A poetical work must vindicate itself:
if the execution be defective, little aid can be derived
from commentaries.
On these grounds I might safely leave
the chorus to be its own advocate, if we had ever
seen it presented in an appropriate manner. But
it must be remembered that a dramatic composition
first assumes the character of a whole by means of
representation on the stage. The poet supplies
only the words, to which, in a lyrical tragedy, music
and rhythmical motion are essential accessories.
It follows, then, that if the chorus is deprived of
accompaniments appealing so powerfully to the senses,
it will appear a superfluity in the economy of the
drama-a mere hinderance to the development
of the plot-destructive to the illusion
of the scene, and wearisome to the spectators.
To do justice to the chorus, more
especially if our aims in poetry be of a grand and
elevated character, we must transport ourselves from
the actual to a possible stage. It is the privilege
of art to furnish for itself whatever is requisite,
and the accidental deficiency of auxiliaries ought
not to confine the plastic imagination of the poet.
He aspires to whatever is most dignified, he labors
to realize the ideal in his own mind-though
in the execution of his purpose he must needs accommodate
himself to circumstances.
The assertion so commonly made that
the public degrades art is not well founded.
It is the artist that brings the public to the level
of his own conceptions; and, in every age in which
art has gone to decay, it has fallen through its professors.
The people need feeling alone, and feeling they possess.
They take their station before the curtain with an
unvoiced longing, with a multifarious capacity.
They bring with them an aptitude for what is highest-they
derive the greatest pleasure from what is judicious
and true; and if, with these powers of appreciation,
they deign to be satisfied with inferior productions,
still, if they have once tasted what is excellent,
they will in the end insist on having it supplied
to them.
It is sometimes objected that the
poet may labor according to an ideal- that
the critic may judge from ideas, but that mere executive
art is subject to contingencies, and depends for effect
on the occasion. Managers will be obstinate;
actors are bent on display-the audience
is inattentive and unruly. Their object is relaxation,
and they are disappointed if mental exertion be required,
when they expected only amusement. But if the
theatre be made instrumental towards higher objects,
the diversion, of the spectator will not be increased,
but ennobled. It will be a diversion, but a poetical
one. All art is dedicated to pleasure, and there
can be no higher and worthier end than to make men
happy. The true art is that which provides the
highest degree of pleasure; and this consists in the
abandonment of the spirit to the free play of all
its faculties.
Every one expects from the imaginative
arts a certain emancipation from the bounds of reality:
we are willing to give a scope to fancy, and recreate
ourselves with the possible. The man who expects
it the least will nevertheless forget his ordinary
pursuits, his everyday existence and individuality,
and experience delight from uncommon incidents:-if
he be of a serious turn of mind he will acknowledge
on the stage that moral government of the world which
he fails to discover in real life. But he is,
at the same time, perfectly aware that all is an empty
show, and that in a true sense he is feeding only
on dreams. When he returns from the theatre to
the world of realities, he is again compressed within
its narrow bounds; he is its denizen as before-for
it remains what it was, and in him nothing has been
changed. What, then, has he gained beyond a momentary
illusive pleasure which vanished with the occasion?
It is because a passing recreation
is alone desired that a mere show of truth is thought
sufficient. I mean that probability or vraisemblance
which is so highly esteemed, but which the commonest
workers are able to substitute for the true.
Art has for its object not merely
to afford a transient pleasure, to excite to a momentary
dream of liberty; its aim is to make us absolutely
free; and this it accomplishes by awakening, exercising,
and perfecting in us a power to remove to an objective
distance the sensible world; (which otherwise only
burdens us as rugged matter, and presses us down with
a brute influence;) to transform it into the free working
of our spirit, and thus acquire a dominion over the
material by means of ideas. For the very reason
also that true art requires somewhat of the objective
and real, it is not satisfied with a show of truth.
It rears its ideal edifice on truth itself-on
the solid and deep foundations of nature.
But how art can be at once altogether
ideal, yet in the strictest sense real; how it can
entirely leave the actual, and yet harmonize with
nature, is a problem to the multitude; and hence the
distorted views which prevail in regard to poetical
and plastic works; for to ordinary judgments these
two requisites seem to counteract each other.
It is commonly supposed that one may
be attained by the sacrifice of the other;-the
result is a failure to arrive at either. One to
whom nature has given a true sensibility, but denied
the plastic imaginative power, will be a faithful
painter of the real; he will adapt casual appearances,
but never catch the spirit of nature. He will
only reproduce to us the matter of the world, which,
not being our own work, the product of our creative
spirit, can never have the beneficent operation of
art, of which the essence is freedom. Serious
indeed, but unpleasing, is the cast of thought with
which such an artist and poet dismisses us; we feel
ourselves painfully thrust back into the narrow sphere
of reality by means of the very art which ought to
have emancipated us. On the other hand, a writer
endowed with a lively fancy, but destitute of warmth
and individuality of feeling, will not concern himself
in the least about truth; he will sport with the stuff
of the world, and endeavor to surprise by whimsical
combinations; and as his whole performance is nothing
but foam and glitter, he will, it is true, engage the
attention for a time, but build up and confirm nothing
in the understanding. His playfulness is, like
the gravity of the other, thoroughly unpoetical.
