Nietzche
[from The Birth of Tragedy from the Spirit of Music]
I To reach a closer understanding of both these tendencies, let us begin by viewing them as the separate art realms of dream and intoxication, two physiological phenomena standing toward one another in much the same relationship as the Apollonian and Dionysiac. It was in a dream, according to Lucretius, that the marvelous gods and goddesses first presented themselves to the minds of men. That great sculptor, Phidias, beheld in a dream the entrancing bodies of more-than-human beings, and likewise, if anyone had asked the Greek poets about the mystery of poetic creation, they too would have referred him to dreams and instructed him much as Hans Sachs instructs us in Die Meistersinger. My friend, it is the poet’s work Dreams to interpret and to mark. Believe me that man’s true conceit In a dream becomes complete: All poetry we ever read Is but true dreams interpreted. The
fair illusion of the dream sphere, in the production of which every man
proves himself an accomplished artist, is a precondition not only of all
plastic art, but even, as we shall see presently, of a wide range of
poetry. Here we enjoy an immediate apprehension of form, all shapes speak
to us directly, nothing seems indifferent or redundant. Despite the high
intensity with which these dream realities exist for us, we still have a
residual sensation that they are illusions; at least such has been my
experience—and the frequency, not to say normality, of the experience is
borne out in many passages of the poets. Men of philosophical disposition
are known for their constant premonition that our everyday reality, too,
is an illusion, hiding another, totally different kind of reality. It was
Schopenhauer who considered the ability to view at certain times all men
and things as mere phantoms or dream images to be the true mark of
philosophic talent. The person who is responsive to the stimuli of art
behaves toward the reality of dream much the way the philosopher behaves
toward the reality of existence: he observes exactly and enjoys his
observations, for it is by these images that he interprets life, by these
processes that he rehearses it. Nor is it by pleasant images only that
such plausible connections are made: the whole divine comedy of life,
including its somber aspects, its sudden balkings, impish accidents,
anxious expectations, moves past him, not quite like a shadow play—for
it is he himself, after all, who lives and suffers through these
scenes—yet never without giving a fleeting sense of illusion; and I
imagine that many persons have reassured themselves amidst the perils of
dream by calling out, “It is a dream! I want it to go on.” I have even
heard of people spinning out the causality of one and the same dream over
three or more successive nights. All these facts clearly bear witness that
our innermost being, the common substratum of humanity, experiences dreams
with deep delight and a sense of real necessity. This deep and happy sense
of the necessity of dream experiences was expressed by the Greeks in the
image of Apollo. Apollo is at once the god of all plastic powers and the
soothsaying god. He who is etymologically the “lucent” one, the god of
light, reigns also over the fair illusion of our inner world of fantasy.
The perfection of these conditions in contrast to our imperfectly
understood waking reality, as well as our profound awareness of nature’s
healing powers during the interval of sleep and dream, furnishes a
symbolic analogue to the soothsaying faculty and quite generally to the
arts, which make life possible and worth living. But the image of Apollo
must incorporate that thin line which the dream image may not cross, under
penalty of becoming pathological, of imposing itself on us as crass
reality: a discreet limitation, a freedom from all extravagant urges, the
sapient tranquillity of the plastic god. His eye must be sun-like, in
keeping with his origin. Even at those moments when he is angry and
ill-tempered there lies upon him the consecration of fair illusion. In an
eccentric way one might say of Apollo what Schopenhauer says, in the first
part of The World as Will and Idea,
of man caught in the veil of Maya: “Even as on an immense, raging sea,
assailed by huge wave crests, a man sits in a little rowboat trusting his
frail craft, so, amidst the furious torments of this world, the individual
sits tranquilly, supported by the principium individuationis and relying on it.” One might say that
the unshakable confidence in that principle has received its most
magnificent expression in Apollo, and that Apollo himself may be regarded
as the marvelous divine image of the principium
individuationis, whose looks and gestures radiate the full delight,
wisdom, and beauty of “illusion.” In
the same context Schopenhauer has described for us the tremendous awe
which seizes man when he suddenly begins to doubt the cognitive modes of
experience, in other words, when in a given instance the law of causation
seems to suspend itself. If we add to this awe the glorious transport
which arises in man, even from the very depths of nature, at the
shattering of the principium
individuationis, then we are in a position to apprehend the essence of
Dionysiac rapture, whose closest analogy is furnished by physical
intoxication. Dionysiac stirrings arise either through the influence of
those narcotic portions of which all primitive races speak in their hymns,
or through the powerful approach of spring, which penetrates with joy the
whole frame of nature. So stirred, the individual forgets himself
completely. It is the same Dionysiac power which in medieval Germany drove
ever increasing crowds of people singing and dancing from place to place;
we recognize in these St. John’s and St. Vitus’ dancers the bacchic
choruses of the Greeks, who had their precursors in Asia Minor and as far
back as Babylon and the orgiastic Sacaea. There are people who, either
from lack of experience or out of sheer stupidity, turn away from such
phenomena, and, strong in the sense of their own sanity, label them either
mockingly or pityingly “endemic diseases.” These benighted souls have
no idea how cadaverous and ghostly their “sanity” appears as the
intense throng of Dionysiac revelers sweeps past them. Not
only does the bond between man and man come to be forged once more by the
magic of the Dionysiac rite, but nature itself, long alienated or
subjugated, rises again to celebrate the reconciliation with her prodigal
son, man. The earth offers its gifts voluntarily, and the savage beasts of
mountain and desert approach in peace. The chariot of Dionysos is bedecked
with flowers and garlands; panthers and tigers stride beneath his yoke. If
one were to convert Beethoven’s “Paean to Joy” into a painting, and
refuse to curb the imagination when that multitude prostrates itself
reverently in the dust, one might form some apprehension of Dionysiac
ritual. Now the slave emerges as a freeman; all the rigid, hostile walls
which either necessity or despotism has erected between men are shattered.
