Greece holds such an eminence in history
because the Crest-Wave rolled in there when it did.
She was tenant of an epochal time; whoever was great
then, was to be remembered forever. But the truth
is, Greece served the future badly enough.
The sixth and fifth centuries B. C.
were an age of transition, in which the world took
a definite step downward. There had been present
among men a great force to keep the life of the nations
sweet: that which we call the Mysteries of Antiquity.
Whether they had been active continuously since this
Fifth Root Race began, who can say? Very possibly
not; for in a million years cycles would repeat themselves,
and I dare say conditions as desolate as our own have
obtained. There may have been withdrawals, and
again expansions outward. But certainly they
were there at the dawn of history, and for a long time
before. What their full effect may have been,
we can only guess; for when the history that we know
begins, they were already declining: we
get no definite news, except of the Iron Age.
The Mysteries were not closed at Eleusis until late
in the days of the Roman Empire; and we know that
such a great man as Julian did not disdain to be initiated.
But they were only a remnant then, an ever-indrawing
source of inspiration; already a good century before
Pericles they must have ceased to rule life.
Pythagoras born, probably, in the five-eighties had
found it necessary, to obtain that with which spirituality
might be reawakened, to travel and learn what he could
in India, Egypt, Chaldaea, and, according to Porphyry
and tradition, among the Druids in Gaul and
very likely Britain, their acredited headquarters.
From these countries he brought home Theosophy to
Greek Italy; and all this suggests that he and
the race needed something that Eleusis could
no longer give. About the same time Buddha and
the founder of Jainism in India, Laotse and Confucius
in China, and as we have seen, probably also Zoroaster
in Persia, all broke away from the Official Mysteries,
more or less, to found Theosophical Movements of their
own; which would indicate that, at least
from the Tyrrhenian to the Yellow Sea, the Mysteries
had, in that sixth century, ceased to be the efficient
instrument of the White Lodge. The substance of
the Ancient Wisdom might remain in them; the energy
was largely gone.
Pisistratus did marvels for Athens;
lifting her out of obscurity to a position which should
invite great souls to seek birth in her. He died
in 527; two years later a son was born to the Eupatrid
Euphorion at Eleusis; and I have no doubt there was
some such stir over the event, on Olympus or on Parnassus,
as happened over a birth at Stratford-on-Avon in 1564,
and one in Florence in the May of 1265. In 510,
Hippias, grown cruel since the assassination of his
brother, was driven out from an Athens already fomenting
with the yeast of new things. About that time
this young Eleusinian Eupatrid was set to watch grapes
ripening for the vintage, and fell asleep. In
his dream Dionysos, God of the Mysteries, appeared
to him and bade him write tragedies for the Dionysian
Festival. On waking, he found himself endowed
with genius: beset inwardly with tremendous thoughts,
and words to clothe them in; so that the work became
as easy to him as if he had been trained to it for
years.
He competed first in 499 against
Choerilos and Pratinas, older poets and
was defeated; and soon afterwards sailed for Sicily,
where he remained for seven years. The dates of
Pythagoras are surmised, not known; Plumptre, with
a query, gives 497 for his death. I wonder whether,
in the last years of his life, that great Teacher
met this young Aeschylus from Athens; whether the
years the latter spent in Sicily on this his first
visit there, were the due seven years of his Pythagorean
probation and initiation? “Veniat Aeschylus,”
says Cicero, “non poeta solum,
sed etiam Pythagoreus: sic enim
accepimus “; and we may accept it
too; for that was the Theosophical Movement of the
age; and he above all others, Pythagoras having died,
was the great Theosophist. They had the Eleusinian
Mysteries at Athens, and Most of the prominent Athenians
must have been initiated into them since
that was the State Religion; but Aeschylus alone in
Athens went through life clothed in the living power
of Theosophy.
Go to the life of such a man, if you
want big clues as to the inner history of his age; the
life of Aeschylus, I think, can interpret for us that
of Athens. There are times when the movement
of the cycles is accelerated, and you can see the
great wheel turning; this was one. Aeschylus
had proudly distinguished himself at Marathon; and
Athens, as the highest honor she could do him for
that, must have his portrait appear in the battle-picture
painted for a memorial of the victory. He fought,
too, at Artemisium and Salamis; with equal distinction.
In 484 he won the first of thirteen annual successes
in the dramatic competitions. These were the
years during which Athens was really playing the hero;
the years of Aristides’ ascendency. In
480 Xerxes burned the city; but the people fought on,
great in faith. In 479 came Plataea, Aeschylus
again fighting. Throughout this time, he, the
Esotericist and Messenger of the Gods, was wholly
at one with his Athens an Athens alive enough
then to the higher things to recognize the voice of
the highest when it spoke to her to award
Aeschylus, year after year, the chief dramatic prize.
Then in 478 or 477 she found herself in a new position:
her heroism and intelligence had won their reward,
and she was set at the head of Greece. Six years
later Aeschylus produced The Persians, the
first of the seven extant out of the seventy or eighty
plays he wrote; in it he is still absolutely the patriotic
Athenian. In 471 came the Seven against Thebes;
from which drama, I think, we get a main current of
light on the whole future history of Athens.
