THE BIRTH OF TRAGEDY
FULL TEXT IN IN ONE PART
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Human beings who do not want to belong to
the mass need only to stop, and not be comfortable;
follow their conscience, which cries out:
"Be yourself! All you are now doing,
thinking, desiring, is not you yourself."...your
educators can be only your liberators...—Schopenhauer as Educator, - From Untimely Meditationsm
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The Birth of Tragedy
Full Text in In One Part
Friedrich Nietzsche
Attempt at a Self-Criticism
(1886)
1
Whatever may be at the bottom of this questionable
book, it must have been an exceptionally
significant and fascinating question, and
deeply personal at that: the time in which
it was written, in spite of which it was
written, bears witness to that--the exciting
time of the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71.
As the thunder of the Battle of Wörth was
rolling over Europe, the muser and riddle-friend
who was to be the father of this book sat
somewhere in an alpine nook, very bemused
and beriddled, hence very concerned and yet
unconcerned, and wrote down his thoughts
about the Greeks--the core of the strange
and almost inaccessible book to which this
belated preface (or postscript) shall now
be added. A few weeks later--and he himself
was to be found under the walls of Metz,
still wedded to the question marks that he
had placed after the alleged "cheerfulness"
of the Greeks and of Greek art. Eventually,
in that month of profoundest suspense when
the peace treaty was being debated at Versailles,
he, too, made peace with himself and, slowly
convalescing from an illness contracted at
the front, completed the final draft of The
Birth of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music.--Out
of music? Music and tragedy? Greeks and the
music of tragedy? Greeks and the art form
of pessimism? The best turned out, most beautiful,
most envied type of humanity to date, those
most apt to seduce us to life, the Greeks--how
now? They of all people should of needed
tragedy? Even more--art? For what--Greek
art?
You will guess where the big question mark
concerning the value of existence has thus
been raised. Is pessimism necessarily a sign
of decline, decay, degeneration, weary and
weak instincts--as it once was in India and
now is, to all appearances, among us, "modern"
men and Europeans? Is there pessimism of
strength? An intellectual predilection for
the hard, gruesome, evil, problematic aspect
of existence, prompted by well-being, by
overflowing health, by the fullness of existence?
Is it perhaps possible to suffer precisely
from overfullness? The sharp-eyed courage
that tempts and attempts, that craves the
frightful as the enemy, the worthy enemy,
against whom one can test one's strength?
From whom one can learn what it means "to
be frightened"? What is the significance
of the tragic myth among the Greeks of the
best, the strongest, the most courageous
period? And the tremendous phenomenon of
the Dionysian--and, born from it, tragedy--what
might they signify?-- And again: that of
which tragedy died, the Socratism of morality,
the dialectics, frugality, and cheerfulness
of the theoretical man--how now? Might not
this very Socratism be a sign of decline,
of weariness, of infection, of the anarchical
dissolution of the instincts? And the "Greek
cheerfulness" of the later Greeks--merely
the afterglow of the sunset? The Epicureans
resolve against pessimism--a mere precaution
of the afflicted? And science itself, our
science--indeed, what is the significance
of all science, viewed as a symptom of life?
For what--worse yet, whence--all science?
How now? Is the resolve to be so scientific
about everything perhaps a kind of fear of,
an escape from, pessimism? A subtle last
resort against--truth? And, morally speaking,
a sort of cowardice and falseness? Amorally
speaking, a ruse? O Socrates, Socrates, was
that perhaps your secret? O enigmatic ironist,
was that perhaps your--irony?
2
What I then got hold of, something frightful
and dangerous, a problem with horns but not
necessarily a bull, in any case a new problem--today
I should say that it was the problem of science
itself, science considered for the first
time as problematic, as questionable. But
the book in which my youthful courage and
suspicion found an outlet--what an impossible
book had to result from a task so uncongenial
to youth! Constructed from a lot of immature,
overgreen personal experiences, all of them
close to the limits of communication, presented
in the context of art--for the problem of
science cannot be recognized in the context
of science--a book perhaps for artists who
also have an analytic and retrospective penchant
(in other words, an exceptional type of artist
for whom one might have to look far and wide
and really would not care to look); a book
full of psychological innovations and artists'
secrets, with an artists' metaphysics in
the background; a youthful work full of the
intrepid mood of youth, the moodiness of
youth, independent, defiantly self-reliant
even where it seems to bow before an authority
and personal reverence; in sum, a first book,
also in every bad sense of that label. In
spite of the problem which seems congenial
to old age, the book is marked by every defect
of youth, with its "length in excess:
and its "storm and stress." On
the other hand, considering its success (especially
with the great artist to whom it addressed
itself as in a dialogue, Richard Wagner),
it is a proven book, I mean one that in any
case satisfied "the best minds of the
time." In view of that, it really ought
to be treated with some consideration and
taciturnity. Still, I do not want to suppress
entirely how disagreeable it now seems to
me, how strange it appears now, after sixteen
years--before a much older, a hundred times
more demanding, but by no means colder eye
which has not become a stranger to the task
which this audacious book dared to tackle
for the first time: to look at science in
the perspective of the artist, but at art
in that of life.
3
To say it once more: today I find it an impossible
book: I consider it badly written, ponderous,
embarrassing, image-mad and image-confused,
sentimental, in places saccharine to the
point of effeminacy, uneven in tempo, without
the will to logical cleanliness, very convinced
and therefore disdainful of proof, mistrustful
even of the propriety of proof, a book for
initiates, "music" for those dedicated
to music, those who are closely related to
begin with on the basis of common and rare
aesthetic experiences, "music"
meant as a sign of recognition for close
relatives in arbitus [In the arts.]--an arrogant
and rhapsodic book that ought to exclude
right from the beginning the profanum vulgus
[The profane crowd.] of "the educated"
even more than "the mass" or "folk."
Still, the effect of the book proved and
proves that it had a knack for seeking our
fellow- rhapsodizers and for luring them
on to new secret paths and dancing places.
What found expression here was anyway--this
was admitted with as much curiosity as antipathy--a
strange voice, the disciple of a still "unknown
God," one who concealed himself for
the time being under the scholar's hood,
under the gravity and dialectical ill-humor
of the German, even under the bad manners
of the Wagnerian. Here was a spirit with
strange, still nameless needs, a memory bursting
with questions, experiences, concealed things
after which the name of Dionysus was added
as one more question mark. What spoke here--as
was admitted, not without suspicion--was
something like a mystical, almost maenadic
soul that stammered with difficulty, a feat
of the will, as in a strange tongue, almost
undecided whether it should communicate or
conceal itself. It should have sung, this
"new soul"--and not spoken! What
I had to say then--too bad that I did not
dare say it as a poet: perhaps I had the
ability. Or at least as a philologist: after
all, even today practically everything in
this field remains to be discovered and dug
up by philologists! Above all, the problem
that there is a problem here--and that the
Greeks, as long as we lack an answer to the
question "what is Dionysian?" remain
as totally uncomprehended and unimaginable
as ever.
4
Indeed, what is Dionysian?-- This book contains
an answer: one "who knows" is talking,
the initiate and disciple of his god. Now
I should perhaps speak more cautiously and
less eloquently about such a difficult psychological
question as that concerning the origin of
tragedy among the Greeks. The question of
the Greek's relation to pain, his degree
of sensitivity, is basic: did this relation
remain constant? Or did it change radically?
The question is whether his ever stronger
craving for beauty, for festivals, pleasures,
new cults was rooted in some deficiency,
privation, melancholy, pain? Supposing that
this were true--and Pericles (or Thucydides)
suggests as much in the great funeral oration--how
should we then have to explain the origin
of the opposite craving, which developed
earlier in time, the craving for the ugly;
the good, severe will of the older Greeks
to pessimism, to the tragic myth, to the
image of everything underlying existence
that is frightful, evil, a riddle, destructive,
fatal? What, then, would be the origin of
tragedy? Perhaps joy, strength, overflowing
health, overgreat fullness? And what, then,
is the significance, physiologically speaking,
of that madness out of which tragic and comic
art developed--the Dionysian madness? How
now? Is madness perhaps not necessarily the
symptom of degeneration, decline, and the
final stage of culture? Are there perhaps--a
question for psychiatrists--neuroses of health?
of the youth and youthfulness of a people?
Where does that synthesis of god and billy
goat in the satyr point? What experience
of himself, what urge compelled the Greek
to conceive the Dionysian enthusiast and
primeval man as a satyr? And regarding the
origin of the tragic chorus: did those centuries
when the Greek body flourished and the Greek
soul foamed over with health perhaps know
endemic ecstasies? Visions and hallucinations
shared by entire communities or assemblies
at a cult? How now? Should the Greeks, precisely
in the abundance of their youth, have had
the will to the tragic and have been pessimists?
Should it have been madness, to use one of
Plato's phrases, that brought the greatest
blessings upon Greece? On the other hand,
conversely, could it be that the Greeks became
more and more optimistic, superficial, and
histrionic precisely in the period of dissolution
and weakness--more and more ardent for logic
and logicizing the world and thus more "cheerful"
and "scientific"? How now? Could
it be possible that, in spite of all "modern
ideas" and the prejudices of a democratic
taste, the triumph of optimism, the gradual
prevalence of rationality, practical and
theoretical utilitarianism, no less than
democracy itself which developed at the same
time, might all have been symptoms of a decline
of strength, of impending old age, and of
physiological weariness? These, and not pessimism?
Was Epicure an optimist--precisely because
he was afflicted?
It is apparent that it was a whole cluster
of grave questions with which this book burdened
itself. Let us add the gravest question of
all. What, seen in the perspective of life,
is the significance of morality?
5
Already in the preface addressed to Richard
Wagner, art, and not morality, is presented
as the truly metaphysical activity of man.
In the book itself the suggestive sentence
is repeated several times, that the existence
of the world is justified only as an aesthetic
phenomenon. Indeed, the whole book knows
only an artistic meaning and crypto-meaning
behind all events--a "god," if
you please, but certainly only an entirely
reckless and amoral artist-god who wants
to experience, whether he is building or
destroying, in the good and in the bad, his
own joy and glory--one who, creating worlds,
frees himself from the distress of fullness
and overfullness and from the affliction
of the contradictions compressed in his soul.
The world--at every moment the attained salvation
of God, as the eternally changing, eternally
new vision of the most deeply afflicted,
discordant, and contradictory being who can
find salvation only in appearance: you can
call this whole artists' metaphysics arbitrary,
idle, fantastic; what matters is that it
betrays a spirit who will one day fight at
any risk whatever the moral interpretation
and significance of existence. Here, perhaps
for the first time, a pessimism "beyond
good and evil" is suggested. Here that
"perversity of mind" gains speech
and formulation against which Schopenhauer
never wearied of hurling in advance his most
irate curses and thunderbolts: a philosophy
that dares to move, to demote, morality into
the realm of appearance--and not merely among
"appearances" or phenomena (in
the sense assigned to these words by Idealistic
philosophers), but among "deceptions,"
as semblance, delusion, error, interpretation,
contrivance, art.
Perhaps the depth of this antimoral propensity
is best inferred from the careful and hostile
silence with which Christianity is treated
throughout the whole book--Christianity as
the most prodigal elaboration of the moral
theme to which humanity has ever been subjected.
In truth, nothing could be more opposed to
the purely aesthetic interpretation and justification
of the world which are taught in this book
than the Christian teaching, which is, and
wants to be, only moral and which relegates
art, every art, to the realm of lies; with
its absolute standards, beginning with the
truthfulness of God, it negates, judges,
and damns art. Behind this mode of thought
and valuation, which must be hostile to art
if it is at all genuine, I never failed to
sense a hostility to life--a furious, vengeful
antipathy to life itself: for all of life
is based on semblance, art, deception, points
of view, and the necessity of perspectives
and error. Christianity was from the beginning,
essentially and fundamentally, life's nausea
and disgust with life, merely concealed behind,
masked by, dressed up as, faith in "another:
or "better" life. Hatred of "the
world," condemnations of the passions,
fear of beauty and sensuality, a beyond invented
the better to slander this life, at bottom
a craving for the nothing, for the end, for
respite, for "the sabbath of sabbaths"--all
this always struck me, no less than the unconditional
will of Christianity to recognize only moral
values, as the most dangerous and uncanny
form of all possible forms of a "will
to decline"--at the very least a sign
of abysmal sickness, weariness, discouragement,
exhaustion, and the impoverishment of life.
For, confronted with morality (especially
Christian, or unconditional, morality), life
must continually and inevitably be in the
wrong, because life is something essentially
amoral--and eventually, crushed by the weight
of contempt and the eternal No, life must
then be felt to be unworthy of desire and
altogether worthless. Morality itself--how
now? might not morality be "a will to
negate life," a secret instinct of annihilation,
a principle of decay, diminution, and slander--the
beginning of the end? Hence, the danger of
dangers?
It was against morality that my instinct
turned with this questionable book, long
ago; it was an instinct that aligned itself
with life and that discovered for itself
a fundamentally opposite doctrine and valuation
of life-- purely artistic and anti-Christian.
What to call it? As a philologist and man
of words I baptized it, not without taking
some liberty--for who could claim to know
the rightful name of the Antichrist?--in
the name of a Greek god: I called it Dionysian.
6
It is clear what task I first dared to touch
with this book? How I regret now that in
those days I still lacked the courage (or
immodesty?) to permit myself in every way
an individual language of my own for such
individual views and hazards--and that instead
I tried laboriously to express by means of
Schopenhauerian and Kantian formulas strange
and new valuations which were basically at
odds with Kant's and Schopenhauer's spirit
and taste! What, after all, did Schopenhauer
think of tragedy?
"That which bestows on everything tragic
its peculiar elevating force"--he says
in The World as Will and Representation,
volume II, p. 495--"is the discovery
that the world, that life, can never give
real satisfaction and hence is not worthy
of our affection: this constitutes the tragic
spirit--it leads to resignation."
How differently Dionysus spoke to me! How
far removed I was from all this resignationism!--
But there is something far worse in this
book, something I now regret still more than
that I obscured and spoiled Dionysian premonitions
with Schopenhauerian formulations: namely,
that I spoiled the grandiose Greek problem,
as it had arisen before my eyes, by introducing
the most modern problems! That I appended
hopes where there was no ground for hope,
where everything pointed all too plainly
to an end! That on the basis of the latest
German music I began to rave about "the
German spirit" as if that were in the
process even then of discovering and finding
itself again--at a time when the German spirit
which not long before had still had the will
to dominate Europe and the strength to lead
Europe, was just making its testament and
abdicating forever, making its transition,
under the pompous pretense of founding a
Reich, to a leveling mediocrity, democracy,
and "modern ideas"!
Indeed, meanwhile I have learned to consider
this "German spirit" with a sufficient
lack of hope or mercy; also, contemporary
German music, which is romanticism through
and through and most un-Greek of all possible
art forms--moreover, a first-rate poison
for the nerves, doubly dangerous among a
people who love drink and who honor lack
of clarity as a virtue, for it has the double
quality of a narcotic that both intoxicates
and spreads a fog.
To be sure, apart from all the hasty hopes
and faulty applications to the present with
which I spoiled my first book, there still
remains the great Dionysian question mark
I raised--regarding music as well: what would
a music have to like that would no longer
be of romantic origin, like German music--but
Dionysian?
7
But, my dear sir, what in the world is romantic
if your book isn't? Can deep hatred against
"the Now," against "reality"
and "modern ideas" be pushed further
than you pushed it in your artists' metaphysics?
believing sooner in the Nothing, sooner in
the devil than in "the Now"? Is
it not a deep bass of wrath and the lust
for destruction that we hear humming underneath
all of your contrapuntal art and seduction
of the ear, a furious resolve against everything
that is "now," a will that is not
too far removed from practical nihilism and
seems to say: "sooner let nothing be
true than that you should be right, than
that your truth should be prove right!"
Listen yourself, my dear pessimist and art-deifier,
but with open ears, to a single passage chosen
from your book--to the not ineloquent dragon-slayer
passage which may have an insidious pied-piper
sound for young ears and hearts. How now?
Isn't this the typical creed of the romantic
of 1830, masked by the pessimism of 1850?
Even the usual romantic finale is sounded--break,
breakdown, return and collapse before an
old faith, before the old God. How now? Is
your pessimists' book not itself a piece
of anti-Hellenism and romanticism? Is it
not itself something "equally intoxicating
and befogging," in any case a narcotic,
even a piece of music, German music? But
listen:
"Let us imagine a coming generation
with such intrepidity of vision, with such
a heroic penchant for the tremendous; let
us imagine the bold stride of these dragon-slayers,
the proud audacity with which they turn their
back on all the weakling's doctrines of optimism
in order to 'live resolutely' in wholeness
and fullness: would it not be necessary for
the tragic man of such a culture, in view
of his self-education for seriousness and
terror, to desire a new art, the art of metaphysical
comfort, and to exclaim with Faust:
Should not my longing overleap the distance
And draw the fairest form into existence?"
[Quoted from Section 18]
"Would it not be necessary?"--No,
thrice no! O you young romantics: it would
not be necessary! But it is highly probable
that it will end that way--namely, "comforted,"
as it is written, in spite of all self-education
for seriousness and terror, "comforted
metaphysically"--in sum, as romantics
end, as Christians.
No! You ought to learn the art of this-worldly
comfort first; you ought to learn to laugh,
my young friends, if you are hell-bent on
remaining pessimists. Then perhaps, as laughers,
you may some day dispatch all metaphysical
comforts to the devil--metaphysics in front.
Or, to say in the language of that Dionysian
monster who bears the name of Zarathustra:
"Raise up your hearts, my brothers,
high, higher! And don't forget your legs!
Raise up your legs too, good dancers; and
still better: stand on your heads!
"This crown of the laugher, this rose-wreath
crown: I crown myself with this crown; I
myself pronounced holy my laughter. I did
not find anyone else today strong enough
for that.
"Zarathustra, the dancer; Zarathustra,
the light one who beckons with his wings,
preparing for a flight, beckoning to all
birds, ready and heady, blissfully lightheaded;
"Zarathustra, the soothsayer; Zarathustra,
the sooth-laugher; not impatient; not unconditional;
one who loves leaps and side-leaps: I crown
myself with this crown.
"This crown of the laugher, this rose-wreath
crown: to you, my brothers, I throw this
crown. Laughter I have pronounced holy: you
higher men, learn--to laugh!"
Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Part IV. ["On
the Higher Man," 17-20, in part.]
Sils-Maria, Upper Engadine, August 1886
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
Preface to Richard Wagner
(1871)
To keep at a distance all the possible scruples,
excitements, and misunderstandings that the
thoughts united in this essay will occasion,
in view of the peculiar character of our
aesthetic public, and to be able to write
these introductory remarks, too, with the
same contemplative delight whose reflection--the
distillation of good and elevating hours--is
evident on every page, I picture the moment
when you, my highly respected friend, will
receive this essay. Perhaps after an evening
walk in the winter snow, you will behold
Prometheus unbound on the title page, read
my name, and be convinced at once that, whatever
this essay should contain, the author certainly
has something serious and urgent to say;
also that, as he hatched these ideas, he
was communicating with you as if you were
present, and hence could write down only
what was in keeping with that presence. You
will recall that it was during the same period
when your splendid Festschrift on Beethoven
came into being, amid the terrors and sublimities
of the war that had just broken out, that
I collected myself for these reflections.
Yet anyone would be mistaken if he associated
my reflections with the contrast between
patriotic excitement and aesthetic enthusiasm,
of courageous seriousness and a cheerful
game: if he really read this essay, it would
dawn on him, to his surprise, what a seriously
German problem is faced here and placed right
in the center of German hopes, as a vortex
and turning point. But perhaps such readers
will find it offensive that an aesthetic
problem should be taken so seriously--assuming
they are unable to consider art more than
a pleasant sideline, a readily dispensable
tinkling of bells that accompanies the "seriousness
of life," just as if nobody knew what
was involved in such a contrast with the
"seriousness of life." Let such
"serious" readers learn something
from the fact that I am convinced that art
represents the highest task and the truly
metaphysical activity of this life, in the
sense of that man to whom, as my sublime
predecessor on this path, I wish to dedicate
this essay.
Basel, end of the year 1871
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
The Birth of Tragedy
1
Much will have been gained for aesthetics
once we have succeeded in apprehending directly--rather
than merely ascertaining--that art owes its
continuous evolution to the Apollinian- Dionysian
duality, even as the propagation of the species
depends on the duality of the sexes, their
constant conflicts and periodic acts of reconciliation.
I have borrowed my adjectives from the Greeks,
who developed their mystical doctrines of
art through plausible embodiments, not through
purely conceptual means. It is by those two
art sponsoring deities, Apollo and Dionysus,
that we are made to recognize the tremendous
split, as regards both origins and objectives,
between the plastic, Apollinian arts and
the nonvisual art of music inspired by Dionysus.
The two creative tendencies developed alongside
one another, usually in fierce opposition,
each by its taunts forcing the other to more
energetic production, both perpetuating in
a discordant concord that agon which the
term art but feebly denominates: until at
last, by the thaumaturgy of an Hellenic act
of will, the pair accepted the yoke of marriage
and, in this condition, begot Attic tragedy,
which exhibits the salient features of both
parents.
To reach a closer understanding of both these
tendencies, let us begin by viewing them
as the separate art realms of dream and intoxication,
two physiological phenomena standing toward
one another in much the same relationship
as the Apollinian and Dionysian. It was in
a dream, according to Lucretius, that the
marvelous gods and goddesses first presented
themselves to the minds of men. That great
sculptor, Phidias, beheld in a dream the
entrancing bodies of more than human beings,
and likewise, if anyone had asked the Greek
poets about the mystery of poetic creation,
they too would have referred him to dreams
and instructed him much as Hans Sachs instructs
us in Die Meistersinger:
The poet's task is this, my friend, to read
his dreams and comprehend. The truest human
fancy seems to be revealed to us in dreams:
all poems and versification are but true
dreams' interpretation.
The fair illusion of the dream sphere, in
the production of which every man proves
himself an accomplished artist, is a precondition
not only of all plastic art, but even, as
we shall see presently, of a wide range of
poetry. Here we enjoy an immediate apprehension
of form, all shapes speak to us directly,
nothing seems indifferent or redundant. Despite
the high intensity with which these dream
realities exist for us, we still have a residual
sensation that they are illusions; at least
such has been my experience-- and the frequency,
not to say normality, of the experience is
borne out in many passages of the poets.
Men of philosophical disposition are known
for their constant premonition that our everyday
reality, too, is an illusion, hiding another,
totally different kind of reality. It was
Schopenhauer who considered the ability to
view at certain times all men and things
as mere phantoms or dream images to be the
true mark of philosophic talent. The person
who is responsive to the stimuli of art behaves
toward the reality of dream much the way
the philosopher behaves toward the reality
of existence: he observes exactly and enjoys
his observations, for it is by these images
that he interprets life, by these processes
that he rehearses it. Nor is it by pleasant
images only that such plausible connections
are made: the whole divine comedy of life,
including its somber aspects, its sudden
balkings, impish accidents, anxious expectations,
moves past him, not quite like a shadow play--for
it is he himself, after all, who lives and
suffers through these scenes--yet never without
giving a fleeting sense of illusion; and
I imagine that many persons have reassured
themselves amidst the perils of dream by
calling out, "It is a dream! I want
it to go on." I have even heard of people
spinning out the causality of one and the
same dream over three or more successive
nights. All these facts clearly bear witness
that our innermost being, the common substratum
of humanity, experiences dreams with deep
delight and a sense of real necessity. This
deep and happy sense of the necessity of
dream experiences was expressed by the Greeks
in the image of Apollo. Apollo is at once
the god of all plastic powers and the soothsaying
god. He who is etymologically the "lucent"
one, the god of light, reigns also over the
fair illusion of our inner world of fantasy.
The perfection of these conditions in contrast
to our imperfectly understood waking reality,
as well as our profound awareness of nature's
healing powers during the interval of sleep
and dream, furnishes a symbolic analogue
to the soothsaying faculty and quite generally
to the arts, which make life possible and
worth living. But the image of Apollo must
incorporate that thin line which the dream
image may not cross, under penalty of becoming
pathological, of imposing itself on us as
crass reality: a discreet limitation, a freedom
from all extravagant urges, the sapient tranquillity
of the plastic god. His eye must be sunlike,
in keeping with his origin. Even at those
moments when he is angry and ill-tempered
there lies upon him the consecration of fair
illusion. In an eccentric way one might say
of Apollo what Schopenhauer says, in the
first part of The World as Will and Idea,
of man caught in the veil of Maya: "Even
as on an immense, raging sea, assailed by
huge wave crests, a man sits in a little
rowboat trusting his frail craft, so, amidst
the furious torments of this world, the individual
sits tranquilly, supported by the principium
individuationis and relying on it."
One might say that the unshakable confidence
in that principle has received its most magnificent
expression in Apollo, and that Apollo himself
may be regarded as the marvelous divine image
of the principium individuationis, whose
looks and gestures radiate the full delight,
wisdom, and beauty of "illusion."
In the same context Schopenhauer has described
for us the tremendous awe which seizes man
when he suddenly begins to doubt the cognitive
modes of experience, in other words, when
in a given instance the law of causation
seems to suspend itself. If we add to this
awe the glorious transport which arises in
man, even from the very depths of nature,
at the shattering of the principium individuationis,
then we are in a position to apprehend the
essence of Dionysian rapture, whose closest
analogy is furnished by physical intoxication.
Dionysian stirrings arise either through
the influence of those narcotic potions of
which all primitive races speak in their
hymns, or through the powerful approach of
spring, which penetrates with joy the whole
frame of nature. So stirred, the individual
forgets himself completely. It is the same
Dionysian power which in medieval Germany
drove ever increasing crowds of people singing
and dancing from place to place; we recognize
in these St. John's and St. Vitus' dancers
the Bacchic choruses of the Greeks, who had
their precursors in Asia Minor and as far
back as Babylon and the orgiastic Sacaea.
There are people who, either from lack of
experience or out of sheer stupidity, turn
away from such phenomena, and, strong in
the sense of their own sanity, label them
either mockingly or pityingly "endemic
diseases." These benighted souls have
no idea how cadaverous and ghostly their
"sanity" appears as the intense
throng of Dionysian revelers sweeps past
them.
Not only does the bond between man and man
come to be forged once more by the magic
of the Dionysian rite, but nature itself,
long alienated or subjugated, rises again
to celebrate the reconciliation with her
prodigal son, man. The earth offers its gifts
voluntarily, and the savage beasts of mountain
and desert approach in peace. The chariot
of Dionysus is bedecked with flowers and
garlands; panthers and tigers stride beneath
his yoke. If one were to convert Beethoven's
"Paean to Joy" into a painting,
and refuse to curb the imagination when that
multitude prostrates itself reverently in
the dust, one might form some apprehension
of Dionysian ritual. Now the slave emerges
as a freeman; all the rigid, hostile walls
which either necessity or despotism has erected
between men are shattered. Now that the gospel
of universal harmony is sounded, each individual
becomes not only reconciled to his fellow
but actually at one with him--as though the
veil of Maya had been torn apart and there
remained only shreds floating before the
vision of mystical Oneness. Man now expresses
himself through song and dance as the member
of a higher community; he has forgotten how
to walk, how to speak, and is on the brink
of taking wing as he dances. Each of his
gestures betokens enchantment; through him
sounds a supernatural power, the same power
which makes the animals speak and the earth
render up milk and honey.
