II.
GOETHE'S STANDARD OF THE SOUL, AS
ILLUSTRATED IN FAUST
The inner
soul's conflict which Goethe has embodied in the personality of Faust
comes to light at the very beginning of the Drama, when Faust turns
away from the sign of the Macrocosm to that of the Earth Spirit. The
content of the first Faust Monologue up to this experience of the soul
is preliminary. Faust's dis-satisfaction with the sciences and with
his position as a man of learning is far less characteristic of Goethe's
nature than the kinship which Faust feels to the Spirit Universal on
the one side and to the Earth Spirit on the other. The all-inclusive
harmony of the universe is revealed to the soul by the sign of the
macrocosm:
“How each the Whole its substance gives,
Each in the other works and lives!
Like heavenly forces rising and descending,
Their golden urns reciprocally lending,
With wings that winnow blessing
From Heaven through Earth I see them pressing,
Filling the All with harmony unceasing!”
If we take
these words in conjunction with Goethe's knowledge of the sign of the
Macrocosm, we come upon an experience of great significance in the soul of
Faust. There appears before Faust's soul a sense picture of the Universe,
— a picture of the sun itself, of the earth in connection with
the other planets of the solar system, and of the activity of the single
heavenly bodies as a revelation of the Divine Being guiding movement
and reciprocal interplay. This is not a mechanical heaven, but a cosmic
weaving of spiritual hierarchies whose effluence is the life of the
world. Into this life man is placed, and he comes forth as the apotheosis
of the work of all these Beings. Faust, however, cannot find in his
soul the experience for which he is seeking even in the vision of this
universal harmony. We can sense the yearning that gnaws in the depths of
this soul: “How do I become Man in the true sense of the word?”
The soul longs to experience what makes man consciously truly Man. In
the sense image hovering there, the soul cannot call up from the depths
of being that profound experience which would make it able to realise
itself as the epitome of all that is there as the sign of the macrocosm.
For this is the “knowledge” that can be trans-formed through
intense inner experience, into “Self-Knowledge.” The very
highest knowledge cannot directly comprehend the whole being of man.
It can only comprehend a part of man. It must then be borne through
life, and in inter-relation with life its range is gradually extended
over the whole being of man. Faust lacks the patience to accept knowledge
with those limitations which, in the early stages, must exist. He wants
to experience instantaneously a soul-realization which can only come
in the course of time. And so he turns away from the revelation of the
Macrocosm:
“How grand a show! but, ah! a show alone.”
Knowledge
can never be more than a picture, a reflection of life. Faust's desire
is not for a picture of life, but for life itself. He turns therefore
to the sign of the Earth Spirit, in which he has a symbol before him
of the whole infinite being of man as a product of earth activity. The
symbol calls forth in his soul a vision of all the infinitude of being
which man bears within him, but which would stun him, overwhelm him,
if he were to receive it gathered up into the perception of a single
moment of discovery rather than drawn out into the many pictures of
that knowledge which is discovered to him in the long course of life.
In the
phenomenon of the Earth Spirit Faust sees what man is in reality, but
the result is confusion when in the weakened reflection of the forces
of cognition it does not penetrate to the consciousness. There was present
in Goethe, not of course in a philosophical form, but as a living concept,
that spiritual fear which overtakes man in his life of thought: what
would become of me if I suddenly were to behold the riddle of my existence
and had not the knowledge to master it!
It was not
Goethe's intention to express in his Faust the disillusionment of a
misguided yearning for knowledge. His aim was rather to represent the
conflict associated with this yearning — a conflict that has its
seat in the being of man. Man in every moment of his existence is more
than can be disclosed if his destiny is to be fulfilled. Man must evolve
from his inner being; he must unfold that which he can only fully know
after the development has taken place. The constitution of his forces
of knowledge is such that when brought to bear prematurely upon what
at the right time they must master, they are liable to deception as
the result of their own operations. Faust lives in all that the words
of the Earth Spirit reveal to him. But this, his own being, confuses
and deceives him when it appears objectively before his soul at a time
when the degree of maturity, to which he has attained, does not yield
him the know-ledge whereby he can transform this being into a picture:
“Thou'rt like the Spirit which thou comprehendest.
Not me!”
Faust is
profoundly shocked by these words. He has really looked upon himself,
but he cannot compare himself to what he sees, because he does not know
what he really is. The contemplation of the Self has deceived and confused
the consciousness that is not ripe for it. Faust puts the question:
“Not thee? Who then?” The answer is given in dramatic form.
