THE EVERLASTING YEA
‘Temptations in the Wilderness!’
exclaims Teufelsdroeckh: ’Have we not all
to be tried with such? Not so easily can the old
Adam, lodged in us by birth, be dispossessed.
Our Life is compassed round with Necessity; yet is
the meaning of Life itself no other than Freedom,
than Voluntary Force: thus have we a warfare;
in the beginning, especially, a hard-fought battle.
For the God-given mandate, Work thou in Welldoing,
lies mysteriously written, in Promethean Prophetic
Characters, in our hearts; and leaves us no rest, night
or day, till it be deciphered and obeyed; till it
burn forth, in our conduct, a visible, acted Gospel
of Freedom. And as the clay-given mandate, Eat
thou and be filled, at the same time persuasively
proclaims itself through every nerve, must
not there be a confusion, a contest, before the better
Influence can become the upper?
’To me nothing seems more natural
than that the Son of Man, when such God-given mandate
first prophetically stirs within him, and the Clay
must now be vanquished, or vanquish, should
be carried of the spirit into grim Solitudes, and
there fronting the Tempter do grimmest battle with
him; defiantly setting him at naught, till he yield
and fly. Name it as we choose: with or without
visible Devil, whether in the natural Desert of rocks
and sands, or in the populous moral Desert of selfishness
and baseness, to such Temptation are we
all called. Unhappy if we are not! Unhappy
if we are but Half-men, in whom that divine handwriting
has never blazed forth, all-subduing, in true sun-splendour;
but quivers dubiously amid meaner lights: or smoulders,
in dull pain, in darkness, under earthly vapours! Our
Wilderness is the wide World in an Atheistic Century;
our Forty Days are long years of suffering and fasting:
nevertheless, to these also comes an end. Yes,
to me also was given, if not Victory, yet the consciousness
of Battle, and the resolve to persevere therein while
life or faculty is left. To me also, entangled
in the enchanted forests, demon-peopled, doleful of
sight and of sound, it was given, after weariest wanderings,
to work out my way into the higher sunlit slopes of
that Mountain which has no summit, or whose summit
is in Heaven only!’
He says elsewhere, under a less ambitious
figure; as figures are, once for all, natural to him:
’Has not thy Life been that of most sufficient
men (tuechtigen Maenner) thou hast known in
this generation? An out-flush of foolish young
Enthusiasm, like the first fallow-crop, wherein are
as many weeds as valuable herbs: this all parched
away, under the Droughts of practical and spiritual
Unbelief, as Disappointment, in thought and act, often-repeated
gave rise to Doubt, and Doubt gradually settled into
Denial! If I have had a second-crop, and now
see the perennial greensward, and sit under umbrageous
cedars, which defy all Drought (and Doubt); herein
too, be the Heavens praised, I am not without examples,
and even exemplars.’
So that, for Teufelsdroeckh also,
there has been a ’glorious revolution’:
these mad shadow-hunting and shadow-hunted Pilgrimings
of his were but some purifying ‘Temptation in
the Wilderness,’ before his Apostolic work (such
as it was) could begin; which Temptation is now happily
over, and the Devil once more worsted! Was ’that
high moment in the Rue de l’Enfer,’
then, properly the turning-point of the battle; when
the Fiend said, Worship me or be torn in shreds;
and was answered valiantly with an Apage Satana? Singular
Teufelsdroeckh, would thou hadst told thy singular
story in plain words! But it is fruitless to
look there, in those Paper-bags, for such. Nothing
but innuendoes, figurative crotchets: a typical
Shadow, fitfully wavering, prophetico-satiric; no
clear logical Picture. ’How paint to the
sensual eye,’ asks he once, ’what passes
in the Holy-of-Holies of Man’s Soul; in what
words, known to these profane times, speak even afar-off
of the unspeakable?’ We ask in turn: Why
perplex these times, profane as they are, with needless
obscurity, by omission and by commission? Not
mystical only is our Professor, but whimsical; and
involves himself, now more than ever, in eye-bewildering
chiaroscuro. Successive glimpses, here
faithfully imparted, our more gifted readers must
endeavour to combine for their own behoof.
He says: ’The hot Harmattan
wind had raged itself out; its howl went silent within
me; and the long-deafened soul could now hear.
