of
to laugh at myself.
my
(superimposing these
And
to
or
Te voy a
me
with such
But
at least I
memories, changed images
new
ones on the old ones that
had quivered too much). Concha had not changed, that was my only opportunity: she immobilized time. And I understood better now why she had provoked such passionate attachments. For each person she had known— and how much for me!— she had been a kind of infallible point of reference, where I rediscovered what had been best in my first love,
guided by what
I
had learned
scious or unconscious— for that love.
of regret— con-
And
this sud-
den confrontation of these two personalities, each of which had been me, produced a new one. That day, the second of our re-encounter, we lay talking for a long time while the night gradually
thickened outside. In the frame of the
window soon
appeared, like an absurd picture, the illuminated
115
Philippe S oilers
We
were playing what Beatrice would have called “Do you remember?” Arc de Triomphe.
“Near the beginning,” Concha
had
my
said, “that
thread
you picked out so carefully —well, every time I did any sewing, I put one there on purpose, to see you take it out. It was so funny!” I
in
hair that
was not too surprised to discover how different her memory was from my own (she was still touched by attentions I had long forgotten). One day, I had thrown a bouquet of artificial carnations out of the window. Another, I had tried to force my way into her bathroom, we had concocted a rape scene, and the excitement of the pretense was so great that my pleasure was upon me before I could possess her. “Total” Concha suddenly concluded, “the way I
we
never are for each other.” I
did not answer. Her face, beside mine, re-
mained motionless. With one accord we changed the subject.
Then wanted
there were endless walks.
Concha never
do anything else, enjoyed this happy, mechanical movement, and if I suggested stopping in
to
a cafe she only agreed reluctantly. Did she do
this
on purpose,
to preserve the marginal character
of our relationship?
When we went the
way
she
She was subtle enough
for that.
up her hair in a bun it, and despite the dia-
out, she did
knew
I
liked
116
A
Strange Solitude
mond-shaped comb and the long pin, it always came undone too quickly. Then she looked at me as if to say: “I cant stay the way you like me for long.” Yes, she was subtle enough for that. And when I walked with her in the neighborhoods where
had been
I if
to take
the
name
so sad, so desperate,
I
told myself, as
revenge on them now: "‘Remember of this street so you can come this way
my
The next day I tested my memory, but it remained mute as to the name, and though Concha was still with me, it was as if I had lost her again forever. again, after you’ve lost her.
Once convinced
that only pleasure counts,
everything turns to ashes
when we
tire of
how
it!
At
such moments of fatigue and boredom, I wondered still, to curtail that if it was fair to be so attached
had had such trouble constructing -but in the name of what? (Neither writing nor my sensations— rather vague, moreover-could make it up to my imagination.) I wondered if I desired independence
I
Concha enough,
trying to discover evidence from
her attitude that she was unsatisfied. Not everyone And it is only afterwards is happy who wants to be. that
117
we
see the
wrong
side of the collage, smell
Philippe Sollers
our partner's sweat— that certain hitherto neglected
become
details
intolerable.
too white
flesh
(though
Now it
I
was
found Concha's certainly
dark),
loathed the hairs at the tips of her breasts, the
cir-
under her eyes, and the (sudden) redness of her chin. It seemed admirable (and a little crazy) that one could really see someone and not love her less cles
for
it.
loved Concha no
I
less,
from
whom
I
re-
covered the special habits which put our pleasure
beyond the mere perfection of bodies. But, more simply, it was enough for me to notice one of her rare hesitations, a of her green eyes,
somewhat drawn smile, a squint for my love— which had been so
free
and easy— suddenly
And
yet,
to flow
through
me
again.
what advantages my attachment for Concha had! What was most in harmony with my nature was that impossibility of deceit which brought
us together tions,
my
when we
felt desire.
a world apart, old and as
love developed as
itself. It
was
not, as
it
if
Without obligaoutside of time,
pleased, gave the best of
with other women, at the mercy
of a visit to a bar, a boring evening at the movies,
or subject to the curse of being always together,
which creates between two people that indecisive zone where speech loses its savor. And perhaps this love,
by such
had been prebe?) from the wreck of all love.
special causes as these,
served (would
it still
118
.
A
Strange Solitude
For a thousand reasons which escaped me, it was myself, still high above the waves, almost in spite of thanks to words, harmonies I could not foresee (as on certain days when I heard nothing but Spanish
would read Madrid instead of Mardi on a calendar, when I was obsessed by her country which, in the realm of feeling— which is
when
spoken, or
I
everything— was also mine); foreign love, words.
.
And
in other
.
I
knew
that
if
my
eagerness to see Concha
again was at times no longer intense, the habit of doing so was the only reason; my happiness would
would one day appear when I would no longer possess it, and this was why, from now on, I was to give it —by excess— its best form, no longer harried by my mind's contradictions. Patiently I would construct the recollec-
construct
tion I
in secret,
itself
was
to
have of
her, governing
(we are nothing but memory), even cost
my
me my
love, and, perhaps,
attention, I
my memory if
this effort
by the strength
would emerge the
of
victor in this duel
with time.
