IN
VINO VERITAS (THE BANQUET)
It
was on one of the last days in July, at ten o'clock in the evening, when the
participants in that banquet assembled together. Date and year I have
forgotten; indeed this would be interesting only to one's memory of details:
and not to one's recollection of the contents of what experience. The
"spirit of the occasion" and whatever impressions are recorded in
one's mind under that heading, concerns only one's recollections; and just as
generous wine gains in flavor by passing the Equator, because of the
evaporation of its watery particles, likewise does recollection gain by getting
rid of the watery particles of memory; and yet recollection becomes as little a
mere figment of the imagination by this process as does the generous wine.
The
participants were five in number: John, with the epithet of the Seducer, Victor
Eremita, Constantin Constantius, and yet two others whose names I have not
exactly forgotten‑-which would be a matter of small importancebut whose names I did not learn. It
was as if these two had no proper names, for they were constantly addressed by
some epithet. The one was called the Young Person. Nor was he more than twenty
and some years, of slender and delicate build, and of a very dark complexion.
His face was thoughtful; but more pleasing even was its lovable and engaging
expression which betokened a purity of soul harmonizing perfectly with the soft
charm, almost feminine, and the transparency of his whole presence. This
external beauty of appearance was lost sight of, however, in one's next
impression of him; or, one kept it only in mind whilst regarding a youth
nurtured orto use a still tenderer expression-‑petted
into being, by thought, and nourished by the contents of his own soula youth who as yet had had nothing
to do with the world, had been neither aroused and fired, nor disquieted and
disturbed. Like a sleep‑walker he bore the law of his actions within
himself, and the amiable, kindly expression of his countenance concerned no
one, but only mirrored the disposition of his soul.
The other person they called the Dressmaker,
and that was his occupation. Of him it was impossible toget a consistent
impression. He was dressed according to the very latest fashion, with his hair
curled and perfumed, fragrant with eau‑de‑cologne. One moment his
carriage did not lack self-possession, whereas in the next it assumed a certain
festive air, a certain hovering motion which, however was kept in rather
definite bounds by the robustness of his figure. Even when he was most malicious
in his speech his voice ever had a touch of the smooth‑tonguedness of the
the shop, the suaveness of the dealer in fancy‑goods, Which evidently was
utterly disgusting to himself and only satisfied his spirit of defiance. As I
think of him now I understand him better, to be sure, than when I first saw him
step out of his carriage and I involuntarily laughed. At the same time there is
some contradiction left still. He had transformed or bewitched himself, had by
the magic of his own will assumed the appearance of one almost halfwitted, but
had not thereby entirely satisfied himself; and this is why his reflectiveness
now and then peered forth from beneath his disguise.
As I think of it now it seems rather absurd
that five such persons should get a banquet arranged. Nor would anything have
come of it, I suppose, if Constantin had not been one of us. In a retired room
of a confectioner's shop where they met at times, the matter had been broached
once before, but had been dropped immediately when the question arose as to who
was to head the undertaking. The Young Person was declared unfit for that task,
the Dressmaker affirmed himself to be too busy. Victor Eremita did not beg to
be excused because "he had married a wife or bought yoke of oxen which he
needed to prove",1 but, he said, even if he should make an exception, for
once, and come to the banquet, yet he would decline the courtesy offered him to
preside at it, and he therewith "entered protest at the proper time.2 This, John considered a work spoken
in due season; because, as he saw it, there was but one person able to prepare
a banquet, and that was the possessor of the wishing‑table which set
itself with delectable things whenever he said to it "Cover thyself!"
He averred that to enjoy the charms of a young girl in haste was not always the
wisest course; but as to a banquet, he would not wait for it, and generally was
tired of it a long while before it came off. However, if the plan was to be
carried into effect he would make one condition, which was, that the banquet
should be so arranged as to be served in one course. And that all were agreed
on. Also, that the settings for it were to be made altogether new, and that
afterwards they were to be destroyed entirely; ay, before rising from table one
was to hear the preparation for their destruction. Nothing was to remain;
"not even so much," said the Dressmaker, "as there is left of a
dress after it has been made over into a hat." "Nothing," said
John, "because nothing is more unpleasant than a sentimental scene, and
nothing more disgusting than the knowledge that somewhere or other there is an
external setting which in a direct and impertinent fashion pretends to be a
reality."
When the conversation had thus become
animated, Victor Eremita suddenly arose, struck an attitude on the floor,
beckoned with his hand in the fashion of one commanding and, holding his arm
extended as one lifting a goblet, he said, with the gesture of one waving a
welcome: "With this cup whose fragrance already intoxicates my senses,
whose cool fire already inflames my blood, I greet you, beloved fellow‑banqueters,
and bid you welcome; being entirely assured that each one of you is
sufficiently satisfied by our merely speaking about the banquet; for our Lord
satisfied the stomach before satisfying the eye, but the imagination acts in
the reverse fashion." Thereupon he inserted his hand in his pocket, took
from it a cigar‑case, struck a match, and began to smoke. When Constantin
Constantius protested against this sovereign free way of transforming the
banquet planned into an illusory fragment of life, Victor declared that he did
not believe for one moment that such a banquet could be got up and that, in any
case, it had beena mistake to let it become the subject of discussion in
advance. "Whatever is to be good must come at once; for 'at once' is the
divinest of all categories and deserves to be honored as in the language of the
Romans: ex templo,3 because it is the starting point for all that is
divine in life, and so much so that what is not done at once is of evil."
However, he remarked, he did not care to argue this point. In case the others
wished to speak and act differently he would not say a word, but if they wished
him to explain the sense of his remarks more fully he must have leave to make a
speech, because he did not consider it all desirable to provoke a discussion on
the subject.
Permission
was given him; and as the others called on him to do so at once, he spoke as
follows: "A banquet is in itself a difficult matter, because even if it be
arranged with ever so much taste and talent there is something else essential
to its success, to‑wit, good luck. And by this I mean not such matters as
most likely would give concern to an anxious hostess, but something different,
a something which no one can make absolutely sure of: a fortunate harmonizing
of the spirit and the minutiae of the banquet, that fine ethereal vibration of
chords, that soul‑stirring music which cannot be ordered in advance from
the town‑musicians. Look you, therefore is it a hazardous thing to undertake,
beause if things do go wrong, perhaps from the very start, one may suffer such
a depression and loss of spirits that recovery from it might involve a very
long time.
"Sheer
habit and thoughtlessness are father and godfather to most banquets, and it is
only due to the lack of critical sense among people that one fails to notice
the utter absence of any idea in them. In the first place, women ought never to
be present at a banquet. Women may be used to advantage only in the Greek
style, as a chorus of dancers. As it is the main thing at a banquet that there
be eating and drinking, woman ought not to be present; she cannot do justice to
what is offered; or, if she can, it is most unbeautiful. Whenever a woman is
present the matter of eating and drinking ought to be reduced to the very
slightest proportions. At most, it ought to be no more than some trifling
feminine occupation, to have something to busy one's hands with. Especially in
the country a little repast of this kindwhich, by the way, should be put at
other times than the principal meals-‑may be extremely delightful; and if
so, always owing to the presence of the other sex. To do like the English, who
let the fair sex retire as soon as the real drinking is to start, is to fall
between two stools, for every plan ought to be a whole, and the very manner
with which I take a seat at the table and seize hold of knife and fork bears a
definite relation to this whole. In the same sense a political banquet presents
an unbeautiful ambiguity inasmuch as one does not4 want to cut down to a very minimum the essentials of a
banquet, and yet does not wish to have the speeches thought of as having been
made over the cups.
"So
far, we are agreed, I suppose; and our numberin case anything should come of the
banquet‑-is correctly chosen, according to that beautiful rule: neither
more than the Muses nor fewer than the Graces. Now I demand the greatest
superabundance of everything thinkable. That is, even though everything be not
actually there, yet the possibility of having it must be at one's immediate
beck and call, aye, hover temptingly over the table, more seductive even than
the actual sight of it. I beg to be excused, however, from banqueting on
sulphur‑matches or on a piece of sugar which all are to suck in turn. My
demands for such a banquet will, on the contrary, be difficult to satisfy; for
the feast itself must be calculated to arouse and incite that unmentionable
longing which each worthy participant is to bring with him. I require that the
earth's fertility be at our service, as though everything sprouted forth at the
very moment the desire for it was born. I desire a more luxurious abundance of
wine than when Mephistopheles needed but to drill holes into the table to
obtain it. I demand an illumination more splendid than have the gnomes when
they lift up the mountain on pillars and dance in a sea of blazing light. I
demand what most excites the senses, I demand their gratification by
deliciously sweet perfumes, more superb than any in the Arabian Nights. I
demand a coolness which voluptuously provokes desire and breathes relaxation on
desire satisfied. I demand a fountain's unceasing enlivenment. If Maecenas
could not sleep without hearing the splashing of a fountain, I cannot eat
without it. Do not misunderstand me, I can eat stockfish without it; but I
cannot eat at a banquet without it; I can drink water without it, but I cannot
drink wine at a banquet without it. I demand a host of servants, chosen and
comely, as if I sate at table with the gods; I demand that there shall be music
at the feast, both strong and subdued; and I demand that it shall be an
accompaniment to my thoughts; and what concerns you, my friends, my demands
regarding you are altogether incredible. Do you see, by reason of all these
demands‑-which are as many reasons against itI hold a banquet to be a pium desideratum,5 and am so
far from desiring a repetition of it that I presume it is not feasible even a
first time."
The
only one who had not actually participated in this conversation, nor in the
frustration of the banquet, was Constantin. Without him, nothing would have
been done save the talking. He had come to a different conclusion and was of
the opinion that the idea might well be realized, if one but carried the matter
with a high hand.
Then some time passed, and both the
banquet and the discussion about it were forgotten, when suddenly, one day, the
participants received a card of invitation from Constantius for a banquet the
very same evening. The motto of the Party had been given by him as: In Vino Veritas, because there was to be
speaking, to be sure, and not only conversation; but the speeches were not to
be made except in vino, and no truth
was to be uttered there excepting that which is in vino--when the wine is a defense of the truth and the truth a
defense of the wine.
The
place had been chosen in the woods, some ten miles distant from Copenhagen. The
hall in which they were to feast had been newly decorated and in every way made
unrecognizable; a smaller room, separated from the hall by a corridor, was
arranged for an orchestra. Shutters and curtains were let down before all
windows, which were left open. The arrangement that the participants were to
drive to the banquet in the evening hour was to intimate to themand that was Constantin's ideawhat was to follow. Even if one
knows that one is driving to a banquet, and the imagination therefore indulges
for a moment in thoughts of luxury, yet the impression of the natural
surroundings is too powerful to be resisted. That this might possibly not be
the case was the only contingency he apprehended; for just as there is no power
like the imagination to render beautiful all it touches, neither is there any
power which can to such a degree disturb allmisfortune conspiringif confronted with reality. But
driving on a summer evening does not lure the imagination to luxurious thoughts,
but rather to the opposite. Even if one does not see it or hear it, the
imagination will unconsciously create a picture of the longing for home which
one is apt to feel in the evening hoursone sees the reapers, man and maid,
returning from their work in the fields, one hears the hurried rattling of the
hay wagon, one interprets even the far‑away lowing from the meadows as a
longing. Thus does a summer evening suggest idyllic thoughts, soothing even a
restless mind with its assuagement, inducing even the soaring imagination to
abide on earth with an indwelling yearning for home as the place from whence it
came, and thus teaching the insatiable mind to be satisfied with little, by
rendering one content; for in the evening hour time stands still and eternity
lingers. Thus they arrived in the evening hour: those
invited; for Constantin had come out somewhat earlier. Victor Eremita who
resided in the country not far away came on horseback, the others in a
carriage. And just as they had discharged it, a light open vehicle rolled in
through the gate caarrying a merry company of four journeymen who were
entertained to be ready at the decisive moment to function as a corps of
destruction: just as firemen are stationed in a theatre, for the opposite
reason at once to extinguish a fire.
So
long as one is a child one possesses sufficient imagination to maintain one's
soul at the very top‑notch of expectation-‑for a whole hour in the
dark room, if need be; but when one has grown older one's imagination may
easily cause one to tire of the Christmas tree before seeing it.
The
folding doors were opened. The effect of the radiant illumination, the coolness
wafting toward them, the beguiling fragrance of sweet perfumes, the excellent
taste of the arrangements, for a moment overwhelmed the feelings of those
entering; and when, at the same time, strains ftom the ballet of "Don
Juan" sounded from the orchestra, their persons seemed transfigured and,
as if out of reverence for an unseen spirit about them, they stopped short for
a moment like men who have been roused by admiration and who have risen to
admire.
Whoever
knows that happy moment, whoever has appreciated its delight, and has not also
felt the apprehension lest suddenly something might happen, some trifle
perhaps, which yet might be sufficient to disturb all! Whoever has held the
lamp of Aladdin in his hand and has not also felt the swooning of pleasure,
because one needs but to wish? Whoever has held what is inviting in his hand
and has not also learned to keep his wrist limber to let go at once, if need
be?
Thus they stood side by side. Only Victor
stood alone, absorbed in thought; a shudder seemed to pass through his soul, he
almost trembled; he collected himself and saluted the omen with these words:
"Ye mysterious, festive, and seductive strains which drew me out of the
cloistered seclusion of a quiet youth and beguiled me with a longing as mighty
as a recollection, and terrible, as though Elvira had not even been seduced but
had only desired to be! Immortal Mozart, thou to whom I owe all; but no! as yet
I do not owe thee all. But when I shall have become an old manif ever I do become an old man; or
when I shall have become ten years olderif ever I do; or when I am become
oldif ever I shall become old; or when
I shall diefor that, indeed, I know I shall:
then shall I say: immortal Mozart, thou to whom I owe alland then I shall let my admiration,
which is my soul's first and only admiration, burst forth in all its might and
let it make away with me, as it often has been on the point of doing. Then have
I set my house in order,6 then have I
remembered my beloved one, then have I confessed my love, then have I fully
established that I owe thee all, then am I occupied no longer with thee, with
the world, but only with the grave thought of death."
Now there came from the orchestra that invitation in
which joy triumphs most exultantly, and heaven‑storming soars aloft above
Elvira's sorrowful thanks; and gracefully apostrophizing, John repeated: "Viva la liberta" "et veritas," said the Young Person; "but above all, in vino," Constantin interrupted
them, seating himself at the table and inviting the others to do likewise.
How
easy to prepare a banquet; yet Constantin declared that he never would risk
preparing another. How easy to admire; yet Victor declared that he never again
would lend words to his admiration; for to suffer a discomfiture is more
dreadful than to become an invalid in war! How easy to express a desire, if one
has the magic lamp; yet that is at times more terrible than to perish of want!
They were seated. In the same moment the
little company were launched into the very middle of the infinite sea of
enjoymentas if with one single bound. Each
one had addressed all his thoughts and all his desires to the banquet, had
prepared his soul for the enjoyment which was offered to overflowing and in
which their souls overflowed. The experienced driver is known by his ability to
start the snorting team with a single bound and to hold them well abreast; the
well‑trained steed is known by his lifting himself in one absolutely
decisive leap: even if one or the other of the guests perhaps fell short in
some particular, certainly Constantin was a good host.
