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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Three Philosophical Poets, by George Santayana
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Three Philosophical Poets
+ Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe
+
+Author: George Santayana
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2011 [EBook #35612]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THREE PHILOSOPHICAL POETS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
+(From images generously made available by the Internet
+Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+THREE PHILOSOPHICAL POETS
+
+LUCRETIUS, DANTE, AND GOETHE
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE SANTAYANA
+
+
+PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HARVARD UNIVERSITY
+
+
+HARVARD STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
+
+VOLUME I
+
+
+CAMBRIDGE
+
+HARVARD UNIVERSITY
+
+1910
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+The present volume is composed, with a few additions, of six lectures
+read at Columbia University in February, 1910, and repeated in April of
+the same year, at the University of Wisconsin. These lectures, in turn,
+were based on a regular course which I had been giving for some time at
+Harvard College. Though produced under such learned auspices, my book
+can make no great claims to learning. It contains the impressions of an
+amateur, the appreciations of an ordinary reader, concerning three great
+writers, two of whom at least might furnish matter enough for the
+studies of a lifetime, and actually have academies, libraries, and
+university chairs especially consecrated to their memory. I am no
+specialist in the study of Lucretius; I am not a Dante scholar nor a
+Goethe scholar. I can report no facts and propose no hypotheses about
+these men which are not at hand in their familiar works, or in
+well-known commentaries upon them. My excuse for writing about them,
+notwithstanding, is merely the human excuse which every new poet has for
+writing about the spring. They have attracted me; they have moved me to
+reflection; they have revealed to me certain aspects of nature and of
+philosophy which I am prompted by mere sincerity to express, if anybody
+seems interested or willing to listen. What I can offer the benevolent
+reader, therefore, is no learned investigation. It is only a piece of
+literary criticism, together with a first broad lesson in the history of
+philosophy--and, perhaps, in philosophy itself.
+
+ G.S.
+
+
+_Harvard College_
+
+_June, 1910_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+I
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+_Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe sum up the chief phases of European
+philosophy,--naturalism, supernaturalism, and romanticism--Ideal
+relation between philosophy and poetry._
+
+II
+
+LUCRETIUS
+
+_Development of Greek cosmology--Democritus--Epicurean moral sentiment
+--Changes inspired by it in the system of Democritus--Accidental
+alliance of materialism with hedonism--Imaginative value of naturalism:
+The Lucretian Venus, or the propitious movement in nature--The Lucretian
+Mars, or the destructive movement--Preponderant melancholy, and the
+reason for it--Materiality of the soul--The fear of death and the fear
+of life--Lucretius a true poet of nature--Comparison with Shelley and
+Wordsworth--Things he might have added consistently: Indefeasible worth
+of his insight and sentiment._
+
+III
+
+DANTE
+
+_Character of Platonism--Its cosmology a parable--Combination of this
+with Hebraic philosophy of history--Theory of the Papacy and the Empire
+adopted by Dante--His judgement on Florence--Dante as a lyric
+poet--Beatrice the woman, the symbol, and the reality--Love, magic, and
+symbolism constitutive principles of Dante's universe--Idea of the
+Divine Comedy--The scheme of virtues and vices--Retributive theory of
+rewards and punishments--Esoteric view of this, which makes even
+punishment intrinsic to the sins--Examples--Dantesque cosmography--The
+genius of the poet--His universal scope--His triumphant execution of the
+Comedy--His defects, in spite of which he remains the type of a supreme
+poet._
+
+IV
+
+GOETHE'S FAUST _Page_
+
+_The romantic spirit--The ideals of the Renaissance--Expression of both
+in the legendary Faust--Marlowe's version--Tendency to vindicate
+Faust--Contrast with Calderon's "Wonder-working Magician"--The original
+Faust of Goethe,--universal ambition and eternal dissatisfaction
+--Modifications--The series of experiments in living--The story of
+Gretchen fitted in--Goethe's naturalistic theory of life and
+rejuvenation: Helen--The classic manner and the judgement on
+classicism--Faust's last ambition--The conflict over his soul and his
+ascent to heaven symbolical--Moral of the whole._
+
+V
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+_Comparison of the three poets--Their relative rank--Ideal of a
+philosophic or comprehensive poet--Untried possibilities of art._
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The sole advantage in possessing great works of literature lies in what
+they can help us to become. In themselves, as feats performed by their
+authors, they would have forfeited none of their truth or greatness if
+they had perished before our day. We can neither take away nor add to
+their past value or inherent dignity. It is only they, in so far as they
+are appropriate food and not poison for us, that can add to the present
+value and dignity of our minds. Foreign classics have to be retranslated
+and reinterpreted for each generation, to render their old naturalness
+in a natural way, and keep their perennial humanity living and capable
+of assimilation. Even native classics have to be reapprehended by every
+reader. It is this continual digestion of the substance supplied by the
+past that alone renders the insights of the past still potent in the
+present and for the future. Living criticism, genuine appreciation, is
+the interest we draw from year to year on the unrecoverable capital of
+human genius.
+
+Regarded from this point of view, as substances to be digested, the
+poetic remains of Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe (though it is his _Faust_
+only that I shall speak of) afford rather a varied feast. In their
+doctrine and genius they may seem to be too much opposed to be at all
+convergent or combinable in their wisdom. Some, who know and care for
+one, perhaps, of these poets, may be disposed to doubt whether they have
+anything vital to learn from the other two. Yet it is as a pupil--I hope
+a discriminating pupil--of each in turn that I mean to speak; and I
+venture to maintain that in what makes them great they are compatible;
+that without any vagueness or doubleness in one's criterion of taste one
+may admire enthusiastically the poetry of each in turn; and that one may
+accept the essential philosophy, the positive intuition, of each,
+without lack of definition or system in one's own thinking.
+
+Indeed, the diversity of these three poets passes, if I may use the
+Hegelian dialect, into a unity of a higher kind. Each is typical of an
+age. Taken together they sum up all European philosophy. Lucretius
+adopts the most radical and the most correct of those cosmological
+systems which the genius of early Greece had devised. He sees the world
+to be one great edifice, one great machine, all its parts reacting upon
+one another, and growing out of one another in obedience to a general
+pervasive process or life. His poem describes the nature, that is, the
+birth and composition, of all things. It shows how they are compounded
+out of elements, and how these elements, which he thinks are atoms in
+perpetual motion, are being constantly redistributed, so that old
+things perish and new things arise. Into this view of the world he fits
+a view of human life as it ought to be led under such conditions. His
+materialism is completed by an aspiration towards freedom and quietness
+of spirit. Allowed to look once upon the wonderful spectacle, which is
+to repeat itself in the world for ever, we should look and admire, for
+to-morrow we die; we should eat, drink, and be merry, but moderately and
+with much art, lest we die miserably, and die to-day.
+
+This is one complete system of philosophy,--materialism in natural
+science, humanism in ethics. Such was the gist of all Greek philosophy
+before Socrates, of that philosophy which was truly Hellenic and
+corresponded with the movement which produced Greek manners, Greek
+government, and Greek art--a movement towards simplicity, autonomy, and
+reasonableness in everything, from dress to religion. Such is the gist
+also of what may be called the philosophy of the Renaissance, the
+reassertion of science and liberty in the modern world, by Bacon, by
+Spinoza, by the whole contemporary school that looks to science for its
+view of the facts, and to the happiness of men on earth for its ideal.
+This system is called naturalism; and of this Lucretius is the
+unrivalled poet.
+
+Skip a thousand years and more, and a contrasting spectacle is before
+us. All minds, all institutions, are dominated by a religion that
+represents the soul as a pilgrim upon earth; the world is fallen and
+subject to the devil; pain and poverty are considered normal, happiness
+impossible here and to be hoped for only in a future life, provided the
+snares and pleasures of the present life have not entrapped us. Meantime
+a sort of Jacob's ladder stretches from the stone on which the wayfarer
+lays his head into the heaven he hopes for; and the angels he sees
+ascending and descending upon it are beautiful stories, wonderful
+theories, and comforting rites. Through these he partakes, even on
+earth, of what will be his heavenly existence. He partly understands his
+destiny; his own history and that of the world are transfigured before
+him and, without ceasing to be sad, become beautiful. The raptures of a
+perfect conformity with the will of God, and of union with Him, overtake
+him in his prayers. This is supernaturalism, a system represented in
+Christendom chiefly by the Catholic Church, but adopted also by the
+later pagans, and widespread in Asia from remote antiquity down to the
+present time. Little as the momentary temper of Europe and America may
+now incline to such a view, it is always possible for the individual, or
+for the race, to return to it. Its sources are in the solitude of the
+spirit and in the disparity, or the opposition, between what the spirit
+feels it is fitted to do, and what, in this world, it is condemned to
+waste itself upon. The unmatched poet of this supernaturalism is Dante.
+
+Skip again some five hundred years, and there is another change of
+scene. The Teutonic races that had previously conquered Europe have
+begun to dominate and understand themselves. They have become
+Protestants, or protesters against the Roman world. An infinite fountain
+of life seems to be unlocked within their bosom. They turn successively
+to the Bible, to learning, to patriotism, to industry, for new objects
+to love and fresh worlds to conquer; but they have too much vitality, or
+too little maturity, to rest in any of these things. A demon drives them
+on; and this demon, divine and immortal in its apparent waywardness, is
+their inmost self. It is their insatiable will, their radical courage.
+Nay, though this be a hard saying to the uninitiated, their will is the
+creator of all those objects by which it is sometimes amused, and
+sometimes baffled, but never tamed. Their will summons all opportunities
+and dangers out of nothing to feed its appetite for action; and in that
+ideal function lies their sole reality. Once attained, things are
+transcended. Like the episodes of a spent dream, they are to be smiled
+at and forgotten; the spirit that feigned and discarded them remains
+always strong and undefiled; it aches for new conquests over new
+fictions. This is romanticism. It is an attitude often found in English
+poetry, and characteristic of German philosophy. It was adopted by
+Emerson and ought to be sympathetic to Americans; for it expresses the
+self-trust of world-building youth, and mystical faith in will and
+action. The greatest monument to this romanticism is Goethe's _Faust._
+
+Can it be an accident that the most adequate and probably the most
+lasting exposition of these three schools of philosophy should have been
+made by poets? Are poets, at heart, in search of a philosophy? Or is
+philosophy, in the end, nothing but poetry? Let us consider the
+situation.
+
+If we think of philosophy as an investigation into truth, or as
+reasoning upon truths supposed to be discovered, there is nothing in
+philosophy akin to poetry. There is nothing poetic about the works of
+Epicurus, or St. Thomas Aquinas, or Kant; they are leafless forests. In
+Lucretius and in Dante themselves we find passages where nothing is
+poetical except the metre, or some incidental ornament. In such passages
+the form of poetry is thrown over the substance of prose, as Lucretius
+himself confesses where he says: "As when physicians would contrive to
+administer loathsome wormwood to little boys they first moisten the rim
+of the cup round about with sweet and golden honey, that the children's,
+unsuspecting youth may be beguiled--to the lips, but no further--while
+they drink down the bitter potion, by deception not betrayed, but
+rather by that stratagem made whole and restored;... so I have willed to
+set forth our doctrine before thee in sweet-sounding Pierian song, and
+to smear it, as it were, with the Muses' honey."[1]
+
+But poetry cannot be spread upon things like butter; it must play upon
+them like light, and be the medium through which we see them. Lucretius
+does himself an injustice. If his philosophy had been wormwood to him,
+he could not have said, as he does just before this passage: "Like a
+sharp blow of the thyrsus, a great hope of praise vibrates through my
+heart and fills my breast with tender love of the Muses, whereby now,
+instinct with flowering fancy, I traverse pathless haunts of the
+Pierides, by no man's foot trodden before. It is joy to reach undefiled
+fountains and quaff; it is joy to gather fresh flowers and weave a
+matchless crown for my head of those bays with which never yet the Muses
+veiled the brow of any man; first, in that I teach sublime truths and
+come to free the soul from the strangling knots of superstition; then,
+in that on so dark a theme I pour forth so clear a song, suffusing all
+with poetic beauty,... if haply by such means I might keep thy mind
+intent upon my verses, until thine eye fathoms the whole structure of
+nature, and the fixed form that makes it beautiful."[2]
+
+Here, I think, we have the solution to our doubt. The reasonings and
+investigations of philosophy are arduous, and if poetry is to be linked
+with them, it can be artificially only, and with a bad grace. But the
+vision of philosophy is sublime. The order it reveals in the world is
+something beautiful, tragic, sympathetic to the mind, and just what
+every poet, on a small or on a large scale, is always trying to catch.
+
+In philosophy itself investigation and reasoning are only preparatory
+and servile parts, means to an end. They terminate in insight, or what
+in the noblest sense of the word may be called _theory, [Greek:
+Theoria]_,--a steady contemplation of all things in their order and
+worth. Such contemplation is imaginative. No one can reach it who has
+not enlarged his mind and tamed his heart. A philosopher who attains it
+is, for the moment, a poet; and a poet who turns his practised and
+passionate imagination on the order of all things, or on anything in the
+light of the whole, is for that moment a philosopher.
+
+Nevertheless, even if we grant that the philosopher, in his best
+moments, is a poet, we may suspect that the poet has his worst moments
+when he tries to be a philosopher, or rather, when he succeeds in being
+one. Philosophy is something reasoned and heavy; poetry something
+winged, flashing, inspired. Take almost any longish poem, and the parts
+of it are better than the whole. A poet is able to put together a few
+words, a cadence or two, a single interesting image. He renders in that
+way some moment of comparatively high tension, of comparatively keen
+sentiment. But at the next moment the tension is relaxed, the sentiment
+has faded, and what succeeds is usually incongruous with what went
+before, or at least inferior. The thought drifts away from what it had
+started to be. It is lost in the sands of versification. As man is now
+constituted, to be brief is almost a condition of being inspired.
+
+Shall we say, then,--and I now broach an idea by which I set some
+store,--that poetry is essentially short-winded, that what is poetic is
+necessarily intermittent in the writings of poets, that only the
+fleeting moment, the mood, the episode, can be rapturously felt, or
+rapturously rendered, while life as a whole, history, character, and
+destiny are objects unfit for imagination to dwell on, and repellent to
+poetic art? I cannot think so. If it be a fact, as it often is, that we
+find little things pleasing and great things arid and formless, and if
+we are better poets in a line than in an epic, that is simply due to
+lack of faculty on our part, lack of imagination and memory, and above
+all to lack of discipline.
+
+This might be shown, I think, by psychological analysis, if we cared to
+rely on something so abstract and so debatable. For in what does the
+short-winded poet himself excel the common unimaginative person who
+talks or who stares? Is it that he thinks even less? Rather, I suppose,
+in that he feels more; in that his moment of intuition, though fleeting,
+has a vision, a scope, a symbolic something about it that renders it
+deep and expressive. Intensity, even momentary intensity, if it can be
+expressed at all, comports fullness and suggestion compressed into that
+intense moment. Yes, everything that comes to us at all must come to us
+at some time or other. It is always the fleeting moment in which we
+live. To this fleeting moment the philosopher, as well as the poet, is
+actually confined. Each must enrich it with his endless vistas, vistas
+necessarily focused, if they are to be disclosed at all, in the eye of
+the observer, here and now. What makes the difference between a moment
+of poetic insight and a vulgar moment is that the passions of the poetic
+moment have more perspective. Even the short-winded poet selects his
+words so that they have a magic momentum in them which carries us, we
+know not how, to mountain-tops of intuition. Is not the poetic quality
+of phrases and images due to their concentrating and liberating the
+confused promptings left in us by a long experience? When we feel the
+poetic thrill, is it not that we find sweep in the concise and depth in
+the clear, as we might find all the lights of the sea in the water of a
+jewel? And what is a philosophic thought but such an epitome?
+
+If a short passage is poetical because it is pregnant with suggestion of
+a few things, which stretches our attention and makes us rapt and
+serious, how much more poetical ought a vision to be which was pregnant
+with all we care for? Focus a little experience, give some scope and
+depth to your feeling, and it grows imaginative; give it more scope and
+more depth, focus all experience within it, make it a philosopher's
+vision of the world, and it will grow imaginative in a superlative
+degree, and be supremely poetical. The difficulty, after having the
+experience to symbolize, lies only in having enough imagination to hold
+and suspend it in a thought; and further to give this thought such
+verbal expression that others maybe able to decipher it, and to be
+stirred by it as by a wind of suggestion sweeping the whole forest of
+their memories.
+
+Poetry, then, is not poetical for being short-winded or incidental, but,
+on the contrary, for being comprehensive and having range. If too much
+matter renders it heavy, that is the fault of the poet's weak intellect,
+not of the outstretched world. A quicker eye, a more synthetic
+imagination, might grasp a larger subject with the same ease. The
+picture that would render this larger subject would not be flatter and
+feebler for its extent, but, on the contrary, deeper and stronger, since
+it would possess as much unity as the little one with greater volume. As
+in a supreme dramatic crisis all our life seems to be focused in the
+present, and used in colouring our consciousness and shaping our
+decisions, so for each philosophic poet the whole world of man is
+gathered together; and he is never so much a poet as when, in a single
+cry, he summons all that has affinity to him in the universe, and
+salutes his ultimate destiny. It is the acme of life to understand life.
+The height of poetry is to speak the language of the gods.
+
+But enough of psychological analysis and of reasoning in the void.
+Three historical illustrations will prove my point more clearly and more
+conclusively.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[1] Lucretius, I. 936-47:
+
+ Veluti pueris absinthia tetra medentes
+ Cum dare conantur, prius oras pocula circura
+ Contingunt mellis dulci flavoque liquore,
+ Ut puerorum aetas improvida ludificetur
+ Labrorum tenus, interea perpotet amarum
+ Absinthi laticem, deceptaque non capiatur,
+ Sed potius tali pacto recreata valescat:
+ Sic ego nunc ... volui tibi suaviloquenti
+ Carmine Pierio rationem exponere nostram,
+ Et quasi musaeo dulci contingere melle.
+
+
+[2] Lucretius, i. 922-34, 948-50:
+
+ Acri
+ Percussit thyrso laudis spes magna meum cor
+ Et simul incussit suavem mi in pectus amorem
+ Musarum, quo nunc instinctus mente vigenti
+ Avia Pieridum peragro loca nullius ante
+ Trita solo: iuvat integros accedere fontes,
+ Atque haurire; iuvatque novos decerpere flores,
+ Insignemque meo capiti petere inde coronam,
+ Unde prius nulli velarint tempora musae.
+ Primum, quod magnis doceo de rebus, et artis
+ Religionum animum nodis exsolvere pergo:
+ Deinde, quod obscura de re tam lucida pango
+ Carmina, musaeo contingens cuncta lepore....
+ Si tibi forte animum tali ratione tenere
+ Versibus in nostris possem, dum perspicis omnem
+ Naturam rerum, qua constet compta figura.
+
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+LUCRETIUS
+
+
+
+There is perhaps no important poem the antecedents of which can be
+traced so exhaustively as can those of the work of Lucretius, _De Rerum
+Natura_. These antecedents, however, do not lie in the poet himself. If
+they did, we should not be able to trace them, since we know nothing, or
+next to nothing, about Lucretius the man. In a chronicon, compiled by
+St. Jerome largely out of Suetonius, in which miscellaneous events are
+noted which occurred in each successive year, we read for the year 94
+B.C.: "Titus Lucretius, poet, is born. After a love-philtre had turned
+him mad, and he had written, in the intervals of his insanity, several
+books which Cicero revised, he killed himself by his own hand in the
+forty-fourth year of his age."
+
+The love-philtre in this report sounds apocryphal; and the story of the
+madness and suicide attributes too edifying an end to an atheist and
+Epicurean not to be suspected. If anything lends colour to the story it
+is a certain consonance which we may feel between its tragic incidents
+and the genius of the poet as revealed in his work, where we find a
+strange scorn of love, a strange vehemence, and a high melancholy. It is
+by no means incredible that the author of such a poem should have been
+at some time the slave of a pathological passion, that his vehemence
+and inspiration should have passed into mania, and that he should have
+taken his own life. But the untrustworthy authority of St. Jerome cannot
+assure us whether what he repeats is a tradition founded on fact or an
+ingenious fiction.
+
+Our ignorance of the life of Lucretius is not, I think, much to be
+regretted. His work preserves that part of him which he himself would
+have wished to preserve. Perfect conviction ignores itself, proclaiming
+the public truth. To reach this no doubt requires a peculiar genius
+which is called intelligence; for intelligence is quickness in seeing
+things as they are. But where intelligence is attained, the rest of a
+man, like the scaffolding to a finished building, becomes irrelevant. We
+do not wish it to intercept our view of the solid structure, which alone
+was intended by the artist--if he was building for others, and was not a
+coxcomb. It is his intellectual vision that the naturalist in particular
+wishes to hand down to posterity, not the shabby incidents that preceded
+that vision in his own person. These incidents, even if they were by
+chance interesting, could not be repeated in us; but the vision into
+which the thinker poured his faculties, and to which he devoted his
+vigils, is communicable to us also, and may become a part of ourselves.
+
+Since Lucretius is thus identical for us with his poem, and is lost in
+his philosophy, the antecedents of Lucretius are simply the stages by
+which his conception of nature first shaped itself in the human mind. To
+retrace these stages is easy; some of them are only too familiar; yet
+the very triteness of the subject may blind us to the grandeur and
+audacity of the intellectual feat involved. A naturalistic conception of
+things is a great work of imagination,--greater, I think, than any
+dramatic or moral mythology: it is a conception fit to inspire great
+poetry, and in the end, perhaps, it will prove the only conception able
+to inspire it.
+
+We are told of the old Xenophanes that he looked up into the round
+heaven and cried, "The All is One." What is logically a truism may often
+be, imaginatively, a great discovery, because no one before may have
+thought of the obvious analogy which the truism registers. So, in this
+case, the unity of all things is logically an evident, if barren, truth;
+for the most disparate and unrelated worlds would still be a multitude,
+and so an aggregate, and so, in some sense, a unity. Yet it was a great
+imaginative feat to cast the eye deliberately round the entire horizon,
+and to draw mentally the sum of all reality, discovering that reality
+makes such a sum, and may be called one; as any stone or animal, though
+composed of many parts, is yet called one in common parlance. It was
+doubtless some prehistoric man of genius, long before Xenophanes, who
+first applied in this way to all things together that notion of unity
+and wholeness which everybody had gained by observation of things
+singly, and who first ventured to speak of "the world." To do so is to
+set the problem for all natural philosophy, and in a certain measure to
+anticipate the solution of that problem; for it is to ask how things
+hang together, and to assume that they do hang together in one way or
+another.
+
+To cry "The All is One," and to perceive that all things are in one
+landscape and form a system by their juxtaposition, is the rude
+beginning of wisdom in natural philosophy. But it is easy to go farther,
+and to see that things form a unity in a far deeper and more mysterious
+way. One of the first things, for instance, that impresses the poet, the
+man of feeling and reflection, is that these objects that people the
+world all pass away, and that the place there-of knows them no more.
+Yet, when they vanish, nothingness does not succeed; other things arise
+in their stead. Nature remains always young and whole in spite of death
+at work everywhere; and what takes the place of what continually
+disappears is often remarkably like it in character. Universal
+instability is not incompatible with a great monotony in things; so that
+while Heraclitus lamented that everything was in flux, Ecclesiastes, who
+was also entirely convinced of that truth, could lament that there was
+nothing new under the sun.
+
+This double experience of mutation and recurrence, an experience at once
+sentimental and scientific, soon brought with it a very great thought,
+perhaps the greatest thought that mankind has ever hit upon, and which
+was the chief inspiration of Lucretius. It is that all we observe about
+us, and ourselves also, may be so many passing forms of a permanent
+substance. This substance, while remaining the same in quantity and in
+inward quality, is constantly redistributed; in its redistribution it
+forms those aggregates which we call things, and which we find
+constantly disappearing and reappearing. All things are dust, and to
+dust they return; a dust, however, eternally fertile, and destined to
+fall perpetually into new, and doubtless beautiful, forms. This notion
+of substance lends a much greater unity to the outspread world; it
+persuades us that all things pass into one another, and have a common
+ground from which they spring successively, and to which they return.
+
+The spectacle of inexorable change, the triumph of time, or whatever we
+may call it, has always been a favourite theme for lyric and tragic
+poetry, and for religious meditation. To perceive universal mutation, to
+feel the vanity of life, has always been the beginning of seriousness.
+It is the condition for any beautiful, measured, or tender philosophy.
+Prior to that, everything is barbarous, both in morals and in poetry;
+for until then mankind has not learned to renounce anything, has not
+outgrown the instinctive egotism and optimism of the young animal, and
+has not removed the centre of its being, or of its faith, from the will
+to the imagination.
+
+To discover substance, then, is a great step in the life of reason, even
+if substance be conceived quite negatively as a term that serves merely
+to mark, by contrast, the unsubstantiality, the vanity, of all
+particular moments and things. That is the way in which Indian poetry
+and philosophy conceived substance. But the step taken by Greek physics,
+and by the poetry of Lucretius, passes beyond. Lucretius and the Greeks,
+in observing universal mutation and the vanity of life, conceived behind
+appearance a great intelligible process, an evolution in nature. The
+reality became interesting, as well as the illusion. Physics became
+scientific, which had previously been merely spectacular.
+
+Here was a much richer theme for the poet and philosopher, who was
+launched upon the discovery of the ground and secret causes of this gay
+or melancholy flux. The understanding that enabled him to discover these
+causes did for the European what no Indian mystic, what no despiser of
+understanding anywhere, suffers himself to do; namely, to dominate,
+foretell, and transform this changing show with a virile, practical
+intelligence. The man who discovers the secret springs of appearances
+opens to contemplation a second positive world, the workshop and busy
+depths of nature, where a prodigious mechanism is continually supporting
+our life, and making ready for it from afar by the most exquisite
+adjustments. The march of this mechanism, while it produces life and
+often fosters it, yet as often makes it difficult and condemns it to
+extinction. This truth, which the conception of natural substance first
+makes intelligible, justifies the elegies which the poets of illusion
+and disillusion have always written upon human things. It is a truth
+with a melancholy side; but being a truth, it satisfies and exalts the
+rational mind, that craves truth as truth, whether it be sad or
+comforting, and wishes to pursue a possible, not an impossible,
+happiness.
+
+So far, Greek science had made out that the world was one, that there
+was a substance, that this was a physical substance, distributed and
+moving in space. It was matter. The question remained, What is the
+precise nature of matter, and how does it produce the appearances we
+observe? The only answer that concerns us here is that given by
+Lucretius; an answer he accepted from Epicurus, his master in
+everything, who in turn had accepted it from Democritus. Now Democritus
+had made a notable advance over the systems that selected one obvious
+substance, like water, or collected all the obvious substances, as
+Anaxagoras had done, and tried to make, the world out of them.
+Democritus thought that the substance of everything ought not to have
+any of the qualities present in some things and absent in others; it
+ought to have only the qualities present in all things. It should be
+_merely_ matter. Materiality, according to him, consisted of extension,
+figure, and solidity; in the thinnest ether, if we looked sharp enough,
+we should find nothing but particles possessing these properties. All
+other qualities of things were apparent only, and imputed to them by a
+convention of the mind. The mind was a born mythologist, and projected
+its feelings into their causes. Light, colour, taste, warmth, beauty,
+excellence, were such imputed and conventional qualities; only space and
+matter were real. But empty space was no less real than matter.
+Consequently, although the atoms of matter never changed their form,
+real changes could take place in nature, because their position might
+change in a real space.
+
+Unlike the useless substance of the Indians, the substance of Democritus
+could offer a calculable, ground for the flux of appearances; for this
+substance was distributed unequally in the void, and was constantly
+moving. Every appearance, however fleeting, corresponded to a precise
+configuration of substance; it arose with that configuration and
+perished with it. This substance, accordingly, was physical, not
+metaphysical. It was no dialectical term, but a scientific anticipation,
+a prophecy as to what an observer who should be properly equipped would
+discover in the interior of bodies. Materialism is not a system of
+metaphysics; it is a speculation in chemistry and physiology, to the
+effect that, if analysis could go deep enough, it would find that all
+substance was homogeneous, and that all motion was regular.
+
+Though matter was homogeneous, the forms of the ultimate particles,
+according to Democritus, were various; and sundry combinations of them
+constituted the sundry objects in nature. Motion was not, as the vulgar
+(and Aristotle) supposed, unnatural, and produced magically by some
+moral cause; it had been eternal and was native to the atoms. On
+striking, they rebounded; and the mechanical currents or vortices which
+these contacts occasioned formed a multitude of stellar systems, called
+worlds, with which infinite space was studded.
+
+Mechanism as to motion, atomism as to structure, materialism as to
+substance, that is the whole system of Democritus. It is as wonderful in
+its insight, in its sense for the ideal demands of method and
+understanding, as it is strange and audacious in its simplicity. Only
+the most convinced rationalist, the boldest prophet, could embrace it
+dogmatically; yet time has largely given it the proof. If Democritus
+could look down upon the present state of science, he would laugh, as he
+was in the habit of doing, partly at the confirmation we can furnish to
+portions of his philosophy, and partly at our stupidity that cannot
+guess the rest.
+
+There are two maxims in Lucretius that suffice, even to this day, to
+distinguish a thinker who is a naturalist from one who is not.
+"Nothing," he says, "arises in the body in order that we may use it, but
+what arises brings forth its use."[1] This is that discarding of final
+causes on which all progress in science depends. The other maxim runs:"
+One thing will grow plain when compared with another: and blind night
+shall not obliterate the path for thee, before thou hast thoroughly
+scanned the ultimate things of nature; so much will things throw light
+on things."[2] Nature is her own standard; and if she seems to us
+unnatural, there is no hope for our minds.
+
+The ethics of Democritus, in so far as we may judge from scanty
+evidence, were merely descriptive or satirical. He was an aristocratic
+observer, a scorner of fools. Nature was laughing at us all; the wise
+man considered his fate and, by knowing it, raised himself in a measure
+above it. All living things pursued the greatest happiness they could
+see their way to; but they were marvellously short-sighted; and the
+business of the philosopher was to foresee and pursue the greatest
+happiness that was really possible. This, in so rough a world, was to be
+found chiefly in abstention and retrenchment. If you asked for little,
+it was more probable that the event would not disappoint you. It was
+important not to be a fool, but it was very hard.
+
+The system of Democritus was adopted by Epicurus, but not because
+Epicurus had any keenness of scientific vision. On the contrary,
+Epicurus, the Herbert Spencer of antiquity, was in his natural
+philosophy an encyclopaedia of second-hand knowledge. Prolix and minute,
+vague and inconsistent, he gathered his scientific miscellany with an
+eye fixed not on nature, but on the exigencies of an inward faith,--a
+faith accepted on moral grounds, deemed necessary to salvation, and
+defended at all costs, with any available weapon. It is instructive that
+materialism should have been adopted at that juncture on the same
+irrelevant moral grounds on which it has usually been rejected.
+
+Epicurus, strange as it may sound to those who have heard, with horror
+or envy, of wallowing in his sty, Epicurus was a saint. The ways of the
+world filled him with dismay. The Athens of his time, which some of us
+would give our eyes to see, retained all its splendour amid its
+political decay; but nothing there interested or pleased Epicurus.
+Theatres, porches, gymnasiums, and above all the agora, reeked, to his
+sense, with vanity and folly. Retired in his private garden, with a few
+friends and disciples, he sought the ways of peace; he lived
+abstemiously; he spoke gently; he gave alms to the poor; he preached
+against wealth, against ambition, against passion. He defended free-will
+because he wished to exercise it in withdrawing from the world, and in
+not swimming with the current. He denied the supernatural, since belief
+in it would have a disquieting influence on the mind, and render too
+many things compulsory and momentous. There was no future life: the art
+of living wisely must not be distorted by such wild imaginings.
+
+All things happened in due course of nature; the gods were too remote
+and too happy, secluded like good Epicureans, to meddle with earthly
+things. Nothing ruffled what Wordsworth calls their "voluptuous
+unconcern." Nevertheless, it was pleasant to frequent their temples.
+There, as in the spaces where they dwelt between the worlds, the gods
+were silent and beautiful, and wore the human form. Their statues, when
+an unhappy man gazed at them, reminded him of happiness; he was
+refreshed and weaned for a moment from the senseless tumult of human
+affairs. From those groves and hallowed sanctuaries the philosopher
+returned to his garden strengthened in his wisdom, happier in his
+isolation, more friendly and more indifferent to all the world. Thus the
+life of Epicurus, as St. Jerome bears witness, was "full of herbs,
+fruits, and abstinences." There was a hush in it, as of bereavement. His
+was a philosophy of the decadence, a philosophy of negation, and of
+flight from the world.
+
+Although science for its own sake could not interest so monkish a
+nature, yet science might be useful in buttressing the faith, or in
+removing objections to it. Epicurus therefore departed from the reserve
+of Socrates, and looked for a natural philosophy that might support his
+ethics. Of all the systems extant--and they were legion--he found that
+of Democritus the most helpful and edifying. Better than any other it
+would persuade men to renounce the madness that must be renounced and to
+enjoy the pleasures that may be enjoyed. But, since it was adopted on
+these external and pragmatic grounds, the system of Democritus did not
+need to be adopted entire. In fact, one change at least was imperative.
+The motion of the atoms must not be wholly regular and mechanical.
+Chance must be admitted, that Fate might be removed. Fate was a
+terrifying notion. It was spoken of by the people with superstitious
+unction. Chance was something humbler, more congenial to the man in the
+street. If only the atoms were allowed to deflect a little now and then
+from their courses, the future might remain unpredictable, and free-will
+might be saved. Therefore, Epicurus decreed that the atoms deflected,
+and fantastic arguments were added to show that this intrusion of chance
+would aid in the organization of nature; for the declension of the
+atoms, as it is called, would explain how the original parallel downpour
+of them might have yielded to vortices, and so to organized bodies. Let
+us pass on.
+
+Materialism, like any system of natural philosophy, carries with it no
+commandments and no advice. It merely describes the world, including the
+aspirations and consciences of mortals, and refers all to a material
+ground. The materialist, being a man, will not fail to have preferences,
+and even a conscience, of his own; but his precepts and policy will
+express, not the logical implications of his science, but his human
+instincts, as inheritance and experience may have shaped them. Any
+system of ethics might accordingly coexist with materialism; for if
+materialism declares certain things (like immortality) to be impossible,
+it cannot declare them to be undesirable. Nevertheless, it is not likely
+that a man so constituted as to embrace materialism will be so
+constituted as to pursue things which he considers unattainable. There
+is therefore a psychological, though no logical, bond between
+materialism and a homely morality.
+
+The materialist is primarily an observer; and he will probably be such
+in ethics also; that is, he will have no ethics, except the emotion
+produced upon him by the march of the world. If he is an _esprit fort_
+and really disinterested, he will love life; as we all love perfect
+vitality, or what strikes us as such, in gulls and porpoises. This, I
+think, is the ethical sentiment psychologically consonant with a
+vigorous materialism: sympathy with the movement of things, interest in
+the rising wave, delight at the foam it bursts into, before it sinks
+again. Nature does not distinguish the better from the worse, but the
+lover of nature does. He calls better what, being analogous to his own
+life, enhances his vitality and probably possesses some vitality of its
+own. This is the ethical feeling of Spinoza, the greatest of modern
+naturalists in philosophy; and we shall see how Lucretius, in spite of
+his fidelity to the ascetic Epicurus, is carried by his poetic ecstasy
+in the same direction.
+
+But mark the crux of this union: the materialist will love the life of
+nature when he loves his own life; but if he should hate his own life,
+how should the life of nature please him? Now Epicurus, for the most
+part, hated life. His moral system, called hedonism, recommends that
+sort of pleasure which has no excitement and no risk about it. This
+ideal is modest, and even chaste, but it is not vital. Epicurus was
+remarkable for his mercy, his friendliness, his utter horror of war, of
+sacrifice, of suffering. These are not sentiments that a genuine
+naturalist would be apt to share. Pity and repentance, Spinoza said,
+were vain and evil; what increased a man's power and his joy increased
+his goodness also. The naturalist will believe in a certain hardness, as
+Nietzsche did; he will incline to a certain scorn, as the laughter of
+Democritus was scornful. He will not count too scrupulously the cost of
+what he achieves; he will be an imperialist, rapt in the joy of
+achieving something. In a word, the moral hue of materialism in a
+formative age, or in an aggressive mind, would be aristocratic and
+imaginative; but in a decadent age, or in a soul that is renouncing
+everything, it would be, as in Epicurus, humanitarian and timidly
+sensual.
+
+We have now before us the antecedents and components of Lucretius' poem
+on nature. There remains the genius of the poet himself. The greatest
+thing about this genius is its power of losing itself in its object, its
+impersonality. We seem to be reading not the poetry of a poet about
+things, but the poetry of things themselves. That things have their
+poetry, not because of what we make them symbols of, but because of
+their own movement and life, is what Lucretius proves once for all to
+mankind.
+
+Of course, the poetry we see in nature is due to the emotion the
+spectacle produces in us; the life of nature might be as romantic and
+sublime as it chose, it would be dust and ashes to us if there were
+nothing sublime and romantic in ourselves to be stirred by it to
+sympathy. But our emotion may be ingenuous; it may be concerned with
+what nature really is and does, has been and will do for ever. It need
+not arise from a selfish preoccupation with what these immense realities
+involve for our own persons or may be used to suggest to our
+self-indulgent fancy. No, the poetry of nature may be discerned merely
+by the power of intuition which it awakens and the understanding which
+it employs. These faculties, more, I should say, than our moodiness or
+stuffy dreams, draw taut the strings of the soul, and bring out her full
+vitality and music. Naturalism is a philosophy of observation, and of an
+imagination that extends the observable; all the sights and sounds of
+nature enter into it, and lend it their directness, pungency, and
+coercive stress. At the same time, naturalism is an intellectual
+philosophy; it divines substance behind appearance, continuity behind
+change, law behind fortune. It therefore attaches all those sights and
+sounds to a hidden background that connects and explains them. So
+understood, nature has depth as well as surface, force and necessity as
+well as sensuous variety. Before the sublimity of this insight, all
+forms of the pathetic fallacy seem cheap and artificial. Mythology, that
+to a childish mind is the only possible poetry, sounds like bad rhetoric
+in comparison. The naturalistic poet abandons fairy land, because he has
+discovered nature, history, the actual passions of man. His imagination
+has reached maturity; its pleasure is to dominate, not to play.
+
+Poetic dominion over things as they are is seen best in Shakespeare for
+the ways of men, and in Lucretius for the ways of nature. Unapproachably
+vivid, relentless, direct in detail, he is unflinchingly grand and
+serious in his grouping of the facts. It is the truth that absorbs him
+and carries him along. He wishes us to be convinced and sobered by the
+fact, by the overwhelming evidence of thing after thing, raining down
+upon us, all bearing witness with one voice to the nature of the world.
+
+Suppose, however,--and it is a tenable supposition,--that Lucretius is
+quite wrong in his science, and that there is no space, no substance,
+and no nature. His poem would then lose its pertinence to our lives and
+personal convictions; it would not lose its imaginative grandeur. We
+could still conceive a world composed as he describes. Fancy what
+emotions those who lived in such a world would have felt on the day when
+a Democritus or a Lucretius revealed to them their actual situation. How
+great the blindness or the madness dissipated, and how wonderful the
+vision gained! How clear the future, how intelligible the past, how
+marvellous the swarming atoms, in their unintentional, perpetual
+fertility! What the sky is to our eyes on a starry night, that every
+nook and cranny of nature would resemble, with here and there the
+tentative smile of life playing about those constellations. Surely that
+universe, for those who lived in it, would have had its poetry. It would
+have been the poetry of naturalism. Lucretius, thinking he lived in such
+a world, heard the music of it, and wrote it down.
+
+And yet, when he set himself to make his poem out of the system of
+Epicurus, the greatness of that task seems to have overwhelmed him. He
+was to unfold for the first time, in sonorous but unwieldy Latin, the
+birth and nature of all things, as Greek subtlety had discerned them. He
+was to dispel superstition, to refute antagonists, to lay the sure
+foundations of science and of wisdom, to summon mankind compellingly
+from its cruel passions and follies to a life of simplicity and peace.
+He was himself combative and distracted enough--as it is often our
+troubles, more than our attainments, that determine our ideals. Yet in
+heralding the advent of human happiness, and in painting that of the
+gods, he was to attain his own, soaring upon the strong wings of his
+hexameters into an ecstasy of contemplation and enthusiasm. When it is
+so great an emotion to read these verses, what must it have been to
+compose them? Yet could he succeed? Could such great things fall to his
+lot? Yes, they might, if only the creative forces of nature, always
+infinite and always at hand, could pass into his brain and into his
+spirit; if only the seeds of corruption and madness, which were always
+coursing through the air, could be blown back for a moment; and if the
+din of civil conflicts could be suspended while he thought and wrote. To
+a fortunate conjunction of atoms, a child owes his first being. To a
+propitious season and atmosphere, a poet owes his inspiration and his
+success. Conscious that his undertaking hangs upon these chance
+conjunctions, Lucretius begins by invoking the powers he is about to
+describe, that they may give him breath and genius enough to describe
+them. And at once these powers send him a happy inspiration, perhaps a
+happy reminiscence of Empedocles. There are two great perspectives which
+the moralist may distinguish in the universal drift of atoms,-a creative
+movement, producing what the moralist values, and a destructive
+movement, abolishing the same. Lucretius knows very well that this
+distinction is moral only, or as people now say, subjective. No one else
+has pointed out so often and so clearly as he that nothing arises in
+this world not helped to life by the death of some other thing;[3] so
+that the destructive movement creates and the creative movement
+destroys. Yet from the point of view of any particular life or interest,
+the distinction between a creative force and a destructive force is real
+and all-important. To make it is not to deny the mechanical structure of
+nature, but only to show how this mechanical structure is fruitful
+morally, how the outlying parts of it are friendly or hostile to me or
+to you, its local and living products.
+
+This double colouring of things is supremely interesting to the
+philosopher; so much so that before his physical science has reached the
+mechanical stage, he will doubtless regard the double aspect which
+things present to him as a dual principle in these things themselves. So
+Empedocles had spoken of Love and Strife as two forces which
+respectively gathered and disrupted the elements, so as to carry on
+between them the Penelope's labour of the world, the one perpetually
+weaving fresh forms of life, and the other perpetually undoing them.[4]
+
+It needed but a slight concession to traditional rhetoric in order to
+exchange these names, Love and Strife, which designated divine powers
+in Empedocles, into the names of Venus and Mars, which designated the
+same influences in Roman mythology. The Mars and Venus of Lucretius are
+not moral forces, incompatible with the mechanism of atoms; they are
+this mechanism itself, in so far as it now produces and now destroys
+life, or any precious enterprise, like this of Lucretius in composing
+his saving poem. Mars and Venus, linked in each other's arms, rule the
+universe together; nothing arises save by the death of some other thing.
+Yet when what arises is happier in itself, or more congenial to us, than
+what is destroyed, the poet says that Venus prevails, that she woos her
+captive lover to suspend his unprofitable raging. At such times it is
+spring on earth; the storms recede (I paraphrase the opening
+passage),[5] the fields are covered with flowers, the sunshine floods
+the serene sky, and all the tribes of animals feel the mighty impulse of
+Venus in their hearts.
+
+The corn ripens in the plains, and even the sea bears in safety the
+fleets that traverse it.
+
+Not least, however, of these works of Venus is the Roman people. Never
+was the formative power of nature better illustrated than in the
+vitality of this race, which conquered so many other races, or than in
+its assimilative power, which civilized and pacified them. Legend had
+made Venus the mother of Aeneas, and Aeneas the progenitor of the
+Romans. Lucretius seizes on this happy accident and identifies the Venus
+of fable with the true Venus, the propitious power in all nature, of
+which Rome was indeed a crowning work. But the poet's work, also, if it
+is to be accomplished worthily, must look to the same propitious
+movement for its happy issue and for its power to persuade. Venus must
+be the patron of his art and philosophy. She must keep Memmius from the
+wars, that he may read, and be weaned from frivolous ambitions; and she
+must stop the tumult of constant sedition, that Lucretius may lend his
+undivided mind to the precepts of Epicurus, and his whole heart to a
+sublime friendship, which prompts him to devote to intense study all the
+watches of the starry night, plotting the course of each invisible atom,
+and mounting almost to the seat of the gods.[6]
+
+This impersonation in the figure of Venus of whatever makes for life
+would not be legitimate--it would really contradict a mechanical view of
+nature--if it were not balanced by a figure representing the opposite
+tendency, the no less universal tendency towards death.
+
+The Mars of the opening passage, subdued for a moment by the
+blandishments of love, is raging in all the rest of the poem in his
+irrepressible fury. These are the two sides of every transmutation, that
+in creating, one thing destroys another; and this transmutation being
+perpetual,--nothing being durable except the void, the atoms, and their
+motion,--it follows that the tendency towards death is, for any
+particular thing, the final and victorious tendency. The names of Venus
+and Mars, not being essential to the poet's thought, are allowed to drop
+out, and the actual processes they stand for are described nakedly; yet,
+if the poem had ever been finished, and Lucretius had wished to make the
+end chime with the beginning, and represent, as it were, one great
+cycle of the world, it is conceivable that he might have placed at the
+close a mythical passage to match that at the beginning; and we might
+have seen Mars aroused from his luxurious lethargy, reasserting his
+immortal nature, and rushing, firebrand in hand, from the palace of love
+to spread destruction throughout the universe, till all things should
+burn fiercely, and be consumed together. Yet not quite all; for the
+goddess herself would remain, more divine and desirable than ever in her
+averted beauty. Instinctively into her bosom the God of War would sink
+again, when weary and drunk with slaughter; and a new world would arise
+from the scattered atoms of the old.
+
+These endless revolutions, taken in themselves, exactly balance; and I
+am not sure that, impartially considered, it is any sadder that new
+worlds should arise than that this world should always continue.
+Besides, nature cannot take from us more than she has given, and it
+would be captious and thankless in us to think of her as destructive
+only, or destructive essentially, after the unspeculative fashion of
+modern pessimists. She destroys to create, and creates to destroy, her
+interest (if we may express it so) being not in particular things, nor
+in their continuance, but solely in the movement that underlies them, in
+the flux of substance beneath. Life, however, belongs to form, and not
+to matter; or in the language of Lucretius, life is an _eventum_, a
+redundant ideal product or incidental aspect, involved in the
+equilibration of matter; as the throw of sixes is an _eventum,_ a
+redundant ideal product or incidental aspect, occasionally involved in
+shaking a dice-box. Yet, as this throw makes the acme and best possible
+issue of a game of dice, so life is the acme and best possible issue of
+the dance of atoms; and it is from the point of view of this _eventum_
+that the whole process is viewed by us, and is judged. Not until that
+happy chance has taken place, do we exist morally, or can we reflect or
+judge at all. The philosopher is at the top of the wave, he is the foam
+in the rolling tempest; and as the wave must have risen before he bursts
+into being, all that he lives to witness is the fall of the wave. The
+decadence of all he lives by is the only prospect before him; his whole
+philosophy must be a prophecy of death. Of the life that may come after,
+when the atoms come together again, he can imagine nothing; the life he
+knows and shares, all that is life to him, is waning and almost spent.
+
+Therefore Lucretius, who is nothing if not honest, is possessed by a
+profound melancholy. Vigorous and throbbing as are his pictures of
+spring, of love, of ambition, of budding culture, of intellectual
+victory, they pale before the vivid strokes with which he paints the
+approach of death--fatigue of the will, lassitude in pleasure,
+corruption and disintegration in society, the soil exhausted, the wild
+animals tamed or exterminated, poverty, pestilence, and famine at hand;
+and for the individual, almost at once, the final dissipation of the
+atoms of his soul, escaping from a relaxed body, to mingle and lose
+themselves in the universal flaw. Nothing comes out of nothing, nothing
+falls back into nothing, if we consider substance; but everything comes
+from nothing and falls back into nothing if we consider things--the
+objects of love and of experience. Time can make no impression on the
+void or on the atoms; nay, time is itself an _eventum_ created by the
+motion of atoms in the void; but the triumph of time is absolute over
+persons, and nations, and worlds.[7]
+
+In treating of the soul and of immortality Lucretius is an imperfect
+psychologist and an arbitrary moralist. His zeal to prove that the soul
+is mortal is inspired by the wish to dispel all fear of future
+punishments, and so to liberate the mind for the calm and tepid
+enjoyment of this world. There is something to be gained in this
+direction, undoubtedly, especially if tales about divine vengeance to
+come are used to sanction irrational practices, and to prevent poor
+people from improving their lot. At the same time, it is hardly fair to
+assume that hell is the only prospect which immortality could possibly
+open to any of us; and it is also unfair not to observe that the
+punishments which religious fables threaten the dead with are, for the
+most part, symbols for the actual degradation which evil-doing brings
+upon the living; so that the fear of hell is not more deterrent or
+repressive than experience of life would be if it were clearly brought
+before the mind.
+
+There is another element in this polemic against immortality which,
+while highly interesting and characteristic of a decadent age, betrays a
+very one-sided and, at bottom, untenable ideal. This element is the fear
+of life. Epicurus had been a pure and tender moralist, but
+pusillanimous. He was so afraid of hurting and of being hurt, so afraid
+of running risks or tempting fortune, that he wished to prove that human
+life was a brief business, not subject to any great transformations, nor
+capable of any great achievements. He taught accordingly that the atoms
+had produced already all the animals they could produce, for though
+infinite in number the atoms were of few kinds. Consequently the
+possible sorts of being were finite and soon exhausted; this world,
+though on the eve of destruction, was of recent date. The worlds around
+it, or to be produced in future, could not afford anything essentially
+different. All the suns were much alike, and there was nothing new under
+them. We need not, then, fear the world; it is an explored and domestic
+scene,--a home, a little garden, six feet of earth for a man to stretch
+in. If people rage and make a great noise, it is not because there is
+much to win, or much to fear, but because people are mad. Let me not be
+mad, thought Epicurus; let me be reasonable, cultivating sentiments
+appropriate to a mortal who inhabits a world morally comfortable and
+small, and physically poor in its infinite monotony. The well-known
+lines of Fitzgerald echo this sentiment perfectly:
+
+ _A Book of Verses underneath the Bough,_
+ _A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread--and Thou_
+ _Beside me singing in the Wilderness--_
+ _Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow!_
+
+But what if the shadow of incalculable possibilities should fall across
+this sunny retreat? What if after death we should awake in a world to
+which the atomic philosophy might not in the least apply? Observe that
+this suggestion is not in the least opposed to any of the arguments by
+which science might prove the atomic theory to be correct. All that
+Epicurus taught about the universe now before us might be perfectly true
+of it; but what if to-morrow a new universe should have taken its
+place? The suggestion is doubtless gratuitous, and no busy man will be
+much troubled by it; yet when the heart is empty it fills itself with
+such attenuated dreams. The muffled pleasures of the wise man, as
+Epicurus conceived him, were really a provocation to supernaturalism.
+They left a great void; and before long supernaturalism--we shall see it
+in Dante--actually rushed in to quicken the pulses of life with fresh
+hopes and illusions, or at least (what may seem better than nothing)
+with terrors and fanatical zeal. With such tendencies already afoot as
+the myths and dogmas of Plato had betrayed, it was imperative for
+Epicurus to banish anxiously all thought of what might follow death. To
+this end are all his arguments about the material nature of the soul and
+her incapacity to survive the body.
+
+To say that the soul is material has a strange and barbarous sound to
+modern ears. We live after Descartes, who taught the world that the
+essence of the soul was consciousness; and to call consciousness
+material would be to talk of the blackness of white. But ancient usage
+gave the word soul a rather different meaning. The essence of the soul
+was not so much to be conscious as to govern the formation of the body,
+to warm, move, and guide it. And if we think of the soul exclusively in
+this light, it will not seem a paradox, it may even seem a truism, to
+say that the soul must be material. For how are we to conceive that
+preexisting consciousness should govern the formation of the body, move,
+warm, or guide it? A spirit capable of such a miracle would in any case
+not be human, but altogether divine. The soul that Lucretius calls
+material should not, then, be identified with consciousness, but with
+the ground of consciousness, which is at the same time the cause of life
+in the body. This he conceives to be a swarm of very small and volatile
+atoms, a sort of ether, resident in all living seeds, breathed in
+abundantly during life and breathed out at death.
+
+Even if this theory were accepted, however, it would not prove the point
+which Lucretius has chiefly at heart, namely, that an after-life is
+impossible. The atoms of the soul are indestructible, like all atoms;
+and if consciousness were attached to the fortunes of a small group of
+them, or of one only (as Leibniz afterwards taught), consciousness would
+continue to exist after these atoms had escaped from the body and were
+shooting through new fields of space. Indeed, they might be the more
+aroused by that adventure, as a bee might find the sky or the garden
+more exciting than the hive. All that Lucretius urges about the
+divisibility of the soul, its diffused bodily seat, and the perils it
+would meet outside fails to remove the ominous possibility that troubles
+him.
+
+To convince us that we perish at death he has to rely on vulgar
+experience and inherent probability: what changes is not indestructible;
+what begins, ends; mental growth, health, sanity, accompany the fortunes
+of the body as a whole (not demonstrably those of the soul-atoms); the
+passions are relevant to bodily life and to an earthly situation; we
+should not be ourselves under a different mask or in a new setting; we
+remember no previous existence if we had one, and so, in a future
+existence, we should not remember this. These reflections are
+impressive, and they are enforced by Lucretius with his usual vividness
+and smack of reality. Nothing is proved scientifically by such a
+deliverance, yet it is good philosophy and good poetry; it brings much
+experience together and passes a lofty judgment upon it. The artist has
+his eye on the model; he is painting death to the life.
+
+If these considerations succeed in banishing the dread of an after-life,
+there remains the distress which many feel at the idea of extinction;
+and if we have ceased to fear death, like Hamlet, for the dreams that
+may come after it, we may still fear death instinctively, like a stuck
+pig. Against this instinctive horror of dying Lucretius has many brave
+arguments. Fools, he says to us, why do you fear what never can touch
+you? While you still live, death is absent; and when you are dead, you
+are so dead that you cannot know you are dead, nor regret it. You will
+be as much at ease as before you were born. Or is what troubles you the
+childish fear of being cold in the earth, or feeling its weight stifling
+you? But you will not be there; the atoms of your soul--themselves
+unconscious--will be dancing in some sunbeam far away, and you yourself
+will be nowhere; you will absolutely not exist. Death is by definition a
+state that excludes experience. If you fear it, you fear a word.
+
+To all this, perhaps, Memmius, or some other recalcitrant reader, might
+retort that what he shrank from was not the metaphysical state of being
+dead, but the very real agony of dying. Dying is something ghastly, as
+being born is something ridiculous; and, even if no pain were involved
+in quitting or entering this world, we might still say what Dante's
+Francesca says of it: _Il modo ancor m' offende_,--"I shudder at the way
+of it." Lucretius, for his part, makes no attempt to show that
+everything is as it should be; and if our way of coming into this life
+is ignoble, and our way of leaving it pitiful, that is no fault of his
+nor of his philosophy. If the fear of death were merely the fear of
+dying, it would be better dealt with by medicine than by argument. There
+is, or there might be, an art of dying well, of dying painlessly,
+willingly, and in season,--as in those noble partings which Attic
+gravestones depict,--especially if we were allowed, as Lucretius would
+allow us, to choose our own time.
+
+But the radical fear of death, I venture to think, is something quite
+different. It is the love of life. Epicurus, who feared life, seems to
+have missed here the primordial and colossal force he was fighting
+against. Had he perceived that force, he would have been obliged to meet
+it in a more radical way, by an enveloping movement, as it were, and an
+attack from the rear. The love of life is not something rational, or
+founded on experience of life. It is something antecedent and
+spontaneous. It is that Venus Genetrix which covers the earth with its
+flora and fauna. It teaches every animal to seek its food and its mate,
+and to protect its offspring; as also to resist or fly from all injury
+to the body, and most of all from threatened death. It is the original
+impulse by which good is discriminated from evil, and hope from fear.
+
+Nothing could be more futile, therefore, than to marshal arguments
+against that fear of death which is merely another name for the energy
+of life, or the tendency to self-preservation. Arguments involve
+premises, and these premises, in the given case, express some particular
+form of the love of life; whence it is impossible to conclude that death
+is in no degree evil and not at all to be feared. For what is most
+dreaded is not the agony of dying, nor yet the strange impossibility
+that when we do not exist we should suffer for not existing. What is
+dreaded is the defeat of a present will directed upon life and its
+various undertakings. Such a present will cannot be argued away, but it
+may be weakened by contradictions arising within it, by the irony of
+experience, or by ascetic discipline. To introduce ascetic discipline,
+to bring out the irony of experience, to expose the self-contradictions
+of the will, would be the true means of mitigating the love of life; and
+if the love of life were extinguished, the fear of death, like smoke
+rising from that fire, would have vanished also.
+
+Indeed, the force of the great passage against the fear of death, at the
+end of the third book of Lucretius, comes chiefly from the picture it
+draws of the madness of life. His philosophy deprecates covetousness,
+ambition, love, and religion; it takes a long step towards the surrender
+of life, by surrendering all in life that is ardent, on the ground that
+it is painful in the end and ignominious. To escape from it all is a
+great deliverance. And since genius must be ardent about something,
+Lucretius pours out his enthusiasm on Epicurus, who brought this
+deliverance and was the saviour of mankind. Yet this was only a
+beginning of salvation, and the same principles carried further would
+have delivered us from the Epicurean life and what it retained that was
+Greek and naturalistic: science, friendship, and the healthy pleasures
+of the body. Had it renounced these things also, Epicureanism would have
+become altogether ascetic, a thorough system of mortification, or the
+pursuit of death. To those who sincerely pursue death, death is no evil,
+but the highest good. No need in that case of elaborate arguments to
+prove that death should not be feared, because it is nothing; for in
+spite of being nothing--or rather because it is nothing--death can be
+loved by a fatigued and disillusioned spirit, just as in spite of being
+nothing--or rather because it is nothing--it must be hated and feared by
+every vigorous animal.
+
+One more point, and I have done with this subject. Ancient culture was
+rhetorical. It abounded in ideas that are verbally plausible, and pass
+muster in a public speech, but that, if we stop to criticize them, prove
+at once to be inexcusably false. One of these rhetorical fallacies is
+the maxim that men cannot live for what they cannot witness. What does
+it matter to you, we may say in debate, what happened before you were
+born, or what may go on after you are buried? And the orator who puts
+such a challenge may carry the audience with him, and raise a laugh at
+the expense of human sincerity. Yet the very men who applaud are proud
+of their ancestors, care for the future of their children, and are very
+much interested in securing legally the execution of their last will and
+testament. What may go on after their death concerns them deeply, not
+because they expect to watch the event from hell or heaven, but because
+they are interested ideally in what that event shall be, although they
+are never to witness it. Lucretius himself, in his sympathy with nature,
+in his zeal for human enlightenment, in his tears for Iphigenia, long
+since dead, is not moved by the hope of observing, or the memory of
+having observed, what excites his emotion. He forgets himself. He sees
+the whole universe spread out in its true movement and proportions; he
+sees mankind freed from the incubus of superstition, and from the havoc
+of passion. The vision kindles his enthusiasm, exalts his imagination,
+and swells his verse into unmistakable earnestness.
+
+If we follow Lucretius, therefore, in narrowing the sum of our personal
+fortunes to one brief and partial glimpse of earth, we must not suppose
+that we need narrow at all the sphere of our moral interests. On the
+contrary, just in proportion as we despise superstitious terrors and
+sentimental hopes, and as our imagination becomes self-forgetful, we
+shall strengthen the direct and primitive concern which we feel in the
+world and in what may go on there, before us, after us, or beyond our
+ken. If, like Lucretius and every philosophical poet, we range over all
+time and all existence, we shall forget our own persons, as he did, and
+even wish them to be forgotten, if only the things we care for may
+subsist or arise. He who truly loves God, says Spinoza, cannot wish that
+God should love him in return. One who lives the life of the universe
+cannot be much concerned for his own. After all, the life of the
+universe is but the locus and extension of ours. The atoms that have
+once served to produce life remain fit to reproduce it; and although the
+body they might animate later would be a new one, and would have a
+somewhat different career, it would not, according to Lucretius, be of a
+totally new species; perhaps not more unlike ourselves than we are
+unlike one another, or than each of us is unlike himself at the various
+stages of his life.
+
+The soul of nature, in the elements of it, is then, according to
+Lucretius, actually immortal; only the human individuality, the chance
+composition of those elements, is transitory; so that, if a man could
+care for what happens to other men, for what befell him when young or
+what may overtake him when old, he might perfectly well care, on the
+same imaginative principle, for what may go on in the world for ever.
+The finitude and injustice of his personal life would be broken down;
+the illusion of selfishness would be dissipated; and he might say to
+himself, I have imagination, and nothing that is real is alien to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The word nature has many senses; but if we preserve the one which
+etymology justifies, and which is the most philosophical as well, nature
+should mean the principle of birth or genesis, the universal mother, the
+great cause, or system of causes, that brings phenomena to light. If we
+take the word nature in this sense, it may be said that Lucretius, more
+than any other man, is the poet of nature. Of course, being an ancient,
+he is not particularly a poet of landscape. He runs deeper than that; he
+is a poet of the source of landscape, a poet of matter. A poet of
+landscape might try to suggest, by well-chosen words, the sensations of
+light, movement, and form which nature arouses in us; but in this
+attempt he would encounter the insuperable difficulty which Lessing long
+ago pointed out, and warned poets of: I mean the unfitness of language
+to render what is spatial and material; its fitness to render only what,
+like language itself, is bodiless and flowing,--action, feeling, and
+thought.
