Title:   Heine and Mathilde

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Author:   Richard Le Gallienne

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Heine and Mathilde

Richard Le Gallienne



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Table of Contents

Heine and Mathilde .............................................................................................................................................1

Richard Le Gallienne...............................................................................................................................1


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Heine and Mathilde

Richard Le Gallienne

The love story of Heine and his Mathilde is another of those stories  which fix a type of loving.  It is the love

of a man of the most  brilliant genius, the most relentless, mocking intellect, for a  simple, pretty woman, who

could no more understand him than a cow can  understand a comet.  Many men of genius have loved just such

women,  and the world, of course, has wondered.  How is it that men of genius  prefer some little Mathilde,

when the presidents of so many women's  clubs are theirs for the asking?  Perhaps the problem is not so

difficult as, at first sight, it may seem.  After all, a man of  genius is much like other men.  He is no more

anxious than any other  man to marry an encyclopedia, or a university degree.  And, more than  most men, he is

fitted to realize the mysterious importance and  satisfaction of simple beautythough it may go quite

unaccompanied  by "intellectual" conversationand the value of simple  womangoodness, the

womangoodness that orders a household so  skillfully that your home is a work of art, the womangoodness

that  glories in that "simple" thing we call motherhood, the womangoodness  that is almost happy when you

are ill because it will be so wonderful  to nurse you.  Superior persons often smile at these Mathildes of the

great.  They have smiled no little at Mathilde Crescence Mirat; but  he who was perhaps the greatest mocker

that ever lived knew better  than to laugh at Mathilde.  The abysses of his brain no one can, or  even dare,

explorebut, listen as we will at the door of that  infernal pit of laughter, we shall hear no laugh against his

faithful  little Mathilde.  It is not at Mathilde he laughs, but at the  precious little bluestocking, who freshened

the last months of his  life with a final infatuationthat still unidentified "Camille  Selden" whom he playfully

called "la Mouche." 

"La Mouche," naturally, had a very poor opinion of Madame Heine, and  you need not be a cynic to enjoy this

passage with which she opens her  famous remembrances of "The Last Days of Heinrich Heine": 

"When I first saw Heinrich Heine he lived on the fifth floor of a  house situated on the Avenue Matignon, not

far from the RondPoint of  the ChampsElysees.  His windows, overlooking the avenue, opened on a  narrow

balcony, covered in hot weather with a striped linen awning,  such as appears in front of small cafes.  The

apartments consisted of  three or four roomsthe diningroom and two rooms used by the master  and the

mistress of the house.  A very low couch, behind a screen  encased in wallpaper, several chairs, and opposite

the door a  walnutwood secretary, formed the entire furniture of the invalid's  chamber.  I nearly forgot to

mention two framed engravings, dated  from the early years of Louis Philippe's reignthe 'Reapers' and the

'Fisherman,' after Leopold Robert.  So far the arrangements of the  rooms evidenced no trace of a woman's

presence, which showed itself  in the adjoining chamber by a display of imitation lace, lined with  transparent

yellow muslin, and a cornercupboard covered with brown  velvet, and more especially by a fulllength

portrait, placed in a  good light, of Mme. Heine, with dress and hair as worn in her  youtha lownecked

black bodice, and bands of hair plastered down  her cheeksa style in the fashion of about 1840. 

"She by no means realized my ideal Mme. Heine.  I had fancied her  refined, elegant, languishing, with a pale,

earnest face, animated by  large, perfidious, velvety eyes.  I saw, instead, a homely, dark,  stout lady, with a

high colour and a jovial countenance, a person of  whom you would say she required plenty of exercise in the

open air.  What a painful contrast between the robust woman and the pale, dying  man, who, with one foot

already in the grave, summoned sufficient  energy to earn not only enough for the daily bread, but money

besides  to purchase beautiful dresses.  The melancholy jests, which obliging  biographers constantly represent

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as flashes of wit from a husband too  much in love not to be profuse, never deluded anybody who visited  that

home.  It is absurd to transform Mme. Heine into an idyllic  character, whilst the poet himself never dreamed

of representing her  in that guise.  Why poetize at the expense of truth?especially when  truth brings more

honour to the poet's memory." 

One is sorry that Heine has not risen again to enjoy this.  One can  easily picture his reading it and, turning

tenderly to his "Treasure,"  his "Heart's Joy," with that everlasting boy's look on his face,  saying: "Never

mind, Damschen.  We know, don't we?  They think they  know, but we know."  And with what a terrible snarl

he would say, "My  ideal Mme. Heine!" 