Now that the gospel of universal harmony is sounded, each individual
becomes not only reconciled to his fellow but actually at one with
him—as though the veil of Maya had been torn apart and there remained
only shreds floating before the vision of mystical Oneness. Man now
expresses himself through song and dance as the member of a higher
community; he has forgotten how to walk, how to speak, and is on the brink
of taking wing as he dances. Each of his gestures betokens enchantment;
through him sounds a supernatural power, the same power which makes the
animals speak and the earth render up milk and honey. He feels himself to
be godlike and strides with the same elation and ecstasy as the gods he
has seen in his dreams. No longer the artist,
he has himself become a work of art:
the productive power of the whole universe is now manifest in his
transport, to the glorious satisfaction of the primordial One. The finest
clay, the most precious marble—man—is here kneaded and hewn, and the
chisel blows of the Dionysiac world artist are accompanied by the cry of
the Eleusinian mystagogues: “Do you fall on your knees, multitudes, do
you divine your creator?” III In
order to comprehend this we must take down the elaborate edifice of
Apollonian culture stone by stone until we discover its foundations. At
first the eye is struck by the marvelous shapes of the Olympian gods who
stand upon its pediments, and whose exploits, in shining bas-relief, adorn
its friezes. The fact that among them we find Apollo as one god among
many, making no claim to a privileged position, should not mislead us. The
same drive that found its most complete representation in Apollo generated
the whole Olympian world, and in this sense we may consider Apollo the
father of that world. But what was the radical need out of which that
illustrious society of Olympian beings sprang? Whoever
approaches the Olympians with a different religion in his heart, seeking
moral elevation, sanctity, spirituality, loving-kindness, will presently
be forced to turn away from them in ill-humored disappointment. Nothing in
these deities reminds us of asceticism, high intellect, or duty: we are
confronted by luxuriant, triumphant existence,
which deifies the good and the bad indifferently. And the beholder may
find himself dismayed in the presence of such overflowing life and ask
himself what potion these heady people must have drunk in order to behold,
in whatever direction they looked, Helen laughing back at them, the
beguiling image of their own existence. But we shall call out to this
beholder, who has already turned his back: Don’t go! Listen first to
what the Greeks themselves have to say of this life, which spreads itself
before you with such puzzling serenity. An old legend has it that King
Midas hunted a long time in the woods for the wise Silenus, companion of
Dionysos, without being able to catch him. When he had finally caught him
the king asked him what he considered man’s greatest good. The daemon
remained sullen and uncommunicative until finally, forced by the king, he
broke into a shrill laugh and spoke: “Ephemeral wretch, begotten by
accident and toil, why do you force me to tell you what it would be your
greatest boon not to hear? What would be best for you is quite beyond your
reach: not to have been born, not to be, to be nothing.
But the second best is to die soon.” What
is the relation of the Olympian gods to this popular wisdom? It is that of
the entranced vision of the martyr to his torment. Now
the Olympian magic mountain opens itself before us, showing us its very
roots. The Greeks were keenly aware of the terrors and horrors of
existence; in order to be able to live at all they had to place before
them the shining fantasy of the Olympians. Their tremendous distrust of
the titanic forces of nature: Moira, mercilessly enthroned beyond the knowable world; the vulture
which fed upon the great philanthropist Prometheus; the terrible lot drawn
by wise Oedipus; the curse on the house of Atreus which brought Orestes to
the murder of his mother: that whole Panic philosophy, in short, with its
mythic examples, by which the gloomy Etruscans perished, the Greeks
conquered—or at least hid from view—again and again by means of this
artificial Olympus. In order to live at all the Greeks had to construct
these deities. The Apollonian need for beauty had to develop the Olympian
hierarchy of joy by slow degrees from the original titanic hierarchy of
terror, as roses are seen to break from a thorny thicket. How else could
life have been borne by a race so hypersensitive, so emotionally intense,
so equipped for suffering’? The same drive which called art into being
as a completion and consummation of existence, and as a guarantee of
further existence, gave rise also to the Olympian realm which acted as a
transfiguring mirror to the Hellenic will. The gods justified human life
by living it themselves—the only satisfactory theodicy ever invented. To
exist in the clear sunlight of such deities was now felt to be the highest
good, and the only real grief suffered by Homeric man was inspired by the
thought of leaving that sunlight, especially when the departure seemed
imminent. Now it became possible to stand the wisdom of Silenus on its
head and proclaim that it was the worst evil for man to die soon, and
second worst for him to die at all. Such laments as arise now arise over
short-lived Achilles, over the generations ephemeral as leaves, the
decline of the heroic age. It is not unbecoming to even the greatest hero
to yearn for an afterlife, though it be as a day laborer. So impetuously,
during the Apollonian phase, does man’s will desire to remain on earth,
so identified does he become with existence, that even his lament turns to
a song of praise. It
should have become apparent by now that the harmony with nature which we
late-comers regard with such nostalgia, and for which Schiller has coined
the cant term naive, is by no means a simple and inevitable condition to
be found at the gateway to every culture, a kind of paradise. Such a
belief could have been endorsed only by a period for which Rousseau’s Emile
was an artist and Homer just such an artist nurtured in the bosom of
nature. Whenever we encounter “naivete” in art, we are face to face
with the ripest fruit of Apollonian culture—which must always triumph
first over titans, kill monsters, and overcome the somber contemplation of
actuality, the intense susceptibility to suffering, by means of illusions
strenuously and zestfully entertained. But how rare are the instances of
true naivete, of that complete identification with the beauty of
appearance! It is this achievement which makes Homer so
magnificent—Homer, who, as a single individual, stood to Apollonian
popular culture in the same relation as the individual dream artist to the
oneiric capacity of a race and of nature generally. The naivete of Homer
must be viewed as a complete victory of Apollonian illusion. Nature often
uses illusions of this sort in order to accomplish its secret purposes.