To string together at will fantastical images is not
to travel into the realm of the ideal; and the imitative
reproduction of the actual cannot be called the representation
of nature. Both requisites stand so little in
contradiction to each other that they are rather one
and the same thing; that art is only true insomuch
as it altogether forsakes the actual, and becomes
purely ideal. Nature herself is an idea of the
mind, and is never presented to the senses. She
lies under the veil of appearances, but is herself
never apparent. To the art of the ideal alone
is lent, or rather absolutely given, the privilege
to grasp the spirit of the all and bind it in a corporeal
form.
Yet, in truth, even art cannot present
it to the senses, but by means of her creative power
to the imaginative faculty alone; and it is thus that
she becomes more true than all reality, and more real
than all experience. It follows from these premises
that the artist can use no single element taken from
reality as he finds it-that his work must
be ideal in all its parts, if it be designed to have,
as it were, an intrinsic reality, and to harmonize
with nature.
What is true of art and poetry, in
the abstract, holds good as to their various kinds;
and we may apply what has been advanced to the subject
of tragedy. In this department it is still necessary
to controvert the ordinary notion of the natural,
with which poetry is altogether incompatible.
A certain ideality has been allowed in painting, though,
I fear, on grounds rather conventional than intrinsic;
but in dramatic works what is desired is allusion,
which, if it could be accomplished by means of the
actual, would be, at best, a paltry deception.
All the externals of a theatrical representation are
opposed to this notion; all is merely a symbol of
the real. The day itself in a theatre is an artificial
one; the metrical dialogue is itself ideal; yet the
conduct of the play must forsooth be real, and the
general effect sacrificed to a part. Thus the
French, who have utterly misconceived the spirit of
the ancients, adopted on their stage the unities of
tine and place in the most common and empirical sense;
as though there were any place but the bare ideal
one, or any other time than the mere sequence of the
incidents.
By the introduction of a metrical
dialogue an important progress has been made towards
the poetical tragedy. A few lyrical dramas have
been successful on the stage, and poetry, by its own
living energy, has triumphed over prevailing prejudices.
But so long as these erroneous views are entertained
little has been done-for it is not enough
barely to tolerate as a poetical license that which
is, in truth, the essence of all poetry. The
introduction of the chorus would be the last and decisive
step; and if it only served this end, namely, to declare
open and honorable warfare against naturalism in art,
it would be for us a living wall which tragedy had
drawn around herself, to guard her from contact with
the world of reality, and maintain her own ideal soil,
her poetical freedom.
It is well-known that the Greek tragedy
had its origin in the chorus; and though in process
of time it became independent, still it may be said
that poetically, and in spirit, the chorus was the
source of its existence, and that without these persevering
supporters and witnesses of the incident a totally
different order of poetry would have grown out of
the drama. The abolition of the chorus, and the
debasement of this sensibly powerful organ into the
characterless substitute of a confidant, is by no
means such an improvement in the tragedy as the French,
and their imitators, would have it supposed to be.
The old tragedy, which at first only
concerned itself with gods, heroes and kings introduced
the chorus as an essential accompaniment. The
poets found it in nature, and for that reason employed
it. It grew out of the poetical aspect of real
life. In the new tragedy it becomes an organ of
art, which aids in making the poetry prominent.
The modern poet no longer finds the chorus in nature;
he must needs create and introduce it poetically;
that is, he must resolve on such an adaption of his
story as will admit of its retrocession to those primitive
times and to that simple form of life.
The chorus thus renders more substantial
service to the modern dramatist than to the old poet-and
for this reason, that it transforms the commonplace
actual world into the old poetical one; that it enables
him to dispense with all that is repugnant to poetry,
and conducts him back to the most simple, original,
and genuine motives of action. The palaces of
kings are in these days closed-courts of
justice have been transferred from the gates of cities
to the interior of buildings; writing has narrowed
the province of speech; the people itself-the
sensibly living mass-when it does not operate
as brute force, has become a part of the civil polity,
and thereby an abstract idea in our minds; the deities
have returned within the bosoms of mankind. The
poet must reopen the palaces-he must place
courts of justice beneath the canopy of heaven-restore
the gods, reproduce every extreme which the artificial
frame of actual life has abolished-throw
aside every factitious influence on the mind or condition
of man which impedes the manifestation of his inward
nature and primitive character, as the statuary rejects
modern costume:-and of all external circumstances
adopts nothing but what is palpable in the highest
of forms-that of humanity.
But precisely as the painter throws
around his figures draperies of ample volume, to fill
up the space of his picture richly and gracefully,
to arrange its several parts in harmonious masses,
to give due play to color, which charms and refreshes
the eye-and at once to envelop human forms
in a spiritual veil, and make them visible-so
the tragic poet inlays and entwines his rigidly
contracted plot and the strong outlines of his characters
with a tissue of lyrical magnificence, in which, as
in flowing robes of purple, they move freely and nobly,
with a sustained dignity and exalted repose.