"My ideal Mme. Heine!"  No doubt "la Mouche" thought she might have  been that, had all the circumstances

been different, had Heine not  already been married for years and had he not been a dying man.  We  may be

quite sure what Heine would have thought of the matter, and  quite sure what she was to him.  Mathilde, we

know, was unhappy about  the visits of the smart young lady who talked Shakespeare and the  musical glasses

so glibly, and who held her husband's hand as he lay  on his mattressgrave, and wore a general air of

providing him with  that intellectual companionship which was so painfully lacking in his  home.  Yet we who

know the whole story, and know her husband far  better than she, know how little she really had to fear from

the  visits of "Camille Selden." To Heine "la Mouche" was merely a  brilliant flower, with the dew of youth

upon her.  His gloomy room  lit up as she entered, and smelled sweet of her young womanhood hours  after she

had gone.  But "the ideal Mme. Heine"?  No!  Heine had  found his real Mme. Heine, the woman who had been

faithful to him for  years, had faced poverty and calamity with him, and had nursed him  with laughing

patience, day in and day out, for years.  Heine had good  reason for knowing how "the ideal Mme. Heine"

would have treated him  under such circumstances; for little basbleue "Mouche" had only to  have a bad cold

to stay away from the bedside of her hero, though she  knew how he was counting the minutes to her coming,

in the nervous,  hysterical fashion of the invalid.  One of his bitterest letters  reproaches her with having kept

him waiting in this way: 

"Tear my sides, my chest, my face, with redhot pincers, flay me alive,  shoot, stone me, rather than keep me

waiting. 

"With all imaginable torture, cruelly break my limbs, but do not keep  me waiting, for of all torments

disappointed expectation is the most  painful.  I expected thee all yesterday afternoon until six o'clock,  but thou

didst not come, thou witch, and I grew almost mad.  Impatience encircled me like the folds of a viper, and I

bounded on  my couch at every ring, but oh! mortal anguish, it did not bring thee.  "Thou didst fail to come; I

fret, I fume, and Satanas whispered  mockingly in my ear'The charming lotusflower makes fun of thee,

thou old fool!'" 

"Camille Selden" made the mistake of her life when she imagined that  Heine loved her, and did not love that

somewhat stout and  Highcoloured Mme. Heine who had such bad taste in lace and literature. 

Mathilde, as we know, was far from being Heine's first love.  She was  more importanthis last.  Heine

himself tells us that from his  boyhood he had been dangerously susceptible to women.  He had tried  many

cures for the disease, but finally came to the conclusion that  "woman is the best antidote to woman",

though"to be sure, this is  driving out Satan with Beelzebub."  There had been many loves in  Heine's life

before, one day in the Quarrier Latin, somewhere in the  year 1835, he had met saucy, laughing Mathilde

Crescence Mirat.  There had been "red Sefchen," the executioner's daughter, whose red  hair as she wound it

round her throat fascinated Heine with its grim  suggestion of blood.  There had been his cousin Amalie,

whose  marriage to another is said to have been the secret spring of sorrow  by which Heine's laughter was fed.

And there had been others, whose  namesimaginary, maybe, in that they were doubtless the imaginary

names of real womenare familiar to all readers of Heines poetry:  Seraphine, Angelique, Diane, Hortense,

Clarisse, Emma, and so on. 


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But she is loved best who is loved last; and when, after those months  of delirious dissipation in Paris, which

all too soon were to be so  exorbitantly paid for by years of suffering, Heine met Mathilde,  there is no doubt at

all that Heine met his wife.  His reminiscent  fancy might sentimentalize about his lost Amalie, but no one can

read  his letters, not so much to, as about, Mathilde without realizing  that he came as near to loving her as a

man of his temperament can  come near to loving any one. 

Though, to begin with, they were not married in the conventional  sense, but "kept house" together in the

fashion of the Quarter,  there seems no question that Heine was faithful to Mathildeto whom  in his letters to

his friends he always referred as his "wife"and  that their relation, in everything but name, was a true

marriage.  Just before he met Mathilde, Heine had written to his friend and  publisher, Campe, that he was at

last sick to death of the poor  pleasures which had held him too long.  "I believe," he writes,  "that my soul is at

last purified of all its dross; henceforth my  verses will be the more beautiful, my books the more harmonious.

At all events, I know thisthat at the present moment everything  impure and vulgar fills me with positive

disgust." 

It was at this moment, disgusted with those common illusions  miscalled pleasure, that Heine met Mathilde,

and was attracted by  what one might call the fresh elementalism of her nature.  That his  love began with that

fine intoxication of wonder and passion without  which no love can endure, this letter to his friend August

Lewald  will show: "How can I apologize for not writing to you?  And you are  kind enough to offer me the

good excuse that your letter must have  been lost.  No, I will confess the whole truth.  I duly received  itbut at

a time when I was up to my neck in a love affair that I  have not yet got out of.  Since October nothing has

been of any  account with me that was not directly connected with this.  I have  neglected everything, I see

nobody, and give a sigh whenever I think  of my friends....  So I have often sighed to think that you must

misunderstand my silence, yet I could not fairly set myself down to  write.  And that is all I can tell you today;

for my cheeks are in  such a flame, and my brain reels so with the scent of flowers, that I  am in no condition

to talk sensibly to you. 

