Part 2 (1/2)
Whoever is turned from his natural path may, if he will, gain in largeness and depth what he loses in simple beauty; and so it was with Goethe. Faust became a wiser if not a n.o.bler being. Werther, who must die because life was not wide enough and rich enough in love for him, ends as the Meister of the Wanderjahre, well content to be one never inadequate to the occasion, ”help-full, comfort-full.”
A great change was, during these years, perceptible to his friends in the character of Goethe. From being always ”either too volatile or infatuated,” he retreated into a self-collected state, which seemed at first even icy to those around him. No longer he darted about him the lightnings of his genius, but sat Jove-like and calm, with the thunderbolts grasped in his hand, and the eagle gathered to his feet.
His freakish wit was subdued into a calm and even cold irony; his multiplied relations no longer permitted him to abandon himself to any; the minister and courtier could not expatiate in the free regions of invention, and bring upon paper the signs of his higher life, without subjecting himself to an artificial process of isolation. Obliged to economy of time and means, he made of his intimates not objects of devout tenderness, of disinterested care, but the crammers and feeders of his intellect. The world was to him an arena or a studio, but not a temple.
”Ye cannot serve G.o.d and Mammon.”
Had Goethe entered upon practical life from the dictate of his spirit, which bade him not be a mere author, but a living, loving man, that had all been well. But he must also be a man of the world, and nothing can be more unfavorable to true manhood than this ambition. The citizen, the hero, the general, the poet, all these are in true relations; but what is called being a man of the world is to truckle to it, not truly to serve it.
Thus fettered in false relations, detained from retirement upon the centre of his being, yet so relieved from the early pressure of his great thoughts as to pity more pious souls for being restless seekers, no wonder that he wrote,--
”Es ist dafur gesorgt da.s.s die Baume nicht in den Himmel wachsen.”
”Care is taken that the trees grow not up into the heavens.” Ay, Goethe, but in proportion to their force of aspiration is their height.
Yet never let him be confounded with those who sell all their birthright. He became blind to the more generous virtues, the n.o.bler impulses, but ever in self-respect was busy to develop his nature. He was kind, industrious, wise, gentlemanly, if not manly. If his genius lost sight of the highest aim, he is the best instructor in the use of means; ceasing to be a prophet poet, he was still a poetic artist. From this time forward he seems a listener to nature, but not himself the highest product of nature,--a priest to the soul of nature. His works grow out of life, but are not instinct with the peculiar life of human resolve, as are Shakspeare's or Dante's.
Faust contains the great idea of his life, as indeed there is but one great poetic idea possible to man--the progress of a soul through the various forms of existence.
All his other works, whatever their miraculous beauty of execution, are mere chapters to this poem, ill.u.s.trative of particular points. Faust, had it been completed in the spirit in which it was begun, would have been the Divina Commedia of its age.
But nothing can better show the difference of result between a stern and earnest life, and one of partial accommodation, than a comparison between the Paridiso and that of the second part of Faust. In both a soul, gradually educated and led back to G.o.d, is received at last not through merit, but grace. But O the difference between the grandly humble reliance of old Catholicism, and the loophole redemption of modern sagacity! Dante was a _man_, of vehement pa.s.sions, many prejudices, bitter as much as sweet. His knowledge was scanty, his sphere of observation narrow, the objects of his active life petty, compared with those of Goethe. But, constantly retiring to his deepest self, clearsighted to the limitations of man, but no less so to the illimitable energy of the soul, the sharpest details in his work convey a largest sense, as his strongest and steadiest flights only direct the eye to heavens yet beyond.
Yet perhaps he had not so hard a battle to wage, as this other great poet. The fiercest pa.s.sions are not so dangerous foes to the soul as the cold scepticism of the understanding. The Jewish demon a.s.sailed the man of Uz with physical ills, the Lucifer of the middle ages tempted his pa.s.sions; but the Mephistopheles of the eighteenth century bade the finite strive to compa.s.s the infinite, and the intellect attempt to solve all the problems of the soul.
This path Faust had taken: it is that of modern necromancy. Not willing to grow into G.o.d by the steady wors.h.i.+p of a life, men would enforce his presence by a spell; not willing to learn his existence by the slow processes of their own, they strive to bind it in a word, that they may wear it about the neck as a talisman.
Faust, bent upon reaching the centre of the universe through the intellect alone, naturally, after a length of trial, which has prevented the harmonious unfolding of his nature, falls into despair. He has striven for one object, and that object eludes him. Returning upon himself, he finds large tracts of his nature lying waste and cheerless.
He is too n.o.ble for apathy, too wise for vulgar content with the animal enjoyments of life. Yet the thirst he has been so many years increasing is not to be borne. Give me, he cries, but a drop of water to cool my burning tongue. Yet, in casting himself with a wild recklessness upon the impulses of his nature yet untried, there is a disbelief that any thing short of the All can satisfy the immortal spirit. His first attempt was n.o.ble, though mistaken, and under the saving influence of it, he makes the compact, whose condition cheats the fiend at last.
Kannst du mich schmeichelnd je belugen Da.s.s ich mir selbst gefallen mag, Kannst du mich mit Genuss betrugen: Das sey fur mich der letzte Tag.
Werd ich zum Augenblicke sagen: Verweile doch! du bist so schon!
Dann magst du mich in Fesseln schlagen, Dann will ich gern zu Grunde gehen.
Canst thou by falsehood or by flattery Make me one moment with myself at peace, Cheat me into tranquillity? Come then And welcome, life's last day.
Make me but to the moment say, O fly not yet, thou art so fair, Then let me perish, &c.
But this condition is never fulfilled. Faust cannot be content with sensuality, with the charlatanry of ambition, nor with riches. His heart never becomes callous, nor his moral and intellectual perceptions obtuse. He is saved at last.
With the progress of an individual soul is shadowed forth that of the soul of the age; beginning in intellectual scepticism; sinking into license; cheating itself with dreams of perfect bliss, to be at once attained by means no surer than a spurious paper currency; longing itself back from conflict between the spirit and the flesh, induced by Christianity, to the Greek era with its harmonious development of body and mind; striving to reembody the loved phantom of cla.s.sical beauty in the heroism of the middle age; flying from the Byron despair of those who die because they cannot soar without wings, to schemes however narrow, of practical utility,--redeemed at last through mercy alone.
The second part of Faust is full of meaning, resplendent with beauty; but it is rather an appendix to the first part than a fulfilment of its promise. The world, remembering the powerful stamp of individual feeling, universal indeed in its application, but individual in its life, which had conquered all its scruples in the first part, was vexed to find, instead of the man Faust, the spirit of the age,--discontented with the shadowy manifestation of truths it longed to embrace, and, above all, disappointed that the author no longer met us face to face, or riveted the ear by his deep tones of grief and resolve.
When the world shall have got rid of the still overpowering influence of the first part, it will be seen that the fundamental idea is never lost sight of in the second. The change is that Goethe, though the same thinker, is no longer the same person.
The continuation of Faust in the practical sense of the education of a man is to be found in Wilhelm Meister. Here we see the change by strongest contrast. The mainspring of action is no longer the impa.s.sioned and n.o.ble seeker, but a disciple of circ.u.mstance, whose most marked characteristic is a taste for virtue and knowledge. Wilhelm certainly prefers these conditions of existence to their opposites, but there is nothing so decided in his character as to prevent his turning a clear eye on every part of that variegated world-scene which the writer wished to place before us.
To see all till he knows all sufficiently to put objects into their relations, then to concentrate his powers and use his knowledge under recognized conditions,--such is the progress of man from Apprentice to Master.