III.
GOETHE'S
STANDARD OF THE SOUL, AS ILLUSTRATED
IN HIS FAIRY STORY OF “THE
GREEN SNAKE AND THE BEAUTIFUL LILY.”
[See
Note 1]
About the
time of the beginning of his friendship with Goethe, Schiller was occupying
himself with the ideas which found expression in his Letters on
the Aesthetic Education of Man. In 1794, he elaborated these letters,
which were originally written for the Duke of Augustenberg, for Die
Horen. The direction of thought in the verbal discussions and the
correspondence which took place at that time between Goethe and Schiller
approximated again and again to the orbit of ideas contained in these
letters. Schiller's thoughts encountered this question: “What
condition of the human soul forces corresponds in the best sense of the
word to an existence worthy of man?” “It may be urged that
every individual bears within himself, at least in adaptation and
destination, a purely ideal man. The great problem of his existence
is to bring all the incessant changes of his outer life into conformity
with the unchanging unity of this ideal.”
Thus writes
Schiller in the fourth letter. It is Schiller's aim to build a bridge
from man as he is in immediate reality, to the ideal man. There exist
in human nature two impulses which hold it back from idealistic perfection
when they develop in an unbalanced way —the impulses of the senses
and of reason. If the sense impulse has the upper hand man is the servant
of his instincts and passions. In action that is irradiated by human
consciousness is mingled a force that clouds this consciousness. His
acts become the result of an inner necessity. If the reason impulse
predominates man strives to suppress the instincts and passions and
to give himself up to an abstract necessity that is not sustained by
inner warmth. In both cases man is subject to coercion. In the first
his sense nature subdues the spiritual; in the second his spiritual
nature subdues that of the senses. Neither the one nor the other gives
man in the kernel of his being which lies between the material and the
spiritual, full and complete freedom. Complete freedom can only be realised
in harmonisation of the two impulses. The material sense nature must
not be subdued, but ennobled; the instincts and passions must be permeated
with spirituality in such a way that they themselves come to be the
fulfilment of the spiritual element that has entered into them. And
reason must lay hold of the soul nature in man in such a way that it
imparts its power to what is merely instinctive and passional, causing
man to fulfil its counsels as a matter of course from out of his instinct
and with the power of passion. “When we have desire for someone
who is worthy of our disdain, we have painful experience of the constraint
of Nature. When we are antagonistic to another who merits our respect,
we have painful experience of the constraint of the intellect. As soon,
however, as he interests our affections and wins our respect, the coercion
of feeling and the coercion of reason both disappear, and we begin to
love him. A man whose material nature manifests the spiritual qualities
of reason, and whose reason manifests the basic power of passion, is
a free personality.” Schiller would like to found harmonious social
life in human society upon the basis of free personalities. For him
the problem of an existence really worthy of man was allied to the problem
of the formation of man's social life. This was his answer to the questions
facing man-kind at the time when he expressed these thoughts, as a result
of the French Revolution (27th Letter). Goethe found deep satisfaction
in such ideas. On 26th October, 1794, he writes to Schiller on the subject
of the Aesthetic Letters as follows: “I read the manuscript sent
to me with the very greatest pleasure; I imbibed it at one draught.
These letters pleased and did me good in the same way as a delicious
drink that suits our nature is easily imbibed and shows its healthy
effects on our tongue through a pleasant humour of the nervous system. How
could it be otherwise, since I found such a coherent and noble exposition
of what I have long recognized to be true, partly experiencing it, partly
longing to experience it in life.”
Goethe
found that Schiller's Aesthetic Letters expressed all that he longed
to experience in life in order to become conscious of an existence that
should be really worthy of man. It is therefore comprehensible that
in his soul also, thoughts should be stimulated which he tried in his
own way to elaborate in Schiller's direction. These thoughts gave birth
to the composition that has been interpreted in so many different ways,
— namely the enigmatical fairy tale at the end of the narrative
which appeared in Die Horen under the title of Conversations
of German Emigrants. The fairy tale appeared in this paper in the
year 1795. These conversations, like Schiller's Aesthetic Letters, had
as their subject the French Revolution. This concluding fairy tale cannot
be explained by bringing all sorts of ideas from outside to bear upon
it, but only by going back to the conceptions which lived in Goethe's
soul at that time.
