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<front>

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  <f name="original-title" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">Die Kunst und die Revolution.</str></f>
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<div type="translators-note" rend="i" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag22"/>
<head>Translator's Note</head>
<p>The <hi rend="up">Introduction</hi> translated on the
opposite and following pages was written by Richard Wagner as the
Preface to Volumes III. and IV. of his "<hi>Gesammelte Schriften</hi>,"
or Collected Writings, for the Edition of <hi>1872</hi>; and
applies not only to "<hi>Art and Revolution</hi>," but also to
"<hi>The Art-Work of the Future</hi>" and "<hi>Opera and Drama</hi>," &amp;c.</p>
</div> 

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<body>
<div type="introduction" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag23"/>
<head rend="up">Introduction to Art and Revolution.</head>

<p><hi rend="up">Thomas Carlyle</hi>, in his <hi>History of Frederick
the Great</hi>,
<note id="rn01" corresp="n01" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
characterises the outbreak of
the French Revolution as the First Act of the "Spontaneous
Combustion" of a nation "sunk into torpor, abeyance, and dry-rot,"
and admonishes his readers in the following words:—</p>

<quote>
<p>"There is the next mile-stone for you, in the History of Mankind!
That universal Burning-up, as in hell-fire, of Human Shams. The
oath of Twenty-five Million men, which has since become that of all
men whatsoever, 'Rather than live longer under lies, we will die!'—that
is the New Act in World-History. New Act,—or, we
may call it New <hi>Part</hi>; Drama of World-History, Part Third. If
Part <hi>Second</hi> was 1800 years ago, this I reckon will be Part
<hi>Third</hi>. This is the truly celestial-infernal Event: the
strangest we have seen for a thousand years. Celestial in the one
part; in the other, infernal. For it is withal the breaking-out of
universal mankind into Anarchy, into the faith and practice of
<hi>No</hi>-Government,—that is to say (if you will be candid),
into unappeasable revolt against Sham-Governors and
Sham-Teachers,—which I do charitably define to be a Search,
most unconscious, yet in deadly earnest, for true Governors and
Teachers. . . . . When the Spontaneous Combustion breaks out; and,
many-coloured, with loud noises, envelopes the whole world in
anarchic flame for long hundreds of years: then has the Event come;
there is the thing for all
<pb id="pag24" n="24"/>
men to mark, and to study and scrutinise
as the strangest thing they ever saw. Centuries of it yet lying
ahead of us; several sad Centuries, sordidly tumultuous, and good
for little! Say Two Centuries yet,—say even Ten of such a
process: before the Old is completely burnt out, and the New in any
state of sightliness? Millennium of Anarchies;—<hi>abridge it,
spend your heart's-blood upon abridging it, ye Heroic Wise that are
to come!</hi>"</p>
</quote>

<p>When, in the feverish excitement of the year
1849, I gave vent to an appeal such as that contained in the
immediately succeeding essay: "<hi>Art and Revolution</hi>," I
believe that I was in complete accord with the last words of this
summons of the grey-headed historian. I believed in the Revolution,
and in its unrestrainable necessity, with certainly no greater
immoderation than Carlyle: only, I also felt that I was called to
point out to it the way of rescue. Far though it was from my intent
to define the New, which should grow from the ruins of a
sham-filled world, as a fresh <hi>political</hi> ordering:
<note id="rn02" corresp="n02" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I felt the rather animated to draw the outlines of
the <hi>Art-work</hi> which should rise from the ruins of a sham-bred
<hi>Art</hi>. To hold this Art-work up to Life itself; as the
prophetic mirror of its Future, appeared to me a weightiest
contribution toward the work of damming the flood of Revolution
within the channel of the peaceful-flowing stream of Manhood. I was
bold enough to prefix the following motto to the little pamphlet:
"When Art erst held her peace, State-wisdom and Philosophy began:
when now both Statesman and Philosopher have breathed their last,
let the Artist's voice again be heard."</p>

<p>It is needless to recall the scorn which my
presumption brought upon me; since in the course of my succeeding
literary labours, whose connected products I here append,
<pb id="pag25" n="25"/>
I had occasion enough to defend myself against the grossest of these
attacks. I have also exhaustively treated this whole matter, both
with regard to the inception of these works and the characteristic
incitement thereto, not only in the "Communication to my Friends,"
<note id="rn03" corresp="n03" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
which brings this whole period to a close,
but also in a later treatise, entitled: "The Music of the Future"
("<hi>Zukunftsmusik</hi>"). I will only say here that the
principal cause which brought down the ridicule of our art-critics
upon my seemingly paradoxical ideas, is to be found in the fervid
enthusiasm which pervaded my style and gave to my remarks more of a
poetic than a scientific character. Moreover, the effect of an
indiscriminate intercalation of philosophical maxims was
prejudicial to my clearness of expression, especially in the eyes
of those who could not or would not follow my line of thought and
general principles. Actively aroused by the perusal of some of
<hi>Ludwig Feuerbach's</hi> essays, I had borrowed various terms of
abstract nomenclature and applied them to artistic ideas with which
they could not always closely harmonise. In thus doing, I gave
myself up without critical deliberation to the guidance of a
brilliant writer, who approached most nearly to my reigning frame
of mind, in that he bade farewell to Philosophy (in which he
fancied he detected naught but masked Theology) and took refuge in
a conception of man's nature in which I thought I clearly
recognised my own ideal of artistic manhood. From this arose a kind
of impassioned tangle of ideas, which manifested itself as
precipitance and indistinctness in my attempts at philosophical
system.</p>

<p>While on this subject, I deem it needful to make
special mention of two chief 'terms,' my misunderstanding of which
has since been strikingly borne in upon me.</p>

<p>I refer in the first place to the concept
<hi>Willkür</hi> and <hi>Unwillkür,</hi>
<note id="rn04" corresp="n04" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
in the use of which a great confusion had
<pb id="pag26" n="26"/>
long preceded my own offending; for an adjectival term,
<hi>unwillkürlich</hi>, had been promoted to the rank of a
substantive. Only those who have learnt from <hi>Schopenhauer</hi>
the true meaning and significance of the <hi>Will</hi>, can
thoroughly appreciate the abuse that had resulted from this mixing
up of words; he who has enjoyed this unspeakable benefit, however,
knows well that that misused "<hi>Unwillkür</hi>" should really
be named "<hi>Der Wille</hi>" (the Will); whilst the term
<hi>Willkür</hi> (Choice or Caprice) is here employed to signify
the so-called Intellectual or Brain Will, influenced by the
guidance of reflection. Since the latter is more concerned with the
properties of Knowledge,—which may easily be led astray by
the purely individual aim,—it is attainted with the evil
qualities with which it is charged in the following pages, under
the name of <hi>Willkür</hi> whereas the pure <hi>Will</hi>, as
the "<hi>Thing-in-itself</hi>" that comes to consciousness in man, is
credited with those true productive qualities which are
here—apparently the result of a confusion sprung from the
popular misuse of the term—assigned to the negative
expression, "<hi>Unwillkür</hi>." Therefore, since a thorough
revision in this sense would lead too far and prove a most
fatiguing task, the reader is begged, when doubtful of the meaning
of any of such passages, to bear graciously in mind the present
explanation.</p>