Two men, representing two forces,
had guided the city during those decades. On
the one hand there was Aristides, called the Just inflexible,
incorruptible, impersonal and generous; on the other,
Themistocles precocious and wild as a boy;
profligate as a youth and young man; ambitious, unscrupulous
and cruel; a genius; a patriot; without moral sense.
The policy of Aristides, despite his so-called democratic
reforms, was conservative; he persuaded Greece, by
sound arguments, to the side of Athens: he was
for Athens doing her duty by Greece, and remaining
content. That of Themistocles was that she should
aim at empire by any means: should make herself
a sea-power with a view to dominating the Greek world.
Oh, to begin with, doubtless with a view to holding
back the Persians; and so far his policy was sane enough;
but his was not the kind of mind in which an ambitious
idea fails to develop in ambitious and greedy directions;
and that of mastery of the seas was an idea that could
not help developing fatally. He had been banished
for his corruption in 471; but he had set Athens on
blue water, and bequeathed to her his policy.
Henceforward she was to make for supremacy, never counting
the moral cost. She attacked the islands at her
pleasure, conquered them, and often treated the conquered
with vile cruelty. The Seven against Thebes
was directed by Aeschylus against the Themistoclean,
and in support of the Aristidean, policy. Imperialistic
ambitions, fast ripening in that third decade of the
fifth century, were opposed by the Messenger of the
Gods.
His valor in four battles had set
him among the national heroes; he had been, in The
Persians, the laureate of Salamis; by the sheer
grandeur of his poetry he had won the prize thirteen
times in succession. And by the bye, it
is to the eternal credit of Athenian intelligence
that Athens, at one hearing of those obscure, lofty
and tremendous poems, should have appreciated them,
and with enthusiasm. Try to imagine Samson
Agonistes put on the stage today; with no academical
enthusiasts or eclat of classicism to back it; but
just put on before thirty thousand sight-seers, learned
and vulgar, statesman and cobbler, tinker and poet;
the mob all there; the groundlings far out-numbering
the elite: and all not merely sitting out
the play, but roused to a frenzy of enthusiasm; and
Milton himself, present and acting, the hero of the
day. That, despite Mr. Whistler and the Ten
O’Clock seems really to have been
the kind of thing that happened in Athens. Tomides
was there, with his companions little
Tomides, the mender of bad soles and intoxicated
by the grand poetry; understanding it, and never finding
it tedious; poetry they had had no opportunity
to study in advance, they understood and appreciated
wildly at first hearing. One cannot imagine it
among moderns. And Milton is clear as daylight
beside remote and difficult Aeschylus. To catch
the latter’s thought, we need the quiet of the
study, close attention, reading and re-reading; and
though of course time has made him more difficult;
and we should have understood him better, with no more
than our present limited intelligence, had we been
his countrymen and contemporaries; yet it remains
a standing marvel, and witness to the far higher general
intelligence of the men of Athens. The human
spirit was immensely nearer this plane; they were far
more civilized, in respect to mental culture, than
we are. Why? The cycles have traveled
downward; our triumphs are on a more brutal plane;
we are much farther from the light of the Mysteries
than they were.
And yet they were going wrong:
the great cycle had begun its down-trend; they were
already preparing the way for our fool-headed materialism.
In the Seven against Thebes Aeschylus protested
against the current of the age. Three years later,
Athens, impatient of criticism, turned on him.
He is acting in one of his own plays one
that been lost. He gives utterance, down there
in the arena, to certain words tremendous
words, as always, we must suppose: words hurled
out of the heights of an angry eternity
"Aeschylus’
bronze-throat eagle-bark for blood,"
and Athens, that used
to thrill and go mad to such tones when they proclaimed
the godlike in her own soul and encouraged her to
grand aspirations goes mad now in another
sense. She has grown used to hear warning in
them, and something in alliance with her own stifled
conscience protesting against her wrong courses; and
such habituation rarely means acquiescence or soothed
complacency. Now she is smitten and stung to the
quick. A yell from the mob; uproar; from the
tiers above tiers they butt, lurch, lunge, pour forward
and down: the tinkers and cobblers, demagogs
and demagoged: intent yes to
kill. But he, having yet something to say, takes
refuge at the altar; and there even a maddened mob
dare not molest him. But the prize goes to a rising
star, young Sophocles; and presently the Gods’
Messenger is formally accused and tried for “Profanation
of the Mysteries.”
Revealing secrets pertaining to them,
in fact. And now note this: his defense
is that he did not know that his lines revealed any
secret was unaware that what he had said
pertained to the Mysteries. Could he have urged
such a plea, had it not been known he was uninitiated?
Could he have known the teachings, had he not been
instructed in a school where they were known?
He, then, was an initiate of the Pythagoreans, the
new Theosophical Movement upon the new method; not
of Orthodox Eleusis, that had grown old and comatose
rather, and had ceased to count. Well, the
judges were something saner than the mob; memory turned
again to what he had done at Marathon, what at Arternisium
and Plataea; to his thirteen solid years of victory
(national heroism on poetico-dramatic fields);
and to that song of his that “saved at Salamis”:
"O Sons of Greeks,
go set your country free!"
and he was acquitted:
Athens had not yet fallen so low as to prepare a hemlock
cup for her teacher. But meanwhile he would do
much better among his old comrades in Sicily than at
home; and thither he went.