Thus
they banqueted. Soon, conversation had woven its beautiful wreaths about the banqueters,
so that they sat garlanded. Now, it was enamored of the food, now of the wine,
and now again of itself; now, it seemed to develop into significance, and then
again it was altogether slight. Soon, fancy unfolded itselfthe splendid one which blows but
once, the tender one which straightway closes its petals; now, there came an
exclamation from one of the banqueters: "These truffles are superb,"
and now, an order of the host: "This Chateau Margaux!" Now, the music
was drowned in the noise, now it was heard again. Sometimes the servants stood
still as if in pausa, in that
decisive moment when a new dish was being brought out, or a new wine was
ordered and mentioned by name, sometimes they were all a‑bustle.
Sometimes there was a silence for a moment, and then the re‑animating
spirit of the music went forth over the guests. Now, one with some bold thought
would take the lead in the conversation and the others followed after, almost
forgetting to eat, and the music would sound after them as it sounds after the
jubilant shouts of a host storming on; now, only the clinking of glasses and
the clattering of plates was heard and the feasting proceeded in silence,
accompanied only by the music that joyously advanced and again stimulated
conversation. Thus they banqueted.
How
poor is language in comparison with that symphony of sounds unmeaning, yet how
significant, whether of a battle or of a banquet, which even scenic
representation cannot imitate and for which language has but a few words! How
rich is language in the expression of the world of ideas, and how poor, when it
is to describe reality!
Only
once did Constantin abandon his omnipresence ill which one actually lost sight
of his presence. At the very beginning he got them to sing one of the old
drinking songs, "by way of calling to mind that jolly time when men and
women feasted together," as he saida proposal which had the positively
burlesque effect he had perhaps calculated it should have. It almost gained the
upper hand when the Dressmaker wanted them to sing the ditty: "When I
shall mount the bridal bed, hoiho!" After a couple of courses had been
served Constantin proposed that the banquet should conclude with each one's
making a speech, but that precautions should be taken against the speakers'
divagating too much. He was for making two conditions, viz., there were to be
no speeches until after the meal; and no one was to speak before having drunk
sufficiently to feel the power of the wineelse he was to be in that condition
in which one says much which under other circumstances one would leave unsaidwithout necessarily having the
connection of speech and thought constantly interrupted by hiccoughs.7 Before speaking, then, each one was
to declare solemnly that he was in that condition. No definite quantity of wine
was to be required, capacities differed so widely. Against this proposal, John
entered protest. He could never become intoxicated, he averred, and when he had
come to a certain point he grew the soberer the more he drank. Victor Eremita
was, of the opinion that any such preparatory premeditations to insure one's
becoming drunk would precisely militate against one's becoming so. If one
desired to become intoxicated the deliberate wish was only a hindrance. Then
there ensued some discussion about the divers influences of wine on
consciousness, and especially about the fact that, in the caseof a reflective temperament, an
excess of wine may manifest itself, not in any particular impetus but, on the contrary, in a noticeably cool self‑possession.
As to the contents of the speeches, Constantin proposed that they should deal
with love, that is, the relation between man and woman. No love stories were to
be told though they might furnish the text of one's remarks.
The
conditions were accepted. All reasonable and just demands a host may make on
his guests were fulfilled: they ate and drank, and "drank and were filled
with drink," as the Bible has it;8 that is, they drank stoutly.
The desert was served. Even if
Victor had not, as yet, had his desire gratified to hear the splashing of a
fountain,which, for that matter, he had
luckily forgotten since that former conversationnow champagne flowed profusely. The
clock struck twelve. Thereupon Constantin commanded silence, saluted the Young
Person with a goblet and the words quod
felix sit faustumque9 and bade him to speak first.
(The
Young Person's Speech)
The Young Person arose and declared that he
felt the power of the wine, which was indeed apparent to some degree; for the
blood pulsed strongly in his temples, and his appearance was not as beautiful
as before the meal. He poke as follows:
If there be truth in the words of the poets,
dear fellow banqueters, then unrequited love is, indeed, the greatest of
sorrows. Should you require any proof of thisyou need but listen to the speech of
lovers. They say that it is death, certain death; and the first time they
believe itfor the space of two weeks. The next
time they say that it is death; and finally they will die sometimeas the result of unrequited love.
For that love has killed them, about that there can obtain no doubt. And as to
love's having to take hold three times to make away with them, that is not
different from the dentist's having to pull three times before he is able to
budge that firmly rooted molar. But, if unrequited love thus means certain
death, how happy am I who have never loved and, I hope, will only achieve dying
some time, and not from unrequited love! But just this may be the greatest
misfortune, for all I know, and how unfortunate must I then be!
The
essence of love probably (for I speak as does a blind man about colors),
probably lies in its bliss; which is, in other words, that the cessation of
love brings death to the lover. This I comprehend very well as in the nature of
a hypothesis correlating life and death. But, if love is to be merely by way of
hypothesis, why, then lovers lay themselves open to ridicule through their
actually falling in love. If, however, love is something real, why, then
reality must bear out what lovers say about it. But did one in real life ever
hear of, or observe, such things having taken place, even if there is hearsay
to that effect? Here I perceive already one of the contradictions in which love
involves a person; for whether this is different for those initiated, that I
have no means of knowing; but love certainly does seem to involve people in the
most curious contradictions.
There
is no other relation between human beings which makes such demands on one's
ideality as does love, and yet love is never seen to have it. For this reason
alone I would be afraid of love; for I fear that it might have the power to
make me too talk vaguely about a bliss which I did not feel and a sorrow I did
not have. I say this here since I am bidden to speak on love, though unacquainted
with itI say this in surroundings which
appeal to me like a Greek symposion; for I should otherwise not care to speak
on this subject as I do not wish to disturb any one's happiness but, rather, am
content with my own thoughts. Who knows but these thoughts are sheer
imbecilities and vain imaginingsperhaps my ignorance is explicable
from the fact that I never have learned, nor have wished to learn, from any
one, how one comes to love; or from the fact that I have never yet challenged a
woman with a glancewhich is supposed to be smartbut have always lowered my eyes,
unwilling to yield to an impression before having fully made sure about the
nature of the power into whose sphere I am venturing.
At
this point he was interrupted by Constantin who expostulated with him because,
by his very confession of never having been in love, he had debarred himself
from speaking. The Young Person declared that at any other time he would gladly
obey an injunction to that effect as he had often enough experienced how
tiresome it was to have to make a speech; but that in this case he would insist
upon his right. Precisely the fact that one had had no love affair, he said,
also constituted an affair of love; and he who could assert this of himself was
entitled to speak about Eros just because his thoughts were bound to take issue
with the whole sex and not with individuals. He was granted permission to speak
and continued.
Inasmuch
as my right to speak has been challenged, this may serve to exempt me from your
laughter; for I know well that, just as among rustics he is not considered a
man who does not call a tobacco pipe his own, likewise among men‑folks he
is not considered a real man who is not experienced in love. If any one feels
like laughing, let him laughmy thought is, and remains, the
essential consideration for me. Or is love, perchance, privileged to be the
only event which is to be considered after, rather than before, it happens? If
that be the case, what then if I, having fallen in love, should later on think
that it was too late to think about it? Look you, this is the reason why I
choose to think about love before it happens. To be sure, lovers also maintain
that they gave the matter thought, but such is not the case. They assume it to
be essential in man to fall in love; but this surely does not mean thinking
about love but, rather, assuming it, in order to make sure of getting one's
self a sweetheart.
In fact, whenever my reflection
endeavors to pin down love, naught but contradiction seems to remain. At times,
it is true, I feel as if something had escaped me, but I cannot tell what it
is, whereas my reflection is able at once to point out the contradictions in
what does occur. Very well, then, in my opinion love is the greatest self‑contradiction
imaginable, and comical at the same time. Indeed, the one corresponds to the
other. The comical is always seen to occur in the category of contradictionswhich truth I cannot take the time
to demonstrate now; but what I shall demonstrate now is that love is comical.
By love I mean the relation between man and woman. I am not thinking of Eros in
the Greek sense which has been extolled so beautifully by Plato who, by the
way, is so far from considering the love of woman that he mentions it only in
passing, holding it to be inferior to the love of youths.10 I say, love is comical to a third
personmore I say not. Whether it is for
this reason that lovers always hate a third person I do not know; but I do know
that reflection is always in such a relation the third person, and for this
reason I cannot love without at the same time having a third person present in
the shape of my reflection.
This surely cannot seem strange to any one,
every one having doubted everything, whereas I am uttering my doubts only with
reference to love. And yet I do think it strange that people have doubted
everything and have again reached certainty, without as much as dropping a word
concerning the difficulties which have held my thought captiveso much so that I have, now and
then, longed to be freed of themfreed by the aid of one, note well,
who was aware of these difficulties, and not of one who in his sleep had a
notion to doubt, and to have doubted, everything, and again in his sleep had
the notion that he is explaining, and has explained, all.11
Let
me then have your attention, dear fellow banqueters, and if you yourselves be
lovers do not therefore interrupt me, nor try to silence me because you do not
wish to hear the explanation. Rather turn away and listen with averted faces to
what I have to say, and what I insist upon saying, having once begun.
In the first place I consider it comical that
every one loves, and every one wishes to love, without any one ever being able
to tell one what is the nature of the lovable or that which is the real object
of love. As to the word "to love" I shall not discuss it since it
means nothing definite; but as soon as the matter is broached at all we are met
by the question as to what it is one loves. No other answer is ever vouchsafed
us on that point other than that one loves what is lovable. For if one should
make answer, with Plato,12 that one is to love what is good, one has in taking this
single step exceeded the bounds of the erotic.
The answer may be offered, perhaps, that one
is to love what is beautiful. But if I then should ask whether to love means to
love a beautiful landscape or a beautiful painting it would be immediately
perceived that the erotic is not, as it were, comprised in the more general
term of the love of things beautiful, but is something entirely of its own
kind. Were a loverjust to give an exampleto speak as follows, in order to
express adequately how much love there dwelled in him: "I love beautiful
landscapes, and my Lalage, and the beautiful dancer, and a beautiful horse‑-in
short, love all that is beautiful," his Lalage would not be satisfied with
his encomium, however well satisfied she might be with him in all other
respects, and even if she be beautiful; and now suppose Lalage is not beautiful
and he yet loved her!
Again, if I should refer the erotic element
to the bisection of which Aristophanes tells us13 when he says that the gods severed
man into two parts as one cuts flounders, and that these parts thus separated
sought one another, then I again encounter a difficulty I cannot get over,
which is, in how far I may base my reasoning on Aristophanes who in his speechjust because there is no reason for
the thought to stop at this point‑-goes further in his thought and thinks
that the gods might take it into their heads to divide man
into three parts, for the sake of
still better fun. For the sake of still better fun; for is it not true, as I
said, that love renders a person ridiculous, if not in the eyes of others
others certainly in the eyes of the gods?
Now,
let me assume that the erotic element resides essentially in the relation
between man and womanwhat is to be inferred from that? If
the lover should say to his Lalage: I love you because you are a woman; I might
as well love any other woman, as for instance, ugly Zoe: then beautiful Lalage
would feel insulted.
In
what, then, consists the lovable? This is my question; but unfortunately, no
one has been able to tell me, The individual lover always believes that, as far
as he is concerned, he knows. Still he cannot make himself understood by any
other lover; and he who listens to the speech of a number of lovers will learn
that no two of them ever agree, even though they all talk about the same thing.
Disregarding those altogether silly explanations which leave one as wise as
before, that is, end by asserting that it is really the pretty feet of the
beloved damsel, or the admired mustachios of the swain, which are the objects
of lovedisregarding these, one will find
mentioned, even in the declamations of lovers in the higher style, first a
number of details and, finally, the declaration: all her lovable ways; and when
they have reached the climax: that inexplicable something I do not know how to
explain. And this speech is meant to please especially beautiful Lalage. Me it
does not please, for I don't understand a word of it and find, rather, that it
contains a double contradictionfirst, that it ends with the
inexplicable, second, that it ends with the inexplicable; for he who intends to
end with the inexplicable had best begin with the inexplicable and then say no
more, lest he lay himself open to suspicion. If he begin with the inexplicable,
saying no more, then this does not prove his helplessness, for it is, anyway,
an explanation in a negative sense; but if he does begin with something else
and lands in the inexplicable, then this does certainly prove his helplessness.
So then we see: to love corresponds to the
lovable; and the lovable is the inexplicable. Well, that is at least something;
but comprehensible it is not, as little as the inexplicable way in which love
seizes on its prey. Who, indeed, would not be alarmed if people about one, time
and again, dropped down dead, all of a sudden, or had convulsions, without
anyone being able to account for it? But precisely in this fashion does love
invade life, only with the difference that one is not alarmed thereby, since
the lovers themselves regard it as their greatest happiness, but that one, on
the contrary, is tempted to laugh; for the comical and the tragical elements
ever correspond to one another. Today, one may converse with a person and can
fairly well make him outtomorrow, he speaks in tongues and
with strange gestures: he is in love.
Now,
if to love meant to fall in love with the first person that came along, it
would be easy to understand that one could give no special reasons for it; but
since to love means to fall in love with one, one single person in all the
world, it would seem as if such an extraordinary process of singling out ought
to be due to such an extensive chain of reasoning that one might have to beg to
be excused from hearing it‑-not so much because it did not explain
anything as because it might be too lengthy to listen to. But no, the lovers
are not able to explain anything at all. He has seen hundreds upon hundreds of
women; he is, perhaps, advanced in years and has all along felt nothing‑-and
all at once he sees her, her the Only one, Catherine. Is this not comical? Is
it not comical that the relation which is to explain and beautify all life,
love, is not like the mustard seed from which there grows a great tree,14 but being still smaller is, at
bottom, nothing at all; for not a single antecedent criterion can be mentioned,
as e.g., that the
phenomenon occurred at a certain age, nor a single reason as to
why be should select her, her alone in all the worldand that by no means in the same
sense as when "Adam chose Eve, because there was none other."15
Or is not the explanation which the lovers
vouchsafe just as comical; or, does it not, rather, emphasize the comical
aspect of love? They say that love renders one blind, and by this fact they
undertake to explain the phenomenon. Now, if a Person who was going into a dark
room to fetch something should answer, on my advising him to take a light
along, that it was only a trifling matter he wanted and so he would not bother
to take a light alongah! then I would understand him
excellently well. If, on the other hand, this same person should take me aside
and, with an air of mystery, confide to me that the thing be was about to fetch
was of the very greatest importance and that it was for this reason that he was
able to do it in the darkah! then I wonder if my weak mortal
brain could follow the soaring flight of his speech. Even if I should refrain
from laughing, in order not to offend him, I should hardly be able to restrain
my mirth as soon as he had turned his back. But at love nobody laughs; for I am
quite prepared to be embarrassed like the Jew who, after ending his story,
asks: Is there no one who will laugh?16 And yet I did not miss the point, as did the Jew, and as to
my laughter I am far from wanting to insult any one. Quite on the contrary, I
scorn those fools who imagine that their love has such good reasons that they
can afford to laugh at other lovers; for since love is altogether inexplicable,
one lover is as ridiculous as the other. Quite as foolish and haughty I
consider it also when a man proudly looks about him in the circle of girls to
find who may be worthy of him, or when a girl proudly tosses her head to select
or reject; because such persons are simply basing their thoughts on an
unexplained assumption. No. What busies my thought is love as such, and it is
love which seems ridiculous to me; and therefore I fear it, lest I become
ridiculous in my own eyes, or ridiculous in the eyes of the gods who have
fashioned man thus. In other words, if love is ridiculous it is equally
ridiculous, whether now my sweetheart be a princess or a servant girl; for the
lovable, as we have seen, is the inexplicable.