The most imperceptible
my
attention as
if
details returned, struck
behind me, and that only able to deflect me from it.
my
frivolity
Asthma had plunged me once again 119
was far had been
to prove that the truth
into that
Philippe Sollers
exasperated sensitivity, forever on the brink of agony,
which
had seized
as a child
my
bear to be alone in great sobs that only this childishness
in the
was
me when
I
bed, screaming for help in
made
over, there was
middle of the night
my
no one
to bring
me
face with a cold cloth.
I
to
come
a glass of
my
neck,
was alone with,
perhaps imaginary duty, that of enlightening
as a
myself in
my own
for sleep, I
A
curtains! this
Now
the attacks worse.
water, pile the pillows against the back of
wipe
couldn’t
At night
eyes.
would turn on
my
as I lay waiting
lamp and
stare at the
sense of absolute strangeness.
Somehow
void must be concealed that only delight could
did not want to be “touching,”
had a horror of weakness. How make it understood that I wanted no complacency and that— if it existed— I was writing about it only to surmount it more readily? What I want to show is nothing but effort, provided it is fill.
I
I
accurate.
And
yet,
what a comfort
it
was, thanks to Con-
cha, to leave the world of indifference, to
back
in spite of everything to the
me, attentive to smile, her
my
world that
slightest variations!
head on one
side,
come knew
With a
she would say: “I
tiny
know
you” in that old mysterious tone, without appeal,
which made
me tremble.
But she would
also remark,
120
A
Strange Solitude
sniffing
much
humorously, “You smoked too
today,”
was bad for my asthma. Or again, when she wanted to “make me furious,” she would whisper that I was “very delicate,” which was sup-
knew
for she
posed
it
make me
to
had nothing
And
feel guilty.
her solicitude
of that false politeness she delighted in
attributing to the French: Frances: falso y cortés. The sensation— a strong one— of finding in Con-
cha a being so individual that even in her immobility (in still
her indifference) she could not be defined, but serving
of calm,
as a point of reference (of refuge),
and above
essential to
had been best of
me
me
now.
built
itself.
all as
My
upon
a subject, was what seemed
this foundation,
nor “love,” to
And
owed
I
sought,
I
wanted
this research, since
nothing
it
know. To plunge into
me
more, was therefore
dertaking. But this research
earnestness about narcissism, there
is
it.
my
sole un-
would have a
For even
certain
at the confines of
the obsessive presence of death
—endangered happiness
of realizing
you are so
nerable yet capable of feeling so absolutely. smile
121
we
the
keep her from being
was hardly estheticism nor an ambiguous sympathy:
could interest
it
could treat Concha frivolously or
I
lose her; in myself, I could not
the given.
wrong,
sensibility, right or
give ourselves, the smile of defiance,
vul-
The is
a
Philippe S oilers
challenge to our pleasure and at the same time to the death of
all
pleasure.
With Concha, communicable.
then,
And
I
I
would
very
as to
remembered
(already)
evening when, despite the cold,
unconcerned
strive for the in-
how much
I
that
and—for my partfelt it, we walked
For a moment, on the Champs-Elysées, was buying a paper and she was standing
late.
while
I
saw her with that distance, that first surprise we must try for unceasingly. Waiting, swaybehind me,
I
ing from foot to foot, her hands in her coat pockets,
her black and white striped scarf— silk?
would have
to
like a picaro
—a
One
faille?
(I
check)— thrown over one shoulder kind of
night, while
I
sly,
laughing child.
was coming
.
.
.
upstairs, think-
ing only of the sound of Concha’s heels beside me, the rustle of her skirt against the wall, that in speaking of
source of so ing as
if
many
my
love for
her— Concha, the
nothing had happened (there was no rea-
separated us long since, broken literated all connections
life
off
should have
our
liaison,
ob-
with the past)— a love so
important to me, so decisive,
I
would doubtless pre-
had had a beginning, an end, a progresthereby denying what I was not sure of: that
tend that
there
realized
contradictory images, reappear-
son for the two of us to be here:
sion,
I
is
it
no
“story,” that nothing really begins or
122
A
Strange Solitude
ends, that certain beings represent a face, a char-
open — and
you force them to take part to play a role, they seem not to understand you, as if the fact that something had to happen (whereas in reality nothing happens), was a notion acter forever
if
,
you learned a sham image of time substituted for time, and which, for these motionless creatures without a destiny, must appear ridiculous, inoppor,
tune; tireless creatures tions, to
we
long to assail with ques-
shake like inanimate objects which seem to
confront us with an irrefutable proof of our
own
confusion and stupidity.
Another time, under a portico, her
face, in the
shadow, assumed that anonymous genre (“Spanish
which she managed to escape. Yet at other times, she was the same: familiar, expected, recaptured. Her filmy nightgown, strewn with tiny, type”) into
pale-pink flowers.
And
her perfume.