He feels himself to be godlike and strides
with the same elation and ecstasy as the
gods he has seen in his dreams. No longer
the artist, he has himself become a work
of art: the productive power of the whole
universe is now manifest in his transport,
to the glorious satisfaction of the primordial
One. The finest clay, the most precious marble--man--is
here kneaded and hewn, and the chisel blows
of the Dionysian world artist are accompanied
by the cry of the Eleusinian mystagogues:
"Do you fall on your knees, multitudes,
do you divine your creator?"
2
So far we have examined the Apollinian and
Dionysian states as the product of formative
forces arising directly from nature without
the mediation of the human artist. At this
stage artistic urges are satisfied directly,
on the one hand through the imagery of dreams,
whose perfection is quite independent of
the intellectual rank, the artistic development
of the individual; on the other hand, through
an ecstatic reality which once again takes
no account of the individual and may even
destroy him, or else redeem him through a
mystical experience of the collective. In
relation to these immediate creative conditions
of nature every artist must appear as "imitator,"
either as the Apollinian dream artist or
the Dionysian ecstatic artist, or, finally
(as in Greek tragedy, for example) as dream
and ecstatic artist in one. We might picture
to ourselves how the last of these, in a
state of Dionysian intoxication and mystical
self-abrogation, wandering apart from the
reveling throng, sinks upon the ground, and
how there is then revealed to him his own
condition--complete oneness with the essence
of the universe--in a dream similitude.
Having set down these general premises and
distinctions, we now turn to the Greeks in
order to realize to what degree the formative
forces of nature were developed in them.
Such an inquiry will enable us to assess
properly the relation of the Greek artist
to his prototypes or, to use Aristotle's
expression, his "imitation of nature."
Of the dreams the Greeks dreamed it is not
possible to speak with any certainty, despite
the extant dream literature and the large
number of dream anecdotes. But considering
the incredible accuracy of their eyes, their
keen and unabashed delight in colors, one
can hardly be wrong in assuming that their
dreams too showed a strict consequence of
lines and contours, hues and groupings, a
progression of scenes similar to their best
bas reliefs. The perfection of these dream
scenes might almost tempt us to consider
the dreaming Greek as a Homer and Homer as
a dreaming Greek; which would be as though
the modern man were to compare himself in
his dreaming to Shakespeare.
Yet there is another point about which we
do not have to conjecture at all: I mean
the profound gap separating the Dionysian
Greeks from the Dionysian barbarians. Throughout
the range of ancient civilization
(leaving the newer civilizations out of account
for the moment) we find evidence of Dionysian
celebrations which stand to the Greek type
in much the same relation as the bearded
satyr, whose name and attributes are derived
from the goat, stands to the god Dionysus.
The central concern of such celebrations
was, almost universally, a complete sexual
promiscuity overriding every form of established
tribal law; all the savage urges of the mind
were unleashed on those occasions until they
reached that paroxysm of lust and cruelty
which has always struck me as the "witches'
cauldron" par excellence. It would appear
that the Greeks were for a while quite immune
from these feverish excesses which must have
reached them by every known land or sea route.
What kept Greece safe was the proud, imposing
image of Apollo, who in holding up the head
of the Gorgon to those brutal and grotesque
Dionysian forces subdued them. Doric art
has immortalized Apollo's majestic rejection
of all license. But resistance became difficult,
even impossible, as soon as similar urges
began to break forth from the deep substratum
of Hellenism itself. Soon the function of
the Delphic god developed into something
quite different and much more limited: all
he could hope to accomplish now was to wrest
the destructive weapon, by a timely gesture
of pacification, from his opponent's hand.
That act of pacification represents the most
important event in the history of Greek ritual;
every department of life now shows symptoms
of a revolutionary change. The two great
antagonists have been reconciled. Each feels
obliged henceforth to keep to his bounds,
each will honor the other by the bestowal
of periodic gifts, while the cleavage remains
fundamentally the same. And yet, if we examine
what happened to the Dionysian powers under
the pressure of that treaty we notice a great
difference: in the place of the Babylonian
Sacaea, with their throwback of men to the
condition of apes and tigers, we now see
entirely new rites celebrated: rites of universal
redemption, of glorious transfiguration.
Only now has it become possible to speak
of nature's celebrating an aesthetic triumph;
only now has the abrogation of the principium
individuationis become an aesthetic event.
That terrible witches' brew concocted of
lust and cruelty has lost all power under
the new conditions. Yet the peculiar blending
of emotions in the heart of the Dionysian
reveler--his ambiguity if you will--seems
still to hark back (as the medicinal drug
harks back to the deadly poison) to the days
when the infliction of pain was experienced
as joy while a sense of supreme triumph elicited
cries of anguish from the heart. For now
in every exuberant joy there is heard an
undertone of terror, or else a wistful lament
over an irrecoverable loss. It is as though
in these Greek festivals a sentimental trait
of nature were coming to the fore, as though
nature were bemoaning the fact of her fragmentation,
her decomposition into separate individuals.
The chants and gestures of these revelers,
so ambiguous in their motivation, represented
an absolute novum in the world of the Homeric
Greeks; their Dionysian music, in especial,
spread abroad terror and a deep shudder.
It is true: music had long been familiar
to the Greeks as an Apollinian art, as a
regular beat like that of waves lapping the
shore, a plastic rhythm expressly developed
for the portrayal of Apollinian conditions.
Apollo's music was a Doric architecture of
sound--of barely hinted sounds such as are
proper to the cithara. Those very elements
which characterize Dionysian music and, after
it, music quite generally: the heart shaking
power of tone, the uniform stream of melody,
the incomparable resources of harmony--all
those elements had been carefully kept at
a distance as being inconsonant with the
Apollinian norm. In the Dionysian dithyramb
man is incited to strain his symbolic faculties
to the utmost; something quite unheard of
is now clamoring to be heard: the desire
to tear asunder the veil of Maya, to sink
back into the original oneness of nature;
the desire to express the very essence of
nature symbolically. Thus an entirely new
set of symbols springs into being. First,
all the symbols pertaining to physical features:
mouth, face, the spoken word, the dance movement
which coordinates the limbs and bends them
to its rhythm. Then suddenly all the rest
of the symbolic forces--music and rhythm
as such, dynamics, harmony--assert themselves
with great energy. In order to comprehend
this total emancipation of all the symbolic
powers one must have reached the same measure
of inner freedom those powers themselves
were making manifest; which is to say that
the votary of Dionysus could not be understood
except by his own kind. It is not difficult
to imagine the awed surprise with which the
Apollinian Greek must have looked on him.
And that surprise would be further increased
as the latter realized, with a shudder, that
all this was not so alien to him after all,
that his Apollinian consciousness was but
a thin veil hiding from him the whole Dionysian
realm.
3
In order to comprehend this we must take
down the elaborate edifice of Apollinian
culture stone by stone until we discover
its foundations. At first the eye is struck
by the marvelous shapes of the Olympian gods
who stand upon its pediments, and whose exploits,
in shining bas-relief, adorn its friezes.
The fact that among them we find Apollo as
one god among many, making no claim to a
privileged position, should not mislead us.
The same drive that found its most complete
representation in Apollo generated the whole
Olympian world, and in this sense we may
consider Apollo the father of that world.
But what was the radical need out of which
that illustrious society of Olympian beings
sprang?
Whoever approaches the Olympians with a different
religion in his heart, seeking moral elevation,
sanctity, spirituality, loving kindness,
will presently be forced to turn away from
them in ill-humored disappointment. Nothing
in these deities reminds us of asceticism,
high intellect, or duty: we are confronted
by luxuriant, triumphant existence, which
deifies the good and the bad indifferently.
And the beholder may find himself dismayed
in the presence of such overflowing life
and ask himself what potion these heady people
must have drunk in order to behold, in whatever
direction they looked, Helen laughing back
at them, the beguiling image of their own
existence. But we shall call out to this
beholder, who has already turned his back:
Don't go! Listen first to what the Greeks
themselves have to say of this life, which
spreads itself before you with such puzzling
serenity. An old legend has it that King
Midas hunted a long time in the woods for
the wise Silenus, companion of Dionysus,
without being able to catch him. When he
had finally caught him the king asked him
what he considered man's greatest good. The
daemon remained sullen and uncommunicative
until finally, forced by the king, he broke
into a shrill laugh and spoke: "Ephemeral
wretch, begotten by accident and toil, why
do you force me to tell you what it would
be your greatest boon not to hear? What would
be best for you is quite beyond your reach:
not to have been born, not to be, to be nothing.
But the second best is to die soon."
What is the relation of the Olympian gods
to this popular wisdom? It is that of the
entranced vision of the martyr to his torment.
Now the Olympian magic mountain opens itself
before us, showing us its very roots. The
Greeks were keenly aware of the terrors and
horrors of existence; in order to be able
to live at all they had to place before them
the shining fantasy of the Olympians. Their
tremendous distrust of the titanic forces
of nature: Moira, mercilessly enthroned beyond
the knowable world; the vulture which fed
upon the great philanthropist Prometheus;
the terrible lot drawn by wise Oedipus; the
curse on the house of Atreus which brought
Orestes to the murder of his mother: that
whole Panic philosophy, in short, with its
mythic examples, by which the gloomy Etruscans
perished, the Greeks conquered--or at least
hid from view--again and again by means of
this artificial Olympus. In order to live
at all the Greeks had to construct these
deities. The Apollinian need for beauty had
to develop the Olympian hierarchy of joy
by slow degrees from the original titanic
hierarchy of terror, as roses are seen to
break from a thorny thicket. How else could
life have been borne by a race so hypersensitive,
so emotionally intense, so equipped for suffering?
The same drive which called art into being
as a completion and consummation of existence,
and as a guarantee of further existence,
gave rise also to that Olympian realm which
acted as a transfiguring mirror to the Hellenic
will. The gods justified human life by living
it themselves--the only satisfactory theodicy
ever invented. To exist in the clear sunlight
of such deities was now felt to be the highest
good, and the only real grief suffered by
Homeric man was inspired by the thought of
leaving that sunlight, especially when the
departure seemed imminent. Now it became
possible to stand the wisdom of Silenus on
its head and proclaim that it was the worst
evil for man to die soon, and second worst
for him to die at all. Such laments as arise
now arise over short-lived Achilles, over
the generations ephemeral as leaves, the
decline of the heroic age. It is not unbecoming
to even the greatest hero to yearn for an
afterlife, though it be as a day laborer.
So impetuously, during the Apollinian phase,
does man's will desire to remain on earth,
so identified does he become with existence,
that even his lament turns to a song of praise.
It should have become apparent by now that
the harmony with nature which we late comers
regard with such nostalgia, and for which
Schiller has coined the cant term naïve,
is by no means a simple and inevitable condition
to be found at the gateway to every culture,
a kind of paradise. Such a belief could have
been endorsed only by a period for which
Rousseau's Emile was an artist and Homer
just such an artist nurtured in the bosom
of nature. Whenever we encounter "naïveté"
in art, we are face to face with the ripest
fruit of Apollinian culture--which must always
triumph first over titans, kill monsters,
and overcome the somber contemplation of
actuality, the intense susceptibility to
suffering, by means of illusions strenuously
and zestfully entertained. But how rare are
the instances of true naïveté, of that complete
identification with the beauty of appearance!
It is this achievement which makes Homer
so magnificent--Homer, who, as a single individual,
stood to Apollinian popular culture in the
same relation as the individual dream artist
to the oneiric capacity of a race and of
nature generally. The naïveté of Homer must
be viewed as a complete victory of Apollinian
illusion. Nature often uses illusions of
this sort in order to accomplish its secret
purposes. The true goal is covered over by
a phantasm. We stretch out our hands to the
latter, while nature, aided by our deception,
attains the former. In the case of the Greeks
it was the will wishing to behold itself
in the work of art, in the transcendence
of genius; but in order so to behold itself
its creatures had first to view themselves
as glorious, to transpose themselves to a
higher sphere, without having that sphere
of pure contemplation either challenge them
or upbraid them with insufficiency. It was
in that sphere of beauty that the Greeks
saw the Olympians as their mirror images;
it was by means of that aesthetic mirror
that the Greek will opposed suffering and
the somber wisdom of suffering which always
accompanies artistic talent. As a monument
to its victory stands Homer, the naïve artist.
4
We can learn something about that naïve artist
through the analogy of dream. We can imagine
the dreamer as he calls out to himself, still
caught in the illusion of his dream and without
disturbing it, "This is a dream, and
I want to go on dreaming," and we can
infer, on the one hand, that he takes deep
delight in the contemplation of his dream,
and, on the other, that he must have forgotten
the day, with its horrible importunity, so
to enjoy his dream. Apollo, the interpreter
of dreams, will furnish the clue to what
is happening here. Although of the two halves
of life--the waking and the dreaming--the
former is generally considered not only the
more important but the only one which is
truly lived, I would, at the risk of sounding
paradoxical, propose the opposite view. The
more I have come to realize in nature those
omnipotent formative tendencies and, with
them, an intense longing for illusion, the
more I feel inclined to the hypothesis that
the original Oneness, the ground of Being,
ever suffering and contradictory, time and
again has need of rapt vision and delightful
illusion to redeem itself. Since we ourselves
are the very stuff of such illusions, we
must view ourselves as the truly non-existent,
that is to say, as a perpetual unfolding
in time, space, and causality--what we label
"empiric reality." But if, for
the moment, we abstract from our own reality,
viewing our empiric existence, as well as
the existence of the world at large, as the
idea of the original Oneness, produced anew
each instant, then our dreams will appear
to us as illusions of illusions, hence as
a still higher form of satisfaction of the
original desire for illusion. It is for this
reason that the very core of nature takes
such a deep delight in the naive artist and
the naive work of art, which likewise is
merely the illusion of an illusion. Raphael,
himself one of those immortal "naive"
artists, in a symbolic canvas has illustrated
that reduction of illusion to further illusion
which is the original act of the naive artist
and at the same time of all Apollinian culture.
In the lower half of his "Transfiguration,"
through the figures of the possessed boy,
the despairing bearers, the helpless, terrified
disciples, we see a reflection of original
pain, the sole ground of being: "illusion"
here is a reflection of eternal contradiction,
begetter of all things. From this illusion
there rises, like the fragrance of ambrosia,
a new illusory world, invisible to those
enmeshed in the first: a radiant vision of
pure delight, a rapt seeing through wide
open eyes. Here we have, in a great symbol
of art, both the fair world of Apollo and
its substratum, the terrible wisdom of Silenus,
and we can comprehend intuitively how they
mutually require one another. But Apollo
appears to us once again as the apotheosis
of the principium individuationis, in whom
the eternal goal of the original Oneness,
namely its redemption through illusion, accomplishes
itself. With august gesture the god shows
us how there is need for a whole world of
torment in order for the individual to produce
the redemptive vision and to sit quietly
in his rocking rowboat in mid sea, absorbed
in contemplation.
If this apotheosis of individuation is to
be read in normative terms, we may infer
that there is one norm only: the individual--or,
more precisely, the observance of the limits
of the individual: sophrosune. As a moral
deity Apollo demands self-control from his
people and, in order to observe such self-control,
a knowledge of self. And so we find that
the aesthetic necessity of beauty is accompanied
by the imperatives, "Know thyself,"
and "Nothing too much." Conversely,
excess and hubris come to be regarded as
the hostile spirits of the non-Apollinian
sphere, hence as properties of the pre-Apollinian
era--the age of Titans --and the extra- Apollinian
world, that is to say the world of the barbarians.
It was because of his Titanic love of man
that Prometheus had to be devoured by vultures;
it was because of his extravagant wisdom
which succeeded in solving the riddle of
the Sphinx that Oedipus had to be cast into
a whirlpool of crime: in this fashion does
the Delphic god interpret the Greek past.
The effects of the Dionysian spirit struck
the Apollinian Greeks as titanic and barbaric;
yet they could not disguise from themselves
the fact that they were essentially akin
to chose deposed Titans and heroes. They
felt more than that: their whole existence,
with its temperate beauty, rested upon a
base of suffering and knowledge which had
been hidden from them until the reinstatement
of Dionysus uncovered it once more. And lo
and behold! Apollo found it impossible to
live without Dionysus. The elements of titanism
and barbarism fumed out to be quite as fundamental
as the Apollinian element. And now let us
imagine how the ecstatic sounds of the Dionysian
rites penetrated ever more enticingly into
that artificially restrained and discreet
world of illusion, how this clamor expressed
the whole outrageous gamut of nature--delight,
grief, knowledge-- even to the most piercing
cry; and then let us imagine how the Apollinian
artist with his thin, monotonous harp music
must have sounded beside the demoniac chant
of the multitude! The muses presiding over
the illusory arts paled before an art which
enthusiastically told the truth, and the
wisdom of Silenus cried "Woe!"
against the serene Olympians. The individual,
with his limits and moderations, forgot himself
in the Dionysian vortex and became oblivious
to the laws of Apollo. Indiscreet extravagance
revealed itself as truth, and contradiction,
a delight born of pain, spoke out of the
bosom of nature. Wherever the Dionysian voice
was heard, the Apollinian norm seemed suspended
or destroyed. Yet it is equally true that,
in those places where the first assault was
withstood, the prestige and majesty of the
Delphic god appeared more rigid and threatening
than before. The only way I am able to view
Doric art and the Doric state is as a perpetual
military encampment of the Apollinian forces.
An art so defiantly austere, so ringed about
with fortifications--an education so military
and exacting--a polity so ruthlessly cruel--could
endure only in a continual state of resistance
against the titanic and barbaric menace of
Dionysus.
Up to this point I have developed at some
length a theme which was sounded at the beginning
of this essay: how the Dionysian and Apollinian
elements, in a continuous chain of creations,
each enhancing the other, dominated the Hellenic
mind; how from the Iron Age, with its battles
of Titans and its austere popular philosophy,
there developed under the aegis of Apollo
the Homeric world of beauty; how this "naive"
splendor was then absorbed once more by the
Dionysian torrent, and how, face to face
with this new power, the Apollinian code
rigidified into the majesty of Doric art
and contemplation. If the earlier phase of
Greek history may justly be broken down into
four major artistic epochs dramatizing the
battle between the two hostile principles,
then we must inquire further (lest Doric
art appear to us as the acme and final goal
of all these striving tendencies) what was
the true end toward which that evolution
moved. And our eyes will come to rest on
the sublime and much lauded achievement of
the dramatic dithyramb and Attic tragedy,
as the common goal of both urges; whose mysterious
marriage, after long discord, ennobled itself
with such a child, at once Antigone and Cassandra.
5
We are now approaching the central concern
of our inquiry, which has as its aim an understanding
of the Dionysian-Apollinian spirit, or at
least an intuitive comprehension of the mystery
which made this conjunction possible. Our
first question must be: where in the Greek
world is the new seed first to be found which
was later to develop into tragedy and the
dramatic dithyramb? Greek antiquity gives
us a pictorial clue when it represents in
statues, on cameos, etc., Homer and Archilochus
side by side as ancestors and torchbearers
of Greek poetry, in the certainty that only
these two are to be regarded as truly original
minds, from whom a stream of fire flowed
onto the entire later Greek world. Homer,
the hoary dreamer, caught in utter abstraction,
prototype of the Apollinian naive artist,
stares in amazement at the passionate head
of Archilochus, soldierly servant of the
Muses, knocked about by fortune. All that
more recent aesthetics has been able to add
by way of interpretation is that here the
"objective" artist is confronted
by the first "subjective" artist.
We find this interpretation of little use,
since to us the subjective artist is simply
the bad artist, and since we demand above
all, in every genre and range of art, a triumph
over subjectivity, deliverance from the self,
the silencing of every personal will and
desire; since, in fact, we cannot imagine
the smallest genuine art work lacking objectivity
and disinterested contemplation. For this
reason our aesthetic must first solve the
following problem: how is the lyrical poet
at all possible as artist--he who, according
to the experience of all times, always says
"I" and recites to us the entire
chromatic scale of his passions and appetites?
It is this Archilochus who most disturbs
us, placed there beside Homer, with the stridor
of his hate and mockery, the drunken outbursts
of his desire. Isn't he--the first artist
to be called subjective--for that reason
the veritable non-artist? How, then, are
we to explain the reverence in which he was
held as a poet, the honor done him by the
Delphic oracle, that seat of "objective"
art, in a number of very curious sayings?
Schiller has thrown some light on his own
manner of composition by a psychological
observation which seems inexplicable to himself
without, however, giving him pause. Schiller
confessed that, prior to composing, he experienced
not a logically connected series of images
but rather a musical mood. "With me
emotion is at the beginning without dear
and definite ideas; those ideas do not arise
until later on. A certain musical disposition
of mind comes first, and after follows the
poetical idea." If we enlarge on this,
taking into account the most important phenomenon
of ancient poetry, by which I mean that union--
nay identity--everywhere considered natural,
between musician and poet (alongside which
our modern poetry appears as the statue of
a god without a head), then we may, on the
basis of the aesthetics adumbrated earlier,
explain the lyrical poet in the following
manner. He is, first and foremost, a Dionysian
artist, become wholly identified with the
original Oneness, its pain and contradiction,
and producing a replica of that Oneness as
music, if music may legitimately be seen
as a repetition of the world; however, this
music becomes visible to him again, as in
a dream similitude, through the Apollinian
dream influence. That reflection, without
image or idea, of original pain in music,
with its redemption through illusion, now
produces a second reflection as a single
simile or example. The artist had abrogated
his subjectivity earlier, during the Dionysian
phase: the image which now reveals to him
his oneness with the heart of the world is
a dream scene showing forth vividly, together
with original pain, the original delight
of illusion. The "I" thus sounds
out of the depth of being; what recent writers
on aesthetics speak of as "subjectivity"
is a mere figment. When Archilochus, the
first lyric poet of the Greeks, hurls both
his frantic love and his contempt at the
daughters of Lycambes, it is not his own
passion that we see dancing before us in
an orgiastic frenzy: we see Dionysus and
the maenads, we see the drunken reveler Archilochus,
sunk down in sleep--as Euripides describes
him for us in the Bacchae, asleep on a high
mountain meadow, in the midday sun--and now
Apollo approaches him and touches him with
his laurel. The sleeper's enchantment through
Dionysian music now begins to emit sparks
of imagery, poems which, at their point of
highest evolution, will bear the name of
tragedies and dramatic dithyrambs.
The sculptor, as well as his brother, the
epic poet, is committed to the pure contemplation
of images. The Dionysian musician, himself
imageless, is nothing but original pain and
reverberation of the image. Out of this mystical
process of un-selving, the poet's spirit
feels a whole world of images and similitudes
arise, which are quite different in hue,
causality, and pace from the images of the
sculptor or narrative poet. While the last
lives in those images, and only in them,
with joyful complacence, and never tires
of scanning them down to the most minute
features, while even the image of angry Achilles
is no more for him than an image whose irate
countenance he enjoys with a dreamer's delight
in appearance--so that this mirror of appearance
protects him from complete fusion with his
characters--the lyrical poet, on the other
hand, himself becomes his images, his images
are objectified versions of himself. Being
the active center of that world he may boldly
speak in the first person, only his "I"
is not that of the actual waking man, but
the "I" dwelling, truly and eternally,
in the ground of being. It is through the
reflections of that "I" that the
lyric poet beholds the ground of being. Let
us imagine, next, how he views himself too
among these reflections--as non-genius, that
is, as his own subject matter, the whole
teeming crowd of his passions and intentions
directed toward a definite goal; and when
it now appears as though the poet and the
nonpoet joined to him were one, and as though
the former were using the pronoun "I,"
we are able to see through this appearance,
which has deceived those who have attached
the label "subjective" to the lyrical
poet. The man Archilochus, with his passionate
loves and hates, is really only a vision
of genius, a genius who is no longer merely
Archilochus but the genius of the universe,
expressing its pain through the similitude
of Archilochus the man. Archilochus, on the
other hand, the subjectively willing and
desiring human being, can never be a poet.
Nor is it at all necessary for the poet to
see only the phenomenon of the man Archilochus
before him as a reflection of Eternal Being:
the world of tragedy shows us to what extent
the vision of the poet can remove itself
from the urgent, immediate phenomenon.
Schopenhauer, who was fully aware of the
difficulties the lyrical poet creates for
the speculative aesthetician, thought that
he had found a solution, which, however,
I cannot endorse. It is true that he alone
possessed the means, in his profound philosophy
of music, for solving this problem; and I
think I have honored his achievement in these
pages, I hope in his own spirit. Yet in the
first part of The World as Will and Idea
he characterizes the essence of song as follows:
"The consciousness of the singer is
filled with the subject of will, which is
to say with his own willing. That willing
may either be a released, satisfied willing
(joy), or, as happens more commonly, an inhibited
willing (sadness). In either case there is
affect here: passion, violent commotion.
At the same time, however, the singer is
moved by the contemplation of nature surrounding
him to experience himself as the subject
of pure, unwilling ideation, and the unshakable
tranquillity of that ideation becomes contrasted
with the urgency of his willing, its limits,
and its lacks. It is the experience of this
contrast, or tug of war, which he expresses
in his song. While we find ourselves in the
lyrical condition, pure ideation approaches
us, as it were, to deliver us from the urgencies
of willing; we obey, yet obey for moments
only. Again and again our willing, our memory
of personal objectives, distracts us from
tranquil contemplation, while, conversely,
the next scene of beauty we behold will yield
us up once more to pure ideation. For this
reason we find in song and in the lyrical
mood a curious mixture of willing (our personal
interest in purposes) and pure contemplation
(whose subject matter is furnished by our
surroundings); relations are sought and imagined
between these two sets of experiences. Subjective
mood--the affection of the will--communicates
its color to the purely viewed surroundings,
and vice versa. All authentic song reflects
a state of mind mixed and divided in this
manner."
Who can fail to perceive in this description
that lyric poetry is presented as an art
never completely realized, indeed a hybrid
whose essence is made to consist in an uneasy
mixture of will and contemplation, i. e.,
the aesthetic and the non-aesthetic conditions.
We, on our part, maintain that the distinction
between subjective and objective, which even
Schopenhauer still uses as a sort of measuring
stick to distinguish the arts, has no value
whatever in aesthetics; the reason being
that the subject--the striving individual
bent on furthering his egoistic purposes--can
be thought of only as an enemy to art, never
as its source. But to the extent that the
subject is an artist he is already delivered
from individual will and has become a medium
through which the True Subject celebrates
His redemption in illusion. For better or
worse, one thing should be quite obvious
to all of us: the entire comedy of art is
not played for our own sakes--for our betterment
or education, say--nor can we consider ourselves
the true originators of that art realm; while
on the other hand we have every right to
view ourselves as aesthetic projections of
the veritable creator and derive such dignity
as we possess from our status as art works.
Only as an aesthetic product can the world
be justified to all eternity-- although our
consciousness of our own significance does
scarcely exceed the consciousness a painted
soldier might have of the battle in which
he takes part. Thus our whole knowledge of
art is at bottom illusory, seeing that as
mere knowers we can never be fused with that
essential spirit, at the same time creator
and spectator, who has prepared the comedy
of art for his own edification. Only as the
genius in the act of creation merges with
the primal architect of the cosmos can he
truly know something of the eternal essence
of art. For in that condition he resembles
the uncanny fairy tale image which is able
to see itself by turning its eyes. He is
at once subject and object, poet, actor,
and audience.