Look you, therefore do I fear love, and find
precisely in this a new proof of love's being comical; for my fear is so
seriously tragic that it throws light on the comical nature love. When people
wreck a building a sign is hung up to warn people, and I shall take care to
stand from under; when a bar has been freshly painted a stone is laid in the
road to apprise people of the fact; when a driver is in danger of running a man
over he will shout "look out"; when there have been cases of cholera
in a house a soldier is set as guard; and so forth. What I mean is that if
there is somedanger, one may be warned and will successfully escape it by
heeding the warning. Now, fearing to be rendered ridiculous by love, I
certainly regard it as dangerous; so whatshall I do to escape it? In other
words, what shall I do to escape the danger of some woman falling in love with
me? I am far from entertaining the thought of being an Adonis every girl is
bound to fall in love with (relata
refero,17 for what this means I do not understand) ‑goodness
no! But since I do not know what the lovable is I cannot, by anymanners of
means, know how to escape this danger.Since, for that matter, the very opposite
of beauty may constitute the lovable; and, finally, since the inexplicable also
is the lovable, I am forsooth in the same situation as the man Jean Paul speaks
of somewhere who, standing on one foot, reads a sign saying, "fox-traps
here," and now does not dare,either to lift his foot or to set it down.
No, love any one I will not, before I have fathomed what love is; but this I
cannot, but have, rather, come to the conclusion that it is comical. Hence I
will not love‑but alas! I have not thereby avoided the danger, for, since
I do not know what the lovable is and how it seizes me, or how it seizes a
woman with reference to me, I cannot make sure Whether I have avoided the
danger. This is tragical and, in a certain sense, even profoundly tragical,
even if no one is concerned about it, or if no one is concerned about the
bitter contradiction for one who thinks‑that a something exists which
everywhere exercises its power and yet is not to be definitely conceived by
thought and which, perhaps, may attack from the rear him who in vain seeks to
conceive it. But as to the tragic side of the matter it has its deep reason in
the comic aspects just pointed out. Possibly, every other person will turn all
this upside down and not find that to be comical which I do, but rather that
which I conceive to be tragical; but this too proves that I am right to a
certain extent. And that for which, if so happens, I become either a tragic or
comic victim is plain enough, viz., my desire to reflect about all I do, and
not imagine I am reflecting about life by dismissing its every important
circumstance with an "I don't care, either way."
Man has both a soul and a body.
About this the wisest and best of the race are agreed. Now, in case one assumes
the essence of love to lie in the relation between man and woman, the comic
aspect will show again in the face-about which is seen when the highest
spiritual values express themselves in the most sensual terms. I am now
referring to all those extraordinary and mystic signals of lovein short, to all the free‑masonry
which forms a continuation of the above‑mentioned inexplicable something.
The contradiction in which love here involves a person lies in the fact that
the symbolic signs mean nothing at all orwhich amounts to the samethat no one is able to explain what
they do signify. Two loving souls vow that they will love each the other in all
eternity; thereupon they embrace, and with a kiss they seal this eternal pact.
Now I ask any thinking person whether he would have hit upon that! And thus
there is constant shifting from the one to the other extreme in love. The most
spiritual is expressed by its very opposite, and the sensual is to signify the
most spiritual.Let me assume I am in love. In that case I would conceive it to
be of the utmost importance to me that the one I love belonged to me for all time.
This I comprehend; for I am now, really, speaking only of Greek eroticism which
has to do with loving beautiful souls. Now when the person I love had vowed to
return my love I would believe her or, in as far as there remained any doubt in
me, try to combat my doubt. But what happens actually? For if I were in love I
would, probably, behave like all the others, that is, seek to obtain still some
other assurance than merely to believe her I love; which, though, is plainly
the only assurance to *had.
When Cockatoo18 all at once begins to plume himself
like a duck which is gorged with food, and then emits the word
"Marian," everybody will laugh, and so will I.. I suppose the
spectator finds it comical that Cockatoo, who doesn't love Marian at all,
should be on such intimate terms with her. But suppose, now, that Cockatoo does
love Marian. Would that be comical still? To me it would; and the comical would
seem to me to lie in love's having become capable of being expressed in such
fashion. Whether now this has been the custom since the beginning of the world
makes no difference whatsoever, for the comical has the prescriptive right from
all eternity to be present in contradictionsand here is a contradiction. There
is really nothing comisal in the antics of a manikin since we see some one
pulling the strings. But to be a manikin at the beck of something inexplicable
is indeed comical, for the contradiction lies in our not seeing any sensible
reason why one should have to twitch now this leg and now that. Hence, if I
cannot explain what I am doing, I do not care to do it; and if I cannot
understand the power into whose sphere I am venturing, I do not care to
surrender myself to that power. And if love is so mysterious a law which binds
together the extremest contradictions, then who will guarantee that I might
not, one day, become altogether confused? Still, that does not concern me so
much.
Again,
I have heard that some lovers consider the behavior of other lovers ridiculous.
I cannot conceive how this ridicule is justified, for if this law of love be a
natural law, then all lovers are subject to it; but if it be the law of their
own choice, then those laughing lovers ought to be able to explain all about
love; which, however, they are unable to do. But in this respect I understand
this matter better as it seems a convention for one lover to laugh at the other
because he always finds the other lover ridiculous, but not himself. If it be
ridiculous to kiss an ugly girl, it is also ridiculous to kiss a pretty one;
and the notion that doing this in some particular way should entitle one to
cast ridicule on another who does it differently, is but presumptuousness and a
conspiracy which does not, for all that, exempt such a snob from laying himself
open to the ridicule which invariably results from the fact that no one is able
to explain what this act of kissing signifies, whereas it is to signify allto signify, indeed, that the lovers
desire to belong to each other in all eternity; aye, what is still more
amusing, to render them certain that they will. Now, if a man should suddenly
lay his head on one side, or shake it, or kick out with his leg and, upon my
asking him why he did this, should answer "To be sure I don't know,
myself, I just happened to do so, next time I may do something different, for I
did it unconsciously"ah, then I would understand him
quite well. But if he said, as the lovers say about their antics, that all
bliss lay therein, how could I help finding it ridiculousjust as I thought that other man's
motions ridiculous, to be sure in a different sense until he restrained my
laughter by declaring that they did not signify anything. For by doing so he
removed the contradiction which is the basic cause of the comical. It is not at
all comical that the insignificant is declared to signify nothing, but it is
very much so if it be asserted to signify all.
As regards involuntary actions, the
contradiction arises at the very outset because involuntary actions are not
looked for in a free rational being. Thus if one supposed that the Pope had a
coughing spell the very moment he was to place the crown on Napoleon's head; or
that bride and groom, in the most solemn moment of the wedding ceremony should
fall to sneezing‑these would be examples of the comical, That is, the
more a given action accentuates the free rational being, the more comical are
involuntary actions. This holds true also in respect of the erotic
gesticulations, where the comical element appears a second time, owing to the
circumstance that the lovers attempt to explain away the contradiction by
attributing to their gesticulations an absolute value. As is well known,
children have a keen sense of the ridiculouswitness children's testimony which
can always be relied on in this regard. Now as a rule children , will laugh at
lovers, and if one makes them tell what they have seen, surely no one can help
laughing. This is, perhaps, due to the fact that children omit the point. Very
strange! When the Jew omitted the point no one cared to laugh. Here, on the
contrary, every one laughs because the point is omitted; since, however, no one
can explain what the point iswhy, then there is no point at all.
So
the lovers explain nothing; and those who praise love explain nothing but are
merely intent onas one is bidden in the Royal Laws
of Denmarkon saying anent it all which may be
pleasant and of good report. But a man who thinks, desires to have his logical
categories in good order; and he who thinks about love wishes to be sure about
his categories also in this matter. The fact is, though, that people do not
think about love, and a "pastoral science" is still lacking; for even
if a poet in a pastoral poem makes an attempt to show how love is born,
everything is smuggled in again by help of another person who teaches the
lovers how to love!
As
we saw, the comical element in love arose from the face‑about whereby the
highest quality of one sphere does not find expression in that sphere but in
the exactly opposite quality of another sphere. It is comical that the soaring
flight of love‑the desire to belong to each other for all timelands ever, like Saft,19 in the pantry; but still more
comical is it that this conclusion is said to constitute love's highest
expression.
Wherever there is a contradiction, there the
comical element is present also. I am ever following that track. If it be
disconcerting to you, dear fellow banqueters, to follow me in what I shall have
to say now, then follow me with averted countenances. I myself am speaking as
if with veiled eyes; for as I see only the mystery in these matters, why, I
cannot see, or I see nothing.
What is
a consequence? If it cannot, in some way or other, be brought under the same
head as its antecedent why, then it would be ridiculous if it posed as a
consequence. To illustrate: if a man who wanted to take a bath jumped into the
tank and, coming to the surface again somewhat confused, groped for the rope to
hold on to, but caught the douche‑line by mistake, and a shower now
descended on him with sufficient motivation and for excellent good reasonwhy, then the consequence would be
entirely in order. The ridiculous here consisted in his seizing the wrong rope;
but there is nothing ridiculous in the shower descending when one pulls the
proper rope. Rather, it would be ridiculous if it did not come; as for example,
just to show the correctness of my contention about contradictions, if a man
nerved himself with bold resolution in order to withstand the shock and, in the
enthusiasm of his decision, with a stout heart pulled the line‑and the
shower did not come.
Let
us see now how it is with regard to love. The lovers wish to belong to each
other for all time, and this they express, curiously, by embracing each other
with all the intensity of the moment; and all the bliss of love is said to
reside therein. But all desire is egotistic. Now, to be sure, the lover's
desire is not egotistic in respect of the one he loves, but the desire of both
in conjunction is absolutely egotistic in so far as they in their union and
love represent a new ego. And yet they are deceived; for in the same moment the
race triumphs over the individual, the race is victorious, and the individuals
are debased to do its bidding.
Now
this I find more ridiculous than what Aristophanes thought so ridiculous. The
ridiculous aspect of his theory of bi-section lies in the inherent
contradiction (which theancient author does not sufficiently emphasize,
however). In considering a person one naturally supposes him to be an entity,
and so one does believe till it becomes apparent that, under the obsession of
love, he is but a half which runs about looking for its complement. There is
nothing ridiculous in half an apple. The comical would appear if a whole apple
turned out to be only half an apple. In thefirst case there exists no contradiction,
but certainly in the latter. If one actually based one's reasoning on the
figure of speech that woman is but half a person she would not be ridiculous at
all in her love. Man, however, who has been enjoying civic rights as a whole
person, will certainly appear ridiculous when he takes to running about (and
looking for his other half);20 for he betrays thereby that he is but half a person. In
fact, the more one thinks about the matter the more ridiculous it seems;
because if man really be a whole, why, then he will not become a whole in love,
but he and woman would make up one and a half. No wonder, then, that the gods
laugh, and particularly at man.
But let me return to my consequence. When the
lovers have found each other, one should certainly believe that they formed a
whole, and in this should lie the proof of their assertion that they wished to
live for each other for all time. But lo! instead of living for each other they
begin to live for the race, and this they do not even suspect.
What is a consequence? If, as I observed, one
cannot detect in it the cause out of which it proceeded, the consequence is
merely ridiculous, and he becomes a laughing stock to whom this happens. Now,
the fact that the separated halves have found each other ought to be a complete
satisfaction and rest for them; and yet the consequence is a new existence.
That having found each other should mean a new existence for the lovers, is
comprehensible enough; but not, that a new existence for a third being should
take its inception from this fact. And yet the resulting consequence is greater
than that of which it is the consequence, whereas such an end as the lovers'
finding each other ought to be infallible evidence of no other, subsequent,
consequence being thinkable.
Does the satisfaction of any other desire
show an analogy to this consequence? Quite on the contrary, the satisfaction of
desire is in every other case evinced by a period of rest; and even if a tristitia21 does superveneindicating by the way, that every
satisfaction of an appetite is comicalthis tristitia is a straightforward consequence, though no tristitia so eloquently attests a
preceding comical element as does that following love. It is quite another
matter with an enormous consequence such as we are dealing with, a consequence
of which no one knows whence it comes, nor whether it will come; whereas, if it
does come, it comes as a consequence.
Who is able to grasp this? And yet that which
for the initiates of love constitutes the greatest pleasure is also the most
important thing for themso important that they even adopt
new names, derived from the consequence thereof which thus, curiously enough,
assumes retroactive force, The lover is now called father, his sweetheart,
mother; and these names seem to them the most beautiful. And yet there is a
being to whom these names are even more beautiful; for what is as beautiful as
filial piety? To me it seems the most beautiful of all sentiments; and
fortunately I can appreciate the thought underlying it. We are taught that it
is seeming in a son to love his father. This I comprehend, I cannot even
suspect that there is any contradiction possible here, and I acknowledge
infinite satisfaction in being held by the loving bonds of filial piety. I
believe it is the greatest debt of all to owe another being one's life. I
believe that this debt cannot ever be wiped out, or even fathomed by any
calculation, and for this reason I agree with Cicero when he asserts that the
son is always in the wrong as against his father; and it is precisely filial
piety which teaches me to believe this, teaches me not even to penetrate the
hidden, but rather to remain hidden in the father. Quite true, I am glad to be
another person's greatest debtor; but as to the opposite, viz., before deciding
to make another person my greatest debtor, I want to arrive at greater clarity.
For to my conception there is a world of difference between being some person's
debtor, and making some person one's debtor to such an extent that he will
never be able to clear himself.
What filial piety forbids the son to
consider, love bids the father to consider. And here contradiction sets in
again. If the son has an immortal soul like his father, what does it mean,
then, to be a father? For must I not smile at myself when thinking of myself as
a fatherwhereas the son is most deeply moved
when he reflects on the relation he bears to his father? Very well do I
understand Plato when he says that an animal will give birth to an animal of
the same species, a plant, to a plant of the same species, and thus also man to
man .22 But this explains nothing, does not
satisfy one's thought, and arouses but a dim feeling; for an immortal soul
cannot be born. Whenever, then, a father considers his son in the light of his
son's immortalitywhich is, indeed, the essential
consideration23he will probably smile at himself,
for he cannot, by any means, grasp in their entirety all the beautiful and
noble thoughts which his son with filial piety entertains about him. If, on the
other hand, he considers his son from the point of view of his animal nature he
must smile again, because the conception of fatherhood is too exalted an
expression for it.
Finally,
if it were thinkable that a father influenced his son in such fashion that his
own nature was a condition from which the son's nature could not free itself,
then the contradiction would arise in another direction; for in this case
nothing more terrible is thinkable than being a father. There is no comparison
between killing a person and giving him lifethe former decides his fate only in
time, the other for all eternity. So there is a contradiction again, and one
both to laugh and to weep about. Is paternity then an illusioneven if not in the same sense as is
implied in Magdelone's speech to Jeronymus24or is it the most terrible thought
imaginable? Is it the greatest benefit conferred on one, or is it the sweetest
gratification of one's desireis it something which just happens,
or is it the greatest task of life ?