+
+It is noticeable, accordingly, that poets who are fascinated by pure
+sense and seek to write poems about it are called not impressionists,
+but symbolists; for in trying to render some absolute sensation they
+render rather the field of association in which that sensation lies, or
+the emotions and half-thoughts that shoot and play about it in their
+fancy. They become--against their will, perhaps--psychological poets,
+ringers of mental chimes, and listeners for the chance overtones of
+consciousness. Hence we call them symbolists, mixing perhaps some shade
+of disparagement in the term, as if they were symbolists of an empty,
+super-subtle, or fatuous sort. For they play with things luxuriously,
+making them symbols for their thoughts, instead of mending their
+thoughts intelligently, to render them symbols for things.
+
+A poet might be a symbolist in another sense,--if he broke up nature,
+the object suggested by landscape to the mind, and reverted to the
+elements of landscape, not in order to associate these sensations lazily
+together, but in order to build out of them in fancy a different nature,
+a better world, than that which they reveal to reason. The elements of
+landscape, chosen, emphasized, and recombined for this purpose, would
+then be symbols for the ideal world they were made to suggest, and for
+the ideal life that might be led in that paradise. Shelley is a symbolic
+landscape poet in this sense. To Shelley, as Francis Thompson has said,
+nature was a toy-shop; his fancy took the materials of the landscape and
+wove them into a gossamer world, a bright ethereal habitation for
+new-born irresponsible spirits. Shelley was the musician of landscape;
+he traced out its unrealized suggestions; transformed the things he saw
+into the things he would fain have seen. In this idealization it was
+spirit that guided him, the bent of his wild and exquisite imagination,
+and he fancied sometimes that the grosser landscapes of earth were
+likewise the work of some half-spiritual stress, of some restlessly
+dreaming power. In this sense, earthly landscape seemed to him the
+symbol of the earth spirit, as the starlit crystal landscapes of his
+verse, with their pensive flowers, were symbols in which his own fevered
+spirit was expressed, images in which his passion rested.
+
+Another sort of landscape poetry is to be found in Wordsworth, for whom
+the title of poet of nature might perhaps be claimed. To him the
+landscape is an influence. What he renders, beyond such pictorial
+touches as language is capable of, is the moral inspiration which the
+scene brings to him. This moral inspiration is not drawn at all from the
+real processes of nature which every landscape manifests in some aspect
+and for one moment. Such would have been the method of Lucretius; he
+would have passed imaginatively from the landscape to the sources of the
+landscape; he would have disclosed the poetry of matter, not of spirit.
+Wordsworth, on the contrary, dwells on adventitious human matters. He is
+no poet of genesis, evolution, and natural force in its myriad
+manifestations. Only a part of the cosmic process engages his interest,
+or touches his soul--the strengthening or chastening of human purposes
+by the influences of landscape. These influences are very real; for as
+food or wine keeps the animal heart beating, or quickens it, so large
+spaces of calm sky, or mountains, or dells, or solitary stretches of
+water, expand the breast, disperse the obsessions that cramp a man's
+daily existence, and even if he be less contemplative and less virtuous
+than Wordsworth, make him, for the moment, a friend to all things, and a
+friend to himself.
+
+Yet these influences are vague and for the most part fleeting.
+Wordsworth would hardly have felt them so distinctly and so constantly
+had he not found a further link to bind landscape to moral sentiment.
+Such a link exists. The landscape is the scene of human life. Every
+spot, every season, is associated with the sort of existence which falls
+to men in that environment. Landscape for Wordsworth's age and in his
+country was seldom without figures. At least, some visible trace of man
+guided the poet and set the key for his moral meditation. Country life
+was no less dear to Wordsworth than landscape was; it fitted into every
+picture; and while the march of things, as Lucretius conceived it, was
+not present to Wordsworth's imagination, the revolutions of society--the
+French Revolution, for instance--were constantly in his thoughts. In so
+far as he was a poet of human life, Wordsworth was truly a poet of
+nature. In so far, however, as he was a poet of landscape, he was still
+fundamentally a poet of human life, or merely of his personal
+experience. When he talked of nature he was generally moralizing, and
+altogether subject to the pathetic fallacy; but when he talked of man,
+or of himself, he was unfolding a part of nature, the upright human
+heart, and studying it in its truth.
+
+Lucretius, a poet of universal nature, studied everything in its truth.
+Even moral life, though he felt it much more narrowly and coldly than
+Wordsworth did, was better understood and better sung by him for being
+seen in its natural setting. It is a fault of idealists to misrepresent
+idealism, because they do not view it as a part of the world. Idealism
+_is_ a part, of the world, a small and dependent part of it. It is a
+small and dependent part even in the life of men. This fact is nothing
+against idealism taken as a moral energy, as a faculty of idealization
+and a habit of living in the familiar presence of an image of what
+would, in everything, be best. But it is the ruin of idealism taken as a
+view of the central and universal power in the world. For this reason
+Lucretius, who sees human life and human idealism in their natural
+setting, has a saner and maturer view of both than has Wordsworth, for
+all his greater refinement. Nature, for the Latin poet, is really
+nature. He loves and fears her, as she deserves to be loved and feared
+by her creatures. Whether it be a wind blowing, a torrent rushing, a
+lamb bleating, the magic of love, genius achieving its purpose, or a
+war, or a pestilence, Lucretius sees everything in its causes, and in
+its total career. One breath of lavish creation, one iron law of change,
+runs through the whole, making all things kin in their inmost elements
+and in their last end. Here is the touch of nature indeed, her largeness
+and eternity. Here is the true echo of the life of matter.
+
+Any comprehensive picture of nature and destiny, if the picture be
+credited, must arouse emotion, and in a reflective and vivid mind must
+inspire poetry--for what is poetry but emotion, fixing and colouring the
+objects from which it springs? The sublime poem of Lucretius, expounding
+the least poetical of philosophies, proves this point beyond a doubt.
+Yet Lucretius was far from exhausting the inspiration which a poet might
+draw from materialism. In the philosophy of Epicurus, even, which had
+but a sickly hold on materialism, there were two strains which Lucretius
+did not take up, and which are naturally rich in poetry, the strain of
+piety and the strain of friendship. It is usual and, in one sense,
+legitimate to speak of the Epicureans as atheists, since they denied
+providence and any government of God in the world. Yet they admitted the
+existence of gods, living in the quiet spaces between those celestial
+whirlpools which form the various worlds. To these gods they attributed
+the human form, and the serene life to which Epicurus aspired. Epicurus
+himself was so sincere in this belief, and so much affected by it, that
+he used to frequent the temples, keep the feasts of the gods, and often
+spend hours before their images in contemplation and prayer.
+
+In this, as in much else, Epicurus was carrying out to its logical
+conclusion the rational and reforming essence of Hellenism. In Greek
+religion, as in all other religions, there was a background of vulgar
+superstition. Survivals and revivals of totem-worship, taboo, magic,
+ritual barter, and objectified rhetoric are to be found in it to the
+very end; yet if we consider in Greek religion its characteristic
+tendency, and what rendered it distinctively Greek, we see that it was
+its unprecedented ideality, disinterestedness, and aestheticism. To the
+Greek, in so far as he was a Greek, religion was an aspiration to grow
+like the gods by invoking their companionship, rehearsing their story,
+feeling vicariously the glow of their splendid prerogatives, and placing
+them, in the form of beautiful and very human statues, constantly before
+his eyes. This sympathetic interest in the immortals took the place, in
+the typical Greek mind, of any vivid hope of human immortality; perhaps
+it made such a hope seem superfluous and inappropriate. Mortality
+belonged to man, as immortality to the gods; and the one was the
+complement of the other. Imagine a poet who, to the freedom and
+simplicity of Homer, should have added the more reverent idealism of a
+later age; and what an inexhaustible fund of poetry might he not have
+found in this conception of the immortals leading a human life, without
+its sordid contrarieties and limitations, eternally young, and frank,
+and different!
+
+Hints of such poetry are to be found in Plato, myths that present the
+ideal suggestions of human life in pictures. These he sometimes leaves
+general and pale, calling them ideas; but at other times he embodies
+them in deities, or in detailed imaginary constructions, like that of
+his _Republic_. This Platonic habit of mind might have been carried
+further by some franker and less reactionary poet than Plato was, or
+tended to become, as the years turned his wine into vinegar. But the
+whole world was then getting sour. Imagination flagged, or was diverted
+from the Greek into the Hebrew channel. Nevertheless, the hymns of
+modern poets to the ancient gods, and the irrepressible echoes of
+classic mythology in our literature, show how easy it would have been
+for the later ancients themselves, had they chosen, to make immortal
+poetry out of their dying superstitions. The denials of Epicurus do not
+exclude this ideal use of religion; on the contrary, by excluding all
+the other uses of it--the commercial, the mock-scientific, and the
+selfish--they leave the moral interpretative aspect of religion standing
+alone, ready to the poet's hand, if any poet could be found pure and
+fertile enough to catch and to render it. Rationalized paganism might
+have had its Dante, a Dante who should have been the pupil not of Virgil
+and Aquinas, but of Homer and Plato. Lucretius was too literal,
+positivistic, and insistent for such a delicate task. He was a Roman.
+Moral mythology and ideal piety, though his philosophy had room for
+them, formed no part of his poetry.
+
+What the other neglected theme, friendship, might have supplied, we may
+see in the tone of another Epicurean, the poet Horace. Friendship was
+highly honoured in all ancient states; and the Epicurean philosophy, in
+banishing so many traditional forms of sentiment, could only intensify
+the emphasis on friendship. It taught men that they were an accident in
+the universe, comrades afloat on the same raft together with no fate not
+common to them all, and no possible helpers but one another. Lucretius
+does speak, in a passage to which I have already referred,[8] about the
+hope of sweet friendship that supports him in his labours; and
+elsewhere[9] he repeats the Epicurean idyl about picnicking together on
+the green grass by a flowing brook; but the little word "together" is
+all he vouchsafes us to mark what must be the chief ingredient in such
+rural happiness.
+
+Horace, usually so much slighter than Lucretius, is less cursory here.
+Not only does he strike much oftener the note of friendship, but his
+whole mind and temper breathe of friendliness and expected agreement.
+There is, in the very charm and artifice of his lines, a sort of
+confidential joy in tasting with the kindred few the sweet or pungent
+savour of human things. To be brief and gently ironical is to assume
+mutual intelligence; and to assume mutual intelligence is to believe in
+friendship. In Lucretius, on the other hand, zeal is mightier than
+sympathy, and scorn mightier than humour. Perhaps it would be asking too
+much of his uncompromising fervour that he should have unbent now and
+then and shown us in some detail what those pleasures of life may be
+which are without care and fear. Yet, if it was impossible for him not
+to be always serious and austere, he might at least have noted the
+melancholy of friendship--for friendship, where nature has made minds
+isolated and bodies mortal, is rich also in melancholy. This again we
+may find in Horace, where once or twice he lets the "something bitter"
+bubble up from the heart even of this flower, when he feels a vague need
+that survives satiety, and yearns perversely for the impossible.[10]
+Poor Epicureans, when they could not learn, like their master, to be
+saints!
+
+So far the decadent materialism of Epicurus might have carried a poet;
+but a materialist in our days might find many other poetic themes to
+weave into his system. To the picture which Lucretius sketches of
+primitive civilization, we might add the whole history of mankind. To a
+consistent and vigorous materialism all personal and national dramas,
+with the beauties of all the arts, are no less natural and interesting
+than are flowers or animal bodies. The moral pageantry of this world,
+surveyed scientifically, is calculated wonderfully to strengthen and
+refine the philosophy of abstention suggested to Epicurus by the flux of
+material things and by the illusions of vulgar passion. Lucretius
+studies superstition, but only as an enemy; and the naturalistic poet
+should be the enemy of nothing. His animus blinds him to half the
+object, to its more beautiful half, and makes us distrust his version of
+the meaner half he is aware of. Seen in its totality, and surrounded by
+all the other products of human imagination, superstition is not only
+moving in itself, a capital subject for tragedy and for comedy, but it
+reinforces the materialistic way of thinking, and shows that it may be
+extended to the most complex and emotional spheres of existence. At the
+same time, a naturalism extended impartially over moral facts brings
+home a lesson of tolerance, scepticism, and independence which, without
+contradicting Epicurean principles, would very much enlarge and
+transform Epicurean sentiment. History would have opened to the
+Epicurean poet a new dimension of nature and a more varied spectacle of
+folly. His imagination would have been enriched and his maxims
+fortified.
+
+The emotions which Lucretius associated with his atoms and void, with
+his religious denials and his abstentions from action, are emotions
+necessarily involved in life. They will exist in any case, though not
+necessarily associated with the doctrines by which this poet sought to
+clarify them. They will remain standing, whatever mechanism we put in
+the place of that which he believed in,--that is, if we are serious, and
+not trying to escape from the facts rather than to explain them. If the
+ideas embodied in a philosophy represent a comprehensive survey of the
+facts, and a mature sentiment in the presence of them, any new ideas
+adopted instead will have to acquire the same values, and nothing will
+be changed morally except the language or euphony of the mind.
+
+Of course one theory of the world must be true and the rest false, at
+least if the categories of any theory are applicable to reality; but the
+true theory like the false resides in imagination, and the truth of it
+which the poet grasps is its truth to life. If there are no atoms, at
+least there must be habits of nature, or laws of evolution, or
+dialectics of progress, or decrees of providence, or intrusions of
+chance; and before these equally external and groundless powers we must
+bow, as Lucretius bowed to his atoms. It will always be important and
+inevitable to recognize _something_ external, something that generates
+or surrounds us; and perhaps the only difference between materialism and
+other systems in this respect is that materialism has studied more
+scrupulously the detail and method of our dependence.
+
+Similarly, even if Lucretius was wrong, and the soul is immortal, it is
+nevertheless steadily changing its interests and its possessions. Our
+lives are mortal if our soul is not; and the sentiment which reconciled
+Lucretius to death is as much needed if we are to face many deaths, as
+if we are to face only one. The gradual losing of what we have been and
+are, Emerson says:
+
+ _This losing is true dying;_
+ _This is lordly maris down-lying,_
+ _This his slow but sure reclining,_
+ _Star by star his world resigning._
+
+The maxim of Lucretius, that nothing arises save by the death of
+something else, meets us still in our crawling immortality. And his art
+of accepting and enjoying what the conditions of our being afford also
+has a perennial application. Dante, the poet of faith, will tell us that
+we must find our peace in the will that gives us our limited portion.
+Goethe, the poet of romantic experience, will tell us that we must
+renounce, renounce perpetually. Thus wisdom clothes the same moral
+truths in many cosmic parables. The doctrines of philosophers disagree
+where they are literal and arbitrary,--mere guesses about the unknown;
+but they agree or complete one another where they are expressive or
+symbolic, thoughts wrung by experience from the hearts of poets. Then
+all philosophies alike are ways of meeting and recording the same flux
+of images, the same vicissitudes of good and evil, which will visit all
+generations, while man is man.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[1] Lucretius, iv. 834, 835:
+
+ Nil ... natumst in corpore, ut uti
+ Possemus, sed quod natumst id procreat usum.
+
+
+[2] Ibid., I. 1115-18:
+
+ Alid ex alio clarescet, nec tibi caeca
+ Nox iter eripiet, quin ultima naturai
+ Pervideas: ita res accendent lumina rebus.
+
+
+[3] Lucretius, i. 264, 265:
+
+ Alid ex alio reficit natura, nec ullam
+ Rem gigni patitur, nisi morte adiuta aliena.
+
+
+[4] An excellent expression of this view is put by Plato into the mouth
+of the physician Eryximachus in the _Symposium_, pp. 186-88.
+
+
+[5] Lucretius, i. 1-13:
+
+ Æneadum genetrix, hominum divomque voluptas,
+ Alma Venus, caeli subter labentia signa
+ Quae mare navigerum, quae terras frugiferentis
+ Concelebras; per te quoniam genus omne animantum
+ Concipitur, visitque exortum lumina solis:
+ Te, dea, te fugiunt venti, te nubila caeli,
+ Adventumque tuum: tibi suaves daedala tellus
+ Submittit flores; tibi rident aequora ponti,
+ Placatumque nitet diffuso lumine caelum.
+ Nam simul ac species patefactast verna diei,
+ Et reserata viget genitabilis aura favoni;
+ Aëriae primum volucres te, diva, tuumque
+ Significant initum, perculsae corda tua vi.
+
+
+[6] Lucretius, i. 24, 28-30, 41-43, 140-44:
+
+ Te sociam studeo scribendis versibus esse....
+ Quo magis aeternum da dictis, diva, leporem:
+ Effice, ut interea fera moenera militiai
+ Per maria ac terras omnes sopita quiescant....
+ Nam neque nos agere hoc patriai tempore iniquo
+ Possumus aequo animo, nec Memmi clara propago
+ Talibus in rebus communi desse saluti....
+ Sed tua me virtus tamen, et sperata voluptas
+ Suavis amicitiae, quemvis sufferre laborem
+ Suadet, et inducit noctes vigilare serenas,
+ Quaerentem, dictis quibus et quo carmine demum
+ Clara tuae possim praepandere lumina menti.
+
+
+[7] Lucretius, ii. 1139-41, 1148-49, 1164-74:
+
+ Omnia debet enim cibus integrare novando,
+ Et fulcire cibus, cibus omnia sustentare.
+ Nequidquam,...
+ Sic igitur magni quoque circum moenia mundi
+ Expugnata dabunt labem putrisque ruinas....
+ Iamque caput quassans grandis suspirat arator
+ Crebrius incassum manuum cecidisse laborem:
+ Et cum tempora temporibus praesentia confert
+ Praeteritis, laudat fortunas saepe parentis,...
+ Nec tenet, omnia paulatim tabescere et ire
+ Ad capulum, spatio aetatis defessa vetusto.
+
+
+[8] Cf. pages 41, 49.
+
+[9] Lucretius, ii. 29-33:
+
+ Inter se prostrati in gramine molli
+ Propter aquae rivum, sub ramis arboris altae,
+ Non magnis opibus iucunde corpora curant:
+ Praesertim cum tempestas arridet, et anni
+ Tempa conspergunt viridantis floribus herbas.
+
+
+[10] Horace, _Odes_, iv. 1:
+
+ Iam nec spes animi credula mutui...
+ Sed cur, heu! Ligurine, cur
+ Manat rara meas lacrima per genas?
+
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+DANTE
+
+
+In the _Phaedo_ of Plato there is an incidental passage of supreme
+interest to the historian. It foreshadows, and accurately defines, the
+whole transition from antiquity to the middle age, from naturalism to
+supernaturalism, from Lucretius to Dante. Socrates, in his prison, is
+addressing his disciples for the last time. The general subject is
+immortality; but in a pause in the argument Socrates says: "In my youth
+... I heard some one reading, as he said, from a book of Anaxagoras,
+that Reason was the disposer and cause of all, and I was delighted at
+this notion, which appeared quite admirable, and I said to myself: 'If
+Reason is the disposer, Reason will dispose all for the best, and put
+each particular in the best place;' and I argued that if any desired to
+find out the cause of the generation or destruction or existence of
+anything, he must find out what ... was best for that thing.... And I
+rejoiced to think that I had found in Anaxagoras a teacher of the causes
+of existence such as I desired, and I imagined that he would tell me
+first whether the earth is flat or round; and whichever was true, he
+would proceed ... to show the nature of the best, and show that this was
+best; and if he said that the earth was in the centre [of the universe],
+he would further explain that this position was the best, and I should
+be satisfied with the explanation given, and not want any other sort of
+cause.... For I could not imagine that when he spoke of Reason as the
+disposer of things, he would give any other account of their being,
+except that this was best.... These hopes I would not have sold for a
+large sum of money, and I seized the books and read them as fast as I
+could, in my eagerness to know the better and the worse.
+
+"What expectations I had formed and how grievously was I disappointed!
+As I proceeded, I found my philosopher altogether forsaking Reason or
+any other principle of order, but having recourse to air, and ether, and
+water, and other eccentricities.... Thus one man makes a vortex all
+round, and steadies the earth by the heaven; another gives the air as a
+support to the earth, which is a sort of broad trough. Any power which
+in arranging them as they are arranges them for the best never enters
+into their minds; and instead of finding any superior strength in it,
+they rather expect to discover another Atlas of the world who is
+stronger and more everlasting and more containing than the good; of the
+obligatory and containing power of the good they think nothing; and yet
+this is the principle which I would fain learn if anyone would teach
+me."[1]
+
+Here we have the programme of a new philosophy. Things are to be
+understood by their uses or purposes, not by their elements or
+antecedents; as the fact that Socrates sits in his prison, when he might
+have escaped to Euboea, is to be understood by his allegiance to his
+notion of what is best, of his duty to himself and to his country, and
+not by the composition of his bones and muscles. Such reasons as we give
+for our actions, such grounds as might move the public assembly to
+decree this or that, are to be given in explanation of the order of
+nature. The world is a work of reason. It must be interpreted, as we
+interpret the actions of a man, by its motives. And these motives we
+must guess, not by a fanciful dramatic mythology, such as the poets of
+old had invented, but by a conscientious study of the better and the
+worse in the conduct of our own lives. For instance, the highest
+occupation, according to Plato, is the study of philosophy; but this
+would not be possible for man if he had to be continually feeding, like
+a grazing animal, with its nose to the ground. Now, to obviate the
+necessity of eating all the time, long intestines are useful; therefore
+the cause of long intestines is the study of philosophy. Again, the
+eyes, nose, and mouth are in the front of the head, because (says Plato)
+the front is the nobler side,--as if the back would not have been the
+nobler side (and the front side) had the eyes, nose, and mouth been
+there! This method is what Molière ridicules in _Le Malade Imaginaire_,
+when the chorus sings that opium puts people to sleep because it has a
+dormitive virtue, the nature of which is to make the senses slumber.
+
+All this is ridiculous physics enough; but Plato knew--though he forgot
+sometimes--that his physics were playful. What it is important for us
+now to remember is rather that, under this childish or metaphorical
+physics, there is a serious morality. After all, the _use_ of opium is
+that it is a narcotic; no matter why, physically, it is one. The _use_
+of the body _is_ the mind, whatever the origin of the body may be. And
+it seems to dignify and vindicate these uses to say that they are the
+"causes" of the organs that make them possible. What is true of
+particular organs or substances is true of the whole frame of nature.
+Its _use_ is to serve the good--to make life, happiness, and virtue
+possible. Therefore, speaking in parables, Plato says with his whole
+school: Discover the right principle of action, and you will have
+discovered the ruling force in the universe. Evoke in your rapt
+aspiration the essence of a supreme good, and you will have understood
+why the spheres revolve, why the earth is fertile, and why mankind
+suffers and exists. Observation must yield to dialectic; political art
+must yield to aspiration.
+
+It took many hundred years for the revolution to work itself out; Plato
+had a prophetic genius, and looked away from what he was (for he was a
+Greek) to what mankind was to become in the next cycle of civilization.
+In Dante the revolution is complete, not merely intellectually (for it
+had been completed intellectually long before, in the Neoplatonists and
+the Fathers of the Church), but complete morally and poetically, in that
+all the habits of the mind and all the sanctions of public life had been
+assimilated to it. There had been time to reinterpret everything,
+obliterating the natural lines of cleavage in the world, and
+substituting moral lines of cleavage for them. Nature was a compound of
+ideal purposes and inert matter. Life was a conflict between sin and
+grace. The environment was a battle-ground between a host of angels and
+a legion of demons. The better and the worse had actually become, as
+Socrates desired, the sole principles of understanding.
+
+Having become Socratic, the thinking part of mankind devoted all its
+energies henceforward to defining good and evil in all their grades, and
+in their ultimate essence; a task which Dante brings to a perfect
+conclusion. So earnestly and exclusively did they speculate about moral
+distinctions that they saw them in almost visible shapes, as Plato had
+seen his ideas. They materialized the terms of their moral philosophy
+into existing objects and powers. The highest good--in Plato still
+chiefly a political ideal, the aim of policy and art--became God, the
+creator of the world. The various stages or elements of perfection
+became persons in the Godhead, or angelic intelligences, or aerial
+demons, or lower types of the animal soul. Evil was identified with
+matter. The various stages of imperfection were ascribed to the
+grossness of various bodies, which weighted and smothered the spark of
+divinity that animated them. This spark, however, might be released;
+then it would fly up again to its parent fire and a soul would be saved.
+
+This philosophy was not a serious description of nature or evolution;
+but it was a serious judgement upon them. The good, the better, the
+best, had been discerned; and a mythical bevy of powers, symbolizing
+these degrees of excellence, had been first talked of and then believed
+in. Myth, when another man has invented it, can pass for history; and
+when this man is a Plato, and has lived long ago, it can pass for
+revelation. In this way moral values came to be regarded as forces
+working in nature. But if they worked in nature, which was a compound of
+evil matter and perfect form, they must exist outside: for the ideal of
+excellence beckons from afar; it is what we pine for and are not. The
+forces that worked in nature were accordingly supernatural virtues,
+dominations, and powers; each natural thing had its supernatural
+incubus, a guardian angel, or a devil that possessed it. The
+supernatural--that is, something moral or ideal regarded as a power and
+an existence--was all about us. Everything in the world was an effect of
+something beyond the world; everything in life was a step to something
+beyond life.
+
+Into this system Christianity fitted easily. It enriched it by adding
+miraculous history to symbolic cosmology. The Platonists had conceived a
+cosmos in which there were higher and lower beings, marshalled in
+concentric circles, around this vile but pivotal lump of earth. The
+Christians supplied a dramatic action for which that stage seemed
+admirably fitted, a story in which the whole human race, or the single
+soul, passed successively through these higher and lower stages. There
+had been a fall, and there might be a salvation. In a sense, even this
+conception of descent from the good, and ascent towards it again, was
+Platonic. According to the Platonists, the good eternally shed its vital
+influence, like light, and received (though unawares and without
+increase of excellence to itself) reflected rays that, in the form of
+love and thought, reverted to it from the ends of the universe. But
+according to the Platonist this radiation of life and focusing of
+aspiration were both perpetual. The double movement was eternal. The
+history of the world was monotonous; or rather the world had no
+significant history, but only a movement like that of a fountain playing
+for ever, or like the circulation of water that is always falling from
+the clouds in rain and always rising again in vapour. This fall, or
+emanation of the world from the deity, was the origin of evil for the
+Platonists; evil consisted merely infinitude, materiality, or otherness
+from God If anything besides God was to exist, it had to be imperfect;
+instability and conflict were essential to finitude and to existence.
+Salvation, on the other hand, was the return current of aspiration on
+the part of the creature to revert to its source; an aspiration which
+was expressed in various types of being, fixed in the eternal,--types
+which led up, like the steps of a temple, to the ineffable good at the
+top.
+
+In the Christian system this cosmic circulation became only a figure or
+symbol expressing the true creation, the true fall, and the true
+salvation; all three being really episodes in a historical drama,
+occurring only once. The material world was only a scene, a
+stage-setting, designed expressly to be appropriate for the play; and
+this play was the history of mankind, especially of Israel and of the
+Church. The persons and events of this history had a philosophic import;
+each played some part in a providential plan. Each illustrated creation,
+sin, and salvation in some degree, and on some particular level.
+
+The Jews had never felt uncomfortable at being material; even in the
+other world they hoped to remain so, and their immortality was a
+resurrection of the flesh. It did not seem plausible to them that this
+excellent frame of things should be nothing but a faint, troubled, and
+unintended echo of the good. On the contrary, they thought this world so
+good, intrinsically, that they were sure God must have made it
+expressly, and not by an unconscious effluence of his virtue, as the
+Platonists had believed. Their wonder at the power and ingenuity of the
+deity reached its maximum when they thought of him as the cunning
+contriver of nature, and of themselves. Nevertheless the work seemed to
+show some imperfections; indeed, its moral excellence was potential
+rather than actual, a suggestion of what might be, rather than an
+accomplished fact. And so, to explain the unexpected flaws in a creation
+which they thought essentially good, they put back at the beginning of
+things an experience they had daily in the present, namely, that trouble
+springs from bad conduct.
+
+The Jews were intent watchers of fortune and of its vicissitudes. The
+careers of men were their meditation by day and by night; and it takes
+little attention to perceive that frivolity, indifference, knavery, and
+debauchery do not make for well-being in this world. And like other
+hard-pressed peoples, the ancient Jews had a pathetic admiration for
+safety and plenty. How little they must have known these things, to
+think of them so rapturously and so poetically! Not merely their
+personal prudence, but their corporate and religious zeal made them
+abhor that bad conduct which defeated prosperity. It was not mere folly,
+but wickedness and the abomination of desolation. With the lessons of
+conduct continually in mind, they framed the theory that all suffering,
+and even death, were the wages of sin. Finally they went so far as to
+attribute evil in all creation to the casual sin of a first man, and to
+the taint of it transmitted to his descendants; thus passing over the
+suffering and death of all creatures that are not human with an
+indifference that would have astonished the Hindoos.
+
+The imperfection of things, in the Hebraic view, was due to accidents in
+their operation; not, as in the Platonic view, to their essential
+separation from their source and their end. It is in harmony with this
+that salvation too should come by virtue of some special act, like the
+incarnation or death of Christ. Just so, the Jews had conceived
+salvation as a revival of their national existence and greatness, to be
+brought about by the patience and fidelity of the elect, with tremendous
+miracles supervening to reward these virtues.
+
+Thus their conception of the fall and of the redemption was historical.
+And this was a great advantage to a man of imagination inheriting their
+system; for the personages and the miracles that figured in their
+sacred histories afforded a rich subject for fancy to work upon, and for
+the arts to depict. The patriarchs from Adam down, the kings and
+prophets, the creation, Eden, the deluge, the deliverance out of Egypt,
+the thunders and the law of Sinai, the temple, the exile--all this and
+much more that fills the Bible was a rich fund, a familiar tradition
+living in the Church, on which Dante could draw, as he drew at the same
+time from the parallel classic tradition which he also inherited. To
+lend all these Biblical persons and incidents a philosophical dignity he
+had only to fit them, as the Fathers of the Church had done, into the
+Neoplatonic cosmology, or, as the doctors of his own time were doing,
+into the Aristotelian ethics.
+
+So interpreted, sacred history acquired for the philosopher a new
+importance besides that which it had seemed to have to Israel in exile,
+or to the Christian soul conscious of sin. Every episode became the
+symbol for some moral state or some moral principle. Every preacher in
+Christendom, as he repeated his homily on the gospel of the day, was
+invited to rear a structure of spiritual interpretations upon the
+literal sense of the narrative, which nevertheless he was always to hold
+and preserve as a foundation for the others.[2] In a world made by God
+for the illustration of his glory, things and events, though real, must
+be also symbolical; for there is intention and propriety behind them.
+The creation, the deluge, the incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection
+of Christ, the coming of the Holy Ghost with flames of fire and the gift
+of tongues, were all historical facts. The Church was heir to the chosen
+people; it was an historic and political institution, with a destiny in
+this world, in which all her children should share, and for which they
+should fight. At the same time all those facts, were mysteries and
+sacraments for the private soul; they were channels for the same moral
+graces that were embodied in the order of the heavenly spheres, and in
+the types of moral life on earth. Thus the Hebrew tradition brought to
+Dante's mind the consciousness of a providential history, a great
+earthly task,--to be transmitted from generation to generation,--and a
+great hope. The Greek tradition brought him natural and moral
+philosophy. These contributions, joined together, had made Christian
+theology.
+
+Although this theology was the guide to Dante's imagination, and his
+general theme, yet it was not his only interest; or rather he put into
+the framework of orthodox theology theories and visions of his own,
+fusing all into one moral unity and one poetical enthusiasm. The fusion
+was perfect between the personal and the traditional elements. He threw
+politics and love into the melting-pot, and they, too, lost their
+impurities and were refined into a philosophic religion. Theology
+became, to his mind, the guardian of patriotism, and, in a strangely
+literal sense, the angel of love.
+
+The political theory of Dante is a sublime and largely original one. It
+suffers only from its extreme ideality, which makes it inapplicable, and
+has caused it to be studied less than it deserves.
+
+A man's country, in the modern sense, is something that arose yesterday,
+that is constantly changing its limits and its ideals; it is something
+that cannot last for ever. It is the product of geographical and
+historical accidents. The diversities between our different nations are
+irrational; each of them has the same right, or want of right, to its
+peculiarities. A man who is just and reasonable must nowadays, so far as
+his imagination permits, share the patriotism of the rivals and enemies
+of his country,--a patriotism as inevitable and pathetic as his own.
+Nationality being an irrational accident, like sex or complexion, a
+man's allegiance to his country must be conditional, at least if he is a
+philosopher. His patriotism has to be subordinated to rational
+allegiance to such things as justice and humanity.
+
+Very different was the situation in Dante's case. For him the love of
+country could be something absolute, and at the same time something
+reasonable, deliberate, and moral. What he found claiming his allegiance
+was a political body quite ideal, providential, and universal. This
+political body had two heads, like the heraldic eagle,--the pope and the
+emperor. Both were, by right, universal potentates; both should have
+their seat in Rome; and both should direct their government to the same
+end, although by different means and in different spheres. The pope
+should watch over the faith and discipline of the Church. He should bear
+witness, in all lands and ages, to the fact that life on earth was
+merely a preliminary to existence in the other world, and should be a
+preparation for that. The emperor, on the other hand, should guard peace
+and justice everywhere, leaving to free cities or princes the regulation
+of local affairs. These two powers had been established by God through
+special miracles and commissions. An evident providential design,
+culminating in them, ran through all history.
+
+To betray or resist these divine rights, or to confound them, was
+accordingly a sin of the first magnitude. The evils from which society
+suffered were the consequence of such transgressions. The pope had
+acquired temporal power, which was alien to his purely spiritual office;
+besides, he had become a tool of the French king, who was (what no king
+should be) at war with the emperor, and rebellious against the supreme
+imperial authority; indeed, the pope had actually been seen to abandon
+Rome for Avignon,--an act which was a sort of satanic sacrament, the
+outward sign of an inward disgrace. The emperor, in his turn, had
+forgotten that he was King of the Romans and Caesar, and was fond of
+loitering in his native Germany, among its forests and princelings, as
+if the whole world were not by right his country, and the object of his
+solicitude.
+
+And here the larger, theoretical patriotism of Dante, as a Catholic and
+a Roman, passed into his narrower and actual patriotism as a Florentine.
+Had Florence been true to its duties and worthy of its privileges, under
+the double authority of the Church and the Empire? Florence was a Roman
+colony. Had it maintained the purity of its Roman stock, and a Roman
+simplicity and austerity in its laws? Alas, Etruscan immigrants had
+contaminated its blood, and this taint was responsible, Dante thought,
+for the prevalent corruption of manners. All that has made Florence
+great in the history of the world was then only just beginning,--its
+industry, refinements, arts, and literature. But to Dante that budding
+age seemed one of decadence and moral ruin. He makes his ancestor, the
+crusader Cacciaguida, praise the time when the narrow circuit of the
+walls held only one-fifth of its later inhabitants. "Then the city
+abided in peace, sober and chaste."[3] The women plied the distaff, or
+rocked the cradle, and prattled to their children of the heroic legends
+of Troy, Fiesole, and Rome. A woman could turn from her glass with her
+face unpainted; she wore no girdle far more deserving of admiration than
+her own person. The birth of a daughter did not frighten a good burgher;
+her dowry would not have to be excessive, nor her marriage premature. No
+houses were empty, their masters being in exile; none were disgraced by
+unmentionable orgies.[4] This was not all; for if luxury was a great
+curse to Florence, faction was a greater. Florence, an imperial city,
+far from assisting in the restitution of the emperors to their universal
+rights, had fought against them traitorously, in alliance with the
+French invader and the usurping pontiff. It had thus undermined the only
+possible foundation of its own peace and dignity.
+
+These were the theoretical sorrows that loomed behind the personal
+sorrows of Dante in his poverty and exile. They helped him to pour forth
+the intense bitterness of his heart with the breath of prophetic
+invective. They made his hatred of the actual popes and of the actual
+Florence so much fervid zeal for what the popes and Florence ought to
+have been. His political passions and political hopes were fused with a
+sublime political ideal; that fusion sublimated them, and made it
+possible for the expression of them to rise into poetry.
+
+Here is one iron string on which Dante played, and which gave a tragic
+strength to his music. He recorded the villainies of priests, princes,
+and peoples. He upbraided them for their infidelity to the tasks
+assigned to them by God,--tasks which Dante conceived with a Biblical
+definiteness and simplicity. He lamented the consequences of this
+iniquity, wasted provinces, corrupted cities, and the bodies of heroes
+rolling unburied down polluted streams. These vigorous details were
+exalted by the immense significance that Dante infused into them. His
+ever-present definite ideal quickened his eye for the ebb and flow of
+things, rendered the experience of them singly more poignant, and the
+vision of them together more sustained and cumulative. Dante read
+contemporary Italy as the Hebrew prophets read the signs of their times;
+and whatever allowance our critical judgement may make for generous
+illusions on the part of either, there can be no doubt that their
+wholeness of soul, and the prophetic absoluteness of their judgements,
+made their hold on particular facts very strong, and their sense for
+impending weal or woe quite over-powering.
+
+Nor does it seem that at bottom Dante's political philosophy, any more
+than that of the Hebrew prophets, missed the great causes and the great
+aims of human progress. Behind mythical and narrow conceptions of
+history, he had a true sense for the moral principles that really
+condition our well-being. A better science need subtract nothing from
+the insight he had into the difference between political good and evil.
+What in his day seemed a dream--that mankind should be one great
+commonwealth--is now obvious to the idealist, the socialist, the
+merchant. Science and trade are giving, in a very different form, to be
+sure, a practical realization to that idea. And the other half of his
+theory, that of the Catholic Church, is maintained literally by that
+church itself to this day; and the outsider might see in that ideal of a
+universal spiritual society a symbol or premonition of the right of the
+mind to freedom from legal compulsions, or of the common allegiance of
+honest minds to science, and to their common spiritual heritage and
+destiny.
+
+On the other hand, the sting of Dante's private wrongs, like the
+enthusiasm of his private loves, lent a wonderful warmth and clearness
+to the great objects of his imagination. We are too often kept from
+feeling great things greatly for want of power to assimilate them to the
+little things which we feel keenly and sincerely. Dante had, in this
+respect, the art of a Platonic lover: he could enlarge the object of his
+passion, and keep the warmth and ardour of it undiminished. He had been
+banished unjustly--_Florentinus exul immeritus_, he liked to call
+himself. That injustice rankled, but it did not fester, in his heart;
+for his indignation spread to all wrong, and thundered against Florence,
+Europe, and mankind, in that they were corrupt and perfidious. Dante had
+loved. The memory of that passion remained also, but it did not
+degenerate into sentimentality; for his adoration passed to a larger
+object and one less accidental. His love had been a spark of that "love
+which moves the sun and the other stars."[5] He had known, in that
+revelation, the secret of the universe. The spheres, the angels, the
+sciences, were henceforth full of sweetness, comfort, and light.
+
+Of this Platonic expansion of emotion, till it suffuses all that
+deserves to kindle it, we have a wonderful version in Dante's _Vita
+Nuova_. This book, on the surface, is an account of Dante's meeting, at
+the age of nine, with Beatrice, a child even a little younger; of
+another meeting with her at the age of eighteen; of an overwhelming
+mystic passion which the lover wished to keep secret, so much so that he
+feigned another attachment as a blind; of a consequent estrangement; and
+of the death of Beatrice, whereupon the poet resolved not to speak
+publicly of her again, until he could praise her in such wise as no
+woman had ever been praised before.
+
+This story is interspersed with poems of the most exquisite delicacy,
+both in sentiment and in versification. They are dreamlike, allegorical,
+musical meditations, ambiguous in their veiled meanings, but absolutely
+clear and perfect in their artful structure, like a work of tracery and
+stained glass, geometrical, mystical, and tender. A singular limpidity
+of accent and image, a singular naïveté, is strangely combined in these
+pieces with scholastic distinctions and a delight in hiding and hinting,
+as in a charade.
+
+The learned will dispute for ever on the exact basis and meaning of
+these confessions of Dante. The learned are perhaps not those best
+fitted to solve the problem. It is a matter for literary tact and
+sympathetic imagination. It must be left to the delicate intelligence
+of the reader, if he has it; and if he has not, Dante does not wish to
+open his heart to him. His enigmatical manner is his protection against
+the intrusion of uncongenial minds.
+
+Without passing beyond the sphere of learned criticism, I think we may
+say this: the various interpretations, in this matter, are not mutually
+exclusive. Symbolism and literalness, in Dante's time, and in his
+practice, are simultaneous. For instance, in any history of mediaeval
+philosophy you may read that a great subject of dispute in those days
+was the question whether universal terms or natures, such as man, or
+humanity, existed before the particulars, in the particulars, or after
+the particulars, by abstraction of what was common to them all. Now,
+this matter was undoubtedly much disputed about; but there is one
+comprehensive and orthodox solution, which represents the true mind of
+the age, above the peculiar hobbies or heresies of individuals. This
+solution is that universal terms or natures exist before the
+particulars, _and_ in the particulars, _and_ after the particulars: for
+God, before he made the world, knew how he intended to make it, and had
+eternally in his mind the notions of a perfect man, horse, etc., after
+which the particulars were to be modelled, or to which, in case of
+accident, they were to be restored, either by the healing and
+recuperative force of nature, or by the ministrations of grace. But
+universal terms or natures existed also _in_ the particulars, since the
+particulars illustrated them, shared in them, and were what they were by
+virtue of that participation. Nevertheless, the universals existed also
+after the particulars: for the discursive mind of man, surveying the
+variety of natural things, could not help noticing and abstracting the
+common types that often recur in them; and this _ex postfacto_ idea, in
+the human mind, is a universal term also. To deny any of the three
+theories, and not to see their consistency, is to miss the mediaeval
+point of view, which, in every sense of the word, was Catholic.
+
+Just such a solution seems to me natural in the case of Beatrice. We
+have it on independent documentary evidence that in Dante's time there
+actually lived in Florence a certain Bice Portinari; and there are many
+incidents in the _Vita Nuova_ and in the _Commedia_ which hardly admit
+of an allegorical interpretation; such as the death of Beatrice, and
+especially that of her father, on which occasion Dante writes a
+sympathetic poem.[6] can see no reason why this lady, as easily as any
+other person, should not have called forth the dreamful passion of our
+poet. That he had loved some one is certain. Most people have; and why
+should Dante, in particular, have found the language of love a natural
+veil for his philosophy, if the passion and the language of love had not
+been his mother-tongue? The language of love is no doubt usual in the
+allegories of mystics, and was current in the conventional poetry of
+Dante's time; but mystics themselves are commonly crossed or potential
+lovers; and the troubadours harped on the string of love simply because
+it was the most responsive string in their own natures, and that which
+could most easily be made to vibrate in their hearers. Dante was not
+less sensitive than the average man of his generation; and if he
+followed the fashion of minstrels and mystics, it was because he shared
+their disposition. The beautiful, the unapproachable, the divine, had
+passed before him in some visible form; it matters nothing whether this
+vision came once only, and in the shape of the actual Beatrice, or
+continuously, and in every shape through which a divine influence may
+seem to come to a poet. No one would deserve this name of poet--and who
+deserves it more than Dante?--if real sights and sounds never impressed
+him; and he would hardly deserve it either, if they impressed him only
+physically, and for what they are in themselves. His sensibility creates
+his ideal.
+
+If to deny the existence of an historical Beatrice seems violent and
+gratuitous, it would be a much worse misunderstanding not to perceive
+that Beatrice is _also_ a symbol. On one occasion, as we read in the
+_Vita Nuova_,[7] Dante found himself, in a church, in the presence of
+Beatrice. His eyes were inevitably fixed upon her; but as he wished to
+conceal his profound passion from the gossiping crowd, he chose another
+lady, who happened to stand in the direct line of vision between him and
+Beatrice, and pretended to be gazing at her, in reality looking beyond
+her to Beatrice. This intervening lady, _la donna gentile_, became the
+screen to his true love.[8] But his attentions to her were so assiduous
+that they were misinterpreted. Beatrice herself observed them, and
+thinking he was going too far and not with an honourable purpose, showed
+her displeasure by refusing to greet him as he passed. This sounds real
+and earthly enough: but what is our surprise when we read expressly, in
+the _Convito_, that the _donna gentile,_ the screen to Dante's true
+love, is philosophy.[9] If the _donna gentile_ is philosophy, the
+_donna gentilissima,_ Beatrice, must be something of the same sort, only
+nobler. She must be theology, and theology Beatrice undoubtedly is. Her
+very name is played upon, if not selected, to mean that she is what
+renders blessed, what shows the path of salvation.
+
+Now the scene in the church becomes an allegory throughout. The young
+Dante, we are given to understand, was at heart a religious and devout
+soul, looking for the highest wisdom. But intervening between his human
+reason and revealed truth (which he really was in love with, and wished
+to win and to understand) he found philosophy or, as we should say,
+science. To science he gave his preliminary attention; so much so that
+the mysteries of theology were momentarily obscured in his mind; and his
+faith, to his great sorrow, refused to salute him as he passed. He had
+fallen into materialistic errors; he had interpreted the spots on the
+moon as if they could be due to physical, not to Socratic, causes; and
+his religious philosophy had lost its warmth, even if his religious
+faith had not actually been endangered. It is certain, then, that
+Beatrice, besides being a woman, was also a symbol.
+
+But this is not the end. If Beatrice is a symbol for theology, theology
+itself is not-final. It, too, is an avenue, an interpretation. The eyes
+of Beatrice reflect a supernal light. It is the ineffable vision of
+God, the beatific vision, that alone can make us happy and be the reason
+and the end of our loves and our pilgrimages.
+
+A supreme ideal of peace and perfection which moves the lover, and which
+moves the sky, is more easily named than understood. In the last canto
+of the _Paradiso_, where Dante is attempting to describe the beatific
+vision, he says many times over that our notion of this ideal must be
+vague and inadequate. The value of the notion to a poet or a philosopher
+does not lie in what it contains positively, but in the attitude which
+it causes him to assume towards real experience. Or perhaps it would be
+better to say that to have an ideal does not mean so much to have any
+image in the fancy, any Utopia more or less articulate, but rather to
+take a consistent moral attitude towards all the things of this world,
+to judge and coordinate our interests, to establish a hierarchy of goods
+and evils, and to value events and persons, not by a casual personal
+impression or instinct, but according to their real nature and tendency.
+So understood, an ultimate ideal is no mere vision of the philosophical
+dreamer, but a powerful and passionate force in the poet and the orator.
+It is the voice of his love or hate, of his hope or sorrow, idealizing,
+challenging, or condemning the world.
+
+It is here that the feverish sensibility of the young Dante stood him in
+good stead; it gave an unprecedented vigour and clearness to his moral
+vision; it made him the classic poet of hell and of heaven. At the same
+time, it helped to make him an upright judge, a terrible accuser, of the
+earth. Everything and everybody in his day and generation became to him,
+on account of his intense loyalty to his inward vision, an instance of
+divine graciousness or of devilish perversity. Doubtless this keenness
+of soul was not wholly due to the gift of loving, or to the discipline
+of love; it was due in part also to pride, to resentment, to theoretical
+prejudices. But figures like that of Francesca di Rimini and Manfred,
+and the light and rapture vibrating through the whole _Paradiso,_ could
+hardly have been evoked by a merely irritated genius. The background and
+the starting-point of everything in Dante is the _intelletto d' amore_,
+the genius of love.
+
+Everybody has heard that God is love and that love makes the world go
+round; and those who have traced this latter notion back to its source
+in Aristotle may have some notion of what it means. It means, as we saw
+in the beginning, that we should not try to explain motion and life by
+their natural antecedents, for these run back _in infinitum_. We should
+explain motion and life rather by their purpose or end, by that
+unrealized ideal which moving and living things seem to aspire to, and
+may be said to love. What justifies itself is not any fact or law; for
+why should these not have been different? What justifies itself is what
+is good, what is as it ought to be. But things in motion, Aristotle
+conceived, declare, as it were, that they are not satisfied, and ought
+to be in some different condition. They look to a fulfilment which is as
+yet ideal. This fulfilment, if it included motion and life, could
+include them inwardly only; it would consist in a sustained activity,
+never lapsing nor suffering change. Such an activity is the unchanging
+goal towards which life advances and by which its different stages are
+measured: But since the purpose of things, and not their natural,
+causes, is that which explains them, we may call this eventual activity
+their reason for being. It will be their unmoved mover.
+
+But how, we may ask,--how can the unchanging, the ideal, the eventual,
+initiate anything or determine the disposition and tendency of what
+actually lives and moves? The answer, or rather the impossibility of
+giving an answer, may be expressed in a single word: magic. It is magic
+when a good or interesting result, because it would prove good or
+interesting, is credited with marshalling the conditions and evoking the
+beings that are to realize it. It is natural that I should be hungry,
+and natural that there should be things suitable for me to eat--for
+otherwise I should not be hungry long; but if my hunger, in case it is
+sharp enough, should be able of itself to produce the food it calls
+for, that would be magic. Nature would be evoked by the incantations of
+the will.
+
+I do not forget that Aristotle, with Dante after him, asserts that the
+goal of life is a separate being already existing, namely, the mind of
+God, eternally realizing what the world aspires to. The influence of
+this mind, however, upon the world is no less magical than would be that
+of a non-existent ideal. For its operation is admittedly not transitive
+or physical. It itself does not change in working. No virtue leaves it;
+it does not, according to Aristotle and Plotinus, even know that it
+works. Indeed, it works only because other things are disposed to pursue
+it as their ideal; let things keep this disposition, and they will
+pursue and frame their ideal no less if it nowhere has an actual
+existence, than if by chance it exists elsewhere in its own person. It
+works only in its capacity of ideal; therefore, even if it exists, it
+works only by magic. The matter beneath feels the spell of its presence,
+and catches something of its image, as the waves of the sea might
+receive and reflect tremblingly the light shed by the moon. The world
+accordingly is moved and vivified in every fibre by magic, by the magic
+of the goal to which it aspires.
+
+But this magic, on earth, bore the name of love. The life of the world
+was a love, produced by the magic attraction of a good it has never
+possessed and, so long as it remains a world, is incapable of
+possessing. Actual things were only suggestions of what the elements in
+that ulterior existence ought to be: they were mere symbols. The acorn
+was a mere prophecy--an existing symbol--for the ideal oak; because when
+the acorn falls into good ground it will be corrupted, but the idea of
+the oak will arise and be manifested in its place. The acorn was a sort
+of reliquary in which the miraculous power of the idea was somehow
+enshrined. In the vulgar attribution of causes we, like Anaxagoras,
+resemble a superstitious relic-worshipper who should forget that the
+intercession and merits of the saint really work the miracle, and should
+attribute it instead to the saint's bones and garments in their material
+capacity. Similarly, we should attribute the power which things exerted
+over us, not to the rarer or denser substance, but to the eternal ideas
+that they existed by expressing, and existed to express. Things merely
+localized--like the saint's relics--the influences which flowed to us
+from above. In the world of values they were mere symbols, accidental
+channels for divine energy; and since divine energy, by its magic
+assimilation of matter, had created these things, in order to express
+itself, they were symbols altogether not merely in their use, but in
+their origin and nature.
+
+A mind persuaded that it lives among things that, like words, are
+essentially significant, and that what they signify is the magic
+attraction, called love, which draws all things after it, is a mind
+poetic in its intuition, even if its language be prose. The science and
+philosophy of Dante did not have to be put into verse in order to become
+poetry: they were poetry fundamentally and in their essence. When Plato
+and Aristotle, following the momentous precept of Socrates, decreed that
+observation of nature should stop and a moral interpretation of nature
+should begin, they launched into the world a new mythology, to take the
+place of the Homeric one which was losing its authority. The power the
+poets had lost of producing illusion was possessed by these philosophers
+in a high degree; and no one was ever more thoroughly under their spell
+than Dante. He became to Platonism and Christianity what Homer had been
+to Paganism; and if Platonism and Christianity, like Paganism, should
+ever cease to be defended scientifically, Dante will keep the poetry and
+wisdom of them alive; and it is safe to say that later generations will
+envy more than they will despise his philosophy. When the absurd
+controversies and factious passions that in some measure obscure the
+nature of this system have completely passed away, no one will think of
+reproaching Dante with his bad science, and bad history, and minute
+theology. These will not seem blemishes in his poetry, but integral
+parts of it.
+
+A thousand years after Homer, Alexandrian critics were expounding his
+charming myths as if they were a revealed treatise of physics and
+morals. A thousand years after Dante we may hope that his conscientious
+vision of the universe, where all is love, magic, and symbolism, may
+charm mankind exclusively as poetry. So conceived, the _Divine Comedy_
+marks high noon in that long day-dream of which Plato's dialogues mark
+the beginning: a pause of two thousand years in the work of political
+reason, during which the moral imagination spun out of itself an
+allegorical philosophy, as a boy, kept at home during a rainy day with
+books too hard and literal for his years, might spin his own romance out
+of his father's histories, and might define, with infantile precision,
+his ideal lady-love, battles, and kingdoms. The middle age saw' the good
+in a vision. It is for the new age to translate those delightful symbols
+into the purposes of manhood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In a letter which tradition assigns to Dante, addressed to his
+protector, Cangrande della Scala, lord of Verona and Vicenza, are these
+words about the _Divine Comedy_: "The subject of the whole work, taken
+merely in its literal sense, is the state of souls after death,
+considered simply as a fact. But if the work is understood in its
+allegorical intention, the subject of it is man, according as, by his
+deserts and demerits in the use of his free-will, he is justly open to
+rewards and punishments." This by no means exhausts, however, the
+significations which we may look for in a work of Dante's. How many
+these may be is pointed out to us in the same letter, and illustrated by
+the beginning of the one hundred and fourteenth Psalm: "When Israel went
+out of Egypt, the house of Jacob from a people of strange language;
+Judah was his sanctuary, and Israel his dominion." Here, Dante tells us,
+"if we look to the _letter_ only, what is conveyed to us is the
+deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt in the time of Moses;
+if we look to the _allegory_ of it, what is signified is our redemption
+accomplished through Christ; if we consider the _moral sense_, what is
+signified is the conversion of the soul from her present grief and
+wretchedness to a state of grace; and if we consider the _anagogical
+sense_ [that is, the revelation contained concerning our highest
+destiny], what is signified is the passing of the sanctified soul from
+the bondage of earthly corruption to the freedom of everlasting glory."
+
+When people brooded so much over a simple text as to find all these
+meanings in it, we may expect that their own works, when meant to be
+profound, should have stage above stage of allegorical application. So
+in the first canto of the _Inferno_ we find a lion that keeps Dante from
+approaching a delectable mountain; and this lion, besides what he is in
+the landscape of the poem, is a symbol for pride or power in general,
+for the king of France in particular, and for whatever political
+ambitions in Dante's personal life may have robbed him of happiness or
+distracted him from faith and from piety. Thus, throughout the _Divine
+Comedy_, meaning and meaning lurk beneath the luminous pictures; and the
+poem, besides being a description of the other world, and of the rewards
+and punishment meted out to souls, is a dramatic view of human passions
+in this life; a history of Italy and of the world; a theory of Church
+and State; the autobiography of an exile; and the confessions of a
+Christian, and of a lover, conscious of his sins and of the miracle of
+divine grace that intervenes to save him.
+
+The subject-matter of the _Divine Comedy_ is accordingly the moral
+universe in all its levels,--romantic, political, religious. To present
+these moral facts in a graphic way, the poet performed a double work of
+imagination. First he chose some historical personage that might
+plausibly illustrate each condition of the soul. Then he pictured this
+person in some characteristic and symbolic attitude of mind and of body,
+and in an appropriate, symbolic environment. To give material embodiment
+to moral ideas by such a method would nowadays be very artificial, and
+perhaps impossible; but in Dante's time everything was favourable to the
+attempt. We are accustomed to think of goods and evils as functions of
+a natural life, sparks struck out in the chance shock of men with things
+or with one another. For Dante, it was a matter of course that moral
+distinctions might be discerned, not merely as they arise incidentally
+in human experience, but also, and more genuinely, as they are displayed
+in the order of creation. The Creator himself was a poet producing
+allegories. The material world was a parable which he had built out in
+space, and ordered to be enacted. History was a great charade. The
+symbols of earthly poets are words or images; the symbols of the divine
+poet were natural things and the fortunes of men. They had been devised
+for a purpose; and this purpose, as the Koran, too, declares, had been
+precisely to show forth the great difference there is in God's sight
+between good and evil.
+
+In Platonic cosmology, the concentric spheres were bodies formed and
+animated by intelligences of various orders. The nobler an intelligence,
+the more swift and outward, or higher, was the sphere it moved; whence
+the identification of "higher" with better, which survives, absurdly, to
+this day. And while Dante could not attribute literal truth to his
+fancies about hell, purgatory, and heaven, he believed that an actual
+heaven, purgatory, and hell had been fashioned by God on purpose to
+receive souls of varying deserts and complexion; so that while the
+poet's imagination, unless it reechoed divine revelation, was only
+human and not prophetic, yet it was a genuine and plausible imagination,
+moving on the lines of nature, and anticipating such things as
+experience might very well realize. Dante's objectification of morality,
+his art of giving visible forms and local habitations to ideal virtues
+and vices, was for him a thoroughly serious and philosophical exercise.
+God had created nature and life on that very principle. The poet's
+method repeated the magic of Genesis. His symbolical imagination
+mirrored this symbolical world; it was a sincere anticipation of fact,
+no mere laboured and wilful allegory.
+
+This situation has a curious consequence. Probably for the first and
+last time in the history of the world a classification worked out by a
+systematic moralist guided the vision of a great poet. Aristotle had
+distinguished, named, and classified the various virtues, with their
+opposites. But observe: if the other world was made on purpose--as it
+was--to express and render palpable those moral distinctions which were
+eternal, and to express and render them palpable in great detail, with
+all their possible tints and varieties; and if Aristotle had correctly
+classified moral qualities, as he had--then it follows that Aristotle
+(without knowing it) must have supplied the ground-plan, as it were, of
+hell and of heaven. Such was Dante's thought. With Aristotle's _Ethics_
+open before him, with a supplementary hint, here and there, drawn from
+the catechism, and with an ingrained preference (pious and almost
+philosophic) for the number three and its multiples, he needed not to
+voyage without a chart. The most visionary of subjects, life after
+death, could be treated with scientific soberness and deep sincerity.
+This vision was to be no wanton dream. It was to be a sober meditation,
+a philosophical prophecy, a probable drama,--the most poignant,
+terrible, and consoling of all possible truths.
+
+The good--this was the fundamental thought of Aristotle and of all Greek
+ethics,--the good is the end at which nature aims. The demands of life
+cannot be radically perverse, since they are the judges of every
+excellence. No man, as Dante says, could hate his own soul; he could not
+at once be, and contradict, the voice of his instincts and emotions. Nor
+could a man hate God; for if that man knew himself, he would see that
+God was, by definition, his natural good, the ultimate goal of his
+actual aspirations.[10] Since it was impossible, according to his
+insight, that our faculties should be intrinsically evil, all evil had
+to arise from the disorder into which these faculties fall, their too
+great weakness or strength in relation to one another. If the animal
+part of man was too strong for his reason, he fell into
+incontinence,--that is, into lust, gluttony, avarice, wrath, or pride.
+Incontinence came from an excessive or ill-timed pursuit of something
+good, of a part of what nature aims at; for food, children, property,
+and character are natural goods. These sins are accordingly the most
+excusable and the least odious. Dante puts those who have sinned through
+love in the first circle of hell, nearest to the sunlight, or in the
+topmost round of purgatory, nearest to the earthly paradise. Below the
+lovers, in each case, are the gluttons,--where a northern poet would
+have been obliged to place his drunkards. Beneath these again are the
+misers,--worse because less open to the excuse of a merely childish lack
+of self-control.
+
+The disorder of the faculties may arise, however, in another way. The
+combative or spirited element, rather than the senses, may get out of
+hand, and lead to crimes of violence. Violence, like incontinence, is
+spontaneous enough in its personal origin, and would not be odious if it
+did not inflict, and intend to inflict, harm on others; so that besides
+incontinence, there is malice in it. Ill-will to others may arise from
+pride, because one loves to be superior to them, or from envy, because
+one abhors that they should seem superior to oneself; or through desire
+for vengeance, because one smarts under some injury. Sins of these kinds
+are more serious than those of foolish incontinence; they complicate the
+moral world more; they introduce endless opposition of interests, and
+perpetual, self-propagating crimes. They are hateful. Dante feels less
+pity for those who suffer by them: he remembers the sufferings these
+malefactors have themselves caused, and he feels a sort of joy in
+joining the divine justice, and would gladly lash them himself.
+
+Worse still than violence, however, is guile: the sin of those who in
+the service of their intemperance or their malice have abused the gift
+of reason. _Corruptio optimi pessima_; and to turn reason, the faculty
+that establishes order, into a means of organizing disorder, is a
+perversity truly satanic: it turns evil into an art. But even this
+perversity has stages; and Dante distinguishes ten sorts of dishonesty
+or simple fraud, as well as three sorts of treachery.