<p>Further, I have to fear that my continual
employment of the term "<hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi>,"
<note id="rn05" corresp="n05" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
in a sense prompted by the same authority, may give
origin, if not to positively harmful misunderstanding, at least to
much perplexity. Since the idea conveyed by this term can only have
the meaning,
<pb id="pag27" n="27"/>
in my argument, of the direct antithesis to
"<hi>Gedanken</hi>" (Thought), or—which will make my purport
clearer—to "<hi>Gedanklichkeit</hi>" (Ideation): its absolute
misunderstanding would certainly be difficult, seeing that the two
opposite factors, Art and Learning, must readily be recognised
herein. But since, in ordinary parlance, this word is employed in
the evil sense of "Sensualism," or even of abandonment to Sensual
Lust, it would be better to replace it by a term of less ambiguous
meaning, in theoretical expositions of so warm a declamatory tone
as these of mine, however wide a currency it has obtained in
philosophical speech. Obviously, the question here is of the
contrast between intuitive and abstract knowledge, both in
themselves and their results; but above all, of the subjective
predisposition to these diverse modes. The term
"<hi>Anschauungsvermögen</hi>" (Perceptive Faculty) would
sufficiently denote the former; were it not that for the specific
<hi>artistic</hi> perception, a distinctive emphasis seems necessary,
for which it might well appear indispensable to retain the
expression "<hi>Sinnliches Anschauungsvermögen</hi>" (Physical
perceptive faculty), and briefly "<hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi>"
(Physicality), alike for the faculty, for the object of its
exercise, and for the force which sets the two in rapport with each
other.</p>

<p>But the greatest peril of all, is that which the
author would incur by his frequent use of the word
<hi>Communism</hi>, should he venture into the Paris of to-day with
these art-essays in his hand; for he openly proclaims his adherence
to this severely scouted category, in contradistinction to
<hi>Egoism</hi>.
<note id="rn06" corresp="n06" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I certainly believe that the friendly German reader, to whom the meaning of this
antithesis will be obvious, will have no special trouble in
overcoming the doubt as to whether he must rank me among the
partisans of the newest Parisian "<hi>Commune</hi>." Still, I cannot
deny that I should not have embarked with the same energy upon the
use of this word "Communism" (employing it in
<pb id="pag28" n="28"/>
a sense borrowed from
the said writings of Feuerbach) as the opposite of Egoism: had I
not also seen in this idea a soclo-pohitical ideal which I
conceived as embodied in a "<hi>Volk</hi>" (People) that should
represent the incomparable productivity of antique brotherhood,
while I looked forward to the perfect evolution of this principle
as the very essence of the associate Manhood of the
Future.—It is significant of my experiences on the practical
side, that in the first of these writings, <hi>Art and
Revolution</hi>, which I had originally intended for a certain
political journal
<note id="rn07" corresp="n07" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
then appearing in
Paris (where I stayed for a few weeks in the summer of 1849), I
avoided this word "Communism,"—as it now seems to me, from
fear of gross misunderstanding on the part of our French brethren,
materialistic ("<hi>sinnlich</hi>") as they are in their
interpretation of so many an abstract idea,—whereas I
forthwith used it without scruple in my next art-writings, designed
expressly for Germany; a fact I now regard as a token of my
implicit trust in the attributes of the German mind. In pursuance
of this observation, I attach considerable importance also to the
experience, that my essay met with absolutely no whit of
understanding in Paris, and that no one at the time could
understand why I should single out a political journal for my
mouthpiece; in consequence whereof; my article did not after all
attain to publication there.</p>

<p>But it was not only from the effects of these
and similar experiences, that the quick of my ideas drew gradually
back from contact with the political excitement of the day, and
soon developed more and more exclusively as an <hi>artistic</hi>
ideal. Hereof the sequence of the writings collected in these two volumes
<note id="rn08" corresp="n08" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
gives sufficient indication; and
this the reader will best recognise from the insertion, in their
midst, of a dramatic sketch: <hi>Wieland der Schmied</hi>, executed
by me in the same chronological order as that in
<pb id="pag29" n="29"/>
which it now stands. If that artistic ideal, which I have ever since held fast
to as my inmost acquisition, under whatsoever form of its
manifestment,—if that ideal remained the only actual outcome
of a labour which taxed the whole energy of my nature; and finally,
if only as a creative artist could I live up to this ideal without
disquietude: then my belief in the German spirit, and the trust in
its predestined place amid the Council of the Nations that took an
ever mightier hold upon me as time rolled on, could alone inspire
me with the hopeful equanimity so indispensable to the
artist—even from the outer aspect of the human lot, however
much the care for the latter had forced its passionate disturbance
upon my views of life. Already I have been enabled to preface the
second edition of <hi>Opera and Drama</hi> by a dedication to a friend
<note id="rn09" corresp="n09" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I had won in the interval,—and
to whose instructive suggestions I have had to thank the most
comforting solutions of the last named problem,—in order to
reach to him the hand of the artist as well as of the man, in token
of the hopes that cheer us both.</p>

<p>I have now only to conclude these comments by
pointing back once more to their opening sentences, wherein I cited
the dictum of Carlyle upon the import of the great world epoch that
dawned upon us with the French Revolution. According to the high
opinion which this great thinker has proclaimed, of the destiny of
the German nation and its spirit of veracity, it must be deemed no
vain presumption that we recognise in this German
people—whose own completed <hi>Reformation</hi> would seem to
have spared it from the need of any share in Revolution—the
pre-ordained "Heroic Wise" on whom he calls to abridge the period
of horrible World-Anarchy. For myself; I feel assured that just the
same relation which my ideal of Art bears to the reality of our
general conditions of existence, that relation is allotted to the
German race in its destiny amid a whole political world in the
throes of "Spontaneous Combustion."</p>
</div> 

<div type="part" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag30"/>
<head rend="up">Art and Revolution.</head>

<p><hi rend="up">Almost</hi> universal is the outcry raised by artists
nowadays against the damage that the Revolution has occasioned
them. It is not the battles of the "barricades," not the sudden
mighty shattering of the pillars of the State, not the hasty change
of Governments,—that is bewailed; for the impression left
behind by such capital events as these, is for the most part
disproportionately fleeting, and short-lived in its violence. But
it is the protracted character of the latest convulsions, that is
so mortally affecting the artistic efforts of the day. The
hitherto-recognised foundations of industry, of commerce, and of
wealth, are now threatened; and though tranquillity has been
outwardly restored, and the general physiognomy of social life
completely re-established, yet there gnaws at the entrails of this
life a carking care, an agonising distress. Reluctance to embark in
fresh undertakings, is maiming credit; he who wishes to preserve
what he has, declines the prospect of uncertain gain; industry is
at a standstill, and—Art has no longer the wherewithal to
live.</p>

<p>It were cruel to refuse human sympathy to the
thousands who are smarting from this blow. Where, a little while
ago, a popular artist was accustomed to receive, at the hands of
the care-free portion of our well-to-do society, the reward of his
appreciated services in sterling payment, and a like prospect of
comfort and contentment in his life,—it is hard for him now
to see himself rejected by tight-closed hands, and abandoned to
lack of occupation. In this he shares the fate of the mechanic, who
must lay the cunning fingers with which he was wont to create a
thousand dainty trifles for the rich, in idleness upon his breast above a
<pb id="pag31" n="31"/>
hungering stomach. He has the right then to bewail his lot;
for to him who feels the smart of pain, has Nature given the gift
of tears. But whether he has a right to confound his own
personality with that of Art, to decry his ills as the ills of Art,
to scold the Revolution as the arch-enemy of Art, because it
interferes with the easy ministry to his own wants: this were grave
matter for question. Before a decision could be arrived at on this
point, at least those artists might be interrogated who have shown
by word and deed that they loved and laboured for Art for its own
pure sake; and from these we should soon learn, that they suffered
also in the former times when others were rejoicing.</p>

<p>The question must be therefore put to Art itself
and its true essence; nor must we in this matter concern ourselves
with mere abstract definitions; for our object will naturally be,
to discover the meaning of Art as a factor in the life of the
State, and to make ourselves acquainted with it as a social
product. A hasty review of the salient points of the history of
European art will be of welcome service to us in this, and assist
us to a solution of the above-named problem—a problem which
is surely not of slight importance.</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>
<pb id="pag32" n="32"/>