Look you, for this reason have I
forsworn all love, for my thought is to me the most essential consideration. So
even if love be the most exquisite joy, I renounce it, without wishing either
to offend or to envy any one; and even if love be the condition for conferring
the greatest benefit imaginable I deny myself the opportunity thereforbut my thought I have not
prostituted. By no means do I lack an eye for what is beautiful, by no means
does my heart remain unmoved when I read the songs of the poets, by no means is
my soul without sadness when it yields to the beautiful conception of love; but
I do not wish to becorne unfaithful to my thought. And of what avail were it to
be, for there is no happiness possible for me except my thought have free sway.
If it had not, I would in desperation yearn for my thought, which I may not desert to cleave to a wife, for it is my
immortal part and, hence, of more importance than a wife. Well do I comprehend
that if any thing is sacred it is love; that if faithlessness in any relation
is base, it is doubly so in love; that if any deceit is detestable, it is
tenfold more detestable in love. But my soul is innocent of blame. I have never
looked at any woman to desire her, neither have I fluttered about aimlessly
before blindly plunging, or lapsing, into the most decisive of all relations.
If I knew what the lovable were I would know with certainty whether I had
offended by tempting any one; but since I do not know, I am certain only of
never having had the conscious desire to do so.
Supposing I should yield to love and be made
to laugh; or supposing I should be cast down by terror, since I cannot find the
narrow path which lovers travel as easily as if it were the broad highway,
undisturbed by any doubts, which they surely have bestowed thought on (seeing
our times have, indeed, reflected about all25 and consequently will comprehend me
when I assert that to act unreflectingly is nonsense, as one ought to have gone
through all possible reflections before acting)supposing, I say, 1 should yield to
love! Would I not insult past redress my beloved one if I laughed; or
irrevocably plunge her into despair if I were overwhelmed by terror? For I
understand well enough that a woman cannot be expected to have thought as
profoundly about these matters; and a woman who found love comical (as but gods
and men can, for which reason woman is a temptation luring them to become
ridiculous) would both betray a suspicious amount of previous experience and
understand me least. But a woman who comprehended the terror of love would have
lost her loveliness and still fail to understand meshe would be annihilated; which is
in nowise my case, so long as my thought saves me.
Is there no one ready to laugh? When I began
by wanting to speak about the comical element in love you perhaps, expected to
be made to laugh, for it is easy to make you laugh, and I myself am a friend of
laughter; and still you did not laugh, I believe. The effect of my speech was a
different one, and yet precisely this proves that I have spoken about the
comical. If there be no one who laughs at my speechwell, then laugh a little at me,
dear fellow-banqueters, and I shall not wonder; for I do not understand what I
have occasionally heard you say about love. Very probably, though, you are
among the initiated as I am not.
Thereupon the Young Person seated himself. He had become more
beautiful, almost, than before the meal. Now.he sat quietly, looking down
before him, unconcerned about the others. John the Seducer desired at once to
urge some objections against the Young Person's speech but was interrupted by
Constantin who warned against discussions and ruled that on this occasion only
speeches were in order. John said if that was the case, he would stipulate that
he should be allowed to be the last speaker. This again gave rise to a
discussion as to the order in which they were to speak, which Constantin closed
by offering to speak forth with, against their recognizing his authority to appoint
the speakers in their turn.
(Constantin's
Speech)
Constantin spoke as
follows:
There is a time to keep
silence, and a time to speak,26 and now it seems to be
the time to speak briefly, for our young friend has spoken much and very
strangely. His vis comica27 has made us struggle
ancipiti proelio28 because his speech was full of doubts, as he
himself is, sitting there nowa perplexed man who knows not whether to laugh, or weep, or
fall in love. In fact, had I had foreknowledge of his speech, such as he
demands one should have of love, I should have forbidden him to speak; but now
it is too late. I shall bid you then, dear fellow‑banqueters,
"gladsome and merry to be," and even if I cannot enforce this I shall
ask you to forget each speech so soon as it is made and to wash it down with a
single draught.
And
now as to woman, about whom I shall speak. I too have pondered about her, and I
have finally discovered the category to which she belongs. I too have sought,
but I have found, too, and I have made a matchless discovery which I shall now
communicate to you. Woman is understood correctly only when placed in the
category of "the joke."
It is man's function to be
absolute, to act in an absolute fashion, or to give expression to the absolute.
Woman's sphere lies in her relativity.29 Between beings so radically different, no true
reciprocal relation can exist. Precisely in this incommensurability lies the
joke. And with woman the joke was born into the world. It is to be understood,
however, that man must know how to stick to his role of being absolute; for
else nothing is seenthat is to say, something exceedingly common is seen, viz.,
that man and woman fit each other, he as a half man and she as a halfman.
The joke is not an
æsthetic, but an abortive ethical, category. Its effect on thought is about the
same as the impression we receive if a man were solemnly to begin making a
speech, recite a comma or two with his pronouncement, then say "hm!"–dash"–and
then stop. Thus with woman. One tries to cover her with the ethical category,
one thinks of human nature, one opens one's eyes, one fastens one's glances on
the most excellent maiden in question, an effort is made to redeem the claims
of the ethical demand; and then one grows ill at ease and says to one's self:
ah, this is undoubtedly a joke! The joke lies, indeed, in applying that
category to her and measuring her by it, because it would be idle to expect
serious results from her; but just that is the joke. Because if one could
demand it of her it would not be a joke at all. A mighty poor joke indeed it
would be, to place her under the air‑pump and draw the air out of
her–indeed it were a shame; but to blow her up to supernatural size and let her
imagine herself to have attained all the ideality which a little maiden of
sixteen imagines she has, that is the beginning of the game and, indeed, the
beginning of a highly entertaining performance. No youth has half so much
imaginary ideality as a young girl, but: "We shall soon be even" as
says the tailor in the proverb; for her ideality is but an illusion.
If one fails to consider
woman from this point of view she may cause irreparable harm; but through my
conception of her she becomes harmless and amusing. For a man there is nothing
more shocking than to catch himself twaddling. It destroys all true ideality;
for one may repent of having been a rascal, and one may feel sorry for not
having meant a word of what one said; but to have talked nonsense, sheer
nonsense, to have meant all one said and behold! it was all nonsense–that is
too disgusting for repentance incarnate to put up with. But this is not the
case with woman. She has a prescriptive right to transfigure herself‑in
less than 24 hours–in the most innocent and pardonable nonsense; for far is it
from her ingenuous soul to wish to deceive one! indeed, she meant all she said,
and now she says the precise opposite, but with the same amiable frankness, for
now she is willing to stake everything on what she said last. Now in case a man
in all seriousness surrenders to love he may be called fortunate indeed if he
succeeds in obtaining an insurance–if, indeed, he is able to obtain it
anywhere; for so inflammable a material as woman is most likely to arouse the
suspicions of an insurance agent. Just consider for a moment what he has done
in thus identifying himself with her! If, some fine New Year's night she goes
off like some fireworks he will promptly follow suit; and even if this should
not happen he will have many a close call. And what may he not lose! He may
lose his all; for there is but one absolute antithesis to the absolute, and
that is nonsense. Therefore, let him not seek refuge in some society for
morally tainted individuals, for he is not morally tainted—far from it; only,
he has been reduced in absurdum and
beatified in nonsense; that is, has been made a fool of.
This will never happen
among men. If a man should sputter off in this fashion I would scorn him. If he
should fool me by his cleverness I need but apply the ethical category to him,
and the danger is trifling. If things go too far I shall put a bullet through
his brain; but to challenge a woman‑what is that, if you please? Who does
not see that it is a joke, just as when Xerxes had the sea whipped? When
Othello murders Desdemona, granting she really had been guilty, he has gained
nothing, for he has been duped, and a dupe he remains; for even by his
murdering her he only makes a concession with regard to a consequence which
originally made him ridiculous; whereas Elvira30 may be an altogether
pathetic figure when arming herself with a dagger to obtain revenge. The fact
that Shakespeare has conceived Othello as a tragic figure (even disregarding
the calamity that Desdemona is innocent) is to be explained and, indeed, to perfect
satisfaction, by the hero being a colored person. For a colored person, dear
fellow‑banqueters, who cannot be assumed to represent spiritual
qualities—a colored person, I say, who therefore becomes green in his face when
his ire is aroused (which is a physiological fact), a colored man may, indeed,
become tragic if he is deceived by a woman; just as a woman has all the pathos
of tragedy on her side when she is betrayed by a man. A man who flies into a
rage may perhaps become tragic; but a man of whom one may expect a developed
mentality, he either not become jealous, or he will become ridiculous if does;
and most of all when he comes running with a dagger in his hand.
A Pity that Shakespeare has
not presented us with a comedy of this description in which the claim raised by
a woman's infidelity is turned down by irony; for not every one who is able to
see the comical element in this situation is able also to develop the thought
and give it dramatic embodiment. Let one but imagine Socrates surprising
Xanthippe in the act—for it would be un‑Socratic even to think of
Socrates being particularly concerned about his wife's infidelity, or still
worse, spying on her—imagine it, and I believe that the fine smile which
transformed the ugliest man in Athens into the handsomest, would for the first
time have turned into a roar of laughter. It is incomprehensible why
Aristophanes, who so frequently made Socrates the butt of his ridicule,
neglected to have him run on the stage shouting: "Where is she, where is
she, so that I may kill her, i.e., my unfaithful Xanthippe." For really it
does not matter greatly whether or no Socrates was made a cuckold, and all that
Xanthippe may do in this regard is wasted labor, like snapping one's fingers in
one's pocket; for Socrates remains the same intellectual hero, even with a horn
on his forehead. But if he had in fact become jealous and had wanted to kill
Xanthippe—alas! then would Xanthippe have exerted a power over him such as the
entire Greek nation and his sentence of death could not—to make him ridiculous.
A cuckold is comical, then,
with respect to his wife; but he may be regarded as becoming tragical with
respect to other men. In this fact we may find an explanation of the Spanish
conception of honor. But the tragic element resides chiefly in his not being
able to obtain redress, and the anguish of his suffering consists really in its
being devoid of meaning—which is terrible enough. To shoot the woman, to
challenge her, to despise her, all this would only serve to render the poor man
still more ridiculous; for woman is the weaker sex. This consideration enters
in everywhere and confuses all. If she performs a great deed she is admired
more than man, because it is more than was expected of her. If she is betrayed,
all the pathos is on her side; but if a man is deceived one has scant sympathy
and little patience while he is present—and laughs at him whell his back is
turned.
Look you, therefore is it
advisable betimes to consider woman as a joke. The entertainment she affords is
simply incomparable. Let one consider her a fixed quantity, and one's self a
relative one; let one by no means contradict her, for that would simply be
helping her; let one never doubt what she says but, rather, believe her every
word; let one gallivant about her, with eyes rendered unsteady unspeakable
admiration and blissful intoxication, and with the mincing steps of a
worshipper; let one languishingly fall on one's knees, then lift up one's eyes
up to her languishingly and heave a breath again; let one do all she bids one,
like an obedient slave. And now comes the cream of the joke. We need no proof
that woman can speak, i.e., use words. Unfortunately, however, she does not
possess sufficient reflection for making sure against her in the long run—which
is, at most, eight days—contradicting herself; unless indeed man, by
contradicting her, exerts a regulative influence. So the consequence is that
within a short time confusion will reign supreme. If one had not done what she
told one to, the confusion would pass unnoticed; for she forgets again as
quickly as she talks. But since her admirer has done all, and has been at her
beck and call in every instance, the confusion is only too glaring.
The more gifted the woman,
the more amusing the situation. For the more gifted she is, the more
imagination she will possess. Now, the more imagination she possesses, the
greater airs she will give herself and the greater the confusion which is bound
to become evident in the next instant. In life, such entertainment is rarely
had, because this blind obedience to a woman's whims occurs but seldom. And if
it does, in some languishing swain, most likely he is not qualified to see the
fun. The fact is, the ideality a little maiden assumes in moments when her
imagination is at work is encountered nowhere else, whether in gods or man; but
it is all the more entertaining to believe her and to add fuel to the fire.
As
I remarked, the fun is simply incomparable—indeed, I know it for a fact,
because I have at times not been able to sleep at night with the mere thought
of what new confusions I should live to see, through the agency of my
sweetheart and my humble zeal to please her. Indeed, no one who gambles in a
lottery will meet with more remarkable combinations than he who has a passion
for this game. For this is sure, that every woman without exception possesses
the same qualifications for being resolved and transfigured in nonsense with a
gracefulness, a nonchalance, an assurance such as befits the weaker sex.
Being a right‑minded
lover one naturally discovers every possible charm in one's beloved. Now, when
discovering genius in the above sense, one ought not to let it remain a mere
possibility but ought, rather, to develop it into virtuosity. I do not need to
be more specific, and more cannot be said in a general way, yet every one will
understand me. Just as one may find entertainment in balancing a cane on one's
nose, in swinging a tumbler in a circle without spilling a drop, in dancing
between eggs, and in other games as amusing and profitable, likewise, and not
otherwise, in living with his beloved the lover will have a source of
incomparable entertainment and food for most interesting study. In matters
pertaining to love let one have absolute belief, not only in her protestations
of fidelity—one soon tires of that game—but in all those explosions of
inviolable Romanticism by which she would probably perish if one did not
contrive a safety‑valve through which the sighs and the smoke, and
"the aria of Romanticism31" may escape and make her worshipper happy.
Let one compare her admiringly to Juliet, the difference being only that no
person ever as much as thought of touching a hair on her Romeo's head. With
regard to intellectual matters, let one hold her capable of all and, if one has
been lucky enough to find the right woman, in a trice one will have a
cantankerous authoress, whilst wonderingly shading one's eyes with one's hand
and duly admiring what the little black hen may yield besides.32 It is altogether
incomprehensible why Socrates did not choose this course of action instead of
bickering with Xanthippe—oh, well! to be sure he wished to acquire practice,
like the riding master who, even though he has the best trained horse, yet
knows how to tease him in such fashion that there is good reason for breaking
him in again."33
Let me be a little more
concrete, in order to illustrate a particular and highly interesting
phenomenon. A great deal has been said about feminine fidelity, but rarely with
any discretion.34 From a purely æsthetic point of view this
fidelity is to be regarded as a piece of poetic fiction which steps on the
stage to find her lover—a fiction which sits by the spinning wheel and waits
for her lover to come; but when she has found him, or he has come, why, then
æsthetics is at a loss. Her infidelity, on the other hand, as contrasted with
her previous fidelity, is to be judged chiefly with regard to its ethical
import, when jealousy will appear as a tragic passion. There are three
possibilities, so the case is favorable for woman; for there are two cases of
fidelity, as against one of infidelity. Inconceivably great is her fidelity
when she is not altogether sure of her cavalier; and ever so inconceivably great
is it when he repels her fidelity. The third case would be her infidelity. Now
granted one has sufficient intellect and objectivity to make reflections, one
will find sufficient justification, in what has been said, for my category of
"the joke." Our young friend whose beginning in a manner deceived me
seemed to be on the point of entering into this matter, but backed out again,
dismayed at the difficulty. And yet the explanation is not difficult, providing
one really sets about it seriously, to make unrequited love and death
correspond to one another, and providing one is serious enough to stick to his
thought—and so much seriousness one ought to have—for sake of the joke.
