Gallantry | Page 2

James Branch Cabell
leap from the solidly set
paragraphs and rearrange the brilliant fooling that opens the chapter
"Magic of the Image Makers." This last is in itself so felicitous a
composite of verse and criticism--a passage incredibly overlooked by
the most meticulous of Cabell's glossarians--that it deserves a paper for
itself. For here, set down prosaically as "the unfinished Rune of the
Blackbirds" are four distinct parodies--including two insidious
burlesques of Browning and Swinburne--on a theme which is familiar
to us to-day in les mots justes of Mother Goose. "It is," explains Freydis,
after the thaumaturgists have finished, "an experimental incantation in
that it is a bit of unfinished magic for which the proper words have not
yet been found: but between now and a while they will be stumbled on,
and then this rune will live perpetually." And thus the poet, speaking
through the mouth-piece of Freydis, discourses on the power of words
and, in one of Cabell's most eloquent chapters, crystallizes that high
mood, presenting the case for poetry as it has been pleaded by few of
her most fervid advocates.
Here the thesis will stop quoting and argue its main contention from
another angle. It will consider the author in a larger and less technical
sense: disclosing his characters, his settings, his plots, even the entire

genealogical plan of his works, to be the design of a poet rather than a
novelist. The persons of Cabell's imagination move to no haphazard
strains; they create their own music. And, like a set of modulated motifs,
they combine to form a richer and more sonorous pattern. With its
interrelation of figures and interweaving of themes, the Cabellian
"Biography" assumes the solidity and shapeliness of a fugue, a
composition in which all the voices speak with equal precision and
recurring clarity.
And what, the diagnostician may inquire, of the characters themselves?
They are, it will be answered, motivated by pity and irony; the tolerant
humor, the sympathetic and not too distant regard of their Olympian
designer agitate them so sensitively that we seldom see what strings are
twitched. These puppets seem to act of their own conviction--possibly
because their director is careful not to have too many convictions of his
own. It may have been pointed out before this that there are no
undeviating villains in his masques and, as many an indignant reviewer
has expostulated, few untarnished heroes. Cabell's, it will be perceived,
is a frankly pagan poetry. It has no texts with which to discipline
beauty; it lacks moral fervor; it pretends to no divinity of dogmatism.
The image-maker is willing to let his creatures ape their living models
by fluctuating between shifting conventions and contradictory ideals;
he leaves to a more positive Author the dubious pleasure of drawing a
daily line between vice and virtue. If Cabell pleads at all, he pleads
with us not to repudiate a Villon or a Marlowe while we are reviling the
imperfect man in a perfect poet. "What is man, that his welfare be
considered?" questions Cabell, paraphrasing Scripture, "an ape who
chatters to himself of kinship with the archangels while filthily he digs
for groundnuts.... Yet do I perceive that this same man is a maimed
god.... He is under penalty condemned to compute eternity with false
weights and to estimate infinity with a yardstick--and he very often
does it."
This, the thesis will contend, is the only possible attitude to the mingled
apathy and abandon of existence--and it is, in fine, the poetic attitude.
Romantic it is, without question, and I imagine Cabell would be the last
to cavil at the implication. For, mocked by a contemptuous silence

gnawing beneath the howling energy of life, what else is there for the
poet but the search for some miracle of belief, some assurance in a
world of illimitable perplexities? It is the wish to attain this dream
which is more real than reality that guides the entire Cabell epos--"and
it is this will that stirs in us to have the creatures of earth and the affairs
of earth, not as they are, but as 'they ought to be.'"
Such a romantic vision, which concludes that glowing testament,
Beyond Life, is the shining thread that binds the latest of Cabell's novels
with the earliest of his short stories. It is, in effect, one tale he is telling,
a tale in which Poictesme and the more local Lichfield are, for all their
topographical dissimilarities, the same place, and all his people
interchangeable symbols of the changeless desires of men. Whether the
allegory is told in the terms of Gallantry with its perfumed lights, its
deliberate artifice and its technique of badinage, or presented in the
more high-flying mood of Chivalry with its ready passions and readier
rhetoric, it prefigures the subsequent pageant in which the victories
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