The true goal is covered over by a phantasm. We stretch out our hands to
the latter, while nature, aided by our deception, attains the former. In
the case of the Greeks it was the will wishing to behold itself in the
work of art, in the transcendence of genius; but in order so to behold
itself its creatures had first to view themselves as glorious, to
transpose themselves to a higher sphere, without having that sphere of
pure contemplation either challenge them or upbraid them with
insufficiency. It was in that sphere of beauty that the Greeks saw the
Olympians as their mirror images; it was by means of that esthetic mirror
that the Greek will opposed suffering and the somber wisdom of suffering
which always accompanies artistic talent. As a monument to its victory
stands Homer, the naive artist. IV We
can learn something about the naive artist through the analogy of dream.
We can imagine the dreamer as he calls out to himself, still caught in the
illusion of his dream and without disturbing it, “This is a dream, and I
want to go on dreaming,” and we can infer, on the one hand, that he
takes deep delight in the contemplation of his dream, and, on the other,
that he must have forgotten the day, with its horrible importunity, so to
enjoy his dream. Apollo, the interpreter of dreams, will furnish the clue
to what is happening here. Although of the two halves of life—the waking
and the dreaming—the former is generally considered not only the more
important but the only one which is truly lived, I would, at the risk of
sounding paradoxical, propose the opposite view. The more I have come to
realize in nature those omnipotent formative tendencies and, with them, an
intense longing for illusion, the more I feel inclined to the hypothesis
that the original Oneness, the ground of Being, ever-suffering and
contradictory, time and again has need of rapt vision and delightful
illusion to redeem itself. Since we ourselves are the very stuff of such
illusions, we must view ourselves as the truly nonexistent, that is to
say, as a perpetual unfolding in time, space, and causality—what we
label “empiric reality.” But if, for the moment, we abstract from our
own reality, viewing our empiric existence, as well as the existence of
the world at large, as the idea of the original Oneness, produced anew
each instant, then our dreams will appear to us as illusions of illusions,
hence as a still higher form of satisfaction of the original desire for
illusion. It is for this reason that the very core of nature takes such a
deep delight in the naive artist and the naive work of art, which likewise
is merely the illusion of an illusion. Raphael, himself one of those
immortal “naive” artists, in a symbolic canvas has illustrated that
reduction of illusion to further illusion which is the original act of the
naive artist and at the same time of all Apollonian culture. In the lower
half of his Transfguration,
through the figures of the possessed boy, the despairing bearers, the
helpless, terrified disciples, we see a reflection of original pain, the
sole ground of being: “illusion” here is a reflection of eternal
contradiction, begetter of all things. From this illusion there rises,
like the fragrance of ambrosia, a new illusory world, invisible to those
enmeshed in the first: a radiant vision of pure delight, a rapt seeing
through wide-open eyes. Here we have, in a great symbol of art, both the
fair world of Apollo and its substratum, the terrible wisdom of Silenus,
and we can comprehend intuitively how they mutually require one another.
But Apollo appears to us once again as the apotheosis of the principium
individuationis, in whom the eternal goal of the original Oneness,
namely its redemption through illusion, accomplishes itself. With august
gesture the god shows us how there is need for a whole world of torment in
order for the individual to produce the redemptive vision and to sit
quietly in his rocking rowboat in mid-sea, absorbed in contemplation. If
this apotheosis of normative terms, we may infer that there is one norm
only: the individual—or, more limits of the individual: sophrosyne.
As a moral deity Apollo demands self-control from his people, and, in
order to observe such self-control, a knowledge of self. And so we find
that the esthetic necessity of beauty is accompanied by the imperatives,
“Know thyself,” and “Nothing too much.” Conversely,
excess and hubris come to be
regarded as the hostile spirits of the non-Apollonian sphere, hence as
properties of the pre-Apollonian era—the age of Titans— and the
extra-Apollonian world, that is to say the world of the barbarians. It was
because of his Titanic love of man that Prometheus had to be devoured by
vultures; it was because of his extravagant wisdom which succeeded in
solving the riddle of the Sphinx that Oedipus had to be cast into a
whirlpool of crime: in this fashion does the Delphic god interpret the
Greek past. The effects of the Dionysiac spirit struck the Apollonian
Greeks as titanic and barbaric; yet they could not disguise from
themselves the fact that they were essentially akin to those deposed
Titans and heroes. They felt more than that: their whole existence, with
its temperate beauty, rested upon a base of suffering and knowledge
which had been hidden from them until the reinstatement of Dionysos
uncovered it once more. And lo and behold! Apollo found it impossible to
live without Dionysos. The elements of titanism and barbarism turned out
to be quite as fundamental as the Apollonian element. And now let us
imagine how the ecstatic sounds of the Dionysiac rites penetrated ever
more enticingly into that artificially restrained and discreet world of
illusion, how this clamor expressed the whole outrageous gamut of
nature— delight, grief, knowledge—even to the most piercing cry; and
then let us imagine how the Apollonian artist with his thin, monotonous
harp music must have sounded beside the demoniac chant of the multitude!