He returned in 458, to find the Age
of Pericles in full swing; with all made anew, or
in the making; and the time definitely set on its
downward course. ‘Reform’ was busy
at abolishing institutions once held sacred; was the
rage; that funeral speech of Pericles,
with its tactless vaunting of Athenian superiority
to all other possible men and nations, should tell
us something. When folk get to feel like that,
God pity and forgive them! it is hard enough
for mere men to. Aeschylus smote at imperialism
in the Agamemnon the first play
of this last of his trilogies; and at the mania
for reforming away sacred institutions in the Eumenides where
he asserts the divine origin of the threatened Areopagus.
Popular feeling rose once more against him, and he
returned to Sicily to die.
Like so many another of his royal
line, apparently a failure. And indeed, a failure
he was, so far as his Athens was concerned. True,
Athenian artistic judgment triumphed presently over
the Athenian spite. Though it was the rule that
no successful play should be performed more than once,
they decreed that ‘revivals’ of Aeschylus
should always be in order. And Aristophanes
testifies to his lasting popularity when
he shows little Tomides with a bad grouch over seeing
a play by Theognis, when he had gone to the theater
“expecting Aeschylus"; and when he
shows Aeschylus and Euripides winning, because his
poetry had died with him, and so he had it there for
a weapon whereas Aeschylus’s was
still alive and on earth. Yes; Athens took him
again, and permanently, into favor: took the
poet, but not the Messenger and his message.
For she had gone on the wrong road in spite of him:
she had let the divine force, the influx of the human
spirit which had come to her as her priceless cyclic
opportunity, flow down from the high planes proper
to it, on to the plane of imperialism and vulgar ambition;
and his word had been spoken to the Greeks in vain as
all Greek history and Karma since has been proclaiming.
But in sooth he was not merely for an age, but for
all time; and his message, unlike Pindar’s whom
all Greece worshiped, and far more than Homer’s
or that of Sophocles is vital today.
Aeschylus, and Plato, and Socrates who speaks through
Plato, and Pythagoras who speaks through all of them,
are the Greeks whose voices are lifted forever for
the Soul.
Even the political aspect of his message the
only one I have touched on is vital.
It proclaims a truth that underlies all history:
one, I suspect, that remains for our Theosophical
Movement to impress on the general world-consciousness
so that wars may end: namely, that the impulse
of Nationalism is a holy thing, foundationed upon
the human spirit: a means designed by the Law
for humanity’s salvation. But like all
spiritual forces, it must be kept pure and spiritual,
or instead of saving, it will damn. In its inception,
it is vision of the Soul: of the Racial or National
Soul which is a divine light to lure us
away from the plane of personality, to obliterate
our distressing and private moods; to evoke the divine
actor in us, and merge us in a consciousness vastly
greater than out own. But add to that saving
truth this damning corolary: I am better than
thou; my race than thine; we have harvests to reap
at your expense, and our rights may be your wrongs: and
you have, though it appear not for awhile, fouled
that stream from godhood: you have debased
your nationalism and made it hellish. Upon your
ambitions and your strength, now in the time of your
national flowering, you may win to your desire, if
you will; because now the spirit is quickening
the whole fiber of your national self; and the national
will must become, under that pressure, almost irresistibly
victorious. The Peoples of the earth shall kneel
before your throne; you shall get your vulgar empire; but
you shall get it presently, as they say, “where
the chicken got the axe”: Vengeance
is mine, saith the Law; I will repay. The cycle,
on the plane to which you have dragged it down, will
run its course; your high throne will go down with
it, and yourself shall kneel to races you now sniff
at for ‘inferior.’ You have brought
it on to the material plane, and are now going upward
on its upward trend there gaily
“Ah, let no evil lust attack
the host
Conquered by greed, to plunder what they ought
not;
For yet they need return in safety home,
Doubling the goal to run their backward race”
[Agamemnon,
Plumtre’s translation]
The downtrend of the cycle awaits
you the other half just as the
runner in the foot-races to win, must round the pillar
at the far end of the course, and return to the starting-place. That
is among the warnings Aeschylus spoke in the Agamemnon
to an Athens that was barefacedly conquering and enslaving
the Isles of Greece to no end but her own wealth and
power and glory. The obvious reference is of
course to the conquerors of Troy.
I have spoken of this Oresteian Trilogy
as his Hamlet; with the Prometheus Bound another
tremendous Soul-Symbol it is what puts
him in equal rank with the four supreme Masters of
later Western Literature. I suppose it is pretty
certain that Shakespeare knew nothing of him, and
had never heard of the plot of his Agamemnon.
But look here:
There was one Hamlet King of Denmark,
absent from control of his kingdom because sleeping
within his orchard (his custom always of an afternoon).
And there was one Agamemnon King of Men, absent from
control of his kingdom because leading those same Men
at the siege of Troy. Hamlet had a wife Gertrude;
Agamemnon had a wife Clytemnestra. Hamlet had
a brother Claudius; who became the lover of Gertrude.
Agamemnon had a cousin Aegisthos, who became the paramour
of Clytemnestra. Claudius murdered Hamlet, and
thereby came by his throne and queen. Clytemnestra
and Aegisthos murdered Agamemnon, and Aegisthos thereby
became possessed of his throne and queen. Hamlet
and Gertrude had a son Hamlet, who avenged his father’s
murder. Agamemnon and Clytemnestra had a son Orestes,
who avenged his father’s murder.
There, however, the parallel ends.
