Presentation Speech by Per Hallström, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy, on December 10, 1934
The work of Luigi Pirandello is extensive.
As an author of novellas he certainly is without equal in output,
even in the primary country of this literary genre. Boccaccio's
Decameron contains one hundred novellas; Pirandello's
Novelle per un anno (1922-37) has one for each day of the
year. They offer much variation in subject matter as well as in
character: descriptions of life either purely realistic or
philosophically profound or paradoxical, as often marked by
humour as by satire. There are also creations of a jaunty poetic
imagination in which the demands of reality give way to an ideal
and creative truth.
The common feature of all these novellas is the effortless
improvisation that gives them spontaneity, élan, and life.
But since the limited scope of the novella demands a particularly
strict composition, we also find the result of improvisation. In
his hurried treatment of the subject Pirandello may soon lose
control, without any concern for the overall impression. Although
his novellas reveal much originality, they are hardly
representative of the accomplished master; this is readily
apparent when one notes the many motifs which were later employed
in his dramatic work.
Nor do his novels mark the zenith of his literary achievement.
Although his early novels were imbued with the same ideas with
which he made his profoundly original contribution to the modern
theatre, he reserved the definitive shaping of these ideas for
the theatre.
In the short survey that is possible here, we can mention only
one of these novels in which a distinctive feature of his concept
of our times, his disgust and fear of materialism which
mechanizes life, appears most strongly. The novel is Si
gira (1916) [Shoot!], titled after a technical term of
the cinema, «Shoot one». The expression warns the
actors when the shooting of a scene begins. The narrator is the
one who «shoots», that is, the cameraman of a large
film industry. He finds a special meaning in his work. For him,
life with all its good and evil is reduced to the material of
images mechanically produced for a thoughtless pastime; it has no
other purpose. The photographic apparatus becomes a demon which
swallows everything and unrolls it on the film reel, thus giving
it an outward appearance of reality, an appearance which is, in
essence, spiritual death and emptiness. Our modern existence
revolves and runs with the same lifeless speed, completely
mechanized as if it were destroyed and annihilated. The author's
attitude is expressed with extreme intensity. The mere plot is
devastating enough.
That is the background of Pirandello's dramas, limited as they
most often are to purely psychological problems. The bitterness
of our present era must have had much influence on the plays'
pessimistic philosophy even if this philosophy is based on the
author's nature.
Maschere Nude (1918-21), the title he gave to his
collection of plays, is difficult to translate because of its
complexity. Literally this expressions means «naked
masks», but «masks» usually indicates a bare
surface. In this case, however, the word is applied to the
disguise which hides one from others and from one's self and
which signifies to Pirandello the form of the selfa surface with
an unfathomable being behind it. «Veiled» masks,
analyzed and dissolved with penetrating clarity: this is the
portrayal of human beings in his dramas - men are unmasked. That
is the meaning of the phrase.
The most remarkable feature of Pirandello's art is his almost
magical power to turn psychological analysis into good theatre.
Usually the theatre requires human stereotypes; here the spirit
is like a shadow, obscurity behind obscurity, and one cannot
decide what is more or less central inside. Finally one racks his
brains, for there is no centre. Everything is relative, nothing
can be grasped completely, and yet the plays can sometimes seize,
captivate, and charm even the great international public. This
result is wholly paradoxical. As the author himself explained, it
depends on the fact that his works «arise out of images
taken from life which have passed through a filter of ideas and
which hold me completely captive». It is the image which is
fundamental, not, as many have believed, the abstract idea
disguised afterwards by an image.
It has been said that Pirandello has but a «single»,
idea, the illusory nature of the personality, of the
«I». The charge is easy to prove. The author is indeed
obsessed with that idea. However, even if the idea is expanded to
include the relativity of everything man believes he sees and
understands, this charge is unfair.
Pirandello's dramatic art did not at first break with general
literary tendencies. He treated social and ethical problems, the
conflict between parenthood and the social structure with its
inflexible notions of honour and decency, and the difficulties
that human goodness finds in protecting itself against the same
adversaries. All this was presented in morally as well as
logically complicated situations and ended either in victory or
defeat. These problems had their natural counterpart in the
analysis of the «I» of the characters who were as
relative as the idea against which they were fighting.
In several of his plays it is the idea others have of a
personality and the effect they experience from it which becomes
the principal subject. Others know us only as we know them,
imperfectly; and yet we make definitive judgments. It is under
the atmospheric pressure of these judgments that the
consciousness of one's self can be changed. In Tutto per
bene (1920) [All For The Best] this psychological
process is carried to its conclusion. In Vestire gli
ignudi (1923) [To Clothe the Naked] the motif is
turned upside down and assumes a moving tragic character. A lost
life, an «I», no longer finding anything in itself,
desires death but, turning entirely to the outside, has a last
pathetic wish to have a proper shroud in the beautifying idea
which others have of its former being. In this gripping play even
Iying appears by its anguish as a kind of innocence.