I paused in my wild wanderings; and sat me down to
wait, and consider; for it was as if the hour of change
drew nigh. I seemed to surrender, to renounce
utterly, and say: Fly, then, false shadows of
Hope; I will chase you no more, I will believe you
no more. And ye too, haggard spectres of Fear,
I care not for you; ye too are all shadows and a lie.
Let me rest here: for I am way-weary and life-weary;
I will rest here, were it but to die: to die
or to live is alike to me; alike insignificant.’ And
again: ’Here, then, as I lay in that CENTRE
OF INDIFFERENCE; cast, doubtless by benignant upper
Influence, into a healing sleep, the heavy dreams
rolled gradually away, and I awoke to a new Heaven
and a new Earth. The first preliminary moral Act,
Annihilation of Self (Selbst-toedtung), had
been happily accomplished; and my mind’s eyes
were now unsealed, and its hands ungyved.’
Might we not also conjecture that
the following passage refers to his Locality, during
this same ‘healing sleep’; that his Pilgrim-staff
lies cast aside here, on ‘the high table-land’;
and indeed that the repose is already taking wholesome
effect on him? If it were not that the tone,
in some parts, has more of riancy, even of levity,
than we could have expected! However, in Teufelsdroeckh,
there is always the strangest Dualism: light
dancing, with guitar-music, will be going on in the
fore-court, while by fits from within comes the faint
whimpering of woe and wail. We transcribe the
piece entire:
’Beautiful it was to sit there,
as in my skyey Tent, musing and meditating; on the
high table-land, in front of the Mountains; over me,
as roof, the azure Dome, and around me, for walls,
four azure-flowing curtains, namely, of
the Four azure winds, on whose bottom-fringes also
I have seen gilding. And then to fancy the fair
Castles that stood sheltered in these Mountain hollows;
with their green flower-lawns, and white dames
and damosels, lovely enough: or better still,
the straw-roofed Cottages, wherein stood many a Mother
baking bread, with her children round her: all
hidden and protectingly folded-up in the valley-folds;
yet there and alive, as sure as if I beheld them.
Or to see, as well as fancy, the nine Towns and Villages,
that lay round my mountain-seat, which, in still weather,
were wont to speak to me (by their steeple-bells) with
metal tongue; and, in almost all weather, proclaimed
their vitality by repeated Smoke-clouds; whereon,
as on a culinary horologe, I might read the hour of
the day. For it was the smoke of cookery, as kind
housewives at morning, midday, eventide, were boiling
their husbands’ kettles; and ever a blue pillar
rose up into the air, successively or simultaneously,
from each of the nine, saying, as plainly as smoke
could say: Such and such a meal is getting ready
here. Not uninteresting! For you have the
whole Borough, with all its love-makings and scandal-mongeries,
contentions and contentments, as in miniature, and
could cover it all with your hat. If, in
my wide Wayfarings, I had learned to look into the
business of the World in its details, here perhaps
was the place for combining it into general propositions,
and deducing inferences therefrom.
’Often also could I see the
black Tempest marching in anger through the Distance:
round some Schreckhorn, as yet grim-blue, would the
eddying vapour gather, and there tumultuously eddy,
and flow down like a mad witch’s hair; till,
after a space, it vanished, and, in the clear sunbeam,
your Schreckhorn stood smiling grim-white, for the
vapour had held snow. How thou fermentest and
elaboratest, in thy great fermenting-vat and laboratory
of an Atmosphere, of a World, O Nature! Or
what is Nature? Ha! why do I not name thee GOD?
Art not thou the “Living Garment of God”?
O Heavens, is it, in very deed, HE, then, that ever
speaks through thee; that lives and loves in thee,
that lives and loves in me?
’Fore-shadows, call them rather
fore-splendours, of that Truth, and Beginning of Truths,
fell mysteriously over my soul. Sweeter than
Dayspring to the Shipwrecked in Nova Zembla; ah, like
the mother’s voice to her little child that
strays bewildered, weeping, in unknown tumults; like
soft streamings of celestial music to my too-exasperated
heart, came that Evangel. The Universe is not
dead and demoniacal, a charnel-house with spectres;
but godlike, and my Father’s!
’With other eyes, too, could
I now look upon my fellow man; with an infinite Love,
an infinite Pity. Poor, wandering, wayward man!