Shakespeare had to paint the human soul at a certain
stage of its evolution: the ’moment of
choice,’ the entering on the path: and
brought all his genius to bear on revealing that.
He had, here, to teach Karma only incidentally; in
Macbeth, when the voice cried ’Sleep
no more!’ he is more Aeschylean in spirit.
That dreadful voice rings through Aeschylus; who was
altogether obsessed with the majesty and awfulness
of Karma. It is what he cried to Athens then,
and to all ages since, reiterating Karma with
terrible sleep-forbidding insistency from dark heights. I
have quoted the wonderful line in which Browning,
using similes borrowed from Aeschylus himself, sums
up the effect of his style:
‘Aeschylus’
bronze-throat eagle-bark for blood,’
which compensates for the more than
Greek unintelligibility of Browning’s
version of the Agamemnon: it gives you some
color, some adumbration of the being and import of
the man. How shall we compare him with those
others, his great compeers on the Mountain of Song?
Shakespeare as I think throned
upon a peak where are storms often, but where the
sun shines mostly; surveying all this life, and with
an eye to the eternal behind: Dante a
prophet, stern, proud, glad and sorrowful; ever in
a great pride of pain or agony of bliss; surveying
the life without, only to correlate it
with and interpret it by the vaster life within that
he knew better; this Universe for him but
the crust and excoriata of the Universe of the Soul.
Milton a Titan Soul hurled down from heaven,
struggling with all chaos and the deep to enunciate just
to proclaim and put on everlasting record
those two profound significant words, Titan
and Soul, for a memorial to Man of the real
nature of Man. Aeschylus the barking
of an eagle of Zeus the Thunderer’s
own eagle out of ominous skies above the mountains:
a thing unseen as Karma, mysterious and mighty as
Fate, as Disaster, as the final Triumph of the Soul;
sublime as death; a throat of bronze, superhumanly
impersonal; a far metallic clangor of sound, hoarse
or harsh, perhaps, if your delicate ears must call
him so; but grand; immeasurably grand; majestically,
ominously and terribly grand; ancestral
voices prophesying war, and doom, and all dark tremendous
destinies; and yet he too with serenity
and the Prophecy of Peace and bliss for his last word
to us: he will not leave his avenging Erinyes
until by Pallas’ wand and will they are transformed
into Eumenides, bringers of good fortune.
Something like that, perhaps, is the
impression Aeschylus leaves on the minds of those
who know him. They bear testimony to the fact
that, however grand his style like a Milton
Carlylized in poetry thought still seems
to overtop it and to be struggling for expression
through a vehicle less than itself.
Says Lytton, not unwisely perhaps:
“His genius is so near the verge of bombast,
that to approach his sublime is to rush into the ridiculous”;
and he goes on to say that you might find the nearest
echo of his diction in Shelley’s Prometheus;
but of his diction alone; for “his power is
in concentration that of Shelley in diffuseness.”
“The intellectuality of Shelley,” he says,
“destroyed; that of Aeschylus only increased
his command over the passions. The interest he
excites is startling, terrible, intense.”
Browning tried to bring over the style; but left the
thought, in an English Double-Dutched, far remoter
than he found it from our understanding. The thought
demands in English a vehicle crystal-clear; but Aeschylus
in the Greek is not crystal-clear: so close-packed
and vast are the ideas that there are lines on lines
of which the best scholars can only conjecture the
meaning. In all this criticism, let me say,
one is but saying what has been said before; echoing
Professor Mahaffy; echoing Professor Gilbert Murray;
but there is a need to give you the best picture possible
of this man speaking from the eternal. Unless
Milton and Carlyle had co-operated to make it, I think,
any translation of the Agamemnon which
so many have tried to translate would be
fatiguing and a great bore to read. It may not
be amiss to quote three lines from George Peel’s
David and Bethsabe, which have been often called
Aeschylean in audacity:
“At him the thunder
shall discharge his bolt,
And his fair spouse,
with bright and fiery wings,
Sit ever burning on
his hateful wings;”
His the thunder’s fair
spouse is the lightning. Imagine images as swift,
vivid and daring as that, hurled and flashed out in
language terse, sudden, lofty and you may
get an idea of what this eagle’s bark was like.
And the word that came rasping and resounding on it
out of storm-skies high over Olympus, for Athens then
and the world since to hear, was KARMA.
He took that theme, and drove it home,
and drove it home, and drove it home. Athens
disregarded the rights and sufferings of others; was
in fact abominably cruel. Well; she should hear
about Karma; and in such a way that she should no,
but she should give ear. Karma
punished wrong-doing. It was wrong-doing that
Karma punished. You could not do wrong with impunity. The
common thought was that any extreme of good fortune
was apt to rouse the jealousy of the Gods, and so
bring on disaster. This was what Pindar taught all-worshiped
prosperous Pindar, Aeschylus’ contemporary,
the darling poet of the Greeks. The idea is illustrated
by Herodotus’ story of the Ring of Polycrates.
