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Guy De Maupassant--A Study By Pol. Neveux
"I entered literary life as a meteor, and I shall leave it like a thunderbolt." These words of
Maupassant to Jose Maria de Heredia on the occasion of a memorable meeting are, in
spite of their morbid solemnity, not an inexact summing up of the brief career during
which, for ten years, the writer, by turns undaunted and sorrowful, with the fertility of a
master hand produced poetry, novels, romances and travels, only to sink prematurely into
the abyss of madness and death. . . . .
In the month of April, 1880, an article appeared in the "Le Gaulois" announcing the
publication of the Soirees de Medan. It was signed by a name as yet unknown: Guy de
Maupassant. After a juvenile diatribe against romanticism and a passionate attack on
languorous literature, the writer extolled the study of real life, and announced the
publication of the new work. It was picturesque and charming. In the quiet of evening, on
an island, in the Seine, beneath poplars instead of the Neapolitan cypresses dear to the
friends of Boccaccio, amid the continuous murmur of the valley, and no longer to the
sound of the Pyrennean streams that murmured a faint accompaniment to the tales of
Marguerite's cavaliers, the master and his disciples took turns in narrating some striking
or pathetic episode of the war. And the issue, in collaboration, of these tales in one
volume, in which the master jostled elbows with his pupils, took on the appearance of a
manifesto, the tone of a challenge, or the utterance of a creed.
In fact, however, the beginnings had been much more simple, and they had confined
themselves, beneath the trees of Medan, to deciding on a general title for the work. Zola
had contributed the manuscript of the "Attaque du Moulin," and it was at Maupassant's
house that the five young men gave in their contributions. Each one read his story,
Maupassant being the last. When he had finished Boule de Suif, with a spontaneous
impulse, with an emotion they never forgot, filled with enthusiasm at this revelation, they
all rose and, without superfluous words, acclaimed him as a master.
He undertook to write the article for the Gaulois and, in cooperation with his friends, he
worded it in the terms with which we are familiar, amplifying and embellishing it,
yielding to an inborn taste for mystification which his youth rendered excusable. The
essential point, he said, is to "unmoor" criticism.
It was unmoored. The following day Wolff wrote a polemical dissertation in the Figaro
and carried away his colleagues. The volume was a brilliant success, thanks to Boule de
Suif. Despite the novelty, the honesty of effort, on the part of all, no mention was made
of the other stories. Relegated to the second rank, they passed without notice. From his
first battle, Maupassant was master of the field in literature.
At once the entire press took him up and said what was appropriate regarding the budding
celebrity. Biographers and reporters sought information concerning his life. As it was
 

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