And
her whis-
between sulking and supplication, as if she were deliberately blurring words she was a little
pers,
ashamed
And
of.
last of all,
one day
without her being aware of
as I it,
in
was watching her the Parc Monceau,
she was the same again, with her severe, secretive expression, smiling a
woman
in a red
little,
suede
dreaming a
jacket, a
lot,
woman
a short
with no
personality, yet everything in the world for me.
123
Philippe S oilers
moments which, following my new notion of memory, I labored to analyze down to the slightest detail, though I knew that between Concha and me there would always Yes, there
were
all
these
be something inexpressible, and therefore all the more binding if I were to try to express it— and was I not justified in writing if, vis-à-vis my model and for
my own
interior
adventure (refined, clarified by
writing), I suffered to the highest degree a
commun-
ion and a laceration?
Surely— I told myself— I would have to force
and
attention
my
my
sensibility, at
some moment
my or
by creating a void within myself I would be more readily acted on. Later, memory would enchant all this. Attention, lucidity, are somehow long-term investments. So I would other of
life,
so that
take refuge against memory's gales, even though
by preserving myself against them I would only succeed— as the dike makes the flood rise— in rendering them more violent. I would thus find myself winning a greater intensity over my involuntary recollections and, on the other hand (for the past, for us, all
is
would construct which time would
certainly recaptured), I
those voluntary recollections
124
A
Strange Solitude
undertake to animate, to astound. into
my
least actions,
certainty of a
not to
wonder
my to
I
would introduce
slightest situations, the
come.
It
was
time, then,
myself go any longer, to direct
let
this
con-
fused mass of sentiments and emotions. Like everyone else, I had noticed that profundity is not always the result of excitement, but
more often
of calm, of
and contentment. Like everyone else, I had discovered that the recollections which delighted me the most were neither those that I had
harmony,
silence,
thought the most beautiful, nor the most likely to last. On the contrary, and by a law that resembled the biological observation that in the natural selection of a species, the
most average type
is
preserved
wanted to mock at our appreciation— so it happened that these recollections were in themselves quite mediocre, though of a freshness,
—as
lit
if
reality, too,
by a subdued
that
first
light.
And
I
recalled
(
called back)
attempt, when, on the balcony of an un-
known city, I had deliberately decided that this moment of contemplation would be exceptional. It was raining, the street was empty, the sky gray. But I wanted everything arranged to please me, and not only did reality seem to submit to my decision, but even today, sciousness
and
I
see again that
will as
of con-
one of the most beautiful,
the most accomplished in
125
moment
my memory.
Since then,
Philippe S oilers
whenever I visit a new house, I never fail to get to a window, open it, and compose for the future one of those perfect
little
To be
limit itself to.
pictures I
certain (but
want
my
life
to
one ever?) that
is
consciousness has been voluntarily as great as pos-
sible— that
is
a pleasure which with a
little
method
you can render inestimable. For this is the only question asked of us: the world and our own qualities being what they are, how enjoy them to the
maximum The
degree before.
.
.
?
great situations, the “events” exhaust them-
place reality,
own
more commonsometimes the most wretched— an ef-
selves of their
accord.
It is
the
fect of wind, heat, light, a sense of places that are
a
little
too
common,
the inexplicably
of certain postures— wliich literally
moving
make
sight
their
way
within us, suddenly exploding in our interior theater,
swelled by
all
effort
they have
ness.
Our
task
the expectations, the detours, the
made is
in
our conscious-
to establish the intoxication of
banality. Yet I felt I in
appear
to
must
find not only
such evidence, but virtually a duty.
my .
pleasure
.
.
Not a
theory of time but a practical and henceforth systematic method
(in
order to become,
some monstrous machine) ally happier, freer, and, in
for
if
possible,
making myself gener-
any
case,
more
sensitive.
126
A
Strange Solitude
Concha herself, the catalyst of all my thoughts, that I wanted to create a definitive image, and it seems to me that I have found it. It was durIt
was
of
ing a visit to the Escorial, one afternoon, that
discovered El Greco’s Martyrdom of
Beyond the very personal reason advance, to
me
let
me
say straight
to exhaust,
by
I
St.
Maurice.
am
about to
off that tills
work seems
very splendor,
its
sources of painting, arousing the feelings certain spectacles leave us stupefied. I that
my
day when,
after
my
friends
all
the re-
by which remember
had made fun
of
me away my exclamations, still my
agitation (only closing time could tear
from the canvas, silence feverish running about),
excitement, a reverie
I
I
remained
in a state of
seldom experienced at such
a pitch of extravagance.
Of course
justifies this
admiration, with
lows, blues
and mauves
its
I
its
the “martyrdom”
brilliant colors (yel-
of an irresistible violence),
already revolutionary composition (that breach
on the
left,
vance),
its
opening onto the plain where armies addiaphanous legs and hands— those hands
already so surprising in the Burial of Count Orgaz
—which this is
cross the canvas like birds.