Art thou not tired, and beaten with stripes, even
as I am? Ever, whether thou bear the royal mantle
or the beggar’s gabardine, art thou not so weary,
so heavy-laden; and thy Bed of Rest is but a Grave.
O my Brother, my Brother, why cannot I shelter thee
in my bosom, and wipe away all tears from thy eyes!
Truly, the din of many-voiced Life, which, in this
solitude, with the mind’s organ, I could hear,
was no longer a maddening discord, but a melting one;
like inarticulate cries, and sobbings of a dumb creature,
which in the ear of Heaven are prayers. The poor
Earth, with her poor joys, was now my needy Mother,
not my cruel Stepdame; Man, with his so mad Wants and
so mean Endeavours, had become the dearer to me; and
even for his sufferings and his sins, I now first
named him Brother. Thus was I standing in the
porch of that “Sanctuary of Sorrow;”
by strange, steep ways had I too been guided thither;
and ere long its sacred gates would open, and the
“Divine Depth of Sorrow” lie disclosed
to me.’
The Professor says, he here first
got eye on the Knot that had been strangling him,
and straightway could unfasten it, and was free.
’A vain interminable controversy,’ writes
he, ’touching what is at present called Origin
of Evil, or some such thing, arises in every soul,
since the beginning of the world; and in every soul,
that would pass from idle Suffering into actual Endeavouring,
must first be put an end to. The most, in our
time, have to go content with a simple, incomplete
enough Suppression of this controversy; to a few some
Solution of it is indispensable. In every new
era, too, such Solution comes-out in different terms;
and ever the Solution of the last era has become obsolete,
and is found unserviceable. For it is man’s
nature to change his Dialect from century to century;
he cannot help it though he would. The authentic
Church-Catechism of our present century has
not yet fallen into my hands: meanwhile, for my
own private behoof, I attempt to elucidate the matter
so. Man’s Unhappiness, as I construe, comes
of his Greatness; it is because there is an Infinite
in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite
bury under the Finite. Will the whole Finance
Ministers and Upholsterers and Confectioners of modern
Europe undertake, in jointstock company, to make one
Shoeblack HAPPY? They cannot accomplish it, above
an hour or two; for the Shoeblack also has a Soul
quite other than his Stomach; and would require, if
you consider it, for his permanent satisfaction and
saturation, simply this allotment, no more, and no
less: God’s infinite Universe altogether
to himself, therein to enjoy infinitely, and fill
every wish as fast as it rose. Oceans of Hochheimer,
a Throat like that of Ophiuchus: speak not of
them; to the infinite Shoeblack they are as nothing.
No sooner is your ocean filled, than he grumbles that
it might have been of better vintage. Try him
with half of a Universe, of an Omnipotence, he sets
to quarrelling with the proprietor of the other half,
and declares himself the most maltreated of men. Always
there is a black spot in our sunshine: it is
even as I said, the Shadow of Ourselves.
’But the whim we have of Happiness
is somewhat thus. By certain valuations, and
averages, of our own striking, we come upon some sort
of average terrestrial lot; this we fancy belongs to
us by nature, and of indefeasible right. It is
simple payment of our wages, of our deserts; requires
neither thanks nor complaint; only such overplus
as there may be do we account Happiness; any deficit
again is Misery. Now consider that we have the
valuation of our own deserts ourselves, and what a
fund of Self-conceit there is in each of us, do
you wonder that the balance should so often dip the
wrong way, and many a Blockhead cry: See there,
what a payment; was ever worthy gentleman so used! I
tell thee, Blockhead, it all comes of thy Vanity;
of what thou fanciest those same deserts of
thine to be. Fancy that thou deservest to be
hanged (as is most likely), thou wilt feel it happiness
to be only shot: fancy that thou deservest to
be hanged in a hair-halter, it will be a luxury to
die in hemp.
’So true is it, what I then
say, that the Fraction of Life can be increased
in value not so much by increasing your Numerator as
by lessening your Denominator. Nay, unless
my Algebra deceive me, Unity itself divided
by Zero will give Infinity. Make
thy claim of wages a zero, then; thou hast the world
under thy feet. Well did the Wisest of our time
write: “It is only with Renunciation (Entsagen)
that Life, properly speaking, can be said to begin.”