<p><hi rend="up">In</hi> any serious investigation of the essence of
our art of to-day, we cannot make one step forward without being
brought face to face with its intimate connection with the <hi>Art
of ancient Greece</hi>. For, in point of fact, our modern art is but
one link in the artistic development of the whole of Europe; and
this development found its starting-point with the Greeks.</p>

<p>After it had overcome the raw religion of its
Asiatic birth-place, built upon the nature-forces of the earth, and
had set thefair, <hi>strong manhood of freedom</hi> upon the pinnacle
of its religious convictions,—the Grecian spirit, at the
flowering-time of its art and polity, found its fullest expression
in the god Apollo, the head and national deity of the Hellenic
race.</p>

<p>It was Apollo,—he who had slain the
Python, the dragon of Chaos; who had smitten down the vain sons of
boastful Niobe by his death-dealing darts; who, through his
priestess at Delphi, had proclaimed to questioning man the
fundamental laws of the Grecian race and nation, thus holding up to
those involved in passionate action, the peaceful, undisturbed
mirror of their inmost, unchangeable Grecian nature,—it was
this Apollo who was the fulfiller of the will of Zeus upon the
Grecian earth; who was, in fact, the Grecian people.</p>

<p>Not as the soft companion of the Muses,—as
the later and more luxurious art of sculpture has alone preserved
his likeness,—must we conceive the Apollo of the spring-time
of the Greeks; but it was with all the traits of energetic
earnestness, beautiful but strong, that the great tragedian
<hi>Æschylus</hi> knew him. Thus, too, the Spartan youths
learnt the nature of the god, when by dance and joust they had
developed their supple bodies to grace and strength; when the boy
was taken from those he loved, and sent on horse to farthest lands
in search of perilous adventure; when the young man was led into
the circle of fellowship,
<pb id="pag33" n="33"/>
his only password that of his beauty and
his native worth, in which alone lay all his might and all his
riches. With such eyes also the Athenian saw the god, when all the
impulses of his fair body, and of his restless soul, 'urged him to
the new birth of his own being through the ideal expression of art;
when the voices, ringing full, sounded forth the choral song,
singing the deeds of the god, the while they gave to the dancers
the mastering measure that meted out the rhythm of the
dance,—which dance itself; in graceful movements, told the
story of those deeds; and when above the harmony of well-ordered
columns he wove the noble roof; heaped one upon the other the broad
crescents of the amphitheatre, and planned the scenic trappings of
the stage. Thus, too, inspired by Dionysus, the tragic poet saw
this glorious god: when, to all the rich elements of spontaneous
art, the harvest of the fairest and most human life, he joined the
bond of speech, and concentrating them all into one focus, brought
forth the highest conceivable form of art—the DRAMA.</p>

<p>The deeds of gods and men, their sufferings,
their delights, as they,—in all solemnity and glee, as
eternal rhythm, as everlasting harmony of every motion and of all
creation,—lay disclosed in the nature of Apollo himself; here
they became actual and true. For all that in them moved and lived,
as it moved and lived in the beholders, here found its peffected
expression; where ear and eye, as soul and heart, lifelike and
actual, seized and perceived all, and saw all in spirit and in body
revealed; so that the imagination need no longer vex itself with
the attempt to conjure up .the image. Such a tragedy-day was a
Feast of the God; for here the god spoke clearly and intelligibly
forth, and the poet, as his high-priest, stood real and embodied in
his- art-work, led the measures of the dance, raised the voices to
a choir, and in ringing words proclaimed the utterances of godlike
wisdom.</p>

<p>Such was the Grecian work of art; such their god
Apollo, incarnated in actual, living art; such was the Grecian
people in its highest truth and beauty.</p>

<p>This race, in every branch, in every unit, was
rich in individuality,
<pb id="pag34" n="34"/>
restless in its energy, in the goal of one
undertaking seeing but the starting-point of a fresh one; in
constant mutual intercourse, in daily-changing alliances, in
daily-varying strifes; to-day in luck, to-morrow in mischance;
to-day in peril of the utmost danger, to-morrow absolutely
exterminating its foes; in all its relations, both internal and
external, breathing the life of the freest and most unceasing
development. This people, streaming in its thousands from the
State-assembly, from the Agora, from land, from sea, from camps,
from distant parts,—filled with its thirty thousand heads the
amphitheatre. To see the most pregnant of all tragedies, the
"Prometheus," came they; in this Titanic masterpiece to see the
image of themselves, to read the riddle of their own actions, to
fuse their own being and their own communion with that of their
god; and thus in noblest, stillest peace to live again the life
which a brief space of time before, they had lived in restless
activity and accentuated individuality.</p>

<p>Ever jealous of his personal independence, and
hunting down the "Tyrannos" who, howsoever wise and lofty, might
imperil from any quarter the freedom of his own strong will: the
Greek despised the soft complacence which, under the convenient
shelter of another's care, can lay itself down to passive egoistic
rest. Constantly on his. guard, untiring in warding off all outside
influence: he gave not even to the hoariest tradition the right
over his own free mundane life, his actions, or his thoughts. Yet,
at the summons of the choir his voice was hushed, he yielded
himself a willing slave to the deep significance of the scenic
show, and hearkened to the great story of Necessity told by the
tragic poet through the mouths of his gods. and heroes on the
stage. For in the tragedy he found himself again,—nay, found
the noblest part of his own nature united with the noblest
characteristics of the whole nation; and from his inmost soul, as
it there unfolded itself to him, proclaimed the Pythian oracle. At
once both God and Priest, glorious godlike man, one with the
Universal, the Universal summed up in him: like one of those
<pb id="pag35" n="35"/>
thousand fibres which form the plant's united life, his slender
form sprang from the soil into the upper air; there to bring forth
the one lovely flower which shed its fragrant breath upon eternity.
This flower was the highest work of Art, its scent the spirit of
Greece; and still it intoxi cates our senses and forces from us the
avowal, that it were better to be for half a day a Greek in
presence of this tragic Art-work, than to all eternity
an—un-Greek <hi>God</hi>!</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>

<p>Hand-in-hand with the dissolution of the
Athenian State, marched the downfall of Tragedy. As the spirit of
<hi>Community</hi> split itself along a thousand lines of egoistic
cleavage, so was the great united work of Tragedy disintegrated
into its individual factors. Above the ruins of tragic art was
heard the cry of the mad laughter of Aristophanes, the maker of
comedies; and, at the bitter end, every impulse of Art stood still
before Philosophy, who read with gloomy mien her homilies upon the
fleeting stay of human strength and beauty.</p>

<p>To <hi>Philosophy</hi> and not to Art, belong the
two thousand years which, since the decadence of Grecian Tragedy,
have passed till our own day. In vain did Art send hither and
thither her dazzling beams into the night of discontented thought,
of mankind grovelling in its madness; they were but the cries, of
pain or joy, of the units who had escaped from the desert of the
multitude, and, like fortunate wanderers from distant lands, had
reached the hidden, bubbling spring of pure Castalian waters, at
which they slaked their thirsty lips but dared not reach the
quickening draught unto the world. Or else it was, that Art entered
on the service of one or other of those abstract ideas or even
conventions which, now lighter and now more heavily, weighed down a
suffering humanity and cast in fetters the freedom both of
individuals and communities. But never more was she the free
expression of a free community. Yet true Art is highest freedom,
and only the highest freedom can bring her forth from out itself; no
<pb id="pag36" n="36"/>
commandment, no ordinance, in short, no aim apart from Art, can
call her to arise.</p>