6
Scholarship has discovered in respect of
Archilochus that he introduced folk song
into literature, and that it was this feat
which earned him the unique distinction of
being placed beside Homer. Yet what does
folk song represent in contrast to epic poetry,
which is wholly Apollinian? Surely the classical
instance of a union between Apollinian and
Dionysian intentions. Its tremendous distribution,
as well as its constant proliferation wherever
we look, attests the strength of that dual
generative motive in nature: a motive which
leaves its traces in folk song much the way
the orgiastic movements of a nation leave
their traces in music. Nor should it be difficult
to show by historical evidence that every
period which abounded in folk songs has,
by the same token, been deeply stirred by
Dionysian currents. Those currents have long
been considered the necessary substratum,
or precondition, of folk poetry.
But first of all we must regard folk song
as a musical mirror of the cosmos, as primordial
melody casting about for an analogue and
finding that analogue eventually in poetry.
Since melody precedes all else, it may have
to undergo any number of objectifications,
such as a variety of texts presents. But
it is always, according to the naive estimation
of the populace, much superior in importance
to those texts. Melody gives birth to poetry
again and again: this is implied by the atrophic
form of folk song. for a long time I wondered
at this phenomenon, until finally the following
explanation offered itself. If we examine
any collection of folk poetry--for example,
Des Knaben Wunderhorn--in this light, we
shall find countless examples of melody generating
whole series of images, and those images,
in their varicolored hues, abrupt transitions,
and headlong forward rush, stand in the most
marked contrast to the equable movement,
the calm illusion, of epic verse. Viewed
from the standpoint of the epic the uneven
and irregular imagery of folk song becomes
quite objectionable. Such must have been
the feeling which the solemn rhapsodists
of the Apollinian rites, during the age of
Terpander, entertained with regard to popular
lyric effusions.
In folk poetry we find, moreover, the most
intense effort of language to imitate the
condition of music. For this reason Archilochus
may be claimed to have ushered in an entirely
new world of poetry, profoundly at variance
with the Homeric; and by this distinction
we have hinted at the only possible relation
between poetry and music, word and sound.
Word, image, and idea, in undergoing the
power of music, now seek for a kind of expression
that would parallel it. In this sense we
may distinguish two main currents in the
history of Greek verse, according as language
is used to imitate the world of appearance
or that of music. To understand more profoundly
the significance of this distinction, let
the reader ponder the utter dissimilarity
of verbal color, syntax and phraseology in
the works of Homer and Pindar. He then cannot
fail to conjecture that in the interval there
must have sounded the orgiastic flute notes
of Olympus, which, as late as Aristotle's
time, in the midst of an infinitely more
complex music, still rouses men to wild enthusiasm,
and which at their inception must have challenged
all contemporaries to imitate them by every
available poetic resource. I wish to instance
in this connection a well-known phenomenon
of our own era which our modish aestheticians
consider most exceptionable. We have noticed
again and again how a Beethoven symphony
compels the individual hearers to use pictorial
speech--though it must be granted that a
collocation of these various descriptive
sequences might appear rather checkered,
fantastic, even contradictory. Small wonder,
then, that our critics have exercised their
feeble wit on these musical images, or else
passed over the phenomenon--surely one worthy
of further investigation--in complete silence.
Even in cases where the composer himself
has employed pictorial tags in talking about
his work-- calling one symphony "Pastoral,"
one movement "Brook Scene" and
another "Jolly Concourse of Peasants"--these
tropes are properly reducible to purely musical
elements rather than standing for actual
objects expressed through music. It is true
that such musical representations can neither
instruct us much concerning the Dionysian
content of music nor yet lay claim to any
distinctive value as images. But once we
study this discharge of music through images
in a youthful milieu, among a people whose
linguistic creativity is unimpaired, we can
form some idea of how atrophic folk song
must have arisen and how a nation's entire
store of verbal resources might be mobilized
by means of that novel principle, imitation
of the language of music.
If we are right in viewing lyric poetry as
an efflorescence of music in images and ideas,
then our next question will be, "How
does music manifest itself in that mirror
of images and ideas?" It manifests itself
as will, using the term in Schopenhauer's
sense, that is to say as the opposite of
the aesthetic, contemplative, unwilling disposition.
At this point it becomes necessary to discriminate
very clearly between essence and appearance--for
it is obviously impossible for music to represent
the essential nature of the will; if it did,
we would have to banish it from the realm
of art altogether, seeing that the will is
the non-aesthetic element par excellence.
Rather we should say that music appears as
the will. In order to express that appearance
through images the lyrical poet must employ
the whole register of emotions, from the
whisper of love to the roar of frenzy; moved
by the urge to talk of music in Apollinian
similitudes, he must first comprehend the
whole range of nature, including himself,
as the eternal source of volition, desire,
appetite. But to the extent that he interprets
music through images he is dwelling on the
still sea of Apollinian contemplation, no
matter how turbulently all that he beholds
through the musical medium may surge about
him. And when he looks at himself through
that medium he will discover his own image
in a state of turmoil: his own willing and
desiring, his groans and jubilations, will
all appear to him as a similitude by which
music is interpreted. Such is the phenomenon
of the lyric poet. Being an Apollinian genius,
he interprets music through the image of
the will, while he is himself turned into
the pure, unshadowed eye of the sun, utterly
detached from the will and its greed.
Throughout this inquiry I have maintained
the position that lyric poetry is dependent
on the spirit of music to the same degree
that music itself, in its absolute sovereignty,
is independent of either image or concept,
though it may tolerate both. The poet cannot
tell us anything that was not already contained,
with a most universal validity, in such music
as prompted him to his figurative discourse.
The cosmic symbolism of music resists any
adequate treatment by language, for the simple
reason that music, in referring to primordial
contradiction and pain, symbolizes a sphere
which is both earlier than appearance and
beyond it. Once we set it over against music,
all appearance becomes a mere analogy. So
it happens that language, the organ and symbol
of appearance, can never succeed in bringing
the innermost core of music to the surface.
Whenever it engages in the imitation of music,
language remains in purely superficial contact
with it, and no amount of poetic eloquence
will carry us a step closer to the essential
secret of that art.
7
At this point we need to call upon every
aesthetic principle so far discussed, in
order to find our way through the labyrinthine
origins of Greek tragedy. I believe I am
saying nothing extravagant when I claim that
the problem of these origins has never even
been posed, much less solved, no matter how
often the elusive rags of ancient tradition
have been speculatively sewn together and
ripped apart That tradition tells us in no
uncertain terms that tragedy arose out of
the tragic chorus and was, to begin with,
nothing but chorus. We are thus bound to
scan the chorus closely as the archetypal
drama, disregarding the current explanations
of it as the idealized spectator, or as representing
the populace over against the noble realm
of the set. The latter interpretation, which
sounds so grandly edifying to certain politicians
(as though the democratic Athenians had represented
in the popular chorus the invariable moral
law, always right in face of the passionate
misdeeds and extravagances of kings) may
have been suggested by a phrase in Aristotle,
but this lofty notion can have had no influence
whatever on the original formation of tragedy,
whose purely religious origins would exclude
not only the opposition between the people
and their rulers but any kind of political
or social context. Likewise we would consider
it blasphemous, in the light of the classical
form of the chorus as we know it from Aeschylus
and Sophocles, to speak of a "foreshadowing'
of constitutional democracy, though others
have not stuck at such blasphemy. No ancient
polity ever embodied constitutional democracy,
and one dares to hope that ancient tragedy
did not even foreshadow it.
Much more famous than this political explanation
of the chorus is the notion of A. W. Schlegel,
who advises us to regard the chorus as the
quintessence of the audience, as the "ideal
spectator." If we hold this view against
the historical tradition according to which
tragedy was, in the beginning, nothing but
chorus, it turns out to be a crude, unscholarly,
though dazzling hypothesis--dazzling because
of the effective formulation, the typically
German bias for anything called "ideal,"
and our momentary wonder at the notion. For
we are indeed amazed when we compare our
familiar theater audience with the tragic
chorus and ask ourselves whether the former
could conceivably be construed into something
analogous to the latter. We tacitly deny
the possibility, and then are brought to
wonder both at the boldness of Schlegel's
assertion and at what must have been the
totally different complexion of the Greek
audience. We had supposed all along that
the spectator, whoever he might be, would
always have to remain conscious of the fact
that he had before him a work of art, not
empiric reality, whereas the tragic chorus
of the Greeks is constrained to view the
characters enacted on the stage as veritably
existing. The chorus of the Oceanides think
that they behold the actual Titan Prometheus,
and believe themselves every bit as real
as the god. Are we seriously to assume that
the highest and purest type of spectator
is he who, like the Oceanides, regards the
god as physically present and real? That
it is characteristic of the ideal spectator
to rush on stage and deliver the god from
his fetters? We had put our faith in an artistic
audience, believing that the more intelligent
the individual spectator was, the more capable
he was of viewing the work of art as art;
and now Schlegel's theory suggests to us
that the perfect spectator viewed the world
of the stage not at all as art but as reality.
"Oh these Greeks!" we moan. "They
upset our entire aesthetic!" But once
we have grown accustomed to it, we repeat
Schlegel's pronouncement whenever the question
of the chorus comes up.
The emphatic tradition I spoke of militates
against Schlegel: chorus as such, without
stage--the primitive form of tragedy--is
incompatible with that chorus of ideal spectators.
What sort of artistic genre would it be that
derived from the idea of the spectator and
crystallized itself in the mode of the "pure"
spectator? A spectator with out drama is
an absurdity. We suspect that the birth of
tragedy can be explained neither by any reverence
for the moral intelligence of the multitude
nor by the notion of a spectator without
drama, and, altogether, we consider the problem
much too complex to be touched by such facile
interpretations.
An infinitely more valuable insight into
the significance of the chorus was furnished
by Schiller in the famous preface to his
Bride of Messina, where the chorus is seen
as a living wall which tragedy draws about
itself in order to achieve insulation from
the actual world, to preserve its ideal ground
and its poetic freedom.
Schiller used this view as his main weapon
against commonplace naturalism, against the
illusionistic demand made upon dramatic poetry.
While the day of the stage was conceded to
be artificial, the architecture of the set
symbolic, the metrical discourse stylized,
a larger misconception still prevailed. Schiller
was not content to have what constitutes
the very essence of poetry merely tolerated
as poetic license. He insisted that the introduction
of the chorus was the decisive step by which
any naturalism in art was openly challenged.
This way of looking at art seems to me the
one which our present age, thinking itself
so superior, has labeled pseudo idealism.
But I very much fear that we, with our idolatry
of verisimilitude, have arrived at the opposite
pole of all idealism, the realm of the waxworks.
This too betrays a kind of art, as do certain
popular novels of today. All I ask is that
we not be importuned by the pretense that
such art has left Goethe's and Schiller's
"pseudo-idealism" behind.
It is certainly true, as Schiller saw, that
the Greek chorus of satyrs, the chorus of
primitive tragedy, moved on ideal ground,
a ground raised high above the common path
of mortals. The Greek has built for his chow
he scaffolding of a fictive chthonic realm
and placed thereon fictive nature spirits.
Tragedy developed on this foundation, and
so has been exempt since its beginning from
the embarrassing task of copying actuality.
All the same, the world of tragedy is by
no means a world arbitrarily projected between
heaven and earth; rather it is a world having
the same reality and credibility as Olympus
possessed for the devout Greek. The satyr,
as the Dionysian chorist, dwells in a reality
sanctioned by myth and ritual. That tragedy
should begin with him, that the Dionysian
wisdom of tragedy should speak through him,
is as puzzling a phenomenon as, more generally,
the origin of tragedy from the chorus. Perhaps
we can gain a starting point for this inquiry
by claiming that the satyr, that fictive
nature sprite, stands to cultured man in
the same relation as Dionysian music does
to civilization. Richard Wagner has said
of the latter that it is absorbed by music
as lamplight by daylight. In the same manner,
I believe, the cultured Greek felt himself
absorbed into the satyr chorus, and in the
next development of Greek tragedy state and
society, in fact all that separated man from
man, gave way before an overwhelming sense
of unity which led back into the heart of
nature. The metaphysical solace
(with which, I wish to say at once, all true
tragedy sends us away) that, despite every
phenomenal change life is at bottom indestructibly
joyful and powerful, was expressed most concretely
in the chorus of satyrs, nature beings who
dwell behind all civilization and preserve
their identity through every change of generations
and historical movement.
With this chorus the profound Greek, so uniquely
susceptible to the subtlest and deepest suffering,
who had penetrated the destructive agencies
of both nature and history, solaced himself.
Though he had been in danger of craving a
Buddhistic denial of the will, he was saved
by art, and through art life reclaimed him.
While the transport of the Dionysian state,
with its suspension of all the ordinary barriers
of existence, lasts, it carries with it a
Lethean element in which everything that
has been experienced by the individual is
drowned. This chasm of oblivion separates
the quotidian reality from the Dionysian.
But as soon as that quotidian reality enters
consciousness once more it is viewed with
loathing, and the consequence is an ascetic,
abulic state of mind. In this sense Dionysian
man might be said to resemble Hamlet: both
have looked deeply into the true nature of
things, they have gained knowledge and are
now loath to act. They realize that no action
of theirs can work any change in the eternal
condition of things, and they regard the
imputation as ludicrous or debasing that
they should set right the time which is out
of joint. Knowledge kills action, for in
order to act we require the veil of illusion;
such is Hamlet's doctrine, not to be confounded
with the cheap wisdom of Jack the Dreamer,
who through too much reflection, as it were
a surplus of possibilities, never arrives
at action. What, both in the case of Hamlet
and of Dionysian man, overbalances any motive
leading to action, is not reflection but
knowledge, the apprehension of truth and
its terror. Now no comfort any longer avails,
desire reaches beyond the transcendental
world, beyond the gods themselves, and existence,
together with its glittering reflection in
the gods and an immortal Beyond, is denied.
The truth once seen, man is aware everywhere
of the ghastly absurdity of existence, comprehends
the symbolism of Ophelia's fate and the wisdom
of the wood sprite Silenus: nausea invades
him.
Then, in this supreme jeopardy of the will,
art, that sorceress expert in healing, approaches
him; only she can turn his fits of nausea
into imaginations with which it is possible
to live. These are on the one hand the spirit
of the sublime, which subjugates terror by
means of art; on the other hand the comic
spirit, which releases us, through art, from
the tedium of absurdity. The satyr chorus
of the dithyramb was the salvation of Greek
art; the threatening paroxysms I have mentioned
were contained by the intermediary of those
Dionysian attendants.
8
The satyr and the idyllic shepherd of later
times have both been products of a desire
for naturalness and simplicity. But how firmly
the Greek shaped his wood sprite, and how
self-consciously and mawkishly the modern
dallies with his tender, fluting shepherd!
For the Greek the satyr expressed nature
in a rude, uncultivated state: he did not,
for that reason, confound him with the monkey.
Quite the contrary, the satyr was man's true
prototype, an expression of his highest and
strongest aspirations. He was an enthusiastic
reveler, filled with transport by the approach
of the god; a compassionate companion re
enacting the sufferings of the god; a prophet
of wisdom born out of nature's womb; a symbol
of the sexual omnipotence of nature, which
the Greek was accustomed to view with reverent
wonder. The satyr was sublime and divine--so
he must have looked to the traumatically
wounded vision of Dionysian man. Our tricked
out, contrived shepherd would have offended
him, but his eyes rested with sublime satisfaction
on the open, undistorted limnings of nature.
Here archetypal man was cleansed of the illusion
of culture, and what revealed itself was
authentic man, the bearded satyr jubilantly
greeting his god. Before him cultured man
dwindled to a false cartoon. Schiller is
also correct as regards these beginnings
of the tragic art: the chorus is a living
wall against the onset of reality because
it depicts reality more truthfully and more
completely than does civilized man, who ordinarily
considers himself the only reality. Poetry
does not lie outside the world as a fantastic
impossibility begotten of the poet's brain;
it seeks to be the exact opposite, an unvarnished
expression of truth, and for this reason
must cast away the trumpery garments worn
by the supposed reality of civilized man.
The contrast between this truth of nature
and the pretentious lie of civilization is
quite similar to that between the eternal
core of things and the entire phenomenal
world. Even as tragedy, with its metaphysical
solace, points to the eternity of true being
surviving every phenomenal change, so does
the symbolism of the satyr chorus express
analogically the primordial relation between
the thing in itself and appearance. The idyllic
shepherd of modern man is but a replica of
the sum of cultural illusions which he mistakes
for nature. The Dionysian Greek, desiring
truth and nature at their highest power,
sees himself metamorphosed into the satyr.
Such are the dispositions and insights of
the reveling throng of Dionysus; and the
power of these dispositions and insights
transforms them in their own eyes, until
they behold themselves restored to the condition
of genii, of satyrs. Later the tragic chorus
came to be an aesthetic imitation of that
natural phenomenon; which then necessitated
a distinction between Dionysian spectators
and votaries actually spellbound by the god.
What must be kept in mind in all these investigations
is that the audience of Attic tragedy discovered
itself in the chorus of the orchestra. Audience
and chorus were never fundamentally set over
against each other: all was one grand chorus
of dancing, singing satyrs, and of those
who let themselves be represented by them.
This granted, Schlegel's dictum assumes a
profounder meaning. The chorus is the "ideal
spectator" inasmuch as it is the only
seer--seer of the visionary world of the
proscenium. An audience of spectators, such
as we know it, was unknown to the Greeks.
Given the terraced structure of the Greek
theater, rising in concentric arcs, each
spectator could quite literally survey the
entire cultural world about him and imagine
himself, in the fullness of seeing, as a
chorist. Thus we are enabled to view the
chorus of primitive proto- tragedy as the
projected image of Dionysian man. The clearest
illustration of this phenomenon is the experience
of the actor, who, if he is truly gifted,
has before his eyes the vivid image of the
role he is to play. The satyr chorus is,
above all, a vision of the Dionysian multitude,
just as the world of the stage is a vision
of that satyr chorus--a vision so powerful
that it blurs the actors' sense of the "reality"
of cultured spectators ranged row on row
about him. The structure of the Greek theater
reminds us of a lonely mountain valley: the
architecture of the stage resembles a luminous
cloud configuration which the Bacchae behold
as they swarm down from the mountaintops;
a marvelous frame in the center of which
Dionysus manifests himself to them.
Our scholarly ideas of elementary artistic
process are likely to be offended by the
primitive events which I have adduced here
to explain the tragic chorus. And yet nothing
can be more evident than the fact that the
poet is poet only insofar as he sees himself
surrounded by living acting shapes into whose
innermost being he penetrates. It is our
peculiar modem weakness to see all primitive
aesthetic phenomena in too complicated and
abstract a way. Metaphor, for the authentic
poet, is not a figure of rhetoric a representative
image standing concretely before him in lieu
of a concept. A character, to him, is not
an assemblage of individual traits laboriously
pieced together, but a personage beheld as
insistently living before his eyes, differing
from the image of the painter only in its
capacity to continue living and acting. What
is it that makes Homer so much more vivid
and concrete in his description than any
other poet? His lively eye, with which he
discerns so much more. We all talk about
poetry so abstractly because we all tend
to be indifferent poets. At bottom the aesthetic
phenomenon is quite simple: all one needs
in order to be a poet is the ability to have
a lively action going on before one continually,
to live surrounded by hosts of spirits. To
be a dramatist all one needs is the urge
to transform oneself and speak out of strange
bodies and souls.
Dionysian excitation is capable of communicating
to a whole multitude this artistic power
to feel itself surrounded by, and one with,
a host of spirits. What happens in the dramatic
chorus is the primary dramatic phenomenon:
projecting oneself outside oneself and then
acting as though one had really entered another
body, another character. This constitutes
the first step in the evolution of drama.
This art is no longer that of the rhapsodist,
who does not merge with his images but, like
the painter, contemplates them as something
outside himself; what we have here is the
individual effacing himself through entering
a strange being. It should be made clear
that this phenomenon is not singular but
epidemic: a whole crowd becomes rapt in this
manner. It is for this reason that the dithyramb
differs essentially from any other kind of
chorus. The virgins who, carrying laurel
branches and singing a processional chant,
move solemnly toward the temple of Apollo,
retain their identities and their civic names.
The dithyrambic chorus on the other hand
is a chorus of the transformed, who have
forgotten their civic past and social rank,
who have become timeless servants of their
god and live outside all social spheres.
While all the other types of Greek choric
verse are simply the highest intensification
of the Apollinian musician, in the dithyramb
we see a community of unconscious actors
all of whom see one another as enchanted.
Enchantment is the precondition of all dramatic
art. In this enchantment the Dionysian reveler
sees himself as satyr, and as satyr, in turn,
he sees the god. In his transformation he
sees a new vision, which is the Apollinian
completion of his state. And by the same
token this new vision completes the dramatic
act.
Thus we have come to interpret Greek tragedy
as a Dionysian chorus which again and again
discharges itself in Apollinian images. Those
choric portions with which the tragedy is
interlaced constitute, as it were, the matrix
of the dialogue, that is to say, of the entire
stage-world of the actual drama. This substratum
of tragedy irradiates, in several consecutive
discharges, the vision of the drama--a vision
on the one hand completely of the nature
of Apollinian dream-illusion and therefore
epic, but on the other hand, as the objectification
of a Dionysian condition, tending toward
the shattering of the individual and his
fusion with the original Oneness. Tragedy
is an Apollinian embodiment of Dionysian
insights and powers, and for that reason
separated by a tremendous gulf from the epic.
On this view the chorus of Greek tragedy,
symbol of an entire multitude agitated by
Dionysus, can be fully explained. Whereas
we who are accustomed to the role of the
chorus in modem theater, especially opera,
find it hard to conceive how the chorus of
the Greeks should have been older, more central
than the dramatic action proper (although
we have clear testimony to this effect) and
whereas we have never been quite able to
reconcile with this position of importance
the fact that the chorus was composed of
such lowly beings as--originally--goatlike
satyrs; and whereas, further, the orchestra
in front of the stage has always seemed a
riddle to us--we now realize that the stage
with its action was originally conceived
as pure vision and that the only reality
was the chorus, who created that vision out
of itself and proclaimed it through the medium
of dance, music, and spoken word. Since,
in this vision, the chorus beholds its lord
and master Dionysus, it remains forever an
attending chorus, it sees how the god suffers
and transforms himself, and it has, for that
reason, no need to act. But, notwithstanding
its subordination to the god, the chorus
remains the highest expression of nature,
and, like nature, utters in its enthusiasm
oracular words of wisdom. Being compassionate
as well as wise, it proclaims a truth that
issues from the heart of the world. Thus
we see how that fantastic and at first sight
embarrassing figure arises, the wise and
enthusiastic satyr who is at the same time
the "simpleton" as opposed to the
god. The satyr is a replica of nature in
its strongest tendencies and at the same
time, a herald of its wisdom and art. He
combines in his person the roles of musician,
poet, dancer and visionary.
It is in keeping both with this insight and
with general tradition that in the earliest
tragedy Dionysus was not actually present
but merely imagined. Original tragedy is
only chorus and not drama at all. Later an
attempt was made to demonstrate the god as
real and to bring the visionary figure, together
with the transfiguring frame, vividly before
the eyes of every spectator. This marks the
beginning of drama in the strict sense of
the word. It then became the task of the
dithyrambic chorus so to excite the mood
of the listeners that when the tragic hero
appeared they would behold not the awkwardly
masked man but a figure born of their own
rapt vision. If we imagine Admetus brooding
on the memory of his recently departed wife,
consuming himself in a spiritual contemplation
of her form, and how a figure of similar
shape and gait is led toward him in deep
disguise; if we then imagine his tremor of
excitement, his impetuous comparisons, his
instinctive conviction--then we have an analogue
for the excitement of the spectator beholding
the god, with whose sufferings he has already
identified himself, stride onto the stage.
Instinctively he would project the shape
of the god that was magically present to
his mind onto that masked figure of a man,
dissolving the latter's reality into a ghostly
unreality. This is the Apollinian dream state,
in which the daylight world is veiled and
a new world--clearer, more comprehensible,
more affecting than the first, and at the
same time more shadowy--falls upon the eye
in ever changing shapes. Thus we may recognize
a drastic stylistic opposition: language,
color, pace, dynamics of speech are polarized
into the Dionysian poetry of the chorus,
on the one hand, and the Apollinian dream
world of the scene on the other. The result
is two completely separate spheres of expression.
The Apollinian embodiments in which Dionysus
assumes objective shape are very different
from the continual interplay of shifting
forces in the music of the chorus, from those
powers deeply felt by the enthusiast, but
which he is incapable of condensing into
a clear image. The adept no longer obscurely
senses the approach of the god: the god now
speaks to him from the proscenium with the
clarity and firmness of epic, as an epic
hero, almost in the language of Homer.
9
Everything that rises to the surface in the
Apollinian portion of Greek tragedy (in the
dialogue) looks simple, transparent, beautiful.
In this sense the dialogue is a mirror of
the Greek mind, whose nature manifests itself
in dance, since in dance the maximum power
is only potentially present, betraying itself
in the suppleness and opulence of movement.
The language of the Sophoclean heroes surprises
us by its Apollinian determinacy and lucidity.
It seems to us that we can fathom their innermost
being, and we are somewhat surprised that
we had such a short way to go. However, once
we abstract from the character of the hero
as it rises to the surface and becomes visible
(a character at bottom no more than a luminous
shape projected onto a dark wall, that is
to say, appearance through and through) and
instead penetrate into the myth which is
projected in these luminous reflections,
we suddenly come up against a phenomenon
which is the exact opposite of a familiar
optical one. After an energetic attempt to
focus on the sun we have, by way of remedy
almost, dark spots before our eyes when we
turn away. Conversely, the luminous images
of the Sophoclean heroes--those Apollinian
masks--are the necessary productions of a
deep look into the horror of nature; luminous
spots, as it were, designed to cure an eye
hurt by the ghastly night. Only in this way
can we form an adequate notion of the seriousness
of Greek "serenity"; whereas we
find that serenity generally misinterpreted
nowadays as a condition of undisturbed complacence.
Sophocles conceived doomed Oedipus the greatest
sufferer of the Greek stage, as a pattern
of nobility, destined to error and misery
despite his wisdom, yet exercising a beneficent
influence upon his environment in virtue
of his boundless grief. The profound poet
tells us that a man who is truly noble is
incapable of sin; though every law, every
natural order, indeed the entire canon of
ethics, perish by his actions, those very
actions will create a circle of higher consequences
able to found a new world on the ruins of
the old. This is the poet's message, insofar
as he is at the same time a religious thinker.
In his capacity as poet he presents us in
the beginning with a complicated legal knot
in the slow unraveling of which the judge
brings about his own destruction. The typically
Greek delight in this dialectical solution
is so great that it imparts an element of
triumphant serenity to the work, and thus
removes the sting lurking in the ghastly
premises of the plot. In Oedipus at Colonus
we meet this same serenity, but utterly transfigured.