You remember how the latter, being
tyrant of Samos, applied to Amasis of Egypt for an
alliance. But wary Amasis, noting his invariable
good luck, advised him to sacrifice something, lest
the Gods should grow jealous: so Polycrates threw
a ring into the sea, with the thought thus to appease
Nemesis cheaply; but an obliging fish allowed itself
to be caught and served up for his supper with the
ring in its internal economy; on hearing of which,
wary Amasis foresaw trouble, and declined the alliance
with thanks. Such views or feelings had come
to be Greek orthodoxy; you may take it that whatever
Pindar said was not far from the orthodoxies hence
his extreme popularity: we dearly love a man
who tells us grandly what we think ourselves, and
think it right to think. But such a position
would not do for Aeschylus. He noted his doctrine
only to condemn it.
“There live an
old saw framed in ancient days
In memories of
men, that high estate,
Full grown, brings
forth its young, nor childless dies,
But that from
good success
Springs to the
race a woe insatiable.
But I, apart from
all,
Hold this my creed
alone:
Ill deeds along
bring forth offspring of ill
Like to their
parent stock.”
Needless to say the translation Dean
Plumptre’s in the main fails to
bring out the force of the original.
We must remember that for his audiences
the story he had to tell was not the important thing.
They knew it in advance; it was one of their familiar
legends. What they went to hear was Aeschylus’
treatment of it; his art, his poetry, his preaching.
That was what was new to them: the thing for
which their eyes and ears were open. We go to
the theater, as we read novels, for amusement; the
Athenians went for aesthetic and religious ends.
So Aechylus had ready for him an efficient pulpit;
and was not suspect for using it. We like Movies
shows because they are entertaining and exciting;
the Athenian would have damned them because they are
inartistic.
I said, he had a pulpit ready for
him; yet, as nearly as such a statement can come to
truth, it was he himself who invented the drama.
It was, remember, an age of transition: things
were passing out from the inner planes: the
Mysteries were losing their virtue. The Egyptian
Mysteries had been dramatic in character; the Eleusinian,
which were very likely borrowed or copied or introduced
from Egypt, were no doubt dramatic too. Then
there had been festivals among the rustics, chiefly
in honor of Dionysos not altogether in his higher
aspects, with rudimentary plays of a coarse buffoonish
character. By 499, in Athens, these had grown
to something more important; in that year the wooden
scaffolding of the theater in which they were given
broke down under the spectators; and this led to the
building of a new theater in stone. It was in
499 Aeschylus first competed; the show was still very
rudimentary in character. Then he went off to
Sicily; and came back with the idea conceived of Greek
Tragedy as an artistic vehicle or expression and
something more. He taught the men who had at
first defeated him, how to do their later and better
work; and opened the way for all who came after, from
Sophocles to Racine. He took to sailing this new
ship of the drama as near as he might to the shore-line
of the Mysteries themselves; indeed, he
did much more than this; for he infused into his plays
that wine of divine life then to be found in its purity
and vigor only or chiefly in the Pythagorean Brotherhood. And
now as to this new art-form of his.
De Quincey, accepting the common idea
that the Dionysian Theater was built to seat between
thirty and forty thousand spectators (every free Athenian
citizen), argues that the formative elements that
made Greek Tragedy what it was were derived from these
huge dimensions. In such a vast building (he
asks) how could you produce such a play as Hamlet? where
the art of the actor shows itself in momentary changes
of expression, small byplay that would be lost, and
the like. The figures would be dwarfed by the
distances; stage whispers and the common inflexions
of the speaking voice would be lost. So none
of these things belonged to Greek Tragedy. The
mere physical scale necessitated a different theory
of art. The stature of the actors had to be increased,
or they would have looked like pygmies; their figures
had to be draped and muffled, to hide the unnatural
proportions thus given them. A mask had to be
worn, if only to make the head proportionate to the
body; and the mask had to contain an arrangement for
multiplying the voice, that it might carry to the
whole audience. That implied that the lines should
be chanted, not spoken; though in any case,
chanted they would be, for they were verse, not prose;
and the Greeks had not forgotten, as we have, that
verse is meant to be chanted. So here, to begin
with, the whole scheme implied something as unlike
actual life as it well could be. And then, too,
there was the solemnity of the occasion the
religious nature of the whole festival.
Thus, in substance De Quincey; who
makes too little, perhaps, of the matter of that last
sentence; and too much of what goes before. We
may say that it was rather the grand impersonal theory
of the art that created the outward condition; not
the conditions that created the theory. Mahaffy
went to Athens and measured the theater; and found
it not so big by any means. They could have worked
out our theories and practice in it, had they wanted
to, so far as that goes. Coarse buffoonish country
festivals do not of themselves evolve into grand art
or solemn occasions; you must seek a cause for that
evolution, and find it in an impulse arisen in some
human mind. Or minds indeed; for such impulses
are very mysterious. The Gods sow their seed in
season; we do not see the sowing, but presently mark
the greening of the brown earth. The method of
the Mysteries drama serious and religious had
been drifting outwards: things had been growing
to a point where a great creative Soul could take
hold of them and mold them to his wish. If Aeschylus
was not an Initiate of Eleusis, he had learnt, with
the Pythagoreans, the method of the Mysteries of all
lands. He knew more, not less, than the common
pillars of the Athenian Church and State. I
imagine it was he, in those thirteen consecutive years
of his victories, who in part created, in part drew
from his Pythagorean knowledge, those conventions
and circumstances for Tragedy which suited him rather
than that conventions already existing imposed formative
limits on him. His genius was aloof, impersonal,
severe, and of the substance of the Eternal; such as
would need precisely those conventions, and must have
created them had they not been there. Briefly,
I believe that this is what happened. Sent by
Pythagoras to do what he could for Athens and Greece,
he forged this mighty bolt of tragedy to be his weapon.