Of course this phrase of
unrequited love being death originated either with a woman or a womanish male.
Its origin is easily made out, seeing that it is one of those categorical
outbursts which, spoken with great bravado, on the spur of the moment, may
count on a great and immediate applause; for although this business is said to
be a matter of life and death, yet the phrase is meant for immediate
consumption—like cream‑puffs. Although referring to daily experience it
by no means binding on him who is to die, but only obliges the listener to rush
post‑haste to the assistance of the dying lover. If a man should take to
using such phrases it would not be amusing at all, for he would be too
despicable to laugh at. Woman, however, possesses genius, is lovable in the
measure she possesses it, and is amusing at all times. Well, then, the languishing
lady dies of love—why certainly, for did she not say so herself? In this matter
she is pathetic, for woman has enough courage to say what no man would have the
courage to do—so then she dies! In saying so I have measured her by ethical
standards. Do ye likewise, dear fellow‑banqueters, and understand your
Aristotle aright, now! He observes very correctly that woman cannot be used in
tragedy.35 And very certainly, her
proper sphere is the pathetic and serious divertissement, the half-hour face,
not the five‑act drama. So then she dies. But should she for that reason
not be able to love again? Why not?—that is, if it be possible to restore her
to life. Now, having been restored to life, she is of course a new
being—another person, that is, and begins afresh and falls in love for the
first time: nothing remarkable in that! Ah, death, great is thy power; not the
most violent emetic and not the most powerful laxative could ever have the same
purging effect!
The resulting confusion is
capital, if one but is attentive and does not forget. A dead man is one of the
most amusing characters to be met with in life. Strange that more use is not
made of him on the stage, for in life he is seen, now and then. When you come
to think of it, even one who has only been seemingly dead is a comical figure;
but one who was really dead certainly contributes to our entertainment all one
can reasonably expect of a man. All depends on whether one is attentive. I
myself had my attention called to it, one day, as I was walking with one of my
acquaintances. A couple passed us. I judged from the expression on his face
that he knew them and asked whether that was the case. "Why, yes," he
answered, "I know them very well, and especially the lady, for she is my
departed one."—"What departed one?" I asked.—"Why, my
departed first love," he answered. "Indeed, this is a strange affair.
She said: I shall die. And that very same moment she departed, naturally
enough, by death—else one might have insured her beforehand in the widow's insurance.
Too late! Dead she was and dead she remained; and now I wander about, as says
the poet, vainly seeking the grave of my lady-love that I may shed my tears
thereon." Thus this broken-hearted man who remained alone in the world,
though it consoled him to find her pretty far along with some other man.
It
is a good thing for the girls, thought I, that they don't have to be buried,
every time they die; for if parents have hitherto considered a boy‑child
to be the more expensive, the girls might become even more so!
A
simple ease of infidelity is not as amusing, by far. I mean, if a girl should
fall in love with some one else and should say to her lover: "I cannot
help it, save me from myself!" But to die from sorrow because she cannot
endure being separated from her lover by his journey to the West Indies, to
have put up with his departure, however, and then, at his return, be not only
not dead, but attached to some one else for all time—that certainly is a
strange fate for a lover to undergo. No wonder, then, that the heart‑broken
man at times consoled himself with the burthen of an old song which runs:
"Hurrah for you and me, I say, we never shall forget that day!"
Now forgive me, dear
fellow‑banqueters, if I have spoken at too great length; and empty a
glass to love and to woman. Beautiful she is and lovely, if she be considered
æsthetically. That is undeniable. But, as has often been said, and as I shall
say also: one ought not to remain standing here, but should go on.36 Consider her, then,
ethically and you will hardly have begun to do so before the humor of it will
become apparent. Even Plato and Aristotle assume that woman is an imperfect
form, an irrational quantity, that is, one which might some time, in a better
world, be transformed into a man. In this life one must take her as she is. And
what this is becomes apparent very soon; for she will not be content with the
æsthetic sphere, but goes on, she wants to become emancipated, and she has the
courage to say so. Let her wish be fulfilled and the amusement will be simply
incomparable.
When
Constantin had finished speaking he forthwith ruled Victor Eremita to begin. He
spoke as follows:
(Victor
Eremita's Speech)
As
will be remembered, Plato offers thanks to the gods for four things. In the
fourth place he is grateful for having been permitted to be a contemporary of
Socrates. For the three other boons mentioned by him,37 an earlier Greek
philosopher38 had already thanked the gods, and so I conclude
that they are worthy our gratitude. But alas!—even if I wanted to express my
gratitude like these Greeks I would not be able to do so for what was denied
me. Let me then collect my soul in gratitude for the one good which was
conferred on me also—that I was made a man and not a woman.
To
be a woman is something so curious, so heterogeneous and composite that no
predicate will fully express these qualities; and if I should use many
predicates they would contradict one another in such fashion that only a woman
would be able to tolerate the result and, what is worse, feel happy about it.
The fact that she really signifies less than man—that is not her misfortune,
and still less so if she got to know it, for it might be borne with fortitude.
No, her misfortune consists in her life's having become devoid of fixed meaning
through a romantic conception of things, by virtue of which, now she signifies
all, and now, nothing at all; without ever finding out what she really does
signify and even that is not her misfortune but, rather, the fact that, being a
woman, she never will be able to find out. As for myself, if I were a woman, I
should prefer to be one in the Orient and as a slave; for to be a slave,
neither more nor less is at any rate something, in comparison with being, now
heyday, now nothing.
Even
if a woman's life did not contain such contrasts, the distinction she enjoys,
and which is rightly assumed to be hers as a woman—a distinction she does not
share with man—would by itself point to the meaninglessness of her life. The
distinction I refer to is that of gallantry. To be gallant to woman is becoming
in men. Now gallantry consists very simply in conceiving in fantastic
categories that person to whom one is gallant. To be gallant to a man is,
therefore, an insult, for he begs to be excused from the application of
fantastic categories to him. For the fair sex, however, gallantry signifies a
tribute, a distinction, which is essentially its privilege. Ah me, if only a
single cavalier were gallant to them the case would not be so serious. But far
from it! At bottom every man is gallant, he is unconsciously so. This
signifies, therefore, that it is life itself which has bestowed this perquisite
on the fair sex. Woman on her part unconsciously accepts it. Here we have the
same trouble again; for if only a single woman did so, another explanation
would be necessary. This is life's characteristic irony.
Now if gallantry contained
the truth it ought to be reciprocal, i.e., gallantry would be the accepted
quotation for the stated difference between beauty on the one hand, and power,
astuteness, and strength, on the other. But this is not the case, gallantry is
essentially woman's due; and the fact that she unconsciously accepts it may be
explained through the solicitude of nature for the weak and those created in a
stepmotherly fashion by her, who feel more than recompensed by an illusion. But
precisely this illusion is misfortune. It is not seldom the case that nature
comes to the assistance of an afflicted creature by consoling him with the
notion that he is the most beautiful. If that is so, why, then we may say that
nature made good the deficiency since now the creature is endowed with even
more than could be reasonably demanded. But to be beautiful ‑only in
one's imagination, and not to be overcome, indeed, by sadness, but to be fooled
into an illusion—why, that is still worse mockery. Now, as to being afflicted,
woman certainly is far from having been treated in a stepmotherly fashion by
nature; still she is so in another sense inasmuch as she never can free herself
from the illusion with which life has consoled her.
Gathering together one's
impressions of a woman's existence, in order to point out its essential
features, one is struck by the fact that every woman's life gives one an
entirely phantastic impression. In a far more decisive sense than man she may
be said to have turning points in her career; for her turning points turn
everything upside down. In one of Tieck's39 Romantic dramas there occurs a person who,
having once been king of Mesopotamia, now is a green-grocer in Copenhagen.
Exactly as fantastic is every feminine existence. If the girl's name is
Juliana, her life is as follows: erstwhile empress in the wide domains of love,
and titulary queen of all the exaggerations of tomfoolery; now, Mrs. Peterson,
corner Bath Street.
When a child, a girl is
less highly esteemed than a boy. When a little older, one does not know exactly
what to make of her. At last she enters that decisive period in which she holds
absolute sway. Worshipfully man approaches her as a suitor. Worshipfully, for
so does every suitor, it is not the scheme of a crafty deceiver. Even the
executioner, when laying down his fasces
to go a‑wooing, even he bends his knee, although he is willing to offer
himself up, within a short time, to domestic executions which he finds so
natural that he is far from seeking any excuse for them in the fact that public
executions have grown so few. The cultured person behaves in the very same
manner. He kneels, he worships, he conceives his lady‑love in the most
fantastic categories; and then he very quickly forgets his kneeling position—in
fact, he knew full well the while he knelt that it was fantastic to do so.
If
I were a woman I would prefer to be sold by my father to the highest bidder, as
is the custom in the Orient; for there is at least some sense in such a deal.
What misfortune to have been born a womah! Yet her misfortune really consists
in her not being able to comprehend it, being a woman. If she does complain,
she complains rather about her Oriental, than her Occidental, status. But if I
were a woman I would first of all refuse to be wooed, and resign myself to
belong to the weaker sex, if such is the case, and be careful—which is most
important if one is proud—of not going beyond the truth. However, that is of
but little concern to her. Juliana is in the seventh heaven, and Mrs. Peterson
submits to her fate.
Let me, then, thank the
gods that I was born a man and not a woman. And still, how much do I forego!
For is not all poetry, from the drinking song to the tragedy, a deification of
woman? All the worse for her and for him who admires her; for if he does not
look out he will, all of a sudden, have to pull a long face. The beautiful, the
excellent, all of man's achievement, owes its origin to woman, for she inspires
him. Woman is, indeed, the inspiring element in life. How many a love‑lorn
shepherd has played on this theme, and how many a shepherdess has listened to
it! Verily, my soul is without envy and feels only gratitude to the gods; for I
would rather be a man, though in humble station, but really so, than be a woman
and an indeterminate quantity, rendered happy by a delusion—I would rather be a
concrete thing, with a small but definite meaning, than an abstraction which is
to mean all.
As I have said, it is
through woman that ideality is born into the world and—what were man without
her! There is many a man who has become a genius through a woman, many a one a
hero, many a one a poet, many a one even a saint; but he did not become a
genius through the woman he married, for through her he only became a privy
councillor; he did not become a hero through the woman he married, for through
her he only became a general; he did not become a poet through the woman he
married, for through her he only became a father; he did not become a saint
through the woman he married, for he did not marry, and would have married but
one—the one whom he did not marry; just as the others became a genius, became a
hero, became a poet through the help of the woman they did not marry. If
woman's ideality were in itself inspiring, why, then the inspiring woman would
be the one to whom a man is united for life. But life tells a different story.
It is only by a negative relation to her that man is rendered productive in his
ideal endeavors. In this sense she is inspiring; but to say that she is
inspiring, without qualifying one's statement, is to be guilty of a paralogism40 which one must be a
woman to overlook. Or has any one ever heard of any man having become a poet
through his wife? So long as man does not possess her she inspires him. It is
this truth which gives rise to the illusions entertained in poetry and by
women. The fact that he does not possess her signifies, either, that he is
still fighting for her—thus has woman inspired many a one and rendered him a
knight; but has any one ever heard of any man having been rendered a knight
valiant through his wife? Or, the fact that he does not possess her signifies
that he cannot obtain her by any manner of means—thus has woman inspired many a
one and roused his ideality; that is, if there is anything in him worth while.
But a wife, who has things ever so much worth while for her husband, will
hardly arouse any ideal strivings in him. Or, again, the fact that be does not
possess her signifies that he is pursuing an ideal. Perchance he loves many,
but loving many is also a kind of unrequited love; and yet the ideality of his
soul is to be seen in this striving and yearning, and not in the small bits of
lovableness which make up the sum total of the contributions of all those he
loves.
The
highest ideality a woman can arouse in a man consists, in fact, in the
awakening within him of the consciousness of immortality. The point of this
proof lies in what one might call the necessity of a reply. Just as one may
remark about some play that it cannot end without this or that person getting
in his say, likewise (says ideality) our existence cannot be all over with
death: I demand a reply! This proof is frequently furnished, in a positive
fashion, in the public advertiser. I hold that to be entirely proper, for if
proof is to be made in the public advertiser it must be made in a positive
fashion. Thus: Mrs. Petersen, we learn, has lived a number of years, until in
the night of the 24th it pleased Providence, etc. This produces in Mr. Petersen
an attack of reminiscences from his courting days or, to express it quite
plainly, nothing but seeing her again will ever console him. For this blissful
meeting he prepare himself, in the meanwhile, by taking unto himself another
wife; for, to be sure, this marriage is by no means as poetic as the
first—still it is a good imitation. This is the proof positive. Mr. Petersen is
not satisfied with demanding a reply, no, he wants a meeting again in the
hereafter.
As is well known, a base
metal will often show the gleam of precious metal. This is the brief silver‑gleam.
With respect to the base metal this is a tragic moment, for it must once for
all resign itself to being a base metal. Not so with Mr. Petersen. The
possession of ideality is by rights inherent in every person—and now, if I
laugh at Mr. Petersen it is not because he, being in reality of base metal, had
but a single silver‑gleam; but, rather, because just this silver‑gleam
betrays his having become a base metal. Thus does the philistine look most
ridiculous when, arrayed in ideality, he affords fitting occasion to say, with
Holberg: What! does that cow wear a fine dress, too?41
The case is this: whenever
a woman arouses ideality in man, and thereby the consciousness of immortality,
she always does so negatively. He who really became a genius, hero, a poet, a
saint through woman, he has by that very fact seized on the essence of
immortality. Now if the inspiring element were positively present in woman,
why, then a man's wife, and only his wife, ought to awaken inthe consciousness
of immortality. But the reverse holds true. That is, if she is really to awaken
ideality in husband she must die. Mr. Petersen, to be sure, is not affected,
for all that. But if woman, by her death, does awaken man's ideality, then is
she indeed the cause of all the great things poetry attributes to her; but note
well: that which she did in a positive fashion for him in no wise roused his
ideality. In fact, her significance in this regard becomes the more doubtful
the longer she lives, because she will at length really begin to wish to
signify something positive. However, the more positive the proof the less it
proves; for then Mr. Petersen's longing will be for some past common
experiences whose content was, to all intents and purposes, exhausted when they
were had. Most positive of all the proof becomes if the object of his longing
concerns their marital spooning—that time when they visited the Deer Park
together! In the same way one might suddenly feel a longing for the old pair of
slippers one used to be so comfortable in; but that proof is not exactly a
proof for the immortality of the soul. On the other hand, the more negative the
proof, the better it is; for the negative is higher than the positive, inasmuch
as it concerns our immortality, and is thus the only positive value.