The muses presiding over the illusory arts paled before an art which
enthusiastically told the truth, and the wisdom of Silenus cried
“Woe!” against the serene Olympians. The individual, with his limits
and moderations, forgot himself in the Dionysiac vortex and became
oblivious to the laws of Apollo. Indiscreet extravagance revealed itself
as truth, and contradiction, a delight born of pain, spoke out of the
bosom of nature. Wherever the Dionysiac voice was heard, the Apollonian
norm seemed suspended or destroyed. Yet it is equally true that, in those
places where the first assault was withstood, the prestige and majesty of
the Delphic god appeared more rigid and threatening than before. The only
way I am able to view Doric art and the Doric state is as a perpetual
military encampment of the Apollonian forces. An art so defiantly austere,
so ringed about with fortifications— an education so military and
exacting—a polity so ruthlessly cruel—could endure only in a continual
state of resistance against the titanic and barbaric menace of Dionysos. Up
to this point I have developed at some length a theme which was sounded at
the beginning of this essay: how the Dionysiac and Apollonian elements, in
a continuous chain of creations, and enhancing the other, dominated the
Hellenic mind; how from the Iron Age, with its battles of Titans and its
austere popular philosophy, there developed under the aegis of Apollo the
Homeric world of beauty; how this “naive” splendor was then absorbed
once more by the Dionysiac torrent, and how, face to face with this new
power, the Apollonian code rigidified into the majesty of Doric art and
contemplation. If the earlier phase of Greek history may justly be broken
down into four major artistic epochs dramatizing the battle between the
two hostile principles, then we must inquire further (lest Doric art
appear to us as the acme and continual goal of all these striving
tendencies) what was the true end toward which that evolution moved. And
our eyes will come to rest on the sublime and much lauded achievement of
the dramatic dithyramb and Attic tragedy, as the common goal of both
urges; whose mysterious marriage, after long discord, ennobled itself with
such a child, at once Antigone and Cassandra. V We
are now approaching the central concern of our inquiry, which has as its
aim an understanding of the Dionysiac-Apollonian spirit, or at least an
intuitive comprehension of the mystery which made this conjunction
possible. Our first question must be: where in the Greek world is the new
seed first to be found which was later to develop into tragedy and the
dramatic dithyramb? Greek antiquity gives us a pictorial clue when it
represents in statues, on cameos, etc., Homer and Archilochus side by side
as ancestors and torchbearers of Greek poetry, in the certainty that only
these two are to be regarded as truly original minds, from whom a stream
of fire blowed onto the entire later Greek world. Homer, the hoary
dreamer, caught in utter abstraction, prototype of the Apollonian naive
artist, stares in amazement at the passionate head of Archilochus,
soldierly servant of the Muses, knocked about by fortune. All that more
recent esthetics has been able to add by way of interpretation is that
here the “objective” artist is confronted by the first
“subjective” artist. We find this interpretation of little use, since
to us the subjective artist is simply the bad artist, and since we demand
above all, in every genre and range of art, a triumph over subjectivity,
deliverance from the self, the silencing of every personal will and
desire; since, in fact, we cannot imagine the smallest genuine art work
lacking objectivity and disinterested contemplation. For this reason our
esthetic must first solve the following problem: how is the lyrical poet
at all possible as artist—he who, according to the experience of all
times, always says “I” and recites to us the entire chromatic scale of
his passions and appetites? It is this Archilochus who most disturbs us,
placed there beside Homer, with the stridor of his hate and mockery, the
drunken outbursts of his desire. Isn’t he—the first artist to be
called subjective—for that reason the veritable non-artist? How,
then, are we to explain the reverence in which he was held as a poet, the
honor done him by the Delphic oracle, that seat of “objective” art, in
a number of very curious sayings? Schiller
has thrown some light on his own manner of composition by a psychological
observation which seems inexplicable to himself without, however, giving
him pause. Schiller confessed that, prior to composing, he experienced not
a logically connected series of images but rather a musical
mood. “With me emotion is at the beginning without clear and
definite ideas; those ideas do not arise until later on. A certain musical
disposition of mind comes first, and after follows the poetical idea.”
If we enlarge on this, taking into account the most important phenomenon
of ancient poetry, by which I mean that union—nay identity— everywhere
considered natural, between musician and poet (alongside which our modern
poetry appears as the statue of a god without a head), then we may, on the
basis of the esthetics adumbrated earlier, explain the lyrical poet in the
following manner. He is, first and foremost, a Dionysiac artist, become
wholly identified with the original Oneness, its pain and contradiction,
and producing a replica of that oneness as music, if music may
legitimately be seen as a repetition of the world; however, this music
becomes visible to him again, as in a dream similitude, through the
Apollonian dream influence. That reflection, without image or idea, of
original pain in music, with its redemption through illusion, now produces
a second reflection as a single simile or example. The artist had
abrogated his subjectivity earlier, during the Dionysiac phase: the image
which now reveals to him his oneness with the heart of the world is a
dream scene showing forth vividly, together with original pain, the
original delight of illusion. The ~r~ thus sounds out of the depth of
being; what recent writers on esthetics speak of as “subjectivity” is
a mere figment. When Archilochus, the first lyric poet of the Greeks,
hurls both his frantic love and his contempt at the daughters of Lycambes,
it is not his own passion that we see dancing before us in an orgiastic
frenzy: we see Dionysos and the maenads, we see the drunken reveler
Archilochus, sunk down in sleep—as Euripides describes him for us in the
Bacchae, asleep on a high mountain meadow, in the midday sun—and now
Apollo approaches him and touches him with his laurel. The sleeper’s
enchantment through Dionysiac music now begins to emit sparks of imagery,
poems which, at their point of highest evolution, will bear the name of
tragedies and dramatic dithyrambs. The
sculptor, as well as his brother, the epic poet, is committed to the pure
contemplation of images. The Dionysiac musician, himself imageless, is
nothing but original pain and reverberation of the image. Out of this
mystical process of un-selving, the poet’s spirit feels a whole world of
images and similitudes arise, which are quite different in hue, causality,
and pace from the images of the sculptor or narrative poet. While the last
lives in those images and only in them, with joyful complacence, and never
tires of scanning them down to the most minute features, while even the
image of angry Achilles is no more for him than an image whose irate
countenance he enjoys with a dreamer’s delight in appearance—so that
this mirror of appearance protects him from complete fusion with his
characters—the lyrical poet, on the other hand, himself becomes his
images, his images are objectified versions of himself. Being the active
center of that world he may boldly speak in the first person, only his
“I” is not that of the actual waking man, but the ~r~ dwelling, truly
and eternally, in the ground of being. It is through the reflections of
that “I” that the lyric poet beholds the ground of being. Let us
imagine, next, how he views himself too among these reflections—as
non-genius, that is, as his own subject matter, the whole teeming crowd of
his passions and intentions directed toward a definite goal; and when it
now appears as though the poet and the non-poet joined to him were one,
and as though the former were using the pronoun “I,” we are able to
see through this appearance, which has deceived those who have attached
the label “subjective” to the lyrical poet. The man Archilochus, with
his passionate loves and hates, is really only a vision of genius, a
genius who is no longer merely Archilochus but the genius of the universe,
expressing its pain through the similitude of Archilochus the man.
