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So near and yet so far - II
While the French may seem to have a more colourful cultural and
political life, they have often paid a high price for it, says
CHRISTOPHER HURST in this concluding part of his two-part essay.
THE British may sometimes have envied their nearest neighbours
for the quicker tempo of their cultural and political life and
the glamour of their capital city. But the price for the French
has often been high.
The battle between left and right in France began in the
Revolution (and even in the years leading up to it), continued in
the upsets of 1848, reached its height in the Paris Commune of
1871, and erupted again violently in the Dreyfus affair. During
the Third Republic (1870-1940) France was as much involved in
expansion overseas as Britain, and of course this had its
opponents, although the national consensus supported it. In the
1930s there was a left-wing "Popular Front" coalition, but this
had its enemies among extreme right anti-republican groups,
inspired by the successes of Hitler and Mussolini.
French scandals seem to be more lurid than British ones; such was
the case in 1934 of the financier Stavisky who had floated bonds
which were worthless, and was then found dead. Far-right groups
claimed he had been murdered to prevent the revelation of crooked
dealings by prominent people, and their agitation culminated in a
riot outside parliament in which 15 people were killed. Two
successive prime ministers were forced to resign, and stability
only returned when a centre government of national unity was
installed.
The right had their real chance after the French army was forced
to accept an armistice with the Germans in June 1940. The country
was by then thoroughly demoralised. It is said that the French
fought so fiercely at Verdun to erase the disgrace of their
defeat in 1870, but they, even more than the British, were
unprepared for the sweeping success of the attack by Hitler's
Panzer divisions. The supposedly impregnable Maginot Line of
fortifications along the eastern frontier was simply by-passed.
The armistice in 1918 was signed by the defeated Germans in a
railway carriage in the forest of Compi`egne. The carriage had
been kept as a national monument, but it was used again for the
surrender in 1940, with the roles of the protagonists reversed.
The French battle fleet was anchored in Oran, Algeria, and the
British fleet, till then its ally, shelled and immobilised it to
prevent it from being used by the Germans.
With the French army defeated, the dissolving French government
turned to the "hero of Verdun", Marshal Petain, by then 84, to
form a new ministry; with the armistice signed, he was given
powers as head of state in the central and southern part of
France which the German did not immediately occupy. Its "capital"
was the spa town, Vichy - a name (with its associated adjective
"Vichyite") ever since associated with craven collaboration with
the Nazis. Every one of the European countries which the Nazis
over-ran produced its collaborators (none more hated than
Norway's Vidkun Quisling), and France, a bigger and greater
country than all the others, had its share. The pre-war
politician who collaborated most eagerly was a former prime
minister, Pierre Laval, and he was executed in 1945 in a manner
that was little less than a lynching.
Petain himself, though condemned to death and then imprisoned for
life after the war, at least claimed with some credibility to be
motivated by concern for his country and for his beloved French
soldiers, more than a million of whom had been taken prisoner by
the Germans in June 1940. He resisted Laval's policy of working
actively for a German victory, and tried to pursue a neutral,
delaying foreign policy, but he did none the less believe that
formal collaboration was necessary as the lesser evil.
There was a 49-year-old brigadier-general, who had served under
Petain in various capacities since 1913, including at the battle
of Verdun, and been promoted by him personally. However, he took
the opposite view from Petain's, left for London in June 1940,
and broadcast to his compatriots urging them to continue the
struggle. In his absence a military court in "Vichy France"
condemned him to death, deprivation of rank, and confiscation of
his property. This was Charles de Gaulle.
De Gaulle may represent an enigma, but he was undoubtedly one of
the truly great political figures Europe has produced. His
actions in 1940, which so deeply influenced subsequent French
history, could in a sense have been foreseen; he had published
several books on military matters, most notably one, in 1934,
advocating a small professional army, mechanised and mobile, as
against the theories of his time, supremely embodied in the
static Maginot Line. This austere intellectual, relatively junior
in rank, was unpopular with his colleagues, and when he
proclaimed "Free France" he had little backing. His pride and
obstinacy exasperated the more easy-going Winston Churchill who
had to work with him. But as time went on his prestige and power
increased, and on the liberation in 1944 he was made head of the
provisional government, but he resigned in 1946 -
characteristically because of irritation with the squabbling of
the political parties.