Of
course, all
organized in an avalanche, an attack on equi-
librium to
make
what struck
me
it
surrender
most of
all
its
last secrets.
But
(without that false ele-
gance which knows nothing of a face before corn-
127
Philippe Sollers
paring
it
a Goya,
to
some painting—“She’s a
was— up
etc.’’)
Botticelli, he’s
above, to the
left,
in
one of
those luminous areas where the angels, saints, and blessed customarily cluster— the gel
who
holds the
Book
of
little
recording an-
Judgment. For
this quite
round countenance (you can make out its sense the texture of the skin), these eyes you
distinct,
colors,
suppose dark and sparkling (fringed not with lashes but with black and swarthy pest anas), the whole face childish and serious, distant and gracious, sur-
mounted by a touseled heap
of hair,
was Concha,
when
she lay with
exactly, eternally, in her bed,
neck propped against the pillow and, suddenly vague, her eyes went blank. And how well this comparison, no, this identification suited Concha,
who
everyone agreed “had the angel” (que tuviese angel) according to her country’s strange expression. In
any
case, this
defining
it
unhoped-for revelation aided
for
my task,
me. For instance, when she was
wearing bright-colored clothes that reminded me of some “advertisement,” she simplified my image of the more.
And among
that collection of faces, real or painted,
which each
her, for
which
I
loved her
all
of us carries about like so
many
possible solutions
problem of the face, I added this one of El Greco’s on which, from time to time, thinking of Concha, I could come to rest. That marvelous little
to the
128
A
Strange Solitude
angel! Above, in the confusion, there
was
action,
and atonly movements,
discussion, preparation— admirable gestures titudes, in fact.
But these were
crimes, hesitations.
still
While that angel, motionless,
its
and a mysterious ecstasy—not beyond the center of unshaken
face filled with light different but alien,
,
calm, manifestly of another race concerned with ineffable
problems— seems
passion: to read.
mav
What
it
to
know
only this one
hears, feels, or projects,
derive from that great tome, perhaps
it
comes
from a distant and secret kingdom, behind the picture. We cannot say, so remote does that face,
which seems so welcoming, turn out
to
be— even,
and particularly, beneath its smile. The angel has assumed its grace to deceive us, to reassure us, or to disturb whoever deserves it. It attracts only the inattentive gaze, the casual commentary. But why do we
feel this uneasiness,
tills
distress in
judging
it?
have said that Concha did not seem to me to have changed. How could I be sure, since we never know other people objectively and since, on the I
other hand,
my
changed so?
I
129
subjective
had never
rid
knowledge of her had myself of that old un-
Philippe Sollers
certainty about her previous
life;
her means of sur-
her wanderings through the war, poverty,
vival;
desertion; her relations with her family— but that
was her
secret, absolutely
unknowable, which
I
had
only heard about in snatches: that she had a child
—a
had probably been a prostitute for which interested me very little, actu-
girl— that she
a while. All of ally.
You cannot
by what,
in
explain people
them,
by events but only
resists events.
What
did
I
care
about the circumstances from which Concha’s char-
and nature emerged, since
was seeking in her something permanent, something beyond pleasure and pain? acter
And
I
wrong about that. It seemed to me that she was even more eager to please me, though without any coquetry. It was the way she began caressing me, taking off my clothes (when we came back from our walks and collapsed on the bed) with the same impatience and at times the same authority I felt myself. Voluntarily, she hesitated two or three times before kissing
would
yet, she
was the same,
I
wasn’t
me, then suddenly, with a kind of fall
fury,
on me. She had desired me, she had
waited for me, since she expected nothing from me.
130
A
Strange Solitude
remember one
I
Sundays
of those spring
spent in her room. After making love, walk, alone, in the Parc Monceau. its
way between
was possible
I
went
we
for a
The sun made
the trees, and suddenly everything
in this universe of leaves
and
light. I
love these cloudy days with intervals of sunlight.
And of
since
most of our
body transposed,
satisfied,
How
the
simple
states of
mind
are only states
realized that once desire
I
unknown momentarily it
was!
I
realized this
was
disappeared.
rhythm
of our
must simply exist without imposing conon it: be happy and speak ill only of oneself
sensibility
ditions
for being incapable of
For a long time
it.
I sat
sprawling on an iron chair,
watching a round-eyed duck who made me think of my own way of walking, and for that reason finding
it
quite fraternal.
went almost every afternoon to see Concha and less and less to my classes. One morning, without having gone home at all, I decided to show up at school. “What are you doing here?" whispered one of the professors I got on well with, drawing I
me if I
131
into a corner of the corridor.
seem
surprised.
.
.
.
How
“You don’t mind
tired
you look— are
Philippe S oilers
you taking psychology? Or physiology? Or psychophysiology?”
And he laughed
Other times,
roguishly.
went out early in the morning. After taking great precaution on the stairs, I opened the door and let the sharp early morning air bum
my my
I
lungs. Lighting a cigarette, I felt the weight of
cessive happiness.
