To my Father‑in‑Law
The Reverend George Fisher,
A Christian
INTRODUCTION
Creditable as have been the contributions of
Scandinavia to the cultural life of the race in well‑nigh all fields of human
endeavor, it has produced but one thinker of the first magnitude, the Dane,
Sören A. Kierkegaard.[1] The fact
that he is virtually unknown to us is ascribable, on the one hand to the
inaccessibility of his works, both as to language and form; on the other, to
the regrettable insularity of English thought.
It is the purpose of this book to
remedy the defect in a measure, and by a selection from his most representative
works to provide a stimulus for a more detailed study of his writings; for the
present times, ruled by material considerations, wholly led by socializing, and
misled by national, ideals are precisely the most opportune to introduce the
bitter but wholesome antidote of individual responsibility, which is his
message. In particular, students of Northern literature cannot afford to know no
more than the name of one who exerted a potent and energizing influence on an
important epoch of Scandinavian thought. To mention only one instance, the
greatest ethical poem of our age, "Brand"¾notwithstanding Ibsen's curt statement that he "had
read little of Kierkegaard and understood less"¾undeniably owes its fundamental thought to him, whether
directly or indirectly.
Of very few authors can it be said with the same
literalness as, of Kierkegaard that their life is their works: as if to furnish
living proof of his untiring insistance on inwardness, his life, like that of
so many other spiritual educators of the race, is notably poor in incidents;
but his life of inward experiences is all the richer¾witness the "literature within a literature" that
came to be within a few years and that gave to Danish letters a score of
immortal works.
Kierkegaard's physical heredity
must be pronounced unfortunate. Being the child of old parents¾his father was, fifty‑seven, his mother forty‑five years. at
his birth (May 5, 1813), he had a weak physique and a feeble constitution.
Still worse, he inherited from his father a burden of melancholy which he took
a sad pride in masking under a show of sprightliness. His father, Michael
Pedersen Kierkegaard, had begun life as a poor cotter's boy in West Jutland,
where he was set to tend the sheep on the wild moorlands. One day, we are told,
oppressed by loneliness and cold, he ascended a hill and in a passionate rage
cursed God who had given him this miserable existence¾the memory of which "sin against the Holy Ghost"
he was not able to shake off to the end of his long life.[2] When
seventeen years old, the gifted lad was sent to his uncle in Copenhagen, who
was a well‑to‑do dealer in woolens and groceries. Kierkegaard quickly established
himself in the trade and amassed a considerable fortune. This enabled him to
withdraw from active life when only forty, and to devote himself to philosophic
studies, the leisure for which life had till then denied him. More especially
he seems to have studied the works of the rationalistic philosopher Wolff.
After the early death of his first wife who left him no issue, he married a
former servant in his household, also of Jutish stock, who bore him seven
children. Of these only two survived him, the oldest son¾later bishop¾Peder
Christian, and the youngest son, Sören Åbye.
Nowhere does Kierkegaard speak of his
mother, a woman of simple mind and cheerful disposition; but he speaks all the
more often of his father, for whom he ever expressed the greatest love and
admiration and who, no doubt, devoted himself largely to the education of his
sons, particularly to that of his latest born. Him he was to mould in his own
image. A pietistic, gloomy spirit of religiosity pervaded the household in
which the severe father was undisputed master, and absolute obedience the
watchword. Little Sören, as he himself tells us, heard more of the Crucified
and the martyrs than of the Christ‑child and good angels. Like John Stuart
Mill, whose early education bears a remarkable resemblance to his, he
"never had the joy to be a child." Although less systematically held
down to his studies, in which religion was the be‑all and end‑all (instead of
being banished, as was the case with Mill), he was granted but a minimum of out‑door
play and exercise. And, instead of strengthening the feeble body, his father
threw the whole weight of his melancholy on the boy.
Nor was his home training,
formidably abstract, counterbalanced by a normal, healthy school‑life.
Naturally introspective and shy, both on account of a slight deformity of his
body and on account of the old‑fashioned clothes his father made him wear, he
had no boy friends; and when cuffed by his more robust contemporaries, he could
defend himself only with his biting sarcasm. Notwithstanding his early maturity
he does not seem to have impressed either his schoolmates or his teachers by
any gifts much above the ordinary. The school he attended was one of those semi‑public
schools which by strict discipline and consistent methods laid a solid
foundation of humanities ind mathematics for those who were to enter upon a
professional career. The natural sciences played no rôle whatever.
Obedient to the wishes of his
father, Sören chose the study of theology, as had his eldest brother; but, once
relieved from the grind of school at the age of seventeen, he rejoiced in the
full liberty of university life, indulging himself to his heart's content in
all the refined intellectual and æsthetic enjoyments the gay capital of
Copenhagen offered. He declares himself in later years to be "one who is
penitent" for having in his youth plunged into all kinds of excesses; but
we feel reasonably sure that he committed no excesses worse than "high
living." He was frequently seen at the opera and the theatre, spent money
freely in restaurants and confectionary shops, bought many, and expensive
books, dressed well, and indulged in such extravagances as driving in a
carriage and pair, alone, for days through the fields and forests of the lovely
island of Zealand. In fact, he contracted considerable debts, so that his
disappointed father decided to put him on an allowance of 500 rixdollars
yearly—rather a handsome sum, a hundred years ago.
Naturally, little direct progress was made in his
studies. But while to all appearances aimlessly dissipating his energies, he
showed a pronounced love for philosophy and kindred disciplines. He lost no
opportunity then offered at the University of Copenhagen to train his mind
along these lines. He heard the sturdily independent Sibbern's lectures on
æstheties and enjoyed a "privatissimum" on the main issues of
Schleiermacher's Dogmatics with his later enemy, the theologian Martensen,
author of the celebrated "Christian Dogmatics."
But there was no steadiness in him.
Periods of indifference to these studies alternated with feverish activity, and
doubts of the truth of Christianity, with bursts of devotion. However, the
Hebraically stern cast of mind of the externally gay student soon wearied of
this rudderless existence. He sighs for an "Archimedean" point of
support for his conduct of life. We find the following entry in his diary,
which prophetically foreshadows some of the fundamental ideas of his later
career: " . . . what I really need is to arrive at a clear comprehension
of what I am to do, not of what I am to grasp with my understanding, except
insofar as this understanding is necessary for every action. The point is, to
comprehend what I am called to do, to see what the Godhead really means that I
shall do, to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I
am willing to live and to die . . ."