Wagner enters and is himself the answer to this, “Who then?”
It was pride of soul in Faust that at this moment made him desire to
grasp the secret of his own being. What lives in him is at first only
the striving after this secret; Wagner is the reflected image of what
he is able at the moment to know of himself. The scene with Wagner will
be entirely misunderstood if the attention is merely directed to the
contrast between the highly spiritual Faust and the very limited Wagner.
In the meeting with Wagner after the Earth Spirit scene Faust has to
realise that his power of cognition is really at the Wagner stage. In
the dramatic imagination of this scene Wagner is the reflected image
of Faust.
This is
something that the Earth Spirit cannot immediately reveal to Faust,
for it must come to pass as a result of development. And Goethe felt
compelled not to allow Faust to experience the depths of higher human
existence only from the point of view of forty years of life, but also
to bring before his soul in a kind of retrospect, all that had escaped
him in his abstract striving for knowledge. In Wagner Faust confronts
himself in his soul vision. The monologue uttered by the real
“Faust,” beginning with the words:
“How him alone all hope abandons ...”
contains nothing but waves beating up from subconscious
depths of soul, expressing themselves finally in the resolve to commit
suicide. At this moment of experience Faust cannot but draw the inference
from his life of feeling that “all hope” must
“abandon” men. His soul is only saved from the consequences
of this by the fact
that life invokes before him something that to his abstract striving
for knowledge was formerly meaningless: the Easter Festival of the
human heart in its simplicity and the Easter Procession. During these
experiences, brought back to him in retrospect from his semi-conscious
youth, the contact with the spiritual world that he has had as a result
of the meeting with the Earth Spirit, works in him. As a result he frees
himself from this attitude of soul during the conversation with Wagner
when he sees the Easter procession. Wagner remains in the region of
abstract scientific endeavour. Faust must bring the soul experiences
through which he has passed into real life in order that life may give
him the power to find another answer than “Wagner” to the
question “Not thee? Then who?”
A man who,
like Faust, has had contact with the spiritual world in its reality,
is bound to face life differently from men whose knowledge is limited
to the phenomenona of sense existence and consists of conceptions derived
from this alone. What Goethe has called the “eye of spiri”
has opened for Faust as a result of experience. Life brings him to
“conquests”,
other than that of the Wagner being. Wagner is also a portion of that
human nature which Faust has within him. Faust conquers it in that he
subsequently makes living within him all that he failed to make living
in his youth. Faust's endeavour to make the word of the Bible living
is also part of the awakening. But during this process of awakening
still another reflected image of his own being — Mephistopheles
— appears before Faust's soul. Mephistopheles is the further,
weightier answer to the “Not thee? Then who?” Faust must
conquer Mephistopheles by the power of the life experiences in the soul
that has had contact with the spiritual world. To see in the figure of
Mephistopheles a portion of Faust's own being is not to sin against the
artistic comprehension
of the Faust Drama, for it is not suggested that Goethe intended to
create a symbolical figure and not a living, dramatic personage in his
Mephistopheles. In life itself man beholds in other men portions of
his own being. Man recognises himself in other men. I do not assert
that to me John Smith is only a symbol when I say: ‘I see in him a
portion of my own being.’ The dramatic figures of Wagner and of
Mephistopheles are individual, living beings; what Faust experiences
through them is Self Perception.
What does
the School Scene in Faust really bring before the souls of those who
allow it to work upon them? Nothing more nor less than the nature which
Faust manifests to the students — the Mephistophelian element
in him. When a man has not conquered Mephistopheles in his own nature
he can be manifested as this figure of Mephistopheles who confronts
the pupils. It appears to me that in this scene Goethe allowed something
from an earlier composition to remain — something that he would
certainly have remodelled, if as he remodelled the older portions he
had been able completely to understand the spirit which the whole work now
reveals. In accordance with the import of this spirit all Mephistopheles'
dealings with the students must also be experienced by Faust. In the
earlier composition of Faust, Goethe was not intent upon giving everything
so dramatic a form that it appears in some way as an experience of Faust
himself. In the final elaboration of his poem he has simply taken over
a great deal that is not an integral part of the spirit of the later
dramatic composition.
