Gold: The Marvellous History of General John Augustus Su
by Blaise Cendrars ISBN: 072061175X
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Gold by Jeff BurseyIn The Astonished Man (1945), the first volume of a memoir tetralogy,
Blaise Cendrars relates how in the spring of 1927 he rented a chateau
named l'Escayrol in the French fishing village of La Redonne, in
which to complete the Dan Yack stories. He set up his typewriter
and wrote the first three lines of the last chapter, "by way
of welcome and to wish myself good work' in this house... These
were the sole, the only lines I was to write at l'Escayrol..."
The poet Andr Gaillard visits the chateau on business occasionally
and adds to the manuscript with each stay. Cendrars says those lines
remain "embedded in [the] text," which was published in
1929. This is a miniature example of how Cendrars rendered his life
in print. The memoirs-which one critic calls "autobiographical
novels"-are fabulous for what is recounted, what is left out,
what is altered, and for their style. The product of a mature writer,
their appearance was preceded by three decades of influential and
robust poetry and fiction.
Cendrars, born Frdric Sauser (1887-1961), does not have a wide
audience today in the English-speaking world, though his advocates
include Kathy Acker, John Dos Passos and Henry Miller. Unable to
neatly classify his work, academics have generally settled for
calling him a sport, a term which is at once vague and exclusionary.
In Europe his visibility is not in peril. Publication of his early
poetry (1912-1915) in France generated attention immediately. In
telegraphic lines influenced by science, travel, revolution and
advertising, Cendrars showed the modernizing, progressive impulses
he witnessed in Berlin, Moscow and New York, where the present and
immediate future promised new and exciting machines, inventions,
skyscrapers and attitudes. The first poems-"Easter in New
York" (1912) and "The Prose of the Transsiberian"
(1913), among others-were not naive nor Futurist love letters to
technology, but instead balanced the excitement of fresh discoveries
with an awareness that scientific progress did not automatically
mean humanity's advancement. They established Cendrars as a vibrant
figure whose valuable insights and literary devices had been gathered
on three continents.
His social circle included fishermen, restaurateurs, film-makers
and eccentrics. He could count as friends or acquaintances Apollinaire,
Braque, Chagall, Delaunay, Jacob, Lger, Modigliani, Picabia and
Picasso. Cendrars chatted freely with anarchists whom he met in
bars or on his travels, and their systems, plans and natures were
immortalized in the harrowing novel Moravagine. Comrades from the
Foreign Legion during the First World War became close, if not
always permanent, friends, and they figure prominently in the
tetralogy and his last novel, To the End of the World (1956).
A Swiss-German who adopted France as his homeland, Cendrars joined
the Legion when war broke out, and lost his right arm (his writing
arm) in September 1915. Despite this devastating injury-Hemingway
coldly said he and others felt "that Cendrars might well be a
little less flashy about his vanished arm"-he quickly resumed
writing poetry, such as "The War in the Luxembourg Garden"
(1916). From then until the middle of the 1950s something appeared
by him, in one language or another, almost every year, in addition
to his activities as a film-maker (with Abel Gance) and as a
publisher. Panama, or The Adventures of My Seven Uncles (1918,
written in 1913/14) earned him more acclaim as a poet, and Dos
Passos, who dubbed Cendrars the Homer of the Transsiberian, translated
it in 1931.
In the 1920s Cendrars lost interest in poetry. He felt fiction was
the genre that could hold his ideas, and in six years five novels
appeared: Gold (1925), Moravagine (1926), Dan Yack (1927), Confessions
of Dan Yack (1929), and Rhum (1930; not in English).
Rarely out of print, Gold, the Marvellous History of General John
Augustus Sutter, has been translated into many languages, and
provided the basis for the movie Sutter's Gold; its screenplay was
worked on by William Faulkner. The adjective "marvellous"
cautions the reader to regard what is presented as a work dealing
with legend, not dry facts and scholarship. Sutter is the first in
a line of outsized men with an overabundance of energy, intelligence,
ambition and pride. Cendrars concisely sketches Sutter's escape
from Europe, his prosperity in California, and the sudden downfall
of his empire due to "the simple blow of a pickaxe." Built
on agriculture, textiles and trade, and assisted by the use of
slaves, Sutter's industrious fiefdom, and the man himself, are
unprepared for what the discovery of gold on his land brings with
it. A very short chapter located at almost the halfway mark expresses
the rupture of an almost Edenic life (save for the slaves and the
aboriginal peoples) with economy, and is worth reprinting in total:
Reverie. Calm. Repose.
It is Peace.
No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No: it is GOLD!
It is gold.
The gold rush.
The world is infected with gold fever.
The great gold rush of 1848, 1849, 1850 and 1851. It will last
forfifteen years.
SAN FRANCISCO!
That "no" moves the reader emotionally from contradiction
to realization, from grim acceptance to panic and fear. This parable
of greed charts the decline in Sutter's mental health and fortune,
the death of family members, and his years in Washington spent
labouring for financial recompense. Stylistically, in Gold sparse
sentences carry much weight, while repetition, along with historical
facts and occasional longer descriptions, subtly merge reportage
and fictional narrative. Panoramic set-pieces of travellers heading
west into dangerous lands or Sutter's voyages across the Pacific
showcase Cendrars's experience in the cinema. This novel is a bridge
between the compressed lines of poetry he fashioned in the early
1920s and the more expansive novels to come.
Short quotations don't adequately convey the momentum of Cendrars's
prose, whether in the cascade of a set of short sentences or in the
piling up of clauses in one-sentence paragraphs that span pages.
Nor can a review do justice to his intricate plots, the exuberant
imagination, the delight in language, the intelligence and the
geniality of the work, and its varieties of humour. Peter Owen
deserves credit for reissuing these novels and To the End of the
World (there are tentative plans for The Astonished Man to appear
this spring). There will be those who find Cendrars's style too
rich, but there will be others who will be carried away by his
adventures, verve and audaciousness.
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