This Archimedean point was soon to
be furnished him There came a succession of blows, culminating in the death of
his father, whose silent disapprobation had long been weighing heavily on the
conscience of the wayward son. Even more awful, perhaps, was a revelation made
by the dying father to his sons, very likely touching that very "sin
against the Holy Ghost" which he had committed in his boyhood and the
consequence of which he now was to lay on them as a curse, instead of his
blessing. Kierkegaard calls it "the great earthquake, the terrible
upheaval, which suddenly forced on me a new and infallible interpretation of
all phenomena." He began to suspect that he had been chosen by Providence
for an extraordinary purpose; and with his abiding filial piety he interprets
his father's death as the last of many sacrifices he made for him; "for he
died, not away from me, but for me, so that there might yet, perchance, become
something of me." Crushed by this thought, and through the "new
interpretation" despairing of happiness in this life, he clings to the
thought of his unusual intellectual powers as his only consolation and a means
by which his salvation, might be accomplished. He quickly absolved his
examination for ordination (ten years after matriculation) and determined on
his magisterial dissertation.[3]
Already some years before he had made a not very
successful debut in the world of letters with a pamphlet whose queer title
"From the MSS. of One Still Living" reveals Kierkegaard's inborn love
of mystification and innuendo. Like a Puck of philosophy, with somewhat awkward
bounds and a callow manner, he had there teased the worthies of his times; and,
in particular, taken a good fall out of Hans Christian Andersen, the poet of
the Fairy Tales, who had aroused his indignation by describing in somewhat
lachrymose fashion the struggles of genius to come into its own. Kierkegaard
himself was soon to show the truth of his own dictum that "genius does not
whine but like a thunderstorm goes straight counter to the wind."
While casting about for a subject
worthy of a more sustained effort—he marks out for study the legends of Faust,
Of the Wandering Jew, of Don Juan, as representatives of certain basic views of
life; the, Conception of Satire among the Ancients, etc., etc.,—he at last
becomes aware of his affinity with Socrates, in whom he found that rare harmony
between theory and the conduct of life which he hoped to attain himself.
Though not by Kierkegaard himself counted among the
works bearing on the "Indirect Communication"—presently to be
explained—his magisterial dissertation, entitled "The Conception of Irony,
with Constant Reference to Socrates," a book of 300 pages, is of crucial
importance. It shows that, helped by the sage who would not directly help any
one, he had found the master key: his own interpretation of life. Indeed, all
the following literary output may be regarded as the consistent development of
the simple directing thoughts of his firstling work. And we must devote what
may seem a disproportionate amount of space to the explanation of these
thoughts if we would enter into the world of his mind.
Not only did Kierkegaard feel
kinship with Socrates. It did not escape him that there was an ominous
similarity between Socrates' times and his own—between the period of
flourishing Attica, eminent in the arts and in philosophy, when a little
familiarity with the shallow phrases of the Sophists enabled one to have an
opinion about everything on earth and in heaven, and his own Copenhagen in the
thirties of the last century, when Johan Ludvig Heiberg had popularized
Hegelian philosophy with such astonishing success that the very cobblers were
using the Hegelian terminology, with "Thesis, Antithesis, and
Synthesis," and one could get instructions from one's barber, while being
shaved, how to "harmonize the ideal with reality, and our wishes with what
we have attained." Every difficulty could be "mediated,"
according to this recipe. And just as the great questioner of Athens gave pause
to his more naïve contemporaries by his "know thyself," so
Kierkegaard insisted that he must rouse his contemporaries from their
philosophic complacency and unwarranted optimism, and move them to realize that
the spiritual life has both mountain and valley, that it is no flat plain easy
to travel. He intended to show difficulties where the road had been supposedly
smoothed for them.
Central, both in the theory and in the
practice of Socrates (according to Kierkegaard), is his irony. The ancient sage
would stop old and young and quizz them skilfully on what they regarded as
common and universally established propositions, until his interlocutor became
confused by some consequence or contradiction arising unexpectedly, and until
he who had been sure of his knowledge was made to confess his ignorance, or
even to become distrustful of the possibility of knowledge. Destroying
supposedly positive values, this method would seem to lead to a negative result
only.
Kierkegaard makes less (and rather too little) of the
positive side of Socrates' method, his maieutic,
or midwifery, by which we are led inductively from trivial instances to a
new definition of a conception, a method which will fit all cases. Guided by a
lofty personality, this Socratic irony becomes, in Kierkegaard's definition,
merely "the negative liberation of subjectivity"; that is, not the
family, nor society, nor the state, nor any rules superimposed from outside,
but one's innermost self (or subjectivity) is to be the determining factor in
one's life. And understood thus, irony as a negative element borders on the
ethical conception of life.
Romantic irony, on the other hand,
laying main stress on subjective liberty, represents the æsthetic conduct of
life. It was, we remember, the great demand of the Romantic period that one
live poetically. That is, after having reduced all reality to possibilities,
all existence to fragments, we are to choose ad libitum one such possible existence, to consider that one's
proper sphere, and for the rest to look ironically on all other reality as
philistine. Undeniably, this license, through the infinitude of possibilities
open to him, gives the ironist an enthusiastic sense of irresponsible freedom
in which he "disports himself as does Leviathan in the deep." Again,
the "æsthetical individual is ill at ease in the world
into which he is born. His typical ailment is a Byronesque Weltschmerz. He would fain mould the elements of existence to suit
himself; that is, "compose" not only himself but also his
surroundings. But without fixed task and purpose, life will soon lose all
continuity ("except that of boredom") and fall apart into
disconnected moods and impulses. Hence, while supposing himself a superman,
free, and his own master, the æsthetic individual is, in reality, a slave to
the merest accidents. He is not self‑directed, self‑propelled; but—drifts.
Over against this attitude Kierkegaard now sets the
ethical, Christian life, one with a definite purpose and goal beyond itself.
"It is one thing to compose one's own life , another, to let one's life be
composed. The Christian lets his life be composed; and insofar a simple
Christian lives far more poetically than many a genius." It would hardly
be possible to characterize the contents of Kierkegaard's first great book, Enten‑Eller "Either‑Or," more
inclusively and tersely.
Very well, then, the Christian
life, with its clear directive, is superior to the aesthetic existence. But how
is this: are we not all Christians in Christendom, children of Christians,
baptized and confirmed according to the regulations of the Church? And are we
not all to be saved according to the promise of Our Lord who died for us? At a
very early time Kierkegaard, himself desperately struggling to maintain his
Christian faith against doubts, had his eyes opened to, this enormous delusion
of modern times and was preparing to battle against it. The great idea and task
for which he was to live and to die—here it was: humanity is in apparent
possession of the divine truth, but utterly perverts it and, to cap injury with
insult, protects and intrenches the deception behind state sanction and
institutions. More appalling evil confronted not even the early protagonists of
Christianity against heathendom. How was he, single‑handed, magnificently
gifted though he was, to cleanse the temple and restore its pristine
simplicity?
Clearly, the old mistake must not be
repeated, to try to influence and reform the masses by a vulgar and futile "revival,"
preaching to them directly and gaining disciples innumerable. It would only
lead again, to the abomination of a lip service. But a ferment must be
introduced which—he hoped—would gradually restore Christianity to its former
vigor; at least in individuals. So far as the form of his own works is
concerned he was thus bound to use the "indirect method" of Socrates
whom he regards as his teacher. In conscious opposition to the Sophists who
sold their boasted wisdom for money, Socrates not only made no charges for his
instruction but even warned people of his igorance, insisting that, like a
midwife, he only helped people to give birth to their own thoughts. And owing
to his irony Socrates' relation to his disciples was not in any positive sense
a personal one. Least of all did he wish to found a new "school" or
erect a philosophic "system."