The theory of modern drama is imitation
of life. It has nothing else and higher to offer;
so, when it fails to imitate, we call it trash.
But the theory of Aeschylean Tragedy is the illumination
of life. Illumination of life, through a medium
quite unlike life. Art begins on a spiritual plane,
and works down to realism in its decadence; then it
ceases to be art at all, and becomes merely copying
what we imagine to be nature, nature, often,
as seen through a diseased liver and well-atrophied
pineal gland.
True art imitates nature only in a
very selective and limited way. It chooses carefully
what it shall imitate, and all to the end of illumination.
It paints a flower, or a sunset, not to reproduce
the thing seen with the eyes, but to declare and set
forth that mood of the Oversoul which the flower or
the sunset expressed. Flower-colors or sunset-colors
cannot be reproduced in pigments; but you can do things
with pigments and a brush that can tell the same story.
Or it can be done in words, in a poem; or with the
notes of music; in both of which cases the
medium used is still more, and totally, unlike the
medium through which the Oversoul said its say in
the sky or the blossom.
Nature is always expressing these
moods of the Oversoul; but we get no news of them,
as a rule, from our own sight and hearing; we must
wait for the poets and artists to interpret them.
Life is always at work to teach us life; but we miss
the grand lessons, usually, until some human Teacher
enforces them. His methods are the same as those
of the artists: between whose office and his
there was at first no difference; Bard
means only, originally, an Adept Teacher. Such
a one selects experiences out of life for his pupils,
and illumines them through the circumstances under
which they are applied; just as the true artist selects
objects from nature, and by his manner of treating
them, interprets the greatness that lies beyond.
So the drama-theory of Aeschylus.
He took fragments of possible experience, and let
them be seen through a heightened and interpretative
medium; with a light at once intense and somber-portentous
thrown on them; and this not to reproduce the externalia
and appearance of life, but to illumine its inner
recesses; to enforce, in plays lasting an hour or so,
the lessons life may take many incarnations to teach.
This cannot be done by realism, imitation or reproduction
of the actual; than which life itself is always better.
What keeps us from seeing the meanings
of life? Personality. Not only our own,
but in all those about us. Personality dodges
and flickers always between our eyes and the solemn
motions, the adumbrations of the augustness beyond.
We demand lots of personality in our drama; we call
it character-drawing. We want to see fellows
like ourselves lounging or bustling about, and hear
them chattering as we do; fellows with motives
(like our own) all springing from the personality.
Human life is what interests us: we desire
to drink deep of it, and drink again and again.
The music that we wish to hear is the “still,
sad music of humanity"; that is, taking
our theory at its best, and before you come down to
sheer ‘jazz’ and ragtime. But what
interested Aeschylus was that which lies beyond and
within life. He said: ’You can get
life in the Agora, on the Acropolis, any day of the
week; when you come to the theater you shall have something
else, and greater.’
So he set his scenes, either in a
vast, remote, and mysterious antiquity, or in
The Persians at Susa before the palace
of the Great King: a setting as remote, splendid,
vast, and mysterious, to the Greek mind of the day,
as the other. Things should not be as like life,
but as unlike life, as possible. The plays themselves,
as acted, were a combination of poetry, dance, statuesque
poses and motions and groupings; there was no action.
All the action was done off the scenes. They
did not portray the evolution of character; they hardly
portrayed character in the personal sense at
all. The dramatis personae are types,
symbols, the expression of natural forces, or principles
in man. In our drama you have a line, an extension
forward in time; a progression from this to that point
in time; in Greek Tragedy you have a cross-section
of time a cutting through the atom of time
that glimpses may be caught of eternity. There
was no unfoldment of a story; but the presentation
of a single mood. In the chanted poetry and the
solemn dance-movements a situation was set forth;
what led up to it being explained retrospectively.
The audience knew what was coming as well as the author
did: that Agamemnon, for instance, was to be
murdered. So all was written to play on their
expectations, not on their surprise. There was
a succession of perfect pictures; these and the poetry
were to hold the interest, to work it up: to seize
upon the people, and lead them by ever-heightening
accessions of feeling into forgetfulness of their
personal lives, and absorption in the impersonal harmony,
the spiritual receptivity, from which the grand truths
are visible. The actors’ masks allowed
only the facial expression of a single mood; and it
was a single mood the dramatist aimed to produce:
a unity; one great word. There could be no
grave-diggers; no quizzing of Polonious; no clouds
very like a whale. The whole drama is the unfoldment
of a single moment: that, say, in which Hamlet
turns on Caudius and kills him rather, leads
him out to kill him. To that you are led by
a little sparse dialog, ominous enough, and pregnant
with dire significance, between two or three actors;
many long speeches in which the story is told in retrospect;
much chanting by the chorus Horatio multiplied
by a dozen or so to make you feel Hamlet’s
long indecision, and to allow you no escape from the
knowledge that Claudius’ crime would bring about
its karmic punishment. It is a unity: one
thunderbolt from Zeus; first the growl and
rumbling of the thunders; then the whirr of the dread
missile, and lo, the man dead that was
to die. And through the bolt so hurled, so effective,
and with it the eagle-bark Aeschylus
crying Karma! to the Athenians.