The writer
of this Essay belongs to the ranks of those readers of Faust who return to
the poem again and again. His repeated reading has afforded him increasing
insight into the infinite knowledge and experience of life which Goethe
has embodied in it. He has, however, always failed to see
Mephistopheles — in
spite of his living dramatic qualities — as an unitary, inwardly
uniform being. He fully understands why the commentators of Faust do
not know how they should really interpret Mephistopheles. The idea has
arisen that Mephistopheles is not a devil in the real sense, that he
is only a servant of the Earth Spirit. But this is contradicted by what
Mephistopheles himself says: “Fain would I go over to the Devil, if
only I myself were not a Devil!” If we compare all that is expressed
in Mephistopheles, we certainly do not get a uniform view.
As Goethe
worked out his Poem he found that it drew nearer and nearer to the deepest
problems of human experience. The light streaming from these problems of
experience shines into all the events narrated in the poem. Mephistopheles
is an embodiment of what man has to overcome in the course of a deeper
experience of life. In the figure of Mephistopheles there stands an
inner opponent of what man must strive for from out of his being. But
if we follow closely those experiences which Goethe has woven subtly
into the creation of Mephistopheles, we do not find one such spiritual
opponent of the nature of Man, but two. One grows out of man's willing
and feeling nature, the other out of his intellectual nature. The willing
and feeling nature strives to isolate man from the rest of the universe
wherein the root and source of ais existence exist. Man is deceived
by his nature of will and feeling into imagining that he can traverse
his life's path by relying on his inner being alone. He is deceived
into a disregard of the fact that he is a limb of the universe in the
sense that a finger is a limb of the organism. Man is destined to spiritual
death if he cuts himself off from the universe, just as a finger would
be destined to physical death if it attempted to live apart from the
organism. There is a rudimentary striving in man in the direction of
such a separation. Wisdom in life is not gained by shutting the eyes
to the existence of this rudimentary striving, but by conquering it,
transforming it in such a way that instead of being an opponent, it
becomes an aid to life. A man who like Faust, has had contact with the
spiritual world, must enter into the fight against this opposing force
in human life much more consciously than one who has had no such contact.
The power of this Luciferic adversary of man can be dramatised into
a Being. This Being works through those soul forces which strive in
the inner man for the enhancement of Egoism.
The other
opposing force in human nature derives its power from the illusions
to which man is exposed as a being who perceives and forms conceptions
of the outer world. Experience of the outer world that is yielded by
cognition is dependent upon the pictures which, in accordance with the
particular attitude of his soul, and other multifarious circumstances,
a man is able to make of this outer world. The Spirit of Illusion creeps
into the formation of these pictures. It distorts the true relation
to the outer world and to the rest of humanity into which man could
bring himself if its operations were not there. It is also, for instance,
the spirit of dissension and strife between man and man, and sets human
beings into that state of subjection to circumstances which brings remorse
and pangs of conscience in its train. In comparison with a figure of
Persian Mythology, we may call it the Ahrimanic Spirit. The Persian
Myths ascribe qualities to their figure of Ahriman which justify the
use of this name.
The Luciferic
and Ahrimanic opponents of the wisdom of man approach human evolution
in quite different ways. Goethe's Mephistopheles has clearly Ahrimanic
qualities, and yet the Luciferic element also exists in him. A Faust
nature is more strongly exposed to the temptations both of Ahriman and
of Lucifer than one without spiritual experiences. It may now appear
that instead of the one Mephistopheles Goethe might have placed two
characteristic beings there in contrast to Faust. Faust would then have
been led through his life's labyrinth in one way by the one figure,
and in another by the second. In Goethe's Mephistopheles, the two different
kinds of qualities, Luciferic and Ahrimanic, are mingled. This not only
hinders the reader from making an uniform picture of Mephistopheles
in his imagination, but it proved to be an obstacle to Goethe himself
when again and again he tried to spin the thread of the Faust poem through
his own life. One is conscious of a very natural desire to witness or
hear much of what Mephistopheles does or says, from a different being. Of
course Goethe attributed the difficulties which confronted him in the
development of his Faust to many other things; but in his sub-consciousness
there worked the twofold nature of Mephistopheles, and this made it
difficult to guide the development of the course of Faust's existence
into channels which must lead through the powers of opposition.