Kierkegaard, with Christianity as his
goal, adopted the same tactics. By an attractive æsthetic beginning people were
to be "lured" into envisaging the difficulties to be unfolded
presently, to think for themselves, to form their own conclusions, whether for
or against. The individual was to be appealed to, first and last—the
individual, no matter how humble, who would take the trouble to follow him and
be his reader, "my only reader, the single individual." "So the
religious author must make it his first business to put himself in touch with
men. That is to say, he must begin aesthetically. The more brilliant his
performance, the better." And then, when he has got them to follow him
"he must produce the religious categories so that these same men with all
the impetus of their devotion to aesthetic 4hings are suddenly brought up sharp
against the religious aspect." The writer's own personality was to be entirely
eliminated by a system of pseudonyms; for the effect of his teaching was not to
be jeopardized by a distracting knowledge of his personality. Accordingly, in
conscious imitation of Socrates, Kierkegaard at first kept up a semblance of
his previous student life, posing as a frivolous idler on the streets of
Copenhagen, a witty dog incapable of prolonged serious activity; thus anxiously
guarding the secret of his feverish activity during the lonely hours of the
night.
His campaign of the "indirect
communication" was thus fully determined upon; but there was still lacking
the impetus of an elemental passion to start it and give it driving force and
conquering persistence. This also was to be furnished him.
Shortly before his father's death
he had made the acquaintance of Regine Olson, a beautiful young girl of good
family. There followed one of the saddest imaginable engagements. The
melancholy, and essentially lonely, thinker may not at first have entertained
the thought of a lasting attachment; for had he not, on the one hand, given up
all hope of worldly happiness, and on the other, begun to think of himself as a
chosen tool of heaven not to be bound by the ordinary ties of human affection?
But the natural desire to be as happy as others and to live man's common lot,
for a moment hushed all anxious scruples. And the love of the brilliant and
promising young man with the deep, sad eyes and the flashing wit was ardently
returned by her.
Difficulties arose very soon. It was not
so much the extreme youth and immaturity of the girl—she was barely sixteen—as
against his tremendous mental development, or even her "total lack of
religious pre‑suppositions"; for that might not itself have precluded a
happy union. Vastly more ominous was his own unconquerable and overwhelming
melancholy. She could not break it. And struggle as he might, he could not
banish it. And, he reasoned, even if he were successful in concealing it from
her, the very concealment were a deceit. Neither would he burden her with his
melancholy by revealing it to her. Besides, some mysterious ailment which, with
Paul, he terms the "thorn in his flesh," tormented him. The fact that
he consulted a physician makes it likely that it was bodily, and perhaps
sexual. On the other hand, the manner of Kierkegaard's multitudinous references
to woman removes the suspicion of any abnormality. The impression remains that
at the bottom of his trouble there lay his melancholy, aggravated admittedly by
an "insane education," and coupled with an exaggerated sense of a
misspent youth. That nothing else prevented the union is clear from his own
repeated later remarks that, with more faith, he would have married her.
Though to the end of his life he never
ceased to love her, he feels that they must part. But she clings to him with a
rather maudlin devotion, which, to be sure, only increased his determination.
He finally hit on the desperate device of pretending frivolous indifference to
her affections, and acted this sad comedy with all the dialectic subtleness of
his genius, until she eventually released him. Then, after braving for a while
the philistine indignation of public opinion and the disapproval of his
friends, in order to confirm her in her bad opinion of him, he fled to Berlin
with shattered nerves and a bleeding heart.
He had deprived himself of what was
dearest to him in life. For all that, he knew that the foundations of his
character remained unshaken. The voluntary renunciation of a worldly happiness
which was his for the taking intensifies his idea of being one of' the
"few in each generation selected to be a sacrifice." Thereafter,
"his thought is all to him," and all his gifts are devoted to the
service of God.
During the first half of the
nineteenth century, more than at any other time, Denmark was an intellectual
dependency of Germany. It was but natural that Kierkegaard, in search for the
ultimate verities, should resort to Berlin where Schelling was just then
beginning his famous course of lectures. In many respects it may be held
deplorable that, at a still formative stage, Kierkegaard should have remained
in the prosaic capital of Prussia and have been influenced by bloodless
abstractions; instead of journeying to France, or still better, to England
whose empiricism would, no doubt, have been an excellent corrective of his
excessive tendency to speculation. In fact he was quickly disappointed with
Schelling and after four months returned to his beloved Copenhagen (which he
was not to leave thereafter except for short periods), with his mind still busy
on the problems which were peculiarly his own. The tremendous impulse given by
hi§ unfortunate engagement was sufficient to stimulate his sensitive mind to a
produc‑tivity without equal in Danish literature, to create a "literature
within a literature." The fearful inner collision of motives had lit an
inner conflagration which did not die down for years. "My becoming an
author is due chiefly to her, my melancholy, and my money."
About a year afterwards (1843)
there appeared his first great work, "Either‑Or," which at once
established his fame. As in the case of most of his works it will be impossible
to give here more than the barest outline of its plan and contents. In
substance, it is a grand debate between the aesthetic and the ethic views of
life. In his dissertation Kierkegaard had already characterized the æsthetic
point of view. Now, in a brilliant series of articles, he proceeds to exemplify
it with exuberant detail.
The fundamental chord of the first part is struck in
the Diapsalmata—aphorisms which, like
so many flashes of a lantern, illuminate the æsthetic life, its pleasures and
its despair. The æsthetic individual—this is brought out in the article
entitled "The Art of Rotation"—wishes to be the exception in human
society, shirking its common, humble duties and claiming special privileges. He
has no fixed principle except that he means not to be bound to anything or
anybody. He has but one desire which is, to enjoy the sweets of life—whether
its purely sensual pleasures or the more refined Epicureanism of the finer
things in life and art, and the ironic enjoyment of one's own superiority over
the rest of humanity; and he has no fear except that he may succumb to boredom.
As a comment on this text there
follow a number of essays in "experimental psychology," supposed to
be the fruit of the æsthete's (A's) leisure. In them the æsthetic life is
exhibited in its various manifestations, in "terms of existence,"
especially as to its "erotic stages," from the indefinite longings of
the Page to the fully conscious "sensual genius" of Don Juan—the
examples are taken from Mozart's opera of this name, which was Kierkegaard's
favorite—until the whole culminates in the famous "Diary of the
Seducer," containing elements of the author's own engagement, poetically
disguised—a seducer, by the way, of an infinitely reflective kind.
Following this climax of
unrestrained æstheticism we hear in the second part the stern demands of the
ethical life. Its spokesman, Judge William, rises in defense of the social
institutes, and of marriage in particular, against the slurs cast on them by
his young friend A. He makes it clear that the only possible outcome of the
æsthetic life, with its aimlessness, its superciliousness, its vague
possibilities, is a feeling of vanity and vexation of spirit, and a hatred of
life itself: despair. One floundering in this inevitable slough of despond, who
earnestly wishes to escape from it and to save himself from the ultimate
destruction of his personality, must choose and determine to rise into the
ethical sphere. That is, he must elect a definite calling, no matter how
humdrum, marry, if possible, and thus subject himself to the "general
law." In a word, instead of a world of vague possibilities, however
attractive, he must choose the definite circumscription of the individual who
is a member of society. Only thus, will he obtain a balance in his life between
the demands of his personality on the one hand, and of the demands of society
on him. When thus reconciled to his environment—his "lot"—all the
pleasures of the æsthetic sphere which he resigned will be his again in rich
measure, but in a transfigured sense.