In contrast to the aged hero, stricken with
excess of grief and passively undergoing
his many misfortunes, we have here a transcendent
serenity issuing from above and hinting that
by his passive endurance the hero may yet
gain a consummate energy of action. This
activity (so different from his earlier conscious
striving, which had resulted in pure passivity)
will extend far beyond the limited experience
of his own life. Thus the legal knot of the
Oedipus fable, which had seemed to mortal
eyes incapable of being disentangled, is
slowly loosened. And we experience the most
profound human joy as we witness this divine
counterpart of dialectics. If this explanation
has done the poet justice, it may yet be
asked whether it has exhausted the implications
of the myth; and now we see that the poet's
entire conception was nothing more nor less
than the luminous afterimage which kind nature
provides our eyes after a look into the abyss.
Oedipus, his father's murderer, his mother's
lover, solver of the Sphinx's riddle! What
is the meaning of this triple fate? An ancient
popular belief, especially strong in Persia,
holds that a wise magus must be incestuously
begotten. If we examine Oedipus, the solver
of riddles and liberator of his mother, in
the light of this Parsee belief, we may conclude
that wherever soothsaying and magical powers
have broken the spell of present and future,
the rigid law of individuation, the magic
circle of nature, extreme unnaturalness--in
this case incest--is the necessary antecedent;
for how should man force nature to yield
up her secrets but by successfully resisting
her, that is to say, by unnatural acts? This
is the recognition I find expressed in the
terrible triad of Oedipean fates: the same
man who solved the riddle of nature (the
ambiguous Sphinx) must also, as murderer
of his father and husband of his mother,
break the consecrated tables of the natural
order. It is as though the myth whispered
to us that wisdom, and especially Dionysian
wisdom, is an unnatural crime, and that whoever,
in pride of knowledge, hurls nature into
the abyss of destruction, must himself experience
nature's disintegration. "The edge of
wisdom is turned against the wise man; wisdom
is a crime committed on nature": such
are the terrible words addressed to us by
myth. Yet the Greek poet, like a sunbeam,
touches the terrible and austere Memnon's
Column of myth, which proceeds to give forth
Sophoclean melodies. Now I wish to contrast
to the glory of passivity the glory of action,
as it irradiates the Prometheus of Aeschylus.
Young Goethe has revealed to us, in the bold
words his Prometheus addresses to Zeus, what
the thinker Aeschylus meant to say, but what,
as poet, he merely gave us to divine in symbol:
Here l sit, forming men in my own image,
a race to be like me, to suffer, to weep,
to delight and to rejoice, and to defy you,
as I do.
Man, raised to titanic proportions, conquers
his own civilization and compels the gods
to join forces with him, since by his autonomous
wisdom he commands both their existence and
the limitations of their sway. What appears
most wonderful, however, in the Prometheus
poem--ostensibly a hymn in praise of impiety--is
its profound Aeschylean longing for justice.
The immense suffering of the bold individual,
on the one hand, and on the other the extreme
jeopardy of the gods, prefiguring a "twilight
of the gods"--the two together pointing
to a reconciliation, a merger of their universes
of suffering--all this reminds one vividly
of the central tenet of Aeschylean speculation
in which Moira, as eternal justice, is seen
enthroned above men and gods alike. In considering
the extraordinary boldness with which Aeschylus
places the Olympian world on his scales of
justice, we must remember that the profound
Greek had an absolutely stable basis of metaphysical
thought in his mystery cults and that he
was free to discharge all his skeptical velleities
on the Olympians. The Greek artist, especially,
experienced in--respect of these divinities
an obscure sense of mutual dependency, a
feeling which has been perfectly symbolized
in the Prometheus of Aeschylus. The titanic
artist was strong in his defiant belief that
he could create men and, at the least, destroy
Olympian gods; this he was able to do by
virtue of his superior wisdom, which, to
be sure, he must atone for by eternal suffering.
The glorious power to do, which is possessed
by great genius, and for which even eternal
suffering is not too high a price to pay--the
artist's austere pride--is of the very essence
of Aeschylean poetry, while Sophocles in
his Oedipus intones a paean to the saint.
But even Aeschylus' interpretation of the
myth fails to exhaust its extraordinary depth
of terror. Once again, we may see the artist's
buoyancy and creative joy as a luminous cloud
shape reflected upon the dark surface of
a lake of sorrow. The legend of Prometheus
is indigenous to the entire community of
Aryan races and attests to their prevailing
talent for profound and tragic vision. In
fact, it is not improbable that this myth
has the same characteristic importance for
the Aryan mind as the myth of the Fall has
for the Semitic, and that the two myths are
related as brother and sister. The presupposition
of the Prometheus myth is primitive man's
belief in the supreme value of fire as the
true palladium of every rising civilization.
But for man to dispose of fire freely, and
not receive it as a gift from heaven in the
kindling thunderbolt and the warming sunlight,
seemed a crime to thoughtful primitive man,
a despoiling of divine nature. Thus this
original philosophical problem poses at once
an insoluble conflict between men and the
gods, which lies like a huge boulder at the
gateway to every culture. Man's highest good
must be bought with a crime and paid for
by the flood of grief and suffering which
the offended divinities visit upon the human
race in its noble ambition. An austere notion,
this, which by the dignity it confers on
crime presents a strange contrast to the
Semitic myth of the Fall--a myth that exhibits
curiosity, deception, suggestibility, concupiscence,
in short a whole series of principally feminine
frailties, as the root of all evil. What
distinguishes the Aryan conception is an
exalted notion of active sin as the properly
Promethean virtue; this notion provides us
with the ethical substratum of pessimistic
tragedy, which comes to be seen as a justification
of human ills, that is to say of human guilt
as well as the suffering purchased by that
guilt. The tragedy at the heart of things,
which the thoughtful Aryan is not disposed
to quibble away, the contrariety at the center
of the universe, is seen by him as an interpenetration
of several worlds, as for instance a divine
and a human, each individually in the right
but each, as it encroaches upon the other,
having to suffer for its individuality. The
individual, in the course of his heroic striving
towards universality, de-individuation, comes
up against that primordial contradiction
and learns both to sin and to suffer. The
Aryan nations assign to crime the male, the
Semites to sin the female gender; and it
is quite consistent with these notions that
the original act of hubris should be attributed
to a man, original sin to a woman. For the
rest, perhaps not too much should be made
of this distinction, cf. the chorus of wizards
in Goethe's Faust:
If that is so, we do not mind it: With a
thousand steps the women find it; But though
they rush, we do not care: With one big jump
the men get there. [Goethe's Faust, lines
3982-85.]
Once we have comprehended the substance of
the Prometheus myth--the imperative necessity
of hubris for the titanic individual--we
must realize the non-Apollinian character
of this pessimistic idea. It is Apollo who
tranquilizes the individual by drawing boundary
lines, and who, by enjoining again and again
the practice of self-knowledge, reminds him
of the holy, universal norms. But lest the
Apollinian tendency freeze all form into
Egyptian rigidity, and in attempting to prescribe
its orbit to each particular wave inhibit
the movement of the lake, the Dionysian flood
tide periodically destroys all the little
circles in which the Apollinian will would
confine Hellenism. The swiftly rising Dionysian
tide then shoulders all the small individual
wave crests, even as Prometheus' brother,
the Titan Atlas, shouldered the world. This
titanic urge to be the Atlas of all individuals,
to bear them on broad shoulders ever farther
and higher, is the common bond between the
Promethean and the Dionysian forces. In this
respect the Aeschylean Prometheus appears
as a Dionysian mask, while in his deep hunger
for justice Aeschylus reveals his paternal
descent from Apollo, god of individuation
and just boundaries. We may express the Janus
face, at once Dionysian and Apollinian, of
the Aeschylean Prometheus in the following
formula: "All that exists is just and
unjust and equally justified in both."
That is your world! A world indeed!-- [Goethe's
Faust, line 409.]
10
It is an unimpeachable tradition that in
its earliest form Greek tragedy records only
the sufferings of Dionysus, and that he was
the only actor. But it may be claimed with
equal justice that, up to Euripides, Dionysus
remains the sole dramatic protagonist and
that all the famous characters of the Greek
stage, Prometheus, Oedipus, etc., are only
masks of that original hero. The fact that
a god hides behind all these masks accounts
for the much-admired "ideal" character
of those celebrated figures. Someone, I can't
recall who, has claimed that all individuals,
as individuals, are comic, and therefore
untragic; which seems to suggest that the
Greeks did not tolerate individuals at all
on the tragic stage. And in fact they must
have felt this way. The Platonic distinction
between the idea and the eidolon ["idol"]
is deemed rooted in the Greek temperament
If we wished to use Plato's terminology we
might speak of the tragic characters of the
Greek stage somewhat as follows: the one
true Dionysus appears in a multiplicity of
characters, in the mask of warrior hero,
and enmeshed in the web of individual will.
The god ascends the stage in the likeness
of a striving and suffering individual. That
he can appear at all with this clarity and
precision is due to dream interpreter Apollo,
who projects before the chorus its Dionysian
condition in this analogical figure. Yet
in truth that hero is the suffering Dionysus
of the mysteries. He of whom the wonderful
myth relates that as a child he was dismembered
by Titans now experiences in his own person
the pains of individuation, and in this condition
is worshipped as Zagreus. We have here an
indication that dismemberment--the truly
Dionysian suffering--was like a separation
into air, water, earth, and fire, and that
individuation should be regarded as the source
of all suffering, and rejected. The smile
of this Dionysus has given birth to the Olympian
gods, his tears have given birth to men.
In his existence as a dismembered god, Dionysus
shows the double nature of a cruel, savage
daemon and a mild, gentle ruler. Every hope
of the Eleusinian initiates pointed to a
rebirth of Dionysus, which we can now interpret
as meaning the end of individuation; the
thundering paean of the adepts addressed
itself to the coming of the third Dionysus.
This hope alone sheds a beam of joy on a
ravaged and fragmented world--as is shown
by the myth of sorrowing Demeter, who rejoiced
only when she was told that she might once
again bear Dionysus. In these notions we
already find all the components of a profound
and mystic philosophy and, by the same token,
of the mystery doctrine of tragedy; a recognition
that whatever exists is of a piece, and that
individuation is the root of all evil; a
conception of art as the sanguine hope that
the spell of individuation may yet be broken.
as an augury of eventual reintegration.
I have said earlier that the Homeric epic
was the poetic expression of Olympian culture,
its victory song over the terrors of the
battle with the Titans. Now, under the overmastering
influence of tragic poetry, the Homeric myths
were once more transformed and by this metempsychosis
proved that in the interim Olympian culture
too had been superseded by an even deeper
philosophy. The contumacious Titan, Prometheus,
now announced to his Olympian tormentor that
unless the latter promptly joined forces
with him, his reign would be in supreme danger.
In the work of Aeschylus we recognize the
alliance of the Titan with a frightened Zeus
in terror of his end. Thus we find the earlier
age of Titans brought back from Tartarus
and restored to the light of day. A philosophy
of wild, naked nature looks with the bold
countenance of truth upon the flitting myths
of the Homeric world: they pale and tremble
before the lightning eye of this goddess,
until the mighty fist of the Dionysian artist
forces them into the service of a new divinity.
The Dionysian truth appropriates the entire
realm of myth as symbolic language for its
own insights, which it expresses partly in
the public rite of tragedy and partly in
the secret celebrations of dramatic mysteries,
but always under the old mythic veil. What
was the power that rescued Prometheus from
his vultures and transformed myth into a
vehicle of Dionysian wisdom? It was the Heraclean
power of music, which reached its highest
form in tragedy and endowed myth with a new
and profound significance. Such, as we have
said earlier, is the mighty prerogative of
music. For it is the lot of every myth to
creep gradually into the narrows of supposititious
historical fact and to be treated by some
later time as a unique event of history.
And the Greeks at that time were already
well on their way to reinterpreting their
childhood dream, cleverly and arbitrarily,
into pragmatic childhood history. It is the
sure sign of the death of a religion when
its mythic presuppositions become systematized,
under the severe, rational eyes of an orthodox
dogmatism, into a ready sum of historical
events, and when people begin timidly defending
the veracity of myth but at the same time
resist its natural continuance--when the
feeling for myth withers and its place is
taken by a religion claiming historical foundations.
This decaying myth was now seized by the
newborn genius of Dionysian music, in whose
hands it fiowered once more, with new colors
and a fragrance that aroused a wistful longing
for a metaphysical world. After this last
florescence myth declined, its leaves withered,
and before long all the ironic Lucians of
antiquity caught at the faded blossoms whirled
away by the wind. It was through tragedy
that myth achieved its profoundest content,
its most expressive form; it arose once again
like a wounded warrior, its eyes alight with
unspent power and the calm wisdom of the
dying.
What were you thinking of, overweening Euripides,
when you hoped to press myth, then in its
last agony, into your service? It died under
your violent hands; but you could easily
put in its place an imitation that, like
Heracles' monkey, would trick itself out
in the master's robes. And even as myth,
music too died under your hands; though you
plundered greedily all the gardens of music,
you could achieve no more than a counterfeit.
And because you had deserted Dionysus. vou
were in turn deserted by Apollo. Though you
hunted all the passions up from their couch
and conjured them into your circle, though
you pointed and burnished a sophistic dialectic
for the speeches of your heroes, they have
only counterfeit passions and speak counterfeit
speeches.
11
Greek tragedy perished in a manner quite
different from the older sister arts: it
died by suicide, in consequence of an insoluble
confiict, while the others died serene and
natural deaths at advanced ages. If it is
the sign of a happy natural condition to
die painlessly, leaving behind a fair progeny,
then the decease of those older genres exhibits
such a condition; they sank slowly, and their
children, fairer than they, stood before
their dying eyes, lifting up their heads
in eagerness. The death of Greek tragedy,
on the other hand, created a tremendous vacuum
that was felt far and wide. As the Greek
sailors in the time of Tiberius heard from
a lonely island the agonizing cry "Great
Pan is dead!" so could be heard ringing
now through the entire Greek world these
painful cries: "Tragedy is dead! And
poetry has perished with it! Away with you,
puny, spiritless imitators! Away with you
to Hades, where you may eat your fill of
the crumbs thrown you by former masters!"
When after all a new genre sprang into being
which honored tragedy as its parent, the
child was seen with dismay to bear indeed
the features of its mother, but of its mother
during her long death struggle. The death
struggle of tragedy had been fought by Euripides,
while the later art is known as the New Attic
comedy. Tragedy lived on there in a degenerate
form, a monument to its painful and laborious
death.
In this context we can understand the passionate
fondness of the writers of the new comedy
for Euripides. Now the wish of Philemon--who
was willing to be hanged for the pleasure
of visiting Euripides in Hades, providing
he could be sure that the dead man was still
in possession of his senses--no longer seems
strange to us. If one were to attempt to
say briefly and merely by way of suggestion
what Menander and Philemon had in common
with Euripides, and what they found so exemplary
and exciting in him, one might say that Euripides
succeeded in transporting the spectator onto
the stage. Once we realize out of what substance
the Promethean dramatists before Euripides
had formed their heroes and how far it had
been from their thoughts to bring onto the
stage a true replica of actuality, we shall
see clearly how utterly different were Euripides'
intentions. Through him the common man found
his way from the auditorium onto the stage.
That mirror, which previously had shown only
the great and bold features, now took on
the kind of accuracy that reflects also the
paltry traits of nature. Odysseus, the typical
Greek of older art, declined under the hands
of the new poets to the character of Graeculus,
who henceforth held the center of the stage
as the good humored, cunning slave. The merit
which Euripides, in Aristophanes' Frogs,
attributes to himself, of having by his nostrum
rid tragic art of its pompous embonpoint,
is apparent in every one of his tragic heroes.
Now every spectator could behold his exact
counterpart on the Euripidean stage and was
delighted to find him so eloquent. But that
was not the only pleasure. People themselves
learned to speak from Euripides--don't we
hear him boast, in his contest with Aeschylus,
that through him the populace had learned
to observe, make transactions and form conclusions
according to all the rules of art, with the
utmost cleverness? It was through this revolution
in public discourse that the new comedy became
possible. From now on the stock phrases to
represent everyday affairs were ready to
hand. While hitherto the character of dramatic
speech had been determined by the demigod
in tragedy and the drunken satyr in comedy,
that bourgeois mediocrity in which Euripides
placed all his political hopes now came to
the fore. And so the Aristophanic Euripides
could pride himself on having portrayed life
"as it really is" and shown men
how to attack it: if now all members of the
populace were able to philosophize, plead
their cases in court and make their business
deals with incredible shrewdness, the merit
was really his, the result of that wisdom
he had inculcated in them.
The new comedy could now address itself to
a prepared, enlightened crowd, for whom Euripides
had served as choirmaster--only in this case
it was the chorus of spectators who had to
be trained. As soon as this chorus had acquired
a competence in the Euripidean key, the new
comedy--that chesslike species of play--with
its constant triumphs of cleverness and cunning,
arose. Meanwhile choirmaster Euripides was
the object of fulsome praise; in fact, people
would have killed themselves in order to
learn more from him had they not known that
the tragic poets were quite as dead as tragedy
itself. With tragedy the Greeks had given
up the belief in immortality: not only the
belief in an ideal past, but also the belief
in an ideal future. The words of the famous
epitaph "Inconstant and frivolous in
old age" apply equally well to the last
phase of Hellenism. Its supreme deities are
wit, whim, caprice, the pleasure of the moment.
The fifth estate, that of the slaves, comes
into its own, at least in point of attitude,
and if it is possible at all now to speak
of Greek serenity, then it must refer to
the serenity of the slave, who has no difficult
responsibilities, no high aims, and to whom
nothing, past or future, is of greater value
than the present. It was this semblance of
Greek serenity that so outraged the profound
and powerful minds of the first four centuries
after Christ. This womanish escape from all
seriousness and awe, this smug embracing
of easy pleasure, seemed to them not only
contemptible but the truly antiChristian
frame of mind. It was they who handed on
to later generations a picture of Greek antiquity
painted entirely in the pale rose hues of
serenity--as though there had never been
a sixth century with its birth of tragedy,
its Mysteries, its Pythagoras and Heracleitus,
indeed as though the art works of the great
period did not exist at all. And yet none
of the latter could, of course, have sprung
from the soil of such a trivial ignoble cheer,
pointing as they do to an entirely different
philosophy as their raison d'etre.
When I said earlier that Euripides had brought
the spectator on the stage in order to enable
him to judge the play, I may have created
the impression that the older drama had all
along stood in a false relation to the spectator;
and one might then be tempted to praise Euripides'
radical tendency to establish a proper relationship
between art work and audience as an advance
upon Sophocles. But, after all, audience
is but a word, not a constant unchanging
value. Why should an author feel obliged
to accommodate himself to a power whose strength
is merely in numbers? If he considers himself
superior in his talent and intentions to
every single spectator, why should he show
respect for the collective expression of
all those mediocre capacities rather than
for the few members of the audience who seem
relatively the most gifted? The truth of
the matter is that no Greek artist ever treated
his audience with greater audacity and self
sulliciency than Euripides; who at a time
when the multitude lay prostrate before him
disavowed in noble defiance and publicly
his own tendencies--those very tendencies
by which he had previously conquered the
masses. Had this genius had the slightest
reverence for that band of Bedlamites called
the public, he would have been struck down
long before the mid point of his career by
the bludgeon blows of his unsuccess. We come
to realize now that our statement, "Euripides
brought the spectator on the stage"--implying
that the spectator would be able henceforth
to exercise competent judgment --was merely
provisional and that we must look for a sounder
explanation of his intentions. It is also
generally recognized that Aeschylus and Sophocles
enjoyed all through their lives and longer
the full benefit of popular favor, and that
for this reason it would be absurd to speak
in either case of a disproportion between
art work and public reception. What was it,
then, that drove the highly talented and
incessantly creative Euripides from a path
bathed in the light of those twin luminaries--his
great predecessors--and of popular acclaim
as well? What peculiar consideration for
the spectator made him defy that very same
spectator? How did it happen that his great
respect for his audience made him treat that
audience with utter disrespect?
Euripides--and this may be the solution of
our riddle-- considered himself quite superior
to the crowd as a whole; not, however, to
two of his spectators. He would translate
the crowd onto the stage but insist, all
the same, on revering the two members as
the sole judges of his art; on following
all their directions and admonitions, and
on instilling in the very hearts of his dramatic
characters those emotions, passions and recognitions
which had heretofore seconded the stage action,
like an invisible chorus, from the serried
ranks of the amphitheater. It was in deference
to these judges that he gave his new characters
a new voice, too, and a new music. Their
votes, and no others, determined for him
the worth of his efforts. And whenever the
public rejected his labors it was their encouragement,
their faith in his final triumph, which sustained
him.
One of the two spectators I just spoke of
was Euripides himself--the thinker Euripides,
not the poet. Of him it may be said that
the extraordinary richness of his critical
gift had helped to produce, as in the case
of Lessing, an authentic creative offshoot.
Endowed with such talent, such remarkable
intellectual lucidity and versatility, Euripides
watched the performances of his predecessors'
plays and tried to rediscover in them those
fine lineaments which age, as happens in
the case of old paintings, had darkened and
almost obliterated. And now something occurred
which cannot surprise those among us who
are familiar with the deeper secrets of Aeschylean
tragedy. Euripides perceived in every line,
in every trait, something quite incommensurable:
a certain deceptive clarity and, together
with it, a mysterious depth, an infinite
background. The clearest figure trailed after
it a comet's tail which seemed to point to
something uncertain, something that could
not be wholly elucidated. A similar twilight
seemed to invest the very structure of drama,
especially the function of the chorus. Then
again, how ambiguous did the solutions of
all moral problems seem! how problematical
the way in which the myths were treated!
how irregular the distribution of fortune
and misfortune! There was also much in the
language of older tragedy that he took exception
to, or to say the least, found puzzling:
why all this pomp in the representation of
simple relationships? why all those tropes
and hyperboles, where the characters themselves
were simple and straightforward? Euripides
sat in the theater pondering, a troubled
spectator. In the end he had to admit to
himself that he did not understand his great
predecessors. But since he looked upon reason
as the fountainhead of all doing and enjoying,
he had to find out whether anybody shared
these notions of his, or whether he was alone
in facing up to such incommensurable features.
But the multitude, including some of the
best individuals, gave him only a smile of
distrust; none of them would tell him why,
notwithstanding his misgivings and reservations,
the great masters were right nonetheless.
In this tormented state of mind, Euripides
discovered his second spectator--one who
did not understand tragedy and for that reason
spumed it. Allied with him he could risk
coming out of his isolation to fight that
tremendous battle against the works of Aeschylus
and Sophocles; not by means of polemics,
but as a tragic poet determined to make his
notion of tragedy prevail over the traditional
notions.
12
Before giving a name to that other spectator,
let us stop a moment and call to mind what
we have said earlier of the incommensurable
and discrepant elements in Aeschylean tragedy.
Let us recollect how strangely we were affected
by the chorus and by the tragic hero of a
kind of tragedy which refused to conform
to either our habits or our tradition--until,
that is, we discovered that the discrepancy
was closely bound up with the very origin
and essence of Greek tragedy, as the expression
of two interacting artistic impulses, the
Apollinian and the Dionysian. Euripides'
basic intention now becomes as clear as day
to us: it is to eliminate from tragedy the
primitive and pervasive Dionysian element,
and to rebuild the drama on a foundation
of non-Dionysian art, custom and philosophy.
Euripides himself, towards the end of his
life, propounded the question of the value
and sign)ficance of this tendency to his
contemporaries in a myth. Has the Dionysian
spirit any right at all to exist? Should
it not, rather, be brutally uprooted from
the Hellenic soil? Yes, it should, the poet
tells us, if only it were possible, but the
god Dionysus is too powerful: even the most
intelligent opponent, like Pentheus in the
Bacchae, is unexpectedly enchanted by him,
and in his enchantment runs headlong to destruction.
The opinion of the two old men in the play--Cadmus
and Tiresias--seems to echo the opinion of
the aged poet himself: that the cleverest
individual cannot by his reasoning overturn
an ancient popular tradition like the worship
of Dionysus, and that it is the proper part
of diplomacy in the face of miraculous powers
to make at least a prudent show of sympathy;
that it is even possible that the god may
still take exception to such tepid interest
and--as happened in the case of Cadmus--turn
the diplomat into a dragon. We are told this
by a poet who all his life had resisted Dionysus
heroically, only to end his career with a
glorification of his opponent and with suicide--like
a man who throws himself from a tower in
order to put an end to the unbearable sensation
of vertigo. The Bacchae acknowledges the
failure of Euripides' dramatic intentions
when, in fact, these had already succeeded:
Dionysus had already been driven from the
tragic stage by a daemonic power speaking
through Euripides. For in a certain sense
Euripides was but a mask, while the divinity
which spoke through him was neither Dionysus
nor Apollo but a brand new daemon called
Socrates. Thenceforward the real antagonism
was to be between Dionysian spirit and the
Socratic, and tragedy was to perish in the
conflict. Try as he may to comfort us with
his recantation, Euripides fails. The marvelous
temple lies in ruins; of what avail is the
destroyer's lament that it was the most beautiful
of all temples? And though, by way of punishment,
Euripides has been turned into a dragon by
all later critics, who can really regard
this as adequate compensation?
Let us now look more closely at the Socratic
tendency by means of which Euripides fought
and conquered Aeschylean tragedy. What, under
the most auspicious conditions, could Euripides
have hoped to effect in founding his tragedy
on purely un-Dionysian elements? Once it
was no longer begotten by music, in the mysterious
Dionysian twilight, what form could drama
conceivably take? Only that of the dramatized
epic, an Apollinian form which precluded
tragic effect. It is not a question here
of the events represented. I submit that
it would have been impossible for Goethe,
in the fifth act of his projected Nausicäa,
to render tragic the suicide of that idyllic
being: the power of the epic Apollinian spirit
is such that it transfigures the most horrible
deeds before our eyes by the charm of illusion,
and redemption through illusion. The poet
who writes dramatized narrative can no more
become one with his images than can the epic
rhapsodist. He too represents serene, wide
eyed contemplation gazing upon its images.
The actor in such dramatized epic remains
essentially a rhapsodist; the consecration
of dream lies upon all his actions and prevents
him from ever becoming in the full sense
an actor.
But what relationship can be said to obtain
between such an ideal Apollinian drama and
the plays of Euripides? The same as obtains
between the early solemn rhapsodist and that
more recent variety described in Plato's
Ion: "When I say something sad my eyes
fill with tears; if, however, what I say
is terrible and ghastly, then my hair stands
on end and my heart beats loudly." Here
there is no longer any trace of epic self
forgetfulness, of the true rhapsodist's cool
detachment, who at the highest pitch of action,
and especially then, becomes wholly illusion
and delight in illusion. Euripides is the
actor of the beating heart, with hair standing
on end. He lays his dramatic plan as Socratic
thinker and carries it out as passionate
actor. So it happens that the Euripidean
drama is at the same time cool and fiery,
able alike to freeze and consume us. It cannot
possibly achieve the Apollinian effects of
the epic, while on the other hand it has
severed all connection with the Dionysian
mode; so that in order to have any impact
at all it must seek out novel stimulants
which are to be found neither in the Apollinian
nor in the Dionysian realm. Those stimulants
are, on the one hand, cold paradoxical ideas
put in the place of Apollinian contemplation,
and on the other fiery emotions put in the
place of Dionysian transports. These last
are splendidly realistic counterfeits, but
neither ideas nor affects are infused with
the spirit of true art.