<p>The Romans,—whose national art had early
vanished before the influence of an indoctrinated Grecian
art,— procured the services of Greek architects, sculptors
and painters; and their own <hi>savants</hi> trained themselves to
Grecian rhetoric and versification. Their giant theatres, however,
they opened not to the gods and heroes of the ancient myths, nor to
the free dancers and singers of the sacred choirs! No! Wild beasts,
lions, panthers and elephants, must tear themselves to pieces in
their amphitheatres, to glut the Roman eye; and gladiators, slaves
trained up to the due pitch of strength and agility, must satiate
the Roman ear with the hoarse gulp of death.</p>

<p>These brutal conquerors of the world were
pleased to wallow in the most absolute realism; their imagination
could find its only solace in the most material of presentments.
Their philosophers they gladly left to flee shuddering from public
life to abstract speculations; but, for themselves, they loved to
revel in concrete and open bloodthirstiness, beholding human
suffering set before them in absolute physical reality.</p>

<p>These gladiators and fighters with wild beasts,
were sprung from every European nation; and the kings, nobles, and
serfs of these nations were all slaves alike of the Roman Emperor,
who showed them, in this most practical of ways, that all men were
equals; just as, on the other hand, he himself was often shown most
palpably by his own Pretorian Guard, that he also was no more than
a mere slave.</p>

<p>This mutual and general slavery—so clear,
that no one could gainsay it—yearned, as every universal
feeling of the world must yearn, for an adequate expression of
itself. But the manifest degradation and dishonour of all men; the
consciousness of the complete corruption of all manly worth; the
inevitably ensuing loathing of the material pleasures that now
alone were left; the deep contempt for their own acts and deeds,
from which all spirit of Genius
<pb id="pag37" n="37"/>
and impulse of Art had long since
joined with Freedom in her flight; this sorrowful existence,
without actual aimful life,—could find but one expression;
which, though certainly universal as the condition that called it
forth, must yet be the direct antithesis of Art. For Art is
pleasure in itself; in existence, in community; but the condition
of that period, at the close of the Roman mastery of the world, was
self-contempt, disgust with existence, horror of community. Thus
<hi>Art</hi> could never be the true expression of this condition:
its only possible expression was <hi>Christianity</hi>.</p>

<p>Christianity adjusts the ills of an honourless,
useless, and sorrowful existence of mankind on earth, by the
miraculous love of God; who had not — as the noble Greek
supposed—created man for a happy and self-conscious life upon
this earth, but had here imprisoned him in a loathsome dungeon: so
as, in reward for the self-contempt that poisoned him therein, to
prepare him for a posthumous state of endless comfort and inactive
ecstasy. Man was therefore bound to remain in this deepest and
unmanliest degradation, and no activity of this present life should
he exercise; for this accursed life was, in truth, the world of the
devil, <hi>i.e.</hi>, of the senses; and by every action in it, he
played into the devil's hands. Therefore the poor wretch who, in
the enjoyment of his natural powers, made this life his own
possession, must suffer after death the eternal torments of hell!
Naught was required of mankind but <hi>Faith</hi>—that
is to say, the confession of its miserable plight, and the
giving up of all spontaneous attempt to escape from out this
misery; for the <hi>undeserved Grace</hi> of God was alone to set it
free.</p>

<p>The historian knows not surely that this was the
view of the humble son of the Galilean carpenter; who, looking on
the misery of his fellow-men, proclaimed that he had not come to
bring peace, but a sword into the world ; whom we must love for the
anger with which he thundered forth against the hypocritical
Pharisees who fawned upon the power of Rome, so as the better to
bind and heartlessly
<pb id="pag38" n="38"/>
enslave the people; and finally, who preached
the reign of universal human love—a love he could never have
enjoined on men whose duty it should be to despise their fellows
and themselves. The inquirer more clearly discerns the hand of the
miraculously converted Pharisee, Paul, and the zeal with which, in
his conversion of the heathen, he followed so successfully the
monition: "Be ye wise as serpents . . . ;" he may also estimate the
deep and universal degradation of civilised mankind, and see in
this the historical soil from which the full-grown tree of finally
developed Christian dogma drew forth the sap that fed its fruit.
But thus much the candid <hi>artist</hi> perceives at the first
glance: that neither was Christianity Art, nor could it ever bring
forth from itself the true and living Art.</p>

<p>The free Greek, who set himself upon the
pinnacle of Nature, could procreate Art from very joy in manhood:
the Christian, who impartially cast aside both Nature and himself;
could only sacrifice to his God on the altar of renunciation; he
durst not bring his actions or his work as offering, but believed
that he must seek His favour by abstinence from all self-prompted
venture. Art is the highest expression of activity of a race that
has developed its physical beauty in unison with itself and Nature;
and man must reap the highest joy from the world of sense, before
he can mould therefrom the implements of his art; for from the
world of sense alone, can he derive so much as the impulse to
artistic creation. The Christian, on the contrary, if he fain would
create an art-work that should correspond to his belief; must
derive his impulse from the essence of abstract spirit
(<hi>Geist</hi>), from the grace of God, and therein find his
tools.—What, then, could he take for aim? Surely not physical
beauty,—mirrored in his eyes as an incarnation of the devil?
And how could pure spirit, at any time, give birth to a something
that could be cognised by the senses?</p>

<p>All pondering of this problem is fruitless; the
course of history shows too unmistakeably the results of these two
opposite methods. Where the Greeks, for their edification,
<pb id="pag39" n="39"/>
gathered in the amphitheatre for the space of a few short hours full of the
deepest meaning: the Christian shut himself away in the life-long
imprisonment of a cloister. In the one case, the Popular Assembly
was the judge: in the other, the Inquisition; here the State
developed to an honourable Democracy: there, to a hypocritical
Despotism.</p>

<p><hi>Hypocrisy</hi> is the salient feature, the
peculiar characteristic, of every century of our Christian era,
right down to our own day; and indeed this vice has always stalked
abroad with more crying shamelessness, in direct proportion as
mankind, in spite of Christendom, has refreshed its vigour from its
own unquenchable and inner well-spring, and ripened toward the
fulfilment of its true purpose. Nature is so strong, so
inexhaustible in its regenerative resources, that no conceivable
violence could weaken its creative force. Into the ebbing veins of
the Roman world, there poured the healthy blood of the fresh
Germanic nations. Despite the adoption of Christianity, a ceaseless
thirst of doing, delight in bold adventure, and unbounded
self-reliance, remained the native element of the new masters of
the world. But, as in the whole history of the Middle Ages we
always light upon one prominent factor, the warfare between worldly
might and the despotism of the Roman Church: so, when this new
world sought for a form of utterance, it could only find it in
opposition to, and strife against, the spirit of Christendom. The
Art of Christian Europe could never proclaim itself; like that of
ancient Greece, as the expression of a world attuned to harmony;
for reason that its inmost being was incurably and irreconcilably
split up between the force of conscience and the instinct of life,
between the ideal and the reality. Like the order of Chivalry
itself; the chivalric poetry of the Middle Ages, in attempting to
heal this severance, could, even amid its loftiest imagery, but
bring to light the falsehood of the reconciliation; the higher and
the more proudly it soared on high, so the more visibly gaped the
abyss between the actual life and the idealised existence,
<pb id="pag40" n="40"/>
between the raw, passionate bearing of these knights in physical life and
their too delicate, etherealised behaviour in romance. For the same
reason did actual life, leaving the pristine, noble, and certainly
not ungraceful customs of the People, become corrupt and vicious;
for it durst not draw the nourishment for its art-impulse from out
of its own being, its joy in itself; and its own physical
demeanour; but was sent for all its spiritual sustenance to
Christianity, which warned it off from the first taste of life's
delight, as from a thing accursed.—The poetry of Chivalry was
thus the honourable hypocrisy of fanaticism, the parody of heroism:
in place of Nature, it offered a convention.</p>