Considerations
of this kind call forth all too readily the cheap objection that one
wants to put Goethe right. This objection must be tolerated for the
sake of the necessity for understanding Goethe's personal relation-ship
to his Faust poem. We need only be reminded of how Goethe complained
to friends of the weakness of his creative power just at the time when
he wanted to bring his “life-poem” to an end. Let us remember
that Goethe in his advanced age needed Eckermann's encouragement to
rouse him to the task of working out the plan of the continuation of
Faust which he intended to incorporate as such into the third book of
Poetry and Truth. Karl Julius Schröer rightly says (page
30, Third Edition, Part II., of his Essay on Faust): “Without
Eckermann we should really have had nothing more than the plan which
possibly would have had some sort of form like the ‘scheme of
continuation’
of the ‘Natural daughter’ that is embodied in the work.”
We know what such a plan is for the world “an object of consideration
for the literary historian and nothing else.” The cessation of
Goethe's work on Faust has been attributed to every kind of possibility
and impossibility. People have tried in one way or another to reconcile
the contradictions that are felt to exist in the figure of Mephistopheles.
The student of Goethe cannot well disregard these things. Or are we
to make a confession like that of Jacob Minor in his otherwise interest
ing book Goethe's Faust (Vol. II., p. 28): “Goethe was
approaching his fiftieth year; and from the period of his Swiss journey
comes, as far as I know, the first sigh which the thought of approaching
age drew from him in the beautiful poem Swiss Alps
(Schweizeralpe).
Thought as a harbinger of the wisdom of old age came more to the foreground
even in him — with his eternal youth — who hitherto was
only accustomed to behold and create. He makes plans and schemes on
his Swiss journey like any real child of circumstance, just as he does
in Faust.” But a consideration of Goethe's life can lead us to
the view that in a poem like Faust, certain things must be presented
which could only be the result of the experience of mature age. If poetic
power can wane in old age — even in a Goethe — how could
such a poem have some into being at all?
Paradoxical
as it may seem to many minds, a serious study of Goethe's personal
relationship to his Faust and to the figure of Mephistopheles seem to
force us to see in the latter an inner foundation of the difficulties
experienced by Goethe in his life poem. The dual nature of the figure
of Mephistopheles worked in the depths of his soul and did not emerge
above the threshold of his consciousness. But because Faust's experiences
must contain reflections
of the deeds of Mephistopheles, obstacles were continually being set
up when it was a question of developing dramatically the course of Faust's
life, and as a result of the working of the dual nature of the opposing
forces, the right impulses for the development would not come to light.
* * * *
The
Prologue in Heaven, which with the Dedication and the
Prologue of the Theatre now forms an introduction to the first
Part of Faust, was first written in the year 1797. In Goethe's discussions
with Schiller on the subject of the poem, and their outcome which is to be
found in the correspondence between the two men, we can see that about
this time Goethe altered his conception of those basic forces which
revealed themselves
as the life of Faust. Until then everything that comes to light in Faust
flows out of that inner being of his soul that is urging him towards
the consummation and widening of life. This inner impulse is the only
one in evidence. Through the Prologue in Heaven Faust is placed
in the whole world process as a seeking man. The spiritual powers that
temper and maintain the world are revealed and the life of Faust is
placed in the midst of their reciprocal co-operation and reaction. And
so for the consciousness of the poet and of the reader, the being of
Faust is removed into the Macrocosm where the Faust of Goethe as a youth
did not wish to be. Mephistopheles appears “in Heaven” among
the active cosmic beings. But just here the twofold being of Mephistopheles
comes clearly into evidence. The “Lord” says:
“Of all the bold denying spirits
The waggish knave least trouble doth create.”
There must
therefore be yet other spirits who “deny” in the world
struggle. And how does this agree with Mephistopheles' unrest at the
end of Part II. in reference to the corpse, when he says
“in Heaven”:
“I much prefer the cheeks where ruddy blood is leaping
And when a corpse approaches close my house.”
Let us
imagine that instead of one Mephistopheles, a Luciferic and an Ahrimanic
spirit oppose the “Lord” in the fight for Faust. An Ahrimanic
spirit must feel unrest before a “corpse,” for Ahriman is
the spirit of illusion. If we go to the sources of illusion we find
them to be connected with the mortal, material element working in human
life. The forces of knowledge, of cognition, which become active to
the degree in which the impulses appear in them which finally bring
about death, underlie the Ahrimanic illusion. The impulses of Will and
of reeling work in opposition to these forces. They are connected with
budding, growing life; they are most powerful in childhood and youth.
The more a man preserves the impulses of youth, the more vitally do
these forces emerge in his old age. In these forces lie the Luciferic
temptation. Lucifer can say: “I love the cheeks where ruddy blood is
leaping”; Ahriman cannot “close his house” to a corpse.