Most of
the attempts to interpret this composition are recorded in the book
entitled Goethe's Wonder Compositions by Friedrich Meyer von
Waldeck Heidelberg (Karl Wintersche Universitätsbuchhandlung).
Since the publication of this book new attempts at explanation have
of course been made.
I have
tried to penetrate into the spirit of the fairy tale, taking as my starting
point the hypothesis of the Goethean school of thought from the ninetieth
year of the eighteenth century onwards, and I first gave expression
to what I had discovered in a lecture delivered on 27th October, 1891,
to the Goethe Society of Vienna. What I then said has expanded in all
directions. But everything that I have since allowed to be printed or that
I have said verbally about the fairy tale, is only a further elaboration
of the thoughts expressed in that Lecture and my Mystery Play, The
Portal of Initiation, published in 1910, is also a result.
We must look
for the embryonic thought underlying the fairy tale in the
Conversations of which it formed the conclusion. In the
Conversations Goethe
tells of the escape of a certain family from regions devastated by war.
In the conversations between the members of this family there lives
all that was stimulated in Goethe's conceptual world as a result of
his interchange of ideas with Schiller. The conversations revolve around
two central points of thought. One of them governs those conceptions
of man which make him believe in the existence of some connection between
the events of his life, — a connection which is impermeable to
the laws of material actuality. The stories told in this connection
are in part phantom, and in part describe experiences which seem to
reveal a “Wonder” element in contrast to natural law. Goethe
did not write these narratives as the result of a tendency towards
superstition,
but from a much deeper motive. That soothing, mystical feeling which
many people have when they hear of something that cannot be explained
by the limited reason directed to the facts of natural law, was quite
alien to Goethe. But again and again he was faced by the question: does
there not exist for the human soul a possibility of emancipating itself
from conceptions emanating from mere sense perception and of apprehending
a supersensible world in a purely spiritual mode of conception? The
impulse towards this kind of activity of the faculty of cognition may
of course be a natural human aspiration based on a connection with this
supersensible world, — a connection that is hidden from the senses
and the understanding bound to them. And the tendency towards experiences
which appear to sever natural connections may be only a childish aberration
of this justifiable longing of man for a spiritual world. Goethe was
interested in the peculiar direction of the soul's activity when giving
way to this fondness for the sweets of superstition rather than for
the actual content of the tales and stories to which these tendencies
give birth in unsophisticated minds.
From the
second central point of thought flow conceptions concerned with man's
moral life, the stimulus for which is derived not from material existence,
but from impulses which raise man above the impacts of material sense
existence. In this sphere a supersensible world of forces enters into
the soul life of man.
Rays which
must ultimately end in the supersensible proceed from both these central
points of thought. And they give rise to the questions about the inner
being of man, the connection of the human soul with the sense world on
the one side and with the supersensible on the other. Schiller approached
this question in a philosophical attitude in his Aesthetic Letters;
the abstract philosophical path was not Goethe's. He had to give a picture
form to what he wrote, as in the case of the fairy tale of The Green
Snake and the Beautiful Lily. In Goethe's imagination the different
human soul powers assumed the form of figures in the fairy tale, and
the whole soul life and soul striving of man was personified in the
experiences and the lives of these figures. When anything of this kind
is said one has to be prepared for the objection which will come from
certain quarters that in this way a composition is lifted out of the
realer of imagination, of phantasy, and made into an inartistic, symbolical
representation of abstract concepts; the figures are removed from real
life and transformed into symbols or even allegories that are not of
the nature of art. Such an objection is based on the notion that nothing
but abstract ideas can live in the human soul as soon as it leaves the
realm of sense materiality. It ignores the fact that there is a living
supersensible mode of perception as well as one that is of the senses.