Having now recognized that Euripides failed
in founding the drama solely on Apollinian
elements and that, instead, his anti Dionysian
tendency led him towards inartistic naturalism,
we are ready to deal with the phenomenon
of aesthetic Socratism. Its supreme law may
be stated as follows: "Whatever is to
be beautiful must also be sensible"
--a parallel to the Socratic notion that
knowledge alone makes men virtuous. Armed
with this canon, Euripides examined every
aspect of drama--diction, character, dramatic
structure, choral music--and made them fit
his specifications. What in Euripidean, as
compared with Sophoclean tragedy, has been
so frequently censured as poetic lack and
retrogression is actually the straight result
of the poet's incisive critical gifts, his
audacious personality. The Euripidean prologue
may seen to illustrate the efficacy of that
rationalistic method. Nothing could be more
at odds with our dramaturgic notions than
the prologue in the drama of Euripides. To
have a character appear at the beginning
of the play, tell us who he is, what preceded
the action, what has happened so far, even
what is about to happen in the course of
the play--a modern writer for the theater
would reject all this as a wanton and unpardonable
dismissal of the element of suspense. Now
that everyone knows what is going to happen,
who will wait to see it happen? Especially
since, in this case, the relation is by no
means that of a prophetic dream to a later
event. But Euripides reasoned quite otherwise.
According to him, the effect of tragedy never
resided in epic suspense, in a teasing uncertainty
as to what was going to happen next. It resided,
rather, in those great scenes of lyrical
rhetoric in which the passion and dialectic
of the protagonist reached heights of eloquence.
Everything portended pathos, not action.
Whatever did not portend pathos was seen
as objectionable. The greatest obstacle to
the spectator's most intimate participation
in those scenes would be any missing link
in the antecedent action: so long as the
spectator had to conjecture what this or
that figure represented, from whence arose
this or that conflict of inclinations and
intentions, he could not fully participate
in the doings and sufferings of the protagonists,
feel with them and fear with them. The tragedy
of Aeschylus and Sophocles had used the subtlest
devices to furnish the spectator in the early
scenes, and as if by chance, with al} the
necessary information. They had shown an
admirable skill in disguising the necessary
structural features and making them seem
accidental. All the same, Euripides thought
he noticed chat during those early scenes
the spectators were in a peculiar state of
unrest--so concerned with figuring out the
antecedents of the story chat the beauty
and pathos of the exposition were lost on
them. For this reason he introduced a prologue
even before the exposition, and put it into
the mouth of a speaker who would command
absolute trust. Very often it was a god who
had to guarantee to the public the course
of the tragedy and so remove any possible
doubt as to the reality of the mydh; exactly
as Descartes could only demonstrate the reality
of the empirical world by appealing to God's
veracity, his inability to tell a lie. At
the end of his drama Euripides required the
same divine truthfulness to act as security,
so to speak, for the future of his protagonists.
This was the function of the ill-famed deus
ex machina. Between the preview of the prologue
and the preview of the epilogue stretched
the dramatic lyric present, the drama proper.
As a poet, then, Euripides was principally
concerned with rendering his conscious perceptions,
and it is this which gives him his position
of importance in the history of Greek drama.
With regard to his poetic procedure, which
was both critical and creative, he must often
have felt that he was applying to drama the
opening words of Anaxagoras' treatise: "In
the beginning all things were mixed together;
then reason came and introduced order."
And even as Anaxagoras, with his concept
of reason, seems like the first sober philosopher
in a company of drunkards, so Euripides may
have appeared to himself as the first rational
maker of tragedy. Everything was mixed together
in a chaotic stew so long as reason, the
sole principle of universal order, remained
excluded from the creative act. Being of
this opinion, Euripides had necessarily to
reject his less rational peers. Euripides
would never have endorsed Sophocles' statement
about Aeschylus--that this poet was doing
the right thing, but unconsciously; instead
he would have claimed that since Aeschylus
created unconsciously he couldn't help doing
the wrong cling. Even the divine Plato speaks
of the creative power of the poet for the
most part ironically and as being on a level
with the gifts of the soothsayer and interpreter
of dreams, since according to the traditional
conception the poet is unable to write until
reason and conscious control have deserted
him. Euripides set out, as Plato was to do,
to show the world the opposite of the "irrational"
poet; his aesthetic axiom, "whatever
is to be beautiful must be conscious"
is strictly parallel to the Socratic "whatever
is to be good must be conscious." We
can hardly go wrong then in calling Euripides
the poet of aesthetic Socratism. But Socrates
was precisely that second spectator, incapable
of understanding the older tragedy and therefore
scorning it, and it was in his company that
Euripides dared to usher in a new era of
poetic activity. If the old tragedy was wrecked'
aesthetic Socratism is to blame, and to the
extent that the target of the innovators
was the Dionysian principle of the older
art we may call Socrates the god's chief
opponent, the new Orpheus who, though destined
to be torn to pieces by the maenads of Athenian
judgment, succeeded in putting the overmastering
god to flight. The latter, as before, when
he fled from Lycurgus, king of the Edoni,
took refuge in the depths of the sea; that
is to say, in the flood of a mystery cult
that was soon to encompass the world.
13
The fact that the aims of Socrates and Euripides
were closely allied did not escape the attention
of their contemporaries. We have an eloquent
illustration of this in the rumotr, current
at the time in Athens, that Socrates was
helping Euripides with his writing. The two
names were bracketed by the partisans of
the "good old days'? whenever it was
a question of castigating the upstart demagogues
of the present. It was they who were blamed
for the disappearance of the Marathonian
soundness of body and mind in favor of a
dubious enlightenment tending toward a progressive
atrophy of the traditional virtues. In the
comedy of Aristophanes both men are treated
in this vein--half indignant, half contemptuous--to
the dismay of the rising generation, who,
while they were willing enough to sacrifice
Euripides, could not forgive the picture
of Socrates as the arch Sophist. Their only
recourse was to pillory Aristophanes in his
turn as a dissolute, Lying Alcibiades of
poetry. I won't pause here to defend the
pro found instincts of Aristophanes against
such attacks but shall proceed to demonstrate
the close affinity between Socrates and Euripides,
as their contemporaries saw them. It is certainly
significant in this connection that Socrates,
being a sworn enemy of the tragic art, is
said never to have attended the theater except
when a new play of Euripides was mounted.
The most famous instance of the conjunction
of the two names, however, is found in the
Delphic oracle which pronounced Socrates
the wisest of men yet allowed that Euripides
merited the second place. The third place
went to Sophocles, who had boasted that,
in contrast to Aeschylus, he not only did
the right thing but knew why he did it. Evidently
it was the transparency of their knowledge
that earned for these three men the reputation
of true wisdom in their day.
It was Socrates who expressed most clearly
this radically new prestige of knowledge
and conscious intelligence when he claimed
to be the only one who acknowledged to himself
that he knew nothing. He roamed all over
Athens, visiting the most distinguished statesmen,
orators, poets and artists, and found everywhere
merely the presumption of knowledge. He was
amazed to discover that all these celebrities
lacked true and certain knowledge of their
callings and pursued those callings by sheer
instinct. The expression "sheer instinct"
seems to focus perfectly the Socratic attitude.
From this point of view Socrates was forced
to condemn both the prevailing art and the
prevailing ethics. Wherever his penetrating
gaze fell he saw nothing but lack of understanding,
fictions rampant, and so was led to deduce
a state of affairs wholly discreditable and
perverse. Socrates believed it was his mission
to correct the situation: a solitary man,
arrogantly superior and herald of a radically
dissimilar culture, art, and ethics, he stepped
into a world whose least hem we should have
counted it an honor to have touched. This
is the reason why the figure of Socrates
disturbs us so profoundly whenever we approach
it, and why we are tempted again and again
to plumb the meaning and intentions of the
most problematical character among the ancients.
Who was this man who dared, singlehanded,
to challenge the entire world of Hellenism--embodied
in Homer, Pindar, and Aeschylus, in Phidias,
Pericles, Pythia, and Dionysus--which commands
our highest reverence? Who was this daemon
daring to pour out the magic philter in the
dust? this demigod to whom the noblest spirits
of mankind must call out:
Alas! You have shattered The beautiful world
With brazen fist; It falls, it is scattered.
[Goethe's Faust, lines 1607-11.]
We are offered a key to the mind of Socrates
in that remarkable phenomenon known as his
daimonion. In certain critical situations,
when even his massive intellect faltered,
he was able to regain his balance through
the agency of a divine voice, which he heard
only at such moments. The voice always spoke
to dissuade. The instinctual wisdom of this
anomalous character manifests itself from
time to time as a purely inhibitory agent,
ready to defy his rational judgment. Whereas
in all truly productive men instinct is the
strong, affirmative force and reason the
dissuader and critic, in the case of Socrates
the roles are reversed: instinct is the critic,
consciousness the creator. Truly a monstrosity!
Because of this lack of every mystical talent
Socrates emerges as the perfect pattern of
the non-mystic, in whom the logical side
has become, through superfetation, as overdeveloped
as has the instinctual side in the mystic.
Yet it was entirely impossible for Socrates'
logical impetus to turn against itself. In
its unrestrained onrush it exhibited an elemental
power such as is commonly found only in men
of violent instincts, where we view it with
awed surprise. Whoever in reading Plato has
experienced the divine directness and sureness
of Socrates' whole way of proceeding must
have a sense of the gigantic driving wheel
of logical Socratism, turning, as it were,
behind Socrates, which we see through Socrates
as through a shadow. That he himself was
by no means unaware of this relationship
appears from the grave dignity with which
he stressed, even at the end and before his
judges, his divine mission. It is as impossible
to controvert him in this as it is to approve
of his corrosive influence upon instinctual
life. In this dilemma his accusers, when
he was brought before the Athenian forum,
could think of one appropriate form of punishment
only, namely exile: to turn this wholly unclassifiable,
mysterious phenomenon out of the state would
have given posterity no cause to charge the
Athenians with a disgraceful act. When finally
death, not banishment, was pronounced against
him, it seems to have been Socrates himself
who, with complete lucidity of mind and in
the absence of every natural fear of death,
insisted on it. He went to his death with
the same calm Plato describes when he has
him leave the symposium in the early dawn,
the last reveler, to begin a new day; while
behind him on the benches and on the floor
his sleepy companions go on dreaming of Socrates,
the true lover. Socrates in his death became
the idol of the young Athenian elite. The
typical Hellenic youth, Plato, prostrated
himself before that image with all the fervent
devotion of his enthusiastic mind.
14
Let us now imagine Socrates' great Cyclops'
eye--that eye which never glowed with the
artist's divine frenzy--turned upon tragedy.
Bearing in mind that he was unable to look
with any pleasure into the Dionysian abysses,
what could Socrates see in that tragic art
which to Plato seemed noble and meritorious?
Something quite abstruse and irrational,
full of causes without effects and effects
seemingly without causes, the whole texture
so checkered that it must be repugnant to
a sober disposition, while it might act as
dangerous tinder to a sensitive and impressionable
mind. We are told that the only genre of
poetry Socrates really appreciated was the
Aesopian fable. This he did with the same
smiling complaisance with which honest Gellert
sings the praise of poetry in his fable of
the bee and the hen:
Poems are useful: they can tell The truth
by means of parable To those who are not
very bright.
The fact is that for Socrates tragic art
failed even to "convey the truth,"
although it did address itself to those who
were "a bit backward," which is
to say to non-philosophers: a double reason
for leaving it alone. Like Plato, he reckoned
it among the beguiling arts which represent
the agreeable, not the useful, and in consequence
exhorted his followers to abstain from such
unphilosophical stimulants. His success was
such that the young tragic poet Plato burned
all his writings in order to qualify as a
student of Socrates. And while strong native
genius might now and again manage to withstand
the Socratic injunction, the power of the
latter was still great enough to force poetry
into entirely new channels.
A good example of this is Plato himself.
Although he did not lag behind the naive
cynicism of his master in the condemnation
of tragedy and of art in general, nevertheless
his creative gifts forced him to develop
an art form deeply akin to the existing forms
which he had repudiated. The main objection
raised by Plato to the older art (that it
was the imitation of an imitation and hence
belonged to an even lower order of empiric
reality) must not, at all costs, apply to
the new genre; and so we see Plato intent
on moving beyond reality and on rendering
the idea which underlies it. By a detour
Plato the thinker reached the very spot where
Plato the poet had all along been at home,
and from which Sophocles, and with him the
whole poetic tradition of the past, protested
such a charge. Tragedy had assimilated to
itself all the older poetic genres. In a
somewhat eccentric sense the same thing can
be claimed for the Platonic dialogue, which
was a mixture of all the available styles
and forms and hovered between narrative,
Iyric, drama, between prose and poetry, once
again breaking through the old law of stylistic
unity. The Cynic philosophers went even farther
in that direction, seeking, by their utterly
promiscuous style and constant alternation
between verse and prose, to project their
image of the "raving Socrates"
in literature, as they sought to enact it
in life. The Platonic dialogue was the lifeboat
in which the shipwrecked older poetry saved
itself, together with its numerous offspring.
Crowded together in a narrow space, and timidly
obeying their helmsman Socrates, they moved
forward into a new era which never tired
of looking at this fantastic spectacle. Plato
has furnished for all posterity the pattern
of a new art form, the novel, viewed as the
Aesopian fable raised to its highest power;
a form in which poetry played the same subordinate
role with regard to dialectic philosophy
as that same philosophy was to play for many
centuries with regard to theology. This,
then, was the new status of poetry, and it
was Plato who, under the pressure of daemonic
Socrates, had brought it about.
It is at this point that philosophical ideas
begin to entwine themselves about art, forcing
the latter to cling closely to the trunk
of dialectic. The Apollinian tendency now
appears disguised as logical schematism,
just as we found in the case of Euripides
a corresponding translation of the Dionysian
affect into a naturalistic one. Socrates,
the dialectical hero of the Platonic drama,
shows a close affinity to the Euripidean
hero, who is compelled to justify his actions
by proof and counterproof, and for that reason
is often in danger of forfeiting our tragic
compassion. For who among us can close his
eyes to the optimistic element in the nature
of dialectics, which sees a triumph in every
syllogism and can breathe only in an atmosphere
of cool, conscious clarity? Once that optimistic
element had entered tragedy, it overgrew
its Dionysian regions and brought about their
annihilation and, finally, the leap into
genteel domestic drama Consider the consequences
of the Socratic maxims: virtue is knowledge;
all sins arise from ignorance; only the virtuous
are happy"--these three basic formulations
of optimism spell the death of tragedy. The
virtuous hero must henceforth be a dialectician;
virtue and knowledge, belief and ethics,
be necessarily and demonstrably connected;
Aeschylus' transcendental concept of justice
be reduced to the brash and shallow principle
of poetic justice with its regular deus ex
machina.
What is the view taken of the chorus in this
new Socratic optimistic stage world, and
of the entire musical and Dionysian foundation
of tragedy? They are seen as accidental features,
as reminders of the origin of tragedy, which
can well be dispensed with--while we have
in fact come to understand that the chorus
is the cause of tragedy and the tragic spirit.
Already in Sophocles we find some embarrassment
with regard to the chorus, which suggests
that the Dionysian floor of tragedy is beginning
to give way. Sophocles no longer dares to
give the chorus the major role in the tragedy
but treats it as almost on the same footing
as the actors, as though it had been raised
from the orchestra onto the scene. By so
doing he necessarily destroyed its meaning,
despite Aristotle's endorsement of this conception
of the chorus. This shift in attitude, which
Sophocles displayed not only in practice
but also, we are told, in theory, was the
first step toward the total disintegration
of the chorus: a process whose rapid phases
we can follow in Euripides, Agathon, and
the New Comedy. Optimistic dialectics took
up the whip of its syllogisms and drove music
out of tragedy. It entirely destroyed the
meaning of tragedy--which can be interpreted
only as a concrete manifestation of Dionysian
conditions, music made visible, an ecstatic
dream world.
Since we have discovered an anti-Dionysian
tendency antedating Socrates, its most brilliant
exponent, we must now ask, "Toward what
does a figure like Socrates point?"
Faced with the evidence of the Platonic dialogues,
we are certainly not entitled to see in Socrates
merely an agent of disintegration. While
it is clear that the immediate result of
the Socratic strategy was the destruction
of Dionysian drama, we are forced, nevertheless,
by the profundity of the Socratic experience
to ask ourselves whether, in fact, art and
Socratism are diametrically opposed to one
another, whether there is really anything
inherently impossible in the idea of a Socratic
artist?
It appears that this despotic logician had
from time to time a sense of void, loss,
unfulfilled duty with regard to art. In prison
he told his friends how, on several occasions,
a voice had spoken to him in a dream, saying
"Practice music, Socrates!" Almost
to the end he remained confident that his
philosophy represented the highest art of
the muses, and would not fully believe that
a divinity meant to remind him of "common,
popular music." Yet in order to unburden
his conscience he finally agreed, in prison,
to undertake that music which hitherto he
had held in low esteem. In this frame of
mind he composed a poem on Apollo and rendered
several Aesopian fables in verse. What prompted
him to these exercises was something very
similar to that warning voice of his daimonion:
an Apollinian perception that, like a barbarian
king, he had failed to comprehend the nature
of a divine effigy, and was in danger of
offending his own god through ignorance.
These words heard by Socrates in his dream
are the only indication that he ever experienced
any uneasiness about the limits of his logical
universe. He may have asked himself: "Have
I been too ready to view what was unintelligible
to me as being devoid of meaning? Perhaps
there is a realm of wisdom, after all, from
which the logician is excluded? Perhaps art
must be seen as the necessary complement
of rational discourse?"
15
In the spirit of these last suggestive questions
it must now be said how the influence of
Socrates, down to the present moment and
even into all future time, has spread over
posterity like a shadow that keeps growing
in the evening sun, and how it again and
again prompts a regeneration of art--of art
in the metaphysical, broadest and profoundest
sense--and how its own infinity also guarantees
the infinity of art.
Before this could be recognized, before the
innermost dependence of every art on the
Greeks, from Homer to Socrates, was demonstrated
conclusively, we had to feel about these
Greeks as the Athenians felt about Socrates.
Nearly every age and stage of culture has
at some time or other sought with profound
irritation to free itself from the Greeks,
because in their presence everything one
has achieved oneself, though apparently quite
original and sincerely admired, suddenly
seemed to lose life and color and shriveled
into a poor copy, even a caricature. And
so time after time cordial anger erupts against
this presumptuous little people that made
bold for all time to designate everything
not native as "barbaric." Who are
they, one asks, who, though they display
only an ephemeral historical splendor, ridiculously
restricted institutions, dubious excellence
in their mores, and are marked by ugly vices,
yet lay claim to that dignity and pre-eminence
among peoples which characterize genius among
the masses? Unfortunately, no one was lucky
enough to find the cup of hemlock with which
one could simply dispose of such a character;
for all the poison that envy, calumny, and
rancor created did not suffice to destroy
that self-sufficient splendor. And so one
feels ashamed and afraid in the presence
of the Greeks, unless one prizes truth above
all things and dares acknowledge even this
truth: that the Greeks, as charioteers, hold
in their hands the reins of our own and every
other culture, but that almost always chariot
and horses are of inferior quality and not
up to the glory of their leaders, who consider
it sport to run such a team into an abyss
which they themselves clear with the leap
of Achilles.
In order to vindicate the dignity of such
a leader's position for Socrates, too, it
is enough to recognize in him a type of existence
unheard of before him: the type of he theoretical
man whose significance and aim it is our
next task to try to understand. Like the
artist, the theoretical man finds an infinite
delight in whatever exists, and this satisfaction
protects him against the practical ethics
of pessimism with its Lyncaeus eyes that
shine only in the dark. Whenever the truth
is uncovered, the artist will always cling
with rapt gaze to what still remains covering
even after such uncovering; but the theoretical
man enjoys and finds satisfaction in the
discarded covering and finds the highest
object of his pleasure in the process of
an ever happy uncovering that succeeds through
his own efforts.
There would be no science if it were concerned
only with that one nude goddess and with
nothing else. For in that case her devotees
would have to feel like men who wanted to
dig a hole straight through the earth, assuming
that each of them realized that even if he
tried his utmost, his whole life long, he
would only be able to dig a very small portion
of this enormous depth, and even that would
be filled in again before his own eyes by
the labors of the next in line, so a third
person would seem to do well if he picked
a new spot for his drilling efforts. Now
suppose someone proved convincingly that
the goal of the antipodes cannot be reached
in this direct manner: who would still wish
to go on working in these old depths, unless
he had learned meanwhile to be satisfied
with finding precious stones or discovering
laws of nature?
Therefore Lessing, the most honest theoretical
man, dared to announce that he cared more
for the search after truth than for truth
itself--and thus revealed the fundamental
secret of science, to the astonishment, and
indeed the anger, of the scientific community.
["If God had locked up all truth in
his right hand, and in his left the unique,
ever-live striving for truth, albeit with
the addition that I should always and eternally
err, and he said to me, 'Choose!'--I should
humbly clasp his left hand, saying: 'Father,
give! Pure truth is after all for thee alone!'"--Gotthold
Ephraim Lessing (1729-81), Eine Duplik, 1778.]
Beside this isolated insight, born of an
excess of honesty if not of exuberance, there
is, to be sure, a profound illusion that
first saw the light of the world in the person
of Socrates: the unshakable faith that thought,
using the thread of logic, can penetrate
the deepest abysses of being, and that thought
is capable not only of knowing being but
even of correcting it. This sublime metaphysical
illusion accompanies science as an instinct
and leads science again and again to its
limits at which it must turn into art--which
is really the aim of this mechanism.
With the torch of this thought in our hands,
let us now look at Socrates: he appears to
us as the first who could not only live,
guided by the instinct of science, but also--and
this is far more--die that way. Hence the
image of the dying Socrates, as the human
being whom knowledge and reasons have liberated
from the fear of death, is the emblem that,
above the entrance gate of science, reminds
all of its mission--namely, to make existence
appear comprehensible and thus justified;
and if reasons do not suffice, myth had to
come to their aid in the end--myth which
I have just called the necessary consequence,
indeed the purpose, of science.
Once we see clearly how after Socrates, the
mystagogue of science, one philosophical
school succeeds another, wave upon wave;
how the hunger for knowledge reached a never-suspected
universality in the widest domain of the
educated world, became the real task for
every person of higher gifts, and led science
onto the high seas from which it has never
again been driven altogether; how this universality
first spread a common net of thought over
the whole globe, actually holding out the
prospect of the lawfulness of an entire solar
system; once we see all this clearly, along
with the amazingly high pyramid of knowledge
in our own time--we cannot fail to see in
Socrates the one turning point and vortex
of so-called world history. For if we imagine
that the whole incalculable sum of energy
used up for this world tendency had been
used not in the service of knowledge but
for the practical, i. e., egoistic aims of
individuals and peoples, then we realize
that in that case universal wars of annihilation
and continual migrations of peoples would
probably have weakened the instinctive lust
for life to such an extent that suicide would
have become a general custom and individuals
might have experienced the final remnant
of a sense of duty when, like the inhabitants
of the Fiji islands, they had strangled their
parents and friends--a practical pessimism
that might even have generated a gruesome
ethic of genocide [Völkermord.] motivated
by pity, and which incidentally is, and was,
present in the world wherever art did not
appear in some form--especially as religion
and science--as a remedy and a preventive
for this breath of pestilence.
By contrast with this practical pessimism,
Socrates is the prototype of the theoretical
optimist who, with his faith that the nature
of things can be fathomed, ascribes to knowledge
and insight the power of a panacea, while
understanding error as the evil par excellence.
To fathom the depths and to separate true
knowledge from appearance and error, seemed
to Socratic man the noblest, even the only
truly human vocation. And since Socrates,
this mechanism of concepts, judgments, and
inferences has been esteemed as the highest
occupation and the most admirable gift of
nature, above all other capacities. Even
the most sublime ethical deeds, the stirrings
of pity, self-sacrifice, heroism, and that
calm sea of the soul, so difficult to attain,
which the Apollinian Greek called sophrosune,
were derived from the dialectic knowledge
by Socrates and his like-minded successors,
down to the present, and accordingly designated
as teachable.
Anyone who has ever experienced the pleasure
of Socratic insight and felt how, spreading
in ever-widening circles, it seeks to embrace
the whole world of appearances, will never
again find any stimulus toward existence
more violent than the craving to complete
this conquest and to weave the net impenetrably
tight. To one who feels that way, the Platonic
Socrates will appear as the teacher of an
altogether new form of "Greek cheerfulness"
and blissful affirmation of existence that
seeks to discharge itself in actions--most
often in maieutic and educational influences
on noble youths, with a view to eventually
producing a genius.
But science, spurred by its powerful illusion,
speeds irresistibly towards its limits where
its optimism, concealed in the essence of
logic, suffers shipwreck. For the periphery
of the circle of science has an infinite
number of points; and while there is no telling
how this circle could ever be surveyed completely,
noble and gifted men nevertheless reach,
e'er half their time and inevitably, such
boundary points on the periphery from which
one gazes into what defies illumination.
When they see to their horror how logic coils
up at these boundaries and finally bites
its own tail--suddenly the new form of insight
breaks through, tragic insight which, merely
to be endured, needs art as a protection
and remedy.
Our eyes strengthened and refreshed by our
contemplation of the Greeks, let us look
at the highest spheres of the world around
us; then we shall see how the hunger for
insatiable and optimistic knowledge that
in Socrates appears exemplary has turned
into tragic resignation and destitute need
for art--while, to be sure, the same hunger
on its lower levels can express itself in
hostility to art and must particularly detest
Dionysian-tragic art, as was illustrated
earlier with the fight of Socratism against
Aeschylean tragedy.
Here we knock, deeply moved, at the gates
of present and future: will this "turning"
lead to ever-new configurations of genius
and especially of the Socrates who practices
music? Will the net of art, even if it is
called religion or science, that is spread
over existence be woven even more tightly
and delicately, or is it destined to be torn
to shreds in the restless, barbarous, chaotic
whirl that now calls itself "the present"?
Concerned but not disconsolate, we stand
aside a little while, contemplative men to
whom it has been granted to be witnesses
of these tremendous struggles and transitions.
Alas, it is the magic of these struggles
that those who behold them must also take
part and fight.
16
By this elaborate historical example we have
sought to make clear how just as tragedy
perishes with the evanescence of the spirit
of music, it is only from this spirit that
it can be reborn. Lest this assertion seem
too strange, it may be well to disclose the
origin of this insight by considering the
analogous phenomena of our own time; we must
enter into the midst of those struggles,
which, as I have just said, are being waged
in the highest spheres of our contemporary
world between insatiable optimistic knowledge
and the tragic need of art. In my examination
I shall leave out of account all those other
antagonistic tendencies which at all times
oppose art, especially tragedy, and which
now are again extending their triumphant
sway to such an extent that of the theatrical
arts only the farce and the ballet, for example,
put forth their blossoms, which perhaps not
everyone cares to smell, in rather rich luxuriance.