The
their carts, crates
were lying
morning of the
first
me
no one arrested
face, surprised that
street
of
enough, happened to be
vendors were
filling
in the gutters.
May
my
for ex-
(which,
The
ironically
feast-day: el dia
de mi
santo ), the street to the métro station was full of
people selling
morning
I
was
lilies
of the valley,
and
at six in the
their only customer, except for
one
two night owls in tuxedoes. I took the métro with the first workmen, who stared at me unkindly, and reached home in the full spring daylight. Once in or
my
room,
I
threw myself on the bed,
an immediate coma,
visiting great
falling into
sun-baked houses
AwakLuxembourg
overlooking landscapes of lakes and trees.
ening around eleven,
I
went
to the
where the fountains touched the lawns with a coolness moving with the wind. They say love dissipates: how it sobers one up! My way of spending time was affected in a way I would once have found insulting.
with
fife,
You
think you can deal quite casually
and the
discipline of pleasure
makes you 132
A
Strange Solitude
love
who
it. I,
never knew what to do,
myself with chatter,
few
at five thirty, a
—a
I
a beer in the Cafe X,
steps in the
taste not without
Rue
Y), I
who
out
its
now
pleasures— well,
I
was
would be. realized that another existence was possible which had never suspected, an existence in which people
always "busy,’' I
stupefied
idleness, "feeling the time pass”
boredom loved
of
(at five,
who
1
arranged matters so
I
need you, and perhaps only one woman: to profit by this naïveté, no longer listening to the voice of
which had once created a memory that
lassitude
was
so incomplete.
that
was what
ence as
my
much
nature or
I
had
To
kill
to do,
as possible,
my
myself with pleasure,
and
no time, experiwithout heeding either lose
habits, so that I could never say
you could have done more. I would force myself, I would never leave myself in peace. And I must admit Concha lent herself adto myself later on:
mirably to
all
my
plans, never offering the slightest
and nuance, sometimes, was
contradiction, her character always harmonious reassuring,
enough
whose
to distress
slightest
me. Thus: a
woman
alone, with-
out position, without desires, and without vanity, a woman indolent enough to abandon coquetry but passionate enough to enjoy pleasure— that was that I
still
exalted me.
And
yet certain nights
did not sleep with her (when
133
I
all
when
did not savor that
Philippe Sollers
which the other seemed stale, of feeling her body against me, of surrounding her, crushing her in my half-sleep), after making love, I left by the last métro sat down at a table in an pleasure, without
,
all-night bar near
my
room, and devoured a steak-
and-fried-potatoes with a glass of red wine. Never
did food taste so good to the sense of
pleasure
shame
w as T
I
me
as at that
might have
quickly brushed
felt
moment. And
about
this tiny
away by my happy
unconcern.
Sometimes, though,
my
seeming lack of resources
which,
I
me. Then to
reproached myself for
I
vis-à-vis this liaison
supposed, should seem extraordinary to I
stayed in Concha’s room,
imbue myself with every
I
struggled
detail, to leave
to the accident of perception.
On
nothing
the wall, thanks
whose white square with red border hung from a piece of string, it was
to the Post Office calendar its
autumn. Great into
trees thrust their dry,
an ice-blue
Beneath them, the same leaves,
sky.
a profusion of leaves on, to roll over
golden leaves
I
would have
and over
in,
my
liked to lie
face pricked by
their crackling freshness. In the distance,
slope opposite this
and
their
little hill
down
on the
covered by the trees
glowing foliage, long, misty green
fields
stretched into the distance, but caressed you, sink-
ing deep within you, never quite escaped you.
134
A
Strange Solitude
Perhaps a river— or a thin blade of crossed these
fields,
a zipper-
steel,
gave them an inaccessible look
where the mind might pause and wonder, for a moment. And yet it was on this murmuring hillside (or so I imagined it) that a decisive game (this much I was sure of) was being played. At this point of the
stroll,
my
face recovering a kind of purity, I
would have stopped, breathed deeply, and leaned against one of these rough trunks.
And probably
beyond the pleasure, the sunshine, this wild dance of autumn (which must have reminded me of the long walks I used to take around Beatrice's estate: vanishing down a narrow path between the vines and heading for the treetops of the skeet-range beyond which the gentle wooded hills fell away, I turned and saw the house with the sun behind it and, on the greenhouse side, I
would have been
far
Beatrice, so blond, so precious, lying in a deckchair of transatlantic blue, waiting for
me; then
I
decided
would approach her without making any noise, without being seen, as if, coming home from a long trip over woods and fields during which everything had been made possible, I were to deserve this shining house), yes, I would have been beyond that, I
since
it
would have been easy
for
vacillation of the wind, to follow
across space, in this rustling
135
it
me in
its
to feel this
hesitations
and immutable
interval.