+
+Besides these positive transgressions there is a possibility of general
+moral sluggishness and indifference. This Dante, with his fervid nature,
+particularly hates. He puts the Laodiceans in the fringe of his hell;
+within the gate, that they may be without hope, but outside of limbo,
+that they may have torments to endure, and be stung by wasps and
+hornets into a belated activity[11]
+
+To these vices, known to Aristotle, the Catholic moralist was obliged to
+add two others: original sin, of which spontaneous disbelief is one
+consequence, and heresy, or misbelief, after a revelation has been given
+and accepted. Original sin, and the paganism that goes with it, if they
+lead to nothing worse, are a mere privation of excellence and involve,
+in eternity merely a privation of joy: they are punished in limbo. There
+sighs are heard, but no lamentation, and the only sorrow is to live in
+desire without hope. This fate is most appropriately imputed to the
+noble and clear-sighted in the hereafter, since it is so often their
+experience here. Dante was never juster than in this stroke.[12] Heresy,
+on the other hand, is a kind of passion when honest, or a kind of fraud
+when politic; and it is punished as pride in fiery tombs,[13] or as
+faction by perpetual gaping wounds and horrible mutilations.[14]
+
+So far, with these slight additions, Dante is following Aristotle; but
+here a great divergence sets in. If a pagan poet had conceived the idea
+of illustrating the catalogue of vices and virtues in poetic scenes, he
+would have chosen suitable episodes in human life, and painted the
+typical characters that figured in them in their earthly environment;
+for pagan morality is a plant of earth. Not so with Dante. His poem
+describes this world merely in retrospect; the foreground is occupied by
+the eternal consequences of what time had brought forth. These
+consequences are new facts, not merely, as for the rationalist, the old
+facts conceived in their truth; they often reverse, in their emotional
+quality, the events they represent. Such a reversal is made possible by
+the theory that justice is partly retributive; that virtue is not its
+own sufficient reward, nor vice its own sufficient punishment. According
+to this theory, this life contains a part of our experience only, yet
+determines the rest. The other life is a second experience, yet it does
+not contain any novel adventures. It is determined altogether by what we
+have done on earth; as the tree falleth so it lieth, and souls after
+death have no further initiative.
+
+The theory Dante adopts mediates between two earlier views; in so far as
+it is Greek, it conceives immortality ideally, as something timeless;
+but in so far as it is Hebraic, it conceives of a new existence and a
+second, different taste of life. Dante thinks of a second experience,
+but of one that is wholly retrospective and changeless. It is an
+epilogue which sums up the play, and is the last episode in it. The
+purpose of this epilogue is not to carry on the play indefinitely: such
+a romantic notion of immortality never entered Dante's mind. The purpose
+of the epilogue is merely to vindicate (in a more unmistakable fashion
+than the play, being ill acted, itself could do) the excellence of
+goodness and the misery of vice. Were this life all, he thinks the
+wicked might laugh. If not wholly happy, at least they might boast that
+their lot was no worse than that of many good men. Nothing would make an
+overwhelming difference. Moral distinctions would be largely impertinent
+and remarkably jumbled. If I am a simple lover of goodness, I may
+perhaps put up with this situation. I may say of the excellences I prize
+what Wordsworth says of his Lucy: there may be none to praise and few to
+love them, but they make all the difference to me.
+
+Dante, however, was not merely a simple lover of excellence: he was also
+a keen hater of wickedness, one that took the moral world tragically
+and wished to heighten the distinctions he felt into something absolute
+and infinite. Now any man who is _enragé_ in his preferences will
+probably say, with Mohammed, Tertullian, and Calvin, that good is
+dishonoured if those who contemn it can go scot-free, and never repent
+of their negligence; that the more horrible the consequences of
+evil-doing, the more tolerable the presence of evil-doing is in the
+world; and that the everlasting shrieks and contortions of the damned
+alone will make it possible for the saints to sit quiet, and be
+convinced that there is perfect harmony in the universe. On this
+principle, in the famous inscription which Dante places over the gate of
+hell, we read that primal love, as well as justice and power,
+established that torture-house; primal love, that is, of that good
+which, by the extreme punishment of those who scorn it, is honoured,
+vindicated, and made to shine like the sun. The damned are damned for
+the glory of God.
+
+This doctrine, I cannot help thinking, is a great disgrace to human
+nature. It shows how desperate, at heart, is the folly of an egotistic
+or anthropocentric philosophy. This philosophy begins by assuring us
+that everything is obviously created to serve our needs; it then
+maintains that everything serves our ideals; and in the end, it reveals
+that everything serves our blind hatreds and superstitious qualms.
+Because my instinct taboos something, the whole universe, with insane
+intensity, shall taboo it for ever. This infatuation was inherited by
+Dante, and it was not uncongenial to his bitter and intemperate spleen.
+Nevertheless, he saw beyond it at times. Like many other Christian
+seers, he betrays here and there an esoteric view of rewards and
+punishments, which makes them simply symbols for the intrinsic quality
+of good and evil ways. The punishment, he then seems to say, is nothing
+added; it is what the passion itself pursues; it is a fulfilment,
+horrifying the soul that desired it.
+
+For instance, spirits newly arrived in hell require no devil with his
+prong to drive them to their punishment. They flit towards it eagerly,
+of their own accord.[15] Similarly, the souls in purgatory are kept by
+their own will at the penance they are doing. No external force retains
+them, but until they are quite purged they are not able, because they
+are not willing, to absolve themselves.[16] The whole mountain, we are
+told, trembles and bursts into psalmody when any one frees himself and
+reaches heaven. Is it too much of a gloss to say that these souls change
+their prison when they change their ideal, and that an inferior state of
+soul is its own purgatory, and determines its own duration? In one
+place, at any rate, Dante proclaims the intrinsic nature of punishment
+in express terms. Among the blasphemers is a certain king of Thebes, who
+defied the thunderbolts of Jupiter. He shows himself indifferent to his
+punishment and says: "Such as I was alive, such I am dead." Whereupon
+Virgil exclaims, with a force Dante had never found in his voice before:
+"In that thy pride is not mortified, thou art punished the more. No
+torture, other than thy own rage, would be woe enough to match thy
+fury."[17] And indeed, Dante's imagination cannot outdo, it cannot even
+equal, the horrors which men have brought upon themselves in this world.
+If we were to choose the most fearful of the scenes in the _Inferno_, we
+should have to choose the story of Ugolino, but this is only a pale
+recital of what Pisa had actually witnessed.
+
+A more subtle and interesting instance, if a less obvious one, may be
+found in the punishment of Paolo and Francesca di Rimini. What makes
+these lovers so wretched in the Inferno? They are still together. Can an
+eternity of floating on the wind, in each other's arms, be a punishment
+for lovers? That is just what their passion, if left to speak for
+itself, would have chosen. It is what passion stops at, and would gladly
+prolong for ever. Divine judgement has only taken it at its word. This
+fate is precisely what Aucassin, in the well-known tale, wishes for
+himself and his sweetheart Nicolette,--not a heaven to be won by
+renunciation, but the possession, even if it be in hell, of what he
+loves and fancies. And a great romantic poet, Alfred de Musset, actually
+upbraids Dante for not seeing that such an eternal destiny as he has
+assigned to Paolo and Francesca would be not the ruin of their love,[18]
+but the perfect fulfilment of it. This last seems to be very true; but
+did Dante overlook the truth of it? If so, what instinct guided him to
+choose just the fate for these lovers that they would have chosen for
+themselves?
+
+There is a great difference between the apprentices in life, and the
+masters,--Aucassin and Alfred de Musset were among the apprentices;
+Dante was one of the masters. He could feel the fresh promptings of life
+as keenly as any youngster, or any romanticist; but he had lived these
+things through, he knew the possible and the impossible issue of them;
+he saw their relation to the rest of human nature, and to the ideal of
+an ultimate happiness and peace. He had discovered the necessity of
+saying continually to oneself: Thou shalt renounce. And for this reason
+he needed no other furniture, for hell than the literal ideals and
+fulfilments of our absolute little passions. The soul that is possessed
+by any one of these passions nevertheless has other hopes in abeyance.
+Love itself dreams of more than mere possession; to conceive happiness,
+it must conceive a life to be shared in a varied world, full of events
+and activities, which shall be new and ideal bonds between the lovers.
+But unlawful love cannot pass out into this public fulfilment. It is
+condemned to be mere possession--possession in the dark, without an
+environment, without a future. It is love among the ruins. And it is
+precisely this that is the torment of Paolo and Francesca--love among
+the ruins of themselves and of all else they might have had to give to
+one another. Abandon yourself, Dante would say to us,--abandon yourself
+altogether to a love that is nothing but love, and you are in hell
+already. Only an inspired poet could be so subtle a moralist. Only a
+sound moralist could be so tragic a poet.
+
+The same tact and fine feeling that appear in these little moral dramas
+appear also in the sympathetic landscape in which each episode is set.
+The poet actually accomplishes the feat which he attributes to the
+Creator; he evokes a material world to be the fit theatre for moral
+attitudes. Popular imagination and the precedents of Homer and Virgil
+had indeed carried him halfway in this symbolic labour, as tradition
+almost always carries a poet who is successful. Mankind, from remotest
+antiquity, had conceived a dark subterranean hell, inhabited by unhappy
+ghosts. In Christian times, these shades had become lost souls,
+tormented by hideous demons. But Dante, with the Aristotelian chart of
+the vices before him, turned those vague windy caverns into a
+symmetrical labyrinth. Seven concentric terraces descended, step by
+step, towards the waters of the Styx, which in turn encircled the brazen
+walls of the City of Dis, or Pluto. Within these walls, two more
+terraces led down to the edge of a prodigious precipice--perhaps a
+thousand miles deep--which formed the pit of hell. At the bottom of
+this, still sinking gently towards the centre, were ten concentric
+furrows or ditches, to hold ten sorts of rogues; and finally a last
+sheer precipice fell to the frozen lake of Cocytus, at the very centre
+of the earth, in the midst of which Lucifer was congealed amongst lesser
+traitors.
+
+Precision and horror, graphic and moral truth, were never so wonderfully
+combined as in the description of this hell. Yet the conception of
+purgatory is more original, and perhaps more poetical. The very approach
+to the place is enchanting. We hear of it first in the fatal adventure
+ascribed to Ulysses by Dante. Restless at Ithaca after his return from
+Troy, the hero had summoned his surviving companions for a last voyage
+of discovery. He had sailed with them past the Pillars of Hercules,
+skirting the African shore; until after three months of open sea, he saw
+a colossal mountain, a great truncated cone, looming before him. This
+was the island and hill of purgatory, at the very antipodes of
+Jerusalem. Yet before Ulysses could land there, a squall overtook him;
+and his galley sank, prow foremost, in that untraversed sea, within
+sight of a new world. So must the heathen fail of salvation, though some
+oracular impulse bring them near the goal.
+
+How easy is success, on the other hand, to the ministers of grace! From
+the mouth of the Tiber, where the souls of Christians congregate after
+death, a light skiff, piloted by an angel, and propelled only by his
+white wings, skims the sea swiftly towards the mountain of purgatory,
+there deposits the spirits it carries, and is back at the mouth of the
+Tiber again on the same day. So much for the approach to purgatory. When
+a spirit lands it finds the skirts of the mountain broad and spreading,
+but the slope soon becomes hard and precipitous. When he has passed the
+narrow gate of repentance, he must stay upon each of the ledges that
+encircle the mountain at various heights, until one of his sins is
+purged, and then upon the next ledge above, if he has been guilty also
+of the sin that is atoned for there. The mountain is so high as to lift
+its head into the sphere of the moon, above the reach of terrestrial
+tempests. The top, which is a broad circular plain, contains the Garden
+of Eden, watered by the rivers Lethe and Eunoe, one to heal all painful
+memories, and the other to bring all good thoughts to clearness. From
+this place, which literally touches the lowest heaven, the upward flight
+is easy from sphere to sphere.
+
+The astronomy of Dante's day fell in beautifully with his poetic task.
+It described and measured a firmament that would still be identified
+with the posthumous heaven of the saints. The whirling invisible spheres
+of that astronomy had the earth for their centre. The sublime
+complexities of this Ptolemaic system were day and night before Dante's
+mind. He loves to tell us in what constellation the sun is rising or
+setting, and what portion of the sky is then over the antipodes; he
+carries in his mind an orrery that shows him, at any given moment, the
+position of every star.
+
+Such a constant dragging in of astronomical lore may seem to us puerile
+or pedantic; but for Dante the astronomical situation had the charm of a
+landscape, literally full of the most wonderful lights and shadows; and
+it also had the charm of a hard-won discovery that unveiled the secrets
+of nature. To think straight, to see things as they are, or as they
+might naturally be, interested him more than to fancy things impossible;
+and in this he shows, not want of imagination, but true imaginative
+power and imaginative maturity. It is those of us who are too feeble to
+conceive and master the real world, or too cowardly to face it, that run
+away from it to those cheap fictions that alone seem to us fine enough
+for poetry or for religion. In Dante the fancy is not empty or
+arbitrary; it is serious, fed on the study of real things. It adopts
+their tendency and divines their true destiny. His art is, in the
+original Greek sense, an imitation or rehearsal of nature, an
+anticipation of fate. For this reason curious details of science or
+theology enter as a matter of course into his verse. With the
+straightforward faith and simplicity of his age he devours these
+interesting images, which help him to clarify the mysteries of this
+world.
+
+There is a kind of sensualism or aestheticism that has decreed in our
+day that theory is not poetical; as if all the images and emotions that
+enter a cultivated mind were not saturated with theory. The prevalence
+of such a sensualism or aestheticism would alone suffice to explain the
+impotence of the arts. The life of theory is not less human or less
+emotional than the life of sense; it is more typically human and more
+keenly emotional. Philosophy is a more intense sort of experience than
+common life is, just as pure and subtle music, heard in retirement, is
+something keener and more intense than the howling of storms or the
+rumble of cities. For this reason philosophy, when a poet is not
+mindless, enters inevitably into his poetry, since it has entered into
+his life; or rather, the detail of things and the detail of ideas pass
+equally into his verse, when both alike lie in the path that has led him
+to his ideal. To object to theory in poetry would be like objecting to
+words there; for words, too, are symbols without the sensuous character
+of the things they stand for; and yet it is only by the net of new
+connections which words throw over things, in recalling them, that
+poetry arises at all. Poetry is an attenuation, a rehandling, an echo of
+crude experience; it is itself a theoretic vision of things at arm's
+length.
+
+Never before or since has a poet lived in so large a landscape as Dante;
+for our infinite times and distances are of little poetic value while we
+have no graphic image of what may fill them. Dante's spaces were
+filled; they, enlarged, to the limits of human imagination, the
+habitations and destinies of mankind. Although the saints did not
+literally inhabit the spheres, but the empyrean beyond, yet each spirit
+could be manifested in that sphere the genius of which was most akin to
+his own. In Dante's vision spirits appear as points of light, from which
+voices also flow sometimes, as well as radiance. Further than reporting
+their words (which are usually about the things of earth) Dante tells us
+little about them. He has indeed, at the end, a vision of a celestial
+rose; tier upon tier of saints are seated as in an amphitheatre, and the
+Deity overarches them in the form of a triple rainbow, with a semblance
+of man in the midst. But this is avowedly a mere symbol, a somewhat
+conventional picture to which Dante has recourse unwillingly, for want
+of a better image to render his mystical intention. What may perhaps
+help us to divine this intention is the fact, just mentioned, that
+according to him the celestial spheres are not the real seat of any
+human soul; that the pure rise through them with increasing ease and
+velocity, the nearer they come to God; and that the eyes of
+Beatrice--the revelation of God to man--are only mirrors, shedding
+merely reflected beauty and light.
+
+These hints suggest the doctrine that the goal of life is the very
+bosom of God; not any finite form of existence, however excellent, but a
+complete absorption and disappearance in the Godhead. So the
+Neoplatonists had thought, from whom all this heavenly landscape is
+borrowed; and the reservations that Christian orthodoxy requires have
+not always remained present to the minds of Christian mystics and poets.
+Dante broaches this very point in the memorable interview he has with
+the spirit of Piccarda, in the third canto of the _Paradiso_. She is in
+the lowest sphere of heaven, that of the inconstant moon, because after
+she had been stolen from her convent and forcibly married, she felt no
+prompting to renew her earlier vows. Dante asks her if she never longs
+for a higher station in paradise, one nearer to God, the natural goal of
+all aspiration. She answers that to share the will of God, who has
+established many different mansions in his house, is to be truly one
+with him. The wish to be nearer God would actually carry the soul
+farther away, since it would oppose the order he has established.[19]
+
+Even in heaven, therefore, the Christian saint was to keep his essential
+fidelity, separation, and lowliness. He was to feel still helpless and
+lost in himself, like Tobias, and happy only in that the angel of the
+Lord was holding him by the hand. For Piccarda to say that she accepts
+the will of God means not that she shares it, but that she submits to
+it. She would fain go higher, for her moral nature demands it, as
+Dante--incorrigible Platonist--perfectly perceived; but she dare not
+mention it, for she knows that God, whose thoughts are not her thoughts,
+has forbidden it. The inconstant sphere of the moon does not afford her
+a perfect happiness; but, chastened as she is, she says it brings her
+happiness enough; all that a broken and a contrite heart has the courage
+to hope for.
+
+Such are the conflicting inspirations beneath the lovely harmonies of
+the _Paradiso_. It was not the poet's soul that was in conflict here; it
+was only his traditions. The conflicts of his own spirit had been left
+behind in other regions; on that threshing-floor of earth which, from
+the height of heaven, he looked back upon with wonder,[20] surprised
+that men should take so passionately this trouble of ants, which he
+judges best, says Dante, who thinks least of it.
+
+In this saying the poet is perhaps conscious of a personal fault; for
+Dante was far from perfect, even as a poet. He was too much a man of his
+own time, and often wrote with a passion not clarified into judgement.
+So much does the purely personal and dramatic interest dominate us as we
+read of a Boniface or an Ugolino that we forget that these historical
+figures are supposed to have been transmuted into the eternal, and to
+have become bits in the mosaic of Platonic essences. Dante himself
+almost forgets it. The modern reader, accustomed to insignificant,
+wayward fictions, and expecting to be entertained by images without
+thoughts, may not notice this lack of perspective, or may rejoice in it.
+But, if he is judicious, he will not rejoice in it long. The Bonifaces
+and the Ugolinos are not the truly deep, the truly lovely figures of the
+_Divine Comedy_. They are, in a relative sense, the vulgarities in it.
+We feel too much, in these cases, the heat of the poet's prejudice or
+indignation. He is not just, as he usually is; he does not stop to
+think, as he almost always does. He forgets that he is in the eternal
+world, and dips for the moment into a brawl in some Italian
+market-place, or into the council-chamber of some factious
+_condottiere_. The passages--such as those about Boniface and
+Ugolino--which Dante writes in this mood are powerful and vehement, but
+they are not beautiful. They brand the object of their invective more
+than they reveal it; they shock more than they move the reader.
+
+This lower kind of success--for it is still a success in rhetoric--falls
+to the poet because he has abandoned the Platonic half of his
+inspiration and has become for the moment wholly historical, wholly
+Hebraic or Roman. He would have been a far inferior mind if he had
+always moved on this level. With the Platonic spheres and the
+Aristotelian ethics taken out, his _Comedy_ would not have been divine.
+Persons and incidents, to be truly memorable, have to be rendered
+significant; they have to be seen in their place in the moral world;
+they have to be judged, and judged rightly, in their dignity and value.
+A casual personal sentiment towards them, however passionate, cannot
+take the place of the sympathetic insight that comprehends and the wide
+experience that judges.
+
+Again (what is fundamental with Dante) love, as he feels and renders it,
+is not normal or healthy love. It was doubtless real enough, but too
+much restrained and expressed too much in fancy; so that when it is
+extended Platonically and identified so easily with the grace of God and
+with revealed wisdom, we feel the suspicion that if the love in question
+had been natural and manly, it would have offered more resistance to so
+mystical a transformation. The poet who wishes to pass convincingly from
+love to philosophy (and that seems a natural progress for a poet) should
+accordingly be a hearty and complete lover--a lover like Goethe and his
+Faust--rather than like Plato and Dante. Faust, too, passes from
+Gretchen to Helen, and partly back again; and Goethe made even more
+passages. Had any of them led to something which not only was loved, but
+deserved to be loved, which not only could inspire a whole life, but
+which ought to inspire it--then we should have had a genuine progress.
+
+In the next place, Dante talks too much about himself. There is a sense
+in which this egotism is a merit, or at least a ground of interest for
+us moderns; for egotism is the distinctive attitude of modern philosophy
+and of romantic sentiment. In being egotistical Dante was ahead of his
+time. His philosophy would have lost an element of depth, and his poetry
+an element of pathos, had he not placed himself in the centre of the
+stage, and described everything as his experience, or as a revelation
+made to himself and made for the sake of his personal salvation. But
+Dante's egotism goes rather further than was requisite, so that the
+transcendental insight might not fail in his philosophy. It extended so
+far that he cast the shadow of his person not only over the terraces of
+purgatory (as he is careful to tell us repeatedly), but over the whole
+of Italy and of Europe, which he saw and judged under the evident
+influence of private passions and resentments.
+
+Moreover, the personality thrust forward so obtrusively is not in every
+respect worthy of contemplation. Dante is very proud and very bitter; at
+the same time, he is curiously timid; and one may tire sometimes of his
+perpetual tremblings and tears, of his fainting fits and his intricate
+doubts. A man who knows he is under the special protection of God, and
+of three celestial ladies, and who has such a sage and magician as
+Virgil for a guide, might have looked even upon hell with a little more
+confidence. How far is this shivering and swooning philosopher from the
+laughing courage of Faust, who sees his poodle swell into a monster,
+then into a cloud, and finally change into Mephistopheles, and says at
+once: _Das also war des Pudels Kern_! Doubtless Dante was mediaeval, and
+contrition, humility, and fear of the devil were great virtues in those
+days; but the conclusion we must come to is precisely that the virtues
+of those days were not the best virtues, and that a poet who represents
+that time cannot be a fair nor an ultimate spokesman for humanity.
+
+Perhaps we have now reviewed the chief objects that peopled Dante's
+imagination, the chief objects into the midst of which his poetry
+transports us; and if a poet's genius avails to transport us into his
+enchanted world, the character of that world will determine the quality
+and dignity of his poetry. Dante transports us, with unmistakable power,
+first into the atmosphere of a visionary love; then into the history of
+his conversion, affected by this love, or by the divine grace identified
+with it. The supreme ideal to which his conversion brought him back is
+expressed for him by universal nature, and is embodied among men in the
+double institution of a revealed religion and a providential empire. To
+trace the fortunes of these institutions, we are transported next into
+the panorama of history, in its great crises and its great men; and
+particularly into the panorama of Italy in the poet's time, where we
+survey the crimes, the virtues, and the sorrows of those prominent in
+furthering or thwarting the ideal of Christendom. These numerous persons
+are set before us with the sympathy and brevity of a dramatist; yet it
+is no mere carnival, no _danse macabre_: for throughout, above the
+confused strife of parties and passions, we hear the steady voice, the
+implacable sentence, of the prophet that judges them.
+
+Thus Dante, gifted with the tenderest sense of colour, and the firmest
+art of design, has put his whole world into his canvas. Seen there, that
+world becomes complete, clear, beautiful, and tragic. It is vivid and
+truthful in its detail, sublime in its march and in its harmony. This is
+not poetry where the parts are better than the whole. Here, as in some
+great symphony, everything is cumulative: the movements conspire, the
+tension grows, the volume redoubles, the keen melody soars higher and
+higher; and it all ends, not with a bang, not with some casual incident,
+but in sustained reflection, in the sense that it has not ended, but
+remains by us in its totality, a revelation and a resource for ever. It
+has taught us to love and to renounce, to judge and to worship., What
+more could a poet do? Dante poetized all life and nature as he found
+them. His imagination dominated and focused the whole world. He thereby
+touched the ultimate goal to which a poet can aspire; he set the
+standard for all possible performance, and became the type of a supreme
+poet. This is not to say that he is the "greatest" of poets. The
+relative merit of poets is a barren thing to wrangle about. The question
+can always be opened anew, when a critic appears with a fresh
+temperament or a new criterion. Even less need we say that no greater
+poet can ever arise; we may be confident of the opposite. But Dante
+gives a successful example of the _highest species_ of poetry. His
+poetry covers the whole field from which poetry may be fetched, and to
+which poetry may be applied, from the inmost recesses of the heart to
+the uttermost bounds of nature and of destiny. If to give imaginative
+value to something is the minimum task of a poet, to give imaginative
+value to all things, and to the system which things compose, is
+evidently his greatest task.
+
+Dante fulfilled this task, of course under special conditions and
+limitations, personal and social; but he fulfilled it, and he thereby
+fulfilled the conditions of supreme poetry. Even Homer, as we are
+beginning to perceive nowadays, suffered from a certain conventionality
+and one-sidedness. There was much in the life and religion of his time
+that his art ignored. It was a flattering, a euphemistic art; it had a
+sort of pervasive blandness, like that which we now associate with a
+fashionable sermon. It was poetry addressed to the ruling caste in the
+state, to the conquerors; and it spread an intentional glamour over
+their past brutalities and present self-deceptions. No such partiality
+in Dante; he paints what he hates as frankly as what he loves, and in
+all things he is complete and sincere. If any similar adequacy is
+attained again by any poet, it will not be, presumably, by a poet of the
+supernatural. Henceforth, for any wide and honest imagination, the
+supernatural must figure as an idea in the human mind,--a part of the
+natural. To conceive it otherwise would be to fall short of the insight
+of this age, not to express or to complete it. Dante, however, for this
+very reason, may be expected to remain the supreme poet of the
+supernatural, the unrivalled exponent, after Plato, of that phase of
+thought and feeling in which the supernatural seems to be the key to
+nature and to happiness. This is the hypothesis on which, as yet, moral
+unity has been best attained in this world. Here, then, we have the most
+complete idealization and comprehension of things achieved by mankind
+hitherto. Dante is the type of a consummate poet.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1:
+ Plato, _Phaedo_,97B-99C, Jowett's translation. I have
+changed the rendering of [Greek: _Nous_ from "mind" to "reason."]
+
+[2] "Est pro fundamento tenenda veritas historiae et desuper spirituales
+expositiones fabricandae." Thomas Aquinas, _Summa Theologiae_, i.
+quaest. 102, conclusio.
+
+[3] _Paradiso_, xv. 97, 99:
+
+ Fiorenza dentro dalla cerchia antica...
+ Si stava in pace, sobria e pudica.
+
+
+[4] Ibid., 100-26:
+
+ Non avea catenella, non corona,
+ Non donne contigiate, non cintura
+ Che fosse a veder pin che la persona.
+ Non faceva nascendo ancor paura
+ La figlia al padre, chè il tempo e la dote
+ Non fuggan quinci e quindi la misura.
+ Non avea case di famiglia vote;
+ Non v'era giunto ancor Sardanapalo
+ A mostrar ciò che in camera si puote....
+ O fortunate! Ciascuna era certa
+ Delia sua sepoltura, ed ancor nulla
+ Era per Francia nel letto deserta.
+ L' una vegghiava a studio della culla,
+ E consolando usava l' idioma
+ Che prima i padri e le madri trastulla;
+ L' altra traendo alia rocca la chioma,
+ Favoleggiava con la sua famiglia
+ De' Troiani, di Fiesole, e di Roma.
+
+
+[5] _Paradiso_, xxxiii. 143-45:
+
+ Volgeva il mio disiro e il _velle,_
+ Si come rota ch' egualmente è mossa,
+ L' amor che move il sole e l' altre stelle.
+
+
+[6] _Vita Nuova_, § 22: Secondo l' usanza della sopradetta cittade,
+donne con donne, e uomini con uomini si adunino a cotale tristizia;
+molte donne s' adunaro colà, ove questa Beatrice piangea pietosamente,
+&c.
+
+Also, _Purgatorio_, xxxi. 50, 51:
+
+ Le belle membra in ch' io
+ Rinchiusa fui, e sono in terra sparte.
+
+
+[7] _Vita Nuova_,§ v.
+
+[8] _Schermo della veritade_,--natural philosophy.
+
+[9] _Convito_, II. cap. 16: _Faccia che gli occhi d' esta Donna miri_;
+gli occhi di questa Donna sono le sue _dimostrazioni_, le quali dritte
+negli occhi dello intelletto inhamorano l' anima, libera nelle
+condizioni. Oh dolcissimi ed ineffabili sembianti, e rubatori subitani
+della mente umana, che nelle dimostrazioni negli occhi della Filosofia
+apparite, quando essa alli suoi drudi ragiona! Veramente in voi è la
+salute, per la quale si fa beato chi vi guarda, e salvo dalla morte
+della ignoranza e delli vizi.... E cosi, in fine di questo secondo
+Trattato, dico e affermo che la Donna, di cui io innamorai appresso lo
+primo amore, fu la bellissima e onestissima figlia dello Imperadore
+dell' universo, alla quale Pittagora pose nome _Filosofia_.
+
+[10] _Purgatorio_, xvii. 106-11:
+
+ Or perchè mai non può dalla salute
+ Amor del suo suggetto volger viso,
+ Dall' odio proprio son le cose tute:
+ E perchè intender non si può diviso,
+ E per sè stante, alcuno esser dal primo,
+ Da quello odiare ogni affetto è deciso.
+
+
+[11] _Inferno_, iii. 64-66:
+
+ Questi sciaurati, che mai non fur vivi,
+ Erano ignudi e stimolati molto
+ Da mosconi e da vespe ch' erano ivi.
+
+
+[12] _Ibid._, iv. 41, 42:
+
+ Semo perduti, e sol di tanto offesi
+ Che senza speme vivemo in disio.
+
+Cf. _Purgatorio_, iii. 37-45, where Virgil says:
+
+ "State contenti, umana gente, al _quia_;
+ Chè se potuto aveste veder tutto,
+ Mestier non era partorir Maria;
+ E disiar vedeste senza frutto
+ Tai, che sarebbe lor disio quetato,
+ Ch' eternalmente è dato lor per lutto.
+ Io dico d' Aristotele e di Plato,
+ E di molti altri." E qui chinò la fronte;
+ E più non disse, e rimase turbato.
+
+
+[13] _Inferno_, ix. 106-33, and x.
+
+[14] _Ibid_., xxviii.
+
+[15] _Inferno_, iii. 124-26:
+
+ E pronti sono a trapassar lo rio,
+ Chè la divina giustizia gli sprona
+ Si che la tema si volge in disio.
+
+
+[16] _Purgatorio_, xxi. 61-69:
+
+ Della mondizia sol voler fa prova,
+ Che, tutta libera a mutar convento,
+ L' alma sorprende, e di voler le giova....
+ Ed io che son giaciuto a questa doglia
+ Cinquecento anni e più, pur mo sentii
+ Libera volontà di miglior soglia.
+
+
+[17] _Inferno_, xiv. 63-66:
+
+ "O Capaneo, in ciò che non s' ammorza
+ La tua superbia, se' tu più punito:
+ Nullo martirio, fuor che la tua rabbia,
+ Sarebbe al tuo furor dolor compito."
+
+
+[18] Alfred de Musset, _Poésies Nouvelles, Souvenir_:
+
+ Dante, pourquoi dis-tu qu'il n'est pire misère
+ Qu'un souvenir heureux dans les jours de douleur?
+ Quel chagrin t'a dicte cette parole amère,
+ Cette offense au malheur?
+
+ ... Ce blasphème vanté ne vient pas de ton coeur.
+ Un souvenir heureux est peut-être sur terre
+ Plus vrai que le bonheur....
+
+ Et c'est à ta Françoise, à ton ange de gloire,
+ Que tu pouvais donner ces mots à prononcer,
+ Elle qui s'interrompt, pour conter son histoire,
+ D'un éternel baiser!
+
+
+[19] _Paradiso_, iii. 73-90:
+
+ "Se disiassimo esser più superne,
+ Foran discordi li nostri disiri
+ Dal voler di colui che qui ne cerne,...
+ E la sua volontate è nostra pace;
+ Ella è quel mare al qual tutto si move
+ Ciò ch' ella crea, e che natura face."
+ Chiaro mi fu allor com' ogni dove
+ In cielo è Paradiso, e sì la grazia
+ Del sommo ben d' un modo non vi piove.
+
+
+[20] _Paradiso_, xxii. 133-39:
+
+ Col viso ritornai per tutte e quante
+ Le sette spere, e vidi questo globo
+ Tal, ch' io sorrisi del suo vil sembiante;
+ E quel consiglio per migliore approbo
+ Che l' ha per meno; e chi ad altro pensa
+ Chiamar si puote veramente probo.
+
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+
+GOETHE'S FAUST
+
+
+
+In approaching the third of our philosophical poets, there is a scruple
+that may cross the mind. Lucretius was undoubtedly a philosophical poet;
+his whole poem is devoted to expounding and defending a system of
+philosophy. In Dante the case is almost as plain. The _Divine Comedy_ is
+a moral and personal fable; yet not only are many passages explicitly
+philosophical, but the whole is inspired and controlled by the most
+definite of religious systems and of moral codes. Dante, too, is
+unmistakably a philosophical poet. But was Goethe a philosopher? And is
+_Faust_ a philosophical poem?
+
+If we say so, it must be by giving a certain latitude to our terms.
+Goethe was the wisest of mankind; too wise, perhaps, to be a philosopher
+in the technical sense, or to try to harness this wild world in a
+brain-spun terminology. It is true that he was all his life a follower
+of Spinoza, and that he may be termed, without hesitation, a naturalist
+in philosophy and a pantheist. His adherence to the general attitude of
+Spinoza, however, did not exclude a great plasticity and freedom in his
+own views, even on the most fundamental points. Thus Goethe did not
+admit the mechanical interpretation of nature advocated by Spinoza. He
+also assigned, at least to privileged souls, like his own, a more
+personal sort of immortality than Spinoza allowed. Moreover, he
+harboured a generous sympathy with the dramatic explanations of nature
+and history current in the Germany of his day. Yet such transcendental
+idealism, making the world the expression of a spiritual endeavour, was
+a total reversal of that conviction, so profound in Spinoza, that all
+moral energies are resident in particular creatures, themselves sparks
+in an absolutely infinite and purposeless world. In a word, Goethe was
+not a systematic philosopher. His feeling for the march of things and
+for the significance of great personages and great ideas was indeed
+philosophical, although more romantic than scientific. His thoughts upon
+life were fresh and miscellaneous. They voiced the genius and learning
+of his age. They did not express a firm personal attitude, radical and
+unified, and transmissible to other times and persons. For philosophers,
+after all, have this advantage over men of letters, that their minds,
+being more organic, can more easily propagate themselves. They scatter
+less influence, but more seeds.
+
+If from Goethe we turn to _Faust_--and it is as the author of _Faust_
+only that we shall consider him--the situation is not less ambiguous. In
+the play, as the young Goethe first wrote it, philosophy appeared in the
+first line,--_Hab nun ach die Philosophey_; but it appeared there, and
+throughout the piece, merely as a human experience, a passion or an
+illusion, a fund of images or an ambitious art. Later, it is true, under
+the spell of fashion and of Schiller, Goethe surrounded his original
+scenes with others, like the prologue in heaven, or the apotheosis of
+Faust, in which a philosophy of life was indicated; namely, that he who
+strives strays, yet in that straying finds his salvation. This idea left
+standing all that satirical and Mephistophelian wisdom with which the
+whole poem abounds, the later parts no less than the earlier. Frankly,
+it was a moral that adorned the tale, without having been the seed of
+it, and without even expressing fairly the spirit which it breathes.
+_Faust_ remained an essentially romantic poem, written to give vent to a
+pregnant and vivid genius, to touch the heart, to bewilder the mind with
+a carnival of images, to amuse, to thrill, to humanize; and, if we must
+speak of philosophy, there were many express maxims in the poem, and
+many insights, half betrayed, that exceeded in philosophic value the
+belated and official moral which the author affixed to it, and which he
+himself warned us not to take too seriously.[1]
+
+_Faust_ is, then, no philosophical poem, after an open or deliberate
+fashion; and yet it offers a solution to the moral problem of existence
+as truly as do the poems of Lucretius and Dante. Heard philosophies are
+sweet, but those unheard may be sweeter. They may be more unmixed and
+more profound for being adopted unconsciously, for being lived rather
+than taught. This is not merely to say what might be said of every work
+of art and of every natural object, that it could be made the
+starting-point for a chain of inferences that should reveal the whole
+universe, like the flower in the crannied wall. It is to say, rather,
+that the vital straining towards an ideal, definite but latent, when it
+dominates a whole life, may express that ideal more fully than could the
+best-chosen words.
+
+Now _Faust_ is the foam on the top of two great waves of human
+aspiration, merging and heaping themselves up together,--the wave of
+romanticism rising from the depths of northern traditions and genius,
+and the wave of a new paganism coming from Greece over Italy. These are
+not philosophies to be read into _Faust_ by the critic; they are
+passions seething in the drama. It is the drama of a philosophical
+adventure; a rebellion against convention; a flight to nature, to
+tenderness, to beauty; and then a return to convention again, with a
+feeling that nature, tenderness, and beauty, unless found there, will
+not be found at all. Goethe never depicts, as Dante does, the object his
+hero is pursuing; he is satisfied with depicting the pursuit. Like
+Lessing, in his famous apologue, he prefers the pursuit of the ideal to
+the ideal itself; perhaps, as in the case of Lessing, because the hope
+of realizing the ideal, and the interest in realizing it, were beginning
+to forsake him.
+
+The case is somewhat as that of Dante would have been if, instead of
+recognizing and loving Beatrice at first sight and rising into a vision
+of the eternal world, ready-made and perfectly ordered, Dante had passed
+from love to love, from _donna gentile_ to _donna gentile_, always
+longing for the eyes of Beatrice without ever meeting them. The _Divine
+Comedy_ would then have been only human, yet it might have suggested and
+required the very consummation that the _Divine Comedy_ depicts; and
+without expressing this consummation, our human comedy might have
+furnished materials and momentum for it, such that, if ever that
+consummation came to be expressed, it would be more deeply felt and more
+adequately understood. Dante gives us a philosophical goal, and we have
+to recall and retrace the journey; Goethe gives us a philosophic
+journey, and we have to divine the goal.
+
+Goethe is a romantic poet; he is a novelist in verse. He is a
+philosopher of experience as it comes to the individual; the philosopher
+of life, as action, memory, or soliloquy may put life before each of us
+in turn. Now the zest of romanticism consists in taking what you know
+is an independent and ancient world as if it were material for your
+private emotions. The savage or the animal, who should not be aware of
+nature or history at all, could not be romantic about them, nor about
+himself. He would be blandly idiotic, and take everything quite
+unsuspectingly for what it was in him. The romanticist, then, should be
+a civilized man, so that his primitiveness and egotism may have
+something paradoxical and conscious about them; and so that his life may
+contain a rich experience, and his reflection may play with all
+varieties of sentiment and thought. At the same time, in his inmost
+genius, he should be a barbarian, a child, a transcendentalist, so that
+his life may seem to him absolutely fresh, self-determined, unforeseen,
+and unforeseeable. It is part of his inspiration to believe that he
+creates a new heaven and a new earth with each revolution in his moods
+or in his purposes. He ignores, or seeks to ignore, all the conditions
+of life, until perhaps by living he personally discovers them.[2] Like
+Faust, he flouts science, and is minded to make trial of magic, which
+renders a man's will master of the universe in which he seems to live.
+He disowns all authority, save that mysteriously exercised over him by
+his deep faith in himself. He is always honest and brave; but he is
+always different, and absolves himself from his past as soon as he has
+outgrown or forgotten it. He is inclined to be wayward and foolhardy,
+justifying himself on the ground that all experience is interesting,
+that the springs of it are inexhaustible and always pure, and that the
+future of his soul is infinite. In the romantic hero the civilized man
+and the barbarian must be combined; he should be the heir to all
+civilization, and, nevertheless, he should take life arrogantly and
+egotistically, as if it were an absolute personal experiment.
+
+This singular combination was strikingly exemplified in Doctor Johannes
+Faustus, a figure half historical, half legendary, familiar to Goethe in
+his boyhood in puppet-shows and chapbooks. An adventurer in the romantic
+as well as in the vulgar sense of the word, somewhat like Paracelsus or
+Giordano Bruno, Doctor Faustus had felt the mystery of nature, had
+scorned authority, had credited magic, had lived by imposture, and had
+fled from the police. His blasphemous boasts and rascally conduct,
+together with his magic arts, had made him even in his lifetime a
+scandalous and interesting personage. He was scarcely dead when legends
+gathered about his name. It was published abroad that he had sold his
+soul to the devil, in exchange for twenty-four years of wild pleasures
+upon earth.
+
+This legend purported to offer a terrible and edifying example, a
+warning to all Christians to avoid the snares of science, of pleasure,
+and of ambition. These things had sent Doctor Faustus into hell-fire;
+his corpse, found face downward, could not be turned over upon its back.
+Nevertheless, we may suspect that even at the beginning people
+recognized in Doctor Faustus a braver brother, a somewhat enviable
+reprobate who had dared to relish the good things of this life above the
+sad joys vaguely promised for the other. All that the Renaissance valued
+was here represented as in the devil's gift; and the man in the street
+might well doubt whether it was religion or worldly life that was
+thereby made the more unlovely. Doubtless the Lutheran authors of the
+first chapbook felt, and felt rightly, that those fine things which
+tempted Faustus were unevangelical, pagan, and popish; yet they could
+not cease altogether to admire and even to covet them, especially when
+the first ardours of the Old-Christian revival had had time to cool.
+
+Marlowe, who wrote only a few years later, made a beginning in the
+rehabilitation of the hero. His Faustus is still damned, but he is
+transformed into the sort of personage that Aristotle approves of for
+the hero of tragedy, essentially human and noble, but led astray by some
+excusable vice or error. Marlowe's public would see in Doctor Faustus a
+man and a Christian like themselves, carried a bit too far by ambition
+and the love of pleasure. He is no radical unbeliever, no natural mate
+for the devil, conscienceless and heathen, like the typical villain of
+the Renaissance. On the contrary, he has become a good Protestant, and
+holds manfully to all those parts of the creed which express his
+spontaneous affections. A good angel is often overheard whispering in
+his ear; and if the bad angel finally prevails, it is in spite of
+continual remorse and hesitation on the Doctor's part. This excellent
+Faustus is damned by accident or by predestination; he is brow-beaten by
+the devil and forbidden to repent when he has really repented. The
+terror of the conclusion is thereby heightened; we see an essentially
+good man, because in a moment of infatuation he had signed away his
+soul, driven against his will to despair and damnation. The alternative
+of a happy solution lies almost at hand; and it is only a lingering
+taste for the lurid and the horrible, ingrained in this sort of
+melodrama, that sends him shrieking to hell.
+
+What makes Marlowe's conclusion the more violent and the more
+unphilosophical is the fact that, to any one not dominated by
+convention, the good angel, in the dialogue, seems to have so much the
+worse of the argument. All he has to offer is sour admonition and
+external warnings:
+
+ _O Faustus, lay that damned book aside,_
+ _And gaze not on it lest it tempt thy soul,_
+ _And heap God's heavy wrath upon thy head._
+ _Read, read, the Scriptures; that is blasphemy...._
+ _Sweet Faustus, think of heaven, and heavenly things._
+
+To which the evil angel replies:
+
+ _No, Faustus, think of honour and of wealth._
+
+And in another place:
+
+ _Go forward, Faustus, in that famous art,_
+ _Wherein all nature's treasure is contained._
+ _Be thou on earth as Jove is in the sky,_
+ _Lord and commander of these elements._
+
+There can be no doubt that the devil here represents the natural ideal
+of Faustus, or of any child of the Renaissance; he appeals to the vague
+but healthy ambitions of a young soul, that would make trial of the
+world. In other words, this devil represents the true good, and it is no
+wonder if the honest Faustus cannot resist his suggestions. We like him
+for his love of life, for his trust in nature, for his enthusiasm for
+beauty. He speaks for us all when he cries:
+
+ _Was this the face that launched a thousand ships_
+ _And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?_
+
+Even his irreverent pranks, being directed against the pope, endear him
+the more to an anti-clerical public; and he appeals to courtiers and
+cavaliers by his lofty poetical scorn for such crabbed professions as
+the law, medicine, or theology. In a word, Marlowe's Faustus is a martyr
+to everything that the Renaissance prized,--power, curious knowledge,
+enterprise, wealth, and beauty.
+
+How thoroughly Marlowe and Goethe are on the way towards reversing the
+Christian philosophy of life may be seen if we compare _Faust_ for a
+moment (as, in other respects, has often been done) with _The
+Wonder-working Magician_ of Calderon. This earlier hero, St. Cyprian of
+Antioch, is like Faust in being a scholar, signing away his soul to the
+devil, practising magic, embracing the ghost of beauty, and being
+ultimately saved. Here the analogy ends. Cyprian, far from being
+disgusted with all theory, and particularly with theology, is a pagan
+philosopher eagerly seeking God, and working his way, with full faith in
+his method, toward Christian orthodoxy. He floors the devil in
+scholastic argument about the unity of God, his power, wisdom, and
+goodness. He falls in love, and sells his soul merely in the hope of
+satisfying his passion. He studies magic chiefly for the same reason;
+but magic cannot overrule the free-will of the Christian lady he loves
+(a modern and very Spanish one, though supposed to adorn ancient
+Antioch). The devil can supply only a false phantasm of her person, and
+as Cyprian approaches her and lifts her veil, he finds a hideous
+death's-head beneath; for God can work miracles to cap those of any
+magician, and can beat the devil at his own game. Thunderstruck at this
+portent, Cyprian becomes a Christian. Half-naked, ecstatic, taken for a
+madman, he bears witness loudly and persistently to the power, wisdom,
+and goodness of the one true God; and, since the persecution of Decius
+is then going on, he is hurried away to martyrdom. His lady, sentenced
+also for the same cause, encourages him by her heroic attitude and
+words. Their earthly passion is dead; but their souls are united in
+death and in immortality.
+
+In this drama we see magic checkmated by miracles, doubt yielding to
+faith, purity resisting temptation, passion transformed into zeal, and
+all the glories of the world collapsing before disillusion and
+asceticism. These glories are nothing, the poet tells us, but dust,
+ashes, smoke, and air.
+
+The contrast with Goethe's _Faust_ could not be more complete. Both
+poets take the greatest liberties with their chronology, yet the spirit
+of their dramas is remarkably true to the respective ages in which they
+are supposed to occur. Calderon glorifies the movement from paganism to
+Christianity. The philosophy in which that movement culminated--Catholic
+orthodoxy--still dominates the poet's mind, not in a perfunctory way,
+but so as to kindle his imagination, and render his personages sublime
+and his verses rapturous. Goethe's _Faust_, on the contrary, glorifies
+the return from Christianity to paganism. It shows the spirit of the
+Renaissance liberating the soul, and bursting the bonds of traditional
+faith and traditional morals. This spirit, after manifesting itself
+brilliantly at the time of the historical Faust, had seemed to be
+smothered in the great world during the seventeenth century. Men's
+characters and laws had reaffirmed their old allegiance to Christianity,
+and the Renaissance survived only abstractly, in scholarship or the fine
+arts, to which it continued to lend a certain classic or pseudo-classic
+elegance. In Goethe's time, however, a second Renaissance was taking
+place in the souls of men. The love of life, primal and adventurous, was
+gathering head in many an individual. In the romantic movement and in
+the French Revolution, this love of life freed itself from the politic
+compromises and conventions that had been stifling it for two hundred
+years. Goethe's hero embodies this second, romantic emancipation of the
+mind, too long an unwilling pupil of Christian tradition. He cries for
+air, for nature, for all experience. Cyprian, on the other hand, an
+unwilling pupil of paganism, had yearned for truth, for solitude, and
+for heaven.
+
+Such was the legend that, to the great good fortune of mankind,
+fascinated the young Goethe, and took root in his fancy. Around it
+gathered the experiences and insights of sixty well-filled years:
+_Faust_ became the poetical autobiography and the philosophic testament
+of Goethe. He stuffed it with every enthusiasm that diversified his own
+life, from the great alternative of romantic or classical art, down to
+the controversy between Neptunism and Vulcanism in geology, and to his
+fatherly admiration for Lord Byron. Yet in spite of the liberties he
+took with the legend, and the personal turn he gave it, nothing in its
+historical associations escaped him. His life in Frankfort and in
+Strassburg had made the mediaeval scene familiar to his fancy; Herder
+had communicated to him an imaginative cult for all that was national
+and characteristic in art and manners; the spell of Gothic architecture
+had fallen on him; and he had learned to feel in Shakespeare the
+infinite strength of suggestion in details, in multitudinous glimpses,
+in lifelike medleys of sadness and mirth, in a humble realism in
+externals, amid lyric and metaphysical outpourings of the passions. The
+sense for classic beauty which had inspired Marlowe with immortal lines,
+and was later to inspire his own _Helena,_ was as yet dormant; but
+instead he had caught the humanitarian craze, then prevalent, for
+defending and idealizing the victims of law and society, among others,
+the poor girl who, to escape disgrace, did away with her new-born child.
+Such a victim of a selfish seducer and a Pharisaical public was to add
+a desirable touch of femininity and pathos to the story of Faust:
+Gretchen was to take the place, at least for the nonce, of the coveted
+Helen.
+
+This Gretchen was to be no common creature, but one endowed with all the
+innocence, sweetness, intelligence, fire, and fortitude which Goethe was
+finding, or thought he was finding, in his own Gretchens, Kätchens, and
+Frederickes. For the young Goethe, though very learned, was no mere
+student of books; to his human competence and power to succeed, he
+joined the gusts of feeling, the irresponsible raptures, the sudden
+sorrows, of a genuine poet. He was a true lover, and a wayward one. He
+could delve into magic with awe, in a Faust-like spirit of adventure; he
+could burn offerings in his attic to the rising sun; he could plunge
+into Christian mysticism; and there could well up, on occasion, from the
+deep store of his unconscious mind, floods of words, of images, and of
+tears. He was a genius, if ever there was one; and this genius, in all
+its freshness, was poured into the composition of _Faust_,--the most
+kindred of themes, the most picturesque and magical of romances.
+
+In Goethe's first version of the poem, before the story of Gretchen, we
+find the studious Faust, as in Marlowe, soliloquizing on the vanity of
+the sciences. They grasp nothing of the genuine truth; they are verbal
+shams. They have not even brought Faust fame or riches. Perhaps magic
+might do better. The air was full of spirits; could they be summoned to
+our aid, possibly the secrets of nature might be unlocked. We might
+reach true science, and through it undreamt-of power over the material
+world. For Nature, according to Goethe, really has secrets. She is not
+all open to eventual inspection; she is no mere mechanism of minute
+parts and statable laws. Our last view of her, like our first glimpse,
+must be interpreted; from the sum of her manifestations we must divine
+her soul. Therefore only a poetic and rhetorical art, like magic, has
+any chance of unveiling her, and of bringing us face to face with the
+truth.
+
+In this invocation of spirits, as Goethe's Faust makes it, there is no
+question of selling, or even of risking, the soul. This Faust, unlike
+Marlowe's, has no faith and no fear. From the point of view of the
+church he is damned already as an unbeliever; but, as an unbeliever, he
+is looking for salvation in another quarter. Like the bolder spirits of
+the Renaissance, he is hoping to find in universal nature, infinite,
+placid, non-censorious, an escape from the prison-house of Christian
+doctrine and Christian law. His magic arts are the sacrament that will
+initiate him into his new religion, the religion of nature. He turns to
+nature also in another sense, more characteristic of the age of Goethe
+than of that of Faust. He longs for grandiose solitudes. He feels that
+moonlight, caves, mountains, driving clouds, would be his best medicine
+and his best counsellors. The souls of Rousseau, Byron, and Shelley are
+pre-incarnate in this Faust, the epitome of all romantic rebellions.
+They coexist there with the souls of Paracelsus and Giordano Bruno. The
+wild aspects of nature, he thinks, will melt and renew his heart, while
+magic reveals the mysteries of cosmic law and helps him to exploit them.
+
+Full of these hopes, Faust opens his book of magic at the sign of the
+Macrocosm: it shows him the mechanism of the world, all forces and
+events playing into one another and forming an infinite chain. The
+spectacle entrances him; he seems to have attained one of his dearest
+ambitions. But here he comes at once upon the other half, or, as Hegel
+would call it, the other moment, of the romantic life. Every romantic
+ideal, once realized, disenchants. No matter what we attain, our
+dissatisfaction must be perpetual. Thus the vision of the universe,
+which Faust now has before him, is, he remembers, only a vision; it is a
+theory or conception.[3] It is not a rendering of the inner life of the
+world as Shakespeare, for instance, feels and renders it. Experience; as
+it comes to him who lives and works, is not given by that theoretical
+vision; in science experience is turned into so many reviewed events,
+the passage of so much substance through so many forms. But Faust does
+not want an image or description of reality; he yearns to enact and to
+become the reality itself.
+
+In this new search, he fixes his eye on the sign of the Earth-Spirit,
+which seems more propitious to his present wish. This sign is the key to
+all experience. All experience tempts Faust; he shrinks from nothing
+that any mortal may have endured; he is ready to undertake everything
+that any mortal may have done. In all men he would live; and with the
+last man he will be content to die.[4] So mighty is his yearning for
+experience that the Earth-Spirit is softened and appears at his bidding.
+In a red flame he sees its monstrous visage, and his enthusiasm is
+turned to horror. Outspread before him is the furious, indiscriminate
+cataract of life, the merciless flux, the infinite variety, the absolute
+inconstancy of it. This general life is not for any individual to
+rehearse; it I bursts all bounds of personality. Each man may assimilate
+that part only which falls within his understanding, only that aspect
+which things wear from his particular angle, and to his particular
+interests. _Du gleichst_, the Earth-Spirit cries to him,--_du gleichst
+dem Geist den du begreifst, nicht mir._
+
+This saying--that the life possible and good for man is the life of
+reason, not the life of nature--is a hard one to the romantic,
+unintellectual, insatiable Faust. He thinks, like many another
+philosopher of feeling, that since his is a part of the sum of
+experience, the whole of experience should be akin to his. But in fact
+the opposite is far nearer the truth. Man is constituted by his
+limitations, by his station contrasted with all other stations, and his
+purposes chosen from amongst all other purposes. Any great scope he can
+attain must be due to his powers of representation. His understanding
+may render him universal; his life never can. Faust, as he hears this
+sentence from the departing Earth-Spirit, collapses under it. He feels
+impotent to gainsay what the tumult of the world is thundering at him,
+but he will not accept on authority so unwelcome and chastening a truth.
+All his long experience to come will scarcely suffice to convince him of
+it.
+
+These are the chief philosophical ideas that appear in the two earlier
+versions of Goethe's _Faust_,--the _Urfaust_ and the _Fragment_. What
+Mephistopheles says to the young student is only a clever expansion of
+what Faust had said in his first monologue about the vanity of science
+and of the learned professions. Mephistopheles, too, finds theory
+ashen, and the tree of life green and full of golden fruit; only, having
+more experience than Faust of the second disenchanting moment in the
+romantic dialectic, he foresees that this golden fruit also will turn to
+ashes in the mouth, as it did in the garden of Eden. Science is folly,
+but life is no better; for after all is not science a part of life?
+
+When we turn to the first part in its final shape, or to the entire
+drama, we find many changes and additions that seem to transform the
+romantic picture of the opening scene, and to offer us a rounded
+philosophy. The changes, however, are more in expression than in
+ultimate substance, and the additions are chiefly new illustrations of
+the ancient theme. Critics who study the _Entstehungsgeschichte_ of
+works of art help us to analyze them more intelligently and reproduce
+more accurately what, at various times, may have been the intention of
+their authors. Yet these bits of information would be dearly bought if
+we were distracted by them from what gives poetic value and individual
+character to the result--its total idiosyncrasy, its place in the moral
+world. The place in the moral world of Goethe's _Faust_ as a whole is
+just the place which the opening scene gave it in the beginning. It
+fills more space, it touches more historical and poetic matters; but its
+centre is the old centre, and its result the old result. It remains
+romantic in its pictures and in its philosophy.
+
+The first addition that promises to throw new light on the idea of the
+drama is the _Prologue in Heaven_. In imitation of _The Book of Job_, we
+find the morning stars--the three archangels--singing together; and then
+follows a very agreeable and humorous conversation between the Lord and
+Mephistopheles. The scene is in the style of mediaeval religious plays,
+and this circumstance might lead us to suppose that the point at issue
+was the salvation of Faust's soul. But that, in the literal sense, is
+far from being the case. As in _Job_, the question is what sentiments
+the tempted mortal will maintain during this life, not what fate will
+afterwards overtake his disembodied spirit. Dead men, Mephistopheles
+observes, do not interest him. He is not a devil from a subterranean
+hell, concerned, out of pique or ambition, to increase the population of
+tortured shades in that fabulous region. He dwells in the atmosphere of
+earth; he knows nothing of the suns or the worlds, the life of man is
+his element.[5] He remains--what he was in the first versions of the
+play--a part of the Earth-Spirit, one of its embodiments. His particular
+office, as we shall see presently, is to precipitate that continual
+destruction which is involved in the continual renewal of life. He finds
+it very foolish of Faust to demand everything and be satisfied with
+nothing; and his wager is that Faust may be brought to demand nothing
+and be satisfied with what chance throws in his way, that he shall lick
+the dust, and lick it with pleasure,[6] that he shall renounce the
+dignity of willing what is not and cannot be, and crawl about, like the
+serpent, basking in the comforts of the moment.
+
+Against this, the Lord pronounces Faust to be his servant,--the servant,
+that is, of an ideal,--and declares that whoever strives after an ideal
+must needs go astray; yet in his necessary errors, the good man never
+misses the right road.[7] In other words, to have an ideal to strive
+for, and, like Faust, never to be satisfied, is itself the salvation of
+man. Faust does not yet know this. He half believes there is some
+concrete and ultimate good beyond, and so is bitter and violent in his
+dissatisfaction; but in due season he will come to clearness on this
+subject, and understand that only he deserves freedom and life who must
+daily win them afresh.[8] Mephistopheles himself, with his mockeries and
+seductions, helps to keep the world moving and men wide awake.[9]
+Imperfection is all that is possible in the world of action; but the
+angels may gather up and fix in thought the perfect forms approached or
+suggested by existence.[10]
+
+In the two earlier versions of _Faust_, Mephistopheles appears without
+introduction; we find him amusing himself by giving ambiguous advice to
+an innocent scholar, and accompanying Faust in his wanderings. His
+mocking tone and miraculous powers mark him at once as the devil of the
+legend; but several passages prove that he is a deputy of the
+Earth-Spirit evoked by Faust in the beginning. That he should be both
+devil and world-demon ought not to surprise the learned.[11] The devils
+of popular mediaeval religion were not cut out of whole cloth: they were
+simply the Neoplatonic demons of the air, together with the gods of
+Olympus and the more ancient chthonic deities, blackened by sectarian
+zeal, and degraded by a coarse and timid imagination. Many of these
+pagan sprites, indeed, had been originally impish and mischievous, since
+not all the aspects of nature are lovely or propitious, nor all the
+dreams of men. But as a whole they were without malice in their
+irresponsible, elemental life,--winged powers darting through space
+between the earth and the moon. They were not dwellers in a subterranean
+hell; they were not tormentors nor tormented. Often they swarmed and
+sang blithely, as they do in _Faust_ and even in the _Wonder-working
+Magician_; and if at other times they croaked or hooted, it was like
+frogs and owls, less lovely creatures than humming-birds, but not less
+natural.
+
+One of these less amiable spirits of the atmosphere, especially of its
+ambient fire, is the Mephistopheles of Goethe. Why he delighted in evil
+rather than in good he himself explains in a profound and ingenious
+fashion. Darkness or nothingness, he says, existed alone before the
+birth of light. Nothingness or darkness still remains the fundamental
+and, to his mind, the better part of that mixture of being and privation
+which we call existence. Nothing that exists can be preserved, nor does
+it deserve to be; therefore it would have been better if nothing had
+ever existed.[12] To deny the value of whatever is, and to wish to
+destroy it, according to him, is the only rational ambition; he is the
+spirit that denies continually, he is the everlasting No. This
+spirit--which we might compare with the Mars of Lucretius--has great
+power in the world; every change, in one of its aspects, expresses it,
+since in one of its aspects, every change is the destruction of
+something. This spirit is always willing evil, for it wills death, with
+all the folly, crime, and despair that minister to death. But in willing
+evil, it is always accomplishing good; for these evils make for
+nothingness, and nothingness is the true good. The famous couplet--
+
+ _Ein Teil von jener Kraft_
+ _Die stets das Böse will, und stets das Gute schafft--_
+
+is far from expressing the Hegelian commonplace with which it is usually
+identified. It does not mean that destruction serves a good purpose
+after all because it clears the way for "something higher."
+Mephistopheles is not one of those philosophers who think change and
+evolution a good in themselves. He does not admit that his activity,
+while aiming at evil, contributes unintentionally to the good. It
+contributes to the good intentionally, because the evil it does is, in
+his opinion, less than the evil it cures. He is the cruel surgeon to the
+disease of life.
+
+If he admitted the other interpretation, he would be _ipso facto_
+converted to the view of the Lord in the _Prologue_. His naughtiness
+would become, in his own eyes, a needful service in the cause of
+life,--a condition of life being really vital and worth living. He might
+then continue his sly operations and biting witticisms, without one drop
+more of kindness, and yet be sanctioned in everything by the Absolute,
+and adopt the smile and halo of the optimist. He would have perceived
+that he was the spice of life, the yeast and red pepper of the world,
+necessary to the perfect savour of the providential concoction. As it
+is, Mephistopheles is far more modest. He says that he wills evil,
+because what he wills is contrary to what his victims will; he is the
+great contradictor, the blaster of young hopes. Yet he does good,
+because these young hopes, if let alone, would lead to misery and
+absurdity. His contradiction nips the folly of living in the bud. To be
+sure, as he goes on to acknowledge, the destructive power never wins a
+decisive victory. While everything falls successively beneath his
+sickle, the seeds of life are being scattered perpetually behind his
+back. The Lucretian Venus has her innings, as well as the Lucretian
+Mars. The eternal see-saw, the ancient flux, continues without end and
+without abatement.