Archilochus, on the other hand, the subjectively willing and desiring
human being, can never be a poet. Nor is it at all necessary for the poet
to see only the phenomenon of the man Archilochus before him as a
reflection of Eternal Being: the world of tragedy shows us to what extent
the vision of the poet can remove itself from the urgent, immediate
phenomenon. Schopenhauer,
who was fully aware of the difficulties the lyrical poet creates for the
speculative esthetician, thought that he had found a solution, which,
however, I cannot endorse. It is true that he alone possessed the means,
in his profound philosophy of music, for solving this problem; and I think
I have honored his achievement in these pages, I hope in his own spirit.
Yet in the first part of The World as Will and Idea he characterizes the essence of song as
follows: The
consciousness of the singer is filled with the subject of will, which is
to say with his own willing. That willing may either be a released,
satisfied willing (joy), or, as happens more commonly, an inhibited
willing (sadness). In either case there is affect here: passion, violent
commotion. At the same time, however, the singer is moved by the
contemplation of nature surrounding him to experience himself as the
subject of pure, unwilling ideation, and the unshakable tranquillity of
that ideation becomes contrasted with the urgency of his willing, its
limits, and its lacks. It is the experience of this contrast, or tug of
war, which he expresses in his song. While we find ourselves in the
lyrical condition, pure ideation approaches us, as it were, to deliver us
from the urgencies of willing; we obey, yet obey for moments only. Again
and again our willing, our memory of personal objectives, distracts us
from tranquil contemplation, while, conversely, the next scene of beauty
we behold will yield us up once more to pure ideation. For this reason we
find in song and in the lyrical mood a curious mixture of willing (our
personal interest in purposes) and pure contemplation (whose subject matter is furnished
by our surroundings); relations are sought and imagined between these two
sets of experiences. Subjective mood—the affection of the
will—communicates its color to the purely viewed surroundings, and vice
versa. All authentic song reflects a state of mind mixed and divided in
this manner. Who
can fail to perceive in this description that lyric poetry is presented as
an art never completely realized, indeed a hybrid whose essence is made to
consist in an uneasy mixture of will and contemplation, i.e., the esthetic
and the non-esthetic conditions? We, on our part, maintain that the
distinction between subjective and objective, which even Schopenhauer
still uses as a sort of measuring stick to distinguish the arts, has no
value whatever in esthetics; the reason being that the subject—the
striving individual bent on furthering his egoistic purposes—can be
thought of only as an enemy to art, never as its source. But to the extent
that the subject is an artist he is already delivered from individual will
and has become a medium through which the True Subject celebrates His
redemption in illusion. For better or worse, one thing should be quite
obvious to all of us: the entire comedy of art is not played for our own
sakes—for our betterment or education, say—nor can we consider
ourselves the true originators of that art realm; while on the other hand
we have every right to view ourselves as esthetic projections of the
veritable creator and derive such dignity as we possess from our status as
art works. Only as an esthetic product can the world be justified to all
eternity—although our consciousness of our own significance does
scarcely exceed the consciousness a painted soldier might have of the
battle in which he takes part. Thus our whole knowledge of art is at
bottom illusory, seeing that as mere knowers we can never be fused with
that essential spirit, at the same time creator and spectator, who has
prepared the comedy of art for his own edification. Only as the genius in
the act of creation merges with the primal architect of the cosmos can he
truly know something of the eternal essence of art. For in that condition
he resembles the uncanny fairy tale image which is able to see itself by
turning its eyes. He is at once subject and object, poet, actor, and
audience. XIV Let
us now imagine Socrates’ great Cyclops’ eye—that eye which never
glowed with the artist’s divine frenzy— turned upon tragedy. Bearing
in mind that he was unable to look with any pleasure into the Dionysiac
abysses, what could Socrates see in that tragic art which to Plato seemed
noble and meritorious? Something quite abstruse and irrational, full of
causes without effects and effects seemingly without causes, the whole
texture so checkered that it must be repugnant to a sober disposition,
while it might act as dangerous tinder to a sensitive and impressionable
mind. We are told that the only genre of poetry Socrates really
appreciated was the Aesopian fable. This he did with the same smiling
complaisance with which honest Gellert sings the praise of poetry in his
fable of the bee and the hen: I
exemplify the use of poetry: The
fact is that for Socrates tragic art failed even to “convey the
truth,” although it did address itself to those who were “a bit
backward,” which is to say to non-philosophers: a double reason for
leaving it alone. Like Plato, he reckoned it among the beguiling arts
which represent the agreeable, not the useful, and in consequence exhorted
his followers to abstain from such unphilosophical stimulants. His success
was such that the young tragic poet Plato burned all his writings in order
to qualify as a student of Socrates. And while strong native genius might
now and again manage to withstand the Socratic injunction, the power of
the latter was still great enough to force poetry into entirely new
channels. A
good example of this is Plato himself. Although he did not lag behind the
naive cynicism of his master in the condemnation of tragedy and of art in
general, nevertheless his creative gifts forced him to develop an art form
deeply akin to the existing forms which he had repudiated. The main
objection raised by Plato to the older art (that it was the imitation of
an imitation and hence belonged to an even lower order of empiric reality)
must not, at all costs, apply to the new genre; and so we see Plato intent
on moving beyond reality and on rendering the idea which underlies it. By
a detour Plato the thinker reached the very spot where Plato the poet had
all along been at home, and from which Sophocles, and with him the whole
poetic tradition of the past, protested such a charge. Tragedy had
assimilated to itself all the older poetic genres. In a somewhat eccentric
sense the same thing can be claimed for the Platonic dialogue, which was a
mixture of all the available styles and forms and hovered between
narrative, lyric, drama, between prose and poetry, once again breaking
through the old law of stylistic unity. The Cynic philosophers went even
farther in that direction, seeking, by their utterly promiscuous style and
constant alternation between verse and prose, to project their image of
the “raving Socrates” in literature, as they sought to enact it in
life. The Platonic dialogue was the lifeboat in which the shipwrecked
older poetry saved itself, together with its numerous offspring. Crowded
together in a narrow space, and timidly obeying their helmsman Socrates,
they moved forward into a new era which never tired of looking at this
fantastic spectacle. Plato has furnished for all posterity the pattern of
a new art form, the novel, viewed as the Aesopian fable raised to its
highest power; a form in which poetry played the same subordinate role
with regard to dialectic philosophy as that same philosophy was to play
for many centuries with regard to theology. This, then, was the new status
of poetry, and it was Plato who, under the pressure of daemonic Socrates,
had brought it about. It
is at this point that philosophical ideas begin to entwine themselves
about art, forcing the latter to cling closely to the trunk of dialectic.