<p>Only when the enthusiasm of belief had
smouldered down, when the Church openly proclaimed herself as
naught but a worldly despotism appreciable by the senses, in
alliance with the no less material worldly absolutism of the
temporal rule which she had sanctified: only then, commenced the
so-called Renaissance of Art. That wherewith man had racked his
brains so long, he would fain now see before him clad in body, like
the Church itself in all its worldly pomp. But this was only
possible on condition that he- opened his eyes once more, and
restored his senses to their rights. Yet when man took the objects
of belief and the revelations of phantasy and set them before his
eyes in physical beauty, and with the artist's delight in that
physical beauty,—this was a complete denial of the very
essence of the Christian religion; and it was the deepest
humiliation to Christendom that the guidance to these art-creations
must be sought from the pagan art of Greece. Nevertheless, the
Church appropriated to herself this newly-roused art-impulse, and
did not blush to deck herself with the borrowed plumes of paganism;
thus trumpeting her own hypocrisy.</p>

<p>Worldly dominion, however, had its share also in
the revival of art. After centuries of combat, their power armed
against all danger from below, the security of riches awoke in the
ruling classes the desire for more refined enjoyment of this
wealth: they took into their pay the
<pb id="pag41" n="41"/>
arts whose lessons Greece had
taught. "<hi>Free</hi>" Art now served as handmaid to these exalted
masters, and, looking into the matter more closely, it is difficult
to decide who was the greater hypocrite:—Louis XIV., when he
sat and heard the Grecian hate of Tyrants, declaimed in polished
verses from the boards of his Court-theatre; or Corneille and
Racine, when, to win the favour of their lord, they set in the
mouths of their stage-heroes the warm words of freedom and
political virtue, of ancient Greece and Rome.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>Could Art be present there in very deed, where
it blossomed not forth as the living utterance of a free,
self-conscious community, but was taken into the service of the
very powers which hindered the self-development of that community,
and was thus capriciously transplanted from foreign climes? No,
surely! Yet we shall see that Art, instead of enfranchising herself
from eminently respectable masters, such as were the Holy Church
and witty Princes, preferred to sell her soul and body to a far
worse mistress—<hi>Commerce</hi>.</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>

<p>The Grecian Zeus, the father of all life, sent a
messenger from Olympus to the gods upon their wanderings through
the world—the fair young <hi>Hermes</hi>. The busy thought of
Zeus was he; winged he clove from the heights above to the depths
below, to proclaim the omnipresence of the sovereign god. He
presided, too, at the death of men, and led their shades into the
still realm of Night; for wherever the stern necessity of Nature's
ordering showed clearly forth, the god Hermes was visible in
action, as the embodied thought of Zeus.</p>

<p>The Romans had a god, <hi>Mercury</hi>, whom they
likened to the Grecian Hermes. But with them his winged mission
gained a more practical intent. For them it was the restless
diligence of their chaffering and usurious merchants, who streamed
from all the ends of the earth into the heart of the Roman world;
to bring its luxurious masters, in
<pb id="pag42" n="42"/>
barter for solid gain, all those
delights of sense which their own immediately surrounding Nature
could not afford them. To the Roman, surveying its essence and its
methods, Commerce seemed no more nor less than trickery; and
though, by reason of his ever-growing luxury, this world of trade
appeared a necessary evil, he cherished a deep contempt for all its
doings. Thus Mercury, the god of merchants, became for him the god
withal of cheats and sharpers.</p>

<p>This slighted god, however, revenged himself
upon the arrogant Romans, and usurped their mastery of the world.
For, crown his head with the halo of Christian hypocrisy, decorate
his breast with the soulless tokens of dead feudal orders: and ye
have in him the god of the modern world, the holy-noble god of
'five per cent,' the ruler and the master of the ceremonies of our
modern—'art.' Ye may see him embodied in a strait-laced
English banker, whose daughter perchance has been given in marriage
to a ruined peer. Ye may see- him in this gentleman, when he
engages the chief singers of the Italian Opera to sing before him
in his own drawing-room rather than in the theatre, because he will
have the glory of paying higher for them here than there; but on no
account, even here, on the sacred Sunday. Behold <hi>Mercury</hi> and
his docile handmaid, <hi>Modern Art</hi>!</p>

<p>This is Art, as it now fills the entire
civilised world! Its true essence is Industry; its ethical aim, the
gaining of gold; its aesthetic purpose, the entertainment of those
whose time hangs heavily on their hands. From the heart of our
modern society, from the golden calf of wholesale Speculation,
stalled at the meeting of its cross-roads, our art sucks forth its
life-juice, borrows a hollow grace from the lifeless relics of the
chivalric conventions of mediaeval times, and—blushing not to
fleece the poor, for all its professions of
Christianity—descends to the depths of the proletariate,
enervating, demoralising, and dehumanising everything on which it
sheds its venom.</p>

<p>Its pleasaunce it has set up in the Theatre, as did the art
<pb id="pag43" n="43"/>
of Greece in its maturity; and, indeed, it has a claim
upon the theatre: for is it not the expression of our current views
of present life? Our modern stage materialises the ruling spirit of
our social life, and publishes its daily record in a way that no
other branch of art can hope to rival; for it prepares its feasts,
night in night out, in almost every town of Europe. Thus, as the
broad-strewn art of drama, it denotes, to all appearance, the
flower of our culture; just as the Grecian tragedy denoted the
culminating point of the Grecian spirit; but ours is the
effiorescence of corruption, of a hollow, soulless and unnatural
condition of human affairs and human relations.</p>

<p>This condition of things we need not further
characterise here; we need but honestly search the contents and the
workings of our public art, especially that of the stage, in order
to see the spirit of the times reflected therein as in a faithful
mirror; for such a mirror public Art has ever been.
<note id="rn10" corresp="n10" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>Thus we can by no means recognise in our
theatrical art the genuine Drama; that one, indivisible, supreme
creation of the mind of man. Our theatre merely offers the
convenient <hi>locale</hi> for the tempting exhibition of the
heterogeneous wares of art-manufacture. H ow incapable is our stage
to gather up each branch of Art in its highest and most perfect
expression—the Drama—it shows at once in its division
into the two opposing classes, Play and Opera; whereby the
idealising influence of music is forbidden to the Play, and the
Opera is forestalled of the living heart and lofty purpose of
actual drama. Thus on the one hand, the spoken Play can never, with but few
<pb id="pag44" n="44"/>
exceptions, lift itself up to the ideal flight of poetry;
but, for very reason of the poverty of its means of
utterance,—to say nothing of the demoralising influence of
our public life,—must fall from height to depth, from the
warm atmosphere of passion into the cold element of intrigue. On
the other hand, the Opera becomes a chaos of sensuous impressions
jostling one another without rhyme or reason, from which each one
may choose at will what pleases best his fancy; here the alluring
movements of a dancer, there the <hi>bravura</hi> passage of a
singer; here the dazzling effect of a triumph of the scene-painter,
there the astounding efforts of a Vulcan of the orchestra. Do we
not read from day to day, that this or that new opera is a
masterpiece because it contains a goodly number of fine
<hi>arias</hi> and duets, the instrumentation is extremely brilliant,
&amp;c., &amp;c.? The aim which alone can justify the employment of
such complex means,—the great dramatic aim,—folk never
give so much as a thought.</p>

<p>Such verdicts as these are shallow, but honest;
they show exactly what is the position of the- audience. There are
even many of our most popular artists who do not in the least
conceal the fact, that they have no other ambition than to satisfy
this shallow audience. They are wise in their generation; for when
the prince leaves a heavy dinner, the banker a fatiguing financial
operation, the working man a weary day of toil, and go to the
theatre: they ask for rest, distraction, and amusement, and are in
no mood for renewed effort and fresh expenditure of force. This
argument is so convincing, that we can only reply by saying: it
would be more decorous to employ for this purpose any other thing
in the wide world, but not the body and soul of Art. We shall then
be told, however, that if we do not employ Art in this manner, it
must perish from out our public life: <hi>i.e.</hi>,—that the
artist will lose the means of living.</p>