+
+Thus Mephistopheles has a philosophy, and is justified and consistent in
+his own eyes; yet in the course of the drama he wears various masks and
+has various moods. All he says and does cannot be made altogether
+compatible with the essence of his mind, as Goethe finally conceived it.
+The dramatic figure of Mephistopheles had been fixed long before in its
+graphic characteristics. Mephistopheles, for instance, is extremely old;
+he feels older than the universe. There is nothing new for him; he has
+no illusions. His feeling for anyone he sees is choked, as happens to
+old people, by his feelings for the infinite number of persons he
+remembers. He is heartless, because he is impersonal and universal. He
+is altogether inhuman; he has not the shames nor the tastes of man. He
+often assumes the form of a dog,--it is his favourite mask in this
+earthly carnival. He is not averse to the witches' kitchen, with its
+senseless din and obscenity. He puts up good-naturedly with the
+grotesque etiquette of the spirit-world, observes all the rules about
+signing contracts in blood, knocking thrice, and respecting pentagrams.
+Why should he not? Dogs and demons of the air are forms of the
+Earth-Spirit as much as man; man has no special dignity that
+Mephistopheles should respect. Man's morality is one of the moralities,
+his conventions are not less absurd than the conventions of other
+monkeys. Mephistopheles has no prejudice against the snake; he
+understands and he despises his cousin, the snake, also. He understands
+and he despises himself; he has had time to know himself thoroughly.
+
+His understanding, however, is not impartial, because he is the advocate
+of death; he cannot sympathize with the other half of the Earth-Spirit,
+which he does not represent,--the creative, propulsive, enamoured side,
+the side that worships the ideal, the love that makes the world go
+round. What enchants an ingenuous soul can only amuse Mephistopheles;
+what torments it gives him a sardonic satisfaction. Thus he comes to be
+in fact a sour and mocking devil. At other times, when he opposes the
+silliness and romanticism of Faust, he seems to be the spokesman of all
+experience and reason; as when he warns Faust that to be at all you must
+be something in particular. Yet even this he says by way of checking and
+denying Faust's passion for the infinite. The soberest truth, when
+unwelcome, may seem to the sentimental as diabolical as the most cynical
+lie; so that in spite of the very unequal justness of his various
+sentiments, Mephistopheles retains his dramatic unity. We recognize his
+tone and, under whatever mask, we think him a villain and find him
+delightful.
+
+Such is the spirit, and such are the conditions, in which Faust
+undertakes his adventures. He thirsts for all experience, including all
+experience of evil; he fears no hell; and he hopes for no happiness. He
+trusts in magic; that is, he believes, or is willing to make believe,
+that apart from any settled conditions laid down by nature or God,
+personal will can evoke the experience it covets by its sheer force and
+assurance. His bond with Mephistopheles is an expression of this
+romantic faith. It is no bargain to buy pleasures on earth at the cost
+of torments hereafter; for neither Goethe, nor Faust, nor Mephistopheles
+believes that such pleasures are worth having, or such torments
+possible.
+
+The first taste Faust gets of the world is in Auerbach's cellar, and he
+finds it at once unpalatable. His mature and disdainful mind cannot be
+amused by the sodden merriment he sees there. He is without that
+simplicity and heartiness which might find even drunken gaiety
+attractive; to put up with such follies, one must know nothing, like
+Brander, or everything, like Mephistopheles. Faust still feels the
+"pathos of distance;" he is acutely conscious of something incomparably
+noble just out of reach. In the witches' kitchen, which he next visits,
+pleasure is still more ugly and shallow; here the din is even more
+nonsensical, and the fancy more obscene. Yet Faust comes forth with two
+points gained in his romantic rehabilitation; he has taken the elixir of
+youth and he has seen the image of Helen in a mirror. He is henceforth
+in love with ideal beauty, and being young again, he is able to find
+ideal beauty in the first woman he sees.
+
+The great episode of Gretchen follows; and when he leaves her (after the
+duel with her brother) to view the wild revels of the Walpurgisnacht,
+his youth for a moment catches the contagion of that orgy. His love of
+ideal beauty, which remains unsatisfied, saves him, however, from any
+lasting illusion. He sees a little red mouse running out of the mouth of
+a nymph he is pursuing, and his momentary inclination turns to aversion.
+When he goes back to Gretchen in her prison, it is too late for him to
+do more than recognize the ruin he has brought about,--Gretchen
+dishonoured, her mother poisoned, her brother killed, her child drowned
+by her in a pond, and she herself about to be executed. Gretchen, who is
+the only true Christian in this poem, refuses to be rescued, because she
+wishes to offer her voluntary death in propitiation for her grave,
+though almost involuntary, offences.
+
+This is the end of Faust's career through the world of private
+interests,--the little world,--and we may well ask what has been the
+fruit of his experiments so far. What strength or experience has he
+amassed for his further adventures? The answer is to be found in the
+first scene of the second part, where Goethe reaches his highest potency
+as a poet and as a philosopher. We are transported to a remote,
+magnificent, virgin country. It is evening, and Faust is lying, weary
+but restless, on a flowering hillside. Kindly spirits of nature are
+hovering above his head. Ariel, their leader, bids them bring solace to
+the troubled hero. It is enough he was unfortunate--they make no
+question whether he was a saint or a sinner.[13] The spirits in chorus
+then sing four lovely stanzas, one for each watch of the night. The
+first invokes peace, forgetfulness, surrender to the healing influence
+of sleep. Pity and remorse, they seem to say, in the words of Spinoza,
+are evil and vain; failure is incidental; error is innocent. Nature has
+no memory; forgive yourself, and you are forgiven. The song of the
+second watch merges the unhappy soul again in the infinite incorruptible
+substance of nature. The stars, great or little, twinkling or pure, fill
+the sky with their ordered peace, and the sea with their trembling
+reflection. In this universal circulation there is no private will, no
+permanent division. In the next watch we find the plastic stress of
+nature beginning to reassert itself; seeds swell, sap mounts up the
+thawing branches, buds grow full; everything recovers a fresh
+individuality and a tender, untried will. Finally, the song of the
+fourth watch bids the flowers open their petals and Faust his eyes.
+Forces renewed in repose should tempt a new career. Nature is open to
+the brave, to the intelligent; all may be noble, who dare to be so.[14]
+
+Soothed by these ministrations, Faust awakes full of new strength and
+ambition. He watches with rapture the sunlight touch the mountain-tops
+and creep down gradually into the valleys. When it reaches him, he
+turns to look directly at the sun; but he is dazzled. He seems to
+remember the Earth-Spirit that had once allured and then rejected him.
+We wish, he says, to kindle our torch of life, and we produce a
+conflagration, a monstrous medley of joy and sorrow, love and hate. Let
+us turn our backs upon the sun, upon infinite force and infinite
+existence. Fitter for our eyes the waterfall over against it, the
+torrent of human affairs, broken into a myriad rills. Upon the mists
+that rise from it the sunlight paints a rainbow, always vanishing, but
+always restored. This is the true image of rational human achievement.
+We have our life in the iridescence of the world.[15] Or, as Shelley has
+said it for us,--
+
+ _Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass,_
+ _Stains the white radiance of eternity,_
+ _Until death tramples it to fragments._
+
+This death, however, is itself unstable. The Lucretian Venus, by
+reshaping our senses and instincts, builds that coloured dome once more.
+The rainbow is renewed, as the mists rise again or the wind dies down,
+and creation is glorious as on the first day.
+
+This is Goethe's theory of rejuvenation and immortality. It is
+thoroughly naturalistic. There is a life after death, but only for such
+souls as have enough scope to identify themselves with those forms which
+nature, in her uncertain oscillations, always tends to reproduce. A deep
+mind has deep roots in nature,--it will bloom many times over. But what
+a deep mind carries over into its next incarnation--perhaps in some
+remote sphere--is not its conventional merits and demerits, its load of
+remorse, or its sordid memories. These are washed away in its new
+baptism. What remains is only what was deep in that deep mind, so deep
+that new situations may again imply and admit it.
+
+When, after the scene with the Earth-Spirit, Faust thought of suicide,
+he regarded it as a means to escape from oppressive conditions and to
+begin a fresh life under conditions wholly different and unknown. It was
+as if a man in middle life, disgusted with his profession, should
+abandon it to take up another. Such a resolution is serious. It
+expresses a great dissatisfaction with things as they stand, but it also
+expresses a great hope. Death, for Faust, is an adventure, like any
+other; and if, contrary to his presumption, this adventure should prove
+the last, that, too, is a risk he is willing to run. Accordingly, as he
+lifted the poison to his lips, he drank to the dawn, to a new springtime
+of existence. It was by no means the saddest nor the weakest moment of
+his life.[16]
+
+Although the sound of an Easter hymn checked him, bringing sentimental
+memories of a religion in which he no longer believed, the
+transformation scene he looked for was only postponed. There is not much
+difference between dying as he had thought to die and living as he was
+about to live. Venomous essences, artificially brewed, were hardly
+necessary to bring him to a new life; the adventures he was entering
+upon were suicidal enough, for he was to strive without hope of
+attainment, and to proceed by passionate wilfulness or magic, without
+accepting the discipline of art or reason. Now, at the close of the
+first part, he has drained this poisoned life to the dregs, and the
+fever into which he falls carries him of itself into a new existence. He
+is not grown better or more reasonable; he is simply starting afresh,
+like a new day or a new person. It contains, however, the fundamental
+part of his character; his will remains wayward, but indomitable, and
+his achievements remain fruitless. Only he will henceforth be romantic
+on a broader stage, that of history and civilization; and his magic
+will summon before him illusions somewhat more intellectual,
+counterfeits of beauty and of power. His old loves have blown over, like
+the storms of a bygone year; and with only a dreamlike memory of his
+past errors, he goes forth to meet a new day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Among the allurements which, in the old legend, prompted Faust to sell
+his soul to the devil, one was the beauty of woman. The poor recluse,
+grown gray among his parchments, had never noticed real women, or had
+not found them beautiful. Pedantic child that he was, when he thought of
+the beauty of woman, he thought only of Helen of Troy. And Helen, to the
+Faust of the legend, was simply what Venus might be to Tannhäuser,--a
+woman more ravishing than other ravishing women. She was the supreme
+instance of a vulgar thing. The young Goethe, however, who was a poet
+and a true German, and loved with his soul, was not attracted by this
+ideal. He gave his Faust a tenderer love,--a love of the heart as well
+as of the senses. Later, also, when Goethe took up the old legend again
+in a more antiquarian spirit, and restored Helen to her place in it, he
+transformed her from a symbol of feminine beauty alone into a symbol for
+all beauty, and especially for the highest beauty, that of Hellas. The
+second love of Faust is the passion for classicism.
+
+This passion in a romantic age is not so paradoxical as it may sound.
+Winckelmann and the philologians were restoring something ancient. It
+was the romantic passion for all experience--for the faded experience of
+the ancients also--that made, for them, the poetry and the charm of
+antiquity. How dignified everything was in those heroic days! How noble,
+serene, and abstracted! How pure the blind eyes of statues, how chaste
+the white folds of the marble drapery! Greece was a remote, fascinating
+vision, the most romantic thing in the history of mankind. The sad,
+delicious emotion one felt before a ruined temple was as sentimental as
+anything one could feel before a ruined castle, but more elegant and
+more choice. It was sentimentality in marble. The heroes of the _Iliad_
+were idealized in the same way as the savages of Rousseau were
+idealized, or as the robbers of Schiller.
+
+The romantic classicism of the Napoleonic era lies between the polite
+classicism of the French seventeenth century and the archaeological
+classicism of our present Grecians. French classicism had been quite
+indifferent to the picturesque aspects of ancient life; it could
+tolerate on the stage an Achilles in a periwig and laces. What the
+French tragedians had adopted from the ancients was something inward, a
+standard of character and motive, or a criterion of taste. They studied
+harmony and restraint, not because these had been Greek qualities, but
+because they were qualities essentially reasonable and beautiful,
+naturally belonging, even in modern times, to a cultivated society and a
+cultivated poet. Again, the admiration for Greece which is common in our
+time among people of judgement differs from that of Goethe and his age;
+for if we admire the artistic expression of ancient life in poetry or
+sculpture, we know that these manifestations were made possible by a
+long political and moral discipline, and that, in spite of that
+discipline, ancient art remained very mixed, and often grotesque and
+impure.
+
+For Goethe, however, as for Byron, Greece was less a past civilization,
+to be studied scientifically, than a living idea, a summons to new forms
+of art and of sentiment. Goethe was never so romantic as when he was
+classical. His distichs are like theatrical gestures; he feels the sweep
+of his toga as he rounds them off. His Iphigenia is a sentimental
+dream--_verflucht human_, as he himself came to feel; and his Helena is
+an evocation of magic, magical not merely by accident and in the story,
+but essentially so, in her ghostly semi-consciousness and glassy beauty.
+The apparent incongruities of the scenes in which she appears,
+surrounded by German knights in the court of a feudal castle, are not
+real incongruities. For this Helen is not a thing of the past; she is
+the present dream and affectation of things classical in a romantic
+era. Faust and his vassals offer Helen the most chivalrous and
+exaggerated homage; they introduce her, as a play queen, into their
+society. Faust retires with her to Arcadia,--the land of intentional and
+mid-summer idleness. Here a son, Euphorion, is born to them, a young
+genius, classic in aspect, but wildly romantic and ungovernable in
+temper. He scales the highest peaks, pursues by preference the nymphs
+that flee from him, loves violence and unreason, and finally, thinking
+to fly, falls headlong, like Icarus, and perishes. His last words call
+his mother after him, and she follows, leaving her veil and mantle
+behind, as Euphorion had left his lyre. On the mantle of Helen, which
+swells into a cloud, Faust is borne back again to his native Germany;
+its virtue, as he learns, is to lift him above all commonness.
+
+This long allegory is charming enough, as a series of pictures and
+melodies, to leave the reader content not to interpret it; yet the
+intention of the poet is clear, if we care to disentangle it. By going
+down into the bowels of nature, where the earth goddesses dwell, who are
+the first mothers of all life and of all civilizations alike, we may
+gather intelligence to comprehend even the most alien existence. Greece,
+after such a reversion to the elemental, will appear to us in her
+unmatched simplicity and beauty. The vision will be granted us, although
+the object we see belongs to a distant past; and if our enthusiasm,
+like that of Faust, is passionate and indomitable, we may actually
+persuade the Queen of the Dead to yield up Helen that we may wed her.
+Our scholarship and philosophy, our faithful imitation of Greek art and
+literature, may actually render the Greek scene familiar to us. Yet the
+setting of this recovered genius will still be modern; it will become
+half modern itself; we shall have to teach Helen to rhyme. The product
+of this hybrid inspiration will be a romantic soul in the garb of
+classicism, a lovely wild thing, fated to die young. When this
+enthusiasm has dashed itself against the hard conditions of life, the
+beauty of Greece, that was its mother, will also pale before our eyes.
+We shall be, perforce, content to let it return to the realm of
+irrevocable past things. Only its garment, the monuments of its art and
+thought, will remain to raise us, if we have loved them, above all
+vulgarity in taste and in moral allegiance.
+
+It is an evidence of Goethe's great wisdom that he felt that romantic
+classicism must be subordinated or abandoned; that Helen must evaporate,
+while Faust returned to Germany and to the feeling that after all
+Gretchen was his true love.[17] At the same time the issue of this
+wonderful episode is a little disappointing. At the beginning, the
+vision of Helen in a mirror had inspired Faust with renewed enthusiasm.
+The sight of her again, in the magic play, had altogether enraptured
+and overwhelmed him; and this inspiration had come just when, after the
+death of Gretchen, he had resolved to pursue not all experience, as at
+first, but rather the best, experience,[18]--a hint that the
+transformations of Faust's will were expected somehow to constitute a
+real progress. There was, indeed, among mortals such an infinite need of
+this incomparable and symbolic Helen, that it could move the very
+guardians of the dead to mercy and to tears. When we remember all this,
+we have some reason to expect that a great and permanent improvement in
+the life and heart of our hero should follow on his obtaining so rare a
+boon. But to live within Arcadia Helen was not needed; any Phyllis would
+have served.
+
+Helen, to be sure, leaves some relics behind, by which we may understand
+that the influence of Greek history, literature, and sculpture may still
+avail to cultivate the mind and give it an air of distinction. Perhaps
+in the commonwealth he is about to found, Faust would wish to establish
+not only dykes and freedom, but also professorships of Greek and
+archaeological museums. And the lyre of Euphorion, which is also left
+us, may signify that poems like Byron's _Isles of Greece_, Keats's
+_Grecian Urn, Die Götter Griechenlands_ of Schiller, and Goethe's own
+classical pieces will continue to enrich European literature. This is
+something, but not enough to lift Faust's immense enthusiasm for Helen
+above a crass illusion. That dream of a perfect beauty to be achieved,
+of a perfect life to be lived according to nature and reason, would have
+ended in a little scholarship and a little pedantry. Faust would have
+won Helen in order to hand her over to Wagner.
+
+Helen was queen of Sparta; and although of course the Doric Sparta of
+Lycurgus was something much later, and had nothing to do with the Sparta
+of Homer, yet taken symbolically it is the happiest accident that Helen,
+the type of Greek perfection in beauty, should have been queen of
+Sparta, the type of Greek perfection in discipline. A Faust that had,
+truly deserved and understood Helen would have built her an Hellenic
+city; he would have become himself an [Greek: _anaks androon_, a master
+of men, one of those poets in things, those shapers of well-bred
+generations and wise laws, of which Plato speaks, contrasting them with
+Homer and other poets in words only. For the beauty of mind and body
+that fascinates the romantic classicist, and which inspired the ancient
+poets themselves, was not a product of idleness and sentimentality, nor
+of material and forced activity; it was a product of orderly war,
+religion, gymnastics, and deliberate self-government.
+
+The next turn in Faust's fortunes actually finds him a trader, a
+statesman, an empire-builder; and if such a rolling stone could gather
+any moss, we should expect to see here, if anywhere, the fruits of that
+"aesthetic education of mankind" which Helen represented. We should
+expect Faust, who had lain in the lap of absolute beauty, to understand
+its nature. We should expect him, in eager search after perfection, to
+establish his state on the distinction between the better and the
+worse,--a distinction never to be abolished or obscured for one who has
+loved beauty. In other words, he might have established a moral society
+founding it on great renunciations and on enlightened heroisms, so that
+the highest beauty might really come down and dwell within that city.
+But we find nothing of the sort. Faust founds his kingdom because he
+must do something; and his only ideal of what he hopes to secure for his
+subjects is that they shall always have something to do. Thus the will
+to live, in Faust, is not in the least educated by his experience. It
+changes its objects because it must; the passions of youth yield to
+those of age; and among all the illusions of his life the most fatuous
+is the illusion of progress.
+
+It is characteristic of the absolute romantic spirit that when it has
+finished with something it must invent a new interest. It beats the bush
+for fresh game; it is always on the verge of being utterly bored. So
+now that Helen is flown, Mephistopheles must come to the rescue, like an
+amiable nurse, and propose all sorts of pastimes. Frankfort, Leipzig,
+Paris, Versailles, are described, with the entertainments that life
+there might afford; but Faust, who was always _difficile_, has been
+rendered more so by his recent splendid adventures. However, a new
+impulse suddenly arises in his breast. From the mountain-top to which
+Helen's mantle has borne him, he can see the German Ocean, with its
+tides daily covering great stretches of the flat shore, and rendering
+them brackish and uninhabitable. It would be a fine thing to reclaim
+those wastes, to plant there a prosperous population. After Greece,
+Faust has a vision of Holland.
+
+This last ambition of Faust's is as romantic as the others. He feels the
+prompting towards political art, as he had felt the prompting towards
+love or beauty.[19] The notion of transforming things by his will, of
+leaving for ages his mark upon nature and upon human society, fascinates
+him;[20] but this passion for activity and power, which some
+simple-minded commentators dignify with the name of altruism and of
+living for others, has no steady purpose or standard about it.[21]
+Goethe is especially lavish in details to prove this point. Magic, the
+exercise of an unteachable will, is still Faust's instrument.
+Mephistopheles, by various arts of illusion, secures the triumph of the
+emperor in a desperate war which he is carrying on against a justifiable
+insurrection. As a reward for the aid rendered, Faust receives the shore
+marches in fief. The necessary dykes and canals are built by magic; the
+spirits that Mephistopheles commands dig and build them with strange
+incantations. The commerce that springs up is also illegitimate: piracy
+is involved in it.
+
+Nor is this all. On some sand-dunes that diversified the original beach,
+an old man and his wife, Philemon and Baucis, lived before the advent of
+Faust and his improvements. On the hillock, besides their cottage, there
+stood a small chapel, with a bell which disturbed Faust in his newly
+built palace, partly by its importunate sound, partly by its Christian
+suggestions, and partly by reminding him that he was not master of the
+country altogether, and that something existed in it not the product of
+his magical will. The old people would not sell out; and in a fit of
+impatience Faust orders that they should be evicted by force, and
+transferred to a better dwelling elsewhere. Mephistopheles and his
+minions execute these orders somewhat roughly: the cottage and chapel
+are set on fire, and Philemon and Baucis are consumed in the flames, or
+buried in the ruins.
+
+Faust regrets this accident; but it is one of those inevitable
+developments of action which a brave man must face, and forget as soon
+as possible. He had regretted in the same way the unhappiness of
+Gretchen, and, presumably, the death of Euphorion; but such is romantic
+life. His will, though shaken, is not extinguished by such
+misadventures. He would continue, if life could last, doing things that,
+in some respect, he would be obliged to regret: but he would banish that
+regret easily, in the pursuit of some new interest, and, on the whole,
+he would not regret having been obliged to regret them. Otherwise, he
+would not have shared the whole experience of mankind, but missed the
+important experience of self-accusation and of self-recovery.
+
+It is impossible to suppose that the citizens he is establishing behind
+leaky dykes, so that they may always have something to keep them busy,
+would have given him unmixed satisfaction if he could really have
+foreseen their career in its concrete details. Holland is an
+interesting country, but hardly a spectacle which would long entrance an
+idealist like Faust, so exacting that he has found the arts and sciences
+wholly vain, domesticity impossible, and kitchens and beer-cellars
+beneath consideration. The career of Faust himself had been far more
+free and active than that of his industrious burghers could ever hope to
+be. His interest in establishing them is a masterful, irresponsible
+interest. It is one more arbitrary passion, one more selfish illusion.
+As he had no conscience in his love, and sought and secured nobody's
+happiness, so he has no conscience in his ambition and in his political
+architecture; but if only his will is done, he does not ask whether,
+judged by its fruits, it will be worth doing. As his immense dejection
+at the beginning, when he was a doctor in his laboratory, was not
+founded on any real misfortune, but on restlessness and a vague infinite
+ambition, so his ultimate satisfaction in his work is not founded on any
+good done, but on a passionate wilfulness. He calls the thing he wants
+for others good, because he now wants to bestow it on them, not because
+they naturally want it for themselves. Incapable of sympathy, he has a
+momentary pleasure in policy; and in the last and "highest" expression
+of his will, in his statesmanship and supposed public spirit, he remains
+romantic and, if need be, aggressive and criminal.
+
+Meantime, his end is approaching. The smoke from that poor little
+conflagration turns into shadowy-shapes of want, guilt, care, and death,
+which come and hover about him. Want is kept off by his wealth, and
+guilt is transcended by his romantic courage. But care slips through the
+keyhole, breathes upon him, and blinds him; while death, though he does
+not see it, follows close upon his heels. Nevertheless, the old
+man--Faust is in his hundredth year--is undaunted, and all his thoughts
+are intent on the future, on the work to which he has set his hand. He
+orders the digging to proceed on the canals he is building; but the
+spirits that seem to obey him are getting out of hand, and dig his grave
+instead.
+
+When he feels death upon him, Faust has one of his most splendid moments
+of self-assertion. He has stormed through the world, he says, taking
+with equal thanks the buffets and rewards of fortune;[22] and the last
+word of wisdom he has learned is that no man deserves life or freedom
+who does not daily win them anew. He will leave the dykes he has thrown
+up against the sea to protect the nation he has established; a symbol
+that their health and freedom must consist in perpetual striving against
+an indomitable foe. The thought of many generations living in that
+wholesome danger and labour fills him with satisfaction; he could almost
+say to this moment, in which that prospect opens before his mind's eye,
+"Stay, thou art so fair."[23] And with these words--a last challenge and
+mock surrender to Mephistopheles--he sinks into the grave open at his
+feet.
+
+Who has won the wager? Faust has almost, though not quite, pronounced
+the words which were to give Mephistopheles the victory; but the sense
+of them is new, and Mephistopheles has not succeeded in making Faust
+surrender his will to will, his indefinite idealism. Since what
+satisfies Faust is merely the consciousness that this will to will is to
+be maintained, and that neither he, nor the colonists he has brought
+into being, will ever lick the dust, and take comfort, without any
+further aspiration, in the chance pleasures of the moment. Faust has
+maintained his enthusiasm for a stormy, difficult, and endless life. He
+has been true to his romantic philosophy.
+
+He is therefore saved, in the sense in which salvation is defined in the
+_Prologue in Heaven_, and presently again in the song of the angels that
+receive his soul when they say: "Whosoever is unflagging in his
+striving for ever, him we can redeem."[24] This salvation does not hang
+on any improvement in Faust's character,--he was sinful to the end, and
+had been God's unwitting servant from the very beginning,--nor does it
+lie in any revolution in his fortunes, as if in heaven he were to be
+differently employed than on earth. He is going to teach life to the
+souls of young boys, who have died too soon to have had in their own
+persons any experience of Rathskellers, Gretchens, Helens, and
+Walpurgisnachts.[25] Teaching (though not exactly in these subjects) had
+been Doctor Faustus' original profession; and the weariness of it was
+what had driven him to magic and almost to suicide, until he had escaped
+into the great world of adventure outside. Certainly, with his new
+pupils he will not be more content; his romantic restlessness will not
+forsake him in heaven. Some fine day he will throw his celestial
+school-books out of the window, and with his pupils after him, go forth
+to taste life in some windier region of the clouds.
+
+No, Faust is not saved in the sense of being sanctified or brought to a
+final, eternal state of bliss. The only improvement in his nature has
+been that he has passed, at the beginning of the second part, from
+private to public activities. If, at the end of this part, he expresses
+a wish to abandon magic and to live like a man among men, in the bosom
+of real nature, that wish remains merely Platonic.[26] It is a thought
+that visited Goethe often during his long career, that it is the part of
+wisdom to accept life under natural conditions rather than to pretend to
+evoke the conditions of life out of the will to live. This thought, were
+it held steadfastly, would constitute an advance from transcendentalism
+to naturalism. But the spirit of nature is itself romantic. It lives
+spontaneously, bravely, without premeditation, and for the sake of
+living rather than of enjoying or attaining anything final. And under
+natural conditions, the vicissitudes of an endless life would be many;
+and there could be no question of an ultimate goal, nor even of an
+endless progress in any particular direction. The veering of life is
+part of its vitality,--it is essential to romantic irony and to romantic
+pluck.
+
+The secret of what is serious in the moral of _Faust_ is to be looked
+for in Spinoza,--the source of what is serious in the philosophy of
+Goethe. Spinoza has an admirable doctrine, or rather insight, which he
+calls seeing things under the form of eternity. This faculty is
+fundamental in the human mind; ordinary perception and memory are cases
+of it. Therefore, when we use it to deal with ultimate issues, we are
+not alienated from experience, but, on the contrary, endowed with
+experience and with its fruits. A thing is seen under the form of
+eternity when all its parts or stages are conceived in their true
+relations, and thereby conceived together. The complete biography of
+Caesar is Caesar seen under the form of eternity. Now the complete
+biography of Faust, Faust seen under the form of eternity, shows forth
+his salvation. God and Faust himself, in his last moment of insight, see
+that to have led such a life, in such a spirit, _was_ to be saved; it
+was to be the sort of man a man should be. The blots on that life were
+helpful and necessary blots; the passions of it were necessary and
+creative passions. To have felt such perpetual dissatisfaction is truly
+satisfactory; such desire for universal experience is the right
+experience. You are saved in that you lived well; saved not after you
+have stopped living well, but during the whole process. Your destiny has
+been to be the servant of God. That God and your own conscience should
+pronounce this sentence is your true salvation. Your worthiness is
+thereby established under the form of eternity.
+
+The play, in its philosophic development, ends here; but Goethe added
+several more details and scenes, with that abundance, that love, of
+symbolic pictures and poetic epigrams which characterizes the whole
+second part. As Faust expires, or rather before he does so,
+Mephistopheles posts one of his little demons at each aperture of the
+hero's body, lest the soul should slip out without being caught. At the
+same time a bevy of angels descends, scattering the red roses of love
+and singing its praises. These roses, if they touch Mephistopheles and
+his demons, turn to balls of fire; and although fire is their familiar
+element, they are scorched and scared away. The angels are thus enabled
+to catch the soul of Faust at their leisure, and bear it away
+triumphantly.
+
+It goes without saying that this fight of little boys over a fluttering
+butterfly cannot be what really determines the issue of the wager and
+the salvation of Faust; but Goethe, in his conversations with Eckermann,
+justifies this intervention of a sort of mechanical accident, by the
+analogy of Christian doctrine. Grace is needed, besides virtue; and the
+intercession of Gretchen and the Virgin Mary, like that of the Virgin
+Mary, Lucia, and Beatrice, in Dante's case, and the stratagem of the
+balls of fire, all stand for this external condition of salvation.
+
+This intervention of grace is, at bottom, only a new symbol for the
+essential justification, under the form of eternity, of what is
+imperfect and insufficient in time. The chequered and wilful life of
+Faust is not righteous in any of its parts; yet righteousness is
+imputed to it as a whole; divine love accepts it as sufficient;
+speculative reason declares that to be the best possible life which, to
+humdrum understanding, seems a series of faults and of failures. If the
+foretaste of his new Holland fills, from a distance, the dying Faust
+with satisfaction, how much more must the wonderful career of Faust
+himself deserve to be accepted and envied, and proclaimed to be its own
+excuse for being! The faults of Faust in time are not counted against
+him in eternity. His crimes and follies were blessings in disguise. Did
+they not render his life interesting and fit to make a poem of? Was it
+not by falling into them, and rising out of them, that Faust was Faust
+at all? This insight is the higher reason, the divine love, supervening
+to save him. What ought to be imperfect in time is, because of its
+very imperfection there, perfect when viewed under the form of
+eternity. To live, to live just as we do, that--if we could only realize
+it--is the purpose and the crown of living. We must seek improvement; we
+must be dissatisfied with ourselves; that is the appointed attitude, the
+histrionic pose, that is to keep the ball rolling. But while we feel
+this dissatisfaction we are perfectly satisfactory, and while we play
+our game and constantly lose it, we are winning the game for God.
+
+Even this scene, however, did not satisfy the prolific fancy of the
+poet, and he added a final one,--the apotheosis or _Himmelfahrt_ of
+Faust. In the Campo Santo at Pisa Goethe had seen a fresco representing
+various anchorites dwelling on the flanks of some sacred
+mountain,--Sinai, Carmel, or Athos,--each in his little cave or
+hermitage; and above them, in the large space of sky, flights of angels
+were seen rising towards the Madonna. Through such a landscape the poet
+now shows us the soul of Faust carried slowly upwards.
+
+This scene has been regarded as inspired by Catholic ideas, whereas the
+_Prologue in Heaven_ was Biblical and Protestant; and Goethe himself
+says that his "poetic intention" could best be rendered by images
+borrowed from the tradition of the mediaeval church. But in truth there
+is nothing Catholic about the scene, except the names or titles of the
+personages. What they say is all sentimental landscape-painting or vague
+mysticism, such as might go with any somewhat nebulous piety; and much
+is actually borrowed from Swedenborg. What is Swedenborgian,
+however,--such as the notion of heavenly instruction, passage from
+sphere to sphere, and looking through other people's eyes,--is in turn a
+mere form of expression. The "poetic intention" of the author is, as we
+have seen, altogether Spinozitic. Undoubtedly he conceives that the soul
+of Faust is to pass, in another world, through some new series of
+experiences. But that destiny is not his salvation; it is the
+continuance of his trial. The famous chorus at the very end repeats,
+with an interesting variation, the same contrast we have seen before
+between the point of view of time and that of eternity. Everything
+transitory, says the mystic chorus,[27] is only an image; here (that is,
+under the form of eternity) the insufficient is turned into something
+actual and complete; and what seemed in experience an endless pursuit
+becomes to speculation a perfect fulfilment. The ideal of something
+infinitely attractive and essentially inexhaustible--the eternal
+feminine, as Goethe calls it--draws life on from stage to stage.
+
+Gretchen and Helen had been symbols of this ideal; Goethe's green old
+age had felt, to the very last, the charm of woman, the sweetness and
+the sorrow of loving what he could not hope to possess, and what, in its
+ideal perfection, necessarily eludes possession. He had reconciled
+himself, not without tears, to this desire without hope, and, like
+Piccarda in the _Paradiso_, he had blessed the hand that gave the
+passion and denied the happiness.[28] Thus, in dreaming of one
+satisfaction and renouncing it, he had found a satisfaction of another
+kind. _Faust_ ends on the same philosophical level on which it
+began,--the level of romanticism. The worth of life lies in pursuit, not
+in attainment therefore, everything is worth pursuing, and nothing
+brings satisfaction--save this endless destiny itself.
+
+Such is the official moral of _Faust_, and what we may call its general
+philosophy. But, as we saw just now, this moral is only an afterthought,
+and is far from exhausting the philosophic ideas which the poem
+contains. Here is a scheme for experience; but experience, in filling it
+out, opens up many vistas; and some of these reveal deeper and higher
+things than experience itself. The path of the pilgrim and the inns he
+stops at are neither the whole landscape he sees as he travels, nor the
+true shrine he is making for. And the incidental philosophy or
+philosophies of Goethe's _Faust_ are, to my mind, often better than its
+ultimate philosophy. The first scene of the second part, for instance,
+is better, poetically and philosophically, than the last. It shows a
+deeper sense for the realities of nature and of the soul, and it is
+more sincere. Goethe there is interpreting nature with Spinoza; he is
+not dreaming with Swedenborg, nor talking equivocal paradoxes with
+Hegel.
+
+In fact, the great merit of the romantic attitude in poetry, and of the
+transcendental method in philosophy, is that they put us back at the
+beginning of our experience. They disintegrate convention, which is
+often cumbrous and confused, and restore us to ourselves, to immediate
+perception and primordial will. That, as it would seem, is the true and
+inevitable starting-point. Had we not been born, had we not peeped into
+this world, each out of his personal eggshell, this world might indeed
+have existed without us, as a thousand undiscoverable worlds may now
+exist; but for us it would not have existed. This obvious truth would
+not need to be insisted on but for two reasons: one that conventional
+knowledge, such as our notions of science and morality afford, is often
+top-heavy; asserts and imposes on us much more than our experience
+warrants,--our experience, which is our only approach to reality. The
+other reason is the reverse or counterpart of this; for conventional
+knowledge often ignores and seems to suppress parts of experience no
+less actual and important for us as those parts on which the
+conventional knowledge itself is reared. The public world is too narrow
+for the soul, as well as too mythical and fabulous. Hence the double
+critical labour and reawakening which romantic reflection is good
+for,--to cut off the dead branches and feed the starving shoots. This
+philosophy, as Kant said, is a cathartic: it is purgative and
+liberating; it is intended to make us start afresh and start right.
+
+It follows that one who has no sympathy with such a philosophy is a
+comparatively conventional person. He has a second-hand mind. Faust has
+a first-hand mind, a truly free, sincere, courageous soul. It follows
+also, however, that one who has no philosophy but this has no wisdom; he
+can say nothing that is worth carrying away; everything in him is
+attitude and nothing is achievement. Faust, and especially
+Mephistopheles, do have other philosophies on top of their
+transcendentalism; for this is only a method, to be used in reaching
+conclusions that shall be critically safeguarded and empirically
+grounded. Such outlooks, such vistas into nature, are scattered
+liberally through the pages of _Faust_. Words of wisdom diversify this
+career of folly, as exquisite scenes fill this tortuous and overloaded
+drama. The mind has become free and sincere, but it has remained
+bewildered.
+
+The literary merits of Goethe's _Faust_ correspond accurately with its
+philosophical excellences. In the prologue in the theatre Goethe himself
+has described them; much scenery, much wisdom, some folly, great wealth
+of incident and characterization; and behind, the soul of a poet singing
+with all sincerity and fervour the visions of his life. Here is
+profundity, inwardness, honesty, waywardness; here are the most touching
+accents of nature, and the most varied assortment of curious lore and
+grotesque fancies. This work, says Goethe (in a quatrain intended as an
+epilogue, but not ultimately inserted in the play),--this work is like
+human life: it has a beginning, it has an end; but it has no totality,
+it is not one whole.[29] How, indeed, should we draw the sum of an
+infinite experience that is without conditions to determine it, and
+without goals in which it terminates? Evidently all a poet of pure
+experience can do is to represent some snatches of it, more or less
+prolonged; and the more prolonged the experience represented is the more
+it will be a collection of snatches, and the less the last part of it
+will have to do with the beginning. Any character which we may attribute
+to the whole of what we have surveyed would fail to dominate it, if that
+whole had been larger, and if we had had memory or foresight enough to
+include other parts of experience differing altogether in kind from the
+episodes we happen to have lived through. To be miscellaneous, to be
+indefinite, to be unfinished, is essential to the romantic life. May we
+not say that it is essential to all life, in its immediacy; and that
+only in reference to what is not life--to objects, ideals, and
+unanimities that cannot be experienced but may only be conceived--can
+life become rational and truly progressive? Herein we may see the
+radical and inalienable excellence of romanticism; its sincerity,
+freedom, richness, and infinity. Herein, too, we may see its
+limitations, in that it cannot fix or trust any of its ideals, and
+blindly believes the universe to be as wayward as itself, so that nature
+and art are always slipping through its fingers. It is obstinately
+empirical, and will never learn anything from experience.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[1] Eckermann, Conversation of May 6, 1827: "Das ist zwar ein wirksamer,
+manches erklärender, guter Gedanke, aber es ist keine Idee die dem
+Ganzen ... zugrunde liege."
+
+[2] _Faust_, Part it-i. Act v. 375-82:
+
+ Ich bin nur durch die Welt gerannt;
+ Ein jed' Gelüst ergriff ich bei den Haaren,
+ Was nicht genügte, liess ich fahren,
+ Was mir entwischte, liess ich ziehn.
+ Ich habe nur begehrt und nur vollbracht
+ Und abermals gewünscht und so mit Macht
+ Mein Leben durchgestürmt; erst gross und mächtig,
+ Nun aber geht es weise, geht bedächtig.
+
+
+[3] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_, i.:
+
+ Welch Schauspiel! aber, ach! ein Schauspiel nur!
+ Wo fass' ich dich, unendliche Natur?
+ Euch, Brüste, wo?
+
+
+[4] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_:
+
+ Du, Geist der Erde, bist mir näher;
+ Schon fühl' ich meine Kräfte höher,
+ Schon glüh' ich wie von neuem Wein;
+ Ich fühle Mut, mich in die Welt zu wagen,
+ Der Erde Weh, der Erde Glück zu tragen,...
+ Mit Stürmen mich herumzuschlagen
+ Und in des Schiffbruchs Knirschen nicht zu zagen.
+
+
+[5] _Faust, Prolog im Himmel_:
+
+ Mit den Toten
+ Hab' ich mich niemals gern befangen.
+ Am meisten lieb' ich mir die vollen, frischen Wangen.
+ Für einen Leichnam bin ich nicht zu Haus;
+ Mir geht es, wie der Katze mit der Maus....
+ Von Sonn' und Welten weiss ich nichts zu sagen,
+ Ich sehe nur, wie sich die Menschen plagen.
+
+
+[6] _Faust, Prolog im Himmel_:
+
+ Staub soll er fressen, und mit Lust.
+
+
+[7] Ibid.:
+
+ Es irrt der Mensch, so lang' er strebt.
+ Ein guter Mensch in seinem dunkeln Drange
+ Ist sich des rechten Weges wohl bewusst.
+
+
+[8] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v.:
+
+ Ja! diesem Sinne bin ich ganz ergeben.
+ Das ist der Weisheit letzter Schluss:
+ Nur der verdient sich Freiheit wie das Leben,
+ Der täglich sie erobern muss.
+
+
+
+[9] Ibid., Part i., _Prolog im Himmel_:
+
+ Des Menschen Thätigkeit kann allzu leicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich gem ihm den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel schaffen.
+
+
+
+[10] Ibid.:
+
+ Das Werdende, das ewig wirkt und lebt,
+ Umfass' euch mit der Liebe holden Schranken,
+ Und was in schwankender Erscheinung schwebt,
+ Befestiget mit dauernden Gedanken!
+
+
+[11] _Faust_, Part i., _Wald und Höhle_:
+
+ Erhabner Geist, du gabst mir, gabst mir alles,
+ Warum ich bat. Du hast mir nicht umsonst
+ Dein Angesicht im Feuer zugewendet....
+ O, dass dem Menschen nichts Vollkommnes wird,
+ Empfind' ich nun. Du gabst zu dieser Wonne,
+ Die mich den Göttern nah und näher bringt,
+ Mir den Gefährten, &c.
+
+Also, ibid., _Trüber Tag_: Grosser herrlicher Geist, der du mir zu
+erscheinen würdigtest, der du mein Herz kennest und meine Seele, warum
+an den Schandgesellen mich Schmieden, der sich am Schaden weidet und am
+Verderben sich letzt?
+
+[12] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_, ii.:
+
+ Ich bin der Geist, der stets verneint!
+ Und das mit Recht; denn alles, was entsteht,
+ Ist wert, dass es zu Grunde geht;,
+ Drum besser wär's, dass nichts entstünde....
+ Ich bin ein Teil des Teils, der anfangs alles war,
+ Ein Teil der Finsternis, die sich das Licht gebar....
+ Was sich dem Nichts entgegenstellt,
+ Das Etwas, diese plumpe Welt,
+ So viel als ich schon unternommen,
+ Ich wusste nicht ihr beizukommen....
+ Wie viele hab' ich schon begraben!
+ Und immer cirkuliert ein neues, frisches Blut.
+ So geht es fort, man möchte rasend werden!
+
+
+[13] _Faust_, Part ii. Act i., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Kleiner Elfen Geistergrösse
+ Eilet, we sie helfen kann;
+ Ob er heilig, ob er böse,
+ Jammert sie der Unglücksmann.
+
+
+[14] _Faust_, Part ii. Act i., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Alles kann der Edle leisten,
+ Der versteht und rasch ergreift.
+
+The whole scene will repay study.
+
+[15] _Faust_, Part ii. Act i., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Des Lebens Fackel wollten wir entzünden,
+ Ein Feuermeer umschlingt uns, welch ein Feuer!...
+ So bleibe denn die Sonne mir im Rücken!
+ Der Wassersturz, das Felsenriff durchbrausend,
+ Ihn schau' ich an mit wachsendem Entzücken....
+ Allein wie herrlich, diesem Sturm erspriessend,
+ Wolbt sich des bunten Bogens Wechseldauer,...
+ Der spiegelt ab das menschliche Bestreben....
+ Am farbigen Abglanz haben wir das Leben.
+
+
+[16] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_:
+
+ Ins hohe Meer werd' ich hinausgewiesen,...
+ Zu neuen Sphären reiner Thätigkeit....
+ Hier ist es Zeit, durch Thaten zu beweisen,
+ Dass Manneswürde nicht der Götterhöhe weicht,...
+ Zu diesem Schritt sich heiter zu entschliessen
+ Und war' es mit Gefahr, ins Nichts dahin zu fliessen.
+
+
+[17] _Faust_, Part ii. Act iv., _Hochgebirg_: The first monologue.
+
+
+[18] _Faust_, Part i, Act ii., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Du, Erde,... regst und rührst ein kraftiges Beschliessen
+ Zum höchsten Dasein immerfort zu streben.
+
+
+[19] _Faust_, Part ii. Act iv., _Hochgebirg_:
+
+ Erstaunenswürdiges soll geraten,
+ Ich fühle Kraft zu kühnem Fleiss.
+ Herrschaft gewinn' ich, Eigentum!
+ Die That ist alles, nichts der Ruhm.
+ Da wagt mein Geist, sich selbst zu überfliegen;
+ Hier möcht' ich kämpfen, dies möcht' ich besiegen.
+
+
+[20] Ibid., Act v., _Grosser Vorhof des Palasts_:
+
+ Es kann die Spur von meinen Erdetagen
+ Nicht in Aeonen untergehn.
+
+
+[21] _Faust_, Part ii. Act iv., _Hochgebirg_:
+
+ Wer befehlen soll
+ Muss im Befehlen Seligkeit empfinden.
+ Ihm ist die Brust von hohem Willen voll,
+ Doch was er will, es darf's kein Mensch ergründen.
+
+
+[22] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Mitternacht_:
+
+ Ich bin nur durch die Welt gerannt:
+ Ein jed' Gelüst ergriff ich bei den Haaren,
+ Was nicht genügte, liess ich fahren,
+ Was mich entwischte, liess ich ziehn.
+
+
+[23] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Grosser Vorhof des Palasts_:
+
+ Solch ein Gewimmel möcht ich sehn,
+ Auf freiem Grund mit freiem Volke stehn.
+ Zum Augenblicke dürft' ich sagen:
+ Verweile doch, du bist so schön!
+
+
+[24] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Himmel_:
+
+ Wer immer strebend sich bemüht,
+ Den konnen wir erlösen.
+
+
+[25] Ibid.:
+
+ Wir wurden früh entfernt
+ Von Lebechören;
+ Doch dieser hat gelernt,
+ Er wird uns lehren.
+
+
+[26] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Mitternacht_:
+
+ Noch hab' ich mich ins Freie nicht gekämpft.
+ Könnt ich Magie von meinem Pfad entfernen,
+ Die Zaubersprüche ganz und gar verlernen,
+ Stünd' ich, Natur, vor dir ein Mann allein.
+ Da wär's der Mühe wert, ein Mensch zu sein.
+
+
+[27] _Faust_, Part ii, Act v., _Himmel_:
+
+ Alles Vergängliche
+ Ist nur ein Gleichnis;
+ Das Unzulängliche,
+ Hier wird's Ereignis;
+ Das Unbeschreibliche,
+ Hier ist es gethan;
+ Das Ewig-Weibliche
+ Zieht uns hinan.
+
+
+[28] Cf. _Trilogie der Leidenschaft_, 1823:
+
+ Mich treibt umher ein unbezwinglich Sehnen;
+ Da bleibt kein Rat als grenzenlose Thränen....
+ Und so das Herz erleichtert merkt behende
+ Dass es noch lebt und schlägt und möchte schlagen,...
+ Da fühlte sich--o, dass es ewig bliebe!--
+ Das Doppelglück der Töne wie der Liebe.
+
+
+[29] _Aus dem Nachlass, Abkündigung:_
+
+ Des Menschen Leben ist ein ähnliches Gedicht;
+ Es hat wohl einen Anfang, hat ein Ende,
+ Allein ein Ganzes ist es nicht.
+
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+It may be possible, after studying these three philosophical poets, to
+establish some comparison between them. By a comparison is not meant a
+discussion as to which of our poets is the best. Each is the best in his
+way, and none is the best in every way. To express a preference is not
+so much a criticism as a personal confession. If it were a question of
+the relative pleasure a man might get from each poet in turn, this
+pleasure would differ according to the man's temperament, his period of
+life, the language he knew best, and the doctrine that was most familiar
+to him. By a comparison is meant a review of the analysis we have
+already made of the type of imagination and philosophy embodied in each
+of the poets, to see what they have in common, how they differ, or what
+order they will fall into from different points of view. Thus we have
+just seen that Goethe, in his _Faust_, presents experience in its
+immediacy, variety, and apparent groundlessness; and that he presents it
+as an episode, before and after which other episodes, differing from it
+more and more as you recede, may be conceived to come. There is no
+possible totality in this, for there is no known ground. Turn to
+Lucretius, and the difference is striking. Lucretius is the poet of
+substance. The ground is what he sees everywhere; and by seeing the
+ground, he sees also the possible products of it. Experience appears in
+Lucretius, not as each man comes upon it in his own person, but as the
+scientific observer views it from without. Experience for him is a
+natural, inevitable, monotonous round of feelings, involved in the
+operations of nature. The ground and the limits of experience have
+become evident together.
+
+In Dante, on the other hand, we have a view of experience also in its
+totality, also from above and, in a sense, from outside; but the
+external point of reference is moral, not physical, and what interests
+the poet is what experience is best, what processes lead to a supreme,
+self-justifying, indestructible sort of existence. Goethe is the poet of
+life; Lucretius the poet of nature; Dante the poet of salvation. Goethe
+gives us what is most fundamental,--the turbid flux of sense, the cry of
+the heart, the first tentative notions of art and science, which magic
+or shrewdness might hit upon. Lucretius carries us one step farther. Our
+wisdom ceases to be impressionistic and casual. It rests on
+understanding of things, so that what happiness remains to us does not
+deceive us, and we can possess it in dignity and peace. Knowledge of
+what is possible is the beginning of happiness. Dante, however, carries
+us much farther than that. He, too, has knowledge of what is possible
+and impossible. He has collected the precepts of old philosophers and
+saints, and the more recent examples patent in society around him, and
+by their help has distinguished the ambitions that may be wisely
+indulged in this life from those which it is madness to foster,--the
+first being called virtue and piety and the second folly and sin. What
+makes such knowledge precious is not only that it sketches in general
+the scope and issue of life, but that it paints in the detail as
+well,--the detail of what is possible no less than that (more familiar
+to tragic poets) of what is impossible.
+
+Lucretius' notion, for instance, of what is positively worth while or
+attainable is very meagre: freedom from superstition, with so much
+natural science as may secure that freedom, friendship, and a few cheap
+and healthful animal pleasures. No love, no patriotism, no enterprise,
+no religion. So, too, in what is forbidden us, Lucretius sees only
+generalities,--the folly of passion, the blight of superstition. Dante,
+on the contrary, sees the various pitfalls of life with intense
+distinctness; and seeing them clearly, and how fatal each is, he sees
+also why men fall into them, the dream that leads men astray, and the
+sweetness of those goods that are impossible. Feeling, even in what we
+must ultimately call evil, the soul of good that attracts us to it, he
+feels, in good all its loveliness and variety. Where, except in Dante,
+can we find so many stars that differ from other stars in glory; so
+many delightful habitations for excellences; so many distinct beauties
+of form, accent, thought, and intention; so many delicacies and
+heroisms? Dante is the master of those who know by experience what is
+worth knowing by experience; he is the master of _distinction_.
+
+Here, then, are our three poets and their messages: Goethe, with human
+life in its immediacy, treated romantically; Lucretius, with a vision of
+nature and of the limits of human life; Dante, with spiritual mastery of
+that life, and a perfect knowledge of good and evil.
+
+You may stop at what stage you will, according to your sense of what is
+real and important; for what one man calls higher another man calls
+unreal; and what one man feels to be strength smells rank to another. In
+the end, we should not be satisfied with any one of our poets if we had
+to drop the other two. It is true that taken formally, and in respect to
+their type of philosophy and imagination, Dante is on a higher plane
+than Lucretius, and Lucretius on a higher plane than Goethe. But the
+plane on which a poet dwells is not everything; much depends on what he
+brings up with him to that level. Now there is a great deal, a very
+great deal, in Goethe that Lucretius does not know of. Not knowing of
+it, Lucretius cannot carry this fund of experience up to the
+intellectual and naturalistic level; he cannot transmute this abundant
+substance of Goethe's by his higher insight and clearer faith; he has
+not woven so much into his poem. So that while to see nature, as
+Lucretius sees it, is a greater feat than merely to live hard in a
+romantic fashion, and produces a purer and more exalted poem than
+Goethe's magical medley, yet this medley is full of images, passions,
+memories, and introspective wisdom that Lucretius could not have dreamed
+of. The intellect of Lucretius rises, but rises comparatively empty; his
+vision sees things as a whole, and in their right places, but sees very
+little of them; he is quite deaf to their intricacy, to their birdlike
+multiform little souls. These Goethe knows admirably; with these he
+makes a natural concert, all the more natural for being sometimes
+discordant, sometimes overloaded and dull. It is necessary to revert
+from Lucretius to Goethe to get at the volume of life.
+
+So, too, if we rise from Lucretius to Dante, there is much left behind
+which we cannot afford to lose. Dante may seem at first sight to have a
+view of nature not less complete and clear than that of Lucretius; a
+view even more efficacious than materialism for fixing the limits of
+human destiny and marking the path to happiness. But there is an
+illusion here. Dante's, idea of nature is not genuine; it is not
+sincerely put together out of reasoned observation. It is a view of
+nature intercepted by myths and worked out by dialectic. Consequently,
+he has no true idea either of the path to happiness or of its real
+conditions. His notion of nature is an inverted image of the moral
+world, cast like a gigantic shadow upon the sky. It is a mirage.
+
+Now, while to know evil, and especially good, in all their forms and
+inward implications is a far greater thing than to know the natural
+conditions of good and evil, or their real distribution in space and
+time, yet the higher philosophy is not safe if the lower philosophy is
+wanting or is false. Of course it is not safe practically; but it is not
+safe even poetically. There is an attenuated texture and imagery in the
+_Divine Comedy_. The voice that sings it, from beginning to end, is a
+thin boy-treble, all wonder and naïveté. This art does not smack of
+life, but of somnambulism. The reason is that the intellect has been
+hypnotized by a legendary and verbal philosophy. It has been unmanned,
+curiously enough, by an excess of humanism; by the fond delusion that
+man and his moral nature are at the centre of the universe. Dante is
+always thinking of the divine order of history and of the spheres; he
+believes in controlling and chastening the individual soul; so that he
+seems to be a cosmic poet, and to have escaped the anthropocentric
+conceit of romanticism. But he has not escaped it. For, as we have seen,
+this golden cage in which his soul sings is artificial; it is
+constructed on purpose to satisfy and glorify human distinctions and
+human preferences. The bird is not in his native wilds; man is not in
+the bosom of nature. He is, in a moral sense, still at the centre of the
+universe; his ideal is the cause of everything. He is the appointed lord
+of the earth, the darling of heaven; and history is a brief and
+prearranged drama, with Judea and Rome for its chief theatre.
+
+Some of these illusions are already abandoned; all are undermined.
+Sometimes, in moments when we are unnerved and uninspired, we may regret
+the ease with which Dante could reconcile himself to a world, so
+imagined as to suit human fancy, and flatter human will. We may envy
+Dante his ignorance of nature, which enabled him to suppose that he
+dominated it, as an infinite and exuberant nature cannot be dominated by
+any of its parts. In the end, however, knowledge is good for the
+imagination. Dante himself thought so; and his work proved that he was
+right, by infinitely excelling that of all ignorant contemporary poets.
+The illusion of knowledge is better than ignorance for a poet; but the
+reality of knowledge would be better than the illusion; it would stretch
+the mind over a vaster and more stimulating scene; it would concentrate
+the will upon a more attainable, distinct, and congenial happiness. The
+growth of what is known increases the scope of what may be imagined and
+hoped for. Throw open to the young poet the infinity of nature; let him
+feel the precariousness of life, the variety of purposes, civilizations,
+and religions even upon this little planet; let him trace the triumphs
+and follies of art and philosophy, and their perpetual resurrections
+--like that of the downcast Faust. If, under the stimulus of such a
+scene, he does not some day compose a natural comedy as much surpassing
+Dante's divine comedy in sublimity and richness as it will surpass it in
+truth, the fault will not lie with the subject, which is inviting and
+magnificent, but with the halting genius that cannot render that subject
+worthily.
+
+Undoubtedly, the universe so displayed would not be without its dark
+shadows and its perpetual tragedies. That is in the nature of things.
+Dante's cosmos, for all its mythical idealism, was not so false as not
+to have a hell in it. Those rolling spheres, with all their lights and
+music, circled for ever about hell. Perhaps in the real life of nature
+evil may not prove to be so central as that. It would seem to be rather
+a sort of inevitable but incidental friction, capable of being
+diminished indefinitely, as the world is better known and the will is
+better educated. In Dante's spheres there could be no discord whatever;
+but at the core of them was eternal woe. In the star-dust of our physics
+discords are everywhere, and harmony is only tentative and approximate,
+as it is in the best earthly life; but at the core there is nothing
+sinister, only freedom, innocence, inexhaustible possibilities of all
+sorts of happiness. These possibilities may tempt future poets to
+describe them; but meantime, if we wish to have a vision of nature not
+fundamentally false, we must revert from Dante to Lucretius.
+
+Obviously, what would be desirable, what would constitute a truly
+philosophical or comprehensive poet, would be the union of the insights
+and gifts which our three poets have possessed. This union is not
+impossible. The insights may be superposed one on the other. Experience
+in all its extent, what Goethe represents, should be at the foundation.
+But as the extent of experience is potentially infinite, as there are
+all sorts of worlds possible and all sorts of senses and habits of
+thought, the widest survey would still leave the poet, where Goethe
+leaves us, with a sense of an infinity beyond. He would be at liberty to
+summon from the limbo of potentiality any form that interested him;
+poetry and art would recover their early freedom; there would be no
+beauties forbidden and none prescribed. For it is a very liberating and
+sublime thing to summon up, like Faust, the image of _all_ experience.
+Unless that has been done, we leave the enemy in our rear; whatever
+interpretations we offer for experience will become impertinent and
+worthless if the experience we work upon is no longer at hand. Nor will
+any construction, however broadly based, have an _absolute_ authority;
+the indomitable freedom of life to be more, to be new, to be what it has
+not entered into the heart of man as yet to conceive, must always remain
+standing. With that freedom goes the modesty of reason, both in physics
+and in morals, that can lay claim only to partial knowledge, and to the
+ordering of a particular soul, or city, or civilization.
+
+Poetry and philosophy, however, are civilized arts; they are proper to
+some particular genius, which has succeeded in flowering at a particular
+time and place. A poet who merely swam out into the sea of sensibility,
+and tried to picture all possible things, real or unreal, human or
+inhuman, would bring materials only to the workshop of art; he would not
+be an artist. To the genius of Goethe he must add that of Lucretius and
+Dante.
+
+There are two directions in which it seems fitting that rational art
+should proceed, on the basis which a limited experience can give it. Art
+may come to buttress a particular form of life, or it may come to
+express it. All that we call industry, science, business, morality,
+buttresses our life; it informs us about our conditions and adjusts us
+to them; it equips us for life; it lays out the ground for the game we
+are to play. This preliminary labour, however, need not be servile. To
+do it is also to exercise our faculties; and in that exercise our
+faculties may grow free,--as the imagination of Lucretius, in tracing
+the course of the atoms, dances and soars most congenially. One
+extension of art, then, would be in the direction of doing artistically,
+joyfully, sympathetically, whatever we have to do. Literature in
+particular (which is involved in history, politics, science, affairs)
+might be throughout a work of art. It would become so not by being
+ornate, but by being appropriate; and the sense of a great precision and
+justness would come over us as we read or wrote. It would delight us; it
+would make us see how beautiful, how satisfying, is the art of being
+observant, economical, and sincere. The philosophical or comprehensive
+poet, like Homer, like Shakespeare, would be a poet of business. He
+would have a taste for the world in which he lived, and a clean view of
+it.
+
+There remains a second form of rational art, that of expressing the
+ideal towards which we would move under these improved conditions. For
+as we react we manifest an inward principle, expressed in that reaction.
+We have a nature that selects its own direction, and the direction in
+which practical arts shall transform the world. The outer life is for
+the sake of the inner; discipline is for the sake of freedom, and
+conquest for the sake of self-possession. This inner life is wonderfully
+redundant; there is, namely, very much more in it than a consciousness
+of those acts by which the body adjusts itself to its surroundings. _Am
+farbigen Abglanz haben wir das Leben_; each sense has its arbitrary
+quality, each language its arbitrary euphony and prosody; every game has
+its creative laws, every soul its own tender reverberations and secret
+dreams. Life has a margin of play which might grow broader, if the
+sustaining nucleus were more firmly established in the world. To the art
+of working well a civilized race would add the art of playing well. To
+play with nature and make it decorative, to play with the overtones of
+life and make them delightful, is a sort of art. It is the ultimate, the
+most artistic sort of art, but it will never be practised successfully
+so long as the other sort of art is in a backward state; for if we do
+not know our environment, we shall mistake our dreams for a part of it,
+and so spoil our science by making it fantastic, and our dreams by
+making them obligatory. The art and the religion of the past, as we see
+conspicuously in Dante, have fallen into this error. To correct it would
+be to establish a new religion and a new art, based on moral liberty and
+on moral courage.