Philippe S oilers
And
just as
we
discover a change in our char-
by a modification— sometimes so our tastes, I doubled my life at every mo-
acter or opinions
faint— in
ment of happiness, of sensuality, with a dreamy, more luminous music which seemed to give its whole measure to what I had just felt. Whether it was Ravel or Debussy (the beginning of the second suite from Daphnis and Chloe or the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun to furnish easy landmarks, :
every author should provide his references)
to
loved, permitted
me
stage accompanied, for instance,
by
more passionately
music, once
come on
this
the descending phrase of the flute in the Prelude
(which
word
in
its
undulation corresponds so well to the
“slip”— as between sheets) or to recite, deeply
moved, Mallarmé’s
Mon
crime
lines:
c’est d’avoir gai
,
de vaincre ces peurs
Traîtresses, divisé lu touffe échevelée
De
baisers ,
que
les
Dieux gardaient
Car à peine fallais cacher un Sous
les replis
Never,
I
being a musician.
And
I
bien mêlée.
ardent
heureux d’une seide.
decided, would
.
.
.
forgive myself for not
that phrase, probably in-
tended to describe certain
and scented
rire
si
rustic
amours violent
in a setting of moist green,
,
I
trans-
136
A
Strange Solitude
f erred
to Concha's room,
who, when
ally
I
made
made
it
love to her,
into a precious
would give
the supreme sensation of possessing the earth (the goddess Earth).
ure
who
Rare are the partners
me
itself
in pleas-
permit you to achieve yourself wholly. For
love does not
mean
longing to achieve the other
—which would be impossible— it means permitting the mother to discover himself as profoundly, vastlv as he deserves.
The acknowledgment
as
of love
—which has nothing to do with jealousy or “mystery”— is what the other has taught us about ourselves, and our joy what we have revealed to him. One day, and I bring up this incident only beme, though quite unnoticeable, of a great importance (like a signal from that world I had merely glimpsed during my solitude), one day cause
it
seems
to
had gone with Concha to visit friends who lived on the Avenue Kléber. Since the visit would not be a long one, and I don’t enjoy seeing new faces, I I
waited for her downstairs in a courtyard surrounded by a low wall topped by an iron fence. It was dark,
and the building, silhouetted against the sky, formed a pale and somehow chilly rectangle despite (and perhaps because
of)
a
swarm
nary to
137
me was
the
A
sharp,
ir-
was leaning against But what seemed so extraordi-
regular sound near the wall
indicated a fountain.
of stars.
murmur
I
of so
many
conversa-
Philippe S oile rs
tions
from the lighted windows of
radio
was playing a popular song:
all six floors.
A
Elle a roulé carrosse , Elle a roulé sa bosse
—a
happy, infectious tune
I
.
.
.
smilingly applied to
Concha. The sound of voices wavered chiefly between two groups of windows, sometimes louder
from
my right,
crying. “So
sometimes from
you
my
left.
see,” I heard, followed
no question about
it!”
A
child
was
by “There's
Exactness of the expression:
And
seemed that alone here, in my courtyard, leaning against this low wall and passionately eavesdropping as if to learn some state secret— but a state secret would have interested me less— I was transfixed by all these familiar noises, they had invaded me, found their development in me, finally fired me back to life. The certainty that Concha— Concha!—would appear any minute now in this setting seemed wonderful to me. For once, I expected the impossible and the impossible would happen. And suddenly I felt that this was what I would have to try to express for the rest of my life, bursts of laughter.
this feeling of ecstasy
it
about the world or about
other people, this sudden assurance of a
harmony
and a happiness that was incommunicable,
of
138
A
Strange Solitude
course, but that to express them.
make
of
my
life
would be perfect only
in
my
effort
And, multiplying these sensations, (was it possible?) a clear and co-
herent whole which would have the brilliance and the hardness of a
new metal
that nothing could
ever melt or corrode.
Concha, laughing, appeared on the
staircase,
abandoned my hypotheses there. Yet that evening I made up some pretext and went home alone, walking all the way. There subsisted, from and
my
I
reverie in the courtyard, a physical euphoria—
and
also a question.
Were such moments worth
bothering about, worth being construed as the center for I
everything else? Yes,
I
believed they were,
believed it— even passionately.
was walking beside the Luxembourg. There was blue-black moonlight among a few clouds that were as wrinkled and mottled as the sand of certain beaches where the receding water seems to have I
struggled one last time to have kept
On
its
conquest.
the other side of the fence, the disorderly tangle
seemed not so much outlined as inlaid in this metallic and secret space. The street was empty as far as I could see, faintly lit, and my steps echoed of trees
loudly in the silence.
From time
to time, I glimpsed
through gaping curtains a piece of furniture, a
lampshade, and sometimes— though rarely— a
139
figure.