And in the fairy tale Goethe moves with his figures in the realm of
supersensible perceptions and not of abstract concepts. What is here
said about these figures and their experiences is not in any sense a
statement that this figure means one thing, and that another. Such
symbolical interpretation is as far removed as it could possibly be from
the standpoint of this Essay. For it, the Old Man with the Lamp and the
Will-o'-the-Wisps in the fairy tale are nothing more nor less than the
phantasy figures as they appear in the composition. It is absolutely
necessary, however, to look for the particular thought impulses which
stimulated the imagination
of the poet to create such figures. Goethe's consciousness did not of
course lay hold of these thought-impulses in abstract form. He expressed
himself in imaginative figures because to his genius any abstract form
of thought would have been too lacking in content. The thought-impulse
holding sway in the substrata of Goethe's soul had as its outcome the
imaginative figure. Thought, as the intermediate stage, lives only
subconsciously
in his soul and gives the imagination its direction. The student of
Goethe's fairy tale needs the thought content, for this alone can enable
his soul to follow the course of Goethe's creative phantasy in re-creative
imagination. The process of growing into the content of this thought
involves nothing more nor less than the adaptation of organs enabling
us to live in the atmosphere that Goethe breathed spiritually when he
created the fairy tale. This means that we focus our gaze upon the same
soul world as Goethe. As a result of Goethe's control of this soul world,
living, spiritual forms — not philosophical ideas, burst forth
before him. What lives in these spiritual forms lives also in the human
soul.
The mode
of conception which permeates the fairy tale is also present in the
Conversations. In the discussions narrated there, the human soul turns
to the two world spheres between which man's life is placed —
the material and the supersensible. The deeper nature of man strives
to establish a right relationship to both these spheres for the purpose
of attaining a free soul understanding that is worthy of man, and of
building a harmonious social life. Goethe felt that what he brought
to light in the narratives did not come to expression fully in the
Conversations.
In the all-embracing picture of the fairy tale he had to bring those
human soul problems upon which his gaze was directed, nearer to the
immeasurably rich world of spiritual life. The striving towards the
condition truly worthy of man to which Schiller refers and which Goethe
longs to experience, is personified in the Young Man in the fairy tale.
His marriage with the Lily, who embodies the realization of the world
of Freedom is the union with those forces which slumber in the human
soul and when awakened lead to the true inner experience of the free
personality.
* * * *
The “Old
Man with the Lamp” plays an important part in the development of
the fairy tale. When he comes with his lamp into the clefts of the rocks,
he is asked which is the most important of the secrets known to him.
He answers, “the revealed,” and when asked if he will not
divulge this secret, replies, “When I have learnt the fourth.”
This fourth secret, however, is known to the Green Snake, who whispers
it in the Old Man's ear. There can be no doubt that this secret concerns
the condition for which all the figures in the fairy tale are longing.
This condition is described at the end of the tale. A picture portrays
the way in which the soul of man enters into union with the subterranean
forces of its nature. As a result of this, the soul's relationship to
the supersensible, — the kingdom of the Lily, — and to the
material, — the kingdom of the Green Snake, is so regulated that
in experience and in action it is freely receptive to impulses from
both regions. In union with both the soul is able to fulfil its true
being. It must be assumed that the Old Man knows this secret; for he
is the only figure who is always master of the circumstances; everything
is dependent on his guidance and leadership. What then can the Snake
say to the Old Man? He knows that the Snake must be offered up in sacrifice
if the longed-for goal is to be attained. But this knowledge of his
is not unconditional. He must wait until the snake from out of the depths
of her nature is ripe to make the sacrifice. Within the compass of man's
soul life is a power which bears the soul's development on to the condition
of free personality. This power has its task on the way to the attainment
of free personality. When this is achieved the task is over. This power
brings the human soul into connection with the experiences of life.
It transforms into inner wisdom all that science and life reveal, and
makes the soul ever riper for the desired spiritual goal. This attained,
it loses meaning, for it establishes man's relation to the outer world.
At the goal, however, all external impulses are changed into inner impulses
of the soul, and there this power must sacrifice itself, must suspend
its functions; it must, without separate existence of its own, live
on now in the transformed man as the ferment permeating the rest of
soul life. Goethe's spiritual outlook was particularly concerned with
this power in human life. He saw it working in the experiences of life
and of science. He wanted to see its application without the outcome
of preconceived ideas or theories of an abstract goal. This goal must
be a result of the experiences themselves. When the experiences are
mature they must themselves give birth to the goal. They must not be
stunted by a predestined end. This soul-power is personified in the
Green Snake. It devours the gold, — the wisdom derived from life
and science, which must be so worked upon by the soul that wisdom and
soul become one. This soul-power will be sacrificed at the right time;
it will bring man to his goal, will make him a free personality. The
Snake whispers to the Old Man that it will sacrifice itself. It confides
to him a mystery that is revealed to him, but of which he can make no
use so long as it is not fnlfllled by the free resolve of the Snake.