The Apollonian tendency now appears disguised as logical schematism, just
as we found in the case of Euripides a corresponding translation of the
Dionysiac affect into a naturalistic one. Socrates, the dialectical hero
of the Platonic drama, shows a close affinity to the Euripidean hero, who
is compelled to justify his actions by proof and counterproof, and for
that reason is often in danger of forfeiting our tragic compassion. For
who among us can close his eyes to the optimistic element in the nature of
dialectics, which sees a triumph in every syllogism and can breathe only
in an atmosphere of cool, conscious clarity? Once that optimistic element
had entered tragedy, it overgrew its Dionysiac regions and brought about
their annihilation and, finally, the leap into genteel domestic drama.
Consider the consequences of the Socratic maxims: “Virtue is knowledge;
all sins arise from ignorance; only the virtuous are happy”—these
three basic formulations of optimism spell the death of tragedy. The
virtuous hero must henceforth be a dialectician; virtue and knowledge,
belief and ethics, be necessarily and demonstrably connected; Aeschylus’
transcendental concept of justice be reduced to the brash and shallow
principle of poetic justice with its regular deaus
ex macina. What
is the view taken of the chorus in this new Socratic-optimistic stage
world, and of the entire musical and Dionysiac foundation of tragedy? They
are seen as accidental features, as reminders of the origin of tragedy,
which can well be dispensed with—while we have in fact come to
understand that the chorus is the cause of tragedy and the tragic spirit.
Already in Sophocles we find some embarrassment with regard to the chorus,
which suggests that the Dionysiac floor of tragedy is beginning to give
way. Sophocles no longer dares to give the chorus the major role in the
tragedy but treats it as almost on the same footing as the actors, as
though it had been raised from the orchestra
onto the scene. By so doing he necessarily destroyed its meaning, despite
Aristotle’s endorsement of this conception of the chorus. This shift in
attitude, which Sophocles displayed not only in practice but also, we are
told, in theory, was the first step toward the total disintegration of the
chorus: a process whose rapid phases we can follow in Euripides, Agathon,
and the New Comedy. Optimistic dialectics took up the whip of its
syllogisms and drove music out of tragedy. It entirely destroyed the
meaning of tragedy—which can be interpreted only as a concrete
manifestation of Dionysiac conditions, music made visible, an ecstatic
dream world. Since
we have discovered an anti-Dionysiac tendency antedating Socrates, its
most brilliant exponent, we must now ask, ” “Toward what does a figure
like Socrates point?” Faced with the evidence of the Platonic dialogues,
we are certainly not entitled to see in Socrates merely an agent of
disintegration. While it is clear that the immediate result of the
Socratic strategy was the destruction of Dionysiac drama, we are forced,
nevertheless, by the profundity of the Socratic experience to ask
ourselves whether, in fact, art and Socratism are diametrically opposed to
one another, whether there is really anything inherently impossible in the
idea of a Socratic artist? It
appears that this despotic logician had from time to time a sense of void,
loss, unfulfilled duty with regard to art. In prison he told his friends
how, on several occasions, a voice had spoken to him in a dream, saying
“Practice music, Socrates!” Almost to the end he remained confident
that his philosophy represented the highest art of the muses, and would
not fully believe that a divinity meant to remind him of “common,
popular music.” Yet in order to unburden his conscience he finally
agreed, in prison, to undertake that music which hitherto he had held in
low esteem. In this frame of mind he composed a poem on Apollo and
rendered several Aesopian tables in verse. What prompted him to these
exercises was something very similar to that warning voice of his
daimonion: an Apollonian perception that, like a barbarian king, he had
failed to comprehend the nature of a divine effigy, and was in danger of
offending his own god through ignorance. These words heard by Socrates in
his dream are the only indication that he ever experienced any uneasiness
about the limits of his logical universe. He may have asked himself:
“Have I been too ready to view what was unintelligible to me as being
devoid of meaning? Perhaps there is a realm of wisdom, after all, from
which the logician is excluded’? Perhaps art must be seen as the
necessary complement of rational discourse?” XIX The
best way to characterize the core of Socratic culture is to call it the
culture of the opera. It is in this area that Socratism has given an open
account of its intentions—a rather surprising one when we compare the
evolution of the opera with the abiding Apollonian and Dionysiac truths.
First I want to remind the reader of the genesis of the stilo
rappresentativo and of
recitative. How did it happen that this operatic music, so wholly external
and incapable of reverence, was enthusiastically greeted by an epoch
which, not so very long ago, had produced the inexpressibly noble and
sacred music of Palestrina’? Can anyone hold the luxury and frivolity of
the Florentine court and the vanity of its dramatic singers responsible
for the speed and intensity with which the vogue of opera spread? I can
explain the passion for a semi-musical declamation, at the same period and
among the same people who had witnessed the grand architecture of
Palestrina’s harmonies (in the making of which the whole Christian
Middle Ages had conspired), only by reference to an extra-artistic
tendency. To the listener who desires to hear the words above the music
corresponds the singer who speaks more than he sings, emphasizing the
verbal pathos in a kind of half-song. By this emphasis he aids the
understanding of the words and gets rid of the remaining half of music.