+
+Who shall be the poet of this double insight? He has never existed, but
+he is needed nevertheless. It is time some genius should appear to
+reconstitute the shattered picture of the world. He should live in the
+continual presence of all experience, and respect it; he should at the
+same time understand nature, the ground of that experience; and he
+should also have a delicate sense for the ideal echoes of his own
+passions, and for all the colours of his possible happiness. All that
+can inspire a poet is contained in this task, and nothing less than this
+task would exhaust a poet's inspiration. We may hail this needed genius
+from afar. Like the poets in Dante's limbo, when Virgil returns among
+them, we may salute him, saying: _Onorate l'altissimo poeta_. Honour the
+most high poet, honour the highest possible poet. But this supreme poet
+is in limbo still.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Three Philosophical Poets, by George Santayana
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Three Philosophical Poets, by George Santayana
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Three Philosophical Poets
+ Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe
+
+Author: George Santayana
+
+Release Date: March 18, 2011 [EBook #35612]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THREE PHILOSOPHICAL POETS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
+(From images generously made available by the Internet
+Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+THREE PHILOSOPHICAL POETS
+
+LUCRETIUS, DANTE, AND GOETHE
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE SANTAYANA
+
+
+PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HARVARD UNIVERSITY
+
+
+HARVARD STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
+
+VOLUME I
+
+
+CAMBRIDGE
+
+HARVARD UNIVERSITY
+
+1910
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+The present volume is composed, with a few additions, of six lectures
+read at Columbia University in February, 1910, and repeated in April of
+the same year, at the University of Wisconsin. These lectures, in turn,
+were based on a regular course which I had been giving for some time at
+Harvard College. Though produced under such learned auspices, my book
+can make no great claims to learning. It contains the impressions of an
+amateur, the appreciations of an ordinary reader, concerning three great
+writers, two of whom at least might furnish matter enough for the
+studies of a lifetime, and actually have academies, libraries, and
+university chairs especially consecrated to their memory. I am no
+specialist in the study of Lucretius; I am not a Dante scholar nor a
+Goethe scholar. I can report no facts and propose no hypotheses about
+these men which are not at hand in their familiar works, or in
+well-known commentaries upon them. My excuse for writing about them,
+notwithstanding, is merely the human excuse which every new poet has for
+writing about the spring. They have attracted me; they have moved me to
+reflection; they have revealed to me certain aspects of nature and of
+philosophy which I am prompted by mere sincerity to express, if anybody
+seems interested or willing to listen. What I can offer the benevolent
+reader, therefore, is no learned investigation. It is only a piece of
+literary criticism, together with a first broad lesson in the history of
+philosophy--and, perhaps, in philosophy itself.
+
+ G.S.
+
+
+_Harvard College_
+
+_June, 1910_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+I
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+_Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe sum up the chief phases of European
+philosophy,--naturalism, supernaturalism, and romanticism--Ideal
+relation between philosophy and poetry._
+
+II
+
+LUCRETIUS
+
+_Development of Greek cosmology--Democritus--Epicurean moral sentiment
+--Changes inspired by it in the system of Democritus--Accidental
+alliance of materialism with hedonism--Imaginative value of naturalism:
+The Lucretian Venus, or the propitious movement in nature--The Lucretian
+Mars, or the destructive movement--Preponderant melancholy, and the
+reason for it--Materiality of the soul--The fear of death and the fear
+of life--Lucretius a true poet of nature--Comparison with Shelley and
+Wordsworth--Things he might have added consistently: Indefeasible worth
+of his insight and sentiment._
+
+III
+
+DANTE
+
+_Character of Platonism--Its cosmology a parable--Combination of this
+with Hebraic philosophy of history--Theory of the Papacy and the Empire
+adopted by Dante--His judgement on Florence--Dante as a lyric
+poet--Beatrice the woman, the symbol, and the reality--Love, magic, and
+symbolism constitutive principles of Dante's universe--Idea of the
+Divine Comedy--The scheme of virtues and vices--Retributive theory of
+rewards and punishments--Esoteric view of this, which makes even
+punishment intrinsic to the sins--Examples--Dantesque cosmography--The
+genius of the poet--His universal scope--His triumphant execution of the
+Comedy--His defects, in spite of which he remains the type of a supreme
+poet._
+
+IV
+
+GOETHE'S FAUST _Page_
+
+_The romantic spirit--The ideals of the Renaissance--Expression of both
+in the legendary Faust--Marlowe's version--Tendency to vindicate
+Faust--Contrast with Calderon's "Wonder-working Magician"--The original
+Faust of Goethe,--universal ambition and eternal dissatisfaction
+--Modifications--The series of experiments in living--The story of
+Gretchen fitted in--Goethe's naturalistic theory of life and
+rejuvenation: Helen--The classic manner and the judgement on
+classicism--Faust's last ambition--The conflict over his soul and his
+ascent to heaven symbolical--Moral of the whole._
+
+V
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+_Comparison of the three poets--Their relative rank--Ideal of a
+philosophic or comprehensive poet--Untried possibilities of art._
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The sole advantage in possessing great works of literature lies in what
+they can help us to become. In themselves, as feats performed by their
+authors, they would have forfeited none of their truth or greatness if
+they had perished before our day. We can neither take away nor add to
+their past value or inherent dignity. It is only they, in so far as they
+are appropriate food and not poison for us, that can add to the present
+value and dignity of our minds. Foreign classics have to be retranslated
+and reinterpreted for each generation, to render their old naturalness
+in a natural way, and keep their perennial humanity living and capable
+of assimilation. Even native classics have to be reapprehended by every
+reader. It is this continual digestion of the substance supplied by the
+past that alone renders the insights of the past still potent in the
+present and for the future. Living criticism, genuine appreciation, is
+the interest we draw from year to year on the unrecoverable capital of
+human genius.
+
+Regarded from this point of view, as substances to be digested, the
+poetic remains of Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe (though it is his _Faust_
+only that I shall speak of) afford rather a varied feast. In their
+doctrine and genius they may seem to be too much opposed to be at all
+convergent or combinable in their wisdom. Some, who know and care for
+one, perhaps, of these poets, may be disposed to doubt whether they have
+anything vital to learn from the other two. Yet it is as a pupil--I hope
+a discriminating pupil--of each in turn that I mean to speak; and I
+venture to maintain that in what makes them great they are compatible;
+that without any vagueness or doubleness in one's criterion of taste one
+may admire enthusiastically the poetry of each in turn; and that one may
+accept the essential philosophy, the positive intuition, of each,
+without lack of definition or system in one's own thinking.
+
+Indeed, the diversity of these three poets passes, if I may use the
+Hegelian dialect, into a unity of a higher kind. Each is typical of an
+age. Taken together they sum up all European philosophy. Lucretius
+adopts the most radical and the most correct of those cosmological
+systems which the genius of early Greece had devised. He sees the world
+to be one great edifice, one great machine, all its parts reacting upon
+one another, and growing out of one another in obedience to a general
+pervasive process or life. His poem describes the nature, that is, the
+birth and composition, of all things. It shows how they are compounded
+out of elements, and how these elements, which he thinks are atoms in
+perpetual motion, are being constantly redistributed, so that old
+things perish and new things arise. Into this view of the world he fits
+a view of human life as it ought to be led under such conditions. His
+materialism is completed by an aspiration towards freedom and quietness
+of spirit. Allowed to look once upon the wonderful spectacle, which is
+to repeat itself in the world for ever, we should look and admire, for
+to-morrow we die; we should eat, drink, and be merry, but moderately and
+with much art, lest we die miserably, and die to-day.
+
+This is one complete system of philosophy,--materialism in natural
+science, humanism in ethics. Such was the gist of all Greek philosophy
+before Socrates, of that philosophy which was truly Hellenic and
+corresponded with the movement which produced Greek manners, Greek
+government, and Greek art--a movement towards simplicity, autonomy, and
+reasonableness in everything, from dress to religion. Such is the gist
+also of what may be called the philosophy of the Renaissance, the
+reassertion of science and liberty in the modern world, by Bacon, by
+Spinoza, by the whole contemporary school that looks to science for its
+view of the facts, and to the happiness of men on earth for its ideal.
+This system is called naturalism; and of this Lucretius is the
+unrivalled poet.
+
+Skip a thousand years and more, and a contrasting spectacle is before
+us. All minds, all institutions, are dominated by a religion that
+represents the soul as a pilgrim upon earth; the world is fallen and
+subject to the devil; pain and poverty are considered normal, happiness
+impossible here and to be hoped for only in a future life, provided the
+snares and pleasures of the present life have not entrapped us. Meantime
+a sort of Jacob's ladder stretches from the stone on which the wayfarer
+lays his head into the heaven he hopes for; and the angels he sees
+ascending and descending upon it are beautiful stories, wonderful
+theories, and comforting rites. Through these he partakes, even on
+earth, of what will be his heavenly existence. He partly understands his
+destiny; his own history and that of the world are transfigured before
+him and, without ceasing to be sad, become beautiful. The raptures of a
+perfect conformity with the will of God, and of union with Him, overtake
+him in his prayers. This is supernaturalism, a system represented in
+Christendom chiefly by the Catholic Church, but adopted also by the
+later pagans, and widespread in Asia from remote antiquity down to the
+present time. Little as the momentary temper of Europe and America may
+now incline to such a view, it is always possible for the individual, or
+for the race, to return to it. Its sources are in the solitude of the
+spirit and in the disparity, or the opposition, between what the spirit
+feels it is fitted to do, and what, in this world, it is condemned to
+waste itself upon. The unmatched poet of this supernaturalism is Dante.
+
+Skip again some five hundred years, and there is another change of
+scene. The Teutonic races that had previously conquered Europe have
+begun to dominate and understand themselves. They have become
+Protestants, or protesters against the Roman world. An infinite fountain
+of life seems to be unlocked within their bosom. They turn successively
+to the Bible, to learning, to patriotism, to industry, for new objects
+to love and fresh worlds to conquer; but they have too much vitality, or
+too little maturity, to rest in any of these things. A demon drives them
+on; and this demon, divine and immortal in its apparent waywardness, is
+their inmost self. It is their insatiable will, their radical courage.
+Nay, though this be a hard saying to the uninitiated, their will is the
+creator of all those objects by which it is sometimes amused, and
+sometimes baffled, but never tamed. Their will summons all opportunities
+and dangers out of nothing to feed its appetite for action; and in that
+ideal function lies their sole reality. Once attained, things are
+transcended. Like the episodes of a spent dream, they are to be smiled
+at and forgotten; the spirit that feigned and discarded them remains
+always strong and undefiled; it aches for new conquests over new
+fictions. This is romanticism. It is an attitude often found in English
+poetry, and characteristic of German philosophy. It was adopted by
+Emerson and ought to be sympathetic to Americans; for it expresses the
+self-trust of world-building youth, and mystical faith in will and
+action. The greatest monument to this romanticism is Goethe's _Faust._
+
+Can it be an accident that the most adequate and probably the most
+lasting exposition of these three schools of philosophy should have been
+made by poets? Are poets, at heart, in search of a philosophy? Or is
+philosophy, in the end, nothing but poetry? Let us consider the
+situation.
+
+If we think of philosophy as an investigation into truth, or as
+reasoning upon truths supposed to be discovered, there is nothing in
+philosophy akin to poetry. There is nothing poetic about the works of
+Epicurus, or St. Thomas Aquinas, or Kant; they are leafless forests. In
+Lucretius and in Dante themselves we find passages where nothing is
+poetical except the metre, or some incidental ornament. In such passages
+the form of poetry is thrown over the substance of prose, as Lucretius
+himself confesses where he says: "As when physicians would contrive to
+administer loathsome wormwood to little boys they first moisten the rim
+of the cup round about with sweet and golden honey, that the children's,
+unsuspecting youth may be beguiled--to the lips, but no further--while
+they drink down the bitter potion, by deception not betrayed, but
+rather by that stratagem made whole and restored;... so I have willed to
+set forth our doctrine before thee in sweet-sounding Pierian song, and
+to smear it, as it were, with the Muses' honey."[1]
+
+But poetry cannot be spread upon things like butter; it must play upon
+them like light, and be the medium through which we see them. Lucretius
+does himself an injustice. If his philosophy had been wormwood to him,
+he could not have said, as he does just before this passage: "Like a
+sharp blow of the thyrsus, a great hope of praise vibrates through my
+heart and fills my breast with tender love of the Muses, whereby now,
+instinct with flowering fancy, I traverse pathless haunts of the
+Pierides, by no man's foot trodden before. It is joy to reach undefiled
+fountains and quaff; it is joy to gather fresh flowers and weave a
+matchless crown for my head of those bays with which never yet the Muses
+veiled the brow of any man; first, in that I teach sublime truths and
+come to free the soul from the strangling knots of superstition; then,
+in that on so dark a theme I pour forth so clear a song, suffusing all
+with poetic beauty,... if haply by such means I might keep thy mind
+intent upon my verses, until thine eye fathoms the whole structure of
+nature, and the fixed form that makes it beautiful."[2]
+
+Here, I think, we have the solution to our doubt. The reasonings and
+investigations of philosophy are arduous, and if poetry is to be linked
+with them, it can be artificially only, and with a bad grace. But the
+vision of philosophy is sublime. The order it reveals in the world is
+something beautiful, tragic, sympathetic to the mind, and just what
+every poet, on a small or on a large scale, is always trying to catch.
+
+In philosophy itself investigation and reasoning are only preparatory
+and servile parts, means to an end. They terminate in insight, or what
+in the noblest sense of the word may be called _theory, [Greek:
+Theoria]_,--a steady contemplation of all things in their order and
+worth. Such contemplation is imaginative. No one can reach it who has
+not enlarged his mind and tamed his heart. A philosopher who attains it
+is, for the moment, a poet; and a poet who turns his practised and
+passionate imagination on the order of all things, or on anything in the
+light of the whole, is for that moment a philosopher.
+
+Nevertheless, even if we grant that the philosopher, in his best
+moments, is a poet, we may suspect that the poet has his worst moments
+when he tries to be a philosopher, or rather, when he succeeds in being
+one. Philosophy is something reasoned and heavy; poetry something
+winged, flashing, inspired. Take almost any longish poem, and the parts
+of it are better than the whole. A poet is able to put together a few
+words, a cadence or two, a single interesting image. He renders in that
+way some moment of comparatively high tension, of comparatively keen
+sentiment. But at the next moment the tension is relaxed, the sentiment
+has faded, and what succeeds is usually incongruous with what went
+before, or at least inferior. The thought drifts away from what it had
+started to be. It is lost in the sands of versification. As man is now
+constituted, to be brief is almost a condition of being inspired.
+
+Shall we say, then,--and I now broach an idea by which I set some
+store,--that poetry is essentially short-winded, that what is poetic is
+necessarily intermittent in the writings of poets, that only the
+fleeting moment, the mood, the episode, can be rapturously felt, or
+rapturously rendered, while life as a whole, history, character, and
+destiny are objects unfit for imagination to dwell on, and repellent to
+poetic art? I cannot think so. If it be a fact, as it often is, that we
+find little things pleasing and great things arid and formless, and if
+we are better poets in a line than in an epic, that is simply due to
+lack of faculty on our part, lack of imagination and memory, and above
+all to lack of discipline.
+
+This might be shown, I think, by psychological analysis, if we cared to
+rely on something so abstract and so debatable. For in what does the
+short-winded poet himself excel the common unimaginative person who
+talks or who stares? Is it that he thinks even less? Rather, I suppose,
+in that he feels more; in that his moment of intuition, though fleeting,
+has a vision, a scope, a symbolic something about it that renders it
+deep and expressive. Intensity, even momentary intensity, if it can be
+expressed at all, comports fullness and suggestion compressed into that
+intense moment. Yes, everything that comes to us at all must come to us
+at some time or other. It is always the fleeting moment in which we
+live. To this fleeting moment the philosopher, as well as the poet, is
+actually confined. Each must enrich it with his endless vistas, vistas
+necessarily focused, if they are to be disclosed at all, in the eye of
+the observer, here and now. What makes the difference between a moment
+of poetic insight and a vulgar moment is that the passions of the poetic
+moment have more perspective. Even the short-winded poet selects his
+words so that they have a magic momentum in them which carries us, we
+know not how, to mountain-tops of intuition. Is not the poetic quality
+of phrases and images due to their concentrating and liberating the
+confused promptings left in us by a long experience? When we feel the
+poetic thrill, is it not that we find sweep in the concise and depth in
+the clear, as we might find all the lights of the sea in the water of a
+jewel? And what is a philosophic thought but such an epitome?
+
+If a short passage is poetical because it is pregnant with suggestion of
+a few things, which stretches our attention and makes us rapt and
+serious, how much more poetical ought a vision to be which was pregnant
+with all we care for? Focus a little experience, give some scope and
+depth to your feeling, and it grows imaginative; give it more scope and
+more depth, focus all experience within it, make it a philosopher's
+vision of the world, and it will grow imaginative in a superlative
+degree, and be supremely poetical. The difficulty, after having the
+experience to symbolize, lies only in having enough imagination to hold
+and suspend it in a thought; and further to give this thought such
+verbal expression that others maybe able to decipher it, and to be
+stirred by it as by a wind of suggestion sweeping the whole forest of
+their memories.
+
+Poetry, then, is not poetical for being short-winded or incidental, but,
+on the contrary, for being comprehensive and having range. If too much
+matter renders it heavy, that is the fault of the poet's weak intellect,
+not of the outstretched world. A quicker eye, a more synthetic
+imagination, might grasp a larger subject with the same ease. The
+picture that would render this larger subject would not be flatter and
+feebler for its extent, but, on the contrary, deeper and stronger, since
+it would possess as much unity as the little one with greater volume. As
+in a supreme dramatic crisis all our life seems to be focused in the
+present, and used in colouring our consciousness and shaping our
+decisions, so for each philosophic poet the whole world of man is
+gathered together; and he is never so much a poet as when, in a single
+cry, he summons all that has affinity to him in the universe, and
+salutes his ultimate destiny. It is the acme of life to understand life.
+The height of poetry is to speak the language of the gods.
+
+But enough of psychological analysis and of reasoning in the void.
+Three historical illustrations will prove my point more clearly and more
+conclusively.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[1] Lucretius, I. 936-47:
+
+ Veluti pueris absinthia tetra medentes
+ Cum dare conantur, prius oras pocula circura
+ Contingunt mellis dulci flavoque liquore,
+ Ut puerorum aetas improvida ludificetur
+ Labrorum tenus, interea perpotet amarum
+ Absinthi laticem, deceptaque non capiatur,
+ Sed potius tali pacto recreata valescat:
+ Sic ego nunc ... volui tibi suaviloquenti
+ Carmine Pierio rationem exponere nostram,
+ Et quasi musaeo dulci contingere melle.
+
+
+[2] Lucretius, i. 922-34, 948-50:
+
+ Acri
+ Percussit thyrso laudis spes magna meum cor
+ Et simul incussit suavem mi in pectus amorem
+ Musarum, quo nunc instinctus mente vigenti
+ Avia Pieridum peragro loca nullius ante
+ Trita solo: iuvat integros accedere fontes,
+ Atque haurire; iuvatque novos decerpere flores,
+ Insignemque meo capiti petere inde coronam,
+ Unde prius nulli velarint tempora musae.
+ Primum, quod magnis doceo de rebus, et artis
+ Religionum animum nodis exsolvere pergo:
+ Deinde, quod obscura de re tam lucida pango
+ Carmina, musaeo contingens cuncta lepore....
+ Si tibi forte animum tali ratione tenere
+ Versibus in nostris possem, dum perspicis omnem
+ Naturam rerum, qua constet compta figura.
+
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+LUCRETIUS
+
+
+
+There is perhaps no important poem the antecedents of which can be
+traced so exhaustively as can those of the work of Lucretius, _De Rerum
+Natura_. These antecedents, however, do not lie in the poet himself. If
+they did, we should not be able to trace them, since we know nothing, or
+next to nothing, about Lucretius the man. In a chronicon, compiled by
+St. Jerome largely out of Suetonius, in which miscellaneous events are
+noted which occurred in each successive year, we read for the year 94
+B.C.: "Titus Lucretius, poet, is born. After a love-philtre had turned
+him mad, and he had written, in the intervals of his insanity, several
+books which Cicero revised, he killed himself by his own hand in the
+forty-fourth year of his age."
+
+The love-philtre in this report sounds apocryphal; and the story of the
+madness and suicide attributes too edifying an end to an atheist and
+Epicurean not to be suspected. If anything lends colour to the story it
+is a certain consonance which we may feel between its tragic incidents
+and the genius of the poet as revealed in his work, where we find a
+strange scorn of love, a strange vehemence, and a high melancholy. It is
+by no means incredible that the author of such a poem should have been
+at some time the slave of a pathological passion, that his vehemence
+and inspiration should have passed into mania, and that he should have
+taken his own life. But the untrustworthy authority of St. Jerome cannot
+assure us whether what he repeats is a tradition founded on fact or an
+ingenious fiction.
+
+Our ignorance of the life of Lucretius is not, I think, much to be
+regretted. His work preserves that part of him which he himself would
+have wished to preserve. Perfect conviction ignores itself, proclaiming
+the public truth. To reach this no doubt requires a peculiar genius
+which is called intelligence; for intelligence is quickness in seeing
+things as they are. But where intelligence is attained, the rest of a
+man, like the scaffolding to a finished building, becomes irrelevant. We
+do not wish it to intercept our view of the solid structure, which alone
+was intended by the artist--if he was building for others, and was not a
+coxcomb. It is his intellectual vision that the naturalist in particular
+wishes to hand down to posterity, not the shabby incidents that preceded
+that vision in his own person. These incidents, even if they were by
+chance interesting, could not be repeated in us; but the vision into
+which the thinker poured his faculties, and to which he devoted his
+vigils, is communicable to us also, and may become a part of ourselves.
+
+Since Lucretius is thus identical for us with his poem, and is lost in
+his philosophy, the antecedents of Lucretius are simply the stages by
+which his conception of nature first shaped itself in the human mind. To
+retrace these stages is easy; some of them are only too familiar; yet
+the very triteness of the subject may blind us to the grandeur and
+audacity of the intellectual feat involved. A naturalistic conception of
+things is a great work of imagination,--greater, I think, than any
+dramatic or moral mythology: it is a conception fit to inspire great
+poetry, and in the end, perhaps, it will prove the only conception able
+to inspire it.
+
+We are told of the old Xenophanes that he looked up into the round
+heaven and cried, "The All is One." What is logically a truism may often
+be, imaginatively, a great discovery, because no one before may have
+thought of the obvious analogy which the truism registers. So, in this
+case, the unity of all things is logically an evident, if barren, truth;
+for the most disparate and unrelated worlds would still be a multitude,
+and so an aggregate, and so, in some sense, a unity. Yet it was a great
+imaginative feat to cast the eye deliberately round the entire horizon,
+and to draw mentally the sum of all reality, discovering that reality
+makes such a sum, and may be called one; as any stone or animal, though
+composed of many parts, is yet called one in common parlance. It was
+doubtless some prehistoric man of genius, long before Xenophanes, who
+first applied in this way to all things together that notion of unity
+and wholeness which everybody had gained by observation of things
+singly, and who first ventured to speak of "the world." To do so is to
+set the problem for all natural philosophy, and in a certain measure to
+anticipate the solution of that problem; for it is to ask how things
+hang together, and to assume that they do hang together in one way or
+another.
+
+To cry "The All is One," and to perceive that all things are in one
+landscape and form a system by their juxtaposition, is the rude
+beginning of wisdom in natural philosophy. But it is easy to go farther,
+and to see that things form a unity in a far deeper and more mysterious
+way. One of the first things, for instance, that impresses the poet, the
+man of feeling and reflection, is that these objects that people the
+world all pass away, and that the place there-of knows them no more.
+Yet, when they vanish, nothingness does not succeed; other things arise
+in their stead. Nature remains always young and whole in spite of death
+at work everywhere; and what takes the place of what continually
+disappears is often remarkably like it in character. Universal
+instability is not incompatible with a great monotony in things; so that
+while Heraclitus lamented that everything was in flux, Ecclesiastes, who
+was also entirely convinced of that truth, could lament that there was
+nothing new under the sun.
+
+This double experience of mutation and recurrence, an experience at once
+sentimental and scientific, soon brought with it a very great thought,
+perhaps the greatest thought that mankind has ever hit upon, and which
+was the chief inspiration of Lucretius. It is that all we observe about
+us, and ourselves also, may be so many passing forms of a permanent
+substance. This substance, while remaining the same in quantity and in
+inward quality, is constantly redistributed; in its redistribution it
+forms those aggregates which we call things, and which we find
+constantly disappearing and reappearing. All things are dust, and to
+dust they return; a dust, however, eternally fertile, and destined to
+fall perpetually into new, and doubtless beautiful, forms. This notion
+of substance lends a much greater unity to the outspread world; it
+persuades us that all things pass into one another, and have a common
+ground from which they spring successively, and to which they return.
+
+The spectacle of inexorable change, the triumph of time, or whatever we
+may call it, has always been a favourite theme for lyric and tragic
+poetry, and for religious meditation. To perceive universal mutation, to
+feel the vanity of life, has always been the beginning of seriousness.
+It is the condition for any beautiful, measured, or tender philosophy.
+Prior to that, everything is barbarous, both in morals and in poetry;
+for until then mankind has not learned to renounce anything, has not
+outgrown the instinctive egotism and optimism of the young animal, and
+has not removed the centre of its being, or of its faith, from the will
+to the imagination.
+
+To discover substance, then, is a great step in the life of reason, even
+if substance be conceived quite negatively as a term that serves merely
+to mark, by contrast, the unsubstantiality, the vanity, of all
+particular moments and things. That is the way in which Indian poetry
+and philosophy conceived substance. But the step taken by Greek physics,
+and by the poetry of Lucretius, passes beyond. Lucretius and the Greeks,
+in observing universal mutation and the vanity of life, conceived behind
+appearance a great intelligible process, an evolution in nature. The
+reality became interesting, as well as the illusion. Physics became
+scientific, which had previously been merely spectacular.
+
+Here was a much richer theme for the poet and philosopher, who was
+launched upon the discovery of the ground and secret causes of this gay
+or melancholy flux. The understanding that enabled him to discover these
+causes did for the European what no Indian mystic, what no despiser of
+understanding anywhere, suffers himself to do; namely, to dominate,
+foretell, and transform this changing show with a virile, practical
+intelligence. The man who discovers the secret springs of appearances
+opens to contemplation a second positive world, the workshop and busy
+depths of nature, where a prodigious mechanism is continually supporting
+our life, and making ready for it from afar by the most exquisite
+adjustments. The march of this mechanism, while it produces life and
+often fosters it, yet as often makes it difficult and condemns it to
+extinction. This truth, which the conception of natural substance first
+makes intelligible, justifies the elegies which the poets of illusion
+and disillusion have always written upon human things. It is a truth
+with a melancholy side; but being a truth, it satisfies and exalts the
+rational mind, that craves truth as truth, whether it be sad or
+comforting, and wishes to pursue a possible, not an impossible,
+happiness.
+
+So far, Greek science had made out that the world was one, that there
+was a substance, that this was a physical substance, distributed and
+moving in space. It was matter. The question remained, What is the
+precise nature of matter, and how does it produce the appearances we
+observe? The only answer that concerns us here is that given by
+Lucretius; an answer he accepted from Epicurus, his master in
+everything, who in turn had accepted it from Democritus. Now Democritus
+had made a notable advance over the systems that selected one obvious
+substance, like water, or collected all the obvious substances, as
+Anaxagoras had done, and tried to make, the world out of them.
+Democritus thought that the substance of everything ought not to have
+any of the qualities present in some things and absent in others; it
+ought to have only the qualities present in all things. It should be
+_merely_ matter. Materiality, according to him, consisted of extension,
+figure, and solidity; in the thinnest ether, if we looked sharp enough,
+we should find nothing but particles possessing these properties. All
+other qualities of things were apparent only, and imputed to them by a
+convention of the mind. The mind was a born mythologist, and projected
+its feelings into their causes. Light, colour, taste, warmth, beauty,
+excellence, were such imputed and conventional qualities; only space and
+matter were real. But empty space was no less real than matter.
+Consequently, although the atoms of matter never changed their form,
+real changes could take place in nature, because their position might
+change in a real space.
+
+Unlike the useless substance of the Indians, the substance of Democritus
+could offer a calculable, ground for the flux of appearances; for this
+substance was distributed unequally in the void, and was constantly
+moving. Every appearance, however fleeting, corresponded to a precise
+configuration of substance; it arose with that configuration and
+perished with it. This substance, accordingly, was physical, not
+metaphysical. It was no dialectical term, but a scientific anticipation,
+a prophecy as to what an observer who should be properly equipped would
+discover in the interior of bodies. Materialism is not a system of
+metaphysics; it is a speculation in chemistry and physiology, to the
+effect that, if analysis could go deep enough, it would find that all
+substance was homogeneous, and that all motion was regular.
+
+Though matter was homogeneous, the forms of the ultimate particles,
+according to Democritus, were various; and sundry combinations of them
+constituted the sundry objects in nature. Motion was not, as the vulgar
+(and Aristotle) supposed, unnatural, and produced magically by some
+moral cause; it had been eternal and was native to the atoms. On
+striking, they rebounded; and the mechanical currents or vortices which
+these contacts occasioned formed a multitude of stellar systems, called
+worlds, with which infinite space was studded.
+
+Mechanism as to motion, atomism as to structure, materialism as to
+substance, that is the whole system of Democritus. It is as wonderful in
+its insight, in its sense for the ideal demands of method and
+understanding, as it is strange and audacious in its simplicity. Only
+the most convinced rationalist, the boldest prophet, could embrace it
+dogmatically; yet time has largely given it the proof. If Democritus
+could look down upon the present state of science, he would laugh, as he
+was in the habit of doing, partly at the confirmation we can furnish to
+portions of his philosophy, and partly at our stupidity that cannot
+guess the rest.
+
+There are two maxims in Lucretius that suffice, even to this day, to
+distinguish a thinker who is a naturalist from one who is not.
+"Nothing," he says, "arises in the body in order that we may use it, but
+what arises brings forth its use."[1] This is that discarding of final
+causes on which all progress in science depends. The other maxim runs:"
+One thing will grow plain when compared with another: and blind night
+shall not obliterate the path for thee, before thou hast thoroughly
+scanned the ultimate things of nature; so much will things throw light
+on things."[2] Nature is her own standard; and if she seems to us
+unnatural, there is no hope for our minds.
+
+The ethics of Democritus, in so far as we may judge from scanty
+evidence, were merely descriptive or satirical. He was an aristocratic
+observer, a scorner of fools. Nature was laughing at us all; the wise
+man considered his fate and, by knowing it, raised himself in a measure
+above it. All living things pursued the greatest happiness they could
+see their way to; but they were marvellously short-sighted; and the
+business of the philosopher was to foresee and pursue the greatest
+happiness that was really possible. This, in so rough a world, was to be
+found chiefly in abstention and retrenchment. If you asked for little,
+it was more probable that the event would not disappoint you. It was
+important not to be a fool, but it was very hard.
+
+The system of Democritus was adopted by Epicurus, but not because
+Epicurus had any keenness of scientific vision. On the contrary,
+Epicurus, the Herbert Spencer of antiquity, was in his natural
+philosophy an encyclopaedia of second-hand knowledge. Prolix and minute,
+vague and inconsistent, he gathered his scientific miscellany with an
+eye fixed not on nature, but on the exigencies of an inward faith,--a
+faith accepted on moral grounds, deemed necessary to salvation, and
+defended at all costs, with any available weapon. It is instructive that
+materialism should have been adopted at that juncture on the same
+irrelevant moral grounds on which it has usually been rejected.
+
+Epicurus, strange as it may sound to those who have heard, with horror
+or envy, of wallowing in his sty, Epicurus was a saint. The ways of the
+world filled him with dismay. The Athens of his time, which some of us
+would give our eyes to see, retained all its splendour amid its
+political decay; but nothing there interested or pleased Epicurus.
+Theatres, porches, gymnasiums, and above all the agora, reeked, to his
+sense, with vanity and folly. Retired in his private garden, with a few
+friends and disciples, he sought the ways of peace; he lived
+abstemiously; he spoke gently; he gave alms to the poor; he preached
+against wealth, against ambition, against passion. He defended free-will
+because he wished to exercise it in withdrawing from the world, and in
+not swimming with the current. He denied the supernatural, since belief
+in it would have a disquieting influence on the mind, and render too
+many things compulsory and momentous. There was no future life: the art
+of living wisely must not be distorted by such wild imaginings.
+
+All things happened in due course of nature; the gods were too remote
+and too happy, secluded like good Epicureans, to meddle with earthly
+things. Nothing ruffled what Wordsworth calls their "voluptuous
+unconcern." Nevertheless, it was pleasant to frequent their temples.
+There, as in the spaces where they dwelt between the worlds, the gods
+were silent and beautiful, and wore the human form. Their statues, when
+an unhappy man gazed at them, reminded him of happiness; he was
+refreshed and weaned for a moment from the senseless tumult of human
+affairs. From those groves and hallowed sanctuaries the philosopher
+returned to his garden strengthened in his wisdom, happier in his
+isolation, more friendly and more indifferent to all the world. Thus the
+life of Epicurus, as St. Jerome bears witness, was "full of herbs,
+fruits, and abstinences." There was a hush in it, as of bereavement. His
+was a philosophy of the decadence, a philosophy of negation, and of
+flight from the world.
+
+Although science for its own sake could not interest so monkish a
+nature, yet science might be useful in buttressing the faith, or in
+removing objections to it. Epicurus therefore departed from the reserve
+of Socrates, and looked for a natural philosophy that might support his
+ethics. Of all the systems extant--and they were legion--he found that
+of Democritus the most helpful and edifying. Better than any other it
+would persuade men to renounce the madness that must be renounced and to
+enjoy the pleasures that may be enjoyed. But, since it was adopted on
+these external and pragmatic grounds, the system of Democritus did not
+need to be adopted entire. In fact, one change at least was imperative.
+The motion of the atoms must not be wholly regular and mechanical.
+Chance must be admitted, that Fate might be removed. Fate was a
+terrifying notion. It was spoken of by the people with superstitious
+unction. Chance was something humbler, more congenial to the man in the
+street. If only the atoms were allowed to deflect a little now and then
+from their courses, the future might remain unpredictable, and free-will
+might be saved. Therefore, Epicurus decreed that the atoms deflected,
+and fantastic arguments were added to show that this intrusion of chance
+would aid in the organization of nature; for the declension of the
+atoms, as it is called, would explain how the original parallel downpour
+of them might have yielded to vortices, and so to organized bodies. Let
+us pass on.
+
+Materialism, like any system of natural philosophy, carries with it no
+commandments and no advice. It merely describes the world, including the
+aspirations and consciences of mortals, and refers all to a material
+ground. The materialist, being a man, will not fail to have preferences,
+and even a conscience, of his own; but his precepts and policy will
+express, not the logical implications of his science, but his human
+instincts, as inheritance and experience may have shaped them. Any
+system of ethics might accordingly coexist with materialism; for if
+materialism declares certain things (like immortality) to be impossible,
+it cannot declare them to be undesirable. Nevertheless, it is not likely
+that a man so constituted as to embrace materialism will be so
+constituted as to pursue things which he considers unattainable. There
+is therefore a psychological, though no logical, bond between
+materialism and a homely morality.
+
+The materialist is primarily an observer; and he will probably be such
+in ethics also; that is, he will have no ethics, except the emotion
+produced upon him by the march of the world. If he is an _esprit fort_
+and really disinterested, he will love life; as we all love perfect
+vitality, or what strikes us as such, in gulls and porpoises. This, I
+think, is the ethical sentiment psychologically consonant with a
+vigorous materialism: sympathy with the movement of things, interest in
+the rising wave, delight at the foam it bursts into, before it sinks
+again. Nature does not distinguish the better from the worse, but the
+lover of nature does. He calls better what, being analogous to his own
+life, enhances his vitality and probably possesses some vitality of its
+own. This is the ethical feeling of Spinoza, the greatest of modern
+naturalists in philosophy; and we shall see how Lucretius, in spite of
+his fidelity to the ascetic Epicurus, is carried by his poetic ecstasy
+in the same direction.
+
+But mark the crux of this union: the materialist will love the life of
+nature when he loves his own life; but if he should hate his own life,
+how should the life of nature please him? Now Epicurus, for the most
+part, hated life. His moral system, called hedonism, recommends that
+sort of pleasure which has no excitement and no risk about it. This
+ideal is modest, and even chaste, but it is not vital. Epicurus was
+remarkable for his mercy, his friendliness, his utter horror of war, of
+sacrifice, of suffering. These are not sentiments that a genuine
+naturalist would be apt to share. Pity and repentance, Spinoza said,
+were vain and evil; what increased a man's power and his joy increased
+his goodness also. The naturalist will believe in a certain hardness, as
+Nietzsche did; he will incline to a certain scorn, as the laughter of
+Democritus was scornful. He will not count too scrupulously the cost of
+what he achieves; he will be an imperialist, rapt in the joy of
+achieving something. In a word, the moral hue of materialism in a
+formative age, or in an aggressive mind, would be aristocratic and
+imaginative; but in a decadent age, or in a soul that is renouncing
+everything, it would be, as in Epicurus, humanitarian and timidly
+sensual.
+
+We have now before us the antecedents and components of Lucretius' poem
+on nature. There remains the genius of the poet himself. The greatest
+thing about this genius is its power of losing itself in its object, its
+impersonality. We seem to be reading not the poetry of a poet about
+things, but the poetry of things themselves. That things have their
+poetry, not because of what we make them symbols of, but because of
+their own movement and life, is what Lucretius proves once for all to
+mankind.
+
+Of course, the poetry we see in nature is due to the emotion the
+spectacle produces in us; the life of nature might be as romantic and
+sublime as it chose, it would be dust and ashes to us if there were
+nothing sublime and romantic in ourselves to be stirred by it to
+sympathy. But our emotion may be ingenuous; it may be concerned with
+what nature really is and does, has been and will do for ever. It need
+not arise from a selfish preoccupation with what these immense realities
+involve for our own persons or may be used to suggest to our
+self-indulgent fancy. No, the poetry of nature may be discerned merely
+by the power of intuition which it awakens and the understanding which
+it employs. These faculties, more, I should say, than our moodiness or
+stuffy dreams, draw taut the strings of the soul, and bring out her full
+vitality and music. Naturalism is a philosophy of observation, and of an
+imagination that extends the observable; all the sights and sounds of
+nature enter into it, and lend it their directness, pungency, and
+coercive stress. At the same time, naturalism is an intellectual
+philosophy; it divines substance behind appearance, continuity behind
+change, law behind fortune. It therefore attaches all those sights and
+sounds to a hidden background that connects and explains them. So
+understood, nature has depth as well as surface, force and necessity as
+well as sensuous variety. Before the sublimity of this insight, all
+forms of the pathetic fallacy seem cheap and artificial. Mythology, that
+to a childish mind is the only possible poetry, sounds like bad rhetoric
+in comparison. The naturalistic poet abandons fairy land, because he has
+discovered nature, history, the actual passions of man. His imagination
+has reached maturity; its pleasure is to dominate, not to play.
+
+Poetic dominion over things as they are is seen best in Shakespeare for
+the ways of men, and in Lucretius for the ways of nature. Unapproachably
+vivid, relentless, direct in detail, he is unflinchingly grand and
+serious in his grouping of the facts. It is the truth that absorbs him
+and carries him along. He wishes us to be convinced and sobered by the
+fact, by the overwhelming evidence of thing after thing, raining down
+upon us, all bearing witness with one voice to the nature of the world.
+
+Suppose, however,--and it is a tenable supposition,--that Lucretius is
+quite wrong in his science, and that there is no space, no substance,
+and no nature. His poem would then lose its pertinence to our lives and
+personal convictions; it would not lose its imaginative grandeur. We
+could still conceive a world composed as he describes. Fancy what
+emotions those who lived in such a world would have felt on the day when
+a Democritus or a Lucretius revealed to them their actual situation. How
+great the blindness or the madness dissipated, and how wonderful the
+vision gained! How clear the future, how intelligible the past, how
+marvellous the swarming atoms, in their unintentional, perpetual
+fertility! What the sky is to our eyes on a starry night, that every
+nook and cranny of nature would resemble, with here and there the
+tentative smile of life playing about those constellations. Surely that
+universe, for those who lived in it, would have had its poetry. It would
+have been the poetry of naturalism. Lucretius, thinking he lived in such
+a world, heard the music of it, and wrote it down.
+
+And yet, when he set himself to make his poem out of the system of
+Epicurus, the greatness of that task seems to have overwhelmed him. He
+was to unfold for the first time, in sonorous but unwieldy Latin, the
+birth and nature of all things, as Greek subtlety had discerned them. He
+was to dispel superstition, to refute antagonists, to lay the sure
+foundations of science and of wisdom, to summon mankind compellingly
+from its cruel passions and follies to a life of simplicity and peace.
+He was himself combative and distracted enough--as it is often our
+troubles, more than our attainments, that determine our ideals. Yet in
+heralding the advent of human happiness, and in painting that of the
+gods, he was to attain his own, soaring upon the strong wings of his
+hexameters into an ecstasy of contemplation and enthusiasm. When it is
+so great an emotion to read these verses, what must it have been to
+compose them? Yet could he succeed? Could such great things fall to his
+lot? Yes, they might, if only the creative forces of nature, always
+infinite and always at hand, could pass into his brain and into his
+spirit; if only the seeds of corruption and madness, which were always
+coursing through the air, could be blown back for a moment; and if the
+din of civil conflicts could be suspended while he thought and wrote. To
+a fortunate conjunction of atoms, a child owes his first being. To a
+propitious season and atmosphere, a poet owes his inspiration and his
+success. Conscious that his undertaking hangs upon these chance
+conjunctions, Lucretius begins by invoking the powers he is about to
+describe, that they may give him breath and genius enough to describe
+them. And at once these powers send him a happy inspiration, perhaps a
+happy reminiscence of Empedocles. There are two great perspectives which
+the moralist may distinguish in the universal drift of atoms,-a creative
+movement, producing what the moralist values, and a destructive
+movement, abolishing the same. Lucretius knows very well that this
+distinction is moral only, or as people now say, subjective. No one else
+has pointed out so often and so clearly as he that nothing arises in
+this world not helped to life by the death of some other thing;[3] so
+that the destructive movement creates and the creative movement
+destroys. Yet from the point of view of any particular life or interest,
+the distinction between a creative force and a destructive force is real
+and all-important. To make it is not to deny the mechanical structure of
+nature, but only to show how this mechanical structure is fruitful
+morally, how the outlying parts of it are friendly or hostile to me or
+to you, its local and living products.
+
+This double colouring of things is supremely interesting to the
+philosopher; so much so that before his physical science has reached the
+mechanical stage, he will doubtless regard the double aspect which
+things present to him as a dual principle in these things themselves. So
+Empedocles had spoken of Love and Strife as two forces which
+respectively gathered and disrupted the elements, so as to carry on
+between them the Penelope's labour of the world, the one perpetually
+weaving fresh forms of life, and the other perpetually undoing them.[4]
+
+It needed but a slight concession to traditional rhetoric in order to
+exchange these names, Love and Strife, which designated divine powers
+in Empedocles, into the names of Venus and Mars, which designated the
+same influences in Roman mythology. The Mars and Venus of Lucretius are
+not moral forces, incompatible with the mechanism of atoms; they are
+this mechanism itself, in so far as it now produces and now destroys
+life, or any precious enterprise, like this of Lucretius in composing
+his saving poem. Mars and Venus, linked in each other's arms, rule the
+universe together; nothing arises save by the death of some other thing.
+Yet when what arises is happier in itself, or more congenial to us, than
+what is destroyed, the poet says that Venus prevails, that she woos her
+captive lover to suspend his unprofitable raging. At such times it is
+spring on earth; the storms recede (I paraphrase the opening
+passage),[5] the fields are covered with flowers, the sunshine floods
+the serene sky, and all the tribes of animals feel the mighty impulse of
+Venus in their hearts.
+
+The corn ripens in the plains, and even the sea bears in safety the
+fleets that traverse it.
+
+Not least, however, of these works of Venus is the Roman people. Never
+was the formative power of nature better illustrated than in the
+vitality of this race, which conquered so many other races, or than in
+its assimilative power, which civilized and pacified them. Legend had
+made Venus the mother of Aeneas, and Aeneas the progenitor of the
+Romans. Lucretius seizes on this happy accident and identifies the Venus
+of fable with the true Venus, the propitious power in all nature, of
+which Rome was indeed a crowning work. But the poet's work, also, if it
+is to be accomplished worthily, must look to the same propitious
+movement for its happy issue and for its power to persuade. Venus must
+be the patron of his art and philosophy. She must keep Memmius from the
+wars, that he may read, and be weaned from frivolous ambitions; and she
+must stop the tumult of constant sedition, that Lucretius may lend his
+undivided mind to the precepts of Epicurus, and his whole heart to a
+sublime friendship, which prompts him to devote to intense study all the
+watches of the starry night, plotting the course of each invisible atom,
+and mounting almost to the seat of the gods.[6]
+
+This impersonation in the figure of Venus of whatever makes for life
+would not be legitimate--it would really contradict a mechanical view of
+nature--if it were not balanced by a figure representing the opposite
+tendency, the no less universal tendency towards death.
+
+The Mars of the opening passage, subdued for a moment by the
+blandishments of love, is raging in all the rest of the poem in his
+irrepressible fury. These are the two sides of every transmutation, that
+in creating, one thing destroys another; and this transmutation being
+perpetual,--nothing being durable except the void, the atoms, and their
+motion,--it follows that the tendency towards death is, for any
+particular thing, the final and victorious tendency. The names of Venus
+and Mars, not being essential to the poet's thought, are allowed to drop
+out, and the actual processes they stand for are described nakedly; yet,
+if the poem had ever been finished, and Lucretius had wished to make the
+end chime with the beginning, and represent, as it were, one great
+cycle of the world, it is conceivable that he might have placed at the
+close a mythical passage to match that at the beginning; and we might
+have seen Mars aroused from his luxurious lethargy, reasserting his
+immortal nature, and rushing, firebrand in hand, from the palace of love
+to spread destruction throughout the universe, till all things should
+burn fiercely, and be consumed together. Yet not quite all; for the
+goddess herself would remain, more divine and desirable than ever in her
+averted beauty. Instinctively into her bosom the God of War would sink
+again, when weary and drunk with slaughter; and a new world would arise
+from the scattered atoms of the old.
+
+These endless revolutions, taken in themselves, exactly balance; and I
+am not sure that, impartially considered, it is any sadder that new
+worlds should arise than that this world should always continue.
+Besides, nature cannot take from us more than she has given, and it
+would be captious and thankless in us to think of her as destructive
+only, or destructive essentially, after the unspeculative fashion of
+modern pessimists. She destroys to create, and creates to destroy, her
+interest (if we may express it so) being not in particular things, nor
+in their continuance, but solely in the movement that underlies them, in
+the flux of substance beneath. Life, however, belongs to form, and not
+to matter; or in the language of Lucretius, life is an _eventum_, a
+redundant ideal product or incidental aspect, involved in the
+equilibration of matter; as the throw of sixes is an _eventum,_ a
+redundant ideal product or incidental aspect, occasionally involved in
+shaking a dice-box. Yet, as this throw makes the acme and best possible
+issue of a game of dice, so life is the acme and best possible issue of
+the dance of atoms; and it is from the point of view of this _eventum_
+that the whole process is viewed by us, and is judged. Not until that
+happy chance has taken place, do we exist morally, or can we reflect or
+judge at all. The philosopher is at the top of the wave, he is the foam
+in the rolling tempest; and as the wave must have risen before he bursts
+into being, all that he lives to witness is the fall of the wave. The
+decadence of all he lives by is the only prospect before him; his whole
+philosophy must be a prophecy of death. Of the life that may come after,
+when the atoms come together again, he can imagine nothing; the life he
+knows and shares, all that is life to him, is waning and almost spent.
+
+Therefore Lucretius, who is nothing if not honest, is possessed by a
+profound melancholy. Vigorous and throbbing as are his pictures of
+spring, of love, of ambition, of budding culture, of intellectual
+victory, they pale before the vivid strokes with which he paints the
+approach of death--fatigue of the will, lassitude in pleasure,
+corruption and disintegration in society, the soil exhausted, the wild
+animals tamed or exterminated, poverty, pestilence, and famine at hand;
+and for the individual, almost at once, the final dissipation of the
+atoms of his soul, escaping from a relaxed body, to mingle and lose
+themselves in the universal flaw. Nothing comes out of nothing, nothing
+falls back into nothing, if we consider substance; but everything comes
+from nothing and falls back into nothing if we consider things--the
+objects of love and of experience. Time can make no impression on the
+void or on the atoms; nay, time is itself an _eventum_ created by the
+motion of atoms in the void; but the triumph of time is absolute over
+persons, and nations, and worlds.[7]
+
+In treating of the soul and of immortality Lucretius is an imperfect
+psychologist and an arbitrary moralist. His zeal to prove that the soul
+is mortal is inspired by the wish to dispel all fear of future
+punishments, and so to liberate the mind for the calm and tepid
+enjoyment of this world. There is something to be gained in this
+direction, undoubtedly, especially if tales about divine vengeance to
+come are used to sanction irrational practices, and to prevent poor
+people from improving their lot. At the same time, it is hardly fair to
+assume that hell is the only prospect which immortality could possibly
+open to any of us; and it is also unfair not to observe that the
+punishments which religious fables threaten the dead with are, for the
+most part, symbols for the actual degradation which evil-doing brings
+upon the living; so that the fear of hell is not more deterrent or
+repressive than experience of life would be if it were clearly brought
+before the mind.
+
+There is another element in this polemic against immortality which,
+while highly interesting and characteristic of a decadent age, betrays a
+very one-sided and, at bottom, untenable ideal. This element is the fear
+of life. Epicurus had been a pure and tender moralist, but
+pusillanimous. He was so afraid of hurting and of being hurt, so afraid
+of running risks or tempting fortune, that he wished to prove that human
+life was a brief business, not subject to any great transformations, nor
+capable of any great achievements. He taught accordingly that the atoms
+had produced already all the animals they could produce, for though
+infinite in number the atoms were of few kinds. Consequently the
+possible sorts of being were finite and soon exhausted; this world,
+though on the eve of destruction, was of recent date. The worlds around
+it, or to be produced in future, could not afford anything essentially
+different. All the suns were much alike, and there was nothing new under
+them. We need not, then, fear the world; it is an explored and domestic
+scene,--a home, a little garden, six feet of earth for a man to stretch
+in. If people rage and make a great noise, it is not because there is
+much to win, or much to fear, but because people are mad. Let me not be
+mad, thought Epicurus; let me be reasonable, cultivating sentiments
+appropriate to a mortal who inhabits a world morally comfortable and
+small, and physically poor in its infinite monotony. The well-known
+lines of Fitzgerald echo this sentiment perfectly:
+
+ _A Book of Verses underneath the Bough,_
+ _A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread--and Thou_
+ _Beside me singing in the Wilderness--_
+ _Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow!_
+
+But what if the shadow of incalculable possibilities should fall across
+this sunny retreat? What if after death we should awake in a world to
+which the atomic philosophy might not in the least apply? Observe that
+this suggestion is not in the least opposed to any of the arguments by
+which science might prove the atomic theory to be correct. All that
+Epicurus taught about the universe now before us might be perfectly true
+of it; but what if to-morrow a new universe should have taken its
+place? The suggestion is doubtless gratuitous, and no busy man will be
+much troubled by it; yet when the heart is empty it fills itself with
+such attenuated dreams. The muffled pleasures of the wise man, as
+Epicurus conceived him, were really a provocation to supernaturalism.
+They left a great void; and before long supernaturalism--we shall see it
+in Dante--actually rushed in to quicken the pulses of life with fresh
+hopes and illusions, or at least (what may seem better than nothing)
+with terrors and fanatical zeal. With such tendencies already afoot as
+the myths and dogmas of Plato had betrayed, it was imperative for
+Epicurus to banish anxiously all thought of what might follow death. To
+this end are all his arguments about the material nature of the soul and
+her incapacity to survive the body.
+
+To say that the soul is material has a strange and barbarous sound to
+modern ears. We live after Descartes, who taught the world that the
+essence of the soul was consciousness; and to call consciousness
+material would be to talk of the blackness of white. But ancient usage
+gave the word soul a rather different meaning. The essence of the soul
+was not so much to be conscious as to govern the formation of the body,
+to warm, move, and guide it. And if we think of the soul exclusively in
+this light, it will not seem a paradox, it may even seem a truism, to
+say that the soul must be material. For how are we to conceive that
+preexisting consciousness should govern the formation of the body, move,
+warm, or guide it? A spirit capable of such a miracle would in any case
+not be human, but altogether divine. The soul that Lucretius calls
+material should not, then, be identified with consciousness, but with
+the ground of consciousness, which is at the same time the cause of life
+in the body. This he conceives to be a swarm of very small and volatile
+atoms, a sort of ether, resident in all living seeds, breathed in
+abundantly during life and breathed out at death.
+
+Even if this theory were accepted, however, it would not prove the point
+which Lucretius has chiefly at heart, namely, that an after-life is
+impossible. The atoms of the soul are indestructible, like all atoms;
+and if consciousness were attached to the fortunes of a small group of
+them, or of one only (as Leibniz afterwards taught), consciousness would
+continue to exist after these atoms had escaped from the body and were
+shooting through new fields of space. Indeed, they might be the more
+aroused by that adventure, as a bee might find the sky or the garden
+more exciting than the hive. All that Lucretius urges about the
+divisibility of the soul, its diffused bodily seat, and the perils it
+would meet outside fails to remove the ominous possibility that troubles
+him.
+
+To convince us that we perish at death he has to rely on vulgar
+experience and inherent probability: what changes is not indestructible;
+what begins, ends; mental growth, health, sanity, accompany the fortunes
+of the body as a whole (not demonstrably those of the soul-atoms); the
+passions are relevant to bodily life and to an earthly situation; we
+should not be ourselves under a different mask or in a new setting; we
+remember no previous existence if we had one, and so, in a future
+existence, we should not remember this. These reflections are
+impressive, and they are enforced by Lucretius with his usual vividness
+and smack of reality. Nothing is proved scientifically by such a
+deliverance, yet it is good philosophy and good poetry; it brings much
+experience together and passes a lofty judgment upon it. The artist has
+his eye on the model; he is painting death to the life.
+
+If these considerations succeed in banishing the dread of an after-life,
+there remains the distress which many feel at the idea of extinction;
+and if we have ceased to fear death, like Hamlet, for the dreams that
+may come after it, we may still fear death instinctively, like a stuck
+pig. Against this instinctive horror of dying Lucretius has many brave
+arguments. Fools, he says to us, why do you fear what never can touch
+you? While you still live, death is absent; and when you are dead, you
+are so dead that you cannot know you are dead, nor regret it. You will
+be as much at ease as before you were born. Or is what troubles you the
+childish fear of being cold in the earth, or feeling its weight stifling
+you? But you will not be there; the atoms of your soul--themselves
+unconscious--will be dancing in some sunbeam far away, and you yourself
+will be nowhere; you will absolutely not exist. Death is by definition a
+state that excludes experience. If you fear it, you fear a word.
+
+To all this, perhaps, Memmius, or some other recalcitrant reader, might
+retort that what he shrank from was not the metaphysical state of being
+dead, but the very real agony of dying. Dying is something ghastly, as
+being born is something ridiculous; and, even if no pain were involved
+in quitting or entering this world, we might still say what Dante's
+Francesca says of it: _Il modo ancor m' offende_,--"I shudder at the way
+of it." Lucretius, for his part, makes no attempt to show that
+everything is as it should be; and if our way of coming into this life
+is ignoble, and our way of leaving it pitiful, that is no fault of his
+nor of his philosophy. If the fear of death were merely the fear of
+dying, it would be better dealt with by medicine than by argument. There
+is, or there might be, an art of dying well, of dying painlessly,
+willingly, and in season,--as in those noble partings which Attic
+gravestones depict,--especially if we were allowed, as Lucretius would
+allow us, to choose our own time.
+
+But the radical fear of death, I venture to think, is something quite
+different. It is the love of life. Epicurus, who feared life, seems to
+have missed here the primordial and colossal force he was fighting
+against. Had he perceived that force, he would have been obliged to meet
+it in a more radical way, by an enveloping movement, as it were, and an
+attack from the rear. The love of life is not something rational, or
+founded on experience of life. It is something antecedent and
+spontaneous. It is that Venus Genetrix which covers the earth with its
+flora and fauna. It teaches every animal to seek its food and its mate,
+and to protect its offspring; as also to resist or fly from all injury
+to the body, and most of all from threatened death. It is the original
+impulse by which good is discriminated from evil, and hope from fear.
+
+Nothing could be more futile, therefore, than to marshal arguments
+against that fear of death which is merely another name for the energy
+of life, or the tendency to self-preservation. Arguments involve
+premises, and these premises, in the given case, express some particular
+form of the love of life; whence it is impossible to conclude that death
+is in no degree evil and not at all to be feared. For what is most
+dreaded is not the agony of dying, nor yet the strange impossibility
+that when we do not exist we should suffer for not existing. What is
+dreaded is the defeat of a present will directed upon life and its
+various undertakings. Such a present will cannot be argued away, but it
+may be weakened by contradictions arising within it, by the irony of
+experience, or by ascetic discipline. To introduce ascetic discipline,
+to bring out the irony of experience, to expose the self-contradictions
+of the will, would be the true means of mitigating the love of life; and
+if the love of life were extinguished, the fear of death, like smoke
+rising from that fire, would have vanished also.
+
+Indeed, the force of the great passage against the fear of death, at the
+end of the third book of Lucretius, comes chiefly from the picture it
+draws of the madness of life. His philosophy deprecates covetousness,
+ambition, love, and religion; it takes a long step towards the surrender
+of life, by surrendering all in life that is ardent, on the ground that
+it is painful in the end and ignominious. To escape from it all is a
+great deliverance. And since genius must be ardent about something,
+Lucretius pours out his enthusiasm on Epicurus, who brought this
+deliverance and was the saviour of mankind. Yet this was only a
+beginning of salvation, and the same principles carried further would
+have delivered us from the Epicurean life and what it retained that was
+Greek and naturalistic: science, friendship, and the healthy pleasures
+of the body. Had it renounced these things also, Epicureanism would have
+become altogether ascetic, a thorough system of mortification, or the
+pursuit of death. To those who sincerely pursue death, death is no evil,
+but the highest good. No need in that case of elaborate arguments to
+prove that death should not be feared, because it is nothing; for in
+spite of being nothing--or rather because it is nothing--death can be
+loved by a fatigued and disillusioned spirit, just as in spite of being
+nothing--or rather because it is nothing--it must be hated and feared by
+every vigorous animal.
+
+One more point, and I have done with this subject. Ancient culture was
+rhetorical. It abounded in ideas that are verbally plausible, and pass
+muster in a public speech, but that, if we stop to criticize them, prove
+at once to be inexcusably false. One of these rhetorical fallacies is
+the maxim that men cannot live for what they cannot witness. What does
+it matter to you, we may say in debate, what happened before you were
+born, or what may go on after you are buried? And the orator who puts
+such a challenge may carry the audience with him, and raise a laugh at
+the expense of human sincerity. Yet the very men who applaud are proud
+of their ancestors, care for the future of their children, and are very
+much interested in securing legally the execution of their last will and
+testament. What may go on after their death concerns them deeply, not
+because they expect to watch the event from hell or heaven, but because
+they are interested ideally in what that event shall be, although they
+are never to witness it. Lucretius himself, in his sympathy with nature,
+in his zeal for human enlightenment, in his tears for Iphigenia, long
+since dead, is not moved by the hope of observing, or the memory of
+having observed, what excites his emotion. He forgets himself. He sees
+the whole universe spread out in its true movement and proportions; he
+sees mankind freed from the incubus of superstition, and from the havoc
+of passion. The vision kindles his enthusiasm, exalts his imagination,
+and swells his verse into unmistakable earnestness.
+
+If we follow Lucretius, therefore, in narrowing the sum of our personal
+fortunes to one brief and partial glimpse of earth, we must not suppose
+that we need narrow at all the sphere of our moral interests. On the
+contrary, just in proportion as we despise superstitious terrors and
+sentimental hopes, and as our imagination becomes self-forgetful, we
+shall strengthen the direct and primitive concern which we feel in the
+world and in what may go on there, before us, after us, or beyond our
+ken. If, like Lucretius and every philosophical poet, we range over all
+time and all existence, we shall forget our own persons, as he did, and
+even wish them to be forgotten, if only the things we care for may
+subsist or arise. He who truly loves God, says Spinoza, cannot wish that
+God should love him in return. One who lives the life of the universe
+cannot be much concerned for his own. After all, the life of the
+universe is but the locus and extension of ours. The atoms that have
+once served to produce life remain fit to reproduce it; and although the
+body they might animate later would be a new one, and would have a
+somewhat different career, it would not, according to Lucretius, be of a
+totally new species; perhaps not more unlike ourselves than we are
+unlike one another, or than each of us is unlike himself at the various
+stages of his life.
+
+The soul of nature, in the elements of it, is then, according to
+Lucretius, actually immortal; only the human individuality, the chance
+composition of those elements, is transitory; so that, if a man could
+care for what happens to other men, for what befell him when young or
+what may overtake him when old, he might perfectly well care, on the
+same imaginative principle, for what may go on in the world for ever.
+The finitude and injustice of his personal life would be broken down;
+the illusion of selfishness would be dissipated; and he might say to
+himself, I have imagination, and nothing that is real is alien to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The word nature has many senses; but if we preserve the one which
+etymology justifies, and which is the most philosophical as well, nature
+should mean the principle of birth or genesis, the universal mother, the
+great cause, or system of causes, that brings phenomena to light. If we
+take the word nature in this sense, it may be said that Lucretius, more
+than any other man, is the poet of nature. Of course, being an ancient,
+he is not particularly a poet of landscape. He runs deeper than that; he
+is a poet of the source of landscape, a poet of matter. A poet of
+landscape might try to suggest, by well-chosen words, the sensations of
+light, movement, and form which nature arouses in us; but in this
+attempt he would encounter the insuperable difficulty which Lessing long
+ago pointed out, and warned poets of: I mean the unfitness of language
+to render what is spatial and material; its fitness to render only what,
+like language itself, is bodiless and flowing,--action, feeling, and
+thought.