He returned to power in 1958 amid the ruins of the chronically
unstable postwar Fourth Republic, which had already been forced
out of Indo-China by insurgents led by Ho Chi Minh, and was then
embroiled in the Algerian war. With extraordinary vision and
courage, despite a French right-wing military rebellion against
him and attempts on his life, de Gaulle disengaged France from
Algeria - the only man who could have done so. He followed this
by granting independence to the French colonies in Africa, very
much on French terms, and with continuing economic and cultural
links far greater than were ever contemplated by the British with
their colonies.
Contemptuous of party politicians and supremely confident of his
own judgment, he none the less set great store by that most
democratic of institutions, the referendum, threatening to resign
if the vote went against him. On losing such a vote in 1969 on a
relatively minor issue, now forgotten, he resigned, aged nearly
80, and died soon after. Although it was as a political
strategist and visionary that he gained and held on to power,
some of his later actions seemed more wilful than statesmanlike -
never more so than when, on a visit to French-speaking Quebec in
1967, he ended a speech to the crowd from the balcony of the city
hall with the words "Vive le Quebec!" This was fair enough, but
when the cheers had died down he added "Vive le Quebec libre!"
This naked appeal to Quebec separatism, the plague of united
Canada, caused outrage in the country and he suffered the
indignity of being ordered to leave Canada by the Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau before he could be received in the capital,
Ottawa. It was clear that de Gaulle's exalted vision was losing
contact with reality.
But, as I said at the start of the previous article, you do not
need to be long in central Paris to know that the heroic past
lives on, an inspiration to the present. Everywhere around are
living relics of the monarchical past (the President's ceremonial
escort of Republican Guards is one such), but symbols of the
republic and of the Revolution are everywhere too, of which none
is more potent than La Marseillaise, the most thrilling of all
national anthems.
With the end of the de Gaulle era, France settled down to a more
mundane existence. Today its presidents and prime ministers are
managers and technocrats, and the French urge to be top dog in
the European Union is unlikely to lead to more than diplomatic
battles. For more than 30 years there has been none of the drama
that punctuated the previous 200 years. Only France's political
scandals retain some of the old flavour - such as the accusation
of illegal arms dealing against Jean-Christophe Mitterrand, son
of the late President Fran~cois Mitterrand, and the trial of a
former foreign minister, Roland Dumas, for using his influence to
get a lucrative but largely fictitious job in the state-owned Elf
oil company for his mistress, and then benefitting from the huge
payments she received. Now the sitting President, Jacques Chirac,
is being accused of using political funds to go on expensive
family holidays.
Only a Philistine could fail to include in a catalogue of the
dramatic events in France's more recent past the movement in
painting which culminated with the Impressionists. It began with
early and mid-19th Century figures such as Delacroix, Corot and
Courbet; climaxed in a transcendent blaze with Cezanne, Renoir,
Manet, Gauguin, Monet, Degas, Pissarro, Sisley and Seurat; and
continued in the 20th Century with Bonnard, Vuillard, Matisse and
others. Van Gogh was Dutch and Picasso Spanish, but France was
such a magnet that it drew them in, along with a host of lesser
talents. This creative high-point surely bears comparison with
Renaissance Italy and the 17th Century Netherlands. Impressionism
was revolutionary; an art of liberation, of rebellion against the
constricting classicism that dominated the academics.
The battles it provoked can be said to have replicated, at times,
in equally venomous form, those between left and right in the
political spectrum. (Courbet supported the Paris Commune and was
subsequently forced into exile.) But above all Impressionism was
great art, and in its achievement and legacy more "classical"
than the work of the classically-inspired academic artists who
once attacked it so savagely, and which has vanished like the
dinosaurs. Could any other country - Britain, Germany, Spain, you
name it - have produced this unique flowering at that particular
time? The answer is obviously No.
Concluded
The first part of this article appeared in the Literary Review,
August 5, 2001.
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