So it has been said that Aeschylean
Tragedy is more nearly allied to sculpture; Shakespearean
Tragedy to the Epic.
Think how that unchanging mask, that
frozen moment of expression, would develop the quality
of tragic irony. In it Clytemnestra comes out
to greet the returning Agamemnon. She has her
handmaids carpet the road for him with purple tapestries;
she makes her speeches of welcome; she alludes to
the old sacrifice of Iphigenia; she tells him how
she has waited for his return; and all
the while the audience knows she is about to kill him.
They listen to her doubtful words, in which she reveals
to them, who know both already, her faithlessness
and dire purpose; but to her husband, seems to reveal
something different altogether. With Agamemnon
comes Cassandra from fallen Troy: whose fate
was to foresee all woes and horror, and to forthtell
what she saw and never to be believed;
so now when she raises her dreadful cry, foreseeing
what is about to happen, and uttering warning
none believe her but the audience, who know it all
in advance. And then there are the chantings
of the chorus, a group of Argive elders. They
know or guess how things stand between the queen and
her lover; they express their misgiving, gathering
as the play goes on; they recount the deeds of violence
of which the House of Atreus has been the scene, and
are haunted by the foreshadowings of Karma.
But they many not understand or give credence to the
warnings of Cassandra: Karma disallows fore-fending
against the fall of its bolts. Troy has fallen,
they say: and that was Karma; because Paris,
and Troy in supporting him, had sinned against Zeus
the patron of hospitality, to whom the
offense rose like vultures with rifled nest, wheeling
in mid-heaven on strong oars of wings, screaming for
retribution. You may not that Aeschylus’
freedom from the bonds of outer religion is like Shakespeare’s
own: here Zeus figures as symbol of the Lords
of Karma; from him flow the severe readjustments of
the Law; but in the Prometheus Bound
he stands for the lower nature that crucifies the
Higher.
Troy, then, had sinned, and has fallen;
but (says the Chorus) let the conquerors look to it
that they do not overstep the mark; let there be no
dishonoring the native Gods of Troy; (the Athenians
had been very considerably overstepping the mark in
some of their own conquests recently;) let
there be no plundering or useless cruelty; (the Athenians
had been hideously greedy and cruel;) or
Karma would overtake it own agents, the Greeks, who
were not yet out of the wood, as we say who
had not yet returned home. This was when the
beacons had announced the fall of Troy, and before
the entry of Agamemnon.
Clytemnestra is not like Gertrude,
but a much grander and more tragical figure.
Shakespeare leaves you in no doubt as to his queen’s
relation to Claudius; he enlarges on their guilty
passion ad lib. Aeschylus never mentions love
at all in any of his extant plays; only barely hints
at it here. It may be supposed to exist; it
is an accessory motive; it lends irony to Clytemnestra’s
welcome to Agamemnon in which only the
audience and the Chorus are aware that the lady does
protest too much. But she stands forth in her
own eyes as an agent of Karma-Nemesis; there is something
very terrible and unhuman about her. Early in
the play she reminds the Chorus how Agamemnon, is
setting out for Troy, sacrificed his and her daughter
Iphigenia to get a fair wind: a deed of blood
whose consequences must be feared something
to add to the Chorus’s misgivings, as they chant
their doubtful hope that the king may safely return.
In reality Artemis had saved Igphigenia; and though
Clytemnestra did not know this, in assuming the position
of her daughter’s avenger she put herself under
the karmic ban. And Agamemnon did not know it:
he had intended the sacrifice: and was therefore,
and for his supposed ruthlessness at Troy, under the
same ban himself. Hence the fate that awaited
him on his return; and hence because of Clytemnestra’s
useless crime when she and Aegisthos come
out from murdering him, and announce what they have
done, the Chorus’s dark foretellings to
come true presently of the Karma that
is to follow upon it.
And here we must guard ourselves against
the error as I think it is that Aeschylus
set himself to create the perfect and final art-form
as such. I think he was just intent on announcing
Karma to the Athenians in the most effective way possible:
bent all his energies to making that and
that the natural result of that high issue clear and
unescapable; purpose was this marvelous art-form which
Sophocles took up later, and in some external ways
perhaps perfected. Then came Aristotle after
a hundred years, and defining the results achieved,
tried to make Shakespeare impossible. The truth
is that when you put yourself to do the Soul’s
work, and have the great forces of the Soul to back
you therein, you create an art-form; and it only remains
for the Aristotelian critic to define it. Then
back comes the Soul after a thousand years, makes
a new one, and laughs at the Aristotles. The
grand business is done by following the Soul not
by conforming to rules or imitating models. But
it must be the Soul; rules and models are much better
than personal whims; they are a discipline good to
be followed as long as one can. You will
note how Aeschylus stood above the possibilities of
actualism with which we so much concern ourselves;
in the course of some sixteen hundred lines, and without
interval or change of act or scene, he introduces
the watchman on the house-top who first sees the beacons
that announce the fall of Troy, on the very night
that Troy fell, and the return of Agamemnon
in his chariot to Argos.
In the Choephori or Libation-Pourers,
the second play of the trilogy, Orestes returns from
his Wittenberg, sent by Apollo to avenge his father.
The scene again is in front of the house of Atreus.