When this soul power in man speaks to him as the Snake speaks to the
Old Man, “the time has come” for the soul to realise life
experience as life wisdom; harmony between the material and the
supersensible
is re-established. The Young Man has had premature contact with the
supersensible world, and has been paralysed, deadened. Life revives
in him and he marries the Lily when the Snake, — the soul experience,
is offered up in sacrifice. Thus the longed for consummation is attained.
The time has now also come when the soul is able to build a bridge between
the nether and the further regions of the river. This bridge is built
of the Snake's own substance. From now on, life experience has no separate
existence; it is no longer directed merely to the outer sense world as
before. It has become inner soul power which is not consciously exercised
as such, but which only functions in the reciprocal illumination of
the material and super-sensible life of man's inner being. This condition
is brought about by the Snake. Yet the Snake by itself cannot impart
to the Young Man the gifts whereby he is able to control the newly fathomed
soul kingdom. These gifts are bestowed on him by the Three Kings. From
the Brazen King he receives the sword with the command: “Take the
sword in your left hand and keep the right hand free.” The Silver
King gives him the sceptre with the words: “Feed my sheep.”
The Golden King sets the Crown of Oak on his head, saying,
“Acknowledge the Highest.” The fourth King, who is formed of
a mixture of the
three metals, Copper, Silver and Gold, sinks lifelessly to the ground.
In the man who is on the way to become a free personality there are
three soul forces in alloy: — Will (Copper), Feeling (Silver),
Knowledge (Gold). In the course of existence the revelations of life
experience give all that the soul assimilates from the operation of
these three forces. Power, through which virtue works is made manifest
in Will: Beauty (beautiful appearance) reveals itself in Peeling; Wisdom,
in Knowledge. Man is separated from the state of “free
personality”
through the fact that these three forces work in his soul in alloy;
he will attain free personality to the degree in which he assimilates
the gifts, each of the three in its specific nature, in full consciousness
and unites them in free conscious activity in his own soul. Then the
chaotic alloy of the gifts of Will, Feeling and Knowledge which has
previously controlled him, falls asunder.
The Wisdom
King is of Gold. Gold personifies Wisdom in some form. The operation
of Wisdom in the life experience that is finally sacrificed has already
been described. But the Will-o'-the-Wisps too, seize upon the Gold in
their own way. In man there exists a soul quality, — (in many
people it develops abnormally and seems to fill their whole being) —
by which he is able to assimilate all the wisdom that life and science
bestow. But this soul quality does not endeavour to unite wisdom wholly
to the inner life. It remains one-sided know-ledge, as an instrument
of dogma or criticism; it makes a man appear brilliant, or helps to
give him a one-sided prominence in life. It makes no effort to bring
about a balance through adjustment with the yields of external experience.
It becomes superstition as described by Goethe in the Wonder Tales
of the Emigrants, because it does not try to harmonise itself to
Nature. It becomes learning before it has become life in the inner being
of the soul. It is that which false prophets and sophists like to bear
through life. All endeavour to assimilate the Goethean life-axiom:
“Man must surrender his existence if he would exist” is alien
to it. The Snake, the selfless life-experience that has developed for
love's sake to conscious wisdom, surrenders its existence in order to
build the bridge between material and spiritual existence.
An
irresistible
desire presses the Young Man onward to the kingdom of the Beautiful
Lily. What are the characteristics of this kingdom? Although men have
the deepest longing for the world of the Lily, they can only reach it
at certain times before the bridge is built. At noon the Snake, even
before its sacrifice, builds a temporary bridge to the supersensible
world. And evening and morning man can pass over the river that separates
sense-existence from supersensible existence on the Giant's Shadows
— the powers of imagination and of memory. Anyone who approaches
the ruler of the supersensible world without the necessary inner
qualification
must do harm to his life like the Young Man. The Lily also desires the
other region. The Ferryman who conveyed the Will-o'-the-Wisps over the
river can bring anyone back from the supersensible world, but can take
no one to it.