"Did you ever read King Solomon's Song?  Just read it, and you will  there find all I could say today." 

So wrote Heine at the beginning of his love.  When that love had  been living for eight years, he was still

writing in no less  loverlike a fashion.  "My wife," says he to his brother Max in a  letter dated April 12, 1843,

"is a good childnatural, gay,  capricious, as only French women can be, and she never allows me for  one

moment to sink into those melancholy reveries for which I have  so strong a disposition." 

When Heine wrote this letter, Mathilde had been his "legal" wife for  something like a year and a half.  Heine

had resorted to the  formalizing of their union under the pressure of one of those  circumstances which compel

a man to think more of a woman than of an  idea.  He was going to fight a duel with one of his and her

cowardly  German traducers, and that there should be no doubt of her position  in the event of his death, he

duly married her.  Writing to his  friend Lewald once more, on the 13th of October, 1841, he says: "You  will

have learned that, a few days before the duel, to make  Mathilde's position secure, I felt it right to turn my free

marriage  into a lawful one.  This conjugal duel, which will never cease till  the death of one or the other of us,

is far more perilous than any  brief meeting with a Solomon Straus of Jew Lane, Frankfort." 

His friend Campe had been previously advised of "my marriage with the  lovely and honest creature who has

lived by my side for years as  Mathilde Heine; was always respected and looked upon as my wife, and  was

defiled by foul names only by some scandalloving Germans of the  Frankfort clique." 

Heine's duel resulted in nothing more serious than a fleshwound on  the hip.  But alas! the wild months of

dissipation before he had met  Mathilde were before long to be paid for by that long, excruciating  suffering

which is one of the most heroic spectacles in the history  of literature.  It is the paradox of the mocker that he

often  displays the virtues and sentiments which he mocks, much more  manfully than the professional


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sentimentalist.  Courage and laughter  are old friends, and Heine's laughterhis later laughter, at  leastwas

perhaps mostly courage.  If for no other reason, one would  hope for a hereafterso that Charles II and Heine

may have met and  compared notes upon dying.  Heine was indeed an "unconscionable long  time adying,"

but then he died with such brilliant patience, with  such good humour, and, in the meanwhile, contrived to

write such  haunting poetry, such saturnine criticism. 

And, all the time, during those ten years of dying, his faithful  "Treasure" was by his side.  The people who

"understood" him better,  who read his books and delighted in his genius, somehow or other  seemed to forget

the lonely Prometheus on the mattressrock at No.  3 Avenue Matignon.  It was 1854 when Heine was

painfully removed  there.  It was so long ago as the May of 1848 that he had walked out  for the last time.  His

difficult steps had taken him to the Louvre,  and, broken in body and nervesbut never in spirithe had

burst  into tears before the Venus of Milo.  It was a characteristic  pilgrimagethough it was only a "Mouche"

who could have taken Heine  seriously when he said that he loved only statues and dead women.  There was

obviously a deep strain of the macabre and the bizarre in  Heine's nature; but it must never be forgotten that he

loved his  Mathilde as well. 

That Heine was under no illusion about Mathilde, his letters show.  He would laugh at her on occasion, and

even be a little bitter; but  if we are not to laugh at those we love, whom are we to laugh at?  So, at all events,

thought Heine.  Superior people might wonder that  a man with Heine's "intellect," et cetera, could put up, day

after  day, with a little bourgeoise like Mathilde.  But Heine might  easily have retorted: "Where anywhere in

the world are you going to  find me a woman who is my equal, who is my true mate?  You will  bring me

cultivated governesses, or titled ladies who preside over  salons, or anemic little literary women with their

imitative verse  or their amateurish political dreams.  No, thank you.  I am a man.  I am a sick, sad man.  I need a

kind, beautiful woman to love and  take care of me.  She must be beautiful, remember, as well as kind  and

she must be not merely a nurse, hut a woman I can love.  If she  shouldn't understand my writings, what does it

matter?  We don't  marry a wife for that.  I am not looking for some little patronizing  bluestockingwho, in

her heart, thinks herself a better writer  than myselfbut for a simple woman of the elements, no more

learned  than a rose, and as meaningless, if you will, as the rising moon." 