I will speak only of the noblest opposition
to the tragic world-conception--and by this
I mean science, which is at bottom optimistic,
with its ancestor Socrates at its head. A
little later on I shall also name those forces
which seem to me to guarantee a rebirth of
tragedy--and perhaps other blessed hopes
for the German genius!
Before we plunge into the midst of these
struggles, let us array ourselves in the
armor of the insights we have acquired. In
contrast to all those who are intent on deriving
the arts from one exclusive principle, as
the necessary vital source of every work
of art, I shall keep my eyes fixed on the
two artistic deities of the Greeks, Apollo
and Dionysus, and recognize in them the living
and conspicuous representatives of two worlds
of art differing in their intrinsic essence
and in their highest aims. I see Apollo as
the transfiguring genius of the principium
individuationis through which alone the redemption
in illusion is truly to be obtained; while
by the mystical triumphant cry of Dionysus
the spell of individuation is broken, and
the way lies open to the Mothers of Being,
to the innermost heart of things. This extraordinary
contrast, which stretches like a yawning
gulf between plastic art as the Apollinian,
and music as the Dionysian art, has revealed
itself to only one of the great thinkers,
to such an extent that, even without this
clue to the symbolism of the Hellenic divinities,
he concedes to music a character and an origin
different from all the other arts, because,
unlike them, it is not a copy of the phenomenon,
but an immediate copy of the will itself,
and therefore complements everything physical
in the world and every phenomenon by representing
what is metaphysical, the thing in itself.
(Schopenhauer, Welt als Wille und Vorstellung,
I, p. 310.)
To this most important insight of aesthetics
(with which, in the most serious sense, aesthetics
properly begins), Richard Wagner, by way
of confirmation of its eternal truth, affixed
his seal, when he asserted in his Beethoven
that music must be evaluated according to
aesthetic principles quite different form
those which apply to all plastic arts, and
not, in general, according to the category
of beauty; although an erroneous aesthetics,
inspired by a mistaken and degenerate art,
has, by virtue of the concept of beauty obtaining
in the plastic domain, accustomed itself
to demand of music an effect similar to that
produced by works of plastic art, namely,
the arousing of delight in beautiful forms.
Having recognized this extraordinary contrast,
I felt a strong need to approach the essence
of Greek tragedy and, with it, the profoundest
revelation of the Hellenic genius; for I
at last thought that I possessed a charm
to enable me--far beyond the phraseology
of our usual aesthetics--to represent vividly
to my mind the fundamental problem of tragedy;
whereby I was granted such a surprising and
unusual insight into the Hellenic character
that it necessarily seemed to me as if our
classical-Hellenic science that bears itself
so proudly had thus far contrived to subsist
mainly on shadow plays and externals.
Perhaps we may touch on this fundamental
problem by asking: what aesthetic effect
results when the essentially separate art-forces,
the Apollinian and the Dionysian, enter into
simultaneous activity? Or more briefly: how
is music related to image and concept? Schopenhauer,
whom Richard Wagner, with special reference
to this point, praises for an unsurpassable
clearness and clarity of exposition, expresses
himself most thoroughly on the subject in
the following passage which I shall cite
here at full length (Welt als Wille und Vorstellung,
I, p. 309): "according to all this,
we may regard the phenomenal world, or nature,
and music as two different expressions of
the same thing, which is therefore itself
the only medium of their analogy, so that
a knowledge of it is demanded in order to
understand that analogy. Music, therefore,
if regarded as an expression of the world,
is in the highest degree a universal language,
which is related indeed to the universality
of concepts, much as they are related to
the particular things. Its, universality,
however, is by no means that empty universality
of abstraction, but of quite a different
kind, and is united with thorough and distinct
definiteness. In this respect it resembles
geometrical figures and numbers, which are
the universal forms of all possible objects
of experience and applicable to them all
a priori, and yet are not abstract but perceptible
and thoroughly determinate. All possible
efforts, excitements, and manifestations
of will, all that goes on in the heart of
man and that reason includes in the wide,
negative concept of feeling, may be expressed
by the infinite number of possible melodies,
but always in the universal, in the mere
form, without the material, always according
to the thing-in-itself, not the phenomenon,
the inmost soul, as it were, of the phenomenon
without the body. This deep relation which
music has to the true nature of all things
also explains the fact that suitable music
played to any scene, action, event, or surrounding
seems to disclose to us its utmost secret
meaning, and appears as the most accurate
and distinct commentary upon it. This is
so truly the case that whoever gives himself
up entirely to the impression of a symphony,
seems to see all the possible events of life
and the world take place in himself; yet
if he reflects, he can find no likeness between
the music and the things that passed before
his mind. For, as we have said, music is
distinguished from all the other arts by
the fact that it is not a copy of the phenomenon,
or, more accurately, of the adequate objectivity
of the will, but an immediate copy of the
will itself, and therefore complements everything
physical in the world and every phenomenon
by representing what is metaphysical, the
thing in itself. We might, therefore, just
as well call the world embodied music as
embodied will; and this is the reason why
music makes every painting, and indeed every
scene of real life and of the world, at once
appear with higher significance, certainly
all the more, in proportion as its melody
is analogous to the inner spirit of the given
phenomenon. Therefore we are able to set
a poem to music as a song, or a visible representation
as a pantomime, or both as an opera. Such
particular pictures of human life, set to
the universal language of music, are never
bound to it or correspond to it with a stringent
necessity; but they stand to it only in the
relation of an example chosen at will to
a general concept. In the determinateness
of the real, they represent that which music
expresses in the universality of mere form.
For melodies are to a certain extent, like
general concepts, an abstraction from the
actual. This actual world, then, the world
of particular things, affords the object
of perception, the special and individual,
the particular case, both to the universality
of the concepts and to the universality of
the melodies. But these two universalities
are in a certain respect opposed to each
other; for the concepts contain particulars
only as the first forms abstracted from perception,
as it were, the separated shell of things;
thus they are, strictly speaking, abstracta:
music, on the other hand, gives the inmost
kernel which precedes all forms, or the heart
of things. This relation may be very well
expressed in the language of the schoolmen,
by saying, the concepts are the universalia
post rem, but music gives the univesralia
ante rem, and the real world the universalia
in re. But that in general a relation is
possible between a composition and a visible
representation rests, as we have said, upon
the fact that both are simply different expressions
of the same inner being of the world. When
now, in the particular case, such a relation
is actually given, that is to say, when the
composer has been able to express in the
universal language of music the stirrings
of will which constitute the heart of an
event, then the melody of the song, the music
of the opera, is expressive. But the analogy
discovered by the composer between the two
must have proceeded from the direct knowledge
of the nature of the world unknown to his
reason, and must not be an imitation produced
with conscious intention by means of concepts,
otherwise the music does not express the
inner nature, the will itself, but merely
gives an inadequate imitation of its phenomenon.
All truly imitative music does this."
According to the doctrine of Schopenhauer,
therefore, we understand music as the immediate
language of the will, and we feel our fancy
stimulated to give form to this invisible
and yet so actively stirred spirit-world
which speaks to us, and we feel prompted
to embody it in an analogous example. On
the other hand, image and concept, under
the influence of a truly corresponding music,
acquires a higher significance. Dionysian
art therefore is wont to exercise two kinds
of influences on the Apollinian art faculty:
music incites to the symbolic intuition of
Dionysian universality, and music allows
the symbolic image to emerge in its highest
significance. From these facts, intelligible
in themselves and not inaccessible to a more
penetrating examination, I infer the capacity
of music to give birth to myth (the most
significant example), and particularly the
tragic myth: the myth which expresses Dionysian
knowledge in symbols. In the phenomenon of
the lyrist, I have shown how music strives
to express its nature in Apollinian images.
If now we reflect that music at its highest
stage must seek to attain also to its highest
objectification in images, we must deem it
possible that it also knows how to find the
symbolic expression for its unique Dionysian
wisdom; and where shall we seek for this
expression if not in tragedy and, in general,
in the conception of the tragic?
From the nature of art as it is usually conceived
according to the single category of appearance
and beauty, the tragic cannot honestly be
deduced at all; it is only through the spirit
of music that we can understand the joy involved
in the annihilation of the individual. For
it is only in particular examples of such
annihilation that we are clearly the eternal
phenomenon of Dionysian art, which gives
expression to the will in its omnipotence,
as it were, behind the principium individuationis,
the eternal life beyond all phenomena, and
despite all annihilation. The metaphysical
joy in the tragic is a translation of the
instinctive unconscious Dionysian wisdom
into the language of images: the hero, the
highest manifestation of the will, is negated
for our pleasure, because he is only phenomenon,
and because the eternal life of the will
is not affected by his annihilation. "We
believe in eternal life," exclaims tragedy;
while music is the immediate idea of this
life. Plastic art has an altogether different
aim: here Apollo overcomes the suffering
of the individual by the radiant glorification
of the eternity of the phenomenon: here beauty
triumphs over the suffering inherent in life;
pain is obliterated by lies from the features
of nature. In Dionysian art and its tragic
symbolism the same nature cries to us with
its true, undissembled voice: "Be as
I am! Amid the ceaseless flux of phenomena
I am the eternally creative primordial mother,
eternally impelling to existence, eternally
finding satisfaction in this change of phenomena!"
17
Dionysian art, too, wishes to convince us
of the eternal joy of existence: only we
are to seek this joy not in phenomena, but
behind them. We are to recognize that all
that comes into being must be ready for a
sorrowful end; we are forced to look into
the terrors of the individual existence--yet
we are not to become rigid with fear: a metaphysical
comfort tears us momentarily from the bustle
of the changing figures. We are really for
a brief moment primordial being itself, feeling
its raging desire for existence and joy in
existence; the struggle, the pain, the destruction
of phenomena, now appear necessary to us,
in view of the excess of countless forms
of existence which force and push one another
into life, in view of the exuberant fertility
of the universal will. We are pierced by
the maddening stings of these pains just
when we have become, as it were, one with
the infinite primordial joy in existence,
and when we anticipate, in Dionysian ecstasy,
the indestructibility and eternity of this
joy. In spite of fear and pity, we are the
happy living beings, not as individuals,
but as the one living being, with whose creative
joy we are united.
The history of the rise of Greek tragedy
now tells us with luminous precision how
the tragic art of the Greeks was really born
of the spirit of music. With this conception
we believe we have done justice for the first
time to the primitive and astonishing significance
of the chorus. At the same time, however,
we must admit that the meaning of tragic
myth set forth above never became clear in
transparent concepts to the Greek poets,
not to speak of the Greek philosophers: their
heroes speak, as it were, more superficially
than they act; the myth does not at all obtain
adequate objectification in the spoken word.
The structure of the scenes and the visual
images reveal a deeper wisdom than the poet
himself can put into words and concepts:
the same is also observable in Shakespeare,
whose Hamlet, for instance, similarly, talks
more superficially than he acts, so that
the previously mentioned lesson of Hamlet
is to be deduced, not from his words, but
from a profound contemplation and survey
of the whole.
With respect to Greek tragedy, which of course
presents itself to us only as word-drama,
I have even intimated that the lack of congruity
between myth and expression might easily
lead us to regard it as shallower and less
significant than it really is, and accordingly
to attribute to it a more superficial effect
than it must have had according to the testimony
of the ancients: for how easily one forgets
that what the word-poet did not succeed in
doing, namely, attain the highest spiritualization
and ideality of the myth, he might very well
succeed in doing every moment as creative
musician! To be sure, we are almost forced
to construct for ourselves by scholarly research
the superior power of the musical effect
in order to experience something of the incomparable
comfort which must have been characteristic
of true tragedy. Even this musical superiority,
however, would only have been felt by us
had we been Greeks; for in the entire development
of Greek music--as compared with the infinitely
richer music known and familiar to us--we
imagine we hear only the youthful song of
the musical genius modestly intoned. The
Greeks, as the Egyptian priests say, are
eternal children, and in tragic art too they
are only children who do not know what a
sublime plaything originated in their hands
and--was quickly demolished.
The striving of the spirit of music toward
visual and mythical objectification, which
increases from the beginnings of lyric poetry
up to Attic tragedy, suddenly breaks off
after attaining a luxuriant development,
and disappears, as it were, from the surface
of Hellenic art; while the Dionysian world
view born of this striving lives on in the
mysteries and, in its strangest metamorphoses
and debasements, does not cease to attract
serious natures. Will it not some day rise
once again out of its mystic depths as art?
Here we are detained by the question, whether
the power, by virtue of whose opening influence
tragedy perished, has for all time sufficient
strength to prevent the artistic reawakening
of tragedy and the tragic world view. If
ancient tragedy was diverted from its course
by the dialectical desire for knowledge and
the optimism of science, this fact might
lead us to believe that there is an eternal
conflict between the theoretic and the tragic
world view; and only after the spirit of
science has been pursued to its limits, and
its claim to universal validity destroyed
by the evidence of these limits may we hope
for a rebirth of tragedy--a form of culture
for which we should have to use the symbol
of the music-practicing Socrates in the sense
spoken of above [See Section 15]. In this
contrast, I understand by the spirit of science
the faith that first came to light in the
person of Socrates--the faith in the explicability
of nature and in knowledge as a panacea.
He who recalls the immediate consequences
of this restlessly progressing spirit of
science will realize at once that myth was
annihilated by it, and that, because of this
annihilation, poetry was driven like a homeless
being from her natural ideal soil. If we
have been right in assigning to music the
power of again giving birth to myth, we may
similarly expect to find the spirit of science
on the path where it inimically opposes this
mythopoeic power of music. This takes place
in the development of the New Attic Dithyramb,
the music of which no longer expressed the
inner essence, the will itself, but only
rendered the phenomenon inadequately, in
an imitation by means of concepts. From this
intrinsically degenerate music the genuinely
musical natures turned away with the same
repugnance that they felt for the art-destroying
tendency of Socrates. The unerring instinct
of Aristophanes was surely right when it
included Socrates himself, the tragedy of
Euripides, and the music of the New Dithyrambic
poets in the same feeling of hatred, recognizing
in all three phenomena the signs of a degenerate
culture.
In this New Dithyramb, music is outrageously
manipulated so as to be the imitative counterfeit
of a phenomenon, for instance, of a battle
or a storm at sea; and thus, of course, it
has been utterly robbed of its mythopoeic
power. For if it seeks to arouse pleasure
only by impelling us to seek external analogies
between a vital or natural process and certain
rhythmical figures and characteristic sounds
of music; if our understanding is to content
itself with the perception of these analogies;
we are reduced to a frame of mind which makes
impossible any reception of the mythical;
for the myth wants to be experienced vividly
as a unique example of a universality and
truth that gaze into the infinite. The truly
Dionysian music presents itself as such a
general mirror of the universal will: the
vivid event refracted in this mirror expands
at once for our consciousness to the copy
of an external truth. Conversely, such a
vivid event is at once divested of every
mythical character by the tone-painting of
the New Dithyramb; music now becomes a wretched
cop of the phenomenon, and therefore infinitely
poorer than the phenomenon itself. And through
this poverty it still further reduces the
phenomenon for our consciousness, so that
now, for example, a musically imitated battle
of this sort exhausts itself in marches,
signal sounds, etc., and our imagination
is arrested precisely by these superficialities.
Tone-painting is thus in every respect the
opposite of true music with its mythopoeic
power: through it the phenomenon, poor in
itself, is made still poorer, while through
Dionysian music the individual phenomenon
is enriched and expanded into an image of
the world. It was a great triumph for the
un- Dionysian spirit when, by the development
of the New Dithyramb, it had estranged music
from itself and reduced it to be the slave
of phenomena. Euripides, who, though in a
higher sense, must be considered a thoroughly
unmusical nature, is for this very reason
a passionate adherent of the New Dithyrambic
Music, and with the liberality of a robber
makes use of all its effective tricks and
mannerisms.
In another direction also we see at work
the power of this un-Dionysian myth-opposing
spirit, when we turn our attention to the
prevalence of character representation and
psychological refinement in tragedy from
Sophocles onward. The character must no longer
be expanded into an eternal type, but, on
the contrary, must develop individually through
artistic subordinate traits and shadings,
through the nicest precision of all lines,
in such a manner that the spectator is in
general no longer conscious of the myth,
but of the vigorous truth to nature and the
artist's imitative power. Here also we observe
the victory of the phenomenon over the universal,
and the delight in a unique, almost anatomical
preparation; we are already in the atmosphere
of a theoretical world, where scientific
knowledge is valued more highly than the
artistic reflection of a universal law.
The movement in the direction of character
delineation proceeds rapidly: while Sophocles
still portrays complete characters and employs
myth for their refined development, Euripides
already draws only prominent individual traits
of character, which can express themselves
in violent bursts of passion. In the New
Attic Comedy, however, there are only masks
with one expression: frivolous old men, duped
panders, and cunning slaves, recurring incessantly.
Where now is the mythopoeic spirit of music?
What still remains of music is either excitatory
or reminiscent music, that is, either a stimulant
for dull and faded nerves, or tone-painting.
As regards the former, it hardly matters
about the text set to it: as soon as his
heroes and choruses begin to sing, everything
becomes pretty slovenly in Euripides; to
what pass must things have come with his
impertinent successors?
The new un-Dionysian spirit, however, reveals
itself more plainly in the dénouements of
the new dramas. In the Old Tragedy one could
sense at the end that metaphysical comfort
without which the delight in tragedy cannot
be explained at all. The reconciling tones
from another world sound purest, perhaps,
in the Oedipus at Colonus. Now that the genius
of music has fled from tragedy, tragedy,
strictly speaking, is dead: for from what
source shall we now draw this metaphysical
comfort? The new spirit, therefore, sought
for an earthly resolution of the tragic dissonance.
The hero, after being sufficiently tortured
by fate, earned a well-deserved reward through
a splendid marriage or tokens of divine favor.
The hero had turned gladiator on whom, after
he had been nicely beaten and covered with
wounds, freedom was occasionally bestowed.
The deus ex machina took the place of metaphysical
comfort.
I will not say that the tragic world view
was everywhere completely destroyed by this
intruding un-Dionysian spirit: we only know
that it had to flee from art into the underworld
as it were, in the degenerate form of a secret
cult. Over the widest extent of the Hellenic
character, however, there raged the consuming
blast of this spirit, which manifests itself
in the form of "Greek cheerfulness,"
which we have already spoken of as a senile,
unproductive love of existence. This cheerfulness
stands opposed to the splendid "naïveté"
of the earlier Greeks, which, according to
the characterization given above, must be
conceived as the blossom of the Apollinian
culture springing from a dark abyss, as the
victory which the Hellenic will, through
its mirroring of beauty, obtains over suffering
and the wisdom of suffering.
The noblest manifestation of that other form
of "Greek cheerfulness," the Alexandrian,
is the cheerfulness of the theoretical man.
It exhibits the same characteristic symptoms
that I have just deduced from the spirit
of the un-Dionysian: it combats Dionysian
wisdom and art, it seeks to dissolve myth,
it substitutes for a metaphysical comfort
an earthly consonance, in fact, a deus ex
machina of its own, the god of machines and
crucibles, that is, the powers of the spirits
of nature recognized and employed in the
service of a higher egoism; it believes that
it can correct the world by knowledge, guiding
life by science, and actually confine the
individual within a limited sphere of solvable
problems, from which he can cheerfully say
to life: "I desire you; you are worth
knowing."
18
It is an eternal phenomenon: the insatiable
will always find a way to detain its creatures
in life and compel them to live on, by means
of an illusion spread over things. One is
chained by the Socratic love of knowledge
and the delusion of being able thereby to
heal the eternal wound of existence; another
is ensnared by art's seductive veil of beauty
fluttering before his eyes; still another
by the metaphysical comfort that beneath
the whirl of phenomena eternal life flows
on indestructibly--to say nothing of the
more vulgar and almost more powerful illusions
which the will always has at hand. These
three stages of illusion are actually designed
only for the more nobly formed natures, who
actually feel profoundly the weight and burden
of existence, and must be deluded by exquisite
stimulants into forgetfulness of their displeasure.
All that we call culture is made up of these
stimulants; and, according to the proportion
of the ingredients, we have either a dominantly
Socratic or artistic or tragic culture; or,
if historical exemplifications are permitted,
there is either an Alexandrian or a Hellenic
or a Buddhistic culture.
Our whole modern world is entangled in the
net of Alexandrian culture. It proposes as
its ideal the theoretical man equipped with
the greatest forces of knowledge, and laboring
in the service of science, whose archetype
and progenitor is Socrates. All our educational
methods originally have this ideal in view:
every other form of existence must struggle
on laboriously beside it, as something tolerated,
but not intended. In an almost alarming manner
the culture man was for a long time found
only in the form of the scholar: even our
poetical arts have been forced to evolve
from scholarly imitations, and in the main
effect, that of rhyme, we still recognize
the origin of our poetic form from artificial
experiments with a nonindigenous, really
scholarly language. How unintelligible must
Faust, the modern cultured man, who is in
himself intelligible, have appeared to a
true Greek--Faust, storming unsatisfied through
all the faculties, devoted to magic and the
devil from a desire for knowledge; Faust,
whom we have but to place beside Socrates
for the purpose of comparison, in order to
see that modern man is beginning to divine
the limits of this Socratic love of knowledge
and yearns for a coast in the wide waste
of the ocean of knowledge. When Goethe on
one occasion said to Eckermann with reference
to Napoleon: "Yes, my good friend, there
is also a productiveness of deeds,"
he reminded us in a charmingly naïve manner
that the nontheorist is something incredible
and astounding to modern man; so that we
again have need of the wisdom of Goethe to
discover that such a surprising form of existence
is not only comprehensible, but even pardonable.
Now we must not hide from ourselves what
is concealed in the womb of this Socratic
culture: optimism, with its delusion of limitless
power. We must not be alarmed if the fruits
of this optimism ripen--if society, leavened
to the very lowest strata by this kind of
culture, gradually begins to tremble with
wanton agitations and desires, if the belief
in the earthly happiness of all, if the belief
in the possibility of such a general intellectual
culture changes into the threatening demand
for such an Alexandrian earthly happiness,
into the conjuring up of a Euripidean deus
ex machina.
Let us mark this well: the Alexandrian culture,
to be able to exist permanently, requires
a slave class, but with its optimistic view
of life it denies the necessity of such a
class, and consequently, when its beautifully
seductive and tranquilizing utterances about
the "dignity of man" and the "dignity
of labor" are no longer effective, it
gradually drifts toward a dreadful destruction.
There is nothing more terrible than a class
of barbaric slaves who have learned to regard
their existence as an injustice, and now
prepare to avenge, not only themselves, but
all generations. In the face of such threatening
storms, who dares to appeal with any confidence
to our pale and exhausted religions, the
very foundations of which have degenerated
into scholarly religions? Myth, the necessary
prerequisite of any religion, is already
paralyzed everywhere, and even in this domain
the optimistic spirit, which we have just
designated as the germ of destruction in
our society, has attained the mastery.
While the disaster gradually slumbering in
the womb of theoretical culture gradually
begins to frighten modern man, and he anxiously
ransacks the stores of his experience for
means to avert the danger, though he has
no great faith in these means; while he,
therefore, begins to divine the consequences
of his situation--great men, universally
gifted, have contrived, with an incredible
amount of thought, to make use of the paraphernalia
of science itself, to point out the limits
and the relativity of knowledge generally,
and thus to deny decisively the claim of
science to universal validity and universal
aims. And their demonstration diagnosed for
the first time the illusory notion which
pretends to be able to fathom the innermost
essence of things with the aid of causality.
The extraordinary courage and wisdom of Kant
and Schopenhauer have succeeded in gaining
the most difficult victory, the victory over
the optimism concealed in the essence of
logic--an optimism that is the basis of our
culture. While this optimism, resting on
apparently unobjectionable aeternae veritates
[Eternal verities.], had believed that all
the riddles of the universe could be known
and fathomed, and had treated space, time,
and causality as entirely unconditional laws
of the most universal validity, Kant showed
that these really served only to elevate
the mere phenomenon, the work of maya, to
the position of the sole and highest reality,
as if it were the innermost and true essence
of things, thus making impossible any knowledge
of this essence or, in Schopenhauer's words,
lulling the dreamer still more soundly asleep.
With this insight a culture is inaugurated
that I venture to call a tragic culture.
Its most important characteristic is that
wisdom takes the place of science as the
highest end--wisdom that, uninfluenced by
the seductive distractions of the sciences,
turns with unmoved eyes to a comprehensive
view of the world, and seeks to grasp, with
sympathetic feelings of love, the eternal
suffering as its own.
Let us imagine a coming generation with such
intrepidity of vision, with such a heroic
penchant for the tremendous; let us imagine
the bold stride of these dragon-slayers,
the proud audacity with which they turn their
back on all the weaklings' doctrines of optimism
in order to "live resolutely" in
wholeness and fullness: would it not be necessary
for the tragic man of such a culture, in
view of his self-education for seriousness
and terror, to desire a new art, the art
of metaphysical comfort, to desire tragedy
as his own proper Helen, and to exclaim with
Faust:
Should not my longing overleap the distance
And draw the fairest form into existence?
[From Goethe's Faust, lines 7438 ff.]
But now that the Socratic culture can only
hold the scepter of its infallibility with
trembling hands; now that it has been shaken
from two directions--once by the fear of
its own consequences which it at length begins
to surmise, and again because it no longer
has its naïve confidence in the eternal validity
of its foundation--it is a sad spectacle
to see how the dance of its thought rushes
longingly toward ever-new forms, to embrace
them, and then, shuddering, lets them go
suddenly as Mephistopheles does the seductive
Lamiae [Faust, lines 7766 ff.]. It is certainly
the sign of the "breach" of which
everyone speaks as the fundamental malady
of modern culture, that the theoretical man,
alarmed and dissatisfied at his own consequences,
no longer dares entrust himself to the terrible
icy current of existence: he runs timidly
up and down the bank. So thoroughly has he
been pampered by his optimistic views that
he no longer wants to have anything whole,
with all of nature's cruelty attaching to
it.. Besides, he feels that a culture based
on the principles of science must be destroyed
when it begins to grow illogical, that is,
to retreat before its own consequences. Our
art reveals this universal distress: in vain
does one depend imitatively on all the great
productive periods and natures; in vain does
one accumulate the entire "world-literature"
around modern man for his comfort; in vain
does one place oneself in the midst of the
art styles and artists of all ages, so that
one may give names to them as Adam did to
the beasts: one still remains externally
hungry, the "critic" without joy
and energy, the Alexandrian man, who is at
bottom a librarian and corrector of proofs,
and wretchedly goes blind from the dust of
books and from printers' errors.
19
We cannot indicate the innermost modern content
of this Socratic culture more distinctly
than by calling it the culture of the opera:
for it is in this department that this culture
has expressed its aims and perceptions with
special naïveté, which is surprising when
we compare the genesis of the opera and the
facts of operatic development with the eternal
truths of the Apollinian and Dionysian. I
recall first of all the origin of the stilo
rappresentativo [Representational style.]
and the recitative. Is it credible that this
thoroughly externalized operatic music, incapable
of devotion, could be received and cherished
with enthusiastic favor, as a rebirth, as
it were, of all true music, by the very age
in which had appeared the ineffably sublime
and sacred music of Palestrina? And who,
on the other hand, would think of making
only the diversion-craving luxuriousness
of those Florentine circles and the vanity
of their dramatic singers responsible for
the love of the opera which spread with such
rapidity? That in the same age, even among
the same people, this passion for a half-
musical mode of speech should awaken alongside
of the vaulted structure of Palestrina harmonics
which all medieval Christendom had been building
up, I can explain to myself only by a cooperating,
extra-artistic tendency in the essence of
the recitative.