+
+It is noticeable, accordingly, that poets who are fascinated by pure
+sense and seek to write poems about it are called not impressionists,
+but symbolists; for in trying to render some absolute sensation they
+render rather the field of association in which that sensation lies, or
+the emotions and half-thoughts that shoot and play about it in their
+fancy. They become--against their will, perhaps--psychological poets,
+ringers of mental chimes, and listeners for the chance overtones of
+consciousness. Hence we call them symbolists, mixing perhaps some shade
+of disparagement in the term, as if they were symbolists of an empty,
+super-subtle, or fatuous sort. For they play with things luxuriously,
+making them symbols for their thoughts, instead of mending their
+thoughts intelligently, to render them symbols for things.
+
+A poet might be a symbolist in another sense,--if he broke up nature,
+the object suggested by landscape to the mind, and reverted to the
+elements of landscape, not in order to associate these sensations lazily
+together, but in order to build out of them in fancy a different nature,
+a better world, than that which they reveal to reason. The elements of
+landscape, chosen, emphasized, and recombined for this purpose, would
+then be symbols for the ideal world they were made to suggest, and for
+the ideal life that might be led in that paradise. Shelley is a symbolic
+landscape poet in this sense. To Shelley, as Francis Thompson has said,
+nature was a toy-shop; his fancy took the materials of the landscape and
+wove them into a gossamer world, a bright ethereal habitation for
+new-born irresponsible spirits. Shelley was the musician of landscape;
+he traced out its unrealized suggestions; transformed the things he saw
+into the things he would fain have seen. In this idealization it was
+spirit that guided him, the bent of his wild and exquisite imagination,
+and he fancied sometimes that the grosser landscapes of earth were
+likewise the work of some half-spiritual stress, of some restlessly
+dreaming power. In this sense, earthly landscape seemed to him the
+symbol of the earth spirit, as the starlit crystal landscapes of his
+verse, with their pensive flowers, were symbols in which his own fevered
+spirit was expressed, images in which his passion rested.
+
+Another sort of landscape poetry is to be found in Wordsworth, for whom
+the title of poet of nature might perhaps be claimed. To him the
+landscape is an influence. What he renders, beyond such pictorial
+touches as language is capable of, is the moral inspiration which the
+scene brings to him. This moral inspiration is not drawn at all from the
+real processes of nature which every landscape manifests in some aspect
+and for one moment. Such would have been the method of Lucretius; he
+would have passed imaginatively from the landscape to the sources of the
+landscape; he would have disclosed the poetry of matter, not of spirit.
+Wordsworth, on the contrary, dwells on adventitious human matters. He is
+no poet of genesis, evolution, and natural force in its myriad
+manifestations. Only a part of the cosmic process engages his interest,
+or touches his soul--the strengthening or chastening of human purposes
+by the influences of landscape. These influences are very real; for as
+food or wine keeps the animal heart beating, or quickens it, so large
+spaces of calm sky, or mountains, or dells, or solitary stretches of
+water, expand the breast, disperse the obsessions that cramp a man's
+daily existence, and even if he be less contemplative and less virtuous
+than Wordsworth, make him, for the moment, a friend to all things, and a
+friend to himself.
+
+Yet these influences are vague and for the most part fleeting.
+Wordsworth would hardly have felt them so distinctly and so constantly
+had he not found a further link to bind landscape to moral sentiment.
+Such a link exists. The landscape is the scene of human life. Every
+spot, every season, is associated with the sort of existence which falls
+to men in that environment. Landscape for Wordsworth's age and in his
+country was seldom without figures. At least, some visible trace of man
+guided the poet and set the key for his moral meditation. Country life
+was no less dear to Wordsworth than landscape was; it fitted into every
+picture; and while the march of things, as Lucretius conceived it, was
+not present to Wordsworth's imagination, the revolutions of society--the
+French Revolution, for instance--were constantly in his thoughts. In so
+far as he was a poet of human life, Wordsworth was truly a poet of
+nature. In so far, however, as he was a poet of landscape, he was still
+fundamentally a poet of human life, or merely of his personal
+experience. When he talked of nature he was generally moralizing, and
+altogether subject to the pathetic fallacy; but when he talked of man,
+or of himself, he was unfolding a part of nature, the upright human
+heart, and studying it in its truth.
+
+Lucretius, a poet of universal nature, studied everything in its truth.
+Even moral life, though he felt it much more narrowly and coldly than
+Wordsworth did, was better understood and better sung by him for being
+seen in its natural setting. It is a fault of idealists to misrepresent
+idealism, because they do not view it as a part of the world. Idealism
+_is_ a part, of the world, a small and dependent part of it. It is a
+small and dependent part even in the life of men. This fact is nothing
+against idealism taken as a moral energy, as a faculty of idealization
+and a habit of living in the familiar presence of an image of what
+would, in everything, be best. But it is the ruin of idealism taken as a
+view of the central and universal power in the world. For this reason
+Lucretius, who sees human life and human idealism in their natural
+setting, has a saner and maturer view of both than has Wordsworth, for
+all his greater refinement. Nature, for the Latin poet, is really
+nature. He loves and fears her, as she deserves to be loved and feared
+by her creatures. Whether it be a wind blowing, a torrent rushing, a
+lamb bleating, the magic of love, genius achieving its purpose, or a
+war, or a pestilence, Lucretius sees everything in its causes, and in
+its total career. One breath of lavish creation, one iron law of change,
+runs through the whole, making all things kin in their inmost elements
+and in their last end. Here is the touch of nature indeed, her largeness
+and eternity. Here is the true echo of the life of matter.
+
+Any comprehensive picture of nature and destiny, if the picture be
+credited, must arouse emotion, and in a reflective and vivid mind must
+inspire poetry--for what is poetry but emotion, fixing and colouring the
+objects from which it springs? The sublime poem of Lucretius, expounding
+the least poetical of philosophies, proves this point beyond a doubt.
+Yet Lucretius was far from exhausting the inspiration which a poet might
+draw from materialism. In the philosophy of Epicurus, even, which had
+but a sickly hold on materialism, there were two strains which Lucretius
+did not take up, and which are naturally rich in poetry, the strain of
+piety and the strain of friendship. It is usual and, in one sense,
+legitimate to speak of the Epicureans as atheists, since they denied
+providence and any government of God in the world. Yet they admitted the
+existence of gods, living in the quiet spaces between those celestial
+whirlpools which form the various worlds. To these gods they attributed
+the human form, and the serene life to which Epicurus aspired. Epicurus
+himself was so sincere in this belief, and so much affected by it, that
+he used to frequent the temples, keep the feasts of the gods, and often
+spend hours before their images in contemplation and prayer.
+
+In this, as in much else, Epicurus was carrying out to its logical
+conclusion the rational and reforming essence of Hellenism. In Greek
+religion, as in all other religions, there was a background of vulgar
+superstition. Survivals and revivals of totem-worship, taboo, magic,
+ritual barter, and objectified rhetoric are to be found in it to the
+very end; yet if we consider in Greek religion its characteristic
+tendency, and what rendered it distinctively Greek, we see that it was
+its unprecedented ideality, disinterestedness, and aestheticism. To the
+Greek, in so far as he was a Greek, religion was an aspiration to grow
+like the gods by invoking their companionship, rehearsing their story,
+feeling vicariously the glow of their splendid prerogatives, and placing
+them, in the form of beautiful and very human statues, constantly before
+his eyes. This sympathetic interest in the immortals took the place, in
+the typical Greek mind, of any vivid hope of human immortality; perhaps
+it made such a hope seem superfluous and inappropriate. Mortality
+belonged to man, as immortality to the gods; and the one was the
+complement of the other. Imagine a poet who, to the freedom and
+simplicity of Homer, should have added the more reverent idealism of a
+later age; and what an inexhaustible fund of poetry might he not have
+found in this conception of the immortals leading a human life, without
+its sordid contrarieties and limitations, eternally young, and frank,
+and different!
+
+Hints of such poetry are to be found in Plato, myths that present the
+ideal suggestions of human life in pictures. These he sometimes leaves
+general and pale, calling them ideas; but at other times he embodies
+them in deities, or in detailed imaginary constructions, like that of
+his _Republic_. This Platonic habit of mind might have been carried
+further by some franker and less reactionary poet than Plato was, or
+tended to become, as the years turned his wine into vinegar. But the
+whole world was then getting sour. Imagination flagged, or was diverted
+from the Greek into the Hebrew channel. Nevertheless, the hymns of
+modern poets to the ancient gods, and the irrepressible echoes of
+classic mythology in our literature, show how easy it would have been
+for the later ancients themselves, had they chosen, to make immortal
+poetry out of their dying superstitions. The denials of Epicurus do not
+exclude this ideal use of religion; on the contrary, by excluding all
+the other uses of it--the commercial, the mock-scientific, and the
+selfish--they leave the moral interpretative aspect of religion standing
+alone, ready to the poet's hand, if any poet could be found pure and
+fertile enough to catch and to render it. Rationalized paganism might
+have had its Dante, a Dante who should have been the pupil not of Virgil
+and Aquinas, but of Homer and Plato. Lucretius was too literal,
+positivistic, and insistent for such a delicate task. He was a Roman.
+Moral mythology and ideal piety, though his philosophy had room for
+them, formed no part of his poetry.
+
+What the other neglected theme, friendship, might have supplied, we may
+see in the tone of another Epicurean, the poet Horace. Friendship was
+highly honoured in all ancient states; and the Epicurean philosophy, in
+banishing so many traditional forms of sentiment, could only intensify
+the emphasis on friendship. It taught men that they were an accident in
+the universe, comrades afloat on the same raft together with no fate not
+common to them all, and no possible helpers but one another. Lucretius
+does speak, in a passage to which I have already referred,[8] about the
+hope of sweet friendship that supports him in his labours; and
+elsewhere[9] he repeats the Epicurean idyl about picnicking together on
+the green grass by a flowing brook; but the little word "together" is
+all he vouchsafes us to mark what must be the chief ingredient in such
+rural happiness.
+
+Horace, usually so much slighter than Lucretius, is less cursory here.
+Not only does he strike much oftener the note of friendship, but his
+whole mind and temper breathe of friendliness and expected agreement.
+There is, in the very charm and artifice of his lines, a sort of
+confidential joy in tasting with the kindred few the sweet or pungent
+savour of human things. To be brief and gently ironical is to assume
+mutual intelligence; and to assume mutual intelligence is to believe in
+friendship. In Lucretius, on the other hand, zeal is mightier than
+sympathy, and scorn mightier than humour. Perhaps it would be asking too
+much of his uncompromising fervour that he should have unbent now and
+then and shown us in some detail what those pleasures of life may be
+which are without care and fear. Yet, if it was impossible for him not
+to be always serious and austere, he might at least have noted the
+melancholy of friendship--for friendship, where nature has made minds
+isolated and bodies mortal, is rich also in melancholy. This again we
+may find in Horace, where once or twice he lets the "something bitter"
+bubble up from the heart even of this flower, when he feels a vague need
+that survives satiety, and yearns perversely for the impossible.[10]
+Poor Epicureans, when they could not learn, like their master, to be
+saints!
+
+So far the decadent materialism of Epicurus might have carried a poet;
+but a materialist in our days might find many other poetic themes to
+weave into his system. To the picture which Lucretius sketches of
+primitive civilization, we might add the whole history of mankind. To a
+consistent and vigorous materialism all personal and national dramas,
+with the beauties of all the arts, are no less natural and interesting
+than are flowers or animal bodies. The moral pageantry of this world,
+surveyed scientifically, is calculated wonderfully to strengthen and
+refine the philosophy of abstention suggested to Epicurus by the flux of
+material things and by the illusions of vulgar passion. Lucretius
+studies superstition, but only as an enemy; and the naturalistic poet
+should be the enemy of nothing. His animus blinds him to half the
+object, to its more beautiful half, and makes us distrust his version of
+the meaner half he is aware of. Seen in its totality, and surrounded by
+all the other products of human imagination, superstition is not only
+moving in itself, a capital subject for tragedy and for comedy, but it
+reinforces the materialistic way of thinking, and shows that it may be
+extended to the most complex and emotional spheres of existence. At the
+same time, a naturalism extended impartially over moral facts brings
+home a lesson of tolerance, scepticism, and independence which, without
+contradicting Epicurean principles, would very much enlarge and
+transform Epicurean sentiment. History would have opened to the
+Epicurean poet a new dimension of nature and a more varied spectacle of
+folly. His imagination would have been enriched and his maxims
+fortified.
+
+The emotions which Lucretius associated with his atoms and void, with
+his religious denials and his abstentions from action, are emotions
+necessarily involved in life. They will exist in any case, though not
+necessarily associated with the doctrines by which this poet sought to
+clarify them. They will remain standing, whatever mechanism we put in
+the place of that which he believed in,--that is, if we are serious, and
+not trying to escape from the facts rather than to explain them. If the
+ideas embodied in a philosophy represent a comprehensive survey of the
+facts, and a mature sentiment in the presence of them, any new ideas
+adopted instead will have to acquire the same values, and nothing will
+be changed morally except the language or euphony of the mind.
+
+Of course one theory of the world must be true and the rest false, at
+least if the categories of any theory are applicable to reality; but the
+true theory like the false resides in imagination, and the truth of it
+which the poet grasps is its truth to life. If there are no atoms, at
+least there must be habits of nature, or laws of evolution, or
+dialectics of progress, or decrees of providence, or intrusions of
+chance; and before these equally external and groundless powers we must
+bow, as Lucretius bowed to his atoms. It will always be important and
+inevitable to recognize _something_ external, something that generates
+or surrounds us; and perhaps the only difference between materialism and
+other systems in this respect is that materialism has studied more
+scrupulously the detail and method of our dependence.
+
+Similarly, even if Lucretius was wrong, and the soul is immortal, it is
+nevertheless steadily changing its interests and its possessions. Our
+lives are mortal if our soul is not; and the sentiment which reconciled
+Lucretius to death is as much needed if we are to face many deaths, as
+if we are to face only one. The gradual losing of what we have been and
+are, Emerson says:
+
+ _This losing is true dying;_
+ _This is lordly maris down-lying,_
+ _This his slow but sure reclining,_
+ _Star by star his world resigning._
+
+The maxim of Lucretius, that nothing arises save by the death of
+something else, meets us still in our crawling immortality. And his art
+of accepting and enjoying what the conditions of our being afford also
+has a perennial application. Dante, the poet of faith, will tell us that
+we must find our peace in the will that gives us our limited portion.
+Goethe, the poet of romantic experience, will tell us that we must
+renounce, renounce perpetually. Thus wisdom clothes the same moral
+truths in many cosmic parables. The doctrines of philosophers disagree
+where they are literal and arbitrary,--mere guesses about the unknown;
+but they agree or complete one another where they are expressive or
+symbolic, thoughts wrung by experience from the hearts of poets. Then
+all philosophies alike are ways of meeting and recording the same flux
+of images, the same vicissitudes of good and evil, which will visit all
+generations, while man is man.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[1] Lucretius, iv. 834, 835:
+
+ Nil ... natumst in corpore, ut uti
+ Possemus, sed quod natumst id procreat usum.
+
+
+[2] Ibid., I. 1115-18:
+
+ Alid ex alio clarescet, nec tibi caeca
+ Nox iter eripiet, quin ultima naturai
+ Pervideas: ita res accendent lumina rebus.
+
+
+[3] Lucretius, i. 264, 265:
+
+ Alid ex alio reficit natura, nec ullam
+ Rem gigni patitur, nisi morte adiuta aliena.
+
+
+[4] An excellent expression of this view is put by Plato into the mouth
+of the physician Eryximachus in the _Symposium_, pp. 186-88.
+
+
+[5] Lucretius, i. 1-13:
+
+ AEneadum genetrix, hominum divomque voluptas,
+ Alma Venus, caeli subter labentia signa
+ Quae mare navigerum, quae terras frugiferentis
+ Concelebras; per te quoniam genus omne animantum
+ Concipitur, visitque exortum lumina solis:
+ Te, dea, te fugiunt venti, te nubila caeli,
+ Adventumque tuum: tibi suaves daedala tellus
+ Submittit flores; tibi rident aequora ponti,
+ Placatumque nitet diffuso lumine caelum.
+ Nam simul ac species patefactast verna diei,
+ Et reserata viget genitabilis aura favoni;
+ Aeriae primum volucres te, diva, tuumque
+ Significant initum, perculsae corda tua vi.
+
+
+[6] Lucretius, i. 24, 28-30, 41-43, 140-44:
+
+ Te sociam studeo scribendis versibus esse....
+ Quo magis aeternum da dictis, diva, leporem:
+ Effice, ut interea fera moenera militiai
+ Per maria ac terras omnes sopita quiescant....
+ Nam neque nos agere hoc patriai tempore iniquo
+ Possumus aequo animo, nec Memmi clara propago
+ Talibus in rebus communi desse saluti....
+ Sed tua me virtus tamen, et sperata voluptas
+ Suavis amicitiae, quemvis sufferre laborem
+ Suadet, et inducit noctes vigilare serenas,
+ Quaerentem, dictis quibus et quo carmine demum
+ Clara tuae possim praepandere lumina menti.
+
+
+[7] Lucretius, ii. 1139-41, 1148-49, 1164-74:
+
+ Omnia debet enim cibus integrare novando,
+ Et fulcire cibus, cibus omnia sustentare.
+ Nequidquam,...
+ Sic igitur magni quoque circum moenia mundi
+ Expugnata dabunt labem putrisque ruinas....
+ Iamque caput quassans grandis suspirat arator
+ Crebrius incassum manuum cecidisse laborem:
+ Et cum tempora temporibus praesentia confert
+ Praeteritis, laudat fortunas saepe parentis,...
+ Nec tenet, omnia paulatim tabescere et ire
+ Ad capulum, spatio aetatis defessa vetusto.
+
+
+[8] Cf. pages 41, 49.
+
+[9] Lucretius, ii. 29-33:
+
+ Inter se prostrati in gramine molli
+ Propter aquae rivum, sub ramis arboris altae,
+ Non magnis opibus iucunde corpora curant:
+ Praesertim cum tempestas arridet, et anni
+ Tempa conspergunt viridantis floribus herbas.
+
+
+[10] Horace, _Odes_, iv. 1:
+
+ Iam nec spes animi credula mutui...
+ Sed cur, heu! Ligurine, cur
+ Manat rara meas lacrima per genas?
+
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+DANTE
+
+
+In the _Phaedo_ of Plato there is an incidental passage of supreme
+interest to the historian. It foreshadows, and accurately defines, the
+whole transition from antiquity to the middle age, from naturalism to
+supernaturalism, from Lucretius to Dante. Socrates, in his prison, is
+addressing his disciples for the last time. The general subject is
+immortality; but in a pause in the argument Socrates says: "In my youth
+... I heard some one reading, as he said, from a book of Anaxagoras,
+that Reason was the disposer and cause of all, and I was delighted at
+this notion, which appeared quite admirable, and I said to myself: 'If
+Reason is the disposer, Reason will dispose all for the best, and put
+each particular in the best place;' and I argued that if any desired to
+find out the cause of the generation or destruction or existence of
+anything, he must find out what ... was best for that thing.... And I
+rejoiced to think that I had found in Anaxagoras a teacher of the causes
+of existence such as I desired, and I imagined that he would tell me
+first whether the earth is flat or round; and whichever was true, he
+would proceed ... to show the nature of the best, and show that this was
+best; and if he said that the earth was in the centre [of the universe],
+he would further explain that this position was the best, and I should
+be satisfied with the explanation given, and not want any other sort of
+cause.... For I could not imagine that when he spoke of Reason as the
+disposer of things, he would give any other account of their being,
+except that this was best.... These hopes I would not have sold for a
+large sum of money, and I seized the books and read them as fast as I
+could, in my eagerness to know the better and the worse.
+
+"What expectations I had formed and how grievously was I disappointed!
+As I proceeded, I found my philosopher altogether forsaking Reason or
+any other principle of order, but having recourse to air, and ether, and
+water, and other eccentricities.... Thus one man makes a vortex all
+round, and steadies the earth by the heaven; another gives the air as a
+support to the earth, which is a sort of broad trough. Any power which
+in arranging them as they are arranges them for the best never enters
+into their minds; and instead of finding any superior strength in it,
+they rather expect to discover another Atlas of the world who is
+stronger and more everlasting and more containing than the good; of the
+obligatory and containing power of the good they think nothing; and yet
+this is the principle which I would fain learn if anyone would teach
+me."[1]
+
+Here we have the programme of a new philosophy. Things are to be
+understood by their uses or purposes, not by their elements or
+antecedents; as the fact that Socrates sits in his prison, when he might
+have escaped to Euboea, is to be understood by his allegiance to his
+notion of what is best, of his duty to himself and to his country, and
+not by the composition of his bones and muscles. Such reasons as we give
+for our actions, such grounds as might move the public assembly to
+decree this or that, are to be given in explanation of the order of
+nature. The world is a work of reason. It must be interpreted, as we
+interpret the actions of a man, by its motives. And these motives we
+must guess, not by a fanciful dramatic mythology, such as the poets of
+old had invented, but by a conscientious study of the better and the
+worse in the conduct of our own lives. For instance, the highest
+occupation, according to Plato, is the study of philosophy; but this
+would not be possible for man if he had to be continually feeding, like
+a grazing animal, with its nose to the ground. Now, to obviate the
+necessity of eating all the time, long intestines are useful; therefore
+the cause of long intestines is the study of philosophy. Again, the
+eyes, nose, and mouth are in the front of the head, because (says Plato)
+the front is the nobler side,--as if the back would not have been the
+nobler side (and the front side) had the eyes, nose, and mouth been
+there! This method is what Moliere ridicules in _Le Malade Imaginaire_,
+when the chorus sings that opium puts people to sleep because it has a
+dormitive virtue, the nature of which is to make the senses slumber.
+
+All this is ridiculous physics enough; but Plato knew--though he forgot
+sometimes--that his physics were playful. What it is important for us
+now to remember is rather that, under this childish or metaphorical
+physics, there is a serious morality. After all, the _use_ of opium is
+that it is a narcotic; no matter why, physically, it is one. The _use_
+of the body _is_ the mind, whatever the origin of the body may be. And
+it seems to dignify and vindicate these uses to say that they are the
+"causes" of the organs that make them possible. What is true of
+particular organs or substances is true of the whole frame of nature.
+Its _use_ is to serve the good--to make life, happiness, and virtue
+possible. Therefore, speaking in parables, Plato says with his whole
+school: Discover the right principle of action, and you will have
+discovered the ruling force in the universe. Evoke in your rapt
+aspiration the essence of a supreme good, and you will have understood
+why the spheres revolve, why the earth is fertile, and why mankind
+suffers and exists. Observation must yield to dialectic; political art
+must yield to aspiration.
+
+It took many hundred years for the revolution to work itself out; Plato
+had a prophetic genius, and looked away from what he was (for he was a
+Greek) to what mankind was to become in the next cycle of civilization.
+In Dante the revolution is complete, not merely intellectually (for it
+had been completed intellectually long before, in the Neoplatonists and
+the Fathers of the Church), but complete morally and poetically, in that
+all the habits of the mind and all the sanctions of public life had been
+assimilated to it. There had been time to reinterpret everything,
+obliterating the natural lines of cleavage in the world, and
+substituting moral lines of cleavage for them. Nature was a compound of
+ideal purposes and inert matter. Life was a conflict between sin and
+grace. The environment was a battle-ground between a host of angels and
+a legion of demons. The better and the worse had actually become, as
+Socrates desired, the sole principles of understanding.
+
+Having become Socratic, the thinking part of mankind devoted all its
+energies henceforward to defining good and evil in all their grades, and
+in their ultimate essence; a task which Dante brings to a perfect
+conclusion. So earnestly and exclusively did they speculate about moral
+distinctions that they saw them in almost visible shapes, as Plato had
+seen his ideas. They materialized the terms of their moral philosophy
+into existing objects and powers. The highest good--in Plato still
+chiefly a political ideal, the aim of policy and art--became God, the
+creator of the world. The various stages or elements of perfection
+became persons in the Godhead, or angelic intelligences, or aerial
+demons, or lower types of the animal soul. Evil was identified with
+matter. The various stages of imperfection were ascribed to the
+grossness of various bodies, which weighted and smothered the spark of
+divinity that animated them. This spark, however, might be released;
+then it would fly up again to its parent fire and a soul would be saved.
+
+This philosophy was not a serious description of nature or evolution;
+but it was a serious judgement upon them. The good, the better, the
+best, had been discerned; and a mythical bevy of powers, symbolizing
+these degrees of excellence, had been first talked of and then believed
+in. Myth, when another man has invented it, can pass for history; and
+when this man is a Plato, and has lived long ago, it can pass for
+revelation. In this way moral values came to be regarded as forces
+working in nature. But if they worked in nature, which was a compound of
+evil matter and perfect form, they must exist outside: for the ideal of
+excellence beckons from afar; it is what we pine for and are not. The
+forces that worked in nature were accordingly supernatural virtues,
+dominations, and powers; each natural thing had its supernatural
+incubus, a guardian angel, or a devil that possessed it. The
+supernatural--that is, something moral or ideal regarded as a power and
+an existence--was all about us. Everything in the world was an effect of
+something beyond the world; everything in life was a step to something
+beyond life.
+
+Into this system Christianity fitted easily. It enriched it by adding
+miraculous history to symbolic cosmology. The Platonists had conceived a
+cosmos in which there were higher and lower beings, marshalled in
+concentric circles, around this vile but pivotal lump of earth. The
+Christians supplied a dramatic action for which that stage seemed
+admirably fitted, a story in which the whole human race, or the single
+soul, passed successively through these higher and lower stages. There
+had been a fall, and there might be a salvation. In a sense, even this
+conception of descent from the good, and ascent towards it again, was
+Platonic. According to the Platonists, the good eternally shed its vital
+influence, like light, and received (though unawares and without
+increase of excellence to itself) reflected rays that, in the form of
+love and thought, reverted to it from the ends of the universe. But
+according to the Platonist this radiation of life and focusing of
+aspiration were both perpetual. The double movement was eternal. The
+history of the world was monotonous; or rather the world had no
+significant history, but only a movement like that of a fountain playing
+for ever, or like the circulation of water that is always falling from
+the clouds in rain and always rising again in vapour. This fall, or
+emanation of the world from the deity, was the origin of evil for the
+Platonists; evil consisted merely infinitude, materiality, or otherness
+from God If anything besides God was to exist, it had to be imperfect;
+instability and conflict were essential to finitude and to existence.
+Salvation, on the other hand, was the return current of aspiration on
+the part of the creature to revert to its source; an aspiration which
+was expressed in various types of being, fixed in the eternal,--types
+which led up, like the steps of a temple, to the ineffable good at the
+top.
+
+In the Christian system this cosmic circulation became only a figure or
+symbol expressing the true creation, the true fall, and the true
+salvation; all three being really episodes in a historical drama,
+occurring only once. The material world was only a scene, a
+stage-setting, designed expressly to be appropriate for the play; and
+this play was the history of mankind, especially of Israel and of the
+Church. The persons and events of this history had a philosophic import;
+each played some part in a providential plan. Each illustrated creation,
+sin, and salvation in some degree, and on some particular level.
+
+The Jews had never felt uncomfortable at being material; even in the
+other world they hoped to remain so, and their immortality was a
+resurrection of the flesh. It did not seem plausible to them that this
+excellent frame of things should be nothing but a faint, troubled, and
+unintended echo of the good. On the contrary, they thought this world so
+good, intrinsically, that they were sure God must have made it
+expressly, and not by an unconscious effluence of his virtue, as the
+Platonists had believed. Their wonder at the power and ingenuity of the
+deity reached its maximum when they thought of him as the cunning
+contriver of nature, and of themselves. Nevertheless the work seemed to
+show some imperfections; indeed, its moral excellence was potential
+rather than actual, a suggestion of what might be, rather than an
+accomplished fact. And so, to explain the unexpected flaws in a creation
+which they thought essentially good, they put back at the beginning of
+things an experience they had daily in the present, namely, that trouble
+springs from bad conduct.
+
+The Jews were intent watchers of fortune and of its vicissitudes. The
+careers of men were their meditation by day and by night; and it takes
+little attention to perceive that frivolity, indifference, knavery, and
+debauchery do not make for well-being in this world. And like other
+hard-pressed peoples, the ancient Jews had a pathetic admiration for
+safety and plenty. How little they must have known these things, to
+think of them so rapturously and so poetically! Not merely their
+personal prudence, but their corporate and religious zeal made them
+abhor that bad conduct which defeated prosperity. It was not mere folly,
+but wickedness and the abomination of desolation. With the lessons of
+conduct continually in mind, they framed the theory that all suffering,
+and even death, were the wages of sin. Finally they went so far as to
+attribute evil in all creation to the casual sin of a first man, and to
+the taint of it transmitted to his descendants; thus passing over the
+suffering and death of all creatures that are not human with an
+indifference that would have astonished the Hindoos.
+
+The imperfection of things, in the Hebraic view, was due to accidents in
+their operation; not, as in the Platonic view, to their essential
+separation from their source and their end. It is in harmony with this
+that salvation too should come by virtue of some special act, like the
+incarnation or death of Christ. Just so, the Jews had conceived
+salvation as a revival of their national existence and greatness, to be
+brought about by the patience and fidelity of the elect, with tremendous
+miracles supervening to reward these virtues.
+
+Thus their conception of the fall and of the redemption was historical.
+And this was a great advantage to a man of imagination inheriting their
+system; for the personages and the miracles that figured in their
+sacred histories afforded a rich subject for fancy to work upon, and for
+the arts to depict. The patriarchs from Adam down, the kings and
+prophets, the creation, Eden, the deluge, the deliverance out of Egypt,
+the thunders and the law of Sinai, the temple, the exile--all this and
+much more that fills the Bible was a rich fund, a familiar tradition
+living in the Church, on which Dante could draw, as he drew at the same
+time from the parallel classic tradition which he also inherited. To
+lend all these Biblical persons and incidents a philosophical dignity he
+had only to fit them, as the Fathers of the Church had done, into the
+Neoplatonic cosmology, or, as the doctors of his own time were doing,
+into the Aristotelian ethics.
+
+So interpreted, sacred history acquired for the philosopher a new
+importance besides that which it had seemed to have to Israel in exile,
+or to the Christian soul conscious of sin. Every episode became the
+symbol for some moral state or some moral principle. Every preacher in
+Christendom, as he repeated his homily on the gospel of the day, was
+invited to rear a structure of spiritual interpretations upon the
+literal sense of the narrative, which nevertheless he was always to hold
+and preserve as a foundation for the others.[2] In a world made by God
+for the illustration of his glory, things and events, though real, must
+be also symbolical; for there is intention and propriety behind them.
+The creation, the deluge, the incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection
+of Christ, the coming of the Holy Ghost with flames of fire and the gift
+of tongues, were all historical facts. The Church was heir to the chosen
+people; it was an historic and political institution, with a destiny in
+this world, in which all her children should share, and for which they
+should fight. At the same time all those facts, were mysteries and
+sacraments for the private soul; they were channels for the same moral
+graces that were embodied in the order of the heavenly spheres, and in
+the types of moral life on earth. Thus the Hebrew tradition brought to
+Dante's mind the consciousness of a providential history, a great
+earthly task,--to be transmitted from generation to generation,--and a
+great hope. The Greek tradition brought him natural and moral
+philosophy. These contributions, joined together, had made Christian
+theology.
+
+Although this theology was the guide to Dante's imagination, and his
+general theme, yet it was not his only interest; or rather he put into
+the framework of orthodox theology theories and visions of his own,
+fusing all into one moral unity and one poetical enthusiasm. The fusion
+was perfect between the personal and the traditional elements. He threw
+politics and love into the melting-pot, and they, too, lost their
+impurities and were refined into a philosophic religion. Theology
+became, to his mind, the guardian of patriotism, and, in a strangely
+literal sense, the angel of love.
+
+The political theory of Dante is a sublime and largely original one. It
+suffers only from its extreme ideality, which makes it inapplicable, and
+has caused it to be studied less than it deserves.
+
+A man's country, in the modern sense, is something that arose yesterday,
+that is constantly changing its limits and its ideals; it is something
+that cannot last for ever. It is the product of geographical and
+historical accidents. The diversities between our different nations are
+irrational; each of them has the same right, or want of right, to its
+peculiarities. A man who is just and reasonable must nowadays, so far as
+his imagination permits, share the patriotism of the rivals and enemies
+of his country,--a patriotism as inevitable and pathetic as his own.
+Nationality being an irrational accident, like sex or complexion, a
+man's allegiance to his country must be conditional, at least if he is a
+philosopher. His patriotism has to be subordinated to rational
+allegiance to such things as justice and humanity.
+
+Very different was the situation in Dante's case. For him the love of
+country could be something absolute, and at the same time something
+reasonable, deliberate, and moral. What he found claiming his allegiance
+was a political body quite ideal, providential, and universal. This
+political body had two heads, like the heraldic eagle,--the pope and the
+emperor. Both were, by right, universal potentates; both should have
+their seat in Rome; and both should direct their government to the same
+end, although by different means and in different spheres. The pope
+should watch over the faith and discipline of the Church. He should bear
+witness, in all lands and ages, to the fact that life on earth was
+merely a preliminary to existence in the other world, and should be a
+preparation for that. The emperor, on the other hand, should guard peace
+and justice everywhere, leaving to free cities or princes the regulation
+of local affairs. These two powers had been established by God through
+special miracles and commissions. An evident providential design,
+culminating in them, ran through all history.
+
+To betray or resist these divine rights, or to confound them, was
+accordingly a sin of the first magnitude. The evils from which society
+suffered were the consequence of such transgressions. The pope had
+acquired temporal power, which was alien to his purely spiritual office;
+besides, he had become a tool of the French king, who was (what no king
+should be) at war with the emperor, and rebellious against the supreme
+imperial authority; indeed, the pope had actually been seen to abandon
+Rome for Avignon,--an act which was a sort of satanic sacrament, the
+outward sign of an inward disgrace. The emperor, in his turn, had
+forgotten that he was King of the Romans and Caesar, and was fond of
+loitering in his native Germany, among its forests and princelings, as
+if the whole world were not by right his country, and the object of his
+solicitude.
+
+And here the larger, theoretical patriotism of Dante, as a Catholic and
+a Roman, passed into his narrower and actual patriotism as a Florentine.
+Had Florence been true to its duties and worthy of its privileges, under
+the double authority of the Church and the Empire? Florence was a Roman
+colony. Had it maintained the purity of its Roman stock, and a Roman
+simplicity and austerity in its laws? Alas, Etruscan immigrants had
+contaminated its blood, and this taint was responsible, Dante thought,
+for the prevalent corruption of manners. All that has made Florence
+great in the history of the world was then only just beginning,--its
+industry, refinements, arts, and literature. But to Dante that budding
+age seemed one of decadence and moral ruin. He makes his ancestor, the
+crusader Cacciaguida, praise the time when the narrow circuit of the
+walls held only one-fifth of its later inhabitants. "Then the city
+abided in peace, sober and chaste."[3] The women plied the distaff, or
+rocked the cradle, and prattled to their children of the heroic legends
+of Troy, Fiesole, and Rome. A woman could turn from her glass with her
+face unpainted; she wore no girdle far more deserving of admiration than
+her own person. The birth of a daughter did not frighten a good burgher;
+her dowry would not have to be excessive, nor her marriage premature. No
+houses were empty, their masters being in exile; none were disgraced by
+unmentionable orgies.[4] This was not all; for if luxury was a great
+curse to Florence, faction was a greater. Florence, an imperial city,
+far from assisting in the restitution of the emperors to their universal
+rights, had fought against them traitorously, in alliance with the
+French invader and the usurping pontiff. It had thus undermined the only
+possible foundation of its own peace and dignity.
+
+These were the theoretical sorrows that loomed behind the personal
+sorrows of Dante in his poverty and exile. They helped him to pour forth
+the intense bitterness of his heart with the breath of prophetic
+invective. They made his hatred of the actual popes and of the actual
+Florence so much fervid zeal for what the popes and Florence ought to
+have been. His political passions and political hopes were fused with a
+sublime political ideal; that fusion sublimated them, and made it
+possible for the expression of them to rise into poetry.
+
+Here is one iron string on which Dante played, and which gave a tragic
+strength to his music. He recorded the villainies of priests, princes,
+and peoples. He upbraided them for their infidelity to the tasks
+assigned to them by God,--tasks which Dante conceived with a Biblical
+definiteness and simplicity. He lamented the consequences of this
+iniquity, wasted provinces, corrupted cities, and the bodies of heroes
+rolling unburied down polluted streams. These vigorous details were
+exalted by the immense significance that Dante infused into them. His
+ever-present definite ideal quickened his eye for the ebb and flow of
+things, rendered the experience of them singly more poignant, and the
+vision of them together more sustained and cumulative. Dante read
+contemporary Italy as the Hebrew prophets read the signs of their times;
+and whatever allowance our critical judgement may make for generous
+illusions on the part of either, there can be no doubt that their
+wholeness of soul, and the prophetic absoluteness of their judgements,
+made their hold on particular facts very strong, and their sense for
+impending weal or woe quite over-powering.
+
+Nor does it seem that at bottom Dante's political philosophy, any more
+than that of the Hebrew prophets, missed the great causes and the great
+aims of human progress. Behind mythical and narrow conceptions of
+history, he had a true sense for the moral principles that really
+condition our well-being. A better science need subtract nothing from
+the insight he had into the difference between political good and evil.
+What in his day seemed a dream--that mankind should be one great
+commonwealth--is now obvious to the idealist, the socialist, the
+merchant. Science and trade are giving, in a very different form, to be
+sure, a practical realization to that idea. And the other half of his
+theory, that of the Catholic Church, is maintained literally by that
+church itself to this day; and the outsider might see in that ideal of a
+universal spiritual society a symbol or premonition of the right of the
+mind to freedom from legal compulsions, or of the common allegiance of
+honest minds to science, and to their common spiritual heritage and
+destiny.
+
+On the other hand, the sting of Dante's private wrongs, like the
+enthusiasm of his private loves, lent a wonderful warmth and clearness
+to the great objects of his imagination. We are too often kept from
+feeling great things greatly for want of power to assimilate them to the
+little things which we feel keenly and sincerely. Dante had, in this
+respect, the art of a Platonic lover: he could enlarge the object of his
+passion, and keep the warmth and ardour of it undiminished. He had been
+banished unjustly--_Florentinus exul immeritus_, he liked to call
+himself. That injustice rankled, but it did not fester, in his heart;
+for his indignation spread to all wrong, and thundered against Florence,
+Europe, and mankind, in that they were corrupt and perfidious. Dante had
+loved. The memory of that passion remained also, but it did not
+degenerate into sentimentality; for his adoration passed to a larger
+object and one less accidental. His love had been a spark of that "love
+which moves the sun and the other stars."[5] He had known, in that
+revelation, the secret of the universe. The spheres, the angels, the
+sciences, were henceforth full of sweetness, comfort, and light.
+
+Of this Platonic expansion of emotion, till it suffuses all that
+deserves to kindle it, we have a wonderful version in Dante's _Vita
+Nuova_. This book, on the surface, is an account of Dante's meeting, at
+the age of nine, with Beatrice, a child even a little younger; of
+another meeting with her at the age of eighteen; of an overwhelming
+mystic passion which the lover wished to keep secret, so much so that he
+feigned another attachment as a blind; of a consequent estrangement; and
+of the death of Beatrice, whereupon the poet resolved not to speak
+publicly of her again, until he could praise her in such wise as no
+woman had ever been praised before.
+
+This story is interspersed with poems of the most exquisite delicacy,
+both in sentiment and in versification. They are dreamlike, allegorical,
+musical meditations, ambiguous in their veiled meanings, but absolutely
+clear and perfect in their artful structure, like a work of tracery and
+stained glass, geometrical, mystical, and tender. A singular limpidity
+of accent and image, a singular naivete, is strangely combined in these
+pieces with scholastic distinctions and a delight in hiding and hinting,
+as in a charade.
+
+The learned will dispute for ever on the exact basis and meaning of
+these confessions of Dante. The learned are perhaps not those best
+fitted to solve the problem. It is a matter for literary tact and
+sympathetic imagination. It must be left to the delicate intelligence
+of the reader, if he has it; and if he has not, Dante does not wish to
+open his heart to him. His enigmatical manner is his protection against
+the intrusion of uncongenial minds.
+
+Without passing beyond the sphere of learned criticism, I think we may
+say this: the various interpretations, in this matter, are not mutually
+exclusive. Symbolism and literalness, in Dante's time, and in his
+practice, are simultaneous. For instance, in any history of mediaeval
+philosophy you may read that a great subject of dispute in those days
+was the question whether universal terms or natures, such as man, or
+humanity, existed before the particulars, in the particulars, or after
+the particulars, by abstraction of what was common to them all. Now,
+this matter was undoubtedly much disputed about; but there is one
+comprehensive and orthodox solution, which represents the true mind of
+the age, above the peculiar hobbies or heresies of individuals. This
+solution is that universal terms or natures exist before the
+particulars, _and_ in the particulars, _and_ after the particulars: for
+God, before he made the world, knew how he intended to make it, and had
+eternally in his mind the notions of a perfect man, horse, etc., after
+which the particulars were to be modelled, or to which, in case of
+accident, they were to be restored, either by the healing and
+recuperative force of nature, or by the ministrations of grace. But
+universal terms or natures existed also _in_ the particulars, since the
+particulars illustrated them, shared in them, and were what they were by
+virtue of that participation. Nevertheless, the universals existed also
+after the particulars: for the discursive mind of man, surveying the
+variety of natural things, could not help noticing and abstracting the
+common types that often recur in them; and this _ex postfacto_ idea, in
+the human mind, is a universal term also. To deny any of the three
+theories, and not to see their consistency, is to miss the mediaeval
+point of view, which, in every sense of the word, was Catholic.
+
+Just such a solution seems to me natural in the case of Beatrice. We
+have it on independent documentary evidence that in Dante's time there
+actually lived in Florence a certain Bice Portinari; and there are many
+incidents in the _Vita Nuova_ and in the _Commedia_ which hardly admit
+of an allegorical interpretation; such as the death of Beatrice, and
+especially that of her father, on which occasion Dante writes a
+sympathetic poem.[6] can see no reason why this lady, as easily as any
+other person, should not have called forth the dreamful passion of our
+poet. That he had loved some one is certain. Most people have; and why
+should Dante, in particular, have found the language of love a natural
+veil for his philosophy, if the passion and the language of love had not
+been his mother-tongue? The language of love is no doubt usual in the
+allegories of mystics, and was current in the conventional poetry of
+Dante's time; but mystics themselves are commonly crossed or potential
+lovers; and the troubadours harped on the string of love simply because
+it was the most responsive string in their own natures, and that which
+could most easily be made to vibrate in their hearers. Dante was not
+less sensitive than the average man of his generation; and if he
+followed the fashion of minstrels and mystics, it was because he shared
+their disposition. The beautiful, the unapproachable, the divine, had
+passed before him in some visible form; it matters nothing whether this
+vision came once only, and in the shape of the actual Beatrice, or
+continuously, and in every shape through which a divine influence may
+seem to come to a poet. No one would deserve this name of poet--and who
+deserves it more than Dante?--if real sights and sounds never impressed
+him; and he would hardly deserve it either, if they impressed him only
+physically, and for what they are in themselves. His sensibility creates
+his ideal.
+
+If to deny the existence of an historical Beatrice seems violent and
+gratuitous, it would be a much worse misunderstanding not to perceive
+that Beatrice is _also_ a symbol. On one occasion, as we read in the
+_Vita Nuova_,[7] Dante found himself, in a church, in the presence of
+Beatrice. His eyes were inevitably fixed upon her; but as he wished to
+conceal his profound passion from the gossiping crowd, he chose another
+lady, who happened to stand in the direct line of vision between him and
+Beatrice, and pretended to be gazing at her, in reality looking beyond
+her to Beatrice. This intervening lady, _la donna gentile_, became the
+screen to his true love.[8] But his attentions to her were so assiduous
+that they were misinterpreted. Beatrice herself observed them, and
+thinking he was going too far and not with an honourable purpose, showed
+her displeasure by refusing to greet him as he passed. This sounds real
+and earthly enough: but what is our surprise when we read expressly, in
+the _Convito_, that the _donna gentile,_ the screen to Dante's true
+love, is philosophy.[9] If the _donna gentile_ is philosophy, the
+_donna gentilissima,_ Beatrice, must be something of the same sort, only
+nobler. She must be theology, and theology Beatrice undoubtedly is. Her
+very name is played upon, if not selected, to mean that she is what
+renders blessed, what shows the path of salvation.
+
+Now the scene in the church becomes an allegory throughout. The young
+Dante, we are given to understand, was at heart a religious and devout
+soul, looking for the highest wisdom. But intervening between his human
+reason and revealed truth (which he really was in love with, and wished
+to win and to understand) he found philosophy or, as we should say,
+science. To science he gave his preliminary attention; so much so that
+the mysteries of theology were momentarily obscured in his mind; and his
+faith, to his great sorrow, refused to salute him as he passed. He had
+fallen into materialistic errors; he had interpreted the spots on the
+moon as if they could be due to physical, not to Socratic, causes; and
+his religious philosophy had lost its warmth, even if his religious
+faith had not actually been endangered. It is certain, then, that
+Beatrice, besides being a woman, was also a symbol.
+
+But this is not the end. If Beatrice is a symbol for theology, theology
+itself is not-final. It, too, is an avenue, an interpretation. The eyes
+of Beatrice reflect a supernal light. It is the ineffable vision of
+God, the beatific vision, that alone can make us happy and be the reason
+and the end of our loves and our pilgrimages.
+
+A supreme ideal of peace and perfection which moves the lover, and which
+moves the sky, is more easily named than understood. In the last canto
+of the _Paradiso_, where Dante is attempting to describe the beatific
+vision, he says many times over that our notion of this ideal must be
+vague and inadequate. The value of the notion to a poet or a philosopher
+does not lie in what it contains positively, but in the attitude which
+it causes him to assume towards real experience. Or perhaps it would be
+better to say that to have an ideal does not mean so much to have any
+image in the fancy, any Utopia more or less articulate, but rather to
+take a consistent moral attitude towards all the things of this world,
+to judge and coordinate our interests, to establish a hierarchy of goods
+and evils, and to value events and persons, not by a casual personal
+impression or instinct, but according to their real nature and tendency.
+So understood, an ultimate ideal is no mere vision of the philosophical
+dreamer, but a powerful and passionate force in the poet and the orator.
+It is the voice of his love or hate, of his hope or sorrow, idealizing,
+challenging, or condemning the world.
+
+It is here that the feverish sensibility of the young Dante stood him in
+good stead; it gave an unprecedented vigour and clearness to his moral
+vision; it made him the classic poet of hell and of heaven. At the same
+time, it helped to make him an upright judge, a terrible accuser, of the
+earth. Everything and everybody in his day and generation became to him,
+on account of his intense loyalty to his inward vision, an instance of
+divine graciousness or of devilish perversity. Doubtless this keenness
+of soul was not wholly due to the gift of loving, or to the discipline
+of love; it was due in part also to pride, to resentment, to theoretical
+prejudices. But figures like that of Francesca di Rimini and Manfred,
+and the light and rapture vibrating through the whole _Paradiso,_ could
+hardly have been evoked by a merely irritated genius. The background and
+the starting-point of everything in Dante is the _intelletto d' amore_,
+the genius of love.
+
+Everybody has heard that God is love and that love makes the world go
+round; and those who have traced this latter notion back to its source
+in Aristotle may have some notion of what it means. It means, as we saw
+in the beginning, that we should not try to explain motion and life by
+their natural antecedents, for these run back _in infinitum_. We should
+explain motion and life rather by their purpose or end, by that
+unrealized ideal which moving and living things seem to aspire to, and
+may be said to love. What justifies itself is not any fact or law; for
+why should these not have been different? What justifies itself is what
+is good, what is as it ought to be. But things in motion, Aristotle
+conceived, declare, as it were, that they are not satisfied, and ought
+to be in some different condition. They look to a fulfilment which is as
+yet ideal. This fulfilment, if it included motion and life, could
+include them inwardly only; it would consist in a sustained activity,
+never lapsing nor suffering change. Such an activity is the unchanging
+goal towards which life advances and by which its different stages are
+measured: But since the purpose of things, and not their natural,
+causes, is that which explains them, we may call this eventual activity
+their reason for being. It will be their unmoved mover.
+
+But how, we may ask,--how can the unchanging, the ideal, the eventual,
+initiate anything or determine the disposition and tendency of what
+actually lives and moves? The answer, or rather the impossibility of
+giving an answer, may be expressed in a single word: magic. It is magic
+when a good or interesting result, because it would prove good or
+interesting, is credited with marshalling the conditions and evoking the
+beings that are to realize it. It is natural that I should be hungry,
+and natural that there should be things suitable for me to eat--for
+otherwise I should not be hungry long; but if my hunger, in case it is
+sharp enough, should be able of itself to produce the food it calls
+for, that would be magic. Nature would be evoked by the incantations of
+the will.
+
+I do not forget that Aristotle, with Dante after him, asserts that the
+goal of life is a separate being already existing, namely, the mind of
+God, eternally realizing what the world aspires to. The influence of
+this mind, however, upon the world is no less magical than would be that
+of a non-existent ideal. For its operation is admittedly not transitive
+or physical. It itself does not change in working. No virtue leaves it;
+it does not, according to Aristotle and Plotinus, even know that it
+works. Indeed, it works only because other things are disposed to pursue
+it as their ideal; let things keep this disposition, and they will
+pursue and frame their ideal no less if it nowhere has an actual
+existence, than if by chance it exists elsewhere in its own person. It
+works only in its capacity of ideal; therefore, even if it exists, it
+works only by magic. The matter beneath feels the spell of its presence,
+and catches something of its image, as the waves of the sea might
+receive and reflect tremblingly the light shed by the moon. The world
+accordingly is moved and vivified in every fibre by magic, by the magic
+of the goal to which it aspires.
+
+But this magic, on earth, bore the name of love. The life of the world
+was a love, produced by the magic attraction of a good it has never
+possessed and, so long as it remains a world, is incapable of
+possessing. Actual things were only suggestions of what the elements in
+that ulterior existence ought to be: they were mere symbols. The acorn
+was a mere prophecy--an existing symbol--for the ideal oak; because when
+the acorn falls into good ground it will be corrupted, but the idea of
+the oak will arise and be manifested in its place. The acorn was a sort
+of reliquary in which the miraculous power of the idea was somehow
+enshrined. In the vulgar attribution of causes we, like Anaxagoras,
+resemble a superstitious relic-worshipper who should forget that the
+intercession and merits of the saint really work the miracle, and should
+attribute it instead to the saint's bones and garments in their material
+capacity. Similarly, we should attribute the power which things exerted
+over us, not to the rarer or denser substance, but to the eternal ideas
+that they existed by expressing, and existed to express. Things merely
+localized--like the saint's relics--the influences which flowed to us
+from above. In the world of values they were mere symbols, accidental
+channels for divine energy; and since divine energy, by its magic
+assimilation of matter, had created these things, in order to express
+itself, they were symbols altogether not merely in their use, but in
+their origin and nature.
+
+A mind persuaded that it lives among things that, like words, are
+essentially significant, and that what they signify is the magic
+attraction, called love, which draws all things after it, is a mind
+poetic in its intuition, even if its language be prose. The science and
+philosophy of Dante did not have to be put into verse in order to become
+poetry: they were poetry fundamentally and in their essence. When Plato
+and Aristotle, following the momentous precept of Socrates, decreed that
+observation of nature should stop and a moral interpretation of nature
+should begin, they launched into the world a new mythology, to take the
+place of the Homeric one which was losing its authority. The power the
+poets had lost of producing illusion was possessed by these philosophers
+in a high degree; and no one was ever more thoroughly under their spell
+than Dante. He became to Platonism and Christianity what Homer had been
+to Paganism; and if Platonism and Christianity, like Paganism, should
+ever cease to be defended scientifically, Dante will keep the poetry and
+wisdom of them alive; and it is safe to say that later generations will
+envy more than they will despise his philosophy. When the absurd
+controversies and factious passions that in some measure obscure the
+nature of this system have completely passed away, no one will think of
+reproaching Dante with his bad science, and bad history, and minute
+theology. These will not seem blemishes in his poetry, but integral
+parts of it.
+
+A thousand years after Homer, Alexandrian critics were expounding his
+charming myths as if they were a revealed treatise of physics and
+morals. A thousand years after Dante we may hope that his conscientious
+vision of the universe, where all is love, magic, and symbolism, may
+charm mankind exclusively as poetry. So conceived, the _Divine Comedy_
+marks high noon in that long day-dream of which Plato's dialogues mark
+the beginning: a pause of two thousand years in the work of political
+reason, during which the moral imagination spun out of itself an
+allegorical philosophy, as a boy, kept at home during a rainy day with
+books too hard and literal for his years, might spin his own romance out
+of his father's histories, and might define, with infantile precision,
+his ideal lady-love, battles, and kingdoms. The middle age saw' the good
+in a vision. It is for the new age to translate those delightful symbols
+into the purposes of manhood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In a letter which tradition assigns to Dante, addressed to his
+protector, Cangrande della Scala, lord of Verona and Vicenza, are these
+words about the _Divine Comedy_: "The subject of the whole work, taken
+merely in its literal sense, is the state of souls after death,
+considered simply as a fact. But if the work is understood in its
+allegorical intention, the subject of it is man, according as, by his
+deserts and demerits in the use of his free-will, he is justly open to
+rewards and punishments." This by no means exhausts, however, the
+significations which we may look for in a work of Dante's. How many
+these may be is pointed out to us in the same letter, and illustrated by
+the beginning of the one hundred and fourteenth Psalm: "When Israel went
+out of Egypt, the house of Jacob from a people of strange language;
+Judah was his sanctuary, and Israel his dominion." Here, Dante tells us,
+"if we look to the _letter_ only, what is conveyed to us is the
+deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt in the time of Moses;
+if we look to the _allegory_ of it, what is signified is our redemption
+accomplished through Christ; if we consider the _moral sense_, what is
+signified is the conversion of the soul from her present grief and
+wretchedness to a state of grace; and if we consider the _anagogical
+sense_ [that is, the revelation contained concerning our highest
+destiny], what is signified is the passing of the sanctified soul from
+the bondage of earthly corruption to the freedom of everlasting glory."
+
+When people brooded so much over a simple text as to find all these
+meanings in it, we may expect that their own works, when meant to be
+profound, should have stage above stage of allegorical application. So
+in the first canto of the _Inferno_ we find a lion that keeps Dante from
+approaching a delectable mountain; and this lion, besides what he is in
+the landscape of the poem, is a symbol for pride or power in general,
+for the king of France in particular, and for whatever political
+ambitions in Dante's personal life may have robbed him of happiness or
+distracted him from faith and from piety. Thus, throughout the _Divine
+Comedy_, meaning and meaning lurk beneath the luminous pictures; and the
+poem, besides being a description of the other world, and of the rewards
+and punishment meted out to souls, is a dramatic view of human passions
+in this life; a history of Italy and of the world; a theory of Church
+and State; the autobiography of an exile; and the confessions of a
+Christian, and of a lover, conscious of his sins and of the miracle of
+divine grace that intervenes to save him.
+
+The subject-matter of the _Divine Comedy_ is accordingly the moral
+universe in all its levels,--romantic, political, religious. To present
+these moral facts in a graphic way, the poet performed a double work of
+imagination. First he chose some historical personage that might
+plausibly illustrate each condition of the soul. Then he pictured this
+person in some characteristic and symbolic attitude of mind and of body,
+and in an appropriate, symbolic environment. To give material embodiment
+to moral ideas by such a method would nowadays be very artificial, and
+perhaps impossible; but in Dante's time everything was favourable to the
+attempt. We are accustomed to think of goods and evils as functions of
+a natural life, sparks struck out in the chance shock of men with things
+or with one another. For Dante, it was a matter of course that moral
+distinctions might be discerned, not merely as they arise incidentally
+in human experience, but also, and more genuinely, as they are displayed
+in the order of creation. The Creator himself was a poet producing
+allegories. The material world was a parable which he had built out in
+space, and ordered to be enacted. History was a great charade. The
+symbols of earthly poets are words or images; the symbols of the divine
+poet were natural things and the fortunes of men. They had been devised
+for a purpose; and this purpose, as the Koran, too, declares, had been
+precisely to show forth the great difference there is in God's sight
+between good and evil.
+
+In Platonic cosmology, the concentric spheres were bodies formed and
+animated by intelligences of various orders. The nobler an intelligence,
+the more swift and outward, or higher, was the sphere it moved; whence
+the identification of "higher" with better, which survives, absurdly, to
+this day. And while Dante could not attribute literal truth to his
+fancies about hell, purgatory, and heaven, he believed that an actual
+heaven, purgatory, and hell had been fashioned by God on purpose to
+receive souls of varying deserts and complexion; so that while the
+poet's imagination, unless it reechoed divine revelation, was only
+human and not prophetic, yet it was a genuine and plausible imagination,
+moving on the lines of nature, and anticipating such things as
+experience might very well realize. Dante's objectification of morality,
+his art of giving visible forms and local habitations to ideal virtues
+and vices, was for him a thoroughly serious and philosophical exercise.
+God had created nature and life on that very principle. The poet's
+method repeated the magic of Genesis. His symbolical imagination
+mirrored this symbolical world; it was a sincere anticipation of fact,
+no mere laboured and wilful allegory.
+
+This situation has a curious consequence. Probably for the first and
+last time in the history of the world a classification worked out by a
+systematic moralist guided the vision of a great poet. Aristotle had
+distinguished, named, and classified the various virtues, with their
+opposites. But observe: if the other world was made on purpose--as it
+was--to express and render palpable those moral distinctions which were
+eternal, and to express and render them palpable in great detail, with
+all their possible tints and varieties; and if Aristotle had correctly
+classified moral qualities, as he had--then it follows that Aristotle
+(without knowing it) must have supplied the ground-plan, as it were, of
+hell and of heaven. Such was Dante's thought. With Aristotle's _Ethics_
+open before him, with a supplementary hint, here and there, drawn from
+the catechism, and with an ingrained preference (pious and almost
+philosophic) for the number three and its multiples, he needed not to
+voyage without a chart. The most visionary of subjects, life after
+death, could be treated with scientific soberness and deep sincerity.
+This vision was to be no wanton dream. It was to be a sober meditation,
+a philosophical prophecy, a probable drama,--the most poignant,
+terrible, and consoling of all possible truths.
+
+The good--this was the fundamental thought of Aristotle and of all Greek
+ethics,--the good is the end at which nature aims. The demands of life
+cannot be radically perverse, since they are the judges of every
+excellence. No man, as Dante says, could hate his own soul; he could not
+at once be, and contradict, the voice of his instincts and emotions. Nor
+could a man hate God; for if that man knew himself, he would see that
+God was, by definition, his natural good, the ultimate goal of his
+actual aspirations.[10] Since it was impossible, according to his
+insight, that our faculties should be intrinsically evil, all evil had
+to arise from the disorder into which these faculties fall, their too
+great weakness or strength in relation to one another. If the animal
+part of man was too strong for his reason, he fell into
+incontinence,--that is, into lust, gluttony, avarice, wrath, or pride.
+Incontinence came from an excessive or ill-timed pursuit of something
+good, of a part of what nature aims at; for food, children, property,
+and character are natural goods. These sins are accordingly the most
+excusable and the least odious. Dante puts those who have sinned through
+love in the first circle of hell, nearest to the sunlight, or in the
+topmost round of purgatory, nearest to the earthly paradise. Below the
+lovers, in each case, are the gluttons,--where a northern poet would
+have been obliged to place his drunkards. Beneath these again are the
+misers,--worse because less open to the excuse of a merely childish lack
+of self-control.
+
+The disorder of the faculties may arise, however, in another way. The
+combative or spirited element, rather than the senses, may get out of
+hand, and lead to crimes of violence. Violence, like incontinence, is
+spontaneous enough in its personal origin, and would not be odious if it
+did not inflict, and intend to inflict, harm on others; so that besides
+incontinence, there is malice in it. Ill-will to others may arise from
+pride, because one loves to be superior to them, or from envy, because
+one abhors that they should seem superior to oneself; or through desire
+for vengeance, because one smarts under some injury. Sins of these kinds
+are more serious than those of foolish incontinence; they complicate the
+moral world more; they introduce endless opposition of interests, and
+perpetual, self-propagating crimes. They are hateful. Dante feels less
+pity for those who suffer by them: he remembers the sufferings these
+malefactors have themselves caused, and he feels a sort of joy in
+joining the divine justice, and would gladly lash them himself.
+
+Worse still than violence, however, is guile: the sin of those who in
+the service of their intemperance or their malice have abused the gift
+of reason. _Corruptio optimi pessima_; and to turn reason, the faculty
+that establishes order, into a means of organizing disorder, is a
+perversity truly satanic: it turns evil into an art. But even this
+perversity has stages; and Dante distinguishes ten sorts of dishonesty
+or simple fraud, as well as three sorts of treachery.