A man who
desires contact with the supersensible world must first have developed
his inner being in the direction of this world through life experience,
for the supersensible world can only be grasped in free spiritual
activity.
The Prose
Aphorisms express Goethe's opinion of this goal: “Everything that
sets our spirit free without giving us mastery over ourselves, is
harmful.”
Another aphorism is: “Duty, when a man loves the commands he gives
to himself.” The kingdom of pure supersensible activity —
Schiller's “Reason Impulse,” is that of the Lily; the kingdom
of pure sense-materiality — Schiller's “Sense Impulse”
is the home of the Snake before its sacrifice. The Ferryman can bring
anyone to the realm of sense but cannot convey them to the realm of
spirit. All men have involuntarily descended from the supersensible
world. But they can only re-establish a free union with this supersensible
world when they have the will to pass over the bridge of sacrificed
life-experience. It is a union independent of “Time,” of all
involuntary conditions of soul. Before this free union has taken place
there exist two involuntary conditions of soul which enable man to attain
to the supersensible world — the kingdom of the free personality.
One such condition is present in creative imagination or phantasy which
is a reflection of supersensible experience. In Art man links sense
existence to the supersensible. In Art he manifests also as free creative
soul. This is depicted in the crossing which the Snake makes possible
at noon. The Snake typifies life-experience not yet ready for supersensible
existence. The other condition of soul sets in when the conscious soul
of man — of the Giant in man who is an image of the macrocosm
— is dimmed, when conscious cognition is obscured and blunted
in such a way that it becomes superstition, hallucination, mediumistic
trance. The soul power existing in this way in obscured consciousness
is for Goethe one with that power that is prone by force and despotism to
lead men to the state of freedom in a revolutionary sense. In revolutions
the urge towards an ideal state lives obscurely; it is like the shadow
of the Giant which lies over the river at twilight. What Schiller writes
to Goethe on 16th October, 1794, is also evidence of the accuracy of
this idea of the Giant. Goethe was on a journey which it was his intention
to extend to Frankforton-the-Main. Schiller writes: “I am indeed
glad to know that you are still far away from the commerce of the Main.
The shadow of the Giant might well lay rough hands upon you.” The
result of caprice, the unregulated “laissez faire” of
historical events, is personified in the Giant and his shadow, by the
side of the obscured consciousness of man. The soul impulses leading to
such happenings are certainly associated with the tendency towards
superstition and chimerical ideology.
The “Old
Man's” lamp has the quality of only being able to give light where
another light already is. One cannot but be reminded here of the saying
of an old Mystic, quoted by Goethe: “If the eye were not of the
nature of the light it could never see the sun; if God's own power were
not within us, how could Divinity delight us?” Just as the lamp
does not give light in the darkness, so the light of wisdom, of knowledge,
does not shine in the man who does not bring to it the appropriate organ,
the inner light. What the lamp denotes will become still more intelligible
if we take heed of the fact that it can in its own way shed light upon
what is developing as a resolution in the Snake, but that there must
first be knowledge of the Snake's willingness to make this resolution.
There is a kind of human know-ledge which is at all times a concern
of the highest endeavour of man. It has arisen from the inner experience
of souls in the course of the historical life of mankind. But the goal
of human endeavour to which it points can only be attained in concrete
reality out of the sacrificed life-experience. All that the consideration
of the historical past teaches man, all that mystical and religious
experience enables him to say about his connection with the supersensible
world,-all this can find its ultimate consummation only by the sacrifice
of life-experience. The Old Man can change everything by his lamp in
such a way that it assumes a new life-serving form, but actual development
is dependent upon the ripening of the life-experience.
The wife
of the Old Man is she whose body is pledged to the river for the debt
which she has come to owe it. This woman personifies the human powers
of perception and conception as well as humanity's memory of its past.