Woman's main significance
lies in her negative contribution, whereas her positive contributions are as
nothing in comparison but, on the contrary, pernicious. It is this truth which
life keeps from her, consoling her with an illusion which surpasses all that
might arise in any man's brain, and with parental care ordering life in such
fashion that both language and everything else confirm her in her illusion. For
even if she be conceived as the very opposite of inspiring, and rather as the
well‑spring of all corruption; whether now we imagine that with her, sin
came into the world, or that it is her infidelity which ruined all—our
conception of her is always gallant. That is, when hearing such opinions one
might readily assume that woman were really able to become infinitely more
culpable than man, which would, indeed, amount to an immense acknowledgment of
her powers. Alas, alas! the case is entirely different. There is a secret
reading of this text which woman cannot comprehend; for, the very next moment,
all life owns to the same conception as the state, which makes man responsible
for his wife. One condemns her as man never is condemned (for only a real
sentence is passed on him, and there the matter ends), not with her receiving a
milder sentence; for in that case not all of her life would be an illusion, but
with the case against her being dismissed and the public, i.e., life, having to
defray the costs. One moment, woman is supposed to be possessed of all possible
wiles, the next moment, one laughs at him whom she deceived, which surely is a
contradiction. Even such a case as that of Potiphar's wife does not preclude
the possibility of her having really been seduced. Thus has woman an enormous
possibility, such as no man has—an enormous possibility; but her reality is in
proportion. And most terrible of all is the magic of illusion in which she
feels herself happy.
Let
Plato then thank the gods for having been born a contemporary of Socrates: I
envy him; let him offer thanks for being a Greek: I envy him; but when he is
grateful for having been born a man and not a woman I join him with all my
heart. If I had been born a woman and could understand what now I can
understand—it were terrible! But if I had been born a woman and therefore could
not understand it—that were still more terrible!
But if the case is as I
stated it, then it follows that one had better refrain from any positive
relation with woman. Wherever she is concerned one has to reckon with that
inevitable hiatus which renders her happy as she does not detect the illusion,
but which would be a man's undoing if he detected it.
I thank the gods, then,
that I was born a man and not a woman; and I thank them, furthermore, that no
woman by some life‑long attachment holds me in duty bound to be
constantly reflecting that it ought not to have been.
Indeed, what a passing
strange device is marriage! And what makes it all the stranger is the
suggestion that it is to be a step taken without thought. And yet no step is
more decisive, for nothing in life is as inexorable and masterful as the
marriage tie. And now so important a step as marriage ought, so we are told, to
be taken without reflection! Yet marriage is not something simple but something
immensely complex and indeterminate. Just as the meat of the turtle smacks of
all kinds of meat, so likewise does marriage have a taste of all manner of
things; and just as the turtle is a sluggish animal, likewise is marriage a
sluggish thing. Falling in love is, at least, a simple thing, but marriage—! Is
it something heathen or something Christian, something spiritual or something
profane, or something civil, or something of all things? Is it an expression of
an inexplicable love, the elective affinity of souls in delicate accord with
one another; or is it a duty, or a partnership, or a mere convenience, or the
custom of certain countries or is it a duty, or a partnership, or a mere
convenience, or the custom of certain countries—or is it a little of all these?
Is one to order the music for it from the town musician or the organist, or is
one to have a little from both? Is it the minister or the police sergeant who
is to make the speech and enroll the names in the book of life—or in the town
register? Does marriage blow a tune on a comb, or does it listen to the
whisperings "like to those of the fairies from the grottoes of a summer
night"42
And now every Darby imagines
he performed such a Potpourri, such incomparably complex music, in getting
married—and imagines that he is still performing it while living a married
life! My dear fellow‑banqueters, ought we not, in default of a wedding
present and congratulations, give each of the conjugal partners a demerit for
repeated inattentiveness? It is taxing enough to express a single idea in
one's life; but to think something so complicated as marriage and,
consequently, bring it under one head; to think something so complicated and
yet to do justice to each and every element in it, and have everything present
at the same time—verily, he is a great man who can accomplish all this! And
still every Benedict accomplishes it—so he does, no doubt; for does he not say
that he does it unconsciously? But if this is to be done unconsciously it must
be through some higher form of unconsciousness permeating all one's reflective
powers. But not a word is said about this! And to ask any married man about it
means just wasting one's time.
He
who has once committed a piece of folly will constantly be pursued by its
consequences. In the case of marriage the folly consists in one's having
gotten into a mess, and the punishment, in recognizing, when it is too late,
what one has done. So you will find that the married man, now, becomes chesty,
with a bit of pathos, thinking he has done something remarkable in having
entered wedlock; now, puts his tail between his legs in dejection; then again,
praises marriage in sheer self‑defense. But as to a thought‑unit
which might serve to hold together the disjecta
membra43 of the most
heterogeneous conceptions of life contained in marriage—for that we shall wait
in vain.
Therefore, to be a mere
Benedict is humbug, and to be a seducer is humbug, and to wish to experiment
with woman for the sake of "the joke" is also humbug. In fact, the
two last mentioned methods will be seen to involve concessions to woman on the
part of man quite as large as those found in marriage. The seducer wishes to
rise in his own estimation by deceiving her; but this very fact that he
deceives and wishes to deceive—that he cares to deceive, is also a
demonstration of his dependence on woman. And the same is true of him who
wishes to experiment with her.
If I were to imagine any
possible relation with woman it would be one so saturated with reflecton that
it would, for that very reason, no longer be any relation with her at all.To be
an excellent husband and yet on the sly seduce every girl; to seem a seducer
and yet harbor within one all the ardor of romanticism—there would be something
to that, or the concession in the first instance were then annihilated in the
second. Certain it is that man finds his true ideality only in such a
reduplication. All merely unconscious existence must be obliterated, and its
obliteration ever cunningly guarded by some sham expression. Such a
reduplication is incomprehensible to woman, for it removes from her the
possibility of expressing man's true nature in one form. If it were possible
for woman to exist in such a reduplication, no erotic relation with her were
thinkable. But, her nature being such as we all know it to be, any disturbance
of the erotic relation is brought about by man's true nature which ever
consists precisely in the annihilation of that in which she has her being.
Am I then preaching the
monastic life and rightly called Eremita? By no means. You may as well
eliminate the cloister, for after all it is only a direct expression of spirituality
and as such but a vain endeavor to express it in direct terms. It makes small
difference whether you use gold, or silver, or paper money; but he who does not
spend a farthing but is counterfeit, he will comprehend me. He to whom every
direct expression is but a fraud, he and he only, is safeguarded better than if
he lived in a cloister‑cell—he will be a hermit even if he travelled in
an omnibus and night.
Scarcely had Victor
finished when the Dressmaker jumped to his feet and threw over a bottle of wine
standing before him; then he spoke as follows:
(The
Dressmaker's Speech)
Well spoken, dear
fellow-banqueters, well spoken! The longer I hear you speak the more I grow
convinced that you are fellow‑conspirators—I greet you as such, I
understand you as such; for fellow‑conspirators one can make out from
afar. And yet, what know you? What does your bit of theory to which you wish to
give the appearance of experience, your bit of experience which you make over
into a theory—what does it amount to? For every now and then you believe her a
moment and—are caught in a moment! No, I know woman—from her weak side, that is
to say, I know her. I shrink from no means to make sure about what I have
learned; for I am a madman, and a madman one must be to understand her, and if
one has not been one before, one will become a madman, once one understands
her. The robber has his hiding place by the noisy high‑road, and the ant‑lion
his funnel in the loose sand, and the pirate his haunts by the roaring sea:
likewise have I may fashionshop in the very midst of the teeming streets,
seductive, irresistible to woman as is the Venusberg to men. There, in a
fashion‑shop, one learns to know woman, in a practical way and without
any theoretical ado.
Now,
if fashion meant nothing than that woman in the heat of her desire threw off
all her clothing—why, then it would stand for something. But this is not the
ease, fashion is not plain sensuality, not tolerated debauchery, but an illicit
trade in indecency authorized as proper. And, just as in heathen Prussia the
marriageable girl wore a bell whose ringing served as a signal to the men,
likewise is a woman's existence in fashion a continual bell‑ringing, not
for debauchees but for lickerish voluptuaries. People hold Fortune to be a
woman—ah, yes it is, to be sure, fickle; still, it is fickle in something, as
it may also give much; and insofar it is not a woman. No; but fashion is a
woman, for fashion is fickleness in nonsense, and is consistent only in its
becoming ever more crazy.
One
hour in my shop is worth more than days and years without, if it really be
one's desire to learn to know woman; in my shop, for it is the only one in the
capital, there is no thought of competition. Who, forsooth, would dare to enter
into competition with one who has entirely devoted himself, and is still
devoting himself, as high‑priest in this idol worship? No, there is not a
distinguished assemblage which does not mention my name first and last; and
there is not a Middle‑class gathering where my name, whenever mentioned,
does not inspire sacred awe, like that of the king; and there is no dress so
idiotic but is accompanied by whisters of admiration when its owner proceeds
down the hall—provided it bears my name; and there is not the lady of gentle
birth who dares pass my shop by, nor the girl of humble origin but passes it
sighing and thinking: if only I could afford it! Well, neither was she
deceived. I deceive no one; I furnish the finest goods and the most costly, and
at the lowest price, indeed, I sell below cost. The fact is, I do not wish to
make a profit. On the contrary, every year I sacrifice large sums. And yet do I
mean to win, I mean to, I shall spend my last farthing in order to corrupt, in
order to bribe, the tools of fashion so that I may win the game. To me it is a
delight beyond compare to unroll the most precious stuffs, to cut them out, to
clip pieces from genuine Brussels‑lace, in order to make a fool's costume
I sell to the lowest prices, genuine goods and in style.
You believe, perhaps,
that woman wants to be dressed fashionably only at certain times? No such
thing, she wants to be so all the time and that is her only thought. For a
woman does have a mind, only it is employed about as well as is the Prodigal
Son's substance; and woman does possess the power of reflection in an
incredibly high degree, for there is nothing so holy but she will in no time
discover it to be reconcilable with her finery—and the chiefest expression of
finery is fashion. What wonder if she does discover it to be reconcilable; for
is not fashion holy to her? And there is nothing so insignificant but she
certainly will know how to make it count in her finery—and the most fatuous
expression of finery is fashion. And there is nothing, nothing in all her
attire, not the least ribbon, of whose relation to fashion she has not a
definite conception and concerning which she is not immediately aware whether
the lady who just passed by noticed it; because, for whose benefit does she
dress, if not for other ladies!
Even in my shop where
she comes to be fitted out à la mode, even
there she is in fashion. Just as there is a special bathing costume and a
special riding habit, likewise there is a particular kind of dress which it is
the fashion to wear to the dressmaker's shop. That costume is not insouciant in the same sense as is the
negligée a lady is pleased to be surprised in, earlier in the forenoon, where
the point is her belonging to the fair sex and the coquetry lies in her letting
herself be surprised. The dressmaker costume, on the other hand, is calculated
to be nonchalant and a bit careless without her being embarrassed thereby;
because a dressmaker stands in a different relation to her from a cavalier. The
coquetry here consists in thus showing herself to a man who, by reason of his
station, does not presume to ask for the lady's womanly recognition, but must
be content with the perquisites which fall abundantly to his share, without her
ever thinking of it; or without it even so much as entering her mind to play
the lady before a dressmaker. The point is, therefore, that her being of the
opposite sex is, in a certain sense, left out of consideration, and her
coquetry invalidated, by the superciliousness of the noble lady who would smile
if any one alluded to any relation existing between her and her dressmaker.
When visited in her negligée she conceals herself, thus displaying her charms
by this very concealment. In my shop she exposes her charms with the utmost
nonchalance, for he is only a dressmaker—and she is a woman. Now, her shawl
slips down and bares some part of her body, and if I did not know what that
means, and what she expects, my reputation would be gone to the winds. Now, she
draws herself up, a priori fashion,
now she gesticulates a posteriori; now,
she sways to and fro in her hips; now, she looks at herself in the mirror and
sees my admiring phiz behind her in the glass; now, she minces her words; now,
she trips along with short steps; now, she hovers; now, she draws her foot
after her in a slovenly fashion; now, she lets herself sink softly into an arm‑chair,
whilst I with humble demeanor offer her a flask of smelling salts and with my
adoration assuage her agitation; now, she strikes after me playfully; now, she
drops her handkerchief and, without as much as a single motion, lets her
relaxed arm remain in its pendent position, whilst I bend down low to pick it
up and return it to her, receiving a little patronizing nod as a reward. These
are the ways of a lady of fashion when in my shop. Whether Diogenes44 made any impression on
the Woman who was praying in a somewhat unbecoming posture, when he asked her
whether she did not believe the gods could see her from behind—that I do not
know; but this I do know, that if I should say to her ladyship kneeling down in
church: "The folds of your gown do not fall according to fashion,"
she would be more alarmed than if she had given offense to the gods. Woe to the
outcast, the male Cinderella, who has not comprehended this! Pro dii immortales45 what, pray, is a woman
who is not in fashion; per deos obsecro,46 and what when she is in
fashion!
Whether all this is true?
Well, make trial of it: let the swain, when his beloved one sinks rapturously
on his breast, whispering unintelligibly: "thine forever," and hides
her head on his bosom—let him but say to her: "My sweet Kitty, your
coiffure is not at all in fashion."—Possibly, men don't give thought to
this; but he who knows it, and has the reputation of knowing it, he is the most
dangerous man in the kingdom. What blissful hours the lover passes with his
sweetheart before marriage I do not know; but of the blissful hours she spends
in my shop he hasn't the slightest inkling, either. Without my special license
and sanction a marriage is null and void, anyway—or else an entirely plebeian
affair. Let it be the very moment when they are to meet before the altar, let
her step forward with the very best conscience in the world that everything was
bought in my shop and tried on there—and now, if I were to rush up And exclaim:
"But mercy! gracious lady, your myrtle wreath is all awry"—why, the
whole ceremony might be postponed, for aught I know. But men do not suspect
these things, one must be a dressmaker to know. So immense is the power of
reflection needed to fathom a woman's thought that only a man who dedicates
himself wholly to the task will succeed, and even then only if gifted to start
with. Happy therefore the man who does not associate with any woman, for she is
not his, anyway, even if, she be no other man's; for she is possessed by that
phantorn born of the unnatural intercourse of woman's reflection with itself,
fashion. Do you see, for this reason should woman always swear by fashion—then
were there some force in her oath; for after all, fashion is the thing she is
always thinking of, the only thing she can think together with, and into,
everything. For instance, the glad message has gone forth from my shop to all
fashionable ladies that fashion decrees the use of a particular kind of head‑dress
to be worn in church, and that this head‑dress, again, must be somewhat
different for High Mass and for the afternoon service. Now when the bells are
ringing the carriage stops in front of my door. Her ladyship descends (for also
this has been decreed, that no one can adjust that head‑dress save I, the
fashion‑dealer), I rush out, making low bows, and lead her into my
cabinet. And whilst she languishingly reposes I put everything in order. Now
she is ready and has looked at herself in the mirror; quick as any messenger of
the gods I hasten in advance, open the door of my cabinet with a bow, then
hasten to the door of my shop and lay my arm on my breast, like some oriental
slave; but encouraged by a gracious courtesy, I even dare to throw her an
adoring and admiring kiss—now she is seated in her carriage—oh dear! she left
her hymn book behind. I hasten out again and hand it to her through the
carriage window, I permit myself once more to remind her to hold her head a
trifle more to the right, and herself to arrange things, should her head‑dress
become a bit disordered when descending. She drives away and is edified.