+
+Besides these positive transgressions there is a possibility of general
+moral sluggishness and indifference. This Dante, with his fervid nature,
+particularly hates. He puts the Laodiceans in the fringe of his hell;
+within the gate, that they may be without hope, but outside of limbo,
+that they may have torments to endure, and be stung by wasps and
+hornets into a belated activity[11]
+
+To these vices, known to Aristotle, the Catholic moralist was obliged to
+add two others: original sin, of which spontaneous disbelief is one
+consequence, and heresy, or misbelief, after a revelation has been given
+and accepted. Original sin, and the paganism that goes with it, if they
+lead to nothing worse, are a mere privation of excellence and involve,
+in eternity merely a privation of joy: they are punished in limbo. There
+sighs are heard, but no lamentation, and the only sorrow is to live in
+desire without hope. This fate is most appropriately imputed to the
+noble and clear-sighted in the hereafter, since it is so often their
+experience here. Dante was never juster than in this stroke.[12] Heresy,
+on the other hand, is a kind of passion when honest, or a kind of fraud
+when politic; and it is punished as pride in fiery tombs,[13] or as
+faction by perpetual gaping wounds and horrible mutilations.[14]
+
+So far, with these slight additions, Dante is following Aristotle; but
+here a great divergence sets in. If a pagan poet had conceived the idea
+of illustrating the catalogue of vices and virtues in poetic scenes, he
+would have chosen suitable episodes in human life, and painted the
+typical characters that figured in them in their earthly environment;
+for pagan morality is a plant of earth. Not so with Dante. His poem
+describes this world merely in retrospect; the foreground is occupied by
+the eternal consequences of what time had brought forth. These
+consequences are new facts, not merely, as for the rationalist, the old
+facts conceived in their truth; they often reverse, in their emotional
+quality, the events they represent. Such a reversal is made possible by
+the theory that justice is partly retributive; that virtue is not its
+own sufficient reward, nor vice its own sufficient punishment. According
+to this theory, this life contains a part of our experience only, yet
+determines the rest. The other life is a second experience, yet it does
+not contain any novel adventures. It is determined altogether by what we
+have done on earth; as the tree falleth so it lieth, and souls after
+death have no further initiative.
+
+The theory Dante adopts mediates between two earlier views; in so far as
+it is Greek, it conceives immortality ideally, as something timeless;
+but in so far as it is Hebraic, it conceives of a new existence and a
+second, different taste of life. Dante thinks of a second experience,
+but of one that is wholly retrospective and changeless. It is an
+epilogue which sums up the play, and is the last episode in it. The
+purpose of this epilogue is not to carry on the play indefinitely: such
+a romantic notion of immortality never entered Dante's mind. The purpose
+of the epilogue is merely to vindicate (in a more unmistakable fashion
+than the play, being ill acted, itself could do) the excellence of
+goodness and the misery of vice. Were this life all, he thinks the
+wicked might laugh. If not wholly happy, at least they might boast that
+their lot was no worse than that of many good men. Nothing would make an
+overwhelming difference. Moral distinctions would be largely impertinent
+and remarkably jumbled. If I am a simple lover of goodness, I may
+perhaps put up with this situation. I may say of the excellences I prize
+what Wordsworth says of his Lucy: there may be none to praise and few to
+love them, but they make all the difference to me.
+
+Dante, however, was not merely a simple lover of excellence: he was also
+a keen hater of wickedness, one that took the moral world tragically
+and wished to heighten the distinctions he felt into something absolute
+and infinite. Now any man who is _enrage_ in his preferences will
+probably say, with Mohammed, Tertullian, and Calvin, that good is
+dishonoured if those who contemn it can go scot-free, and never repent
+of their negligence; that the more horrible the consequences of
+evil-doing, the more tolerable the presence of evil-doing is in the
+world; and that the everlasting shrieks and contortions of the damned
+alone will make it possible for the saints to sit quiet, and be
+convinced that there is perfect harmony in the universe. On this
+principle, in the famous inscription which Dante places over the gate of
+hell, we read that primal love, as well as justice and power,
+established that torture-house; primal love, that is, of that good
+which, by the extreme punishment of those who scorn it, is honoured,
+vindicated, and made to shine like the sun. The damned are damned for
+the glory of God.
+
+This doctrine, I cannot help thinking, is a great disgrace to human
+nature. It shows how desperate, at heart, is the folly of an egotistic
+or anthropocentric philosophy. This philosophy begins by assuring us
+that everything is obviously created to serve our needs; it then
+maintains that everything serves our ideals; and in the end, it reveals
+that everything serves our blind hatreds and superstitious qualms.
+Because my instinct taboos something, the whole universe, with insane
+intensity, shall taboo it for ever. This infatuation was inherited by
+Dante, and it was not uncongenial to his bitter and intemperate spleen.
+Nevertheless, he saw beyond it at times. Like many other Christian
+seers, he betrays here and there an esoteric view of rewards and
+punishments, which makes them simply symbols for the intrinsic quality
+of good and evil ways. The punishment, he then seems to say, is nothing
+added; it is what the passion itself pursues; it is a fulfilment,
+horrifying the soul that desired it.
+
+For instance, spirits newly arrived in hell require no devil with his
+prong to drive them to their punishment. They flit towards it eagerly,
+of their own accord.[15] Similarly, the souls in purgatory are kept by
+their own will at the penance they are doing. No external force retains
+them, but until they are quite purged they are not able, because they
+are not willing, to absolve themselves.[16] The whole mountain, we are
+told, trembles and bursts into psalmody when any one frees himself and
+reaches heaven. Is it too much of a gloss to say that these souls change
+their prison when they change their ideal, and that an inferior state of
+soul is its own purgatory, and determines its own duration? In one
+place, at any rate, Dante proclaims the intrinsic nature of punishment
+in express terms. Among the blasphemers is a certain king of Thebes, who
+defied the thunderbolts of Jupiter. He shows himself indifferent to his
+punishment and says: "Such as I was alive, such I am dead." Whereupon
+Virgil exclaims, with a force Dante had never found in his voice before:
+"In that thy pride is not mortified, thou art punished the more. No
+torture, other than thy own rage, would be woe enough to match thy
+fury."[17] And indeed, Dante's imagination cannot outdo, it cannot even
+equal, the horrors which men have brought upon themselves in this world.
+If we were to choose the most fearful of the scenes in the _Inferno_, we
+should have to choose the story of Ugolino, but this is only a pale
+recital of what Pisa had actually witnessed.
+
+A more subtle and interesting instance, if a less obvious one, may be
+found in the punishment of Paolo and Francesca di Rimini. What makes
+these lovers so wretched in the Inferno? They are still together. Can an
+eternity of floating on the wind, in each other's arms, be a punishment
+for lovers? That is just what their passion, if left to speak for
+itself, would have chosen. It is what passion stops at, and would gladly
+prolong for ever. Divine judgement has only taken it at its word. This
+fate is precisely what Aucassin, in the well-known tale, wishes for
+himself and his sweetheart Nicolette,--not a heaven to be won by
+renunciation, but the possession, even if it be in hell, of what he
+loves and fancies. And a great romantic poet, Alfred de Musset, actually
+upbraids Dante for not seeing that such an eternal destiny as he has
+assigned to Paolo and Francesca would be not the ruin of their love,[18]
+but the perfect fulfilment of it. This last seems to be very true; but
+did Dante overlook the truth of it? If so, what instinct guided him to
+choose just the fate for these lovers that they would have chosen for
+themselves?
+
+There is a great difference between the apprentices in life, and the
+masters,--Aucassin and Alfred de Musset were among the apprentices;
+Dante was one of the masters. He could feel the fresh promptings of life
+as keenly as any youngster, or any romanticist; but he had lived these
+things through, he knew the possible and the impossible issue of them;
+he saw their relation to the rest of human nature, and to the ideal of
+an ultimate happiness and peace. He had discovered the necessity of
+saying continually to oneself: Thou shalt renounce. And for this reason
+he needed no other furniture, for hell than the literal ideals and
+fulfilments of our absolute little passions. The soul that is possessed
+by any one of these passions nevertheless has other hopes in abeyance.
+Love itself dreams of more than mere possession; to conceive happiness,
+it must conceive a life to be shared in a varied world, full of events
+and activities, which shall be new and ideal bonds between the lovers.
+But unlawful love cannot pass out into this public fulfilment. It is
+condemned to be mere possession--possession in the dark, without an
+environment, without a future. It is love among the ruins. And it is
+precisely this that is the torment of Paolo and Francesca--love among
+the ruins of themselves and of all else they might have had to give to
+one another. Abandon yourself, Dante would say to us,--abandon yourself
+altogether to a love that is nothing but love, and you are in hell
+already. Only an inspired poet could be so subtle a moralist. Only a
+sound moralist could be so tragic a poet.
+
+The same tact and fine feeling that appear in these little moral dramas
+appear also in the sympathetic landscape in which each episode is set.
+The poet actually accomplishes the feat which he attributes to the
+Creator; he evokes a material world to be the fit theatre for moral
+attitudes. Popular imagination and the precedents of Homer and Virgil
+had indeed carried him halfway in this symbolic labour, as tradition
+almost always carries a poet who is successful. Mankind, from remotest
+antiquity, had conceived a dark subterranean hell, inhabited by unhappy
+ghosts. In Christian times, these shades had become lost souls,
+tormented by hideous demons. But Dante, with the Aristotelian chart of
+the vices before him, turned those vague windy caverns into a
+symmetrical labyrinth. Seven concentric terraces descended, step by
+step, towards the waters of the Styx, which in turn encircled the brazen
+walls of the City of Dis, or Pluto. Within these walls, two more
+terraces led down to the edge of a prodigious precipice--perhaps a
+thousand miles deep--which formed the pit of hell. At the bottom of
+this, still sinking gently towards the centre, were ten concentric
+furrows or ditches, to hold ten sorts of rogues; and finally a last
+sheer precipice fell to the frozen lake of Cocytus, at the very centre
+of the earth, in the midst of which Lucifer was congealed amongst lesser
+traitors.
+
+Precision and horror, graphic and moral truth, were never so wonderfully
+combined as in the description of this hell. Yet the conception of
+purgatory is more original, and perhaps more poetical. The very approach
+to the place is enchanting. We hear of it first in the fatal adventure
+ascribed to Ulysses by Dante. Restless at Ithaca after his return from
+Troy, the hero had summoned his surviving companions for a last voyage
+of discovery. He had sailed with them past the Pillars of Hercules,
+skirting the African shore; until after three months of open sea, he saw
+a colossal mountain, a great truncated cone, looming before him. This
+was the island and hill of purgatory, at the very antipodes of
+Jerusalem. Yet before Ulysses could land there, a squall overtook him;
+and his galley sank, prow foremost, in that untraversed sea, within
+sight of a new world. So must the heathen fail of salvation, though some
+oracular impulse bring them near the goal.
+
+How easy is success, on the other hand, to the ministers of grace! From
+the mouth of the Tiber, where the souls of Christians congregate after
+death, a light skiff, piloted by an angel, and propelled only by his
+white wings, skims the sea swiftly towards the mountain of purgatory,
+there deposits the spirits it carries, and is back at the mouth of the
+Tiber again on the same day. So much for the approach to purgatory. When
+a spirit lands it finds the skirts of the mountain broad and spreading,
+but the slope soon becomes hard and precipitous. When he has passed the
+narrow gate of repentance, he must stay upon each of the ledges that
+encircle the mountain at various heights, until one of his sins is
+purged, and then upon the next ledge above, if he has been guilty also
+of the sin that is atoned for there. The mountain is so high as to lift
+its head into the sphere of the moon, above the reach of terrestrial
+tempests. The top, which is a broad circular plain, contains the Garden
+of Eden, watered by the rivers Lethe and Eunoe, one to heal all painful
+memories, and the other to bring all good thoughts to clearness. From
+this place, which literally touches the lowest heaven, the upward flight
+is easy from sphere to sphere.
+
+The astronomy of Dante's day fell in beautifully with his poetic task.
+It described and measured a firmament that would still be identified
+with the posthumous heaven of the saints. The whirling invisible spheres
+of that astronomy had the earth for their centre. The sublime
+complexities of this Ptolemaic system were day and night before Dante's
+mind. He loves to tell us in what constellation the sun is rising or
+setting, and what portion of the sky is then over the antipodes; he
+carries in his mind an orrery that shows him, at any given moment, the
+position of every star.
+
+Such a constant dragging in of astronomical lore may seem to us puerile
+or pedantic; but for Dante the astronomical situation had the charm of a
+landscape, literally full of the most wonderful lights and shadows; and
+it also had the charm of a hard-won discovery that unveiled the secrets
+of nature. To think straight, to see things as they are, or as they
+might naturally be, interested him more than to fancy things impossible;
+and in this he shows, not want of imagination, but true imaginative
+power and imaginative maturity. It is those of us who are too feeble to
+conceive and master the real world, or too cowardly to face it, that run
+away from it to those cheap fictions that alone seem to us fine enough
+for poetry or for religion. In Dante the fancy is not empty or
+arbitrary; it is serious, fed on the study of real things. It adopts
+their tendency and divines their true destiny. His art is, in the
+original Greek sense, an imitation or rehearsal of nature, an
+anticipation of fate. For this reason curious details of science or
+theology enter as a matter of course into his verse. With the
+straightforward faith and simplicity of his age he devours these
+interesting images, which help him to clarify the mysteries of this
+world.
+
+There is a kind of sensualism or aestheticism that has decreed in our
+day that theory is not poetical; as if all the images and emotions that
+enter a cultivated mind were not saturated with theory. The prevalence
+of such a sensualism or aestheticism would alone suffice to explain the
+impotence of the arts. The life of theory is not less human or less
+emotional than the life of sense; it is more typically human and more
+keenly emotional. Philosophy is a more intense sort of experience than
+common life is, just as pure and subtle music, heard in retirement, is
+something keener and more intense than the howling of storms or the
+rumble of cities. For this reason philosophy, when a poet is not
+mindless, enters inevitably into his poetry, since it has entered into
+his life; or rather, the detail of things and the detail of ideas pass
+equally into his verse, when both alike lie in the path that has led him
+to his ideal. To object to theory in poetry would be like objecting to
+words there; for words, too, are symbols without the sensuous character
+of the things they stand for; and yet it is only by the net of new
+connections which words throw over things, in recalling them, that
+poetry arises at all. Poetry is an attenuation, a rehandling, an echo of
+crude experience; it is itself a theoretic vision of things at arm's
+length.
+
+Never before or since has a poet lived in so large a landscape as Dante;
+for our infinite times and distances are of little poetic value while we
+have no graphic image of what may fill them. Dante's spaces were
+filled; they, enlarged, to the limits of human imagination, the
+habitations and destinies of mankind. Although the saints did not
+literally inhabit the spheres, but the empyrean beyond, yet each spirit
+could be manifested in that sphere the genius of which was most akin to
+his own. In Dante's vision spirits appear as points of light, from which
+voices also flow sometimes, as well as radiance. Further than reporting
+their words (which are usually about the things of earth) Dante tells us
+little about them. He has indeed, at the end, a vision of a celestial
+rose; tier upon tier of saints are seated as in an amphitheatre, and the
+Deity overarches them in the form of a triple rainbow, with a semblance
+of man in the midst. But this is avowedly a mere symbol, a somewhat
+conventional picture to which Dante has recourse unwillingly, for want
+of a better image to render his mystical intention. What may perhaps
+help us to divine this intention is the fact, just mentioned, that
+according to him the celestial spheres are not the real seat of any
+human soul; that the pure rise through them with increasing ease and
+velocity, the nearer they come to God; and that the eyes of
+Beatrice--the revelation of God to man--are only mirrors, shedding
+merely reflected beauty and light.
+
+These hints suggest the doctrine that the goal of life is the very
+bosom of God; not any finite form of existence, however excellent, but a
+complete absorption and disappearance in the Godhead. So the
+Neoplatonists had thought, from whom all this heavenly landscape is
+borrowed; and the reservations that Christian orthodoxy requires have
+not always remained present to the minds of Christian mystics and poets.
+Dante broaches this very point in the memorable interview he has with
+the spirit of Piccarda, in the third canto of the _Paradiso_. She is in
+the lowest sphere of heaven, that of the inconstant moon, because after
+she had been stolen from her convent and forcibly married, she felt no
+prompting to renew her earlier vows. Dante asks her if she never longs
+for a higher station in paradise, one nearer to God, the natural goal of
+all aspiration. She answers that to share the will of God, who has
+established many different mansions in his house, is to be truly one
+with him. The wish to be nearer God would actually carry the soul
+farther away, since it would oppose the order he has established.[19]
+
+Even in heaven, therefore, the Christian saint was to keep his essential
+fidelity, separation, and lowliness. He was to feel still helpless and
+lost in himself, like Tobias, and happy only in that the angel of the
+Lord was holding him by the hand. For Piccarda to say that she accepts
+the will of God means not that she shares it, but that she submits to
+it. She would fain go higher, for her moral nature demands it, as
+Dante--incorrigible Platonist--perfectly perceived; but she dare not
+mention it, for she knows that God, whose thoughts are not her thoughts,
+has forbidden it. The inconstant sphere of the moon does not afford her
+a perfect happiness; but, chastened as she is, she says it brings her
+happiness enough; all that a broken and a contrite heart has the courage
+to hope for.
+
+Such are the conflicting inspirations beneath the lovely harmonies of
+the _Paradiso_. It was not the poet's soul that was in conflict here; it
+was only his traditions. The conflicts of his own spirit had been left
+behind in other regions; on that threshing-floor of earth which, from
+the height of heaven, he looked back upon with wonder,[20] surprised
+that men should take so passionately this trouble of ants, which he
+judges best, says Dante, who thinks least of it.
+
+In this saying the poet is perhaps conscious of a personal fault; for
+Dante was far from perfect, even as a poet. He was too much a man of his
+own time, and often wrote with a passion not clarified into judgement.
+So much does the purely personal and dramatic interest dominate us as we
+read of a Boniface or an Ugolino that we forget that these historical
+figures are supposed to have been transmuted into the eternal, and to
+have become bits in the mosaic of Platonic essences. Dante himself
+almost forgets it. The modern reader, accustomed to insignificant,
+wayward fictions, and expecting to be entertained by images without
+thoughts, may not notice this lack of perspective, or may rejoice in it.
+But, if he is judicious, he will not rejoice in it long. The Bonifaces
+and the Ugolinos are not the truly deep, the truly lovely figures of the
+_Divine Comedy_. They are, in a relative sense, the vulgarities in it.
+We feel too much, in these cases, the heat of the poet's prejudice or
+indignation. He is not just, as he usually is; he does not stop to
+think, as he almost always does. He forgets that he is in the eternal
+world, and dips for the moment into a brawl in some Italian
+market-place, or into the council-chamber of some factious
+_condottiere_. The passages--such as those about Boniface and
+Ugolino--which Dante writes in this mood are powerful and vehement, but
+they are not beautiful. They brand the object of their invective more
+than they reveal it; they shock more than they move the reader.
+
+This lower kind of success--for it is still a success in rhetoric--falls
+to the poet because he has abandoned the Platonic half of his
+inspiration and has become for the moment wholly historical, wholly
+Hebraic or Roman. He would have been a far inferior mind if he had
+always moved on this level. With the Platonic spheres and the
+Aristotelian ethics taken out, his _Comedy_ would not have been divine.
+Persons and incidents, to be truly memorable, have to be rendered
+significant; they have to be seen in their place in the moral world;
+they have to be judged, and judged rightly, in their dignity and value.
+A casual personal sentiment towards them, however passionate, cannot
+take the place of the sympathetic insight that comprehends and the wide
+experience that judges.
+
+Again (what is fundamental with Dante) love, as he feels and renders it,
+is not normal or healthy love. It was doubtless real enough, but too
+much restrained and expressed too much in fancy; so that when it is
+extended Platonically and identified so easily with the grace of God and
+with revealed wisdom, we feel the suspicion that if the love in question
+had been natural and manly, it would have offered more resistance to so
+mystical a transformation. The poet who wishes to pass convincingly from
+love to philosophy (and that seems a natural progress for a poet) should
+accordingly be a hearty and complete lover--a lover like Goethe and his
+Faust--rather than like Plato and Dante. Faust, too, passes from
+Gretchen to Helen, and partly back again; and Goethe made even more
+passages. Had any of them led to something which not only was loved, but
+deserved to be loved, which not only could inspire a whole life, but
+which ought to inspire it--then we should have had a genuine progress.
+
+In the next place, Dante talks too much about himself. There is a sense
+in which this egotism is a merit, or at least a ground of interest for
+us moderns; for egotism is the distinctive attitude of modern philosophy
+and of romantic sentiment. In being egotistical Dante was ahead of his
+time. His philosophy would have lost an element of depth, and his poetry
+an element of pathos, had he not placed himself in the centre of the
+stage, and described everything as his experience, or as a revelation
+made to himself and made for the sake of his personal salvation. But
+Dante's egotism goes rather further than was requisite, so that the
+transcendental insight might not fail in his philosophy. It extended so
+far that he cast the shadow of his person not only over the terraces of
+purgatory (as he is careful to tell us repeatedly), but over the whole
+of Italy and of Europe, which he saw and judged under the evident
+influence of private passions and resentments.
+
+Moreover, the personality thrust forward so obtrusively is not in every
+respect worthy of contemplation. Dante is very proud and very bitter; at
+the same time, he is curiously timid; and one may tire sometimes of his
+perpetual tremblings and tears, of his fainting fits and his intricate
+doubts. A man who knows he is under the special protection of God, and
+of three celestial ladies, and who has such a sage and magician as
+Virgil for a guide, might have looked even upon hell with a little more
+confidence. How far is this shivering and swooning philosopher from the
+laughing courage of Faust, who sees his poodle swell into a monster,
+then into a cloud, and finally change into Mephistopheles, and says at
+once: _Das also war des Pudels Kern_! Doubtless Dante was mediaeval, and
+contrition, humility, and fear of the devil were great virtues in those
+days; but the conclusion we must come to is precisely that the virtues
+of those days were not the best virtues, and that a poet who represents
+that time cannot be a fair nor an ultimate spokesman for humanity.
+
+Perhaps we have now reviewed the chief objects that peopled Dante's
+imagination, the chief objects into the midst of which his poetry
+transports us; and if a poet's genius avails to transport us into his
+enchanted world, the character of that world will determine the quality
+and dignity of his poetry. Dante transports us, with unmistakable power,
+first into the atmosphere of a visionary love; then into the history of
+his conversion, affected by this love, or by the divine grace identified
+with it. The supreme ideal to which his conversion brought him back is
+expressed for him by universal nature, and is embodied among men in the
+double institution of a revealed religion and a providential empire. To
+trace the fortunes of these institutions, we are transported next into
+the panorama of history, in its great crises and its great men; and
+particularly into the panorama of Italy in the poet's time, where we
+survey the crimes, the virtues, and the sorrows of those prominent in
+furthering or thwarting the ideal of Christendom. These numerous persons
+are set before us with the sympathy and brevity of a dramatist; yet it
+is no mere carnival, no _danse macabre_: for throughout, above the
+confused strife of parties and passions, we hear the steady voice, the
+implacable sentence, of the prophet that judges them.
+
+Thus Dante, gifted with the tenderest sense of colour, and the firmest
+art of design, has put his whole world into his canvas. Seen there, that
+world becomes complete, clear, beautiful, and tragic. It is vivid and
+truthful in its detail, sublime in its march and in its harmony. This is
+not poetry where the parts are better than the whole. Here, as in some
+great symphony, everything is cumulative: the movements conspire, the
+tension grows, the volume redoubles, the keen melody soars higher and
+higher; and it all ends, not with a bang, not with some casual incident,
+but in sustained reflection, in the sense that it has not ended, but
+remains by us in its totality, a revelation and a resource for ever. It
+has taught us to love and to renounce, to judge and to worship., What
+more could a poet do? Dante poetized all life and nature as he found
+them. His imagination dominated and focused the whole world. He thereby
+touched the ultimate goal to which a poet can aspire; he set the
+standard for all possible performance, and became the type of a supreme
+poet. This is not to say that he is the "greatest" of poets. The
+relative merit of poets is a barren thing to wrangle about. The question
+can always be opened anew, when a critic appears with a fresh
+temperament or a new criterion. Even less need we say that no greater
+poet can ever arise; we may be confident of the opposite. But Dante
+gives a successful example of the _highest species_ of poetry. His
+poetry covers the whole field from which poetry may be fetched, and to
+which poetry may be applied, from the inmost recesses of the heart to
+the uttermost bounds of nature and of destiny. If to give imaginative
+value to something is the minimum task of a poet, to give imaginative
+value to all things, and to the system which things compose, is
+evidently his greatest task.
+
+Dante fulfilled this task, of course under special conditions and
+limitations, personal and social; but he fulfilled it, and he thereby
+fulfilled the conditions of supreme poetry. Even Homer, as we are
+beginning to perceive nowadays, suffered from a certain conventionality
+and one-sidedness. There was much in the life and religion of his time
+that his art ignored. It was a flattering, a euphemistic art; it had a
+sort of pervasive blandness, like that which we now associate with a
+fashionable sermon. It was poetry addressed to the ruling caste in the
+state, to the conquerors; and it spread an intentional glamour over
+their past brutalities and present self-deceptions. No such partiality
+in Dante; he paints what he hates as frankly as what he loves, and in
+all things he is complete and sincere. If any similar adequacy is
+attained again by any poet, it will not be, presumably, by a poet of the
+supernatural. Henceforth, for any wide and honest imagination, the
+supernatural must figure as an idea in the human mind,--a part of the
+natural. To conceive it otherwise would be to fall short of the insight
+of this age, not to express or to complete it. Dante, however, for this
+very reason, may be expected to remain the supreme poet of the
+supernatural, the unrivalled exponent, after Plato, of that phase of
+thought and feeling in which the supernatural seems to be the key to
+nature and to happiness. This is the hypothesis on which, as yet, moral
+unity has been best attained in this world. Here, then, we have the most
+complete idealization and comprehension of things achieved by mankind
+hitherto. Dante is the type of a consummate poet.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1:
+ Plato, _Phaedo_,97B-99C, Jowett's translation. I have
+changed the rendering of [Greek: _Nous_ from "mind" to "reason."]
+
+[2] "Est pro fundamento tenenda veritas historiae et desuper spirituales
+expositiones fabricandae." Thomas Aquinas, _Summa Theologiae_, i.
+quaest. 102, conclusio.
+
+[3] _Paradiso_, xv. 97, 99:
+
+ Fiorenza dentro dalla cerchia antica...
+ Si stava in pace, sobria e pudica.
+
+
+[4] Ibid., 100-26:
+
+ Non avea catenella, non corona,
+ Non donne contigiate, non cintura
+ Che fosse a veder pin che la persona.
+ Non faceva nascendo ancor paura
+ La figlia al padre, che il tempo e la dote
+ Non fuggan quinci e quindi la misura.
+ Non avea case di famiglia vote;
+ Non v'era giunto ancor Sardanapalo
+ A mostrar cio che in camera si puote....
+ O fortunate! Ciascuna era certa
+ Delia sua sepoltura, ed ancor nulla
+ Era per Francia nel letto deserta.
+ L' una vegghiava a studio della culla,
+ E consolando usava l' idioma
+ Che prima i padri e le madri trastulla;
+ L' altra traendo alia rocca la chioma,
+ Favoleggiava con la sua famiglia
+ De' Troiani, di Fiesole, e di Roma.
+
+
+[5] _Paradiso_, xxxiii. 143-45:
+
+ Volgeva il mio disiro e il _velle,_
+ Si come rota ch' egualmente e mossa,
+ L' amor che move il sole e l' altre stelle.
+
+
+[6] _Vita Nuova_, Sec. 22: Secondo l' usanza della sopradetta cittade,
+donne con donne, e uomini con uomini si adunino a cotale tristizia;
+molte donne s' adunaro cola, ove questa Beatrice piangea pietosamente,
+&c.
+
+Also, _Purgatorio_, xxxi. 50, 51:
+
+ Le belle membra in ch' io
+ Rinchiusa fui, e sono in terra sparte.
+
+
+[7] _Vita Nuova_,Sec. v.
+
+[8] _Schermo della veritade_,--natural philosophy.
+
+[9] _Convito_, II. cap. 16: _Faccia che gli occhi d' esta Donna miri_;
+gli occhi di questa Donna sono le sue _dimostrazioni_, le quali dritte
+negli occhi dello intelletto inhamorano l' anima, libera nelle
+condizioni. Oh dolcissimi ed ineffabili sembianti, e rubatori subitani
+della mente umana, che nelle dimostrazioni negli occhi della Filosofia
+apparite, quando essa alli suoi drudi ragiona! Veramente in voi e la
+salute, per la quale si fa beato chi vi guarda, e salvo dalla morte
+della ignoranza e delli vizi.... E cosi, in fine di questo secondo
+Trattato, dico e affermo che la Donna, di cui io innamorai appresso lo
+primo amore, fu la bellissima e onestissima figlia dello Imperadore
+dell' universo, alla quale Pittagora pose nome _Filosofia_.
+
+[10] _Purgatorio_, xvii. 106-11:
+
+ Or perche mai non puo dalla salute
+ Amor del suo suggetto volger viso,
+ Dall' odio proprio son le cose tute:
+ E perche intender non si puo diviso,
+ E per se stante, alcuno esser dal primo,
+ Da quello odiare ogni affetto e deciso.
+
+
+[11] _Inferno_, iii. 64-66:
+
+ Questi sciaurati, che mai non fur vivi,
+ Erano ignudi e stimolati molto
+ Da mosconi e da vespe ch' erano ivi.
+
+
+[12] _Ibid._, iv. 41, 42:
+
+ Semo perduti, e sol di tanto offesi
+ Che senza speme vivemo in disio.
+
+Cf. _Purgatorio_, iii. 37-45, where Virgil says:
+
+ "State contenti, umana gente, al _quia_;
+ Che se potuto aveste veder tutto,
+ Mestier non era partorir Maria;
+ E disiar vedeste senza frutto
+ Tai, che sarebbe lor disio quetato,
+ Ch' eternalmente e dato lor per lutto.
+ Io dico d' Aristotele e di Plato,
+ E di molti altri." E qui chino la fronte;
+ E piu non disse, e rimase turbato.
+
+
+[13] _Inferno_, ix. 106-33, and x.
+
+[14] _Ibid_., xxviii.
+
+[15] _Inferno_, iii. 124-26:
+
+ E pronti sono a trapassar lo rio,
+ Che la divina giustizia gli sprona
+ Si che la tema si volge in disio.
+
+
+[16] _Purgatorio_, xxi. 61-69:
+
+ Della mondizia sol voler fa prova,
+ Che, tutta libera a mutar convento,
+ L' alma sorprende, e di voler le giova....
+ Ed io che son giaciuto a questa doglia
+ Cinquecento anni e piu, pur mo sentii
+ Libera volonta di miglior soglia.
+
+
+[17] _Inferno_, xiv. 63-66:
+
+ "O Capaneo, in cio che non s' ammorza
+ La tua superbia, se' tu piu punito:
+ Nullo martirio, fuor che la tua rabbia,
+ Sarebbe al tuo furor dolor compito."
+
+
+[18] Alfred de Musset, _Poesies Nouvelles, Souvenir_:
+
+ Dante, pourquoi dis-tu qu'il n'est pire misere
+ Qu'un souvenir heureux dans les jours de douleur?
+ Quel chagrin t'a dicte cette parole amere,
+ Cette offense au malheur?
+
+ ... Ce blaspheme vante ne vient pas de ton coeur.
+ Un souvenir heureux est peut-etre sur terre
+ Plus vrai que le bonheur....
+
+ Et c'est a ta Francoise, a ton ange de gloire,
+ Que tu pouvais donner ces mots a prononcer,
+ Elle qui s'interrompt, pour conter son histoire,
+ D'un eternel baiser!
+
+
+[19] _Paradiso_, iii. 73-90:
+
+ "Se disiassimo esser piu superne,
+ Foran discordi li nostri disiri
+ Dal voler di colui che qui ne cerne,...
+ E la sua volontate e nostra pace;
+ Ella e quel mare al qual tutto si move
+ Cio ch' ella crea, e che natura face."
+ Chiaro mi fu allor com' ogni dove
+ In cielo e Paradiso, e si la grazia
+ Del sommo ben d' un modo non vi piove.
+
+
+[20] _Paradiso_, xxii. 133-39:
+
+ Col viso ritornai per tutte e quante
+ Le sette spere, e vidi questo globo
+ Tal, ch' io sorrisi del suo vil sembiante;
+ E quel consiglio per migliore approbo
+ Che l' ha per meno; e chi ad altro pensa
+ Chiamar si puote veramente probo.
+
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+
+GOETHE'S FAUST
+
+
+
+In approaching the third of our philosophical poets, there is a scruple
+that may cross the mind. Lucretius was undoubtedly a philosophical poet;
+his whole poem is devoted to expounding and defending a system of
+philosophy. In Dante the case is almost as plain. The _Divine Comedy_ is
+a moral and personal fable; yet not only are many passages explicitly
+philosophical, but the whole is inspired and controlled by the most
+definite of religious systems and of moral codes. Dante, too, is
+unmistakably a philosophical poet. But was Goethe a philosopher? And is
+_Faust_ a philosophical poem?
+
+If we say so, it must be by giving a certain latitude to our terms.
+Goethe was the wisest of mankind; too wise, perhaps, to be a philosopher
+in the technical sense, or to try to harness this wild world in a
+brain-spun terminology. It is true that he was all his life a follower
+of Spinoza, and that he may be termed, without hesitation, a naturalist
+in philosophy and a pantheist. His adherence to the general attitude of
+Spinoza, however, did not exclude a great plasticity and freedom in his
+own views, even on the most fundamental points. Thus Goethe did not
+admit the mechanical interpretation of nature advocated by Spinoza. He
+also assigned, at least to privileged souls, like his own, a more
+personal sort of immortality than Spinoza allowed. Moreover, he
+harboured a generous sympathy with the dramatic explanations of nature
+and history current in the Germany of his day. Yet such transcendental
+idealism, making the world the expression of a spiritual endeavour, was
+a total reversal of that conviction, so profound in Spinoza, that all
+moral energies are resident in particular creatures, themselves sparks
+in an absolutely infinite and purposeless world. In a word, Goethe was
+not a systematic philosopher. His feeling for the march of things and
+for the significance of great personages and great ideas was indeed
+philosophical, although more romantic than scientific. His thoughts upon
+life were fresh and miscellaneous. They voiced the genius and learning
+of his age. They did not express a firm personal attitude, radical and
+unified, and transmissible to other times and persons. For philosophers,
+after all, have this advantage over men of letters, that their minds,
+being more organic, can more easily propagate themselves. They scatter
+less influence, but more seeds.
+
+If from Goethe we turn to _Faust_--and it is as the author of _Faust_
+only that we shall consider him--the situation is not less ambiguous. In
+the play, as the young Goethe first wrote it, philosophy appeared in the
+first line,--_Hab nun ach die Philosophey_; but it appeared there, and
+throughout the piece, merely as a human experience, a passion or an
+illusion, a fund of images or an ambitious art. Later, it is true, under
+the spell of fashion and of Schiller, Goethe surrounded his original
+scenes with others, like the prologue in heaven, or the apotheosis of
+Faust, in which a philosophy of life was indicated; namely, that he who
+strives strays, yet in that straying finds his salvation. This idea left
+standing all that satirical and Mephistophelian wisdom with which the
+whole poem abounds, the later parts no less than the earlier. Frankly,
+it was a moral that adorned the tale, without having been the seed of
+it, and without even expressing fairly the spirit which it breathes.
+_Faust_ remained an essentially romantic poem, written to give vent to a
+pregnant and vivid genius, to touch the heart, to bewilder the mind with
+a carnival of images, to amuse, to thrill, to humanize; and, if we must
+speak of philosophy, there were many express maxims in the poem, and
+many insights, half betrayed, that exceeded in philosophic value the
+belated and official moral which the author affixed to it, and which he
+himself warned us not to take too seriously.[1]
+
+_Faust_ is, then, no philosophical poem, after an open or deliberate
+fashion; and yet it offers a solution to the moral problem of existence
+as truly as do the poems of Lucretius and Dante. Heard philosophies are
+sweet, but those unheard may be sweeter. They may be more unmixed and
+more profound for being adopted unconsciously, for being lived rather
+than taught. This is not merely to say what might be said of every work
+of art and of every natural object, that it could be made the
+starting-point for a chain of inferences that should reveal the whole
+universe, like the flower in the crannied wall. It is to say, rather,
+that the vital straining towards an ideal, definite but latent, when it
+dominates a whole life, may express that ideal more fully than could the
+best-chosen words.
+
+Now _Faust_ is the foam on the top of two great waves of human
+aspiration, merging and heaping themselves up together,--the wave of
+romanticism rising from the depths of northern traditions and genius,
+and the wave of a new paganism coming from Greece over Italy. These are
+not philosophies to be read into _Faust_ by the critic; they are
+passions seething in the drama. It is the drama of a philosophical
+adventure; a rebellion against convention; a flight to nature, to
+tenderness, to beauty; and then a return to convention again, with a
+feeling that nature, tenderness, and beauty, unless found there, will
+not be found at all. Goethe never depicts, as Dante does, the object his
+hero is pursuing; he is satisfied with depicting the pursuit. Like
+Lessing, in his famous apologue, he prefers the pursuit of the ideal to
+the ideal itself; perhaps, as in the case of Lessing, because the hope
+of realizing the ideal, and the interest in realizing it, were beginning
+to forsake him.
+
+The case is somewhat as that of Dante would have been if, instead of
+recognizing and loving Beatrice at first sight and rising into a vision
+of the eternal world, ready-made and perfectly ordered, Dante had passed
+from love to love, from _donna gentile_ to _donna gentile_, always
+longing for the eyes of Beatrice without ever meeting them. The _Divine
+Comedy_ would then have been only human, yet it might have suggested and
+required the very consummation that the _Divine Comedy_ depicts; and
+without expressing this consummation, our human comedy might have
+furnished materials and momentum for it, such that, if ever that
+consummation came to be expressed, it would be more deeply felt and more
+adequately understood. Dante gives us a philosophical goal, and we have
+to recall and retrace the journey; Goethe gives us a philosophic
+journey, and we have to divine the goal.
+
+Goethe is a romantic poet; he is a novelist in verse. He is a
+philosopher of experience as it comes to the individual; the philosopher
+of life, as action, memory, or soliloquy may put life before each of us
+in turn. Now the zest of romanticism consists in taking what you know
+is an independent and ancient world as if it were material for your
+private emotions. The savage or the animal, who should not be aware of
+nature or history at all, could not be romantic about them, nor about
+himself. He would be blandly idiotic, and take everything quite
+unsuspectingly for what it was in him. The romanticist, then, should be
+a civilized man, so that his primitiveness and egotism may have
+something paradoxical and conscious about them; and so that his life may
+contain a rich experience, and his reflection may play with all
+varieties of sentiment and thought. At the same time, in his inmost
+genius, he should be a barbarian, a child, a transcendentalist, so that
+his life may seem to him absolutely fresh, self-determined, unforeseen,
+and unforeseeable. It is part of his inspiration to believe that he
+creates a new heaven and a new earth with each revolution in his moods
+or in his purposes. He ignores, or seeks to ignore, all the conditions
+of life, until perhaps by living he personally discovers them.[2] Like
+Faust, he flouts science, and is minded to make trial of magic, which
+renders a man's will master of the universe in which he seems to live.
+He disowns all authority, save that mysteriously exercised over him by
+his deep faith in himself. He is always honest and brave; but he is
+always different, and absolves himself from his past as soon as he has
+outgrown or forgotten it. He is inclined to be wayward and foolhardy,
+justifying himself on the ground that all experience is interesting,
+that the springs of it are inexhaustible and always pure, and that the
+future of his soul is infinite. In the romantic hero the civilized man
+and the barbarian must be combined; he should be the heir to all
+civilization, and, nevertheless, he should take life arrogantly and
+egotistically, as if it were an absolute personal experiment.
+
+This singular combination was strikingly exemplified in Doctor Johannes
+Faustus, a figure half historical, half legendary, familiar to Goethe in
+his boyhood in puppet-shows and chapbooks. An adventurer in the romantic
+as well as in the vulgar sense of the word, somewhat like Paracelsus or
+Giordano Bruno, Doctor Faustus had felt the mystery of nature, had
+scorned authority, had credited magic, had lived by imposture, and had
+fled from the police. His blasphemous boasts and rascally conduct,
+together with his magic arts, had made him even in his lifetime a
+scandalous and interesting personage. He was scarcely dead when legends
+gathered about his name. It was published abroad that he had sold his
+soul to the devil, in exchange for twenty-four years of wild pleasures
+upon earth.
+
+This legend purported to offer a terrible and edifying example, a
+warning to all Christians to avoid the snares of science, of pleasure,
+and of ambition. These things had sent Doctor Faustus into hell-fire;
+his corpse, found face downward, could not be turned over upon its back.
+Nevertheless, we may suspect that even at the beginning people
+recognized in Doctor Faustus a braver brother, a somewhat enviable
+reprobate who had dared to relish the good things of this life above the
+sad joys vaguely promised for the other. All that the Renaissance valued
+was here represented as in the devil's gift; and the man in the street
+might well doubt whether it was religion or worldly life that was
+thereby made the more unlovely. Doubtless the Lutheran authors of the
+first chapbook felt, and felt rightly, that those fine things which
+tempted Faustus were unevangelical, pagan, and popish; yet they could
+not cease altogether to admire and even to covet them, especially when
+the first ardours of the Old-Christian revival had had time to cool.
+
+Marlowe, who wrote only a few years later, made a beginning in the
+rehabilitation of the hero. His Faustus is still damned, but he is
+transformed into the sort of personage that Aristotle approves of for
+the hero of tragedy, essentially human and noble, but led astray by some
+excusable vice or error. Marlowe's public would see in Doctor Faustus a
+man and a Christian like themselves, carried a bit too far by ambition
+and the love of pleasure. He is no radical unbeliever, no natural mate
+for the devil, conscienceless and heathen, like the typical villain of
+the Renaissance. On the contrary, he has become a good Protestant, and
+holds manfully to all those parts of the creed which express his
+spontaneous affections. A good angel is often overheard whispering in
+his ear; and if the bad angel finally prevails, it is in spite of
+continual remorse and hesitation on the Doctor's part. This excellent
+Faustus is damned by accident or by predestination; he is brow-beaten by
+the devil and forbidden to repent when he has really repented. The
+terror of the conclusion is thereby heightened; we see an essentially
+good man, because in a moment of infatuation he had signed away his
+soul, driven against his will to despair and damnation. The alternative
+of a happy solution lies almost at hand; and it is only a lingering
+taste for the lurid and the horrible, ingrained in this sort of
+melodrama, that sends him shrieking to hell.
+
+What makes Marlowe's conclusion the more violent and the more
+unphilosophical is the fact that, to any one not dominated by
+convention, the good angel, in the dialogue, seems to have so much the
+worse of the argument. All he has to offer is sour admonition and
+external warnings:
+
+ _O Faustus, lay that damned book aside,_
+ _And gaze not on it lest it tempt thy soul,_
+ _And heap God's heavy wrath upon thy head._
+ _Read, read, the Scriptures; that is blasphemy...._
+ _Sweet Faustus, think of heaven, and heavenly things._
+
+To which the evil angel replies:
+
+ _No, Faustus, think of honour and of wealth._
+
+And in another place:
+
+ _Go forward, Faustus, in that famous art,_
+ _Wherein all nature's treasure is contained._
+ _Be thou on earth as Jove is in the sky,_
+ _Lord and commander of these elements._
+
+There can be no doubt that the devil here represents the natural ideal
+of Faustus, or of any child of the Renaissance; he appeals to the vague
+but healthy ambitions of a young soul, that would make trial of the
+world. In other words, this devil represents the true good, and it is no
+wonder if the honest Faustus cannot resist his suggestions. We like him
+for his love of life, for his trust in nature, for his enthusiasm for
+beauty. He speaks for us all when he cries:
+
+ _Was this the face that launched a thousand ships_
+ _And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?_
+
+Even his irreverent pranks, being directed against the pope, endear him
+the more to an anti-clerical public; and he appeals to courtiers and
+cavaliers by his lofty poetical scorn for such crabbed professions as
+the law, medicine, or theology. In a word, Marlowe's Faustus is a martyr
+to everything that the Renaissance prized,--power, curious knowledge,
+enterprise, wealth, and beauty.
+
+How thoroughly Marlowe and Goethe are on the way towards reversing the
+Christian philosophy of life may be seen if we compare _Faust_ for a
+moment (as, in other respects, has often been done) with _The
+Wonder-working Magician_ of Calderon. This earlier hero, St. Cyprian of
+Antioch, is like Faust in being a scholar, signing away his soul to the
+devil, practising magic, embracing the ghost of beauty, and being
+ultimately saved. Here the analogy ends. Cyprian, far from being
+disgusted with all theory, and particularly with theology, is a pagan
+philosopher eagerly seeking God, and working his way, with full faith in
+his method, toward Christian orthodoxy. He floors the devil in
+scholastic argument about the unity of God, his power, wisdom, and
+goodness. He falls in love, and sells his soul merely in the hope of
+satisfying his passion. He studies magic chiefly for the same reason;
+but magic cannot overrule the free-will of the Christian lady he loves
+(a modern and very Spanish one, though supposed to adorn ancient
+Antioch). The devil can supply only a false phantasm of her person, and
+as Cyprian approaches her and lifts her veil, he finds a hideous
+death's-head beneath; for God can work miracles to cap those of any
+magician, and can beat the devil at his own game. Thunderstruck at this
+portent, Cyprian becomes a Christian. Half-naked, ecstatic, taken for a
+madman, he bears witness loudly and persistently to the power, wisdom,
+and goodness of the one true God; and, since the persecution of Decius
+is then going on, he is hurried away to martyrdom. His lady, sentenced
+also for the same cause, encourages him by her heroic attitude and
+words. Their earthly passion is dead; but their souls are united in
+death and in immortality.
+
+In this drama we see magic checkmated by miracles, doubt yielding to
+faith, purity resisting temptation, passion transformed into zeal, and
+all the glories of the world collapsing before disillusion and
+asceticism. These glories are nothing, the poet tells us, but dust,
+ashes, smoke, and air.
+
+The contrast with Goethe's _Faust_ could not be more complete. Both
+poets take the greatest liberties with their chronology, yet the spirit
+of their dramas is remarkably true to the respective ages in which they
+are supposed to occur. Calderon glorifies the movement from paganism to
+Christianity. The philosophy in which that movement culminated--Catholic
+orthodoxy--still dominates the poet's mind, not in a perfunctory way,
+but so as to kindle his imagination, and render his personages sublime
+and his verses rapturous. Goethe's _Faust_, on the contrary, glorifies
+the return from Christianity to paganism. It shows the spirit of the
+Renaissance liberating the soul, and bursting the bonds of traditional
+faith and traditional morals. This spirit, after manifesting itself
+brilliantly at the time of the historical Faust, had seemed to be
+smothered in the great world during the seventeenth century. Men's
+characters and laws had reaffirmed their old allegiance to Christianity,
+and the Renaissance survived only abstractly, in scholarship or the fine
+arts, to which it continued to lend a certain classic or pseudo-classic
+elegance. In Goethe's time, however, a second Renaissance was taking
+place in the souls of men. The love of life, primal and adventurous, was
+gathering head in many an individual. In the romantic movement and in
+the French Revolution, this love of life freed itself from the politic
+compromises and conventions that had been stifling it for two hundred
+years. Goethe's hero embodies this second, romantic emancipation of the
+mind, too long an unwilling pupil of Christian tradition. He cries for
+air, for nature, for all experience. Cyprian, on the other hand, an
+unwilling pupil of paganism, had yearned for truth, for solitude, and
+for heaven.
+
+Such was the legend that, to the great good fortune of mankind,
+fascinated the young Goethe, and took root in his fancy. Around it
+gathered the experiences and insights of sixty well-filled years:
+_Faust_ became the poetical autobiography and the philosophic testament
+of Goethe. He stuffed it with every enthusiasm that diversified his own
+life, from the great alternative of romantic or classical art, down to
+the controversy between Neptunism and Vulcanism in geology, and to his
+fatherly admiration for Lord Byron. Yet in spite of the liberties he
+took with the legend, and the personal turn he gave it, nothing in its
+historical associations escaped him. His life in Frankfort and in
+Strassburg had made the mediaeval scene familiar to his fancy; Herder
+had communicated to him an imaginative cult for all that was national
+and characteristic in art and manners; the spell of Gothic architecture
+had fallen on him; and he had learned to feel in Shakespeare the
+infinite strength of suggestion in details, in multitudinous glimpses,
+in lifelike medleys of sadness and mirth, in a humble realism in
+externals, amid lyric and metaphysical outpourings of the passions. The
+sense for classic beauty which had inspired Marlowe with immortal lines,
+and was later to inspire his own _Helena,_ was as yet dormant; but
+instead he had caught the humanitarian craze, then prevalent, for
+defending and idealizing the victims of law and society, among others,
+the poor girl who, to escape disgrace, did away with her new-born child.
+Such a victim of a selfish seducer and a Pharisaical public was to add
+a desirable touch of femininity and pathos to the story of Faust:
+Gretchen was to take the place, at least for the nonce, of the coveted
+Helen.
+
+This Gretchen was to be no common creature, but one endowed with all the
+innocence, sweetness, intelligence, fire, and fortitude which Goethe was
+finding, or thought he was finding, in his own Gretchens, Kaetchens, and
+Frederickes. For the young Goethe, though very learned, was no mere
+student of books; to his human competence and power to succeed, he
+joined the gusts of feeling, the irresponsible raptures, the sudden
+sorrows, of a genuine poet. He was a true lover, and a wayward one. He
+could delve into magic with awe, in a Faust-like spirit of adventure; he
+could burn offerings in his attic to the rising sun; he could plunge
+into Christian mysticism; and there could well up, on occasion, from the
+deep store of his unconscious mind, floods of words, of images, and of
+tears. He was a genius, if ever there was one; and this genius, in all
+its freshness, was poured into the composition of _Faust_,--the most
+kindred of themes, the most picturesque and magical of romances.
+
+In Goethe's first version of the poem, before the story of Gretchen, we
+find the studious Faust, as in Marlowe, soliloquizing on the vanity of
+the sciences. They grasp nothing of the genuine truth; they are verbal
+shams. They have not even brought Faust fame or riches. Perhaps magic
+might do better. The air was full of spirits; could they be summoned to
+our aid, possibly the secrets of nature might be unlocked. We might
+reach true science, and through it undreamt-of power over the material
+world. For Nature, according to Goethe, really has secrets. She is not
+all open to eventual inspection; she is no mere mechanism of minute
+parts and statable laws. Our last view of her, like our first glimpse,
+must be interpreted; from the sum of her manifestations we must divine
+her soul. Therefore only a poetic and rhetorical art, like magic, has
+any chance of unveiling her, and of bringing us face to face with the
+truth.
+
+In this invocation of spirits, as Goethe's Faust makes it, there is no
+question of selling, or even of risking, the soul. This Faust, unlike
+Marlowe's, has no faith and no fear. From the point of view of the
+church he is damned already as an unbeliever; but, as an unbeliever, he
+is looking for salvation in another quarter. Like the bolder spirits of
+the Renaissance, he is hoping to find in universal nature, infinite,
+placid, non-censorious, an escape from the prison-house of Christian
+doctrine and Christian law. His magic arts are the sacrament that will
+initiate him into his new religion, the religion of nature. He turns to
+nature also in another sense, more characteristic of the age of Goethe
+than of that of Faust. He longs for grandiose solitudes. He feels that
+moonlight, caves, mountains, driving clouds, would be his best medicine
+and his best counsellors. The souls of Rousseau, Byron, and Shelley are
+pre-incarnate in this Faust, the epitome of all romantic rebellions.
+They coexist there with the souls of Paracelsus and Giordano Bruno. The
+wild aspects of nature, he thinks, will melt and renew his heart, while
+magic reveals the mysteries of cosmic law and helps him to exploit them.
+
+Full of these hopes, Faust opens his book of magic at the sign of the
+Macrocosm: it shows him the mechanism of the world, all forces and
+events playing into one another and forming an infinite chain. The
+spectacle entrances him; he seems to have attained one of his dearest
+ambitions. But here he comes at once upon the other half, or, as Hegel
+would call it, the other moment, of the romantic life. Every romantic
+ideal, once realized, disenchants. No matter what we attain, our
+dissatisfaction must be perpetual. Thus the vision of the universe,
+which Faust now has before him, is, he remembers, only a vision; it is a
+theory or conception.[3] It is not a rendering of the inner life of the
+world as Shakespeare, for instance, feels and renders it. Experience; as
+it comes to him who lives and works, is not given by that theoretical
+vision; in science experience is turned into so many reviewed events,
+the passage of so much substance through so many forms. But Faust does
+not want an image or description of reality; he yearns to enact and to
+become the reality itself.
+
+In this new search, he fixes his eye on the sign of the Earth-Spirit,
+which seems more propitious to his present wish. This sign is the key to
+all experience. All experience tempts Faust; he shrinks from nothing
+that any mortal may have endured; he is ready to undertake everything
+that any mortal may have done. In all men he would live; and with the
+last man he will be content to die.[4] So mighty is his yearning for
+experience that the Earth-Spirit is softened and appears at his bidding.
+In a red flame he sees its monstrous visage, and his enthusiasm is
+turned to horror. Outspread before him is the furious, indiscriminate
+cataract of life, the merciless flux, the infinite variety, the absolute
+inconstancy of it. This general life is not for any individual to
+rehearse; it I bursts all bounds of personality. Each man may assimilate
+that part only which falls within his understanding, only that aspect
+which things wear from his particular angle, and to his particular
+interests. _Du gleichst_, the Earth-Spirit cries to him,--_du gleichst
+dem Geist den du begreifst, nicht mir._
+
+This saying--that the life possible and good for man is the life of
+reason, not the life of nature--is a hard one to the romantic,
+unintellectual, insatiable Faust. He thinks, like many another
+philosopher of feeling, that since his is a part of the sum of
+experience, the whole of experience should be akin to his. But in fact
+the opposite is far nearer the truth. Man is constituted by his
+limitations, by his station contrasted with all other stations, and his
+purposes chosen from amongst all other purposes. Any great scope he can
+attain must be due to his powers of representation. His understanding
+may render him universal; his life never can. Faust, as he hears this
+sentence from the departing Earth-Spirit, collapses under it. He feels
+impotent to gainsay what the tumult of the world is thundering at him,
+but he will not accept on authority so unwelcome and chastening a truth.
+All his long experience to come will scarcely suffice to convince him of
+it.
+
+These are the chief philosophical ideas that appear in the two earlier
+versions of Goethe's _Faust_,--the _Urfaust_ and the _Fragment_. What
+Mephistopheles says to the young student is only a clever expansion of
+what Faust had said in his first monologue about the vanity of science
+and of the learned professions. Mephistopheles, too, finds theory
+ashen, and the tree of life green and full of golden fruit; only, having
+more experience than Faust of the second disenchanting moment in the
+romantic dialectic, he foresees that this golden fruit also will turn to
+ashes in the mouth, as it did in the garden of Eden. Science is folly,
+but life is no better; for after all is not science a part of life?
+
+When we turn to the first part in its final shape, or to the entire
+drama, we find many changes and additions that seem to transform the
+romantic picture of the opening scene, and to offer us a rounded
+philosophy. The changes, however, are more in expression than in
+ultimate substance, and the additions are chiefly new illustrations of
+the ancient theme. Critics who study the _Entstehungsgeschichte_ of
+works of art help us to analyze them more intelligently and reproduce
+more accurately what, at various times, may have been the intention of
+their authors. Yet these bits of information would be dearly bought if
+we were distracted by them from what gives poetic value and individual
+character to the result--its total idiosyncrasy, its place in the moral
+world. The place in the moral world of Goethe's _Faust_ as a whole is
+just the place which the opening scene gave it in the beginning. It
+fills more space, it touches more historical and poetic matters; but its
+centre is the old centre, and its result the old result. It remains
+romantic in its pictures and in its philosophy.
+
+The first addition that promises to throw new light on the idea of the
+drama is the _Prologue in Heaven_. In imitation of _The Book of Job_, we
+find the morning stars--the three archangels--singing together; and then
+follows a very agreeable and humorous conversation between the Lord and
+Mephistopheles. The scene is in the style of mediaeval religious plays,
+and this circumstance might lead us to suppose that the point at issue
+was the salvation of Faust's soul. But that, in the literal sense, is
+far from being the case. As in _Job_, the question is what sentiments
+the tempted mortal will maintain during this life, not what fate will
+afterwards overtake his disembodied spirit. Dead men, Mephistopheles
+observes, do not interest him. He is not a devil from a subterranean
+hell, concerned, out of pique or ambition, to increase the population of
+tortured shades in that fabulous region. He dwells in the atmosphere of
+earth; he knows nothing of the suns or the worlds, the life of man is
+his element.[5] He remains--what he was in the first versions of the
+play--a part of the Earth-Spirit, one of its embodiments. His particular
+office, as we shall see presently, is to precipitate that continual
+destruction which is involved in the continual renewal of life. He finds
+it very foolish of Faust to demand everything and be satisfied with
+nothing; and his wager is that Faust may be brought to demand nothing
+and be satisfied with what chance throws in his way, that he shall lick
+the dust, and lick it with pleasure,[6] that he shall renounce the
+dignity of willing what is not and cannot be, and crawl about, like the
+serpent, basking in the comforts of the moment.
+
+Against this, the Lord pronounces Faust to be his servant,--the servant,
+that is, of an ideal,--and declares that whoever strives after an ideal
+must needs go astray; yet in his necessary errors, the good man never
+misses the right road.[7] In other words, to have an ideal to strive
+for, and, like Faust, never to be satisfied, is itself the salvation of
+man. Faust does not yet know this. He half believes there is some
+concrete and ultimate good beyond, and so is bitter and violent in his
+dissatisfaction; but in due season he will come to clearness on this
+subject, and understand that only he deserves freedom and life who must
+daily win them afresh.[8] Mephistopheles himself, with his mockeries and
+seductions, helps to keep the world moving and men wide awake.[9]
+Imperfection is all that is possible in the world of action; but the
+angels may gather up and fix in thought the perfect forms approached or
+suggested by existence.[10]
+
+In the two earlier versions of _Faust_, Mephistopheles appears without
+introduction; we find him amusing himself by giving ambiguous advice to
+an innocent scholar, and accompanying Faust in his wanderings. His
+mocking tone and miraculous powers mark him at once as the devil of the
+legend; but several passages prove that he is a deputy of the
+Earth-Spirit evoked by Faust in the beginning. That he should be both
+devil and world-demon ought not to surprise the learned.[11] The devils
+of popular mediaeval religion were not cut out of whole cloth: they were
+simply the Neoplatonic demons of the air, together with the gods of
+Olympus and the more ancient chthonic deities, blackened by sectarian
+zeal, and degraded by a coarse and timid imagination. Many of these
+pagan sprites, indeed, had been originally impish and mischievous, since
+not all the aspects of nature are lovely or propitious, nor all the
+dreams of men. But as a whole they were without malice in their
+irresponsible, elemental life,--winged powers darting through space
+between the earth and the moon. They were not dwellers in a subterranean
+hell; they were not tormentors nor tormented. Often they swarmed and
+sang blithely, as they do in _Faust_ and even in the _Wonder-working
+Magician_; and if at other times they croaked or hooted, it was like
+frogs and owls, less lovely creatures than humming-birds, but not less
+natural.
+
+One of these less amiable spirits of the atmosphere, especially of its
+ambient fire, is the Mephistopheles of Goethe. Why he delighted in evil
+rather than in good he himself explains in a profound and ingenious
+fashion. Darkness or nothingness, he says, existed alone before the
+birth of light. Nothingness or darkness still remains the fundamental
+and, to his mind, the better part of that mixture of being and privation
+which we call existence. Nothing that exists can be preserved, nor does
+it deserve to be; therefore it would have been better if nothing had
+ever existed.[12] To deny the value of whatever is, and to wish to
+destroy it, according to him, is the only rational ambition; he is the
+spirit that denies continually, he is the everlasting No. This
+spirit--which we might compare with the Mars of Lucretius--has great
+power in the world; every change, in one of its aspects, expresses it,
+since in one of its aspects, every change is the destruction of
+something. This spirit is always willing evil, for it wills death, with
+all the folly, crime, and despair that minister to death. But in willing
+evil, it is always accomplishing good; for these evils make for
+nothingness, and nothingness is the true good. The famous couplet--
+
+ _Ein Teil von jener Kraft_
+ _Die stets das Boese will, und stets das Gute schafft--_
+
+is far from expressing the Hegelian commonplace with which it is usually
+identified. It does not mean that destruction serves a good purpose
+after all because it clears the way for "something higher."
+Mephistopheles is not one of those philosophers who think change and
+evolution a good in themselves. He does not admit that his activity,
+while aiming at evil, contributes unintentionally to the good. It
+contributes to the good intentionally, because the evil it does is, in
+his opinion, less than the evil it cures. He is the cruel surgeon to the
+disease of life.
+
+If he admitted the other interpretation, he would be _ipso facto_
+converted to the view of the Lord in the _Prologue_. His naughtiness
+would become, in his own eyes, a needful service in the cause of
+life,--a condition of life being really vital and worth living. He might
+then continue his sly operations and biting witticisms, without one drop
+more of kindness, and yet be sanctioned in everything by the Absolute,
+and adopt the smile and halo of the optimist. He would have perceived
+that he was the spice of life, the yeast and red pepper of the world,
+necessary to the perfect savour of the providential concoction. As it
+is, Mephistopheles is far more modest. He says that he wills evil,
+because what he wills is contrary to what his victims will; he is the
+great contradictor, the blaster of young hopes. Yet he does good,
+because these young hopes, if let alone, would lead to misery and
+absurdity. His contradiction nips the folly of living in the bud. To be
+sure, as he goes on to acknowledge, the destructive power never wins a
+decisive victory. While everything falls successively beneath his
+sickle, the seeds of life are being scattered perpetually behind his
+back. The Lucretian Venus has her innings, as well as the Lucretian
+Mars. The eternal see-saw, the ancient flux, continues without end and
+without abatement.
