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Mad times

No doubt at all what this novel’s about! From start to end, three friends, the rather dull narrator, the cynical charmer Armengol and the medical student Giberga investigate the eccentric behaviour, then madness, then total mental collapse of their acquaintance Daniel Serrallonga

The Mad­ness is a very straight­for­wardly struc­tured novel: it cov­ers Ser­ral­longa’s de­cline in chrono­log­i­cal se­quence. The friends who analyse Ser­ral­longa (as if he were a lab rat) have three ap­proaches. The name­less nar­ra­tor is kindly, though in­ef­fec­tive; Ar­men­gol is mock­ing; and the med­ical stu­dent Giberga gives a more dis­tant, sci­en­tific view. Then, two kinds of mad­ness are posited: in­her­ited, bi­o­log­i­cal mad­ness and mad­ness caused by dif­fi­cult cir­cum­stances. And Oller im­plies a third: per­haps the three friends who, un­like Ser­ral­longa, adapt com­fort­ably to a mad world are not so sane, ei­ther.

The novel opens in Barcelona in 1867 and fo­cuses on the nar­ra­tor’s oc­ca­sional meet­ings with the wealthy landowner, Ser­ral­longa, and on news and gos­sip about him over the next 16 years. We learn at the first meet­ing in a café that Ser­ral­longa, pipe gripped in teeth, eyes that roll back in their sock­ets when he lis­tens or thinks, shab­bily dressed, is ec­cen­tric and pas­sion­ate. He is some­one you don’t for­get – and the dri­ving-force of the novel is that Oller makes read­ers want to fol­low Ser­ral­longa’s story. Haven’t most of us met a Ser­ral­longa – the slightly older bo­hemian (he is 25; Ar­men­gol and the nar­ra­tor are law stu­dents) who over­awes us be­cause he seems to have lived more, know more and, so much bolder, care not a jot what peo­ple think?

So, who’s mad?

Ser­ral­longa causes a po­lit­i­cal rum­pus in the café and is ar­rested. While he is in jail. Ar­men­gol plays a dirty trick on him, pre­tend­ing his anti-gov­ern­ment ar­ti­cles have been pub­lished when they haven’t. The nar­ra­tor does not like the de­ceit, but spine­lessly goes along with it. The reader next hears of Ser­ral­longa through the med­ical stu­dent Giberga, who de­scribes Ser­ral­longa’s un­for­tu­nate fam­ily to the two friends in an­other café. Mad­ness in the fam­ily means, Giberga be­lieves, that Ser­ral­longa is “a marked man”, marked by an in­jury to the brain. He has in­her­ited mad­ness.

This is the no­to­ri­ous ’nat­u­ral­ism’ of the nine­teenth-cen­tury French writer Émile Zola: that our des­tinies are pre­or­dained by both blood (genes, we would say now) and cir­cum­stance, but with no room for per­sonal choice. Zola’s nov­els sought to show so­cial re­al­ity by means of de­tailed de­scrip­tions of places and peo­ple seen only from the out­side. Though Oller is often cited as the Cata­lan Zola, this is too facile a label. The Mad­ness con­tains a lot of psy­cho­log­i­cal in­sight into the char­ac­ters’ mo­tives. Nor is Oller writ­ing gloomy nov­els of pre­des­tined fail­ure. In­deed, when Giberga ex­pounds this the­ory of in­her­ited in­san­ity, Ar­men­gol laugh­ingly shouts “What mad­ness! You need to take a long, hard look at your­self.” (p.45) What and who is mad is not al­ways so crys­tal clear.

Some years later, the nar­ra­tor vis­its Ser­ral­longa’s vil­lage and meets his crazy sis­ters. The sui­cide of Ser­ral­longa’s fa­ther and the two sis­ters’ be­hav­iour are ev­i­dence of men­tal dis­or­der in the fam­ily. The nar­ra­tor learns that Ser­ral­longa has be­come a mem­ber of par­lia­ment in Madrid, but does not dare to speak. Then his po­lit­i­cal hero Prim is as­sas­si­nated, which plunges Ser­ral­longa into gloom. He takes to his bed for three days, be­fore with ob­ses­sive en­ergy in­sist­ing to every­one in sight that only he can find Prim’s killers. Every­one agrees he’s been un­hinged by Prim’s death. At the same time his sis­ter Adela es­capes his con­trol and mar­ries. Then, in fu­ri­ous stub­born­ness, Ser­ral­longa de­cides to marry a peas­ant girl, be­cause it will dis­in­herit his sis­ters. And so… on to the fate­ful end.

