leaving elsinore
by Douglas Messerli
Franz Hellens Memoirs from Elsinore, translated
from the French by Howard Curtis (New York: Peter Lang, 2000)
Although he is little known today—even in his native
Belgium—Franz Hellens was a recognized novelist the 1920s through the 50s in
his homeland; without Hellens's existence, notes fellow Belgian Henri Michaux,
he would never have written his own first book. Author of over 100 books of
fiction, poetry, essays, plays, art criticism and other genres, Hellens's most
noted works are the surrealist-fantasy Mélusine of 1921, Le Naïf
(with an introduction in the Italian edition by Giuseppe Ungaretti) and Moreldieu
of 1946.
Memoirs from Elsinore (1954) is from the very beginning the
kind of novel where you know the narrator is not only unreliable but is going
to precipitate a great many disasters, and, accordingly, an uneasy feeling
settles over this book from its first pages.
The young
Hamlet of this fiction, Théophile, is a chubby and extremely healthy terror,
whom his parents immediately dub as "the monster." His relationship
with his mother is nearly incestuous; but it is his shock at seeing his
work-horse of a father unexpectedly cry in his presence that haunts him
throughout the early part of his life. The father soon dies and the uncle
quickly enters the scene to marry the widow. Not unlike Hamlet, young Théo is
as suddenly sent off to school, a Jesuit boarding school in Antwerp.
Fortunately (or unfortunately for the other figures of the book) Théo is
allowed visits with his mother's cousin, Jean, a local canon, but also a
free-thinking alcoholic with a live-in maid-mistress, the bosomy Toinette.
Expectedly, Théo makes trouble at the school, forcing a young schoolmate to
steal for him a poisonous snake he has seen at the zoo, and, with money from
the Canon, he is off on a truly monstrous career. He returns home (snake in
hand) only to have his arm blown away by an old grenade in the attic. His
revenge on his step-father is now determined, and, having put the snake in the
protection of his beloved Séraphine—the gardener's daughter—he plots patricide.
But before it can be completed, his Ophelia dies by the sting of the viper. Now
in revenge for his own father's cuckolding, his mother's honor, and his young
beloved's death, he plants the snake in his uncle's bed and the inevitable
occurs.
Ousted from Eden, Hellens's young Hamlet
begins his voyage through life. Théo escapes to sea, where he is entrusted by
the Captain of the Slonsk to keep a diary-log of the ship's many
voyages. On their very first voyage, Théo murders a woman aboard who toys with
his and other's affections, and begins a long life aboard the ship lived mainly
in fevers and forgetfulness. He awakens just long enough for the mad captain to
tell him of the existence of his goddess-like daughter, Upanisha, of whom he
catches a glimpse in his feverish sleep. Hellens seems almost unable to sustain
or, perhaps, explain the surreal circumstances of Théo's love-hate relationship
with Upanisha; but suffice it to say that this strange portion of the novel
ends in his destroying the woman and the boat. He is saved; how we are never
told.
Returning home to his mother, he is suddenly
forced to face a new rival in the previously unreported step-brother Victor,
who is attempting to sell the lovely house and grounds in order to create a
factory that will make him his fortune. The brothers, innately hating one
another, are further embittered as Victor's intended bride, the mayor's
daughter Amanda, increasingly falls in love with and outwardly flirts with the
older Théo. But when the mother dies, in part because of an argument with
Victor, Théo simply packs his bag and leaves. Just as he mystified
Upanisha's murder and the destruction of the boat at sea, so Hellens turns to
fable at novel's end, as Théo trudges off into the snow, never to be seen
again.
It is difficult to know what to make of a novel in which
the major events of the book are clouded over, and other actions, such as they
are, are presented "off-stage" or in brief glimpses. Yet the
psychological portrait Hellens paints of his anti-hero is a strong one, at
times extremely moving and touching and at other times enormously frightening
and unsettling. And that alone is worth reading this most unusual work.
Los Angeles, 2000
Reprinted from Green
Integer Blog (March 2008).
No comments:
Post a Comment