Though nobly eloquent in places, and
instinct with warm feeling, this panegyric on marriage and the fixed duties of
life is somewhat unconvincing, and its style undeniably tame and unctious—at
least when contrasted with the Satanic Verve of most of A's papers. The fact is
that Kierkegaard, when considering the ethical sphere, in order to carry out
his plan of contrasting it with the æsthetic sphere, was already envisaging the
higher sphere of religion, to which the ethical sphere is but a transition, and
which is the only true alternative to the æsthetic life. At the very end of the
book Kierkegaard, flying his true colors, places a sermon as an
"ultimatum," purporting to have been written bya pastor on the Jutish
Heath. Its text is that "as against we are always in the wrong," and
the tenor of it, "onlythat truth which edifies is truth for you." It
is not that you must choose either the æsthetic or the ethical view of life;
but that neither the one nor the other is the full truth—God alone is the truth
which must be grasped with all inwardness. But since we recognize our
imperfections, or sins, the more keenly, as we are developed more highly, our
typical relation to God must be that of repentance; and by repentance as by a
step we may rise into the higher sphere of religion—as will be seen, a purely
Christian thought.
A work of such powerful originality, imposing by its
very size, and published at the anonymous author's own expense, could not but
create a stir among the small Danish reading public. And notwithstanding
Kierkegaard's consistent efforts to conceal his authorship in the interest of
his "indirect communication," it could not long remain a secret. The
book was much, and perplexedly, discussed, though no one was able to fathom the
author's real aim, most readers being attracted by piquant subjects such as the
"Diary of the Seducer," and regarding the latter half as a feeble
afterthought. As he said himself: "With my left hand I held out to the
world 'Either‑Or,' with my right, 'Two Edifying Discourses'; but they all—or
practically all—seized with their right hands what I held in my left."
These "Two Edifying
Discourses,"[4] for thus
he preferred to call them, rather than sermons, because he claimed no authority
to preach—as well as all the many later ones, were published over his own name,
addressed to Den Enkelte "The
Single Individual" "whom with joy and gratitude he calls his
reader," and were dedicated to the memory of his father. They belong among
the noblest books of edification, of which the North has not a few.
During the
following three years (1843‑5) Kierkegaard,
once roused to productivity, though undoubtedly kept at his task by the
exertion of marvellous will‑power, wrote in quick succession some of his most
notable works—so original in form, in thought, in content that it is a well‑nigh
hopeless task to analyze them to any satisfaction. All we can do here is to
note the development in them of the one grand theme which is fundamental to all
his literary activity: how to become a Christian.
If the second part of "Either‑Or"
was devoted to an explanation of the nature of the ethical, as against the
æsthetic, conduct of life, inevitably the next task was, first, to define the
nature of the religious life, as against the merely ethical life; then, to show
how the religious sphere may be attained. This is done in the brilliant twin
books Frygt og Baeven "Fear and
Trembling" and Gjentagelsen "Repetition."
Both were published over pseudonyms.
"Fear and Trembling" bears as its subtitle
"Dialectic Lyrics." Indeed, nowhere perhaps, is Kierkegaard's strange
union of dialectic subtlety and intense lyrical power and passion so strikingly
in evidence as in this panegyric on Abraham, the father of faith. To
Kierkegaard he is the shining exemplar of the religious life; and his greatest
act of faith, his obedience to God's command to slay Isaac. Nothing can surpass
the eloquence with which he depicts the agony of the father, his struggle
between the ethical, or general, law which saith "thou shalt no
kill"! and God's specific command. In the end, Abraham by a grand resolve
transgresses the law; and lo! because he has faith, against certainty, that he
will keep Isaac, and does not merely resign him, as many a tragic hero would
have done, he receives all again, in a new and higher sphere. In other words,
Abraham chooses to be "the exception" and set aside the general law,
as well as does the æsthetic individual; but, note well: "in fear and
trembling," and at the express command of God! He is a "knight of
faith." But because this direct relation to the divinity necessarily can
be certain only to Abraham's self, his action is altogether incomprehensible to
others. Reason recoils before the absolute paradox of the individual who
chooses to rise superior to the general law.
The rise into the religious sphere is
always likely to be the outcome of some severe inner conflict engendering
infinite passion. In the splendidly written Gjentagelse
"Repetition" we are shown ad
oculos an abortive transition into the religious sphere, with a
corresponding relapse into the æsthetic sphere. Kierkegaard's own love‑story is
again drawn upon: the "Young Person" ardently loves the woman; but
discovers to his consternation that she is in reality but a burden to him
since, instead of having an actual, living relation to her, he merely
"remembers" her when she is present. In the ensuing collision of
motives his æsthetically cool friend Constantin Constantius advises him to act
as one unworthy of her—as did Kierkegaard—and to forget her. But instead of
following this advice, and lacking a deeper religious background, he flees the
town and subsequently transmutes his trials into poetry—that is, relapses into
the æsthetic sphere: rather than, like Job, whom he apostrophises passionately,
"receiving all again" (having all "repeated") in a higher
sphere. This idea of the resumption of a lower stage into a higher one is one
of Kierkegaard's most original and fertile thoughts. It is illustrated here
with an amazing wealth of instances.
So far, it had been a question of
religious feeling in general—how it may arise, and what its nature is. In the
pivotal work Philosophiske Smuler "Philosophic
Trifles"—note the irony—Kierkegaard throws the searching rays of his
penetrating intellect on the grand problem of revealed religion: can one's
eternal salvation be based on an historical event? This is the great stumbling
block to the understanding.
Hegel's philosophic optimism
maintained that the difficulties of Christianity had been completely
"reconciled" or "mediated" in the supposedly higher
synthesis of philosophy, by which process religion had been reduced to terms
which might be grasped by the intellect. Kierkegaard, fully voicing the claim
both of the intellect and of religion, erects the barrier of the paradox,
impassable except by the act of faith. As will be seen, this is Tertullian's Credo quia absurdum.[5]
In the briefest possible outline his argument is as
follows: Socrates had taught that in reality every one had the truth in him and
needed but to be reminded of it by the teacher who thus is necessary only in
helping the disciple to discover it himself. That is the indirect communication
of the truth. But now suppose that the truth is not innate in man, suppose he
has merely the ability to grasp it when presented to him. And suppose the
teacher to be of absolute, infinite importance—the Godhead himself, directly
communicating with man, revealing the truth in the shape of man; in fact, as
the lowliest of men, yet insisting on implicit belief in Him! This, according
to Kierkegaard, constitutes the paradox of faith par excellence. But this paradox, he shows, existed for the
generation contemporaneous with Christ in the same manner as it does for those
living now. To think that faith was an easier matter for those who saw the Lord
and walked in His blessed company is but a sentimental, and fatal, delusion. On
the other hand, to found one's faith on the glorious results, now evident, of
Christ's appearance in the world is sheer thoughtlessness and blasphemy. With
ineluctable cogency it follows that "there can be no disciple at second
hand." Now, as well as "1800 years ago," whether in Heathendom
or in Christendom, faith is born of the same conditions: the resolute
acceptance by the individual of the absolute paradox.