<p>On this side everything is lamentable, indeed,
but candid, genuine, and honest; civilised corruption, and modern
Christian dulness!</p>

<pb id="pag45" n="45"/>

<p>But, affairs having undeniably come to such a
pass, what shall we say to the hypocritical pretence of many an
art-hero of our times, whose fame is now the order of the day?
—when he dons the melancholy counterfeit of true artistic
inspiration; when he racks his brains for thoughts of deep intent,
and ever seeks fresh food for awe, setting heaven and hell in
motion: in short, when he behaves just like those honest journeymen
of art who avowed that one must <hi>not</hi> be too particular if one
wish to get rid of one's goods. What shall we say, when these
heroes not only seek to entertain, but expose themselves to all the
peril of fatiguing, in order to be thought profound; when, too,
they renounce all hope of substantial profit, and even—though
only a rich man, born and bred, can afford that!—spend their
own money upon their productions, thus offering up the highest
modern sacrifice? To what purpose, this enormous waste? Alas! there
yet remains one other thing than gold, a thing that nowadays a man
may buy for gold like any other pleasure: that thing is
<hi>Fame</hi>!—Yet what sort of fame is there to reach in our public art?
Only the fame of the same publicity for which this art is planned,
and which the fame-lusting man can never obtain but by submission
to its most trivial claims. Thus he deludes both himself and the
public, in giving it his piebald art-work; while the public deludes
both itself and him, in bestowing on him its applause. But this
mutual lie is worthy of the lying nature of modern Fame itself; for
we are adepts in the art of decking out our own self-seeking
passions with the monstrous lies of such sweet-sounding names as
"Patriotism," "Honour," "Law and Order," &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>

<p>Yet, why do we deem it necessary so publicly to
cheat each one the other?—Because, mid all the ruling evils,
these notions and these virtues are present still within our
conscience; though truly in our <hi>guilty</hi> conscience. For it is
sure, that where honour and truth are really present, there also is
true Art at hand. The greatest and most noble minds—whom
Æschylus and Sophocles would have
<pb id="pag46" n="46"/>
greeted with the kiss of
brotherhood—for centuries have raised their voices in the
wilderness. We have heard their cry, and it lingers still within
our ears; but from our base and frivolous hearts we have washed
away its living echo. We tremble at their fame, but mock their art.
We admit their rank as artists of lofty aim, but rob them of the
realisation of their art-work; for the one great, genuine work of
Art they cannot bring to life unaided: we, too, must help them in
its birth. The tragedies of Æschylus and Sophocles were the
work of Athens!</p>

<p>What boots, then, the fame of these Masters?
What serves it us, that <hi>Shakespeare</hi>, like a second Creator,
has opened for us the endless realm of human nature? What serves
it, that <hi>Beethoven</hi> has lent to Music the manly, independent
strength of Poetry? Ask the threadbare caricatures of your
theatres, ask the street-minstrel commonplaces of your operas: and
ye have your answer! But do ye need to ask? Alas, no! Ye know it
right well; indeed, ye would not have it otherwise; ye only give
yourselves the air as though ye knew it not!</p>

<p>What then is your Art, and what your Drama?</p>

<p>The Revolution of February deprived the Paris
theatres of public support; many of them were on the brink of
bankruptcy. After the events of June, Cavaignac, busied with the
maintenance of the existing order of society, came to their aid and
demanded a subvention for their continu ance. Why?—Because
the Breadless Classes, the <hi>Prolétariat</hi>, would be
augmented by the closing of the theatres.—So; this interest
alone has the State in the Stage! It sees in it an industrial
workshop, and, to boot, an influence that may calm the passions,
absorb the excitement, and divert the threatening agitation of the
heated public mind; which broods in deepest discontent, seeking for
the way by which dishonoured human nature may return to its true
self; even though it be at cost of the continuance of our—so
appropriate theatrical institutions!</p>

<p>Well! the avowal is candid; and on all fours
with the frankness of this admission, stands the complaint
<pb id="pag47" n="47"/>
of our modern artists and their hatred for the Revolution. Yet what has
<hi>Art</hi> in common with these cares and these complaints?</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>

<p>Let us now compare the chief features of the
public art of modern Europe with those of the public art of Greece,
in order to set clearly before our eyes their characteristic points
of difference.</p>

<p>The public art of the Greeks, which reached its
zenith in their Tragedy, was the expression of the deepest and the
noblest principles of the people's consciousness: with <hi>us</hi>
the deepest and noblest of man's consciousness is the direct
opposite of this, namely the denunciation of our public art. To the
Greeks the production of a tragedy was a religious festival, where
the gods bestirred themselves upon the stage and bestowed on men
their wisdom: <hi>our</hi> evil conscience has so lowered the theatre
in public estimation, that it is the duty of the police to prevent
the stage from meddling in the slightest with religion;
<note id="rn11" corresp="n11" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
a circumstance as characteristic of our religion
as of our art. Within the ample boundaries of the Grecian
amphitheatre, the whole populace was wont to witness the
performances: in our superior theatres, loll only the affluent
classes. The Greeks sought the instruments of their art in the
products of the highest associate culture: we seek ours in the
deepest social barbarism. The education of the Greek, from his
earliest youth, made himself the subject of his own artistic
treatment and artistic enjoyment, in body as in spirit: our foolish
education, fashioned for the most part to fit us merely for future
industrial gain, gives us a ridiculous, and withal arrogant
satisfaction with our own unfitness for art, and forces us to seek
the subjects of any kind of artistic
<pb id="pag48" n="48"/>
amusement outside
ourselves,—like the rake who goes for the fleeting joys of
love to the arms of a prostitute. Thus the Greek was his own actor,
singer, and dancer; his share in the performance of a tragedy was
to him the highest pleasure in the work of Art itself, and he
rightly held it an honour to be entitled by his beauty and his
culture to be called to this beloved task: we, on the other hand,
permit a certain portion of our proletariate, which is to be found
in every social stratum, to be instructed for our entertainment;
thus prurient vanity, claptrap, and at times unseemly haste for
fortune-making, fill up the ranks of our dramatic companies. Where
the Grecian artist found his only reward in his own delight in the
masterpiece, in its success, and the public approbation: we have
the modern artist boarded, lodged, and—<hi>paid</hi>. And thus
we reach the essential distinction between the two: with the Greeks
their public art was very <hi>Art</hi>, with us it is
artistic—<hi>Handicraft</hi>.</p>

<p>The <hi>true artist</hi> finds delight not only in
the aim of his creation, but also in the very process of creation,
in the handling and moulding of his material. The very act of
production is to him a gladsome, satisfying activity: no toil. The
<hi>journeyman</hi> reckons only the goal of his labour, the profit
which his toil shall bring him; the energy which he expends, gives
him no pleasure; it is but a fatigue, an inevitable task, a burden
which he would gladly give over to a machine; his toil is but a
fettering chain. For this reason he is never present with his work
in spirit, but always looking beyond it to its goal, which he fain
would reach as quickly as he may. Yet, if the immediate aim of the
journeyman is the satisfaction of an impulse of his own, such as
the preparing of his own dwelling, his chattels, his raiment,
&amp;c.: then, together with his prospective pleasure in the
hasting value of these objects, there also enters by degrees a bent
to such a fashioning of the material as shall agree with his
individual tastes. After he has fulfilled the demands of bare
necessity, the creation of that which answers to less pressing
needs will elevate itself to the rank
<pb id="pag49" n="49"/>
of artistic production. But
if he bargains away the product of his toil, all that remains to
him is its mere money-worth; and thus his energy can never rise
above the character of The busy strokes of a machine; in his eyes
it is but weariness, and bitter, sorrowful toil. The latter is the
lot of the Slave of Industry; and our modern factories afford us
the sad picture of the deepest degradation of man,—constant
labour, killing both body and soul, without joy or love, often
almost without aim.</p>