The listener who insists on distinctly hearing
the words under the music has his desire
fulfilled by the singer in that the latter
speaks rather than sings, intensifying the
pathetic expression of the words by means
of this half-song. By this intensification
of the pathos he facilitates the understanding
of the words and overcomes the remaining
half of the music. The specific danger now
threatening him is that in some unguarded
moment he may stress the music unduly, which
would immediately entail the destruction
of the pathos of the speech and the distinctness
of the words; while, on the other hand, he
feels himself continually impelled to musical
discharge and a virtuoso exhibition of his
vocal talent. Here the "poet" comes
to his aid, who knows how to provide him
with abundant opportunities for lyrical interjections,
repetitions of words and sentences, etc.--at
which places the singer, now in the purely
musical element, can rest himself without
paying any attention to the words. This alternation
of emotionally impressive speech which, however,
is only half sung, with interjections which
are wholly sung, an alternation characteristic
of the stilo rappresentativo, this rapidly
changing endeavor to affect now the concepts
and imagination of the hearer, now his musical
sense, is something so utterly unnatural
and likewise so intrinsically contradictory
both to the Apollinian and Dionysian artistic
impulses, that one has to infer an origin
of the recitative lying outside all artistic
instincts. According to this description,
the recitative must be defined as a mixture
of epic and lyric delivery, not by any means
as an intrinsically stable mixture, a state
not to be attained in the case of such totally
disparate elements, but as an entirely superficial
mosaic conglutination, such as is totally
unprecedented in the domain of nature and
experience. But this was not the opinion
of the inventors of the recitative: they
themselves, together with their age, believed
rather that the mystery of antique music
has been solved by this stilo rappresentativo,
in which, so they thought, was to be found
the only explanation of the enormous influence
of an Orpheus, an Amphion, and even of Greek
tragedy. The new style was looked upon as
the reawakening of the most effective music,
ancient Greek music: indeed, in accordance
with the universal and popular conception
of the Homeric as the primitive world, they
could abandon themselves to the dream of
having descended once more into the paradisiacal
beginnings of mankind, where music also must
have had that unsurpassed purity, power,
and innocence of which the poets, in their
pastoral plays, could give such touching
accounts. Here we can see into the innermost
development of this thoroughly modern variety
of art, the opera: art here responds to a
powerful need, but it is a nonaesthetic need:
the yearning for the idyllic, the faith in
the primordial existence of the artistic
and good man. The recitative was regarded
as the rediscovered language of this primitive
man; opera as the rediscovered country of
this idyllically or heroically good creature,
who simultaneously with every action follows
a natural artistic impulse, who accomplishes
his speech with a little singing, in order
that he may immediately break forth into
full song at the slightest emotional excitement.
It is now a matter of indifference to us
that the humanists of the time combated the
old ecclesiastical conception of man as inherently
corrupt and lost, with this newly created
picture of the paradisiacal artist: so that
opera is to be understood as the opposition
dogma of the good man, but may also, at the
same time, provide a consolation for that
pessimism which, owing to the frightful uncertainty
of all conditions of life, attracted precisely
the serious-minded men of the time. For us,
it is enough to have perceived that the essential
charm, and therefore the genesis, of this
new art form lies in the gratification of
an altogether nonaesthetic need, in the optimistic
glorification of man as such, in the conception
of the primitive man as the man naturally
good and artistic--a principle of the opera
that has gradually changed into a threatening
and terrible demand which, in face of contemporary
socialist movements, we can no longer ignore.
The "good primitive man" wants
his rights: what paradisiacal prospects!
Besides this I place another equally obvious
confirmation of my view that opera is based
on the same principles as our Alexandrian
culture. Opera is the birth of the theoretical
man, the critical layman, not of the artist:
one of the most surprising facts in the history
of all the arts. It was the demand of thoroughly
unmusical hearers that before everything
else the words must be understood, so that
according to them a rebirth of music is to
be expected only when some mode of singing
has been discovered in which text-word lords
it over counterpoint like master over servant.
For the words, it is argued, are a much nobler
than the accompanying harmonic system as
the soul is nobler than the body.
It was in accordance with the laically unmusical
crudeness of these views that the combination
of music, image, and words was effected in
the beginnings of the opera. In the spirit
of this aesthetic the first experiments were
made in the leading amateur circles of Florence
by the poets and singers patronized there.
The man incapable of art creates for himself
a kind of art precisely because he is the
inartistic man as such. Because he does not
sense the Dionysian depth of music, he changes
his musical taste into an appreciation of
the understandable word-and-tone-rhetoric
of the passions in the stilo rappresentativo,
and into the voluptuousness of the arts of
song. Because he is unable to behold a vision,
he forces the machinist and the decorative
artist into his service. Because he cannot
comprehend the true nature of the artist,
he conjures up the "artistic primitive
man" to suit his taste, that is, the
man who sings and recites verses under the
influence of passion. He dreams himself back
into a time when passion sufficed to generate
songs and poems; as if emotion had ever been
able to create anything artistic.
The premise of the opera is a false belief
concerning the artistic process: the idyllic
belief that every sentient man is an artist.
This belief would make opera the expression
of the taste of the laity in art, dictating
their laws with the cheerful optimism of
the theoretical man.
Should we desire to combine the two conceptions
that have just been shown to have influenced
the origin of opera, it would merely remain
for us to speak of an idyllic tendency of
the opera. In this connection we need only
avail ourselves of the expressions and explanation
of Schiller. Nature and the ideal, he says,
are either objects of grief, when the former
is represented as lost, the latter unattained;
or both are objects of joy, in that they
are represented as real. The first case furnishes
the elegy in its narrower signification,
the second the idyll in its widest sense.
Here we must at once call attention to the
common characteristic of these two conceptions
in the genesis of opera, namely, that in
them the ideal is not felt as unattained
or nature as lost. This sentiment supposes
that there was a primitive age of man when
he lay close to the heart of nature, and,
owing to this naturalness, had at once attained
the ideal of mankind in a paradisiacal goodness
and artistry. From this perfect primitive
man all of us were supposed to be descended.
We were even supposed to be faithful copies
of him; only we had to cast off a few things
in order to recognize ourselves once more
as this primitive man, on the strength of
a voluntary renunciation of a superficial
learnedness, of superabundant culture. It
was to such a concord of nature and the ideal,
to an idyllic reality, that the cultured
Renaissance man let himself be led back by
his operatic imitation of Greek tragedy.
He mad use of this tragedy as Dante made
use of Vergil, in order to be conducted to
the gates of paradise; while from this point
he continued unassisted and passed over from
an imitation of the highest Greek art-form
to a "restoration of all things,"
to an imitation of man's original art-world.
What a cheerful confidence there is about
these daring endeavors, in the very heart
of theoretical culture!--solely to be explained
by the comforting belief, that "man-in-himself"
is the eternally virtuous hero of the opera,
the eternally piping or singing shepherd,
who must always in the end rediscover himself
as such, should he ever at any time really
lost himself; to be considered solely as
the fruit of that optimism, which here rises
like a sweetishly seductive column of vapor
from the depth of the Socratic world view.
Therefore, the features of the opera do not
by any means exhibit the elegiac sorrow of
an eternal loss, but rather the cheerfulness
of eternal rediscovery, the comfortable delight
in an idyllic reality which one can at least
always imagine as real. But in this process
one may some day grasp the fact that this
supposed reality is nothing but a fantastically
silly dawdling, at which everyone who could
judge it by the terrible seriousness of true
nature, and compare it with actual primitive
scenes of the beginnings of mankind, would
be impelled to call out, nauseated: Away
with the phantom!
Nevertheless, it would be a mistake to imagine
that it is possible merely by a vigorous
shout to frighten away such a playful thing
as the opera, as if it were a specter. He
who would destroy the opera must take up
the struggle against Alexandrian cheerfulness,
which expresses itself so naïvely in opera
concerning its favorite idea. Indeed, opera
is its specific form of art. But what may
art itself expect form the operation of an
art form whose beginnings lie entirely outside
of the aesthetic province and which has stolen
over from a half-moral sphere into the artistic
domain, deceiving us only occasionally about
its hybrid origin? By what sap is this parasitic
opera nourished, if not by that of true art?
Must we not suppose that the highest, and,
indeed, the truly serious task of art--to
save the eye from gazing into the horrors
of night and to deliver the suspect by the
healing balm of illusion from the spasms
of the agitations of the will--must degenerate
under the influence of its idyllic seductions
and Alexandrian flatteries to become an empty
and merely distracting diversion? What will
become of the eternal truths of the Dionysian
and Apollinian when the styles are mixed
in this fashion, as I have shown to be the
essence of the stilo rappresentativo? A style
in which music is regarded as the servant,
the text as the master, where music is compared
with the body, the text with the soul? where
at best the highest aim will be directed
toward a paraphrastic tone-painting, just
as formerly in the New Attic Dithyramb? where
music is completely alienated from its true
dignity as the Dionysian mirror of the world,
so that the only thing left to it, as the
slave of phenomena, is to imitate the formal
character of phenomena, and to arouse a superficial
pleasure in the play of lines and proportions.
Closely observed, this fatal influence of
the opera on music is seen to coincide exactly
with the universal development of modern
music; the optimism lurking in the genesis
of the opera and in the character of the
culture thereby represented, has, with alarming
rapidity, succeeded in divesting music of
its Dionysian-cosmic mission and impressing
on it a playfully formal and pleasurable
character: a change comparable to the metamorphosis
of the Aeschylean man into the cheerful Alexandrian.
If, however, in the exemplification here
indicated, we have rightly associated the
disappearance of the Dionysian spirit with
a most striking, but hitherto unexplained,
transformation and degeneration of the Hellenic
man--what hopes must revive in us when the
most certain auspices guarantee the reverse
process, the gradual awakening of the Dionysian
spirit in our modern world! It is impossible
that the divine strength of Herakles should
languish forever in ample bondage to Omphale
[A queen of Lydia by whom Herakles claimed
to have been detained for a year of bondage.].
Out of the Dionysian root of the German spirit
a power has arisen which, having nothing
in common with the primitive conditions of
Socratic culture, can neither be explained
nor excused by it, but which is rather felt
by this culture as something terribly inexplicable
and overwhelmingly hostile--German music
as we must understand it, particularly in
its vast solar orbit from Bach to Beethoven,
from Beethoven to Wagner.
Even under the most favorable circumstances
what can the knowledge-craving Socratism
of our days do with this demon rising from
unfathomable depths? Neither by means of
the flourishes and arabesques of operatic
melody, nor with the aid of the arithmetical
counting board of fugue and contrapuntal
dialectic is the formula to be found by whose
thrice-powerful light one might subdue this
demon and compel it to speak. What a spectacle,
when our latter-day aestheticians, with a
net of "beauty" peculiar to themselves,
pursue and clutch at the genius of music
whirling before display activities which
are not to be judged by the standard of eternal
beauty any more than by the standard of the
sublime. Let us but observe these patrons
of music at close range, as they really are,
indefatigably crying: "Beauty! beauty!"
Do they really bear the stamp of nature's
darling children who are fostered and nourished
at the breast of the beautiful, or are they
not rather seeking a mendacious cloak for
their own coarseness, an aesthetical pretext
for their insensitive sobriety; here I am
thinking of Otto Jahn, for example [Professor
of classical philology at Bonn.]. But let
the liar and the hypocrite beware of German
music: for amid all our culture it is really
the only genuine, pure, and purifying fire-spirit
from which and toward which, as in the teaching
of the great Heraclitus of Ephesus, all things
move in a double orbit: all that we now call
culture, education, civilization, must some
day appear before the unerring judge, Dionysus.
Let us recollect further that Kant and Schopenhauer
made it possible for the spirit of German
philosophy, streaming from similar sources,
to destroy scientific Socratism's complacent
delight in existence by establishing its
boundaries; how through this delimitation
was introduced an infinitely profounder and
more serious view of ethical problems and
of art, which we may designate as Dionysian
wisdom comprised in concepts. To what then
does the mystery of this oneness of German
music and philosophy point if not to a new
form of existence, concerning whose character
we can only inform ourselves by surmise from
Hellenic analogies? For to us who stand on
the boundary line between two different forms
of existence, the Hellenic prototype retains
this immeasurable value, that all these transitions
and struggles are imprinted upon it in a
classically instructive form; except that
we, as it were, pass through the chief epochs
of the Hellenic genius, analogically in reverse
order, and seem now, for instance, to be
passing backward from the Alexandrian age
to the period of tragedy. At the same time
we have the feeling that the birth of a tragic
age simply means a return to itself of the
German spirit, a blessed self-rediscovery
after powerful intrusive influences had for
a long time compelled it, living as it did
in a helpless and unchaste barbarism, to
servitude under their form. Now at last,
upon returning to the primitive source of
its being, it may venture to stride along
boldly and freely before the eyes of all
nations without being attached to the lead
strings of a Romanic civilization; if only
it can learn constantly from one people--the
Greeks, from whom to be able to learn at
all itself is a high honor and a rare distinction.
And when were we in greater need of these
highest of all teachers than at present,
when we are experiencing a rebirth of tragedy
and are in danger alike of not knowing whence
it comes and of being unable to make clear
to ourselves whither it tends?
20
Some day, before an impartial judge, it may
be decided in what time and in what men the
German spirit has s far striven most resolutely
to learn from the Greeks; and if we confidently
assume that this unique praise must be accorded
to the noblest intellectual efforts of Goethe,
Schiller, and Winckelmann, we should certainly
have to add that since their time and the
more immediate consequences of their efforts,
the endeavor to attain to culture and to
the Greeks on the same path has grown incomprehensibly
feebler and feebler. That we may not despair
utterly of the German spirit, must we not
conclude that, in some essential manner,
even these champions did not penetrate into
the core of the Hellenic nature, to establish
a permanent alliance between German and Greek
culture? So an unconscious recognition of
this shortcoming may have prompted the disheartening
doubt, even in very serious people, whether
after such predecessors they could possibly
advance further on this path of culture or
could reach the goal at all. Accordingly,
we see that opinions concerning the value
if the Greeks for education have been degenerating
in the most alarming manner since that time.
Expressions of compassionate condescension
may be heard in the most varied camps of
the spirit--and of lack of spirit. Elsewhere,
ineffectual rhetoric plays with the phrases
"Greek harmony," "Greek beauty,"
"Greek cheerfulness." And those
very circles whose dignified task it might
be to draw indefatigably from the Greek reservoir
for the good of German culture, the teachers
of the higher educational institutions, have
learned best to come to terms with the Greeks
easily and in good time, often by skeptically
abandoning the Hellenic ideal and completely
perverting the true purpose of antiquarian
studies. Whoever in these circles has not
completely exhausted himself in his endeavor
to be a dependable corrector of old texts
or a linguistic microscopist who apes natural
history is probably trying to assimilate
Greek antiquity "historically,"
along with other antiquities, at any rate
according to the method and with the supercilious
airs of our present cultured historiography.
The cultural power of our higher educational
institutions has perhaps never been lower
or feebler than at present. The "journalist,"
the paper slave of the day, triumphs over
the professor in all matters pertaining to
culture; and nothing remains to the latter
but the metamorphosis, often experienced
by now, of fluttering also like a cheerful
cultured butterfly, with the "light
elegance" peculiar to this sphere, employing
the journalist's style. In what painful confusion
must the cultured class of such a period
gaze at the phenomenon which perhaps is to
be comprehended analogically only by means
of the profoundest principle of the hitherto
unintelligible Hellenic genius--the phenomenon
of the reawakening of the Dionysian spirit
and the rebirth of tragedy?
There has never been another period in the
history of art in which so-called culture
and true art have been so estranged and opposed
as we may observe them to be at present.
We can understand why so feeble a culture
hates true art; it fears destruction from
its hands. But has not an entire cultural
form, namely, the Socratic-Alexandrian, exhausted
itself after culminating in such a daintily
tapering point as our present culture? If
heroes like Goethe and Schiller could not
succeed in breaking open the enchanted gate
which leads into the Hellenic magic mountain;
if with their most dauntless striving they
could not go beyond the longing gaze which
Goethe's Iphigenia casts from barbaric Tauris
to her home across the ocean, what could
the epigones of such heroes hope for--unless,
amid the mystic tones of reawakened tragic
music, the gate should open for them suddenly
of its own accord, from an entirely different
side, quite overlooked in all previous cultural
endeavors.
Let no one try to blight our faith in a yet-impending
rebirth of Hellenic antiquity; for this alone
gives us hope for a renovation and purification
of the German spirit through the fire magic
of music. What else could we name that might
awaken any comforting expectations for the
future in the midst of the desolation and
exhaustion of contemporary culture? In vain
we look for a single vigorously developed
root, for a spot of fertile and healthy soil:
everywhere there is dust and sand; everything
has become rigid and languishes. One who
is disconsolate and lonely could not choose
a better symbol than the knight with death
and devil, as Dürer has drawn him for us,
the armored knight with the iron, hard look,
who knows how to pursue his terrible path,
undeterred by his gruesome companions, and
yet without hope, alone with his horse and
dog. Our Schopenhauer was such a Dürer knight;
he lacked all hope, but he desired truth.
He has no peers.
But how suddenly the desert of our exhausted
culture, just described in such gloomy terms,
is changed when it is touched by the Dionysian
magic! A tempest seizes everything that has
outlived itself, everything that is decayed,
broken, and withered, and, whirling, shrouds
it in a cloud of red dust to carry it into
the air like a vulture. Confused, our eyes
look after what has disappeared; for what
they see has been raised as from a depression
into golden light, so full and green, so
amply alive, immeasurable and full of yearning.
Tragedy is seated amid this excess of life,
suffering, and pleasure, in sublime ecstasy,
listening to a distant melancholy song that
tells of the mothers of being whose names
are: Delusion, Will, Woe.
Yes, my friends, believe with me in Dionysian
life and the rebirth of tragedy. The age
of the Socratic man is over; put on wreaths
of ivy, put the thyrsus into your hand, and
do not be surprised when tigers and panther
lie down, fawning, at your feet. Only dare
to be tragic men; for you are to be redeemed.
You shall accompany the Dionysian pageant
from India to Greece. Prepare yourselves
for hard strife, but believe in the miracles
of your god.
21
Returning from these hortatory tones to the
mood befitting contemplation, I repeat that
we can learn only from the Greeks what such
an almost miraculously sudden awakening of
tragedy means for the innermost life ground
of a people. It is the people of the tragic
mysteries that fights the battles against
the Persians; and the people that fought
these wars in turn needs tragedy as a necessary
potion to recover. Who would have supposed
that precisely this people, after it had
been deeply agitated through several generations
by the strongest spasms of the Dionysian
demon, should still have been capable of
such a uniformly vigorous effusion of the
simplest political feeling, the most natural
patriotic instincts, and original manly desire
to fight? After all, one feels in every case
in which Dionysian excitement gains any significant
extent how the Dionysian liberation from
the fetters of the individual finds expression
first of all in a diminution of, in indifference
to, indeed, in hostility to, the political
instincts. Just as certainly, Apollo who
forms states is also the genius of the principium
individuationis, and state and patriotism
cannot live without an affirmation of the
individual personality. But from orgies a
people can take one path only, the path to
Indian Buddhism, and in order that this may
be endurable at all with its yearning for
the nothing, it requires these rare ecstatic
states with their elevation above space,
time, and the individual. These states in
turn demand a philosophy that teaches men
how to overcome by the force of an idea the
indescribable displeasure of the states that
lie between. Where the political drives are
taken to be absolutely valid, it is just
as necessary that a people should go to the
path toward the most extreme secularization
whose most magnificent but also most terrifying
expression may be found in the Roman imperium.
Placed between India and Rome, and pushed
toward a seductive choice, the Greeks succeeded
in inventing a third form, in classical purity--to
be sure, one they did not long use themselves,
but one that precisely for that reason gained
immortality. For that the favorites of the
gods die early, is true in all things; but
it is just as certain that they then live
eternally with the gods. After all, one should
not demand of what is noblest of all that
it should have the durable toughness of leather.
That staunch perseverance which characterized,
for example, the national instincts of the
Romans, probably does not belong among the
necessary predicates of perfection. But let
us ask by means of what remedy it was possible
for the Greeks during their great period,
in spite of the extraordinary strength of
their Dionysian and political instincts,
not to exhaust themselves either in ecstatic
brooding or in a consuming chase after worldly
power and worldly honor, but rather to attain
that splendid mixture which resembles a noble
wine in making one feel fiery and contemplative
at the same time. Here we must think clearly
of the tremendous power that stimulated,
purified, and discharged the whole life of
the people: tragedy. We cannot begin to sense
its highest value until it confronts us,
as it did the Greeks, as the quintessence
of all prophylactic powers of healing, as
the mediator that worked among the strongest
and in themselves most fatal qualities of
the people.
Tragedy absorbs the highest ecstasies of
music, so that it truly brings music, both
among the Greeks and among us, to its perfection;
but then it places the tragic myth and the
tragic hero next to it, and he, like a powerful
Titan, takes the whole Dionysian world upon
his back and thus relieves us of this burden.
On the other hand, by means of the same tragic
myth, in the person of the tragic hero; it
knows how to redeem us from the greedy thirst
for this existence, and with an admonishing
gesture it reminds us of another existence
and a higher pleasure for which the struggling
hero prepares himself by means of his destruction,
not by means of his triumphs. Between the
universal validity of its music and the listener,
receptive in his Dionysian state, tragedy
places a sublime parable, the myth, and deceives
the listener into feeling that the music
is merely the highest means to bring life
into the vivid world of myth. Relying on
this noble deception, it may now move its
limbs in dithyrambic dances and yield unhesitatingly
to an ecstatic feeling of freedom in which
it could not dare to wallow as pure music
without this deception. The myth protects
us against the music, while on the other
hand it alone gives music the highest freedom.
In return, music imparts to the tragic myth
an intense and convincing metaphysical significance
that word an image without this singular
help could never have attained. And above
all, it is through music that the tragic
spectator is overcome by an assured premonition
of a highest pleasure attained through destruction
and negation, so he feels as if the innermost
abyss of things spoke to him perceptibly.
If these last sentences have perhaps managed
to give only a preliminary expression to
these difficult ideas and are immediately
intelligible only to few, I nevertheless
may not desist at this point from trying
to stimulate my friends to further efforts
and must ask them to use a single example
of our common experience in order to prepare
themselves for a general insight. In giving
this example, I must not appeal to those
who use the images of what happens on the
stage, the words and emotions of the acting
persons, in order to approach with their
help the musical feeling; for these people
do not speak music as their mother tongue
and, in spite of this help, never get beyond
the entrance halls of musical perception,
without ever being able to as much as touch
the inner sanctum. Some of them, like Gervinus
[G. G. Gervinus, author of Shakespeare, and
Shakespeare Commentaries], do not even reach
the entrance halls. I must appeal only to
those who, immediately related to music,
have in it, as it were, their motherly womb,
and are related to things almost exclusively
through unconscious musical relations. To
these genuine musicians I direct the question
whether they can imagine a human being who
would be able to perceive the third act of
Tristan and Isolde, without any aid of word
and image, purely as a tremendous symphonic
movement, without expiring in a spasmodic
unharnessing of all the wings of the soul?
Suppose a human being has thus put his ear,
as it were, to the heart chamber of the world
will and felt the roaring desire for existence
pouring from there into all the veins of
the world, as a thundering current or as
the gentlest brook, dissolving into a mist--how
could he fail to break suddenly? How could
he endure to perceive the echo of innumerable
shouts of pleasure and woe in the "wide
space of the world night," enclosed
in the wretched glass capsule of the human
individual, without inexorably fleeing toward
his primordial home, as he hears this shepherd's
dance of metaphysics? But if such a work
could nevertheless be perceived as a whole,
without denial of individual existence; if
such a creation could be created without
smashing its creator--whence do we take the
solution of such a contradiction?
Here the tragic myth and the tragic hero
intervene between our highest musical emotion
and this music--at bottom only as symbols
of the most universal facts, of which only
music can speak so directly. But if our feelings
were those of entirely Dionysian beings,
myth as a symbol would remain totally ineffective
and unnoticed, and would never for a moment
keep us from listening to the re-echo of
the universalia ante rem [The universals
before the thing.]. Yet here the Apollinian
power erupts to restore the almost shattered
individual with the healing balm of blissful
illusion: suddenly we imagine we see only
Tristan, motionless, asking himself dully:
"The old tune, why does it wake me?"
And what once seemed to us like a hollow
sigh from the core of being now merely wants
to tell us how "desolate and empty the
sea." And where, breathless, we once
thought we were being extinguished in a convulsive
distention of all feelings, and little remained
to tie us to our present existence, we now
hear and see only the hero wounded to death,
yet not dying, with his despairing cry: "Longing!
Longing! In death still longing! for very
longing not dying!" And where, formerly
after such an excess and superabundance of
consuming agonies, the jubilation of the
horn cut through our hearts almost like the
ultimate agony, the rejoicing Kurwenal now
stands between us and this "jubilation
in itself," his face turned toward the
ship which carries Isolde. However powerfully
pity affects us, it nevertheless saves us
in a way from the primordial suffering of
the world, just as the symbolic image of
the myth saves us from the immediate perception
of the highest world-idea, just as thought
and word save us from the uninhibited effusion
of the unconscious will. The glorious Apollinian
illusion makes it appear as if even the tone
world confronted us as a sculpted world,
as if the fate of Tristan and Isolde had
been formed and molded in it, too, as in
an exceedingly tender and expressive material.
Thus the Apollinian tears us out of the Dionysian
universality and lets us find delight in
individuals; it attaches our pity to them,
and by means of them it satisfies our sense
of beauty which longs for great and sublime
forms; it presents images of life to us,
and incites us to comprehend in thought the
core of life they contain. With the immense
impact of the image, the concept, the ethical
teaching, and the sympathetic emotion, the
Apollinian tears man from his orgiastic self-annihilation
and blinds him to the universality of the
Dionysian process, deluding him into the
belief that he is seeing a single image of
the world (Tristan and Isolde, for instance),
and that, through music, he is merely supposed
to see it still better and more profoundly.
What can the healing magic of Apollo not
accomplish when it can even create the illusion
that the Dionysian is really in the service
of the Apollinian and capable of enhancing
its effects--as if music were essentially
the art of presenting an Apollinian content?
By means of the pre-established harmony between
perfect drama and its music, the drama attains
a superlative vividness unattainable in mere
spoken drama. In the independently moving
lines of the melody all the living figures
of the scene simplify themselves before us
to the distinctness of curved lines, and
the harmonies of these lines sympathize in
a most delicate manner with the events on
the stage. These harmonies make the relations
of things immediately perceptible to us in
a sensuous, by no means abstract manner,
and thus we perceive that it is only in these
relations that the essence of a character
and of a melodic line is revealed clearly.
And while music thus compels us to see more
and more profoundly than usual, and we see
the action on the stage as a delicate web,
the world of the stage is expanded infinitely
and illuminated for our spiritualized eye.