’I asked myself: What is
this that, ever since earliest years, thou hast been
fretting and fuming, and lamenting and self-tormenting,
on account of? Say it in a word: is it not
because thou art not HAPPY? Because the THOU
(sweet gentleman) is not sufficiently honoured, nourished,
soft-bedded, and lovingly cared for? Foolish soul!
What Act of Legislature was there that thou
shouldst be Happy? A little while ago thou hadst
no right to be at all. What if thou wert
born and predestined not to be Happy, but to be Unhappy!
Art thou nothing other than a Vulture, then, that
fliest through the Universe seeking after somewhat
to eat; and shrieking dolefully because carrion
enough is not given thee? Close thy Byron;
open thy Goethe.’
‘Es leuchtet mir ein,
I see a glimpse of it!’ cries he elsewhere:
’there is in man a HIGHER than Love of Happiness:
he can do without Happiness, and instead thereof find
Blessedness! Was it not to preach-forth this
same HIGHER that sages and martyrs, the Poet and the
Priest, in all times, have spoken and suffered; bearing
testimony, through life and through death, of the
Godlike that is in Man, and how in the Godlike only
has he Strength and Freedom? Which God-inspired
Doctrine art thou also honoured to be taught; O Heavens!
and broken with manifold merciful Afflictions, even
till thou become contrite, and learn it! O, thank
thy Destiny for these; thankfully bear what yet remain:
thou hadst need of them; the Self in thee needed to
be annihilated. By benignant fever-paroxysms
is Life rooting out the deep-seated chronic Disease,
and triumphs over Death. On the roaring billows
of Time, thou art not engulfed, but borne aloft into
the azure of Eternity. Love not Pleasure; love
God. This is the EVERLASTING YEA, wherein all
contradiction is solved: wherein whoso walks and
works, it is well with him.’
And again: ’Small is it
that thou canst trample the Earth with its injuries
under thy feet, as old Greek Zeno trained thee:
thou canst love the Earth while it injures thee, and
even because it injures thee; for this a Greater than
Zeno was needed, and he too was sent. Knowest
thou that “Worship of Sorrow”?
The Temple thereof, founded some eighteen centuries
ago, now lies in ruins, overgrown with jungle, the
habitation of doleful creatures: nevertheless,
venture forward; in a low crypt, arched out of falling
fragments, thou findest the Altar still there, and
its sacred Lamp perennially burning.’
Without pretending to comment on which
strange utterances, the Editor will only remark, that
there lies beside them much of a still more questionable
character; unsuited to the general apprehension; nay
wherein he himself does not see his way. Nebulous
disquisitions on Religion, yet not without bursts
of splendour; on the ’perennial continuance
of Inspiration;’ on Prophecy; that there are
’true Priests, as well as Baal-Priests, in our
own day:’ with more of the like sort.
We select some fractions, by way of finish to this
farrago.
‘Cease, my much-respected Herr
von Voltaire,’ thus apostrophises the Professor:
’shut thy sweet voice; for the task appointed
thee seems finished. Sufficiently hast thou demonstrated
this proposition, considerable or otherwise:
That the Mythus of the Christian Religion looks not
in the eighteenth century as it did in the eighth.
Alas, were thy six-and-thirty quartos, and the six-and-thirty
thousand other quartos and folios, and flying sheets
or reams, printed before and since on the same subject,
all needed to convince us of so little! But what
next? Wilt thou help us to embody the divine Spirit
of that Religion in a new Mythus, in a new vehicle
and vesture, that our Souls, otherwise too like perishing,
may live? What! thou hast no faculty in that
kind? Only a torch for burning, no hammer for
building? Take our thanks, then, and thyself
away.
’Meanwhile what are antiquated
Mythuses to me? Or is the God present, felt in
my own heart, a thing which Herr von Voltaire will
dispute out of me; or dispute into me? To the
“Worship of Sorrow” ascribe what
origin and genesis thou pleasest, has not that
Worship originated, and been generated; is it not
here? Feel it in thy heart, and then say
whether it is of God! This is Belief; all else
is Opinion, for which latter whoso will
let him worry and be worried.’
‘Neither,’ observes he
elsewhere, ’shall ye tear-out one another’s
eyes, struggling over “Plenary Inspiration,”
and suchlike: try rather to get a little even
Partial Inspiration, each of you for himself.