<p>It is impossible to mistake the lamentable
effects of Christian dogma, in this also. As this dogma set man's
goal entirely outside his earthly being, and that goal was centred
in an absolute and superhuman God: so only from the aspect of its
most inevitable needs, could life remain an object of man's care;
for, having once received the gift of life, it was his bounden duty
to maintain it until that day when God alone should please relieve
him of its burden. But in no wise should his needs awake a lust to
treat with loving hand the matter given him for their satisfaction;
only the abstract aim of life's bare maintenance could justify the
operation of his senses. And thus we see with horror the spirit of
modern Christianity embodied in a cotton-mill: to speed the rich,
God has become our Industry, which only holds the wretched
Christian labourer to life until the heavenly courses of the stars
of commerce bring round the gracious dispensation that sends him to
a better world.</p>

<p>The Greek knew no handicraft, rightly so
described. The so-called necessaries of life,—which, strictly
speaking, make up the whole concernment of our private and our
public life,—he deemed unworthy to rank as objects of special
and engrossing attention. His soul lived only in publicity, in the
great fellowship of his nation; the needs of this public life made
up the total of his care; whereas these needs were satisfied by the
patriot, the statesman, and the artist, but not the handicraftsman.
The Greek went forth to the delights of this publicity from a
simple, unassuming home. It would have seemed to him disgraceful
<pb id="pag50" n="50"/>
and degrading to revel, within the costly walls of a private
palace, in the refinements of luxury and extravagance which to-day
fill out the life of a hero of the Bourse; for this was the
distinction that he drew between himself and the egoistic
"Barbarians" of the East. He sought the culture of his body in the
general public baths and gymnasia; his simple, noble clothing was
for the most part the artistic care of the women; and whenever he
fell upon the necessity of manual toil, it was of his very nature
that he should find out its artistic side, and straightway raise it
to an art. But the drudgery of household labour he thrust
away—to <hi>Slaves</hi>.</p>

<p>This Slave thus became the fateful hinge of the
whole destiny of the world. The Slave, by sheer reason of the
assumed necessity of his slavery, has exposed the null and fleeting
nature of all the strength and beauty of exclusive Grecian manhood,
and has shown to all time that <hi>Beauty and Strength, as
attributes of public life, can then alone prove lasting blessings,
when they are the common gifts of all mankind</hi>.</p>

<p>Unhappily, things have not as yet advanced
beyond the mere demonstration. In fact, the Revolution of the human
race, that has lasted now two thousand years, has been almost
exclusively in the spirit of Reaction. It has dragged down the
fair, free man to itself, to slavery; the slave has not become a
freeman, but the freeman a slave.</p>

<p>To the Greek the fair, strong man alone was
free, and this man was none other than <hi>himself</hi>; whatever lay
outside the circle of Grecian manhood and Apollonian priesthood,
was to him <hi>barbarian</hi>, and if he employed
it,—<hi>slave</hi>. True that the man who was not Greek, was
actually barbarian and slave; but he was still a <hi>man</hi>, and
his barbarianism and his slavery were not his nature but his fate:
the sin of history against his nature, just as to-day it is the sin
of our social system, that the healthiest nations in the healthiest
climates have brought forth cripples and outcasts. This historical
sin, however, was destined soon to be avenged upon the free Greek
himself. Where there lived among the nations no feeling of
<hi>absolute human-love</hi>,
<pb id="pag51" n="51"/>
the Barbarian needed only to subjugate
the Greek: and all was over with Grecian freedom, strength, and
beauty. Thus, in deep humiliation, two hundred million men, huddled
in helpless confusion in the Roman empire, too soon found out
that—when <hi>all</hi> men cannot be <hi>free alike</hi> and
<hi>happy</hi>—all men must <hi>suffer alike</hi> as
<hi>slaves</hi>.</p>

<p>Thus we are slaves until this very day, with but
the sorry consolation of knowing that we are all slaves together.
Slaves, to whom once the Christian Apostles and the Emperor
Constantine gave counsel, to patiently submit to a suffering life
below, for sake of a better world above; slaves, whom bankers and
manufacturers teach nowadays to seek the goal of Being in manual
toil for daily bread. Free from this slavery, in his time, felt the
Emperor Constantine alone; when he enthroned himself a
pleasure-seeking heathen despot, above this life which he had
taught his believing subj ects to deem so useless. And free alone,
to-day,—at least in the sense of freedom from open
slavery,—feels he who has money; for he is thus able to
employ his life to some other end than that of winning the bare
means of subsistence. Thus, as the struggle for freedom from the
general slavery proclaimed itself in Roman and Medieval times as
the reaching after absolute dominion: so it comes to light to-day
as the greed for gold. And we must not be astonished, if even Art
grasps after gold; for everything strives to its freedom, towards
its goda—and our god is Gold, our religion the Pursuit of
Wealth.</p>

<p>Yet Art remains in its essence what it ever was;
we have only to say, that it is not present in our modern public
system. It lives, however, and has ever lived in the individual
conscience, as the one fair, indivisible Art. Thus the only
difference is this: with the Greeks it lived in the public
conscience, whereas to.day it lives alone in the conscience of
private persons, the public <hi>un</hi>-conscience recking nothing of
it. Therefore in its flowering time the Grecian Art was
<hi>conservative</hi>, because it was a worthy and adequate
expression of the public conscience: with us,
<pb id="pag52" n="52"/>
true Art is <hi>revolutionary</hi>, because its very existence is opposed to the
ruling spirit of the community.</p>

<p>With the Greeks the perfect work of art, the
Drama, was the abstract and epitome of all that was expressible in
the Grecian nature. It was the nation itself—in intimate
connection with its own history—that stood mirrored in its
art-work, that communed with itself and, within the span of a few
hours, feasted its eyes with its own noblest essence. All division
of this enjoyment, all scattering of the forces concentred on
<hi>one</hi> point, all diversion of the elements into separate
channels, must needs have been as hurtful to this <hi>unique</hi> and
noble Art-work as to the like-formed State itself; and thus it
could only mature, but never change its nature. Thus Art was
conservative, just as the noblest sons of this epoch of the Grecian
State were themselves conservative. <hi>Æschylus</hi> is the
very type of this conservatism, and his loftiest work of
conservative art is the "<hi>Oresteia</hi>," with which he stands
alike opposed as poet to the youthful <hi>Sophocles</hi>, as
statesman to the revolutionary <hi>Pericles</hi>. The victory of
Sophocles, like that of Pericles, was fully in the spirit of the
advancing development of mankind; but the deposition of
Æschylus was the first downward step from the height of
Grecian Tragedy, the first beginning of the dissolution of Athenian
Polity.</p>