There is a danger that now and again the music will preponderate, spoiling
the pathos and clarity of his declamation, while conversely he is always
under the temptation to discharge the music of his voice in a virtuoso
manner. The pseudopoetic librettist furnishes him ample opportunity for
this display in lyrical interjections, repetitions of words and phrases,
etc., where the singer may give himself up to the purely musical element
without consideration for the text. This constant alternation, so
characteristic of the stilo rappresentativo between emotionally charged, only partly sung
declamation and wholly musical interjections, this rapid shift of focus
between concept and imagination, on the one hand, and the musical response
of the listener, on the other, is so completely unnatural, equally opposed
to the Dionysiac and the Apollonian spirit, that one must conclude the
origin of recitative to have lain outside any artistic instinct. Viewed in
these terms, the recitative may be characterized as a mixture of epic and
lyric declamation. And yet, since the components are so wholly disparate,
the resulting combination is neither harmonious nor constant, but rather a
superficial and mosaic-like conglutination, not without precedent in the
realm of nature and experience. However, the inventors of recitative took
a very different view of it. They, and their age with them, thought they
had discovered the secret of ancient music, that secret which alone could
account for the amazing feats of an Orpheus or an Amphion or, indeed, for
Greek tragedy. They thought that by that novel style they had managed to
resuscitate ancient Greek music in all its power; and, given the popular
conception of the Homeric world as the primordial world, it was possible
to embrace the illusion that one had at last returned to the paradisaical
beginnings of mankind, in which music must have had that supreme purity,
power, and innocence of which the pastoral poets wrote so movingly. Here
we have touched the nerve center of opera, that genuinely modern genre. In
it, art satisfies a strong need, but one that can hardly be called
esthetic: a hankering for the idyll, a belief in the primordial existence
of pure, artistically sensitive man. Recitative stood for the rediscovered
language of that archetypal man, opera for the rediscovered country of
that idyllic and heroically pure species, who in all their actions
followed a natural artistic bent—who, no matter what they had to say,
sang at least part of it, and who when their emotions were ever so little
aroused burst into full song. It is irrelevant to our inquiry that the
humanists of the time used the new image of the paradisaical artist to
combat the old ecclesiastical notion of man as totally corrupt and damned;
that opera thus represented the opposition dogma of man as essentially
good, and furnished an antidote to that pessimism which, given the
terrible instability of the epoch, naturally enlisted its strongest and
most thoughtful minds. What
matters here is our recognition that the peculiar attraction and thus the
success of this new art form must be attributed to its satisfaction of a
wholly unesthetic need: it was optimistic; it glorified man in himself; it
conceived of man as originally good and full of talent. This principle of
opera has by degrees become a menacing and rather appalling claim, against
which we who are faced with present-day socialist movements cannot stop
our ears. The “noble savage” demands his rights: what a paradisaical
prospect! There
is still a further point in support of my contention that opera is built
on the same principles as our Alexandrian culture. Opera is the product of
the man of theory, the critical layman, not the artist. This constitutes
one of the most disturbing facts in the entire history of art. Since the
demand, coming from essentially unmusical people, was for a clear
understanding of the words, a renascence of music could come about only
through the discovery of a type of music in which the words lorded it over
the counterpoint as a master over his servant. For were not the words
nobler than the accompanying harmonic system, as the soul is nobler than
the body? It was with precisely that unmusical clumsiness that the
combinations of music, image, and word were treated in the beginning of
opera, and in this spirit the first experiments in the new genre were
carried out, even in the noble lay circles of Florence, by the poets and
singers patronized by those circles. Inartistic man produces his own brand
of art, precisely by virtue of his artistic impotence. Having not the
faintest conception of the Dionysiac profundity of music, he transforms
musical enjoyment into a rationalistic rhetoric of passion in the stilo
rappresentativo, into a voluptuous indulgence of vocal virtuoso feats;
lacking imagination, he must employ engineers and stage designers; being
incapable of understanding the true nature of the artist, he invents an
“artistic primitive” to suit his taste, i.e.,
a man who, when his passions are aroused, breaks into song and recites
verses. He projects himself into a time when passion sufficed to produce
songs and poems—as though mere emotion had ever been able to create art.
There lies at the root of opera a fallacious conception of the artistic
process, the idyllic belief that every sensitive man is at bottom an
artist. In keeping with this belief, opera is the expression of
dilettantism in art, dictating its rules with the cheerful optimism of the
theorist. If
we were to combine the two tendencies conspiring at the creation of opera
into one, we might speak of an idyllic tendency of opera. Here it would be
well to refer back to Schiller’s account. Nature and ideal, according to
Schiller, are objects of grief when the former is felt to be lost, the
latter to be beyond reach. But both may become objects of joy when they
are represented as actual. Then the first will produce the elegy, in its
strict sense, and the second the idyll, in its widest sense. I would like
to point out at once the common feature of these two conceptions in the
origin of opera: here the ideal is never viewed as unattained nor nature
as lost. Rather, a primitive period in the history of man is imagined, in
which he lay at the heart of nature and in this state of nature attained
immediately the ideal of humanity through Edenic nobility and artistry.