Just such a woman Heine found in his Mathilde, and it is to be  remembered that for years before the illness

which left him, so to  speak, at her mercy, he had loved and been faithful to her.  There  are letters which seem

to show that Mathilde had the defects of those  qualities of buxom lightheartedness, of eternal sunshine,

which had  kept a fickle Heine so faithful.  Sometimes, one gathers, she as  little realized the tragedy of Heine's

suffering as she understood  his writings.  As such a woman must, she often left Heine very lonely;  and

seemed to feel more for her cat, or her parrot "Cocotte," than  her immortal, dying husband. 

"Oh, what a night we have had!"  Heine exclaimed one day to his  friend Meissner.  "I have not been able to

close an eye.  We have had  an accident in our house; the cat fell from the mantelpiece and  scratched her right

ear; it even bled a little.  That gave us great  sorrow.  My good Mathilde remained up and applied cold poultices

to  the cat all night long.  For me she never remains awake." 

And another time, he said, even more bitterly, to another friend: "I  felt rather anxious yesterday.  My wife had

finished her toilet as  early as two o'clock and had gone to take a drive.  She promised to  be back at four

o'clock.  It struck halfpast five and she had not  got back yet.  The clock struck eight and my anxiety

increased.  Had  she, perhaps, got tired of her sick husband and eloped with a cunning  seducer?  In my painful

doubt I sent the sicknurse to her chamber to  see whether 'Cocotte' the parrot was still there.  Yes, 'Cocotte'

was  still there.  That set me at ease again, and I began to breathe more  freely.  Without 'Cocotte' the dear

woman would never go away." 

A great man like Heine must necessarily have such moods about a  little woman like Mathilde; but the

important fact remains that for  some twenty years Heine was Mathilde's faithful husband, and that the


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commonplace, pretty, ignorant, pleasureloving, bourgeoise Mathilde  was good and faithful to a crippled,

incomprehensible mate.  Perhaps,  after all, the wonder in this marriage is even more on the side of  Mathilde

than of Heine.  Think what such a woman must have had to  forego, to suffer, to "put up with," with such a

mana man, remember,  whose real significance must have been Chinese to her.  Surely, all  of us who truly

love love by faith, and the love of Heine for  Mathilde, and of Mathilde for Heine, alike is only to be

explained by  that mysterious explanationfaith. 

That Heine understood his love for Mathilde, so far as any man of  genius can understand his love, and was

satisfied with it so far as  any man of genius can be with any love, we may be quite sure.  His  many letters

about her, and to her, prove it.  All the elemental  simplicities of her naturethe very bourgeoise traits which

made his  friends wonderalike interested him, and drew him closer toward her.  When she weaves a rug for

his friend Lewald, how seriously he takes  it!  He could laugh at all things in heaven and earth, but when

Mathilde weaves a rug for his friend he takes life seriously. 

How "domestic" Heine could be is witnessed by a letter of histo  Mathilde from Hamburg in 1823in

regard to her buying a hat for his  sister and another for his niecegiving careful directions as to  style and

price.  Mathilde and he had then been each other's for over  eight years, but none the lessnay, let us say all

the morehe  ended his letter: "Adieu!  I think only of thee, and I love thee like  the madman that I am." 

Perhaps the truest proof of Heine's love for Mathilde is the way in  which, in his will, he flattered his

despicable cousin, Carl Heine,  for her sake, so that she might not suffer any loss of his  inheritance.  There is

no doubt that Heine knew the worth of his  Mathilde.  If so terrible a critic of human nature was satisfied to

love and live with her for so many years, we may be sure that  Mathilde was a remarkable woman.  She didn't

indeed talk poetry and  philosophy, like little "Mouche," but then the women who do that  are legion; and

Mathilde was one of those rarer women who are just  women, and love they know not why. 

In saying this, we mustn't forget that "Camille Selden" said it was  ridiculous to sentimentalize about Mme.

Heine.  Yet, at the same time,  we must remember Heine's point of view.  When "Camille Selden" first  sought

his acquaintance, he had been living with Mathilde for some  twenty years.  Men of geniusand even

ordinary men are not apt to  live with women they do not love for twenty years; and that Heine did  perhaps the

one wise thing of his life in marrying his Mathilde there  can be very little doubt. 

To a man such as Heine a woman is not so much a personality as a  beautiful embodiment of the elements:

"Earth, air, fire and water met  together in a rose."' If she is beautiful, he will waive  "intellectual sympathy"; if

she is good, he will not mind her  forgetting the titles of his books.  When she becomes a mother, he  being a

man of geniusunderstands that she is a more wonderful  being than he can ever hope to be. 

Much has been said about the unhappy marriages of great writers.  The  true reason too often has been that

they have married literary  amateurs instead of women and wives.  Heine was wiser.  No one would,  of course,

pretend that Mathilde was his mate.  But, then, what woman  could have been?  Certainly not that little literary

prig he called  his "Mouche." 


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1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Heine and Mathilde, page = 4

   3. Richard Le Gallienne, page = 4