You believe, perhaps, that
it is only great ladies who worship fashion, but far from it! Look at my
sempstresses for whose dress I spare no expense, so that the dogmas of fashion
may be proclaimed most emphatically from my shop. They form a chorus of half‑witted
creatures, and I myself lead them on as high‑priest, as a shining
example, squandering all, solely in order to make all womankind ridiculous. For
when a seducer makes the boast that every woman's virtue has its price, I do
not believe him; but I do believe that every woman at an early time will be
crazed by the maddening and defiling introspection taught her by fashion, which
will corrupt her more thoroughly than being seduced. have made trial more than
once. If not able to corrupt her myself I set on her a few of fashion's slaves
of her own nation; for just as one may train rats to bite rats, likewise is the
crazed woman's sting like that of the tarantula. And most especially dangerous
is it when some man lends his help.
Whether I serve the Devil
or God I do not know; but I am right, I shall be right, I will be, so long as I
possess a single farthing, I will be until the blood spurts out of my fngers.
The physiologist pictures the shape of woman to show the dreadful effects of
wearing a corset, and beside it he draws a picture of her normal figure. That
is all entely correct, but only one of the drawings has the validity of truth:
they all wear corsets. Describe, therefore, the miserable, stunted perversity
of the fashion‑mad woman, Describe the insidious introspection devouring
her, and then describe the womanly modesty which least of all knows about
itself—do so and you have judged woman, have in very truth passed terrible
sentence on her. If ever I discover such a girl who is contented and demure and
not yet corrupted by indecent intercourse with women—she shall fall
nevertheless. I shall catch her in my toils, already she stands at the
sacrificial altar, that is to say, in my shop. With the most scornful glance a
haughty monchalance can assume I measure her appearance, she perishes with
fright; a peal of laughter from the adjoining room where sit my trained
accomplices annihilates her. And afterwards, when I have gotten her rigged up à la mode and she looks crazier than a
lunatic, as crazy as one who would not be accepted even in a lunatic asylum,
then she leaves me in a state of bliss—no man, not even a god, were able to
inspire fear in her; for is she not dressed in fashion?
Do
you comprehend me now, do you comprehend why I call you fellow‑conspirators,
even though in a distant way? Do you now comprehend my conception of woman?
Everything in life is a matter of fashion, the fear of God is a matter of
fashion, and so are love, and crinolines, and a ring through the nose. To the
utmost of my ability will I therefore come to the support of the exalted genius
who wishes to laugh at the most ridiculous of all animals. If woman has reduced
everything to a matter of fashion, then will I, with the help of fashion,
prostitute her, as she deserves to be; I have no peace, I the dressmaker, my
soul rages when I think of my task—she will yet be made to wear a ring through
her nose. Seek therefore no sweetheart, abandon love as you would the most
dangerous neighborhood; for the one whom you love would also be made to go with
a ring through her nose.
Thereupon John, called the
Seducer, spoke as follows:
(The
Speech of John the Seducer)
My dear boon companions,
is Satan plaguing you? For, indeed, you speak like so many hired mourners, your
eyes are red with tears and not with wine. You almost move me to tears also,
for an unhappy lover does have a miserable time of it in lif e. Hinc illae lacrimae.47 I, however, am a happy
lover, and my only wish is to remain so. Very possibly, that is one of the
concessions to woman which Victor is so afraid of. Why not? Let it be a
concession! Loosening the lead foil of this bottle of champagne also is a
concession; letting its foaming contents flow into my glass also is a
concession; and so is raising it to my lips—now I drain it—concedo.48 Now, however, it is
empty, hence I need no more concessions. Just the same with girls. If some
unhappy lover has bought his kiss too dearly, this proves to me only that he
does not know, either how to take what is coming to him or how to do it. I
never pay too much for this sort of thing—that is a matter for the girls to
decide. What this signifies? To me it signifies the most beautiful, the most
delicious, and well‑nigh the most persuasive, argumentum ad hominem; but since every woman, at least once in her
life, possesses this argumentative freshness I do not see any reason why I
should not let myself be persuaded. Our young friend wishes to make this
experience in his thought. Why not buy a cream puff and be content with looking
at it? I mean to enjoy. No mere talk for me! Just as an old song has it about a
kiss: es ist kaum zu sehn, es ist nur
filr Lippen, die genau sich verstehn49—understand each other so exactly that any
reflection about the matter is but an impertinence and a folly. He who is
twenty and does not grasp the existence of the categorical imperative
"enjoy thyself"—he is a fool; and he who does not seize the
opportunity is and remains a Christianfelder.50
However,
you all are unhappy lovers, and that is why you are not satisfied with woman as
she is. The gods forbid! As she is she pleases me, just as she is. Even
Constantin's category of "the joke" seems to contain a secret desire.
I, on the other hand, I am gallant. And why not? Gallantry costs nothing and
gives one all and is the condition for all, erotic pleasure. Gallantry is the
Masonic language of the senses and of voluptuousness, between man and woman. It
is a natural language, as love's language in general is. It consists not of
sounds but of desires disguised and of ever changing wishes. That an unhappy
lover may be ungallant enough to wish to convert his deficit into a draught
payable in immortality—that I understand well enough. That is to say, I for my
part do not understand it; for to me a woman has sufficient intrinsic value. I
assure every woman of this, it is the truth; and at the same time it is certain
that I am the only one who is not deceived by this truth. As to whether a
despoiled woman is worth less than man—about that I find no information in my
price list. I do not pick flowers already broken, I leave them to the married
men to use for Shrove‑tide decoration. Whether e. g. Edward, wishes to
consider the matter again, and again fall in love with Cordelia,51 or simply repeat the
affair in his reflection —that is his own business. Why should I concern myself
with other peoples' affairs! I explained to her at an earlier time what I
thought of her; and, in truth, she convinced me, convinced me to my absolute satisfaction,
that my gallantry was well applied.
Concedo. Concessi.52 If
I should meet with another Cordelia, why then I shall enact a comedy "Ring
number 2."53 But you are unhappy lovers and have conspired
together, and are worse deceived than the girls, notwithstanding that you are
richly endowed by nature. But decision—the decision of desire, is the most
essential thing in life. Our young friend will always remain an onlooker.
Victor is an unpractical enthusiast. Constantin has acquired his good sense at
too great a cost; and the fashion dealer is a madman. Stuff and nonsense! With
all four of you busy about one girl, nothing would come of it.
Let
one have enthusiasm enough to idealize, taste enough to join in the clinking of
glasses at the festive board of enjoyment, sense enough to break off—to break
off absolutely, as does Death, madness enough to wish to enjoy all over
again—if you have all that you will be the favorite of gods and girls.
But of what avail to
speak here? I do not intend to make proselytes. Neither is this the place for
that. To be sure I love wine, to be sure I love the abundance of a banquet—all
that is good; but let a girl be my company, and then I shall be eloquent. Let
then Constantin have my thanks for the banquet, and the wine, and the excellent
appointments—the speeches, however, were but indifferent. But in order that
things shall have a better ending I shall pronounce a eulogy on woman.
Just as he who is to speak
in praise of the divinity must be inspired by the divinity to speak worthily,
and must therefore be taught by the divinity as to what he shall say, Likewise
he who would speak of women. For woman, even less than the divinity, is a mere
figment of man's brain, a day‑dream, or a notion that occurs to one and
which one pay argue about pro et contra. Nay,
one learns from woman alone what to say of her. And the more teachers one has
had, the better. The first time one is a disciple, the next time one is already
over the chief difficulties, just as one learns in formal and learned
disputations how to use the last opponent's compliments against a new opponent.
Nevertheless nothing is lost. For as little as a kiss is a mere sample of good
things, and as little as an embrace is an exertion, just as little is this
experience exhaustive. In fact it is essentially different from the
mathematical proof of a theorem, which remains ever the same, even though other
letters be substituted. This method is one befitting mathematics and ghosts,
but not love and women, because each is a new proof, corroborating the truth of
the theorem in a different manner. It is my joy that, far from being less
perfect than man, the female sex is, on the contrary, the more perfect. I
shall, however, clothe my speech in a myth; and I shall exult, on woman's
account whom you have so unjustly maligned, if my speech pronounce judgment on
your souls, if the enjoyment of her beckon you only to flee you, as did the
fruits from Tantalus; because you have fled, and thereby insulted, woman. Only
thus, forsooth, may she be insulted, even though she scorn it, and though
punishment instantly falls on him who had the audacity. I, however, insult no
one. That is but the notion of married men, and a slander; whereas, in reality,
I respect her more highly than does the man she is married to.
Originally there was but
one sex, so the Greeks relate, and that was man's. Splendidly endowed he was,
so he did honor to the gods—so splendidly endowed that the same happened to
them as sometimes happens to a poet who has expended all his energy on a poetic
invention: they grew jealous of man. Ay, what is worse, they feared that he
would not willingly bow under their yoke; they feared, though with small
reason, that he might cause their very heaven to totter. Thus they had raised
up a power they scarcely held themselves able to curb. Then there was anxiety
and alarm in the council of the gods. Much had they lavished in their
generosity on the creation of man; but all must be risked now, for reason of
bitter necessity; for all was at stake—so the gods believed—and recalled he
could not be, as a poet may recall his invention. And by force he could not be
subdued, or else the gods themselves could have done so; but precisely of that
they despaired. He would have to be caught and subdued, then, by a power weaker
than his own and yet stronger—one strong enough to compel him. What a
marvellous power this would have to be! However, necessity teaches even the
gods to surpass themselves in inventiveness. They sought and they found. That
power was woman, the marvel of creation, even in the eyes of the gods a greater
marvel than man—a discovery which the gods in their näiveté could not help but
applaud themselves for. What more can be said in her praise than that she was
able to accomplish what even the gods did not believe themselves able to do;
and what more can be said in her praise than that she did accomplish it! But
how marvellous a creation must be hers to have accomplished it.
It
was a ruse of the gods. Cunningly the enchantress was fashioned, for no sooner
had she bewitched man than she changed and caught him in all the
circumstantialities of existence. It was that the gods had desired. But what,
pray, can be more delicious, or more entrancing and bewitching, than what the
gods themselves contrived, when battling for their supremacy, as the only means
of luring man? And most assuredly it is so, for woman is the only, and the most
seductive, power in heaven and on earth. When compared with her in this sense
man will indeed be found to be exceedingly imperfect.
And
the stratagem of the gods was crowned with success; but not always. There have
existed at all times some men—a few—who have detected the deception. They
perceive well enough woman's loveliness—more keenly, indeed than the others—but
they also suspect the real state of affairs. I call them erotic natures and
count myself among them. Men call them seducers, woman has no name for
them—such persons are to her unnameable. These erotic natures are the truly
fortunate ones. They live more luxuriously than do the very gods, for they
regale themselves with food more delectable than ambrosia, and they drink what
is more delicious than nectar; they eat the most seductive invention of the
gods' most ingenious thought, they are ever eating dainties set for a bait—ah,
incomparable delight, ah, blissful fare—they are ever eating but the dainties
set for a bait; and they are never caught. All other men greedily seize and
devour it, like bumpkins eating their cabbage, and are caught. Only the erotic
nature fully appreciates the dainties set out for bait—he prizes them
infinitely. Woman divines this, and for that reason there is a secret
understanding between him and her. But he knows also that she is a bait, and
that secret he keeps to himself.
That nothing more
marvellous, nothing more delicious, nothing more seductive, than woman can be
devised, for that vouch the gods and their pressing need which hightened their
powers of invention; for that vouches also the fact that they risked all, and
in shaping her moved heaven and earth.
I now forsake the myth.
The conception "man" corresponds to his "idea." I can
therefore, if necessary, think of an individual man as existing. The idea of
woman, on the other hand, is so general that no one single woman is able to
express it completely. She is not contemporaneous with man (and hence of less
noble origin), but a later creation, though more perfect than he. Whether now
the gods took some part from him whilst he slept, from fear of waking him by
taking too much; or whether they bisected him and made woman out of the one
half—at any rate it was man who was partitioned. Hence she is the equal of man
only after this partition. She is a delusion and a snare, but is so only afterwards,
and for him who is deluded. She is finiteness incarnate; but in her first stage
she is finiteness raised to the highest degree in the deceptive infinitude of
all divine and human illusions. Now, the deception does not exist—one instant
longer, and one is deceived.
She
is finiteness, and as such she is a collective: one woman represents all women.
Only the erotic nature comprehends this and therefore knows how to love many
without ever being deceived, sipping the while all the delights the cunning gods
were able to prepare. For this reason, as I said, woman cannot be fully
expressed by one formula, but is, rather, an infinitude of finalities. He who
wishes to think her "idea" will have the same experience as he who
gazes on a sea of nebulous shapes which ever form anew, or as he who is dazed
by looking over the waves whose foamy crests ever mock one's vision; for her
"idea" is but the workshop of possibilities. And to the erotic nature
these possibilities are the everlasting reason for his worship.
So the gods created her
delicate and ethereal as if out of the mists of the summer night, yet goodly
like ripe fruit; light like a bird, though the repository of what attracts all
the world—light because the play of the forces is harmoniously balanced in the
invisible center of a negative relation;54 slender in growth, with definite lines, yet her
body sinuous with beautiful curves; perfect, yet ever appearing as if completed
but now; cool, delicious, and refreshing like new-fallen snow, yet blushing in
coy transparency; happy like some pleasantry which makes one forget all one's
sorrow; soothing as being the end of desire, and satisfying in herself being
the stimulus of desire. And the gods had calculated that man, when first
beholding her, would be amazed, as one who sees himself, though familiar with
that sight—would stand in amaze as one who sees himself in the splendor of
perfection—would stand in amaze as one who beholds what he did never dream he
would, yet beholds what, it would seem, ought to have occurred to him
before—sees what is essential to life and yet gazes on it as being the very
mystery of existence. It is precisely this contradiction in his admiration
which nurses desire to life, while this same admiration urges him ever nearer,
so that he cannot desist from gazing, cannot desist from believing himself
familiar with the sight, without really daring to approach, even though he
cannot desist from desiring.
When
the gods had thus planned her form they were seized with fear lest they might
not have the wherewithal to give it existence; but what they feared even more
was herself. For they dared not let her know how beautiful she was,
apprehensive of having some one in the secret who might spoil their ruse. Then
was the crowning touch given to their wondrous creation: they made her
faultless; but they concealed all this from her in the nescience of her
innocence, and concealed it doubly from her in the impenetrable mystery of her
modesty. Now she was perfect, and victory certain. Inviting she had been
before, but now doubly so through her shyness, and beseeching through her
shrinking, and irresistible through herself offering resistance. The gods were
jubilant. And no allurement has ever been devised in the world so great as is
woman, and no allurement is as compelling as is innocence, and no temptation is
as ensnaring as is modesty, and no deception is as matchless as is woman. She
knows of nothing, still her modesty is instinctive divination. She is distinct
from man, and the separating wall of modesty parting them is more decisive than
Aladdin's sword separating him from Gulnare;55 and yet, when like
Pyramis he puts his head to this dividing wall of modesty, the erotic nature
will perceive all pleasures of desire divined within as from afar.