From this supposedly perfect primitive we are all said to derive; indeed,
we are still his faithful replicas. All we need do in order to recognize
ourselves in that primitive is to jettison some of our later achievements,
such as our superfluous learning and excess culture. The educated man of
the Renaissance used the operatic imitation of Greek tragedy to lead him
back to that concord of nature and ideal, to an idyllic reality. He used
ancient tragedy the way Dante used Virgil, to lead him to the gates of
Paradise,’ but from there on he went ahead on his own, moving from an
imitation of the highest Greek art form to a “restitution of all
things,” to a re-creation of man’s original art world. What confidence
and bonhomie these bold enterprises betokened, arising as they did in the
very heart of theoretical culture! The only explanation lies in the
comforting belief of the day that “essential man” is the perennially
virtuous operatic hero, the endlessly piping or singing shepherd, who, if
he should ever by chance lose himself for a spell, would inevitably
recover himself intact; in the optimism that rises like a perfumed,
seductive cloud from the depths of Socratic contemplation. Opera,
then, does not wear the countenance of eternal grief but rather that of
joy in an eternal reunion. It expresses the complacent delight in an
idyllic reality, or such, at least, as can be viewed as real at any
moment. Perhaps people will one day come to realize
that this supposititious reality is at bottom no more than a fantastic and
foolish trifling, which should make anyone who pits against it the immense
seriousness of genuine nature and of the true origins of man exclaim in
disgust: “Away with that phantom!” And yet it would be self-delusion
to think that, trivial as it is, opera can be driven off with a shout,
like an apparition. Whoever wants to destroy opera must gird himself for
battle with that Alexandrian cheerfulness that has furnished opera its
favorite conceptions and whose natural artistic expression it is. As for
art proper, what possible benefit can it derive from a form whose origins
lie altogether outside the esthetic realm, a form which from a semi-moral
sphere has trespassed on the domain of art and can only at rare moments
deceive us as to its hybrid origin? What sap nourishes this operatic
growth if not that of true art? Are we not right in supposing that its
idyllic seductions and Alexandrian blandishments may sophisticate the
highest, the truly serious task of art (to deliver the eye from the horror
of night, to redeem us by virtue of the healing balm of illusion, from the
spastic motions of the will) into an empty and frivolous amusement? What
becomes of the enduring Apollonian and Dionysiac truths in such a mixture
of styles as we find in the stilo
rappresentativo; where music acts the part of the servant, the text
that of the master; where music is likened to the body, the text to the
soul; where the ultimate goal is at best a periphrastic tone painting,
similar to that found in the new Attic dithyramb; where music has
abrogated its true dignity as the Dionysiac mirror of the universe and
seems content to be the slave of appearance, to imitate the play of
phenomenal forms, and to stimulate an artificial delight by dallying with
lines and proportions? To a careful observer this pernicious influence of
opera on music recapitulates the general development of modern music. The
optimism that presided at the birth of opera and of the society
represented by opera has succeeded with frightening rapidity in divesting
music of its grand Dionysiac meanings and stamping it with the trivial
character of a divertissement, a transformation only equaled in scope by that of
Aeschylean man into jovial Alexandrian man. If
we have been justified in suggesting a connection between the
disappearance of the Dionysiac spirit and the spectacular, yet hitherto
unexplained, degeneration of the Greek species, with what high hopes must
we greet the auspicious signs of the opposite development in our own era,
namely the gradual reawakening of the Dionysiac spirit! The divine power
of Heracles cannot languish for ever in the service of Omphale. Out of the
Dionysiac recesses of the German soul has sprung a power which has nothing
in common with the presuppositions of Socratic culture and which that
culture can neither explain nor justify. Quite the contrary, the culture
sees it as something to be dreaded and abhorred, something infinitely
potent and hostile. I refer to German music, in its mighty course from
Bach to Beethoven, and from Beethoven to Wagner. How can the petty
intellectualism of our day deal with this monster that has risen out of
the infinite deeps? There is no formula to be found, in either the
reservoir of operatic filigree and arabesque or the abacus of the fugue
and contrapuntal dialectics, that will subdue this monster, make it stand
and deliver. What a spectacle to see our estheticians beating the air with
the butterfly nets of their pedantic slogans, in vain pursuit of that
marvelously volatile musical genius, their movements sadly belying their
standards of “eternal” beauty and grandeur! Look at these patrons of
music for a moment at close range, as they repeat indefatigably:
“Beauty! Beauty!” and judge for yourselves whether they really look
like the beautiful darlings of nature, or whether it would not be more
correct to say that they have assumed a disguise for their own coarseness,
as esthetic pretext for their barren and jejune sensibilities—take the
case of Otto Jahn. But liars and prevaricators ought to watch their step
in the area of German music. For amidst our degenerate culture music is
the only pure and purifying flame, towards which and away from which all
things move in a Heracleitean double motion. All that is now called
culture, education, civilization will one day have to appear before the
incorruptible judge, Dionysos. Let
us now recall how the new German philosophy was nourished from the same
sources, how Kant and Schopenhauer succeeded in destroying the complacent
acquiescence of intellectual Socratism, how by their labors an infinitely
more profound and serious consideration of questions of ethics and art was
made possible—a conceptualized form, in fact, of Dionysiac wisdom. To
what does this miraculous union between German philosophy and music point
if not to a new mode of existence, whose precise nature we can divine only
with the aid of Greek analogies? For us, who stand on the watershed
between two different modes of existence, the Greek example is still of
inestimable value, since it embodies the violent transition to a
classical, rationalistic form of suasion; only, we are living through the
great phases of Hellenism in reverse order and seem at this very moment to
be moving backward from the Alexandrian age into an age of tragedy. And we
can’t help feeling that the dawn of a new tragic age is for the German
spirit only a return to itself, a blessed recovery of its true identity.
For an unconscionably long time powerful forces from the outside have
compelled the German spirit, which had vegetated in barbaric formlessness,
to subserve their forms. But at long last the German spirit may stand
before the other nations, free of the leading strings of Romance
culture—provided that it continues to be able to learn from the nation
from whom to learn at all is a high and rare thing, the Greeks. And was
there ever a time when we needed these supreme teachers more urgently than
now, as we witness the rebirth of tragedy and are in danger of not knowing
either whence it comes or whither it goes? (1872) |