+
+Thus Mephistopheles has a philosophy, and is justified and consistent in
+his own eyes; yet in the course of the drama he wears various masks and
+has various moods. All he says and does cannot be made altogether
+compatible with the essence of his mind, as Goethe finally conceived it.
+The dramatic figure of Mephistopheles had been fixed long before in its
+graphic characteristics. Mephistopheles, for instance, is extremely old;
+he feels older than the universe. There is nothing new for him; he has
+no illusions. His feeling for anyone he sees is choked, as happens to
+old people, by his feelings for the infinite number of persons he
+remembers. He is heartless, because he is impersonal and universal. He
+is altogether inhuman; he has not the shames nor the tastes of man. He
+often assumes the form of a dog,--it is his favourite mask in this
+earthly carnival. He is not averse to the witches' kitchen, with its
+senseless din and obscenity. He puts up good-naturedly with the
+grotesque etiquette of the spirit-world, observes all the rules about
+signing contracts in blood, knocking thrice, and respecting pentagrams.
+Why should he not? Dogs and demons of the air are forms of the
+Earth-Spirit as much as man; man has no special dignity that
+Mephistopheles should respect. Man's morality is one of the moralities,
+his conventions are not less absurd than the conventions of other
+monkeys. Mephistopheles has no prejudice against the snake; he
+understands and he despises his cousin, the snake, also. He understands
+and he despises himself; he has had time to know himself thoroughly.
+
+His understanding, however, is not impartial, because he is the advocate
+of death; he cannot sympathize with the other half of the Earth-Spirit,
+which he does not represent,--the creative, propulsive, enamoured side,
+the side that worships the ideal, the love that makes the world go
+round. What enchants an ingenuous soul can only amuse Mephistopheles;
+what torments it gives him a sardonic satisfaction. Thus he comes to be
+in fact a sour and mocking devil. At other times, when he opposes the
+silliness and romanticism of Faust, he seems to be the spokesman of all
+experience and reason; as when he warns Faust that to be at all you must
+be something in particular. Yet even this he says by way of checking and
+denying Faust's passion for the infinite. The soberest truth, when
+unwelcome, may seem to the sentimental as diabolical as the most cynical
+lie; so that in spite of the very unequal justness of his various
+sentiments, Mephistopheles retains his dramatic unity. We recognize his
+tone and, under whatever mask, we think him a villain and find him
+delightful.
+
+Such is the spirit, and such are the conditions, in which Faust
+undertakes his adventures. He thirsts for all experience, including all
+experience of evil; he fears no hell; and he hopes for no happiness. He
+trusts in magic; that is, he believes, or is willing to make believe,
+that apart from any settled conditions laid down by nature or God,
+personal will can evoke the experience it covets by its sheer force and
+assurance. His bond with Mephistopheles is an expression of this
+romantic faith. It is no bargain to buy pleasures on earth at the cost
+of torments hereafter; for neither Goethe, nor Faust, nor Mephistopheles
+believes that such pleasures are worth having, or such torments
+possible.
+
+The first taste Faust gets of the world is in Auerbach's cellar, and he
+finds it at once unpalatable. His mature and disdainful mind cannot be
+amused by the sodden merriment he sees there. He is without that
+simplicity and heartiness which might find even drunken gaiety
+attractive; to put up with such follies, one must know nothing, like
+Brander, or everything, like Mephistopheles. Faust still feels the
+"pathos of distance;" he is acutely conscious of something incomparably
+noble just out of reach. In the witches' kitchen, which he next visits,
+pleasure is still more ugly and shallow; here the din is even more
+nonsensical, and the fancy more obscene. Yet Faust comes forth with two
+points gained in his romantic rehabilitation; he has taken the elixir of
+youth and he has seen the image of Helen in a mirror. He is henceforth
+in love with ideal beauty, and being young again, he is able to find
+ideal beauty in the first woman he sees.
+
+The great episode of Gretchen follows; and when he leaves her (after the
+duel with her brother) to view the wild revels of the Walpurgisnacht,
+his youth for a moment catches the contagion of that orgy. His love of
+ideal beauty, which remains unsatisfied, saves him, however, from any
+lasting illusion. He sees a little red mouse running out of the mouth of
+a nymph he is pursuing, and his momentary inclination turns to aversion.
+When he goes back to Gretchen in her prison, it is too late for him to
+do more than recognize the ruin he has brought about,--Gretchen
+dishonoured, her mother poisoned, her brother killed, her child drowned
+by her in a pond, and she herself about to be executed. Gretchen, who is
+the only true Christian in this poem, refuses to be rescued, because she
+wishes to offer her voluntary death in propitiation for her grave,
+though almost involuntary, offences.
+
+This is the end of Faust's career through the world of private
+interests,--the little world,--and we may well ask what has been the
+fruit of his experiments so far. What strength or experience has he
+amassed for his further adventures? The answer is to be found in the
+first scene of the second part, where Goethe reaches his highest potency
+as a poet and as a philosopher. We are transported to a remote,
+magnificent, virgin country. It is evening, and Faust is lying, weary
+but restless, on a flowering hillside. Kindly spirits of nature are
+hovering above his head. Ariel, their leader, bids them bring solace to
+the troubled hero. It is enough he was unfortunate--they make no
+question whether he was a saint or a sinner.[13] The spirits in chorus
+then sing four lovely stanzas, one for each watch of the night. The
+first invokes peace, forgetfulness, surrender to the healing influence
+of sleep. Pity and remorse, they seem to say, in the words of Spinoza,
+are evil and vain; failure is incidental; error is innocent. Nature has
+no memory; forgive yourself, and you are forgiven. The song of the
+second watch merges the unhappy soul again in the infinite incorruptible
+substance of nature. The stars, great or little, twinkling or pure, fill
+the sky with their ordered peace, and the sea with their trembling
+reflection. In this universal circulation there is no private will, no
+permanent division. In the next watch we find the plastic stress of
+nature beginning to reassert itself; seeds swell, sap mounts up the
+thawing branches, buds grow full; everything recovers a fresh
+individuality and a tender, untried will. Finally, the song of the
+fourth watch bids the flowers open their petals and Faust his eyes.
+Forces renewed in repose should tempt a new career. Nature is open to
+the brave, to the intelligent; all may be noble, who dare to be so.[14]
+
+Soothed by these ministrations, Faust awakes full of new strength and
+ambition. He watches with rapture the sunlight touch the mountain-tops
+and creep down gradually into the valleys. When it reaches him, he
+turns to look directly at the sun; but he is dazzled. He seems to
+remember the Earth-Spirit that had once allured and then rejected him.
+We wish, he says, to kindle our torch of life, and we produce a
+conflagration, a monstrous medley of joy and sorrow, love and hate. Let
+us turn our backs upon the sun, upon infinite force and infinite
+existence. Fitter for our eyes the waterfall over against it, the
+torrent of human affairs, broken into a myriad rills. Upon the mists
+that rise from it the sunlight paints a rainbow, always vanishing, but
+always restored. This is the true image of rational human achievement.
+We have our life in the iridescence of the world.[15] Or, as Shelley has
+said it for us,--
+
+ _Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass,_
+ _Stains the white radiance of eternity,_
+ _Until death tramples it to fragments._
+
+This death, however, is itself unstable. The Lucretian Venus, by
+reshaping our senses and instincts, builds that coloured dome once more.
+The rainbow is renewed, as the mists rise again or the wind dies down,
+and creation is glorious as on the first day.
+
+This is Goethe's theory of rejuvenation and immortality. It is
+thoroughly naturalistic. There is a life after death, but only for such
+souls as have enough scope to identify themselves with those forms which
+nature, in her uncertain oscillations, always tends to reproduce. A deep
+mind has deep roots in nature,--it will bloom many times over. But what
+a deep mind carries over into its next incarnation--perhaps in some
+remote sphere--is not its conventional merits and demerits, its load of
+remorse, or its sordid memories. These are washed away in its new
+baptism. What remains is only what was deep in that deep mind, so deep
+that new situations may again imply and admit it.
+
+When, after the scene with the Earth-Spirit, Faust thought of suicide,
+he regarded it as a means to escape from oppressive conditions and to
+begin a fresh life under conditions wholly different and unknown. It was
+as if a man in middle life, disgusted with his profession, should
+abandon it to take up another. Such a resolution is serious. It
+expresses a great dissatisfaction with things as they stand, but it also
+expresses a great hope. Death, for Faust, is an adventure, like any
+other; and if, contrary to his presumption, this adventure should prove
+the last, that, too, is a risk he is willing to run. Accordingly, as he
+lifted the poison to his lips, he drank to the dawn, to a new springtime
+of existence. It was by no means the saddest nor the weakest moment of
+his life.[16]
+
+Although the sound of an Easter hymn checked him, bringing sentimental
+memories of a religion in which he no longer believed, the
+transformation scene he looked for was only postponed. There is not much
+difference between dying as he had thought to die and living as he was
+about to live. Venomous essences, artificially brewed, were hardly
+necessary to bring him to a new life; the adventures he was entering
+upon were suicidal enough, for he was to strive without hope of
+attainment, and to proceed by passionate wilfulness or magic, without
+accepting the discipline of art or reason. Now, at the close of the
+first part, he has drained this poisoned life to the dregs, and the
+fever into which he falls carries him of itself into a new existence. He
+is not grown better or more reasonable; he is simply starting afresh,
+like a new day or a new person. It contains, however, the fundamental
+part of his character; his will remains wayward, but indomitable, and
+his achievements remain fruitless. Only he will henceforth be romantic
+on a broader stage, that of history and civilization; and his magic
+will summon before him illusions somewhat more intellectual,
+counterfeits of beauty and of power. His old loves have blown over, like
+the storms of a bygone year; and with only a dreamlike memory of his
+past errors, he goes forth to meet a new day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Among the allurements which, in the old legend, prompted Faust to sell
+his soul to the devil, one was the beauty of woman. The poor recluse,
+grown gray among his parchments, had never noticed real women, or had
+not found them beautiful. Pedantic child that he was, when he thought of
+the beauty of woman, he thought only of Helen of Troy. And Helen, to the
+Faust of the legend, was simply what Venus might be to Tannhaeuser,--a
+woman more ravishing than other ravishing women. She was the supreme
+instance of a vulgar thing. The young Goethe, however, who was a poet
+and a true German, and loved with his soul, was not attracted by this
+ideal. He gave his Faust a tenderer love,--a love of the heart as well
+as of the senses. Later, also, when Goethe took up the old legend again
+in a more antiquarian spirit, and restored Helen to her place in it, he
+transformed her from a symbol of feminine beauty alone into a symbol for
+all beauty, and especially for the highest beauty, that of Hellas. The
+second love of Faust is the passion for classicism.
+
+This passion in a romantic age is not so paradoxical as it may sound.
+Winckelmann and the philologians were restoring something ancient. It
+was the romantic passion for all experience--for the faded experience of
+the ancients also--that made, for them, the poetry and the charm of
+antiquity. How dignified everything was in those heroic days! How noble,
+serene, and abstracted! How pure the blind eyes of statues, how chaste
+the white folds of the marble drapery! Greece was a remote, fascinating
+vision, the most romantic thing in the history of mankind. The sad,
+delicious emotion one felt before a ruined temple was as sentimental as
+anything one could feel before a ruined castle, but more elegant and
+more choice. It was sentimentality in marble. The heroes of the _Iliad_
+were idealized in the same way as the savages of Rousseau were
+idealized, or as the robbers of Schiller.
+
+The romantic classicism of the Napoleonic era lies between the polite
+classicism of the French seventeenth century and the archaeological
+classicism of our present Grecians. French classicism had been quite
+indifferent to the picturesque aspects of ancient life; it could
+tolerate on the stage an Achilles in a periwig and laces. What the
+French tragedians had adopted from the ancients was something inward, a
+standard of character and motive, or a criterion of taste. They studied
+harmony and restraint, not because these had been Greek qualities, but
+because they were qualities essentially reasonable and beautiful,
+naturally belonging, even in modern times, to a cultivated society and a
+cultivated poet. Again, the admiration for Greece which is common in our
+time among people of judgement differs from that of Goethe and his age;
+for if we admire the artistic expression of ancient life in poetry or
+sculpture, we know that these manifestations were made possible by a
+long political and moral discipline, and that, in spite of that
+discipline, ancient art remained very mixed, and often grotesque and
+impure.
+
+For Goethe, however, as for Byron, Greece was less a past civilization,
+to be studied scientifically, than a living idea, a summons to new forms
+of art and of sentiment. Goethe was never so romantic as when he was
+classical. His distichs are like theatrical gestures; he feels the sweep
+of his toga as he rounds them off. His Iphigenia is a sentimental
+dream--_verflucht human_, as he himself came to feel; and his Helena is
+an evocation of magic, magical not merely by accident and in the story,
+but essentially so, in her ghostly semi-consciousness and glassy beauty.
+The apparent incongruities of the scenes in which she appears,
+surrounded by German knights in the court of a feudal castle, are not
+real incongruities. For this Helen is not a thing of the past; she is
+the present dream and affectation of things classical in a romantic
+era. Faust and his vassals offer Helen the most chivalrous and
+exaggerated homage; they introduce her, as a play queen, into their
+society. Faust retires with her to Arcadia,--the land of intentional and
+mid-summer idleness. Here a son, Euphorion, is born to them, a young
+genius, classic in aspect, but wildly romantic and ungovernable in
+temper. He scales the highest peaks, pursues by preference the nymphs
+that flee from him, loves violence and unreason, and finally, thinking
+to fly, falls headlong, like Icarus, and perishes. His last words call
+his mother after him, and she follows, leaving her veil and mantle
+behind, as Euphorion had left his lyre. On the mantle of Helen, which
+swells into a cloud, Faust is borne back again to his native Germany;
+its virtue, as he learns, is to lift him above all commonness.
+
+This long allegory is charming enough, as a series of pictures and
+melodies, to leave the reader content not to interpret it; yet the
+intention of the poet is clear, if we care to disentangle it. By going
+down into the bowels of nature, where the earth goddesses dwell, who are
+the first mothers of all life and of all civilizations alike, we may
+gather intelligence to comprehend even the most alien existence. Greece,
+after such a reversion to the elemental, will appear to us in her
+unmatched simplicity and beauty. The vision will be granted us, although
+the object we see belongs to a distant past; and if our enthusiasm,
+like that of Faust, is passionate and indomitable, we may actually
+persuade the Queen of the Dead to yield up Helen that we may wed her.
+Our scholarship and philosophy, our faithful imitation of Greek art and
+literature, may actually render the Greek scene familiar to us. Yet the
+setting of this recovered genius will still be modern; it will become
+half modern itself; we shall have to teach Helen to rhyme. The product
+of this hybrid inspiration will be a romantic soul in the garb of
+classicism, a lovely wild thing, fated to die young. When this
+enthusiasm has dashed itself against the hard conditions of life, the
+beauty of Greece, that was its mother, will also pale before our eyes.
+We shall be, perforce, content to let it return to the realm of
+irrevocable past things. Only its garment, the monuments of its art and
+thought, will remain to raise us, if we have loved them, above all
+vulgarity in taste and in moral allegiance.
+
+It is an evidence of Goethe's great wisdom that he felt that romantic
+classicism must be subordinated or abandoned; that Helen must evaporate,
+while Faust returned to Germany and to the feeling that after all
+Gretchen was his true love.[17] At the same time the issue of this
+wonderful episode is a little disappointing. At the beginning, the
+vision of Helen in a mirror had inspired Faust with renewed enthusiasm.
+The sight of her again, in the magic play, had altogether enraptured
+and overwhelmed him; and this inspiration had come just when, after the
+death of Gretchen, he had resolved to pursue not all experience, as at
+first, but rather the best, experience,[18]--a hint that the
+transformations of Faust's will were expected somehow to constitute a
+real progress. There was, indeed, among mortals such an infinite need of
+this incomparable and symbolic Helen, that it could move the very
+guardians of the dead to mercy and to tears. When we remember all this,
+we have some reason to expect that a great and permanent improvement in
+the life and heart of our hero should follow on his obtaining so rare a
+boon. But to live within Arcadia Helen was not needed; any Phyllis would
+have served.
+
+Helen, to be sure, leaves some relics behind, by which we may understand
+that the influence of Greek history, literature, and sculpture may still
+avail to cultivate the mind and give it an air of distinction. Perhaps
+in the commonwealth he is about to found, Faust would wish to establish
+not only dykes and freedom, but also professorships of Greek and
+archaeological museums. And the lyre of Euphorion, which is also left
+us, may signify that poems like Byron's _Isles of Greece_, Keats's
+_Grecian Urn, Die Goetter Griechenlands_ of Schiller, and Goethe's own
+classical pieces will continue to enrich European literature. This is
+something, but not enough to lift Faust's immense enthusiasm for Helen
+above a crass illusion. That dream of a perfect beauty to be achieved,
+of a perfect life to be lived according to nature and reason, would have
+ended in a little scholarship and a little pedantry. Faust would have
+won Helen in order to hand her over to Wagner.
+
+Helen was queen of Sparta; and although of course the Doric Sparta of
+Lycurgus was something much later, and had nothing to do with the Sparta
+of Homer, yet taken symbolically it is the happiest accident that Helen,
+the type of Greek perfection in beauty, should have been queen of
+Sparta, the type of Greek perfection in discipline. A Faust that had,
+truly deserved and understood Helen would have built her an Hellenic
+city; he would have become himself an [Greek: _anaks androon_, a master
+of men, one of those poets in things, those shapers of well-bred
+generations and wise laws, of which Plato speaks, contrasting them with
+Homer and other poets in words only. For the beauty of mind and body
+that fascinates the romantic classicist, and which inspired the ancient
+poets themselves, was not a product of idleness and sentimentality, nor
+of material and forced activity; it was a product of orderly war,
+religion, gymnastics, and deliberate self-government.
+
+The next turn in Faust's fortunes actually finds him a trader, a
+statesman, an empire-builder; and if such a rolling stone could gather
+any moss, we should expect to see here, if anywhere, the fruits of that
+"aesthetic education of mankind" which Helen represented. We should
+expect Faust, who had lain in the lap of absolute beauty, to understand
+its nature. We should expect him, in eager search after perfection, to
+establish his state on the distinction between the better and the
+worse,--a distinction never to be abolished or obscured for one who has
+loved beauty. In other words, he might have established a moral society
+founding it on great renunciations and on enlightened heroisms, so that
+the highest beauty might really come down and dwell within that city.
+But we find nothing of the sort. Faust founds his kingdom because he
+must do something; and his only ideal of what he hopes to secure for his
+subjects is that they shall always have something to do. Thus the will
+to live, in Faust, is not in the least educated by his experience. It
+changes its objects because it must; the passions of youth yield to
+those of age; and among all the illusions of his life the most fatuous
+is the illusion of progress.
+
+It is characteristic of the absolute romantic spirit that when it has
+finished with something it must invent a new interest. It beats the bush
+for fresh game; it is always on the verge of being utterly bored. So
+now that Helen is flown, Mephistopheles must come to the rescue, like an
+amiable nurse, and propose all sorts of pastimes. Frankfort, Leipzig,
+Paris, Versailles, are described, with the entertainments that life
+there might afford; but Faust, who was always _difficile_, has been
+rendered more so by his recent splendid adventures. However, a new
+impulse suddenly arises in his breast. From the mountain-top to which
+Helen's mantle has borne him, he can see the German Ocean, with its
+tides daily covering great stretches of the flat shore, and rendering
+them brackish and uninhabitable. It would be a fine thing to reclaim
+those wastes, to plant there a prosperous population. After Greece,
+Faust has a vision of Holland.
+
+This last ambition of Faust's is as romantic as the others. He feels the
+prompting towards political art, as he had felt the prompting towards
+love or beauty.[19] The notion of transforming things by his will, of
+leaving for ages his mark upon nature and upon human society, fascinates
+him;[20] but this passion for activity and power, which some
+simple-minded commentators dignify with the name of altruism and of
+living for others, has no steady purpose or standard about it.[21]
+Goethe is especially lavish in details to prove this point. Magic, the
+exercise of an unteachable will, is still Faust's instrument.
+Mephistopheles, by various arts of illusion, secures the triumph of the
+emperor in a desperate war which he is carrying on against a justifiable
+insurrection. As a reward for the aid rendered, Faust receives the shore
+marches in fief. The necessary dykes and canals are built by magic; the
+spirits that Mephistopheles commands dig and build them with strange
+incantations. The commerce that springs up is also illegitimate: piracy
+is involved in it.
+
+Nor is this all. On some sand-dunes that diversified the original beach,
+an old man and his wife, Philemon and Baucis, lived before the advent of
+Faust and his improvements. On the hillock, besides their cottage, there
+stood a small chapel, with a bell which disturbed Faust in his newly
+built palace, partly by its importunate sound, partly by its Christian
+suggestions, and partly by reminding him that he was not master of the
+country altogether, and that something existed in it not the product of
+his magical will. The old people would not sell out; and in a fit of
+impatience Faust orders that they should be evicted by force, and
+transferred to a better dwelling elsewhere. Mephistopheles and his
+minions execute these orders somewhat roughly: the cottage and chapel
+are set on fire, and Philemon and Baucis are consumed in the flames, or
+buried in the ruins.
+
+Faust regrets this accident; but it is one of those inevitable
+developments of action which a brave man must face, and forget as soon
+as possible. He had regretted in the same way the unhappiness of
+Gretchen, and, presumably, the death of Euphorion; but such is romantic
+life. His will, though shaken, is not extinguished by such
+misadventures. He would continue, if life could last, doing things that,
+in some respect, he would be obliged to regret: but he would banish that
+regret easily, in the pursuit of some new interest, and, on the whole,
+he would not regret having been obliged to regret them. Otherwise, he
+would not have shared the whole experience of mankind, but missed the
+important experience of self-accusation and of self-recovery.
+
+It is impossible to suppose that the citizens he is establishing behind
+leaky dykes, so that they may always have something to keep them busy,
+would have given him unmixed satisfaction if he could really have
+foreseen their career in its concrete details. Holland is an
+interesting country, but hardly a spectacle which would long entrance an
+idealist like Faust, so exacting that he has found the arts and sciences
+wholly vain, domesticity impossible, and kitchens and beer-cellars
+beneath consideration. The career of Faust himself had been far more
+free and active than that of his industrious burghers could ever hope to
+be. His interest in establishing them is a masterful, irresponsible
+interest. It is one more arbitrary passion, one more selfish illusion.
+As he had no conscience in his love, and sought and secured nobody's
+happiness, so he has no conscience in his ambition and in his political
+architecture; but if only his will is done, he does not ask whether,
+judged by its fruits, it will be worth doing. As his immense dejection
+at the beginning, when he was a doctor in his laboratory, was not
+founded on any real misfortune, but on restlessness and a vague infinite
+ambition, so his ultimate satisfaction in his work is not founded on any
+good done, but on a passionate wilfulness. He calls the thing he wants
+for others good, because he now wants to bestow it on them, not because
+they naturally want it for themselves. Incapable of sympathy, he has a
+momentary pleasure in policy; and in the last and "highest" expression
+of his will, in his statesmanship and supposed public spirit, he remains
+romantic and, if need be, aggressive and criminal.
+
+Meantime, his end is approaching. The smoke from that poor little
+conflagration turns into shadowy-shapes of want, guilt, care, and death,
+which come and hover about him. Want is kept off by his wealth, and
+guilt is transcended by his romantic courage. But care slips through the
+keyhole, breathes upon him, and blinds him; while death, though he does
+not see it, follows close upon his heels. Nevertheless, the old
+man--Faust is in his hundredth year--is undaunted, and all his thoughts
+are intent on the future, on the work to which he has set his hand. He
+orders the digging to proceed on the canals he is building; but the
+spirits that seem to obey him are getting out of hand, and dig his grave
+instead.
+
+When he feels death upon him, Faust has one of his most splendid moments
+of self-assertion. He has stormed through the world, he says, taking
+with equal thanks the buffets and rewards of fortune;[22] and the last
+word of wisdom he has learned is that no man deserves life or freedom
+who does not daily win them anew. He will leave the dykes he has thrown
+up against the sea to protect the nation he has established; a symbol
+that their health and freedom must consist in perpetual striving against
+an indomitable foe. The thought of many generations living in that
+wholesome danger and labour fills him with satisfaction; he could almost
+say to this moment, in which that prospect opens before his mind's eye,
+"Stay, thou art so fair."[23] And with these words--a last challenge and
+mock surrender to Mephistopheles--he sinks into the grave open at his
+feet.
+
+Who has won the wager? Faust has almost, though not quite, pronounced
+the words which were to give Mephistopheles the victory; but the sense
+of them is new, and Mephistopheles has not succeeded in making Faust
+surrender his will to will, his indefinite idealism. Since what
+satisfies Faust is merely the consciousness that this will to will is to
+be maintained, and that neither he, nor the colonists he has brought
+into being, will ever lick the dust, and take comfort, without any
+further aspiration, in the chance pleasures of the moment. Faust has
+maintained his enthusiasm for a stormy, difficult, and endless life. He
+has been true to his romantic philosophy.
+
+He is therefore saved, in the sense in which salvation is defined in the
+_Prologue in Heaven_, and presently again in the song of the angels that
+receive his soul when they say: "Whosoever is unflagging in his
+striving for ever, him we can redeem."[24] This salvation does not hang
+on any improvement in Faust's character,--he was sinful to the end, and
+had been God's unwitting servant from the very beginning,--nor does it
+lie in any revolution in his fortunes, as if in heaven he were to be
+differently employed than on earth. He is going to teach life to the
+souls of young boys, who have died too soon to have had in their own
+persons any experience of Rathskellers, Gretchens, Helens, and
+Walpurgisnachts.[25] Teaching (though not exactly in these subjects) had
+been Doctor Faustus' original profession; and the weariness of it was
+what had driven him to magic and almost to suicide, until he had escaped
+into the great world of adventure outside. Certainly, with his new
+pupils he will not be more content; his romantic restlessness will not
+forsake him in heaven. Some fine day he will throw his celestial
+school-books out of the window, and with his pupils after him, go forth
+to taste life in some windier region of the clouds.
+
+No, Faust is not saved in the sense of being sanctified or brought to a
+final, eternal state of bliss. The only improvement in his nature has
+been that he has passed, at the beginning of the second part, from
+private to public activities. If, at the end of this part, he expresses
+a wish to abandon magic and to live like a man among men, in the bosom
+of real nature, that wish remains merely Platonic.[26] It is a thought
+that visited Goethe often during his long career, that it is the part of
+wisdom to accept life under natural conditions rather than to pretend to
+evoke the conditions of life out of the will to live. This thought, were
+it held steadfastly, would constitute an advance from transcendentalism
+to naturalism. But the spirit of nature is itself romantic. It lives
+spontaneously, bravely, without premeditation, and for the sake of
+living rather than of enjoying or attaining anything final. And under
+natural conditions, the vicissitudes of an endless life would be many;
+and there could be no question of an ultimate goal, nor even of an
+endless progress in any particular direction. The veering of life is
+part of its vitality,--it is essential to romantic irony and to romantic
+pluck.
+
+The secret of what is serious in the moral of _Faust_ is to be looked
+for in Spinoza,--the source of what is serious in the philosophy of
+Goethe. Spinoza has an admirable doctrine, or rather insight, which he
+calls seeing things under the form of eternity. This faculty is
+fundamental in the human mind; ordinary perception and memory are cases
+of it. Therefore, when we use it to deal with ultimate issues, we are
+not alienated from experience, but, on the contrary, endowed with
+experience and with its fruits. A thing is seen under the form of
+eternity when all its parts or stages are conceived in their true
+relations, and thereby conceived together. The complete biography of
+Caesar is Caesar seen under the form of eternity. Now the complete
+biography of Faust, Faust seen under the form of eternity, shows forth
+his salvation. God and Faust himself, in his last moment of insight, see
+that to have led such a life, in such a spirit, _was_ to be saved; it
+was to be the sort of man a man should be. The blots on that life were
+helpful and necessary blots; the passions of it were necessary and
+creative passions. To have felt such perpetual dissatisfaction is truly
+satisfactory; such desire for universal experience is the right
+experience. You are saved in that you lived well; saved not after you
+have stopped living well, but during the whole process. Your destiny has
+been to be the servant of God. That God and your own conscience should
+pronounce this sentence is your true salvation. Your worthiness is
+thereby established under the form of eternity.
+
+The play, in its philosophic development, ends here; but Goethe added
+several more details and scenes, with that abundance, that love, of
+symbolic pictures and poetic epigrams which characterizes the whole
+second part. As Faust expires, or rather before he does so,
+Mephistopheles posts one of his little demons at each aperture of the
+hero's body, lest the soul should slip out without being caught. At the
+same time a bevy of angels descends, scattering the red roses of love
+and singing its praises. These roses, if they touch Mephistopheles and
+his demons, turn to balls of fire; and although fire is their familiar
+element, they are scorched and scared away. The angels are thus enabled
+to catch the soul of Faust at their leisure, and bear it away
+triumphantly.
+
+It goes without saying that this fight of little boys over a fluttering
+butterfly cannot be what really determines the issue of the wager and
+the salvation of Faust; but Goethe, in his conversations with Eckermann,
+justifies this intervention of a sort of mechanical accident, by the
+analogy of Christian doctrine. Grace is needed, besides virtue; and the
+intercession of Gretchen and the Virgin Mary, like that of the Virgin
+Mary, Lucia, and Beatrice, in Dante's case, and the stratagem of the
+balls of fire, all stand for this external condition of salvation.
+
+This intervention of grace is, at bottom, only a new symbol for the
+essential justification, under the form of eternity, of what is
+imperfect and insufficient in time. The chequered and wilful life of
+Faust is not righteous in any of its parts; yet righteousness is
+imputed to it as a whole; divine love accepts it as sufficient;
+speculative reason declares that to be the best possible life which, to
+humdrum understanding, seems a series of faults and of failures. If the
+foretaste of his new Holland fills, from a distance, the dying Faust
+with satisfaction, how much more must the wonderful career of Faust
+himself deserve to be accepted and envied, and proclaimed to be its own
+excuse for being! The faults of Faust in time are not counted against
+him in eternity. His crimes and follies were blessings in disguise. Did
+they not render his life interesting and fit to make a poem of? Was it
+not by falling into them, and rising out of them, that Faust was Faust
+at all? This insight is the higher reason, the divine love, supervening
+to save him. What ought to be imperfect in time is, i because of its
+very imperfection there, perfect when I viewed under the form of
+eternity. To live, to live just as we do, that--if we could only realize
+it--is the purpose and the crown of living. We must seek improvement; we
+must be dissatisfied with ourselves; that is the appointed attitude, the
+histrionic pose, that is to keep the ball rolling. But while we feel
+this dissatisfaction we are perfectly satisfactory, and while we play
+our game and constantly lose it, we are winning the game for God.
+
+Even this scene, however, did not satisfy the prolific fancy of the
+poet, and he added a final one,--the apotheosis or _Himmelfahrt_ of
+Faust. In the Campo Santo at Pisa Goethe had seen a fresco representing
+various anchorites dwelling on the flanks of some sacred
+mountain,--Sinai, Carmel, or Athos,--each in his little cave or
+hermitage; and above them, in the large space of sky, flights of angels
+were seen rising towards the Madonna. Through such a landscape the poet
+now shows us the soul of Faust carried slowly upwards.
+
+This scene has been regarded as inspired by Catholic ideas, whereas the
+_Prologue in Heaven_ was Biblical and Protestant; and Goethe himself
+says that his "poetic intention" could best be rendered by images
+borrowed from the tradition of the mediaeval church. But in truth there
+is nothing Catholic about the scene, except the names or titles of the
+personages. What they say is all sentimental landscape-painting or vague
+mysticism, such as might go with any somewhat nebulous piety; and much
+is actually borrowed from Swedenborg. What is Swedenborgian,
+however,--such as the notion of heavenly instruction, passage from
+sphere to sphere, and looking through other people's eyes,--is in turn a
+mere form of expression. The "poetic intention" of the author is, as we
+have seen, altogether Spinozitic. Undoubtedly he conceives that the soul
+of Faust is to pass, in another world, through some new series of
+experiences. But that destiny is not his salvation; it is the
+continuance of his trial. The famous chorus at the very end repeats,
+with an interesting variation, the same contrast we have seen before
+between the point of view of time and that of eternity. Everything
+transitory, says the mystic chorus,[27] is only an image; here (that is,
+under the form of eternity) the insufficient is turned into something
+actual and complete; and what seemed in experience an endless pursuit
+becomes to speculation a perfect fulfilment. The ideal of something
+infinitely attractive and essentially inexhaustible--the eternal
+feminine, as Goethe calls it--draws life on from stage to stage.
+
+Gretchen and Helen had been symbols of this ideal; Goethe's green old
+age had felt, to the very last, the charm of woman, the sweetness and
+the sorrow of loving what he could not hope to possess, and what, in its
+ideal perfection, necessarily eludes possession. He had reconciled
+himself, not without tears, to this desire without hope, and, like
+Piccarda in the _Paradiso_, he had blessed the hand that gave the
+passion and denied the happiness.[28] Thus, in dreaming of one
+satisfaction and renouncing it, he had found a satisfaction of another
+kind. _Faust_ ends on the same philosophical level on which it
+began,--the level of romanticism. The worth of life lies in pursuit, not
+in attainment therefore, everything is worth pursuing, and nothing
+brings satisfaction--save this endless destiny itself.
+
+Such is the official moral of _Faust_, and what we may call its general
+philosophy. But, as we saw just now, this moral is only an afterthought,
+and is far from exhausting the philosophic ideas which the poem
+contains. Here is a scheme for experience; but experience, in filling it
+out, opens up many vistas; and some of these reveal deeper and higher
+things than experience itself. The path of the pilgrim and the inns he
+stops at are neither the whole landscape he sees as he travels, nor the
+true shrine he is making for. And the incidental philosophy or
+philosophies of Goethe's _Faust_ are, to my mind, often better than its
+ultimate philosophy. The first scene of the second part, for instance,
+is better, poetically and philosophically, than the last. It shows a
+deeper sense for the realities of nature and of the soul, and it is
+more sincere. Goethe there is interpreting nature with Spinoza; he is
+not dreaming with Swedenborg, nor talking equivocal paradoxes with
+Hegel.
+
+In fact, the great merit of the romantic attitude in poetry, and of the
+transcendental method in philosophy, is that they put us back at the
+beginning of our experience. They disintegrate convention, which is
+often cumbrous and confused, and restore us to ourselves, to immediate
+perception and primordial will. That, as it would seem, is the true and
+inevitable starting-point. Had we not been born, had we not peeped into
+this world, each out of his personal eggshell, this world might indeed
+have existed without us, as a thousand undiscoverable worlds may now
+exist; but for us it would not have existed. This obvious truth would
+not need to be insisted on but for two reasons: one that conventional
+knowledge, such as our notions of science and morality afford, is often
+top-heavy; asserts and imposes on us much more than our experience
+warrants,--our experience, which is our only approach to reality. The
+other reason is the reverse or counterpart of this; for conventional
+knowledge often ignores and seems to suppress parts of experience no
+less actual and important for us as those parts on which the
+conventional knowledge itself is reared. The public world is too narrow
+for the soul, as well as too mythical and fabulous. Hence the double
+critical labour and reawakening which romantic reflection is good
+for,--to cut off the dead branches and feed the starving shoots. This
+philosophy, as Kant said, is a cathartic: it is purgative and
+liberating; it is intended to make us start afresh and start right.
+
+It follows that one who has no sympathy with such a philosophy is a
+comparatively conventional person. He has a second-hand mind. Faust has
+a first-hand mind, a truly free, sincere, courageous soul. It follows
+also, however, that one who has no philosophy but this has no wisdom; he
+can say nothing that is worth carrying away; everything in him is
+attitude and nothing is achievement. Faust, and especially
+Mephistopheles, do have other philosophies on top of their
+transcendentalism; for this is only a method, to be used in reaching
+conclusions that shall be critically safeguarded and empirically
+grounded. Such outlooks, such vistas into nature, are scattered
+liberally through the pages of _Faust_. Words of wisdom diversify this
+career of folly, as exquisite scenes fill this tortuous and overloaded
+drama. The mind has become free and sincere, but it has remained
+bewildered.
+
+The literary merits of Goethe's _Faust_ correspond accurately with its
+philosophical excellences. In the prologue in the theatre Goethe himself
+has described them; much scenery, much wisdom, some folly, great wealth
+of incident and characterization; and behind, the soul of a poet singing
+with all sincerity and fervour the visions of his life. Here is
+profundity, inwardness, honesty, waywardness; here are the most touching
+accents of nature, and the most varied assortment of curious lore and
+grotesque fancies. This work, says Goethe (in a quatrain intended as an
+epilogue, but not ultimately inserted in the play),--this work is like
+human life: it has a beginning, it has an end; but it has no totality,
+it is not one whole.[29] How, indeed, should we draw the sum of an
+infinite experience that is without conditions to determine it, and
+without goals in which it terminates? Evidently all a poet of pure
+experience can do is to represent some snatches of it, more or less
+prolonged; and the more prolonged the experience represented is the more
+it will be a collection of snatches, and the less the last part of it
+will have to do with the beginning. Any character which we may attribute
+to the whole of what we have surveyed would fail to dominate it, if that
+whole had been larger, and if we had had memory or foresight enough to
+include other parts of experience differing altogether in kind from the
+episodes we happen to have lived through. To be miscellaneous, to be
+indefinite, to be unfinished, is essential to the romantic life. May we
+not say that it is essential to all life, in its immediacy; and that
+only in reference to what is not life--to objects, ideals, and
+unanimities that cannot be experienced but may only be conceived--can
+life become rational and truly progressive? Herein we may see the
+radical and inalienable excellence of romanticism; its sincerity,
+freedom, richness, and infinity. Herein, too, we may see its
+limitations, in that it cannot fix or trust any of its ideals, and
+blindly believes the universe to be as wayward as itself, so that nature
+and art are always slipping through its fingers. It is obstinately
+empirical, and will never learn anything from experience.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[1] Eckermann, Conversation of May 6, 1827: "Das ist zwar ein wirksamer,
+manches erklaerender, guter Gedanke, aber es ist keine Idee die dem
+Ganzen ... zugrunde liege."
+
+[2] _Faust_, Part it-i. Act v. 375-82:
+
+ Ich bin nur durch die Welt gerannt;
+ Ein jed' Geluest ergriff ich bei den Haaren,
+ Was nicht genuegte, liess ich fahren,
+ Was mir entwischte, liess ich ziehn.
+ Ich habe nur begehrt und nur vollbracht
+ Und abermals gewuenscht und so mit Macht
+ Mein Leben durchgestuermt; erst gross und maechtig,
+ Nun aber geht es weise, geht bedaechtig.
+
+
+[3] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_, i.:
+
+ Welch Schauspiel! aber, ach! ein Schauspiel nur!
+ Wo fass' ich dich, unendliche Natur?
+ Euch, Brueste, wo?
+
+
+[4] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_:
+
+ Du, Geist der Erde, bist mir naeher;
+ Schon fuehl' ich meine Kraefte hoeher,
+ Schon glueh' ich wie von neuem Wein;
+ Ich fuehle Mut, mich in die Welt zu wagen,
+ Der Erde Weh, der Erde Glueck zu tragen,...
+ Mit Stuermen mich herumzuschlagen
+ Und in des Schiffbruchs Knirschen nicht zu zagen.
+
+
+[5] _Faust, Prolog im Himmel_:
+
+ Mit den Toten
+ Hab' ich mich niemals gern befangen.
+ Am meisten lieb' ich mir die vollen, frischen Wangen.
+ Fuer einen Leichnam bin ich nicht zu Haus;
+ Mir geht es, wie der Katze mit der Maus....
+ Von Sonn' und Welten weiss ich nichts zu sagen,
+ Ich sehe nur, wie sich die Menschen plagen.
+
+
+[6] _Faust, Prolog im Himmel_:
+
+ Staub soll er fressen, und mit Lust.
+
+
+[7] Ibid.:
+
+ Es irrt der Mensch, so lang' er strebt.
+ Ein guter Mensch in seinem dunkeln Drange
+ Ist sich des rechten Weges wohl bewusst.
+
+
+[8] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v.:
+
+ Ja! diesem Sinne bin ich ganz ergeben.
+ Das ist der Weisheit letzter Schluss:
+ Nur der verdient sich Freiheit wie das Leben,
+ Der taeglich sie erobern muss.
+
+
+
+[9] Ibid., Part i., _Prolog im Himmel_:
+
+ Des Menschen Thaetigkeit kann allzu leicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich gem ihm den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel schaffen.
+
+
+
+[10] Ibid.:
+
+ Das Werdende, das ewig wirkt und lebt,
+ Umfass' euch mit der Liebe holden Schranken,
+ Und was in schwankender Erscheinung schwebt,
+ Befestiget mit dauernden Gedanken!
+
+
+[11] _Faust_, Part i., _Wald und Hoehle_:
+
+ Erhabner Geist, du gabst mir, gabst mir alles,
+ Warum ich bat. Du hast mir nicht umsonst
+ Dein Angesicht im Feuer zugewendet....
+ O, dass dem Menschen nichts Vollkommnes wird,
+ Empfind' ich nun. Du gabst zu dieser Wonne,
+ Die mich den Goettern nah und naeher bringt,
+ Mir den Gefaehrten, &c.
+
+Also, ibid., _Trueber Tag_: Grosser herrlicher Geist, der du mir zu
+erscheinen wuerdigtest, der du mein Herz kennest und meine Seele, warum
+an den Schandgesellen mich Schmieden, der sich am Schaden weidet und am
+Verderben sich letzt?
+
+[12] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_, ii.:
+
+ Ich bin der Geist, der stets verneint!
+ Und das mit Recht; denn alles, was entsteht,
+ Ist wert, dass es zu Grunde geht;,
+ Drum besser waer's, dass nichts entstuende....
+ Ich bin ein Teil des Teils, der anfangs alles war,
+ Ein Teil der Finsternis, die sich das Licht gebar....
+ Was sich dem Nichts entgegenstellt,
+ Das Etwas, diese plumpe Welt,
+ So viel als ich schon unternommen,
+ Ich wusste nicht ihr beizukommen....
+ Wie viele hab' ich schon begraben!
+ Und immer cirkuliert ein neues, frisches Blut.
+ So geht es fort, man moechte rasend werden!
+
+
+[13] _Faust_, Part ii. Act i., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Kleiner Elfen Geistergroesse
+ Eilet, we sie helfen kann;
+ Ob er heilig, ob er boese,
+ Jammert sie der Ungluecksmann.
+
+
+[14] _Faust_, Part ii. Act i., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Alles kann der Edle leisten,
+ Der versteht und rasch ergreift.
+
+The whole scene will repay study.
+
+[15] _Faust_, Part ii. Act i., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Des Lebens Fackel wollten wir entzuenden,
+ Ein Feuermeer umschlingt uns, welch ein Feuer!...
+ So bleibe denn die Sonne mir im Ruecken!
+ Der Wassersturz, das Felsenriff durchbrausend,
+ Ihn schau' ich an mit wachsendem Entzuecken....
+ Allein wie herrlich, diesem Sturm erspriessend,
+ Wolbt sich des bunten Bogens Wechseldauer,...
+ Der spiegelt ab das menschliche Bestreben....
+ Am farbigen Abglanz haben wir das Leben.
+
+
+[16] _Faust_, Part i., _Studierzimmer_:
+
+ Ins hohe Meer werd' ich hinausgewiesen,...
+ Zu neuen Sphaeren reiner Thaetigkeit....
+ Hier ist es Zeit, durch Thaten zu beweisen,
+ Dass Manneswuerde nicht der Goetterhoehe weicht,...
+ Zu diesem Schritt sich heiter zu entschliessen
+ Und war' es mit Gefahr, ins Nichts dahin zu fliessen.
+
+
+[17] _Faust_, Part ii. Act iv., _Hochgebirg_: The first monologue.
+
+
+[18] _Faust_, Part i, Act ii., _Anmutige Gegend_:
+
+ Du, Erde,... regst und ruehrst ein kraftiges Beschliessen
+ Zum hoechsten Dasein immerfort zu streben.
+
+
+[19] _Faust_, Part ii. Act iv., _Hochgebirg_:
+
+ Erstaunenswuerdiges soll geraten,
+ Ich fuehle Kraft zu kuehnem Fleiss.
+ Herrschaft gewinn' ich, Eigentum!
+ Die That ist alles, nichts der Ruhm.
+ Da wagt mein Geist, sich selbst zu ueberfliegen;
+ Hier moecht' ich kaempfen, dies moecht' ich besiegen.
+
+
+[20] Ibid., Act v., _Grosser Vorhof des Palasts_:
+
+ Es kann die Spur von meinen Erdetagen
+ Nicht in Aeonen untergehn.
+
+
+[21] _Faust_, Part ii. Act iv., _Hochgebirg_:
+
+ Wer befehlen soll
+ Muss im Befehlen Seligkeit empfinden.
+ Ihm ist die Brust von hohem Willen voll,
+ Doch was er will, es darf's kein Mensch ergruenden.
+
+
+[22] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Mitternacht_:
+
+ Ich bin nur durch die Welt gerannt:
+ Ein jed' Geluest ergriff ich bei den Haaren,
+ Was nicht genuegte, liess ich fahren,
+ Was mich entwischte, liess ich ziehn.
+
+
+[23] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Grosser Vorhof des Palasts_:
+
+ Solch ein Gewimmel moecht ich sehn,
+ Auf freiem Grund mit freiem Volke stehn.
+ Zum Augenblicke duerft' ich sagen:
+ Verweile doch, du bist so schoen!
+
+
+[24] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Himmel_:
+
+ Wer immer strebend sich bemueht,
+ Den konnen wir erloesen.
+
+
+[25] Ibid.:
+
+ Wir wurden frueh entfernt
+ Von Lebechoeren;
+ Doch dieser hat gelernt,
+ Er wird uns lehren.
+
+
+[26] _Faust_, Part ii. Act v., _Mitternacht_:
+
+ Noch hab' ich mich ins Freie nicht gekaempft.
+ Koennt ich Magie von meinem Pfad entfernen,
+ Die Zaubersprueche ganz und gar verlernen,
+ Stuend' ich, Natur, vor dir ein Mann allein.
+ Da waer's der Muehe wert, ein Mensch zu sein.
+
+
+[27] _Faust_, Part ii, Act v., _Himmel_:
+
+ Alles Vergaengliche
+ Ist nur ein Gleichnis;
+ Das Unzulaengliche,
+ Hier wird's Ereignis;
+ Das Unbeschreibliche,
+ Hier ist es gethan;
+ Das Ewig-Weibliche
+ Zieht uns hinan.
+
+
+[28] Cf. _Trilogie der Leidenschaft_, 1823:
+
+ Mich treibt umher ein unbezwinglich Sehnen;
+ Da bleibt kein Rat als grenzenlose Thraenen....
+ Und so das Herz erleichtert merkt behende
+ Dass es noch lebt und schlaegt und moechte schlagen,...
+ Da fuehlte sich--o, dass es ewig bliebe!--
+ Das Doppelglueck der Toene wie der Liebe.
+
+
+[29] _Aus dem Nachlass, Abkuendigung:_
+
+ Des Menschen Leben ist ein aehnliches Gedicht;
+ Es hat wohl einen Anfang, hat ein Ende,
+ Allein ein Ganzes ist es nicht.
+
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+It may be possible, after studying these three philosophical poets, to
+establish some comparison between them. By a comparison is not meant a
+discussion as to which of our poets is the best. Each is the best in his
+way, and none is the best in every way. To express a preference is not
+so much a criticism as a personal confession. If it were a question of
+the relative pleasure a man might get from each poet in turn, this
+pleasure would differ according to the man's temperament, his period of
+life, the language he knew best, and the doctrine that was most familiar
+to him. By a comparison is meant a review of the analysis we have
+already made of the type of imagination and philosophy embodied in each
+of the poets, to see what they have in common, how they differ, or what
+order they will fall into from different points of view. Thus we have
+just seen that Goethe, in his _Faust_, presents experience in its
+immediacy, variety, and apparent groundlessness; and that he presents it
+as an episode, before and after which other episodes, differing from it
+more and more as you recede, may be conceived to come. There is no
+possible totality in this, for there is no known ground. Turn to
+Lucretius, and the difference is striking. Lucretius is the poet of
+substance. The ground is what he sees everywhere; and by seeing the
+ground, he sees also the possible products of it. Experience appears in
+Lucretius, not as each man comes upon it in his own person, but as the
+scientific observer views it from without. Experience for him is a
+natural, inevitable, monotonous round of feelings, involved in the
+operations of nature. The ground and the limits of experience have
+become evident together.
+
+In Dante, on the other hand, we have a view of experience also in its
+totality, also from above and, in a sense, from outside; but the
+external point of reference is moral, not physical, and what interests
+the poet is what experience is best, what processes lead to a supreme,
+self-justifying, indestructible sort of existence. Goethe is the poet of
+life; Lucretius the poet of nature; Dante the poet of salvation. Goethe
+gives us what is most fundamental,--the turbid flux of sense, the cry of
+the heart, the first tentative notions of art and science, which magic
+or shrewdness might hit upon. Lucretius carries us one step farther. Our
+wisdom ceases to be impressionistic and casual. It rests on
+understanding of things, so that what happiness remains to us does not
+deceive us, and we can possess it in dignity and peace. Knowledge of
+what is possible is the beginning of happiness. Dante, however, carries
+us much farther than that. He, too, has knowledge of what is possible
+and impossible. He has collected the precepts of old philosophers and
+saints, and the more recent examples patent in society around him, and
+by their help has distinguished the ambitions that may be wisely
+indulged in this life from those which it is madness to foster,--the
+first being called virtue and piety and the second folly and sin. What
+makes such knowledge precious is not only that it sketches in general
+the scope and issue of life, but that it paints in the detail as
+well,--the detail of what is possible no less than that (more familiar
+to tragic poets) of what is impossible.
+
+Lucretius' notion, for instance, of what is positively worth while or
+attainable is very meagre: freedom from superstition, with so much
+natural science as may secure that freedom, friendship, and a few cheap
+and healthful animal pleasures. No love, no patriotism, no enterprise,
+no religion. So, too, in what is forbidden us, Lucretius sees only
+generalities,--the folly of passion, the blight of superstition. Dante,
+on the contrary, sees the various pitfalls of life with intense
+distinctness; and seeing them clearly, and how fatal each is, he sees
+also why men fall into them, the dream that leads men astray, and the
+sweetness of those goods that are impossible. Feeling, even in what we
+must ultimately call evil, the soul of good that attracts us to it, he
+feels, in good all its loveliness and variety. Where, except in Dante,
+can we find so many stars that differ from other stars in glory; so
+many delightful habitations for excellences; so many distinct beauties
+of form, accent, thought, and intention; so many delicacies and
+heroisms? Dante is the master of those who know by experience what is
+worth knowing by experience; he is the master of _distinction_.
+
+Here, then, are our three poets and their messages: Goethe, with human
+life in its immediacy, treated romantically; Lucretius, with a vision of
+nature and of the limits of human life; Dante, with spiritual mastery of
+that life, and a perfect knowledge of good and evil.
+
+You may stop at what stage you will, according to your sense of what is
+real and important; for what one man calls higher another man calls
+unreal; and what one man feels to be strength smells rank to another. In
+the end, we should not be satisfied with any one of our poets if we had
+to drop the other two. It is true that taken formally, and in respect to
+their type of philosophy and imagination, Dante is on a higher plane
+than Lucretius, and Lucretius on a higher plane than Goethe. But the
+plane on which a poet dwells is not everything; much depends on what he
+brings up with him to that level. Now there is a great deal, a very
+great deal, in Goethe that Lucretius does not know of. Not knowing of
+it, Lucretius cannot carry this fund of experience up to the
+intellectual and naturalistic level; he cannot transmute this abundant
+substance of Goethe's by his higher insight and clearer faith; he has
+not woven so much into his poem. So that while to see nature, as
+Lucretius sees it, is a greater feat than merely to live hard in a
+romantic fashion, and produces a purer and more exalted poem than
+Goethe's magical medley, yet this medley is full of images, passions,
+memories, and introspective wisdom that Lucretius could not have dreamed
+of. The intellect of Lucretius rises, but rises comparatively empty; his
+vision sees things as a whole, and in their right places, but sees very
+little of them; he is quite deaf to their intricacy, to their birdlike
+multiform little souls. These Goethe knows admirably; with these he
+makes a natural concert, all the more natural for being sometimes
+discordant, sometimes overloaded and dull. It is necessary to revert
+from Lucretius to Goethe to get at the volume of life.
+
+So, too, if we rise from Lucretius to Dante, there is much left behind
+which we cannot afford to lose. Dante may seem at first sight to have a
+view of nature not less complete and clear than that of Lucretius; a
+view even more efficacious than materialism for fixing the limits of
+human destiny and marking the path to happiness. But there is an
+illusion here. Dante's, idea of nature is not genuine; it is not
+sincerely put together out of reasoned observation. It is a view of
+nature intercepted by myths and worked out by dialectic. Consequently,
+he has no true idea either of the path to happiness or of its real
+conditions. His notion of nature is an inverted image of the moral
+world, cast like a gigantic shadow upon the sky. It is a mirage.
+
+Now, while to know evil, and especially good, in all their forms and
+inward implications is a far greater thing than to know the natural
+conditions of good and evil, or their real distribution in space and
+time, yet the higher philosophy is not safe if the lower philosophy is
+wanting or is false. Of course it is not safe practically; but it is not
+safe even poetically. There is an attenuated texture and imagery in the
+_Divine Comedy_. The voice that sings it, from beginning to end, is a
+thin boy-treble, all wonder and naivete. This art does not smack of
+life, but of somnambulism. The reason is that the intellect has been
+hypnotized by a legendary and verbal philosophy. It has been unmanned,
+curiously enough, by an excess of humanism; by the fond delusion that
+man and his moral nature are at the centre of the universe. Dante is
+always thinking of the divine order of history and of the spheres; he
+believes in controlling and chastening the individual soul; so that he
+seems to be a cosmic poet, and to have escaped the anthropocentric
+conceit of romanticism. But he has not escaped it. For, as we have seen,
+this golden cage in which his soul sings is artificial; it is
+constructed on purpose to satisfy and glorify human distinctions and
+human preferences. The bird is not in his native wilds; man is not in
+the bosom of nature. He is, in a moral sense, still at the centre of the
+universe; his ideal is the cause of everything. He is the appointed lord
+of the earth, the darling of heaven; and history is a brief and
+prearranged drama, with Judea and Rome for its chief theatre.
+
+Some of these illusions are already abandoned; all are undermined.
+Sometimes, in moments when we are unnerved and uninspired, we may regret
+the ease with which Dante could reconcile himself to a world, so
+imagined as to suit human fancy, and flatter human will. We may envy
+Dante his ignorance of nature, which enabled him to suppose that he
+dominated it, as an infinite and exuberant nature cannot be dominated by
+any of its parts. In the end, however, knowledge is good for the
+imagination. Dante himself thought so; and his work proved that he was
+right, by infinitely excelling that of all ignorant contemporary poets.
+The illusion of knowledge is better than ignorance for a poet; but the
+reality of knowledge would be better than the illusion; it would stretch
+the mind over a vaster and more stimulating scene; it would concentrate
+the will upon a more attainable, distinct, and congenial happiness. The
+growth of what is known increases the scope of what may be imagined and
+hoped for. Throw open to the young poet the infinity of nature; let him
+feel the precariousness of life, the variety of purposes, civilizations,
+and religions even upon this little planet; let him trace the triumphs
+and follies of art and philosophy, and their perpetual resurrections
+--like that of the downcast Faust. If, under the stimulus of such a
+scene, he does not some day compose a natural comedy as much surpassing
+Dante's divine comedy in sublimity and richness as it will surpass it in
+truth, the fault will not lie with the subject, which is inviting and
+magnificent, but with the halting genius that cannot render that subject
+worthily.
+
+Undoubtedly, the universe so displayed would not be without its dark
+shadows and its perpetual tragedies. That is in the nature of things.
+Dante's cosmos, for all its mythical idealism, was not so false as not
+to have a hell in it. Those rolling spheres, with all their lights and
+music, circled for ever about hell. Perhaps in the real life of nature
+evil may not prove to be so central as that. It would seem to be rather
+a sort of inevitable but incidental friction, capable of being
+diminished indefinitely, as the world is better known and the will is
+better educated. In Dante's spheres there could be no discord whatever;
+but at the core of them was eternal woe. In the star-dust of our physics
+discords are everywhere, and harmony is only tentative and approximate,
+as it is in the best earthly life; but at the core there is nothing
+sinister, only freedom, innocence, inexhaustible possibilities of all
+sorts of happiness. These possibilities may tempt future poets to
+describe them; but meantime, if we wish to have a vision of nature not
+fundamentally false, we must revert from Dante to Lucretius.
+
+Obviously, what would be desirable, what would constitute a truly
+philosophical or comprehensive poet, would be the union of the insights
+and gifts which our three poets have possessed. This union is not
+impossible. The insights may be superposed one on the other. Experience
+in all its extent, what Goethe represents, should be at the foundation.
+But as the extent of experience is potentially infinite, as there are
+all sorts of worlds possible and all sorts of senses and habits of
+thought, the widest survey would still leave the poet, where Goethe
+leaves us, with a sense of an infinity beyond. He would be at liberty to
+summon from the limbo of potentiality any form that interested him;
+poetry and art would recover their early freedom; there would be no
+beauties forbidden and none prescribed. For it is a very liberating and
+sublime thing to summon up, like Faust, the image of _all_ experience.
+Unless that has been done, we leave the enemy in our rear; whatever
+interpretations we offer for experience will become impertinent and
+worthless if the experience we work upon is no longer at hand. Nor will
+any construction, however broadly based, have an _absolute_ authority;
+the indomitable freedom of life to be more, to be new, to be what it has
+not entered into the heart of man as yet to conceive, must always remain
+standing. With that freedom goes the modesty of reason, both in physics
+and in morals, that can lay claim only to partial knowledge, and to the
+ordering of a particular soul, or city, or civilization.
+
+Poetry and philosophy, however, are civilized arts; they are proper to
+some particular genius, which has succeeded in flowering at a particular
+time and place. A poet who merely swam out into the sea of sensibility,
+and tried to picture all possible things, real or unreal, human or
+inhuman, would bring materials only to the workshop of art; he would not
+be an artist. To the genius of Goethe he must add that of Lucretius and
+Dante.
+
+There are two directions in which it seems fitting that rational art
+should proceed, on the basis which a limited experience can give it. Art
+may come to buttress a particular form of life, or it may come to
+express it. All that we call industry, science, business, morality,
+buttresses our life; it informs us about our conditions and adjusts us
+to them; it equips us for life; it lays out the ground for the game we
+are to play. This preliminary labour, however, need not be servile. To
+do it is also to exercise our faculties; and in that exercise our
+faculties may grow free,--as the imagination of Lucretius, in tracing
+the course of the atoms, dances and soars most congenially. One
+extension of art, then, would be in the direction of doing artistically,
+joyfully, sympathetically, whatever we have to do. Literature in
+particular (which is involved in history, politics, science, affairs)
+might be throughout a work of art. It would become so not by being
+ornate, but by being appropriate; and the sense of a great precision and
+justness would come over us as we read or wrote. It would delight us; it
+would make us see how beautiful, how satisfying, is the art of being
+observant, economical, and sincere. The philosophical or comprehensive
+poet, like Homer, like Shakespeare, would be a poet of business. He
+would have a taste for the world in which he lived, and a clean view of
+it.
+
+There remains a second form of rational art, that of expressing the
+ideal towards which we would move under these improved conditions. For
+as we react we manifest an inward principle, expressed in that reaction.
+We have a nature that selects its own direction, and the direction in
+which practical arts shall transform the world. The outer life is for
+the sake of the inner; discipline is for the sake of freedom, and
+conquest for the sake of self-possession. This inner life is wonderfully
+redundant; there is, namely, very much more in it than a consciousness
+of those acts by which the body adjusts itself to its surroundings. _Am
+farbigen Abglanz haben wir das Leben_; each sense has its arbitrary
+quality, each language its arbitrary euphony and prosody; every game has
+its creative laws, every soul its own tender reverberations and secret
+dreams. Life has a margin of play which might grow broader, if the
+sustaining nucleus were more firmly established in the world. To the art
+of working well a civilized race would add the art of playing well. To
+play with nature and make it decorative, to play with the overtones of
+life and make them delightful, is a sort of art. It is the ultimate, the
+most artistic sort of art, but it will never be practised successfully
+so long as the other sort of art is in a backward state; for if we do
+not know our environment, we shall mistake our dreams for a part of it,
+and so spoil our science by making it fantastic, and our dreams by
+making them obligatory. The art and the religion of the past, as we see
+conspicuously in Dante, have fallen into this error. To correct it would
+be to establish a new religion and a new art, based on moral liberty and
+on moral courage.
+
+Who shall be the poet of this double insight? He has never existed, but
+he is needed nevertheless. It is time some genius should appear to
+reconstitute the shattered picture of the world. He should live in the
+continual presence of all experience, and respect it; he should at the
+same time understand nature, the ground of that experience; and he
+should also have a delicate sense for the ideal echoes of his own
+passions, and for all the colours of his possible happiness. All that
+can inspire a poet is contained in this task, and nothing less than this
+task would exhaust a poet's inspiration. We may hail this needed genius
+from afar. Like the poets in Dante's limbo, when Virgil returns among
+them, we may salute him, saying: _Onorate l'altissimo poeta_. Honour the
+most high poet, honour the highest possible poet. But this supreme poet
+is in limbo still.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Three Philosophical Poets, by George Santayana
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