But the author does not stop here; several of his plays deal with
the lie in the world of relativity and examine with a penetrating
logic how more or less criminal this lie is. In La vita che ti
diedi (1924) [The Life I Gave You] the right to
unreality receives beautiful and great expression. A woman,
having lost her only son, no longer has anything which holds her
to life; yet the very violence of the blow reawakens in her a
strength which dispels death, as light dispels darkness. All has
become shadows; she feels that not only herself but all existence
is «such stuff as dreams are made of». In her heart she
guards both the memory and the dream, and now they are able to
surpass all other things. The son to whom she gave life, who
always filled her soul, fills it still. There no void is
possible; the son cannot be removed. He remains in her presence,
a form she cannot grasp; she feels him there as much as she is
able to feel anything. Thus the relativity of truth has taken the
shape of a simple and sublime mystery.
The same relativity appears as an enigma in Così é
(se vipare) (1918) [Right You Are (If You Think You
Are)]. The play is called a parable, which means that its
singular story makes no pretensions to reality. It is a bold and
ingenious fabrication which imparts wisdom. The circumstances of
a family, recently settled in a provincial city, become
intolerable to the other inhabitants of the town. Of the three
members of the family, the husband, the wife, and the
mother-in-law, either the husband or the mother-in-law, each
otherwise reasonable, must be viewed as seized with absurd ideas
about the identity of the wife. The last speaker always has the
final say on the issue, but a comparison of the conflicting
statements leaves it in doubt. The questionings and the
confrontation of the two characters are described with great
dramatic art and with a knowledge of the most subtle maladies of
the soul. The wife should be able to resolve the puzzle, but when
she appears she is veiled like the goddess of knowledge and
speaks mysteriously; to each of the interested parties she
represents what she must be in order for that person to preserve
his image of her. In reality she is the symbol of the truth which
no one can grasp in its entirety.
The play is also a brilliant satire on man's curiosity and false
wisdom; in it Pirandello presents a catalogue of types and
reveals a penetrating self-conceit, either partially or
completely ridiculous, in those attempting to discover truth. The
whole remains a masterpiece in its own right.
The central problem in the author's dramatic work, however, is
the analysis of the «I» - its dissolution in contrary
elements, the negation of its unity as illusory, and the
symbolical description of the Maschere nude. Thanks to the
inexhaustible productivity of his mind, Pirandello attacks the
problem from different sides, some of which have already been
mentioned.
By sounding the depths of madness, he makes important
discoveries. In the tragedy of Enrico IV (1922) [Henry
IV], for example, the strongest impression comes from the
struggle of the personality for its identity in the eternally
flowing torrent of time. In Il giuoco delle parti (19191)
[The Rules of the Game] Pirandello creates a drama of pure
abstractions: he uses the artificial notions of duty to which
members of society can be subjected by the force of tradition
with resolute logic for an action completely contrary to
expectation. As by a stroke of a magic wand, the game of
abstractions fills the scene ith an extremely captivating
life.
Sei Personaggi in cerca d'autore (1921) [Six Characters
in Search of an Author] is a game similar to that described
earlier and at the same time its very opposite; it is both
profoundly serious and full of ideas. Here unrestrained creative
imagination rather than abstraction dominates. It is the true
drama of poetic creation; it is also the settling of accounts
between the theatre and truth, between appearance and reality.
Moreover, it is the half-despairing message of art to the soul of
a ravaged age, of fragmentary scenes both fulminating and
explosive. This flood of violent feeling and superior
intellectuality, rich in poetry, is truly the inspiration of
genius. The world-wide success of the play, which proves that it
has to some extent been understood, is as extraordinary as the
piece itself There is neither the necessity nor the time to
recall its magically startling details.
The sceptical psychology on which Pirandello has based his
remarkable production is purely negative. If it were adopted by
the general public with the same naiveté with which new and
bold ideas are generally received, it would indeed entail more
than one risk. But there is no danger that this will happen. It
applies itself to purely intellectual realms and the general
public scarcely follows it there. If by chance someone might be
persuaded that his «I» is a fiction, he would soon be
convinced that in practice this «I» does possess a
certain degree of reality. Just as it is impossible to prove the
freedom of the will, which is however constantly proved by
experience, so the «I» manifestly finds means to make
itself remembered. These means are gross or subtle. The most
subtle of them perhaps consists in the faculty of thought itself;
among others, the thought which wants to annihilate the
«I».
But the analytical work of this great writer retains its value,
especially if compared to several other things to which we have
been treated in our time. Psychological analysis has given us
complexes, which have spread immense pleasure and joy. They have
even been worshipped as fetishes by apparently pious minds.
Barbarous fetishes! To a person with some visual imagination,
they resemble seaweed entangled in the water. Small fish often
hover before this seaweed meditating until, their heads clear at
last, they sink into it and disappear. Pirandello's scepticism
protects us from such adventures; furthermore, he can help us. He
warns us not to touch the delicate tissue of the human soul in a
coarsely dogmatic and blind manner.
As a moralist, Pirandello is neither paradoxical nor destructive.
Good remains good, and evil, evil. A nobly old-fashioned humanity
dominates his ideas about the world of men. His bitter pessimism
has not stifled his idealism; his penetrating analytical reason
has not cut the roots of life. Happiness does not occupy a large
place in the world of his imagination, but what gives dignity to
life still finds enough air to breathe in it.
Dear Dr. Pirandello - Mine was the difficult task of presenting a
concise synopsis of your profound literary work. Although such a
brief sketch is hardly adequate, I have carried out my charge
with pleasure.
May I now ask you to receive from His Majesty the Nobel Prize in
Literature, of which the Swedish Academy has deemed you
worthy.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1934