In previous works Kierkegaard had
already intimated that what furnished man the impetus to rise into the highest
sphere and to assail passionately and incessantly the barrier of the paradox,
or else caused him to lapse into "demonic despair," was the
consciousness of sin. In the book Begrebet
Angest "The Concept of Sin," he now attempts with an infinite and
laborious subtlety to explain the nature of sin. Its origin is found in the
"sympathetic antipathy" of Dread—that force which at one and the same
time attracts and repels from the suspected danger of a fall and is present
even in the state of innocence, in children. It finally results in a kind of
"dizziness" which is fatal. Yet, so Kierkegaard contends, the
"fall" of man is, in every
single instance, due to a definite act of the will, a "leap"—which
seems a patent contradiction.
To the modern reader, this is the least palatable of
Kierkegaard's works, conceived as it is with a sovereign and almost medieval
disregard of the predisposing undeniable factors of environment and heredity
(which, to be sure, poorly fit his notion of the absolute responsibility of the
individual). Its sombreness is redeemed, to a certain degree, by a series of
marvellous observations, drawn from history and literature, on the various
phases and manifestations of Dread in human life.
On the same day as the book just
discussed there appeared, as a "counter‑irritant," the hilariously
exuberant Forord "Forewords,"
a collection of some eight playful but vicious attacks, in the form of
prefaces, on various foolish manifestations of Hegelianism in Denmark. They are
aimed chiefly at the high‑priest of the "system," the poet Johan
Ludvig Heiberg who, as the arbiter
elegantiarum of the times had presumed to review, with a plentiful lack of
insight, Kierkegaard's activity. But some of the most telling shots are fired
at a number of the individualist Kierkegaard's pet aversions.
His next great work, Stadier paa Livets Vei "Stages on Life's Road," forms a
sort of resumé of the results so far gained. The three "spheres" are
more clearly elaborated.
The aesthetic sphere is represented
existentially by the incomparable In Vino
Veritas, generally called "The Banquet," from a purely literary
point of view the most perfect of Kierkegaard's works, which, if written in one
of the great languages of Europe, would have procured him world fame. Composed
in direct emulation of Plato's immortal Symposion,
it bears comparison with it as well as any modern composition can.[6] Indeed,
it excels Plato's work in subtlety, richness, and refined humor. To be sure,
Kierkegaard has charged his creation with such romantic superabundance of delicate
observations and rococo ornament that the whole comes dangerously near being
improbable; whereas the older work
stands solidly in reality.
It is with definite purpose that
the theme of the speeches of the five participants in the banquet is love, i.e.,
the relation of the two sexes in love; for it is there the main battle between
the æsthetic and the ethical view of life must be fought out. Accordingly,
Judge William, to whom the last idyllic pages of "The Banquet" again
introduce us, in the second part breaks another shaft in defense of marriage,
which in the ethical view of life is the typical realization of the
"general law." Love exists also for the ethical individual. In fact,
love and no other consideration whatsoever can justify marriage. But whereas to
the aesthetic individual love is merely eroticism, viz., a passing self‑indulgence
without any obligation, the ethical individual attaches to himself the woman of
his choice by an act of volition, for better or for worse, and by his marriage
vow incurs an obligation to society. Marriage is thus a synthesis of love and
duty. A pity only that Kierkegaard's astonishingly low evaluation of woman
utterly mars what would otherwise be a classic defence of marriage.
The religious sphere is shown forth in the third
part, Skyldig—Ikke‑Skyldig "Guilty—Not‑Guilty,"
with the apt subtitle "A History of Woe." Working over, for the third
time, and in the most intense fashion, his own unsuccessful attempt to
"realize the general law," i.e., by marrying, he here presents in the
form of a diary the essential facts of his own engagement, but in darker colors
than in "Repetition." It is broken because of religious
incompatibility and the lover's unconquerable melancholy; and by his voluntary
renunciation, coupled with acute suffering through his sense of guilt for his
act, he is driven up to an approximation of the religious sphere. Not unjustly,
Kierkegaard himself regarded this as the richest of his works.
One may say that "Guilty‑Not‑Guilty"
corresponds to Kierkegaard's own development at this stage. Christianity is
still above him. How may it be attained? This is the grand theme of the huge
book whimsically named "Final Unscientific Postscript to the Philosophical
Trifles," Afstuttende Uvidenskabelig
Efterskrift (1846): "How shall
I become a Christian, I, Johannes Climacus, born in this city, thirty years of
age, and not in any way different from the ordinary run of men"?
Following up the results gained in
the "Trifles," the subjectivity of faith is established once for all:
it is not to be attained by swearing to any set of dogmas, not even Scripture;
for who will vouch for its being an absolutely reliable and inspired account of
Christ? Besides, as Lessing had demonstrated conclusively: historic facts never
can become the proof of eternal verities. Nor can the existence of the Church
through the ages furnish any guarantee for faith—straight counter to the
opinion held by Kierkegaard's famous contemporary Grundtvig—any more than can
mere contemporaneousness establish a guarantee for those living at the
beginning. To sum up: "One who has an objective Christianity and nothing
else, he is eo ipso a heathen."
For the same reason, "philosophic speculation" is not the proper
approach, since it seeks to understand Christianity objectively, as an historic
phenomenon—which rules it out from the start.
It is only by a decisive "leap," from
objective thinking into subjective faith, with the consciousness of sin as the
driving power, that the individual may realize (we would say, attain)
Christianity. Nor is it gained once for all, but must ever be maintained by
passionately assailing the paradox of faith, which is, that one's eternal
salvation is based on an historic fact. The main thing always is the
"how," not the "what." Kierkegaard goes so far as to say
that he who with fervency and inwardness prays to some false god is to be
preferred to him who worships the true god, but without the passion of
devotion.
In order to prevent any misunderstanding
about the manner of presentation in this remarkable book, it will be well to
add Kierkegaard's own remark after reading a conscientious German review of his
"Trifles": "Although the account given is correct, every one who
reads it will obtain an altogether incorrect impression of the book; because
the account the critic gives is in the ex
cathedra style (docerende), which
will produce on the reader the impression that the book is written in a like
manner. But this is in my eyes the worst misconception possible." And as
to its peculiar conversational, entertaining manner which in the most
leisurely, legère fashion and in an all but dogmatic style treats of the
profoundest problems, it is well to recall the similarly popular manner of
Pascal in his Lettres Provinciales. Like
him—and his grand prototype Socrates—Kierkegaard has the singular faculty of
attacking the most abstruse matters with a chattiness bordering on frivolity,
yet without ever losing dignity.