In a higher organization, the material,
or the elementary, need not be visible; the chemical
color vanishes in the finer tints of the imaginative
one. The material, however, has its peculiar effect,
and may be included in an artistical composition.
But it must deserve its place by animation, fulness
and harmony, and give value to the ideal forms which
it surrounds instead of stifling them by its weight.
In respect of the pictorial art, this
is obvious to ordinary apprehension, yet in poetry
likewise, and in the tragical kind, which is our immediate
subject, the same doctrine holds good. Whatever
fascinates the senses alone is mere matter, and the
rude element of a work of art:- if it takes
the lead it will inevitably destroy the poetical-which
lies at the exact medium between the ideal and the
sensible. But man is so constituted that he is
ever impatient to pass from what is fanciful to what
is common; and reflection must, therefore, have its
place even in tragedy. But to merit this place
it must, by means of delivery, recover what it wants
in actual life; for if the two elements of poetry,
the ideal and the sensible, do not operate with an
inward mutuality, they must at least act as allies-or
poetry is out of the question. If the balance
be not intrinsically perfect, the equipoise can only
be maintained by an agitation of both scales.
This is what the chorus effects in
tragedy. It is in itself, not an individual but
a general conception; yet it is represented by a palpable
body which appeals to the senses with an imposing grandeur.
It forsakes the contracted sphere of the incidents
to dilate itself over the past and the future, over
distant times and nations, and general humanity, to
deduce the grand results of life, and pronounce the
lessons of wisdom. But all this it does with
the full power of fancy-with a bold lyrical
freedom which ascends, as with godlike step, to the
topmost height of worldly things; and it effects it
in conjunction with the whole sensible influence of
melody and rhythm, in tones and movements.
The chorus thus exercises a purifying
influence on tragic poetry, insomuch as it keeps reflection
apart from the incidents, and by this separation arms
it with a poetical vigor, as the painter, by means
of a rich drapery, changes the ordinary poverty of
costume into a charm and ornament.
But as the painter finds himself obliged
to strengthen the tone of color of the living subject,
in order to counterbalance the material influences-so
the lyrical effusions of the chorus impose upon
the poet the necessity of a proportionate elevation
of his general diction. It is the chorus alone
which entitles the poet to employ this fulness of tone,
which at once charms the senses, pervades the spirit,
and expands the mind. This one giant form on
his canvas obliges him to mount all his figures on
the cothurnus, and thus impart a tragical grandeur
to his picture. If the chorus be taken away,
the diction of the tragedy must generally be lowered,
or what is now great and majestic will appear forced
and overstrained. The old chorus introduced into
the French tragedy would present it in all its poverty,
and reduce it to nothing; yet, without doubt, the
same accompaniment would impart to Shakspeare’s
tragedy its true significance.
As the chorus gives life to the language-so
also it gives repose to the action; but it is that
beautiful and lofty repose which is the characteristic
of a true work of art. For the mind of the spectator
ought to maintain its freedom through the most impassioned
scenes; it should not be the mere prey of impressions,
but calmly and severely detach itself from the emotions
which it suffers. The commonplace objection made
to the chorus, that it disturbs the illusion, and blunts
the edge of the feelings, is what constitutes its highest
recommendation; for it is this blind force of the
affections which the true artist deprecates-this
illusion is what he disdains to excite. If the
strokes which tragedy inflicts on our bosoms followed
without respite, the passion would overpower the action.
We should mix ourselves with the subject-matter, and
no longer stand above it. It is by holding asunder
the different parts, and stepping between the passions
with its composing views, that the chorus restores
to us our freedom, which would else be lost in the
tempest. The characters of the drama need this
intermission in order to collect themselves; for they
are no real beings who obey the impulse of the moment,
and merely represent individuals-but ideal
persons and representatives of their species, who enunciate
the deep things of humanity.
Thus much on my attempt to revive
the old chorus on the tragic stage. It is true
that choruses are not unknown to modern tragedy; but
the chorus of the Greek drama, as I have employed
it-the chorus, as a single ideal person,
furthering and accompanying the whole plot-if
of an entirely distinct character; and when, in discussion
on the Greek tragedy, I hear mention made of choruses,
I generally suspect the speaker’s ignorance of
his subject. In my view the chorus has never been
reproduced since the decline of the old tragedy.
I have divided it into two parts,
and represented it in contest with itself; but this
occurs where it acts as a real person, and as an unthinking
multitude. As chorus and an ideal person it is
always one and entire. I have also several times
dispensed with its presence on the stage. For
this liberty I have the example of Aeschylus, the creator
of tragedy, and Sophocles, the greatest master of
his art.
Another license it may be more difficult
to excuse. I have blended together the Christian
religion and the pagan mythology, and introduced recollections
of the Moorish superstition. But the scene of
the drama is Messina-where these three
religions either exercised a living influence, or
appealed to the senses in monumental remains.
Besides, I consider it a privilege of poetry to deal
with different religions as a collective whole.
In which everything that bears an individual character,
and expresses a peculiar mode of feeling, has its
place. Religion itself, the idea of a Divine
Power, lies under the veil of all religions; and it
must be permitted to the poet to represent it in the
form which appears the most appropriate to his subject.