Having killed Aegistlios within, Orestes comes out
to the Chorus; then Clytemnestra enters; he tells
her what he has done, and what he intends to do; and
despite her pleadings, leads her in to die beside
her paramour. He comes out again, bearing (for
his justification) the blood-stained robe of Agamemnon; but
he comes out distraught and with the guilt of matricide
weighing on his soul. The Chorus bids him be of
good cheer, reminding him upon what high suggestion
he has acted; but in the background he, and he alone,
sees the Furies swarming to haunt him, “like
Gorgons, dark-robed, and all their tresses hang entwined
with many serpents; and from their eyes is dropping
loathsome blood.” He must wander the world
seeking purification. In the Eumenides
we find him in the temple of Loxias (the Apollo) at
Delphi, there seeking refuge with the god who had
prompted him to the deed. But even there the Furies
haunt him though for weariness or
really because it is the shrine of Loxias they
have fallen asleep. From them even Loxias may
not free him; only perhaps Pallas at Athens may do
that; Loxias announces this to him and bids him go
to Athens, and assures him meanwhile of his protection.
To Athens then the scene changes,
where Orestes’ case is tried: Apollo defends
him; Pallas is the judge; the Furies the accusers;
the Court of the Areopagus the jury. The votes
of these are equally divided; but Athene gives
her casting vote in his favor; and to compensate the
Erinyes, turns them into Eumenides from
Furies to goddesses of good omen and fortune.
Orestes is free, and the end is happy.
No doubt very pretty and feeble of
the bronze-throated Eagle-barker to make it so.
What! clap on an exit to these piled-up miseries? he
should have plunged us deeper in woe, and left us
to stew in our juices; he Should have shunned this
detestable effeminacy, worthy only of the Dantes and
Shakespeares. But unfortunately he was an
Esotericist, with the business of helping, not plaguing,
mankind: he must follow the grand symbolism
of the story of the Soul, recording and emphasizing
and showing the way to its victories, not its defeats.
He had the eye to see deep into realities, and was
not to be led from the path of truth eternal by the
cheap effective expedients of realism. He must
tell the whole truth: building up, not merely
destroying; and truth, at the end, is not bitter,
but bright and glorious. It is the triumph and
purification of the soul; and to that happy consummation
all sorrow and darkness and the dread Furies themselves,
whom he paints with all the dark flame-pigments of
sheerest terror, are but incidental and a means.
And the meaning of it all? Well,
the meaning is as vast as the scheme of evolution
itself, I suppose. It is Hamlet over
again, and treated differently; that which wrote Hamlet
through Shakespeare, wrote this Trilogy through Aeschylus.
I imagine you are to find in the Agamemnon
the symbol of the Spirit’s fall into matter of
the incarnation (and obscuration) of the Lords of
Mind driven thereto by ancient Karma, and
the result of the life of past universes.
Shakespeare deals with this retrospectively, in the
Ghost’s words to Hamlet on the terrace.
The ‘death’ of the Spirit is its fall into
matter.
And just as the ghost urges Hamlet
to revenge, so Apollo urges Orestes; it is the influx,
stir, or impingement of the Supreme Self, that rouses
a man, at a certain stage in his evolution, to lift
himself above his common manhood. This is the
most interesting and momentous event in the long career
of the soul: it takes the place, in that drama
of incarnations, that the marriage does in the modern
novel. Shakespeare, whose mental tendencies
were the precise opposite of Aeschylus’s they
ran to infinite multiplicity and complexity, where
the other’s ran to stern unity and simplicity
(of plot) made two characters of Polonius
and Gertrude: Polonius, the objective
lower world, with its shallow wisdom and conventions;
Gertrude, Nature, the lower world in it
subjective or inner relation to the soul incarnate
in it. Aeschylus made no separate symbol for
the former. Shakespeare makes the killing of
Polonius a turning-point; thenceforth Hamlet must,
will he nill he, in some dawdling sort sweep to his
revenge. Aeschylus makes that same turning-point
in the killing of Clytemnestra, whereafter the Furies
are let loose on Orestes. If you think well
what it means, it is that “leap” spoken
of in Light on the Path, by which a man raises
himself “on to the path of individual accomplishment
instead of mere obedience to the genii which rule our
earth.” He can no longer walk secure like
a sheep in the flock; he has come out, and is separate;
he has chosen a captain within, and must follow the
Soul, and not outer convention. That step taken,
and the face set towards the Spirit-Sun the
life of the world forgone, that a way may be fought
into the Life of the Soul: all his past
lives and their errors rise against him; his passions
are roused to fight for their lives, and easy living
is no longer possible. He must fly then for
refuge to Loxias the Sun-God, the Supreme Self, who
can protect him from these Erinyes but
it is Pallas, Goddess of the Inner Wisdom, of the
true method of life, that can alone set him free.
And it is thus that Apollo pleads before her for Orestes
who killed his mother (Nature) to avenge his Father
(Spirit): a man, says he, is in reality
the child of his father, not of his mother: this
lower world in which we are incarnate is not in truth
our parent or originator at all, but only the seed-plot
in which we, sons of the Eternal, are sown, the nursery
in which we grow to the point of birth; but
we ourselves are in our essence flame of the Flame
of God. So Pallas and you must think
of all she implied Theosophy, right living,
right thought and action, true wisdom judges
Orestes guiltless, sets him free, and transforms his
passions into his powers.