Thus does woman tempt. Men
are wont to set forth the most precious things they possess as a delectation
for the gods, nothing less will do. Thus is woman a show‑bread. the gods
knew of naught comparable to her. She exists, she is present, she is with us,
close by; and yet she is removed from us to an infinite distance when concealed
in her modesty‑until she herself betrays her hiding place, she knows not
how: it is not she herself, it is life which informs on her. Roguish she is
like a child who in playing peeps forth from his hiding place, yet her
roguishness is inexplicable, for she does not know of it herself, she is ever
mysterious‑mysterious when she casts down her eyes, mysterious when she
sends forth the messengers of her glance which no thought, let alone any word,
is able to follow. And yet is the eye the "interpreter" of the soul!
What, then, is the explanation of this mystery if the interpreter too is
unintelligible? Calm she is like the hushed stillness of eventide, when not a
leaf stirs; calm like a consciousness as yet unaware of aught. Her heart‑beats
are as regular as if life were not present; and yet the erotic nature,
listening with his stethoscopically practiced ear, detects the dithyrambic
pulsing of desire sounding along unbeknown. Careless she is like the blowing of
the wind, content like the profound ocean, and yet full of longing like a thing
biding its explanation. My friends! My mind is softened, indescribably
softened. I comprehend that also my life expresses an idea, even if you do not
comprehend me. I too have discovered the secret of existence; I too serve a
divine idea—and, assuredly, I do not serve it for nothing. If woman is a ruse
of the gods, this means that she is to be seduced; and if woman is not an
"idea," the true inference is that the erotic nature wishes to love
as many of them as possible.
What luxury it is to
relish the ruse without being duped, only the erotic nature comprehends. And
how blissful it is to be seduced, woman alone knows. I know that from woman,
even though I never yet allowed any one of them time to explain it to me, but re‑asserted
my independence, serving the idea by a break as sudden as that caused by death;
for a bride and a break are to one another like female and male.56 Only woman is aware of
this, and she is aware of it together with her seducer. No married man will
ever grasp this. Nor does she ever speak with him about it. She resigns herself
to her fate, she knows that it must be so and that she can be seduced only
once. For this reason she never really bears malice against the man who seduced
her. That is to say, if he really did seduce her and thus expressed the idea.
Broken marriage vows and that kind of thing is, of course, nonsense and no
seduction. Indeed, it is by no means so great a misfortune for a woman to be
seduced. In fact, it is a piece of good fortune for her. An excellently seduced
girl may make an excellent wife. If I myself were not fit to be a
seducer—however deeply I feel my inferior qualifications in this respect—if I
chose to be a married man, I should always choose a girl already seduced, so
that I would not have to begin my marriage by seducing my wife. Marriage, to be
sure, also expresses an idea; but in relation to the idea of marriage that
quality is altogether immaterial which is the absolutely essential condition
for my idea. Therefore, a marriage ought never to be planned to begin as though
it were the beginning of a story of seduction. So much is sure: there is a
seducer for every woman. Happy is she whose good fortune it is to meet just
him.
Through
marriage, on the other hand, the gods win their victory. In it the once seduced
maiden walks through life by the side of her husband, looking back at times,
full of longing, resigned to her fate, until she reaches the goal of life. She
dies; but not in the same sense as man dies. She is volatilized and resolved
into that mysterious primal element of which the gods formed her—she disappears
like a dream, like an impermanent shape whose hour is past. For what is woman
but a dream, and the highest reality withal! Thus does the erotic nature
comprehend her, leading her, and being led by her in the moment of seduction,
beyond time—where she has her true existence, being an illusion. Through her
husband, on the other hand, she becomes a creature of this world, and he
through her.
Marvellous nature! If I did not admire thee,
a woman would teach me; for truly she is the venerabile of life. Splendidly didst thou fashion her, but more
splendidly still in that thou never didst fashion one woman like another. In
man, the essential is the essential, and insofar always alike; but in woman the
adventitious is the essential, and is thus an inexhaustible source of
differences. Brief is her splendor; but quickly the pain is forgotten, too,
when the same splendor is proffered me anew. It is true, I too am aware of the
unbeautiful which may appear in her thereafter; but she is not thus with her
seducer.
They
rose from the table. It needed but a hint from Constantin, for the participants
understood each other with military precision whenever there was a question of
face or turn about. With his invisible baton of command, elastic like a
divining rod in his hand, Constantin once more touched them in order to call
forth in them a fleeting reminiscence of the banquet and the spirit of
enjoyment which had prevailed before but was now, in some measure, submerged
through the intellectual effort of the speeches—in order that the note of glad
festivity which had disappeared might, by way of resonance, return once more
among the guests in a brief moment of recollection. He saluted with his full
glass as a signal of parting, emptying it, and then flinging it against the
door in the rear wall. The others followed his example, consummating this
symbolic action with all the solemnity of adepts. Justice was thus done the
pleasure of stopping short—that royal pleasure which, though briefer, yet is
more liberating than any other pleasure. With a libation this pleasure ought to
be entered upon, with the libation of flinging one's glass into destruction and
oblivion, and tearing one's self passionately away from every memory, as if it
were a danger to one's life: this libation is to the gods of the nether world.
One breaks off, and strength is needed to do that, greater strength than to
sever a knot by a sword‑blow; for the difficulty of the knot tends to
arouse one's passion, but the passion required for breaking off must be of
one's own making. In a superficial sense the result is, of course, the same;
but from an artistic int of view there is a world of difference between
something ceasing or simply coming to an end, and it being broken off by one's
own free will—whether it is a mere occurrence or a passionate decision; whether
it is all over, like a school song, because there is no more to it, or whether
it is terminated by the Cæsarian operation of one's own Pleasure; whether it is
a triviality every one has experienced, or the secret which escapes most.
Constantin's
flinging his beaker against the door was intended merely as a symbolic rite;
nevertheless, his so doing was, in a way, a decisive act; for when the last
glass was shattered the door opened, and just as he who presumpuously knocked
at Death's door and, on its opening, beheld the powers of annihilation, so the
banqueters beheld the corps of destruction ready to demolish everything—a
memento which in an instant put them to flight from that place, while at the
very same moment the entire surroundings had been reduced to the semblance of
ruin.
A
carriage stood ready at the door. At Constantin's invitation they seated
themselves in it and drove away in good spirits; for that tableau of
destruction which they left behind had given their souls fresh elasticity.
After having covered a distance of several miles a halt was made. Here
Constantin took his leave as host, informing them that five carriages were at
their disposal—each one was free to suit his own pleasure and drive wherever he
wanted, whether alone or in company with whomsoever he pleased. Thus a rocket,
propelled by the force of the powder, ascends at a single shot, remains
collected for an instant, in order then to spread out to all the winds.
While the horses were
being hitched to the carriages the nocturnal banqueters strolled a little way
down the road. The fresh air of the morning purified their hot blood with its
coolness, and they gave themselves up to it entirely. Their forms, and the
groups in which they ranged themselves, made a phantastic impression on me. For
when the morning sun shines on field and meadow, and on every creature which in
the night found rest and strength to rise up jubilating with the sun—in this
there is only a pleasing, mutual understanding; but a nightly company, viewed
by the morning light and in smiling surroundings, makes a downright uncanny
impression. It makes one think of spooks which have been surprised by daylight,
of subterranean spirits which are unable to regain the crevice through which
they may vanish, because it is visible only in the dark; of unhappy creatures
in whom the difference between day and night has become obliterated through the
monotony of their sufferings.
A
foot path led them through a small patch of field toward a garden surrounded by
a hedge, from behind whose concealment a modest summer‑cottage peeped
forth. At the end of the garden, toward the field, there was an arbor formed by
trees. Becoming aware of people being in the arbor, they all grew curious, and
with the spying glances of men bent on observation, the besiegers closed in
about that pleasant place of concealment, hiding themselves, and as eager as
emissaries of the police about to take some one by surprise. Like emissaries of
the police—well, to be sure, their appearance made the misunderstanding
possible that it was they whom the minions of the law might be looking for.
Each one had occupied a point of vantage for peeping in, when Victor drew back
a step and said to his neighbor, "Why, dear me, if that is not Judge
William and his wife!"
They were surprised—not
the two whom the foliage concealed and who were all too deeply concerned with
their domestic enjoyment to be observers. They felt themselves too secure to
believe themselves an object of any one's observation excepting the morning
sun's which took pleasure in looking in to them, whilst a gentle zephyr moved
the boughs above them, and the reposefulness of the countryside, as well as all
things around them girded the little arbor about with peace. The happy married
couple was not surprised and noticed nothing. That they were a married couple
was clear enough; one could perceive that at a glance—alas! if one is something
of an observer one's self. Even if nothing in the wide world, nothing, whether
overtly or covertly, if nothing, I say, threatens to interfere with the
happiness of lovers, yet they are not thus secure when sitting together. They
are in a state of bliss; and yet it is as if there were some power bent on
separating them, so firmly they clasp one another; and yet it is as if there
were some enemy present against whom they must defend themselves; ,and yet it
is as if they could never become, sufficiently reassured. Not thus married
people, and not thus that married couple in the arbor. How long they had been
married, however, that was not to be determined with certainty. To be sure, the
wife's activity at the tea‑table revealed a sureness of hand born of
practice, but at the same time such almost childlike interest in her occupation
as if she were a newly married woman and in that middle condition when she is
not, as yet, sure whether marriage is fun or earnest, whether being a housewife
is a calling, or a game, or a pastime. Perhaps she had been married for some
longer time but did not generally preside at the tea‑table, or perhaps
did so only out here in the country, or did it perhaps only that morning which,
possibly, had a special significance for them. Who could tell? All calculation
is frustrated to a certain degree by the fact that every personality exhibits
some originality which keeps time from leaving its marks. When the sun shines
in all his summer glory one thinks straightway that there must be some festal
occasion at hand—that it cannot be so for every‑day use, or that it is
the first time, or at least one of the first times; for surely, one thinks, it
cannot be repeated for any length of time. Thus would think he who saw it but
once, or saw it for the first time; and I saw the wife of the justice for the
first time. He who sees the object in question every day may think differently;
provided he sees the same thing. But let the judge decide about that!
As I remarked, our amiable
housewife was occupied. She poured boiling water into the cups, probably to
warm them, emptied them again, set a cup on a platter, poured the tea and
served it with sugar and cream—now all was ready; was it fun or earnest? In
case a person did not relish tea at other times—he should have sat in the
judge's place; for just then that drink seemed most inviting to me. only the
inviting air of the lovely woman herself seemeo to me more inviting.
It appeared that she had
not had time to speak until then. Now she broke the silence and said, while
serving him his tea: "Quick, now, dear, and drink while it is hot, the
morning air is quite cool, anyway; and surely the least I can do for you is to
be a little careful of you." "The least?" the judge answered
laconically. "Yes, or the most, or the only thing." The judge looked
at her inquiringly, and whilst he was helping himself she continued: "You
interrupted me yesterday when I wished to broach the subject, but I have
thought about it again; many times I have thought about it, and now
particularly, you know yourself in reference to whom: it is certainly true that
if you hadn't married, you would have been far more successful in your
career." With his cup still on the platter the judge sipped a first
mouthful with visible enjoyment, thoroughly refreshed; or was it perchance the
joy over his lovely wife; I for my part believe it was the latter. She,
however, seemed only to be glad that it tasted so good to him. Then he put down
his cup on the table at his side, took out a cigar, and said: "May I light
it at your chafing‑dish"? "Certainly," she said, and
handed him a live coal on a tea‑spoon. He lit his cigar and put his arm
about her waist whilst she leaned against his shoulder. He turned his head the
other way to blow out the smoke and then he let his eyes rest on her with a
devotion such as only a glance can reveal; yet he smiled, but this glad smile
had in it a dash of sad irony. Finally he said: "Do you really believe so,
my girl?" "What do you mean?" she answered. He was silent again,
his smile gained the upper hand, but his voice remained quite serious,
nevertheless. "Then I pardon you your previous folly, seeing that you
yourself have forgotten it so quickly; thou speakest as one of the foolish
women speaketh57—what great career should I have had?" His
wife seemed embarrassed for a moment by this return, but collected her wits
quickly and, now explained her meaning with womanly eloquence. The judge looked
down before him, without interrupting her; but as she continued he began to
drum on the table with the fingers of his right hand, at the same time humming
a tune. The words of the song were audible for a moment, just as the pattern of
a texture now becomes visible, now disappears again; and then again they were
heard no longer as he hummed the tune of the song: "The goodman he went to
the forest, to cut the wands so white." After this melodramatic
performance, consisting in the justice's wife explaining herself whilst he
hummed his tune, the dialogue set in again. "I am thinking," he
remarked, "I am thinking you are ignorant of the fact that the Danish Law
permits a man to castigate his wife58 —a pity only that the law does not indicate on
which occasions it is permitted." His wife smiled at his threat and
continued: "Now why can I never get you to be serious when I touch on this
matter? You do not understand me: believe me, I mean it sincerely, it seems to
me a very beautiful thought. Of course, if you weren't my husband I would not
dare to entertain it; but now I have done so, for your sake and for my sake;
and now be nice and serious, for my sake, and answer me frankly."
"No, you can't get me to be serious, and a serious answer you won't get; I
must either laugh at you, or make you forget it, as before, or beat you; or
else you must stop talking, about it, or I shall have to make you keep silent
about it some other way. You see, it is a joke, and that is why there are so
many ways out." He arose, pressed a kiss on her brow, laid her arm in his,
and then disappeared in a leafy walk which led from the arbor.
The arbor was empty;
there was nothing else to do, so the hostile corps of occupation withdrew
without making any gains. Still, the others were content with uttering some
malicious remarks. The company returned but missed Victor. He had rounded the
corner and, in walking along the garden, had come up to the country home. The
doors of a garden‑room facing the lawn were open, and likewise a window.
Very probably he had seen something which attracted his attention. He leapt
into the window, and leapt out again just as the party were approaching, for
they had been looking for him. Triumphantly he held up some papers in his hand
and exclaimed: "One of the judge's manuscripts!59 Seeing that I edited
his other works it is no more than my duty that I should edit this one
too." He put it into his pocket; or, rather, he was about to do so; for as
he was bending his arm and already had his hand with the manuscript half‑way
down in his pocket I managed to steal it from him.
But who, then, am I? Let
no one ask! If it hasn't occurred to you before to ask about it I am over the
difficulty—for now the worst is behind me. For that matter, I am not worth
asking about, for I am the least of all things, people would put me in utter
confusion by asking about me. I am pure existence, and therefore smaller,
almost, than nothing. I am "pure existence" which is present
everywhere but still is never noticed; for I am ever vanishing. I am like the
line above which stands the summa
summarum—who cares about the line? By my own strength I can accomplish
nothing, for even the idea to steal the manuscript from Victor was not my own
idea; for this very idea which, as a thief would say, induced me to
"borrow" the manuscript, was borrowed from him. And now, when
editing, this manuscript, I am, again, nothing at all; for it rightly belongs
to the judge. And as editor, I am in my nothingness only a kind of nemesis on
Victor, who imagined that he had the prescriptive right to do so.
11 This ironic sally refers, not to Descartes' principle of skepsis, but to the numerous Danish followers of Hegel and his "method"; cf. Fear and Trembling, p. 119.
59 Containing the second part of "Stages on Life's Road." entitled "Reflections on Marriage in Refutation of Objections."