For four and a half years
Kierkegaard had now, notwithstanding his feeble health, toiled feverishly and,
as he himself states, without even a single day's remission. And "the
honorarium had been rather Socratic": all of his books bad been brought
out at his own expense, and their sale had been, of course, small. (Of the "Final
Postscript," e.g., which had cost him between 500 and 600 rixdollars, only
60 copies were sold). Hardly any one had understood what the purpose of this
"literature" was. He himself had done, with the utmost exertion and
to the best of his ability, what he set out to do: to show his times, which had
assumed that being a Christian is an easy enough matter, how unspeakably
difficult a matter it really is and what terribly severe demands it makes on
natural man. He now longed for rest and seriously entertained the plan of
bringing his literary career to a close and spending the remainder of his days
as a pastor of some quiet country parish, there to convert his philosophy into
terms of practical existence. But this was not to be. An incident which would
seem ridicuously small to a more robust nature sufficed to inflict on
Kierkegaard's sensitive mind the keenest tortures and thus to sting him into a
renewed and more passionate literary activity.
As it happened, the comic paper Korsaren "The Corsair" was
then at the heyday of its career. The first really democratic periodical in
Denmark, it stood above party lines and through its malicious, brilliant satire
and amusing caricatures of prominent personalities was hated, feared, and
enjoyed by everybody. Its editor, the Jewish author Meir Goldschmidt, was a
warm and outspoken admirer of the philosopher. Kierkegaard, on the other hand,
had long regarded the Press with suspicion. He loathed it because it gave
expression to, and thus subtly flattered, the multitude, "the public,"
"the mob"—as against the individual, and because it worked with the
terrible weapon of anonymity; but held it especially dangerous by reason of its
enormous circulation and daily repetition of mischievous falsehoods. So it
seemed to him who ever doubted the ability of the "people" to think
for themselves. In a word, the Press is to him "the evil principle in the
modern world." Needless to say, the tactics of "The Corsair," in
particular, infuriated him.
In a Christmas annual (1845) there had
appeared a blundering review, by one of the collaborators on "The
Corsair," of his "Stages on Life's Road." Seizing the
opportunity offered, Kierkegaard wrote a caustic rejoinder, adding the
challenge: "Would that I now soon appear in 'The Corsair.' It is really
hard on a poor author to be singled out in Danish literature by remaining the
only one who is not abused in it." We know now that Goldschmidt did his
best in a private interview to ward off a feud,. but when rebuffed he turned
the batteries of his ridicule on the personality of his erstwhile idol. And for
the better part of a year the Copenhagen public was kept laughing and grinning
about the unequal trouser legs, the spindle shanks, the inseparable umbrella,
the dialectic propensities, of "Either—Or," as Kierkegaard came to be
called by the populace; for, owing to his peripatetic habits—acquired in
connection with the Indirect Communication—he had long been a familiar figure
on the streets of the capital. While trying to maintain an air of indifference,
be suffered the tortures of the damned. In his Journal (several hundred of
whose pages are given over to reflections on this experience) we find
exclamations such as this one: "What is it to be roasted alive at a slow
fire, or to be broken on the wheel or, as they do in warm climates, to be
smeared with honey and put at the mercy of the insects—what is that in
comparison with this torture: to be grinned to death!"
There could be no thought now of
retiring to a peaceful charge in the country. That would have been fleeing from
persecution. Besides, unbeknown perhaps to himself, his pugnacity was aroused.
While under the influence of the "Corsair Feud" (as it is known in
Danish literature) he completes the booklet "A Literary Review." This
was originally intended as a purely æsthetic evaluation and appreciation of the
(then anonymous) author[7] of the Hverdagshistorier "Commonplace
Stories" that are praised by him for their thoughtful bodying forth of a
consistent view of life which—however different from his own—yet commanded his
respect. He now appended a series of bitter reflections on the Present Times,
paying his respects to the Press, which he calls incomparably the worst
offender in furnishing people with cheap irony, in forcibly levelling out and
reducing to mediocrity all those who strive to rise above it
intellectually—words applicable, alas! no less to our own times. To him,
however, who in a religious sense has become the captain of his soul, the
becoming a butt of the Press is but a true test. Looking up, Kierkegaard sees
in his own fate the usual reward accorded by mankind to the courageous souls
who dare to fight for the truth, for the ideal—for Christianity, against the
"masses." In a modern way, through ridicule, he was undergoing the
martyrdom which the blood witnesses of old had undergone for the sake of their
faith. Their task it had been to preach the Gospel among the heathen. His, he
reasoned, was in nowise easier: to make clear to uncomprehending millions of so‑called
Christians that they were not Christians at all, that they did not even know
what Christianity is: suffering and persecution, as he now recognizes, being
inseparable from the truly Christian life.
First, then, the road had to be
cleared, emphatically, for the truth that Christianity and "the
public" are opposite terms. The collection of "Edifying Discourses in
Diverse Spirits" is thus a religious parallel to the polemic in his
"Review." The first part of these meditations has for text: "The
purity of the heart consists in willing one thing"—and this one thing is
necessarily the good, the ideal; but only he who lives his life as the
individual can possibly will the good—else it is lived in duplicity, for the
world will share his aspirations, he will bid for the rewards which the bowing
before the crowd can give him. In the second part, entitled "What we may
learn from the Lilies of the Field and the Birds of the Air"—one of
Kierkegaard's favorite texts—the greatest danger to the ethico-religious life
is shown to be the uneasiness about our material welfare which insidiously
haunts our thought‑life, and, notwithstanding our best endeavors, renders us
essentially slaves to "the crowd"; whereas it is given to man,
created in the image of God, to be as self‑contained, unafraid, hopeful as are
(symbolically) the lily and the bird. The startlingly new development attained
through his recent experiences is most evident in the third part, "The
Gospel of Sufferings," in which absolute stress is laid on the imitation
of Christ in the strictest sense. Only the "individual" can compass
this: the narrow way to salvation must be traveled alone; and will lead to
salvation only if the world is, literally, overcome in persecution and
tribulation. And, on the other hand, to be happy in this world is equivalent to
forfeiting salvation. Thus briefly outlined, the contents of this book would
seem to be sheer monkish asceticism; but no synopsis, however full, can hope to
give an idea of its lyrical pathos, its wealth of tender reflections, the great
love tempering the stern severity of its teaching.
With wonderful beauty "The Deeds of Love" (Kjerlighedens Gjerninger) (1847) are
exalted as the Christian's help and salvation against the tribulations of the
world—love, not indeed of the human kind, but of man through God. "You are
not concerned at all with what others do to you, but only with what you do to
others; and also, with how you react to what others do to you—you are
concerned, essentially, only with yourself, before God."
In rapid succession there follow
"Christian Discourses"; "The Lily of the Field and the Bird of
the Air"; "Sickness Unto Death"
(with the sub‑title "A Christian Psychological Exposition");
"Two Religious Treatises"; "The High Priest, the Publican, the
Sinner"; "Three Discourses on the 0ccasion of Communion on
Friday."
In the course of these reflections
it had become increasingly clear to Kierkegaard that the self‑constituted
representative of Christ—the Church or, to mention only the organization he was
intimately acquainted with, the Danish State Church—had succeeded in becoming a
purely worldly organization whose representatives, far from striving to follow
Christ, had made life quite comfortable for themselves; retort to which was
presently made that by thus stressing "contemporaneousness" with its
aspects of suffering and persecution, Kierkegaard had both exceeded the
accepted teaching of the Church and staked the attainment of Christianity so
high as to drive all existing forms of it ad
absurdum.