Philippe S oilers
The neighborhood the opposition of
used to know seemed now,
I
secret interior security
tills
this cold stretch of landscape, strangely
in
and
new, as
if
transferred to the center of an irresistible, naked
My breath-
attraction, almost pleading for existence.
ing slowed,
my ears hummed,
as
I
walked,
sinking deeper into myself. Could
I
began
I
say that suddenly
lolling,
and even
I
was
My
floating?
steps
seemed the rhythm
grew
disproportionately louder until they
to
the whole night, echoing as
of an
if
to
fill
was I no longer. And probably, at this moment that was so intense, so fugitive, I was that sky where, beyond the tangle of trees, the dawn was breaking where, quietly, familiarly, probably taking advantage of some carelessness (on the world’s part or on mine), I had dissolved myself.
unknown
One
dance. But
it
was leaving for the vacation— I had a date with Concha at ten o’clock in front of a movie theater on the Champs-Elysées. It was to see her, to talk to her once more, and I will admit I was a little annoyed by tills ceremony before our separation. To cut things short, even though outbursts and effusions were not the sort of thing I expected from Concha, I almost didn’t turn up. At first I thought she was late,
evening, which was to be the last— for
but that was so unlike her that
I
I
began worry-
ing right away. Suppose she didn’t come?
What
if
140
A
Strange Solitude
came again? Then, and by a natural and absurd impulse, I was gripped by an anxiety as great as if my life had been in danger. I began walking up and down the sidewalk. Ten after ten. And during the whole time I was searching the she never
faces of the people walking by,
saw her woman, I seen
when
I
thought
I
each automobile, in every hurrying
in
tried to
imagine in Concha
s
face as
I
had
the night before the slightest sign of dis-
it
pleasure or coldness. Hadn't she said au revoir with a little too much remoteness, as if she were already
moving away? Had she decided to signify fifteen. I
to
break
this
date
an adieu she hesitated to speak? Tenwalked back and forth on the sidewalk,
exhausting
my
hypotheses and concocting, to ex-
plain her delay, the classical excuses of infatuation (there had been a misunderstanding, she couldn't
help
know
it,
it
etc.). I
now,"
had never desired her I
I
stupid going
away
much.
"I
repeated furiously, “I can’t do
must
without her,
so
find her again.
like this.
And
besides,
it's
.” .
.
sensed that by “standing me up," expressing her absence in this vulgar form, Concha was resuming the advantage. I still loved her
Perhaps
I
had enough vanity to believe in that kind of plot. Ten-thirty. I was seething not so much with anger as with love— though a moment before I was enough,
141
I
Philippe Sollers
still
wondering
street,
went
if I
to the
should see her.
métro
station,
came back, went
away, fearful each time— though I
policeman was watching
me
to her
room. As
I
turned back
jeeringly. I
was about
came from the
train
I
had missed
every other second— that
go
crossed the
I
her.
I
Where could
big
decided to
to take the
métro a
other direction and
Concha
,
got out. Fascinated, completely unaware of
was doing,
A
what I
followed her without her seeing me. she be going? But
I
soon realized that
though she was three-quarters of an hour late, she was quite calmly coming to meet me. Her face
showed only I
indifference, she didn’t
continued walking behind her— this
even see me.
woman who
had vanished and whom I would now confront furiously and then burst out laughing. Of course, she was delayed, she had thought it was earlier. How could she not have come?
And
I
prolonged the pleasure of watching her
walk, supple, indifferent— so serious, as soon as she
was
alone, that her face
assumed an expression
of
severity.
That same night,
own same
room.
We
I
would
went back with her part, I thought,
lack of emphasis, that
was so much a part exhausted
just
with that
same naturalness
last false note,
that
I
had
all
that
of Concha’s character.
now, in a
to her
142
A
Strange Solitude
remained of childishness and
instability.
This time,
was really over with. We would see each other now and then to make love or talk in low voices of the past, and these future encounters would be sweet, a little despairing. But after all, other adven-
it
tures
most
Then
awaited both of
likely
I
realized
us.
Concha s
that
leaning
face,
was wet with tears. The lamp made it shine a little. Her beauty, at this moment, was transcendent, bordered on the pathos of certain against the wall,
images you see only once, in the horror of catas-
She was crying, murmuring that she had come late on purpose hoping I would have left, trophes.
taking on myself the responsibility for our separation; that all
she was too old for
me— she knew
that,
right— that our love could lead nowhere for either
of us; that she
wanted
to
be
forever so as not to have to see
far
me
away from me any more; that
she didn't hate me, oh no! but that everything was hopeless.
Now she pressed her against my cheek. Then,
poor, trembling,
pushing
wet face
me away
a
little,
she looked at me. Already she seemed somewhere
on another shore, remote, unknown, swept away by a whirlwind as sudden as it was unforeseeable. She loved me, and that was why, I knew,
else,
she didn’t want to see
143
me
again. Quickly she
wiped
Philippe S oilers
her eyes with the back of her hand, the
dren do, while
I
way
chil-
realized, aghast, that everything
had believed to be so solid, so indisputable, had crumbled in a second. Had I been so wrong? Whole I
had composed my most secret and sadness, my renewed emotion
years, everything that
my
intimacy,
joy
sustained during so
was
many
days.
from everything
.
.
.