Shots on the Ram­bla

Right from the first page, Oller makes read­ers aware that the friends are liv­ing through tur­bu­lent times: “There had been shots fired on the Ram­bla the night be­fore… there were likely to be more that night.” Looked at through the po­lit­i­cal lens, it is the nar­ra­tor and Ar­men­gol who seem, if not fully mad, at least highly ir­re­spon­si­ble, cal­low and cal­lous. They spend their time lolling about in cafés and play­ing silly jokes while the queen is over­thrown, Prim is killed and the Carlist war rages. Might Ser­ral­longa’s po­lit­i­cally im­pas­sioned re­ac­tion be health­ier than this fop­pish mid­dle-class pas­siv­ity? To add to this re­viewer’s prej­u­dice, the weak-minded nar­ra­tor then mar­ries in a rather sickly ro­mance “lit­tle Matilda.”

Though Ser­ral­longa’s story is what struc­tures the book, it is the so­cial con­text, the glis­ten­ing Ram­bla cafés, the clothes, the con­ver­sa­tions be­tween Giberga and the two friends, and the in­tru­sions of po­lit­i­cal life that make the book so at­trac­tive, so re­al­ist. The Mad­ness is no dense, nine­teenth-cen­tury tract. Rather, it’s lively and witty: a tragedy, but writ­ten in a light, some­times comic key.

book re­view

The publisher Fum d’Estampa offers a 20% discount on any order* from their website (www.fumdestampa.com) using the code CATTODAYBOOKS * Except for subscriptions
The Madness Narcís Oller Translator: Douglas Suttle Introduction: Andrew Dowling Publisher: Fum d’Estampa (2020) Pages: 125 “…the one really gifted Catalan novelist of the late nineteenth century… [Oller] created a public for a type of novel which reflects the most serious tendencies of contemporary realism.” Arthur Terry

Pioneering novelist

Narcís Oller (1846-1930) was born in Catalonia’s sourthern city of Valls but he lived most of his life in the capital Barcelona. He worked for many years as a court attorney (procurador): legal details feature in several novels, including The Madness. He translated literature, such as Flaubert, Tolstoy, and Turgenev among others, to Catalan.

Oller was the first great novelist in Catalan since Joanot Martorell 400 years earlier. While his contemporaries Àngel Guimerà (born 1845) and Jacint Verdaguer (born 1845) were leaders of the Catalan literary resurgence in theatre and poetry, respectively, Oller was the leading novelist. All three belonged to a generation that was consciously remaking Catalan as a literary language.

In fact, Oller started writing romantic novels in Spanish, but switched in 1877 to Catalan. Until his generation, Catalan speakers tended to write in Spanish. It was the example and success of Verdaguer that persuaded Oller, against the advice of Spain’s preeminent novelist Pérez Galdós, to switch to Catalan. Galdós considered Catalan a naive, uncultured language. It was “absurd” to write novels in Catalan, as novels require “extremely rich and flexible diction.” With admirable forbearance, Oller responded that Catalan was his language and it would be “false and ridiculous” to write in another. “Don’t you think that language concretises the spirit?” he asked Galdós.

His first major novel La papallona (The Butterfly, 1882) described an orphan girl’s struggles. The 1885 introduction by Zola to the French translation led critics to place Oller firmly in the naturalist tradition, despite La papallona being more romantic than naturalist. Oller shares with Zola the fatal decline of his main character. He shares too the detailed observation of people’s conduct and circumstances that is characteristic of naturalism, but Oller is more humorous, more optimistic and looks more at the emotions and motives of his characters. Really, he was only in part a ’naturalist’ writer.

La papallona was followed by L’escanyapobres, The Moneylender (1884), about two misers whose passion for money destroys them; then Vilaniu, the name he gave to his native Valls, in 1885. His most famous novel La febre d’or, Gold fever (1892), tackles the money-lust and speculation of the newly rich bourgeoisie in the 1870s.

Oller wrote theatre and many short stories, but his last major novel was the stylistically sophisticated and psychological Pilar Prim (1906), a study of a young widow’s struggles to survive her family’s greed and suitors’ attentions.

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