In his Indövelse i Christendom "Preparation for a Christian
Life" and the somber Til
Selvprövelse "For a Self‑Examation" Kierkegaard returns
to the attack with a powerful re‑examination of the whole question as to how
far modern Christianity corresponds to that of the Founder. Simply, but with
grandiose power, he works out in concrete instances the conception of
"contemporaneousness" gained in the "Final Postscript"; at
the same time demonstrating to all who have eyes to see, the axiomatic
connection between the doctrine of Propitiation and Christ's life in
debasement; that Christianity consists in absolutely dying to the world; and
that the Christianity which does not live up to this is but a travesty on
Christianity. We may think what we Please about this counsel of perfection, and
judge what we may about the rather arbitrary choice of Scripture passages on
which Kierkegaard builds: no serious reader, no sincere Christian can escape
the searching of heart sure to follow this tremendous arraignment of humanity
false to its divine leader. There is nothing more impressive in all modern
literature than the gallery of "opinions" voiced by those arrayed
against Christ when on earth—and now—as to what constitutes the
"offense."
Kierkegaard had hesitated a long time before
publishing the "Preparation for a Christian Life." Authority‑loving
as he was, he shrank from antagonizing the Church, as it was bound to do; and
more especially, from giving offense to its primate, the venerable Bishop
Mynster who had been his father's friend and spiritual adviser, to whom he had
himself always looked up with admiring reverence, and whose sermons he had been
in the habit of reading at all times. Also, to be sure, he was restrained by
the thought that by publishing his book he would render Christianity well‑night
unattainable to the weak and the simple and the afflicted who certainly were in
need of the consolations of Christianity without any additional sufferings
interposed and surely no reader of his devotional works can be in doubt that he
was the most tender‑hearted of men. In earlier, stronger times, he imagines, he
would have been made a martyr for his opinions; but was he entitled to become a
blood‑witness—he who realized more keenly than any one that he himself was not
a Christian in the strictest sense? In his "Two Religious Treatises"
he debates the question: "Is it permissible for a man to let himself be
killed for the truth?"; which is answered in the negative in "About
the Difference between a Genius and an Apostle"—which consists in the
Apostle's speaking with authority. However, should not the truth be the most
important consideration? His journal during that time offers abundant proof of
the absolute earnestness with which he struggled over the question.
When Kierkegaard finally published
"The Preparation for a Christian Life," the bishop was, indeed,
incensed; but he did nothing. Nor did any one else venture forth. Still worse
affront! Kierkegaard had said his last word, had stated his ultimatum—and it
was received with indifference, it seemed. Nevertheless he decided to wait and
see what effect his books would have for he hesitated to draw the last
conclusions and mortally wound the old man tottering on the brink of his grave
by thus attacking the Church. There followed a three years' period of silence
on the part of Kierkegaard—again certainly a proof of his utter sincerity. It
must be remembered, in this connection, that the very last thing Kierkegaard
desired was an external reorganization, a "reform," of the
Church—indeed, he firmly refused to be identified with any movement of
secession, differing in this respect vitally from his contemporaries Vinet and
Grundtvig who otherwise had so much in common with him. His only wish was to
infuse life and inwardness into the existing forms. And far from being inferior
to them in this he was here at one with the Founder and the Early Church in
that he states the aim of the Christian Life to be, not to transform the
existing social order, but to transcend it. For the very same reason, coupled
to be sure with a pronounced aristocratic individualism, he is utterly and
unreasonably indifferent, and even antagonistic, to the great social movements
of his time, to the political upheavals of 1848, to the revolutionary advances
of science.
As Kierkegaard now considered his
career virtually concluded, he wrote (1851) a brief account "About my
Activity as an Author" in,which he furnishes his readers a key to its
unfolding—from an aesthetic view to the religious view—which he considers his
own education by Providence; and indicates it to be his special task to call
attention, without authority, to the religious, the Christian life. His
"Viewpoint for my Activity as an Author," published by his brother
only long after his death, likewise deflnes the purpose of the whole "authorship,"
besides containing important biographical material.
At length (January, 1854) Mynster
died. Even then Kierkegaard, though still on his guard, might not have felt
called upon to have recourse to stronger measures if it had liot been for an
unfortunate sentence in the funeral sermon preached by the now famous
Martensen—generally pointed out as the successor to the primacy—with whom
Kierkegaard had already broken a lance or two. Martensen had declared Mynster
to have been "one of the holy chain of witnesses for the truth (sandhedsvidner) which extends through
the centuries down from the time of the Apostles." This is the provocation
for which Kierkegaard had waited. "Bishop Mynster a witness for the
truth"! he bursts out, "You who read this, you know well what in a
Christian sense is a witness for the truth. Still, let me remind you that to be
one, it is absolutely essential to suffer for the teaching of
Christianity"; whereas "the truth is that Mynster was wordly‑wise to
a degree—was weak, pleasureloving, and great only as a declaimer." But
once more striking proof of his circumspection and single‑mindedness—he kept
this harsh letter in his desk for nine months, lest its publication should
interfere in the least with Martensen's appointment, or seem the outcome of
personal resentment.
Martensen's reply, which forcefully
enough brings out all that could be said for a milder interpretation of the
Christian categories and for his predecessor, was not as respectful to the
sensitive author as it ought to have been. In a number of newspaper letters of
increasing violence and acerbity Kierkegaard now tried to force his obstinately
silent opponent to his knees; but in vain. Filled with holy wrath at what he
conceived to be a conspiracy by silence, and evasions to bring to naught the
whole infinitely important matter for which he had striven, Kierkegaard finally
turned agitator. He addressed himself directly to the people with the
celebrated pamphlet series Öeblikket "The
Present Moment" in which he opens an absolutely withering fire of
invective on anything and everything connected with "the existing
order" in Christendom—an agitation the like of which for revolutionary
vehemence has rarely, if ever, been seen. All rites of the Church—marriage,
baptism, confirmation, communion, burial—and most of all the clergy, high and
low, draw the fiery bolts of his wrath and a perfect hail of fierce, cruel
invective. The dominant note, though varied infinitely, is ever the same:
"Whoever you may be, and whatever the life you live, my friend: by
omitting to attend the public divine service—if indeed it be your habit to
attend it—by omitting to attend public divine service as now constituted—aiming
as it does to represent the Christianity of the New Testament) you will escape
at least one, and a great, 4b in not attempting to fool God by calling that the
Christianity of the New Testament which is not the Christianity of the New
Testament." And he does not hesitate to use strong, even coarse, language;
he even courts the reproach of blasphemy in order to render ridiculous in
"Official Christianity" what to most may seem inherently, though
mistakenly, a matter of highest reverence. The swiftness and mercilessness of
his attack seem to have left his contemporaries without a weapon: all they could
do was to shrug their shoulders about the "fanatic," to duck and wait
dumbly until the storm had passed.