And
already,
I
was going to have to suffer. For it was another Concha that I would have to create— a Concha who left me, destroying that part of myself which she had once constructed with such skill. I would have to question myself again, muzzle my habits to fill the void this change had dug within me. The blame belonged to that childhood which had still not finished dying in me. suffering
How
could
I live
I
with a false image, too care-
lie?
composed and which now revealed its painful As witness of my error, there would always be
this
new
face, this face in tears.
my
solitude with this face
fully
dure
My
make
would have had
could
I
en-
had not tamed?
my memory
the longed-for accomplice out of
it.
to write forever in order to diminish,
without ever quite exhausting, that
I
theories crashed against this face,
could not I
How
just fallen
on
my
life.
breathe, try to recapture this
enormous weight Write in order to
this
moment
that
was so
brief, so crucial.
144
A
Strange Solitude
Concha
kissed me, nibbling a
little
as she did
each time she was sad, and left at once. Would I ever see her again? But the service staircase over-
and through the ground-glass windows I could still make out her shadow, rising slowly, her head thrown back, as if she were solemnly mounting a scaffold to some sacrifice. Her long hair made a darker shadow behind her head.
looked the
street,
me and waved her hand, which seemed transparent. A window on the next I
whistled. She heard
was open, and I hoped I would see her when she passed it. But suddenly the hall light went out and Concha disappeared altogether. Would she turn it on on the floor above? I imagined her groping for the switch as I had done so many times coming to meet her in the evening. I would walk
floor
down
the long hallway at the end of which, having
would open her door. Perhaps she was there now, at that same place where I used to stand a few seconds, so as not to seem too out of breath. But the light stayed out: Concha had gone
heard
my
steps, she
the rest of the
way
long time. “Now,”
I
in darkness. I
waited quite a
told myself, “she
s
taking off
her clothes, she’s lying there with her arms around her knees, so flat beneath the covers that if some-
one came into her room to arrest her, he wouldn even bother opening the bed.”
145
t
Philippe Sollers
need big
I
my
cities.
The
balcony.
May
across the
Late at night,
flashes of heat lightning streaked
sky.
The
noise of motors, the squeal
of brakes, the reflection of a
board composed their I
was going
stayed out on
I
neon sign on a
futile distractions
around me.
abandon
to leave in a minute,
bill-
Paris,
But what dawned so gently inside me with the daylight, like an inextricable contradiction, this immutable thing on which my life would now be built and on which the exterior would probably
travel.
now on be only a series of tude, I mean— warned me that
from
youth. Like the old stories
variations— my
soli-
was cured of my where the dead from I
time to time come to advise the living,
it
was
as
if
Concha had reappeared only to comfort me. Was it even Concha? Or was it my sixteen years, the period of my life when I had been granted the grace of loving her? Nothing was lost, probably. I would see her again, we would agree to forget this evenings incident, there would be a thousand reasons to ignore old friend. self,
“don’t
.
would
.
Concha,
my
only love,
“For the moment/’
move around any more,
take cover.” I
.
it.
I
my
dear
reminded mv-
I
dig yourself
was growing slowly numb, but
stay there, leaning against
in,
knew my window I
146
A
Strange Solitude
My life opened and
watching the day dawn.
closed,
been happy? Much more than misery, which makes us depend on our desires, it is happiness which isolates. And I felt the whole
without a sound. Hadn’t
extent of
my
I
solitude as lucidity revealed
it
to
me;
the true, the only solitude: the solitude whose eyes are open. So
it
had come
seems that everything
is
then, this
moment when
it
collapsing around you, that
you are no longer jeopardized by anything that once could have compromised you, that at last you can pull yourself together. I would love other people, but only to interest myself in their most imperceptible movements, that mystery which escapes
and assumes for a little while the features of a face, the form of pleasure. But I accepted this mystery conditionally, I knew (contrary to what I had
us
thought a during self),
before, seeing Concha’s hysteria,
reality’s last
that
tapped its
moment
attempt to
would no longer deceive me, that I had power to make me suffer and left it only
it
its
enchantment.
The dawn was gathering of roofs
those
and
nor was it
147
treetops.
moments
and which,
it:
make me doubt my-
it
for
But
of ecstasy
against a background
was no longer one of had once known so well
this I
such a short time, cured
the resignation
was another
feeling
I
me
of habit;
had hated so—far from
which seized
me now-
Philippe S oilers
fragile,
perhaps, and temporary, the feeling of be-
ing from stir
and
now on
as far as possible
strategy. I write this
ridiculous: I felt I
from the world
though
was saved. And
it
s
may seem
in this
sudden
certainty (the certainty of being inaccessible) there
was a joy so great I felt I had found my way, I mean, a sense of no longer living shamefully glued to
some
illusion.
be able
And
then, feeling that I
was going
seemed inestimable, for it allowed me to observe, to feel, to compare its reactions though I would no longer play a part in them, as if I had withdrawn from the game to observe its to
last effects.
to
work,
life
Waiting for worse.
Le Martray -Paris, July -Dec ember, 1957
148
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