Presentation Speech by Anders Österling, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy
On the first page of the remarkable journal
kept by André Gide for half a century, the author, then
twenty years old, finds himself on the sixth floor of a building
in the Latin Quarter, looking for a meeting place for «The
Symbolists», the group of youths to which he belonged. From
the window he looked at the Seine and Notre Dame during the
sunset of an autumn day and felt like the hero of a Balzac novel,
a Rastignac ready to conquer the city lying at his feet:«And
now, we two!» However, Gide's ambition was to find long and
twisting paths ahead; nor was it to be contented with easy
victories.
The seventy-eight-year-old writer who this day is being honoured
with the award of the Nobel Prize has always been a controversial
figure. From the beginning of his career he put himself in the
first rank of the sowers of spiritual anxiety, but this does not
keep him today from being counted almost everywhere among the
first literary names of France, or from enjoying an influence
that has persisted unabatedly through several generations. His
first works appeared in the 1890's; his last one dates from the
spring of 1947. A very important period in the spiritual history
of Europe is outlined in his work, constituting a kind of
dramatic foundation to his long life. One may ask why the
importance of this work has only so recently been appreciated at
its true value: the reason is that André Gide belongs
unquestionably to that class of writers whose real evaluation
requires a long perspective and a space adequate for the three
stages of the dialectic process. More than any of his
contemporaries, Gide has been a man of contrasts, a veritable
Proteus of perpetually changing attitudes, working tirelessly at
opposite poles in order to strike flashing sparks. This is why
his work gives the appearance of an uninterrupted dialogue in
which faith constantly struggles against doubt, asceticism
against the love of life, discipline against the need for
freedom. Even his external life has been mobile and changing, and
his famous voyages to the Congo in 1927 and to Soviet Russia in
1935 - to cite only those - are proof enough that he did not want
to be ranked among the peaceful stay-at-homes of
literature.
Gide comes from a Protestant family whose social position
permitted him to follow his vocation freely and to devote greater
attention than most others can afford to the cultivation of his
personality and to his inner development. He described this
family milieu in his famous autobiography whose title Si le
grain ne meurt (1924) [If It Die... ] is taken from
St. John's words about the grain of wheat that must die before
its fruition. Although he has strongly reacted against his
Puritan education, he has nonetheless all his life dwelled on the
fundamental problems of morality and religion, and at times he
has defined with rare purity the message of Christian love,
particularly in his short novel, La Porte étroite
(1909) [Strait Is the Gate], which deserves to be compared
with the tragedies of Racine.
On the other hand, one finds in André Gide still stronger
manifestations of that famous «immoralism» - a
conception which his adversaries have often misinterpreted. In
reality it designates the free act, the «gratuitous»
act, the liberation from all repressions of conscience, something
analogous to what the American recluse Thoreau expressed,
«The worst thing is being the slave dealer of one's
soul.» One should always keep in mind that Gide found some
difficulty in presenting as virtue that which is composed of the
absence of generally recognized virtues. Les Nourritures
terrestres (1897) [Fruits of the Earth] was a youthful
attempt from which he later turned away, and the diverse delights
he enthusiastically sings of evoke for us those beautiful fruits
of southern lands which do not bear keeping. The exhortation
which he addresses to his disciple and reader, «And now,
throw away my book. Leave me!», has been followed first of
all by himself in his later works. But what leaves the strongest
impression, in Nourritures as elsewhere, is the intense
poetry of separation, of return, captured by him in so masterly a
fashion in the flute-song of his prose. One rediscovers it often,
for example in this brief journal entry, written later, near a
mosque at Brusa on one May morning: «Ah! begin anew and on
again afresh! Feel with rapture this exquisite tenderness of the
cells in which emotion filters like milk... Bush of the dense
gardens, rose of purity, indolent rose in the shade of plane
trees, can it be thee thou hast not known my youth? Before? Is it
a memory I dwell in? Is it indeed I who am seated in this little
corner of the mosque, I who breathe and I who love thee? or do I
only dream of loving thee?... If I were indeed real, would this
swallow have stolen so close to me?»
Behind the strange and incessant shift in perspective that Gide's
work offers to us, in the novels as well as in the essays, in the
travel diaries, or in the analyses of contemporary events, we
always find the same supple intelligence, the same incorruptible
psychology, expressed in a language which, by the most sober
means, attains a wholly classic limpidity and the most delicate
variety. Without going into the details of the work, let us
mention in this connection the celebrated Les Faux
Monnayeurs (1926) [The Counterfeiters], with its bold
and penetrating analysis of a group of young French people.
Through the novelty of its technique, this novel has inspired a
whole new orientation in the contemporary art of the narrative.
Next to it, put the volume of memoirs already mentioned, in which
the author intended to recount his life truthfully without adding
anything that could be to his advantage or hiding what would be
unpleasant. Rousseau had had the same intention, with this
difference, that Rousseau exhibits his faults in the conviction
that all men being as evil as he, none will dare to judge or
condemn him. Gide, however, quite simply refuses to admit to his
fellows the right to pass any judgment on him; he calls on a
higher tribunal, a vaster perspective, in which he will present
himself before the sovereign eye of God. The significance of
these memoirs thus is indicated in the mysterious Biblical
quotation of the grain of wheat which here represents the
personality: as long as the latter is sentient, deliberate, and
egocentric, it dwells alone and without germinating power; it is
only at the price of its death and its transmutation that it will
acquire life and be able to bear fruit. «I do not
think,» Gide writes, «that there is a way of looking at
the moral and religious question or of acting in the face of it
that I have not known and made my own at some moment in my life.
In truth, I have wished to reconcile them all, the most diverse
points of view, by excluding nothing and by being ready to
entrust to Christ the solution of the contest between Dionysus
and Apollo.»
Such a statement throws light on the intellectual versatility for
which Gide is often blamed and misunderstood, but which has never
led him to betray himself. His philosophy has a tendency toward
regeneration at any price and does not fail to evoke the
miraculous phoenix which out of its nest of flames hurls itself
to a new flight.
In circumstances like those of today, in which, filled with
admiring gratitude, we linger before the rich motifs and the
essential themes of this work, it is natural that we pass over
the critical reservations which the author himself seems to enjoy
provoking. For even in his ripe age, Gide has never argued in
favor of a full and complete acceptance of his experiences and
his conclusions. What he wishes above all is to stir up and
present the problems. Even in the future, his influence will
doubtless be noted less in a total acceptance than in a lively
controversy about his work. And in this lies the foundation of
his true greatness.
His work contains pages which provoke like a defiance through the
almost unequalled audacity of the confession. He wishes to combat
the Pharisees, but it is difficult, in the struggle, to avoid
shocking certain rather delicate norms of human character. One
must always remember that this manner of acting is a form of the
impassioned love of truth which, since Montaigne and Rousseau,
has been an axiom of French literature. Through all the phases of
his evolution, Gide has appeared as a true defender of literary
integrity, founded on the personality's right and duty to present
all its problems resolutely and honestly. From this point of
view, his long and varied activity, stimulated in so many ways,
unquestionably represents an idealistic value.
Since Mr. André Gide, who has declared with great gratitude
his acceptance of the distinction offered him, has unfortunately
been prevented from coming here by reasons of health, his Prize
will now be handed to His Excellency the French Ambassador.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1947