How could a word-poet furnish anything analogous,
when he strives to attain this internal expansion
and illumination of the visible stage-world
by means of a much more imperfect mechanism,
indirectly, proceeding from word and concept?
Although musical tragedy also avails itself
of the word, it can at the same time place
beside it the basis and origin of the word,
making the development of the word clear
to us, from the inside.
Concerning the process just described, however,
we may still say with equal assurance that
it is merely a glorious appearance, namely,
the aforementioned Apollinian illusion whose
influence aims to deliver us from the Dionysian
flood and excess. For, at bottom, the relation
of music to drama is precisely the reverse:
music is the real idea of the world, drama
is but the reflection of this idea, a single
silhouette of it. The identity between the
melody and the living figure, between the
harmony and the character relations of that
figure, is true in a sense opposite to what
one would suppose on the contemplation of
musical tragedy. Even if we agitate and enliven
the figure in the most visible manner, and
illuminate it from within, it still remains
merely a phenomenon from which no bridge
leads us to true reality, into the heart
of the world. But music speaks out of this
heart; and though countless phenomena of
the kind were to accompany this music, they
could never exhaust its essence, but would
always be nothing more than its externalized
copies.
As for the intricate relationship of music
and drama, nothing can be explained, while
everything may be confused, by the popular
and thoroughly false contrast of soul and
body; but the unphilosophical crudeness of
this contrast seems to have become--who knows
for what reasons--a readily accepted article
of faith among our aestheticians, while they
have learned nothing of the contrast of the
phenomenon and the thing-in- itself--or,
for equally unknown reasons, have not cared
to learn anything about it.
Should our analysis have established that
the Apollinian element in tragedy has by
means of its illusion gained a complete victory
over the primordial Dionysian element of
music, making music subservient to its aims,
namely, to make the drama as vivid as possible--it
would certainly be necessary to add a very
important qualification: at the most essential
point this Apollinian illusion is broken
and annihilated. The drama that, with the
aid of music, unfolds itself before us with
such inwardly illumined distinctness in all
its movements and figures, as if we saw the
texture coming into being on the loom as
the shuttle flies to and fro--attains as
a whole an effect that transcends all Apollinian
artistic effects. In the total effect of
tragedy, the Dionysian predominates once
again. Tragedy closes with a sound which
could never come from the realm of Apollinian
art. And thus the Apollinian illusion reveals
itself as what it really is--the veiling
during the performance of the tragedy of
the real Dionysian effect; but the latter
is so powerful that it ends by forcing the
Apollinian drama itself into a sphere where
it begins to speak with Dionysian wisdom
and even denies itself and its Apollinian
visibility. Thus the intricate relation of
the Apollinian and the Dionysian in tragedy
may really be symbolized by a fraternal union
of the two deities: Dionysus speaks the language
of Apollo; and Apollo, finally the language
of Dionysus and so the highest goal of tragedy
and of all art is attained.
22
Let the attentive friend imagine the effect
of a true musical tragedy purely and simply,
as he knows it from experience. I think I
have so portrayed the phenomenon of this
effect in both its phases that he can now
interpret his own experiences. For he will
recollect how with regard to the myth which
passed in front of him, he felt himself exalted
to a kind of omniscience, as if his visual
faculty were no longer merely a surface faculty
but capable of penetrating into the interior,
and as if he now saw before him, with the
aid of music, the waves of the will, the
conflict of motives, and the swelling flood
of the passions, sensually visible, as it
were, like a multitude of vividly moving
lines and figures; and he felt he could dip
into the most delicate secrets of unconscious
emotions. While he thus becomes conscious
of the highest exaltation of his instincts
for clarity and transfiguration, he nevertheless
feels just as definitely that this long series
of Apollinian artistic effects still does
not generate that blessed continuance in
will-less contemplation which the plastic
artist and the epic poet, that is to say,
the strictly Apollinian artists, evoke in
him with their artistic productions: to wit,
the justification of the world of the individuatio
attained by this contemplation--which is
the climax and essence of Apollinian art.
He beholds the transfigured world of the
stage and nevertheless denies it. He sees
the tragic hero before him in epic clearness
and beauty, and nevertheless rejoices in
his annihilation. He comprehends the action
deep down, and yet likes to flee into the
incomprehensible. He feels the actions of
the hero to be justified, and is nevertheless
still more elated when these actions annihilate
their agent. He shudders at the sufferings
which will befall the hero, and yet anticipates
in them a higher, much more overpowering
joy. He sees more extensively and profoundly
than ever, and yet wishes he were blind.
How must we derive this curious internal
bifurcation, this blunting of the Apollinian
point, if not from the Dionysian magic that,
though apparently exciting the Apollinian
emotions to their highest pitch, still retains
the power to force into its service his excess
of Apollinian force?
The tragic myth is to be understood only
as a symbolization of Dionysian wisdom through
Apollinian artifices. The myth leads the
world of phenomena to its limits where it
denies itself and seeks to flee back again
into the womb of the true and only reality,
where it then seems to commence its metaphysical
swansong, like Isolde:
In the rapture ocean's billowing roll, in
the fragrance waves' ringing sound, in the
world breath's wafting whole-- to drown,
to sink-- unconscious--highest joy!
Thus we use the experiences of the truly
aesthetic listener to bring to mind the tragic
artist himself as he creates his figures
like a fecund divinity of individuation (so
his work can hardly be understood as an "imitation
of nature") and as his vast Dionysian
impulse then devours his entire world of
phenomena, in order to let us sense beyond
it, and through its destruction, the highest
artistic primal joy, in the bosom of the
primordially One. Of course our aestheticians
have nothing to say about this return to
the primordial home, or the fraternal union
of the two art-deities, nor of the excitement
of the hearer which is Apollinian as well
as Dionysian; but they never tire of characterizing
the struggle of the hero with fate, the triumph
of the moral world order, or the purgation
of the emotions through tragedy, as the essence
of the tragic. And their indefatigability
makes me think that perhaps they are not
aesthetically sensitive at all, but react
merely as moral beings when listening to
a tragedy.
Never since Aristotle has an explanation
of the tragic effect been offered from which
aesthetic states or an aesthetic activity
of the listener could be inferred. Now the
serious events are supposed to prompt pity
and fear to discharge themselves in a way
that relieves us; now we are supposed to
feel elevated and inspired by the triumph
of good and noble principles, at the sacrifice
of the hero in the interest of a moral vision
of the universe. I am sure that for countless
men precisely this, and only this, is the
effect of tragedy, but it plainly follows
that all these men, together with their interpreting
aestheticians, have had no experience of
tragedy as a supreme art.
The pathological discharge, the catharsis
of Aristotle, of which philologists are not
sure whether it should be included among
medical or moral phenomena, recalls a remarkable
notion of Goethe's. "Without a lively
pathological interest," he says, "I,
too, have never yet succeeded in elaborating
a tragic situation of any kind, and hence
I have rather avoided than sought it. Can
it perhaps have been yet another merit of
the ancients that the deepest pathos was
with them merely aesthetic play, while with
us the truth of nature must cooperate in
order to produce such a work?"
We can now answer this profound final question
in the affirmative after our glorious experiences,
having found to our astonishment that the
deepest pathos can indeed be merely aesthetic
play in the case of musical tragedy. Therefore
we are justified in believing that now for
the first time the primal phenomenon of the
tragic can be described with some degree
of success. Anyone who still persists in
talking only of those vicarious effects proceeding
from extra-aesthetic spheres, and who does
not feel that he is above the pathological-moral
process, should despair of his aesthetic
nature: should we recommend to him as an
innocent equivalent the interpretation of
Shakespeare after the manner of Gervinus
and the diligent search for poetic justice?
Thus the aesthetic listener is also reborn
with the rebirth of tragedy. In his place
in the theater, a curious quid pro quo used
to sit with half moral and half scholarly
pretensions--the "critic." Everything
in his sphere so far has been artificial
and merely whitewashed with an appearance
of life. The performing artist was really
at a loss how to deal with a listener who
comported himself so critically; so he, as
well as the dramatist or operatic composer
who inspired him, searched anxiously for
the last remains of life in a being so pretentiously
barren and incapable of enjoyment. So far,
however, such "critics" have constituted
the audience: the student, the schoolboy,
even the innocuous female had been unwittingly
prepared by education and newspapers for
this kind of perception of works of art.
Confronted with such a public, the nobler
natures among the artists counted upon exciting
their moral-religious emotions, and the appeal
to the moral world-order intervened vicariously
where some powerful artistic magic ought
to enrapture the genuine listener. Or some
more imposing, or at all events exciting,
trend of the contemporary political and social
world was so vividly presented by the dramatist
that the listener could forget his critical
exhaustion and abandon himself to emotions
similar to those felt in patriotic or warlike
moments, or before the tribune of parliament,
or at the condemnation of crime and vice--an
alienation from the true aims of art that
sometimes had to result in an outright cult
of tendentiousness. The attempt, for example,
to use the theater as an institution for
the moral education of the people, still
taken seriously in Schiller's time, is already
reckoned among the incredible antiques of
a dated type of education. While the critic
got the upper hand in the theater and concert
hall, the journalist in the schools, and
the press in society, art degenerated into
a particularly lowly topic of conversation,
and aesthetic criticism was used as a means
of uniting a vain, distracted, selfish, and
moreover piteously unoriginal sociability
whose character is suggested by Schopenhauer's
parable of the porcupines. As a result, art
has never been so much talked about and so
little esteemed. But is it still possible
to have intercourse with a person capable
of conversing about Beethoven or Shakespeare?
Let each answer this question according to
his own feelings: he will at any rate show
by his answer his conception of "culture,"
provided he at least tries to answer the
question, and has not already become dumbfounded
with astonishment.
On the other hand, many a being more nobly
and delicately endowed by nature, though
he may have gradually become a critical barbarian
in the manner described, might have something
to say about the unexpected as well as totally
unintelligible effect that a successful performance
of Lohengrin, for example, had on him--except
that perhaps there was no helpful interpreting
hand to guide him; so the incomprehensibly
different and altogether incomparable sensation
that thrilled him remained isolated and,
like a mysterious star, became extinct after
a short period of brilliance. But it was
then that he had an inkling of what an aesthetic
listener is.
23
Whoever wishes to test rigorously to what
extent he himself is related to the true
aesthetic listener or belongs to the community
of the Socratic-critical persons needs only
to examine sincerely the feeling with which
he accepts miracles represented on the stage:
whether he feels his historical sense, which
insists on strict psychological causality,
insulted by them, whether he makes a benevolent
concession and admits the miracle as a phenomenon
intelligible to childhood but alien to him,
or whether he experiences anything else.
For in this way he will be able to determine
to what extent he is capable of understanding
myth as a concentrated image of the world
that, as a condensation of phenomena, cannot
dispense with miracles. It is probable, however,
that almost everyone, upon close examination,
finds that the critical-historical spirit
of our culture has so affected him that he
can only make the former existence of myth
credible to himself by means of scholarship,
through intermediary abstractions. But without
myth every culture loses the healthy natural
power of its creativity: only a horizon defined
by myths completes and unifies a whole cultural
movement. Myth alone saves all the powers
of the imagination and of the Apollinian
dream from their aimless wanderings. The
images of the myth have to be the unnoticed
omnipresent demonic guardians, under whose
care the young soul grows to maturity and
whose signs help the man to interpret his
life and struggles. Even the state knows
no more powerful unwritten laws than the
mythical foundation that guarantees its connection
with religion and its growth from mythical
notions.
By way of comparison let us now picture the
abstract man, untutored by myth; abstract
education; abstract morality; abstract law;
abstract state; let us imagine the lawless
roving of the artistic imagination, unchecked
by any native myth; let us think of a culture
that has no fixed and sacred primordial site
but is doomed to exhaust all possibilities
and to nourish itself wretchedly on all other
cultures--there we have the present age,
the result of that Socratism which is bent
on the destruction of myth. And now the mythless
man stands eternally hungry, surrounded by
all past ages, and digs and grubs for roots,
even if he has to dig for them among the
remotest antiquities. The tremendous historical
need of our unsatisfied modern culture, the
assembling around one of countless other
cultures, the consuming desire for knowledge--what
does all this point to, if not to the loss
of myth, the loss of the mythical home, the
mythical maternal womb? Let us ask ourselves
whether the feverish and uncanny excitement
of this culture is anything but the greedy
seizing and snatching at food of a hungry
man--and who would care to contribute anything
to a culture that cannot be satisfied no
matter how much it devours, and at whose
contact the most vigorous and wholesome nourishment
is changed into "history and criticism"?
We should also have to regard our German
character with sorrowful despair, if it had
already become inextricably entangled in,
or even identical with, its culture, as we
may observe to our horror in the case of
civilized France. What for a long time was
the great advantage of France and the cause
of her vast superiority, namely, this very
identity of people and culture, might compel
us in view of this sight to congratulate
ourselves that this so questionable culture
of ours has as yet nothing in common with
the noble core of our people's character?
On the contrary, all our hopes stretch out
longingly toward the perception that beneath
this restlessly palpitating cultural life
and convulsion there is concealed a glorious,
intrinsically healthy, primordial power that,
to be sure, stirs vigorously only at intervals
in stupendous moments, and then continues
to dream of a future awakening. It is from
this abyss that the German Reformation came
forth; and in its chorales the future tune
of German music resounded for the first time.
So deep, courageous, and spiritual, so exuberantly
good and tender did this chorale of Luther
sound--as the first Dionysian luring call
breaking forth from dense thickets at the
approach of spring. And in competing echoes
the solemnly exuberant procession of Dionysian
revelers responded, to whom we are indebted
for German music--and to whom we shall be
indebted for the rebirth of German myth.
I know that I must now lead the sympathizing
and attentive friend to an elevated position
of lonely contemplation, where he will have
but a few companions, and I call out encouragingly
to him that we must hold fast to our luminous
guides, the Greeks. To purify our aesthetic
insight, we have previously borrowed from
them the two divine figures who rule over
separate realms of art, and concerning whose
mutual contact and enhancement we have acquired
some notion through Greek tragedy. It had
to appear to us that the demise of Greek
tragedy was brought about through a remarkable
and forcible dissociation of these two primordial
artistic drives. To this process there corresponded
a degeneration and transformation of the
character of the Greek people, which calls
for serious reflection on how necessary and
close the fundamental connections are between
art and the people, myth and custom, tragedy
and the state. This demise of tragedy was
at the same time the demise of myth. Until
then the Greeks had felt involuntarily impelled
to relate all their experiences immediately
to their myths, indeed to understand them
only in this relation. Thus even the immediate
present had to appear to them right away
sub specie aeterni [Under the aspect of the
eternal.] and in a certain sense as timeless.
But the state no less than art dipped into
this current of the timeless to find rest
in it from the burden and the greed of the
moment. And any people--just as, incidentally,
also any individual--is worth only as much
as it is able to press upon its experiences
the stamp of the eternal; for thus it is,
as it were, desecularized and shows its unconscious
inward convictions of the relativity of time
and of the true, that is metaphysical, significance
of life. The opposite of this happens when
a people begins to comprehend itself historically
and to smash the mythical works that surround
it. At that point we generally find a decisive
secularization, a break with the unconscious
metaphysics of its previous existence, together
with all its ethical consequences. Greek
art and pre-eminently Greek tragedy delayed
above all the destruction of myth. One had
to destroy tragedy, too, in order to be able
to live away from the soil of home, uninhibited,
in the wilderness of thought, custom, and
deed. Even now this metaphysical drive still
tries to create for itself a certainly attenuated
form of transfiguration, in the Socratism
of science that strives for life; but on
the lower steps, this same drive led only
to a feverish search that gradually lost
itself in a pandemonium of myths and superstitions
that were collected from all over and piled
up in confusion: nevertheless the Greek sat
among them with an unstilled heart until
he learned to mask this fever with Greek
cheerfulness and Greek frivolity, becoming
a Graeculus [A contemptuous term for a Greek.],
or he numbed his mind completely in some
dark Oriental superstition.
Since the reawakening of Alexandrian-Roman
antiquity in the fifteenth century we have
approximated this state in the most evident
manner, after a long interlude that is difficult
to describe. On the heights we encounter
the same overabundant lust for knowledge,
the same unsatisfied delight in discovery,
the same tremendous secularization, and beside
it a homeless roving, a greedy crowding around
foreign tables, a frivolous deification of
the present, or a dully dazed retreat--everything
sub specie saeculi [Under the aspect of the
times, or the spirit of the age.], of the
"present age." And these same symptoms
allow us to infer the same lack at the heart
of this culture, the destruction of myth.
It scarcely seems possible to be continuously
successful at transplanting a foreign myth
without irreparably damaging the tree by
this transplantation. In one case it may
perhaps be strong and healthy enlugh to eliminate
this foreign element in a terrible fight;
usually, however, it must consume itself,
sick and withered or in diseased superfoetation.
We think so highly of the pure and vigorous
core of the German character that we dare
to expect of it above all others this elimination
of the forcibly implanted foreign elements,
and consider it possible that the German
spirit will return to itself. Some may suppose
that this spirit must begin its fight with
the elimination of everything Romanic. If
so they may recognize an external preparation
and encouragement in the victorious fortitude
and bloody glory of the last war; but one
must still seek the inner necessity in the
ambition to be always worthy of the sublime
champions on this way, Luther as well as
our great artists and poets. But let him
never believe that he could fight similar
fights without the gods of his house, or
his mythical home, without "bringing
back" all German things! And if the
German should hesitantly look around for
a leader who might bring him back again into
his long lost home whose ways and paths he
scarcely knows anymore, let him merely listen
to the ecstatically luring call of the Dionysian
bird that hovers above him and wants to point
the way for him.
24
Among the peculiar art effects of musical
tragedy we had to emphasize an Apollinian
illusion by means of which we were supposed
to be saved from the immediate unity with
Dionysian music, while our musical excitement
could discharge itself in an Apollinian field
and in relation to a visible intermediary
world that had been interposed. At the same
time we thought that we had observed how
precisely through this discharge the intermediary
world of the action on the stage, and the
drama in general, had been made visible and
intelligible form the inside to a degree
that in all other Apollinian art remains
unattained. Where the Apollinian receives
wings from the spirit of music and soars,
we thus found the highest intensification
of its powers, and in this fraternal union
of Apollo and Dionysus we had to recognize
the apex of the Apollinian as well as the
Dionysian aims of art.
To be sure, the Apollinian projection that
is thus illuminated from inside by music
does not achieve the peculiar effect of the
weaker degrees of Apollinian art. What the
epic or the animated stone can do, compelling
the contemplative eye to find calm delight
in the world of individuation, that could
not be attained here, in spite of a higher
animation and clarity. We looked at the drama
and with penetrating eye reached its inner
world of motives--and yet we felt as if only
a parable passed us by, whose most profound
meaning we almost thought we could guess
and that we wished to draw away like a curtain
in order to behold the primordial image behind
it. The brightest clarity of the image did
not suffice us, for this seemed to wish just
as much to reveal something as to conceal
something. Its revelation, being like a parable,
seemed to summon us to teat the veil and
to uncover the mysterious background; but
at the same time this all-illuminated total
visibility cast a spell over the eyes and
prevented them from penetrating deeper.
Those who have never had the experience of
having to see at the same time that they
also longed to transcend all seeing will
scarcely be able to imagine how definitely
and clearly these two processes coexist and
are felt at the same time, as one contemplates
the tragic myth. But all truly aesthetic
spectators will confirm that among the peculiar
effects of tragedy this coexistence is the
most remarkable. Now transfer this phenomenon
of the aesthetic spectator into an analogous
process in the tragic artist, and you will
have understood the genesis of the tragic
myth. With the Apollinian art sphere he shares
the complete pleasure in mere appearance
and in seeing, yet at the same time he negates
this pleasure and finds a still higher satisfaction
in the destruction of the visible world of
mere appearance.
The content of the tragic myth is , first
of all, an epic event and the glorification
of the fighting hero. But what is the origin
of this enigmatic trait that the suffering
and the fate of the hero, the most painful
triumphs, the most agonizing oppositions
of motives, in short, the exemplification
of this wisdom of Silenus, or, to put it
aesthetically, that which is ugly and disharmonic,
is represented ever anew in such countless
forms and with such a distinct preference--and
precisely in the most fruitful and youthful
period of a people? Surely a higher pleasure
must be perceived in all this.
That life really so tragic would least of
all explain the origin of an art form--assuming
that art is not merely imitation of the reality
of nature but rather a metaphysical supplement
of the reality of nature, placed beside it
for its overcoming. The tragic myth too,
insofar as it belongs to art at all, participates
fully in this metaphysical intention of art
to transfigure. But what does it transfigure
when it presents the world of appearance
in the image of the suffering hero? Least
of all the "reality" of this world
of appearance, for it says to us: "Look
there! Look closely! This is your life, this
is the hand on the clock of your existence."
And the myth should show us this life in
order to thus transfigure it? But if not,
in what then lies the aesthetic pleasure
with which we let these images, too, pass
before us? I asked about the aesthetic pleasure,
though I know full well that many of these
images also produce at times a moral delight,
for example, under the form of pity or moral
triumph. But those who would derive the effect
of the tragic solely from these moral sources--which,
to be sure, has been the custom in aesthetics
all too long--should least of all believe
that they have thus accomplished something
for art, which above all must demand purity
in its sphere. If you would explain the tragic
myth, the first requirement is to seek the
pleasure that is peculiar to it in the purely
aesthetic sphere, without transgressing into
the region of pity, fear, or the morally
sublime. How can the ugly and the disharmonic,
the content of the tragic myth, stimulate
aesthetic pleasure?
Here it becomes necessary to take a bold
running start and leap into a metaphysics
of art, by repeating the sentence written
above [Section 5], that existence and thee
world seem justified only as an aesthetic
phenomenon. In this sense, it is precisely
the tragic myth that has to convince us that
even the ugly and disharmonic are part of
an artistic game that the will in the eternal
amplitude of its pleasure plays with itself.
But this primordial phenomenon of Dionysian
art is difficult to grasp, and there is only
one direct way to make it intelligible and
grasp it immediately: through the wonderful
significance of musical dissonance. Quite
generally, only music, placed beside the
world, can give us an idea of what is meant
by the justification of the world as an aesthetic
phenomenon. The joy aroused by the tragic
myth has the same origin as the joyous sensation
of dissonance in music. The Dionysian, with
its primordial joy experienced even in pain,
is the common source of music and tragic
myth.
Is it not possible that by calling to our
aid the musical relation of dissonance we
may meanwhile have made the difficult problem
of the tragic effect much easier? For we
now understand what it means to wish to see
tragedy and at the same time to long to get
beyond all seeing: referring to the artistically
employed dissonances, we should have to characterize
the corresponding state by saying that we
desire to hear and at the same time long
to get beyond all hearing. The striving for
the infinite, the wing-beat of longing that
accompanies the highest delight in clearly
perceived reality, reminds us that in both
states we must recognize a Dionysian phenomenon:
again and again it reveals to us the playful
construction and destruction of the individual
world as the overflow of a primordial delight.
Thus the dark Heraclitus compares the world-building
force to a playing child that places stones
here and there and builds sand hills only
to overthrow them again.
In order, then, to form a true estimate of
the Dionysian capacity of a people, we must
not only think of their music, but also just
as necessarily of their tragic myth, as the
second witness of this capacity. Considering
this extremely close relationship between
music and myth, one must suppose that a degeneration
and depravation of the one will involve a
deterioration of the other, if the weakening
of the myth really expresses a weakening
of the Dionysian capacity. Concerning both,
however, a glance at the development of the
German character should not leave us in any
doubt. In the opera, just as in the abstract
character of our mythless existence, in an
art degenerated to mere entertainment as
will as in a life guided by concepts, the
inartistic as well as life-consuming nature
of Socratic optimism had revealed itself
to us. Yet we were comforted by indications
that nevertheless in some inaccessible abyss
the German spirit still rests and dreams,
undestroyed, in glorious health, profundity
and Dionysian strength, like a knight sunk
in slumber; and from this abyss the Dionysian
song rises to our ears to let us know that
this German knight is still dreaming his
primordial Dionysian myth in blissfully serious
visions. Let no one believe that the German
spirit has forever lost its mythical home
when it can sill understand so plainly the
voices of the birds that tell of that home.
Some day it will find itself awake in all
the morning freshness following a tremendous
sleep: then it will slay dragons, destroy
vicious dwarfs, wake Brünhilde--and even
Wotan's spear will not be able to stop this
course!
My friends, you who believe in Dionysian
music, you also know what tragedy means to
us. There we have tragic myth reborn from
music--and in this myth we can hope for everything
and forget what is most painful. What is
most painful for all of us, however, is--the
prolonged degradation in which the German
genius has lived, estranged from house and
home, in the service of vicious dwarfs. You
understand my words--as you will also, in
conclusion, understand my hopes.
25
Music and tragic myth are equally expressions
of the Dionysian capacity of a people, and
they are inseparable. Both derive from a
sphere of art that lies beyond the Apollinian;
both transfigure a region in whose joyous
chords dissonance as well as the terrible
image of the world fade away charmingly;
both play with the sting of displeasure,
trusting in their exceedingly powerful magic
arts; and by means of this play both justify
the existence of even the "worst world."
Thus the Dionysian is seen to be, compared
to the Apollinian, the eternal and original
artistic power that first calls the whole
world of phenomena into existence--and it
is only in the midst of this world that a
new transfiguring illusion becomes necessary
in order to keep the animated world of individuation
alive.
If we could imagine dissonance become man--and
what else is man?--this dissonance, to be
able to live, would need a splendid illusion
that would cover dissonance with a veil of
beauty. This is the true artistic aim of
Apollo in whose name we comprehend all those
countless illusions of the beauty of mere
appearance that at every moment make life
worth living at all and prompt the desire
to live on in order to experience the next
moment.
Of this foundation of all existence--the
Dionysian basic ground of the world--not
one whit more may enter the consciousness
of the human individual than can be overcome
again by this Apollinian power of transfiguration.
Thus these two art drives must unfold their
powers in a strict proportion, according
to the law of eternal justice. Where the
Dionysian powers rise up as impetuously as
we experience them now, Apollo, too, must
already have descended among us, wrapped
in a cloud; and the next generation will
probably behold his most ample beautiful
effects.
That this effect should be necessary, everybody
should be able to feel most assuredly by
means of intuition, provided he has ever
felt, if only in a dream, that he was carried
back into an ancient Greek existence. Walking
under lofty Ionic colonnades, looking up
toward a horizon that was cut off by pure
and noble lines, finding reflections of his
transfigured shape in the shining marble
at his side, and all around him solemnly
striding or delicately moving human beings,
speaking with harmonious voices and in a
rhythmic language of gestures--in view of
this continual influx of beauty, would he
not have to exclaim, raising his hand to
Apollo: "Blessed people of Hellas! How
great must Dionysus be among you if the god
of Delos considers such magic necessary to
heal your dithyrambic madness!"
To a man in such a mood, however, an old
Athenian, looking up at him with the sublime
eyes of Aeschylus, might reply: "But
say this, too, curious stranger: how much
did this people have to suffer to be able
to become so beautiful! But now follow me
to witness a tragedy, and sacrifice with
me in the temple of both deities!"
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