One BIBLE I know, of whose Plenary Inspiration doubt
is not so much as possible; nay with my own eyes I
saw the God’s-Hand writing it: thereof
all other Bibles are but leaves, say, in
Picture-Writing to assist the weaker faculty.’
Or, to give the wearied reader relief,
and bring it to an end, let him take the following
perhaps more intelligible passage:
‘To me, in this our life,’
says the Professor, ’which is an internecine
warfare with the Time-spirit, other warfare seems
questionable. Hast thou in any way a Contention
with thy brother, I advise thee, think well what the
meaning thereof is. If thou gauge it to the bottom,
it is simply this: “Fellow, see! thou art
taking more than thy share of Happiness in the world,
something from my share: which, by the
Heavens, thou shall not; nay I will fight thee rather.” Alas,
and the whole lot to be divided is such a beggarly
matter, truly a “feast of shells,” for
the substance has been spilled out: not enough
to quench one Appetite; and the collective human species
clutching at them! Can we not, in all such
cases, rather say: “Take it, thou too-ravenous
individual; take that pitiful additional fraction
of a share, which I reckoned mine, but which thou so
wantest; take it with a blessing: would to Heaven
I had enough for thee!” If Fichte’s
Wissenschaftslehre be, “to a certain extent,
Applied Christianity,” surely to a still greater
extent, so is this. We have here not a Whole
Duty of Man, yet a Half Duty, namely the Passive half:
could we but do it, as we can demonstrate it!
’But indeed Conviction, were
it never so excellent, is worthless till it convert
itself into Conduct. Nay properly Conviction is
not possible till then; inasmuch as all Speculation
is by nature endless, formless, a vortex amid vortices:
only by a felt indubitable certainty of Experience
does it find any centre to revolve round, and so fashion
itself into a system. Most true is it, as a wise
man teaches us, that “Doubt of any sort cannot
be removed except by Action.” On which
ground, too, let him who gropes painfully in darkness
or uncertain light, and prays vehemently that the
dawn may ripen into day, lay this other precept well
to heart, which to me was of invaluable service:
“Do the Duty which lies nearest thee,”
which thou knowest to be a Duty! Thy second Duty
will already have become clearer.
’May we not say, however, that
the hour of Spiritual Enfranchisement is even this:
When your Ideal World, wherein the whole man has been
dimly struggling and inexpressibly languishing to work,
becomes revealed, and thrown open; and you discover,
with amazement enough, like the Lothario in Wilhelm
Meister, that your “America is here or nowhere”?
The Situation that has not its Duty, its Ideal, was
never yet occupied by man. Yes here, in this
poor, miserable, hampered, despicable Actual, wherein
thou even now standest, here or nowhere is thy Ideal:
work it out therefrom; and working, believe, live,
be free. Fool! the Ideal is in thyself, the impediment
too is in thyself: thy Condition is but the stuff
thou art to shape that same Ideal out of: what
matters whether such stuff be of this sort or that,
so the Form thou give it be heroic, be poetic?
O thou that pinest in the imprisonment of the Actual,
and criest bitterly to the gods for a kingdom wherein
to rule and create, know this of a truth: the
thing thou seekest is already with thee, “here
or nowhere,” couldst thou only see!
’But it is with man’s
Soul as it was with Nature: the beginning of
Creation is Light. Till the eye have
vision, the whole members are in bonds. Divine
moment, when over the tempest-tost Soul, as once over
the wild-weltering Chaos, it is spoken: Let there
be Light! Ever to the greatest that has felt
such moment, is it not miraculous and God-announcing;
even as, under simpler figures, to the simplest and
least. The mad primeval Discord is hushed; the
rudely-jumbled conflicting elements bind themselves
into separate Firmaments: deep silent rock-foundations
are built beneath; and the skyey vault with its everlasting
Luminaries above: instead of a dark wasteful Chaos,
we have a blooming, fertile, heaven-encompassed World.
’I too could now say to myself:
Be no longer a Chaos, but a World, or even Worldkin.
Produce! Produce! Were it but the pitifullest
infinitesimal fraction of a Product, produce it, in
God’s name! ’Tis the utmost thou
hast in thee: out with it, then. Up, up!
Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy
whole might. Work while it is called Today; for
the Night cometh, wherein no man can work.’