She is an associate of the Old Man. By her aid he has possession of
the light that is able to illumine what is made evident already by external
reality. But the powers of conception and of remembrance are not united
in life with the concrete forces active in the evolution of the individual
man and in the historical life of humanity. The power of conception
and of remembrance cleaves to the past; it conserves the things of the
past so that they make their claims upon all that is becoming and evolving
in the present. The conditions — maintained by memory —
in which the individual and the human race are always living, are the
crystallisation of this power of the soul.
Schiller
writes of them in the third of the Aesthetic Letters: “He
(man) was introduced into this state by the power of circumstances,
before he could freely select his own position. Before he could adjust
it according to the Laws of Reason, necessity has done so according to
Natural Laws.” The river divides the two kingdoms, of free spiritual
activity in supersensible existence and of necessity in material life.
The unconscious soul powers, the Ferryman, transport man, whose origin
is in the supersensible kingdom, into the material world. Here in the
first place he finds himself in a realm wherein the powers of conception
and remembrance have created conditions in which he has to live. But
they separate him from the supersensible world; he feels himself beholden
to them when he must approach the power (the Ferryman) that has brought
him unconsciously out of the supersensible world into the material sense
world. He can only break the power which these conditions have over
him, and which is revealed in the deprivation of his freedom, when with
the “Fruits of the Earth” that is to say, with self-created
life wisdom, he frees himself from the obligation imposed upon him by the
conditions, from coercion. If he cannot do this, these conditions —
the water of the river — take his individual wisdom away from him.
He is swallowed up into his soul being.
On the
river stands the Temple in which the marriage of the Young Man with
the Lily takes place. The “marriage” with the supersensible,
the realisation of the free personality, is possible in a human soul whose
forces have been brought into a state of regularity that in comparison
with the usual state is a transformation. The life experience previously
acquired by the soul is so far mature that the force directed to it
is no longer exhausted in adapting man to the world of sense. This force
becomes the content of what is able to stream into man's inner being
from the supersensible world in such a way, that, acts in the material
sense world become the fulfilment of supersensible impulses. In this
condition of soul, those spiritual powers of man which previously flowed
along mistaken or one-sided channels, assume their new significance
in the character as a whole, — a significance adequate for a higher
state of consciousness. The wisdom of the Will-o'-the-Wisps, for example,
which has broken loose from the sense world and has wandered into
superstitution
or chaotic thought, serves to open the door of the Palace, that is the
personification of the soul condition wherein the chaotic alloy of Will,
Feeling and Cognition holds man in chain within a constricted inner
life shut off from the supersensible world.
In the wonder
pictures of the composition Goethe approached the panoramic evolution
of the human soul before his spiritual vision in that frame of mind
which is conscious of estrangement in face of the supersensible until
it attains those heights of consciousness where life in the sense world
is permeated by the supersensible, spiritual world to such an extent
that the two become one. This process of transformation was visible
to Goethe's soul in delicately woven figures of phantasy. Through the
Conversations of German Emigrants shines the problem of the
relation of the physical world to a world of supersensible experience
free of every element of sense with its consequences for the communal
life of man. This problem finds a far-reaching solution at the end of the
fairy tale in a panorama of poetic pictures. This Essay merely indicates
the path leading to the realm where Goethe's imagination wove the fabric
of the fairy tale. Living understanding of all the other details can
be developed by those who realise the fairy tale to be a picture of
man's soul life as it strives towards the supersensible world. Schiller
realised this fully. He writes: “The fairy tale is full of colour
and humour and I think that you have given most charming expression to
the ideas of which you once spoke, namely, in reference to the reciprocal
interplay of the powers and their reaction on each other.” For
even when it is objected that this reciprocal interaction of the powers
refers to powers of different men, we can plead the well-known Goethean
truth that although the soul powers from one point of view are distributed
among different human beings, they are nothing but the divergent rays
of the collective human soul. And when different human natures work
together in a common existence we have in this mutual action and reaction
nothing more nor less than a picture of the multifarious forces and
powers constituting in their reciprocal relationships the one collective
individual being, Man.
Notes:
Note 1.
“This essay is an elaboration
of my article Goethe's Secret Revelation which appeared in the Literary
Magazine in 1899, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of Goethe's
birthday.
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