And the “Lord” can say to Ahriman:
“Of all the bold denying spirits
The waggish knave least trouble cloth create.”
The scoffing
nature is akin to the nature of illusion. And so far as the
“Eternal” in man is concerned, the Ahrimanic being
governing the material and transitory, is less significant than
the other denying spirit who is inwardly bound up with the kernel
of man's being. The perception of a dual nature in Mephistopheles
is not the result of an arbitrary fancy but the self-evident feeling
of the existence of a duality in the constitution of man's universe
and life. Goethe could not help being aware subconsciously of an
element which made him feel: I am confronting the universal form of
life with the Faust-Mephistopheles paradox, but it will not harmonise.
If what
has here been said were taken in the sense of the pedantic, critical
suggestion that Goethe ought to have drawn Mephistopheles otherwise,
it could easily be refuted. It would only be necessary to point out
that in Goethe's imagination this figure grew as unity, — nay
had to grow as such, out of the tradition of the Faust Legend, out of
Germanic and Northern Mythology. And over against the evidence of
“contradictions”
in a living figure, apart from the fact that what is full of life must
necessarily contain “life and its contradictions,” we could
adduce Goethe's own clear words: “If phantasy (imagination) did
not produce things which must for ever remain problematic to the intellect,
there would not be much in it. This is what distinguishes poetry from
prose.” What is here suggested does not in any sense lie in this
region. But what Karl Julius Schröer says (page xciv., 3rd
edition of Part II. of his Essay on Faust) is indisputable:
“Sparkling,
witty, brilliantly descriptive, and manifesting a penetration of the
obscure background of the most sublime problems of humanity ... the
poem stimulates in us feelings of the most intense reverence ...”
This is the whole point: all that lay before Goethe's imagination in
his Faust poem appeared to him against the “obscure background
of the most sublime problems of humanity” which he penetrated again
and again. The attitude in which Schröer, with his deep knowledge
and rare love of Goethe's genius, makes these statements is unassailable,
because Schröer cannot be reproached with having wished to explain
Goethe's poem in the sense of an abstract development of ideas. But
because the background of the most sublime problems of humanity stood
before Goethe's soul, the traditional figure of the “Northern
Devil” expanded before his spiritual gaze into that dual Being
to which the profound student of life and the universe will be led when
he realises how Man is placed within the whole world process.
The
Mephistopheles figure which hovered before Goethe when he began his poem
was in line with Faust's estrangement from the import of the Macrocosm. The
conflicts of the soul then rising from his inner being led to a struggle
against the opposing power that lays hold of man's inner nature and is
Luciferic. But Goethe was bound to lead Faust into the struggle with the
powers of the external world also. The nearer he came to the elaboration
of the second part of Faust, the more strongly did he feel this necessity.
And in the “Classical Walpurgis Night” which was meant to
lead up to the actual meeting between Faust and Helena, world powers
and macrocosmic events entered into connection with human experiences.
Mephistopheles entering into this connection must assume an Ahrimanic
character. As a result of his scientific world conception Goethe had
built for himself the bridge over which he was able to bring world events
into connection with human evolution. He did this in his “Classical
Walpurgis Night.” The poetic value of this will only be appreciated
when it is fully realised that in this part of Faust Goethe so completely
succeeded in moulding Nature's conceptions into artistic form that nothing
of a conceptual, abstract nature remained in them; everything flowed
into imagery, into an imaginative form. It is an esthetic superstition
to reproach the “Classical Walpurgis Night” with containing
a distressing element of abstract scientific theories. And perhaps the
bridge between supersensible, macrocosmic events and human experiences
is more marked in the mighty concluding picture of the Fifth Act of
Part II.
There seems
no doubt that Goethe's genius underwent a development in the course
of his life as a result of which the dual nature of the cosmic powers
opposing man came before his soul's vision and that in the development
of his Faust he realised the necessity for overcoming its own beginning,
for the life of Faust is turned again to the Macrocosm, from which his
incomplete knowledge had at first estranged him.
“A wondrous show! but ah! a show alone.”
Yet into
this show there played the forces of all embracing macrocosmic events.
The “show” became Life, because Faust strove towards goals
that lead man, as a result of the life struggle in his inner being,
into conflicts with Powers that make him appear not only as a struggling
member of the universe, but as a match for the struggle.
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