Nor did it last long. On the second of
October, 1855, Kierkegaard fell unconscious in the street. He was brought to
the hospital where he died on the eleventh of November,—aged 42. The immense
exertions of the last months had shattered his frail body. And strange: the
last of his money bid been used up. He had said what he thought Providence had
to communicate through him. His strength was gone. His death at this moment
would put the crown on his work. As he said on his death‑bed: "The bomb
explodes, and the conflagration will follow."
In appraising Kierkegaard's life
and works it will be found true, as Höffding says, that he can mean much even
to those who do not subscribe to the beliefs so unquestioningly entertained by
him. And however much they may regret that he poured his noble wine into the
old bottles, they cannot fail to recognize the yeoman's service he did, totii
for sincere Christians in compelling them to rehearse inwardly what ever tends
to become a matter of form: what it means to be a Christian; and for others, in
deepening their sense of individual responsibility. In fact, every one who has
once come under his influence and has wrestled with this mighty spirit will
bear away some blessing. In its time when, as in our own, the crowd, society,
the millions, the nation, had depressed the individual to an insignificant
atom—and what is worse, in the individual's own estimation; when shallow
altruistic, socializing effort thought naively that the millenium was at hand,
he drove the truth home that, on the contrary, the individual is the measure of
all things; that we do not live en masse;
that both the terrible responsibility and the great satisfactions of life
inhere in the individual. Again, more forcibly than any one else in modern
times, certainly more cogently than Pascal, he demonstrated that the
possibility of proof in religion is an illusion; that doubt cannot be combatted
by reason, that it ever will be credo
quia impossibile. In religion, he showed the utter incompatibility of the
æsthetic and the religious life; and in Christianity, he re‑stated and
repointed the principle of ideal perfection by his unremitting insistence on
contemporaneousness with Christ. It is another matter whether by so doing
Kierkegaard was about to pull the pillars from underneath the great edifice of
Christianity which housed both him and his enemies: seeing that he himself
finally doubted whether it had ever existed apart from the Founder and,
possibly, the Apostles.
Kierkegaard is not easy reading. One's
first impression of crabbedness, whimsicality, abstruseness will, however, soon
give way to admiration of the marvellous instrument of precision language has
become in his hands. To be sure, he did not write for people who are in a
hurry, nor for dullards. His closely reasoned paragraphs and, at times huge,
though rhetorically faultless, periods require concentrated attention, his
involutions and repetitions, handled with such incomparable virtuosity, demand
an everlasting readiness of comprehension on the part of the reader. On the
other hand his philosophic work is delightfully "Socratic,"
unconventional, and altogether "un‑textbooklike." Kierkegaard himself
wished that his devotional works should be read aloud. And, from a purely
æsthetic point of view, it ought to be a delight for any orator to practice on
the wonderful periods of e.g., "The Preparation," or of, say, the parable of the coach‑horses in
"Acts of the Apostles." They alone would be sufficient to place
Kierkegaard in the front rank of prose writers of the nineteenth century where,
both by the power of his utterance and the originality of his thought, he
rightfully belongs.
In laying before an English
speaking public selections from Kierkegaard's works, the translator has
endeavored to give an adequate idea of the various aspects of his highly
disparate works. For this purpose he has chosen a few large pieces, rather than
given tidbits. He hopes to be pardoned for not having a slavish regard for
Kierkegaard's very inconsequential paragraphing[8] and for
breaking, with no detriment, he believes, to the thought, some excessively long
paragraphs into smaller units; which will prove more restful to the eye and
more encouraging to the reader. As to occasional omissions—always indicated by
dots—the possessor of the complete works will readily identify them. In
consonance with Kierkegaard's views on "contemporaneousness," no
capitals are used in "The Preparation" when referring to Christ by
pronouns.
When Kierkegaard died, his
influence, like that of Socrates, was just beginning to make itself felt. The
complete translation into German of all his works[9] and of
many into other languages; the magnificent new edition of his works[10] and of
his extraordinarily voluminous diaries,[11] now
nearing completion; and the steadily increasing number of books, pamphlets, and
articles from the most diverse quarters testify to his reaching a growing
number of individuals. Below is given
a list of the more important books and articles on Kierkegaard. It does not aim
at completeness.
L. M.
HOLLANDER
Adjunct Professor of Germanic
Languages, University of Texas, Austin.
Bärthold, A. S. K., Eine Verfasserexistenz eigner Art. Halberstadt, 1873.
Same: Noten zu S. K.'s Lebensgeschichte. Halle, 1876.
Same: Die Bedeutung der aesthetischen Schriften S.
K.'s. Halle, 1879.
Barfod, H.
P. (Introduction to the first
edition of the Diary.) Copenhagen,
1869.
Bohlin,
Th. S. K.'s Etiska Askadning. Uppsala,
1918.1
Brandes, G. S. K., En kritisk
Fremstilling i Grundrids. Copenhagen, 1877.
Same:
German ed. Leipsic, 1879.
Deleuran,
V. Esquisse d'une étude sur S. K. Thése, University of Paris, 1897.
Höffding,
H. S. K. Copenhagen, 1892.
Same:
German edition (2nd).
Stuttgart, 1902.
Hoffmann,
R. K. und die religidse Gewissheit. Göttingen,
1910.
Jensen,
Ch. S. K.'s religibse Udvikling. Aarhus, 1898.
Monrad, 0.
P. S. K. Sein Leben und seine Werke. Jena, 1909.
Münch,
Ph. Haupt und Grundgedanken der Philosophie S. K.'s. Leipsic, 1902.
Rosenberg,
P. A. S. K., hans Liv, hans Personlighed og hans
Forfatterskab. Copenhagen, 1898.
Rudin,
W., S. K.'s Person och Författerskap. Förste
Afdelningen. Stockholm,
1880.
Schrempf,
Ch. S. K.'s Stellung zu Bibel und Dogma. Zeitschrift für Theologie und Kirche, 1891, p. 179.
Same: S.
K. Ein unfreier Pionier der
Freiheit. (With a foreword by
Höffding) Frankfort, 1909.
Swenson,
D. The Anti‑Intellectualism of K. Philosophic Review, 1916, p. 567.
To my friends and colleagues, Percy M. Dawson and
Howard M. Jones, I wish also in this place to express my thanks for help and
criticism "in divers spirits."
[1]
Pronounced Kerkegor.
[2]
An interesting parallel is the
story of Peter Williams, as told by George Borrow, Lavengro, chap. 75 ff.
[3]
Corresponding, approximately, to
our doctoral thesis.
[4]
Not "Discourses for
Edification," cf. the Foreword to Atter
Opbyggelige Taler, S. V. vol. iv.
[5]
De
Carne Christi, chap. V,
as my friend, Professor A. E. Haydon, kindly points out.
[6]
Cf. Brandes, S. K. p. 157.
[7]
Mrs. Thomasine
Gyllembourg-Ehrensvärd.
[8]
With signal exception of "The
Present Moment."
[9]
In process of publication. Jena.
[10]
Samlede Værker. Copenhagen, 1901-1906
(14 vols.). In the notes abbreviated S. V. Still another edition is preparing.
[11]
Copenhagen, 1909 ff.