<p>With the subsequent downfall of Tragedy, Art
became less and less the expression of the public conscience. The
Drama separated into its component parts; rhetoric, sculpture,
painting, music, &amp;c., forsook the ranks in which they had moved
in unison before; each one to take its own way, and in lonely
self-sufficiency to pursue its own development. And thus it was
that at the Renaissance of Art we lit first upon these isolated
Grecian arts, which had sprung from the wreck of Tragedy. The great
unitarian Art-work of Greece could not at once reveal itself to our
bewildered, wandering, piecemeal minds in all its fulness; for how
could we have understood it? But we knew how to appropriate those
dissevered handiworks of Art; for as
<pb id="pag53" n="53"/>
goodly handiwork, to which
category they had already sunk in the Romo-Greek world, they lay
not so far from our own nature and our minds. The guild and
handicraft spirit of the new citizenship rose quick and lively in
the towns ; princes and notabilities were well pleased that their
castles should be more becomingly built and decorated, their walls
bedecked with more attractive paintings, than had been possible to
the raw art of the Middle Ages; the priests laid hands on rhetoric
for their pulpits and music for their choirs; and the new world of
handicraft worked valiantly among the separate arts of Greece, so
far at least as it understood them or thought them fitted to its
purpose.</p>

<p>Each one of these dissevered arts, nursed and
luxuriously tended for the entertainment of the rich, has filled
the world to overflowing with its products; in each, great minds
have brought forth marvels; but the one true Art has not been born
again, either in or since the Renaissance. The perfect Art-work,
the great united utterance of a free and lovely public life, the
<hi>Drama, Tragedy</hi>,—howsoever great the poets who have
here and there indited tragedies,—is not yet born again: for
reason that it cannot be <hi>re-born</hi>, but must be <hi>born
anew</hi>.</p>

<p>Only the great <hi>Revolution of Mankind</hi>,
whose beginnings erstwhile shattered Grecian Tragedy, can win for
us this Art-work. For only this Revolution can bring forth from its
hidden depths, in the new beauty of a nobler Universalism,
<hi>that</hi> which it once tore from the conservative spirit of a
time of beautiful but narrow-meted culture—and tearing it,
engulphed.</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>

<p>But only <hi>Revolution</hi>, not slavish
<hi>Restoration</hi>, can give us back that highest Art-work. The
task we have before us is immeasurably greater than that already
accomplished in 'days of old. If the Grecian Art-work embraced the
spirit of a fair and noble nation, the Art-work of the Future must
embrace the spirit of a free mankind, delivered from every
<pb id="pag54" n="54"/>
shackle of hampering nationality; its racial imprint must be no more than
an embellishment, the individual charm of manifold diversity, and
not a cramping barrier. We have thus quite other work to do, than
to tinker at the resuscitation of old Greece. Indeed, the foolish
restoration of a sham Greek mode of art has been attempted
already,—for what will our artists not attempt, to order? But
nothing better than an inane patchwork could ever come of
it—the offspring of the same juggling endeavour which we find
evinced by the whole history of our official civihisation, seized
as it is with a constant wish to avoid the only lawful endeavour,
the striving after Nature.</p>

<p>No, we do not wish to revert to Greekdom; for
what the Greeks knew not, and, knowing not, came by their downfall:
that know <hi>we</hi>. It is their very fall, whose cause we now
perceive after years of misery and deepest universal suffering,
that shows us clearly what we should become; it shows us that we
must love all men before we can rightly love ourselves, before we
can regain true joy in our own personality. From the dishonouring
slave-yoke of universal journeymanhood, with its sickly Money-soul,
we wish to soar to the free manhood of Art, with the star-rays of
its World-soul; from the weary, overburdened day-labourers of
Commerce, we desire to grow to fair strong men, to whom the world
belongs as an eternal, inexhaustible source of the highest delights
of Art.</p>

<p>To this end we need the mightiest force of
Revolution; for only <hi>that</hi> revolutionary force can boot us,
which presses forward to the goal—to that goal whose
attainment alone can justify its earliest exercise upon the
disintegration of Greek Tragedy and the dissolution of the Athenian
State.</p>

<p>But whence shall we derive this force, in our
present state of utmost weakness? Whence the manly strength against
the crushing pressure of a civilisation which disowns all manhood,
against the arrogance of a culture which employs the human mind as
naught but steam-power for its machinery? Whence the light with
which to illumine the gruesome ruling heresy, that this civilisation
<pb id="pag55" n="55"/>
and this culture are of more value in themselves than
the true living Man?—that Man has worth and value only as a
tool of these despotic abstract powers, and not by virtue of his
manhood?</p>

<p>When the learned physician is at the end of his
resources, in despair we turn at last to—<hi>Nature</hi>.
Nature, then, and only Nature, can unravel the skein of this great
world-fate. If Culture, starting from the Christian dogma of the
worthlessness of human nature, disown humanity: she has created for
herself a foe who one day must inevitably destroy her, in so far as
she no longer has place for manhood; for this foe is the eternal,
and only living Nature. Nature, Human Nature, will proclaim this
law to the twin sisters Culture and Civilisation: "So far as I am
contained in you, shall ye live and flourish; so far as I am not in
you, shall ye rot and die!"</p>

<p>In the man-destroying march of Culture, however,
there looms before us this happy result: the heavy load with which
she presses Nature down, will one day grow so ponderous that it
lends at last to down-trod, never-dying Nature the necessary
impetus to hurl the whole cramping burden from her, with one sole
thrust; and this heaping up of Culture will thus have <hi>taught</hi>
to Nature her own gigantic force. The releasing of this force
is—<hi>Revolution.</hi></p>

<p>In what way, then, does this revolutionary force
exhibit itself in the present social crisis? Is it not in the
mechanic's pride in the moral consciousness of his labour, as
opposed to the criminal passivity or immoral activity of the rich?
Does he not wish, as in revenge, to elevate the principle of labour
to the rank of the one and orthodox religion of society? To force
the rich like him to work,—like him, by the sweat of their
brow to gain their daily bread? Must we not fear that the exercise
of this compulsion, the recognition of this principle, would raise
at last the man-degrading journeymanhood to an absolute and
universal might, and—to keep to our chief theme—would
straightway make of Art an impossibility for all time?</p>

<pb id="pag56" n="56"/>

<p>In truth, this is the fear of many an honest
friend of Art and many an upright friend of men, whose only wish is
to preserve the nobler core of our present civilisation. But they
mistake the true nature of the great social agitation. They are led
astray by the windy theories of our socialistic doctrinaires, who
would fain patch up an impossible compact with the present
conditions of society. They are deceived by the immediate utterance
of the indignation of the most suffering portion of our social
system, behind which lies a deeper, nobler, natural instinct : the
instinct which demands a worthy taste of the joys of life, whose
material sustenance shall no longer absorb man's whole life-forces
in weary service, but in which he shall rejoice as Man. Viewed
closer, it is thus the straining from journeymanhood to artistic
manhood, to the free dignity of Man.</p>

<p>It is for Art therefore, and Art above all else,
to teach this social impulse its noblest meaning, and guide it
toward its true direction. Only on the shoulders of this great
social movement can true Art lift itself from its present state of
civilised barbarianism, and take its post of honour. Each has a
common goal, and the twain can only reach it when they recognise it
jointly. This goal is <hi>the strong fair Man</hi>, to whom
<hi>Revolution</hi> shall give his <hi>Strength</hi>, and <hi>Art</hi>
his <hi>Beauty</hi>!</p>

<p>Neither is it our present purpose to indicate
more closely the march of this social development and the records
it will stamp on history, nor could dogmatic calculation foretell
the historical demeanour of man's social nature, so little
dependent upon preconceived ideas. In the history of man nothing is
<hi>made</hi>, but everything evolves by its own inner necessity. Yet
it is impossible that the final state which this movement shall
attain one day, should be other than the direct opposite of the
present; else were the whole history of the world a restless
zig-zag of cross purposes, and not the ordered movement of a mighty
stream; which with all its bends, its deviations, and its floods,
yet flows for ever in one steadfast course.</p>

<pb id="pag57" n="57"/>

<p>Let us glance, then, for a moment at this future
state of Man, when he shall have freed himself from his last
heresy, the denial of Nature,—that heresy which has taught
him hitherto to look upon himself as a mere instrument to an end
which lay outside himself. When Mankind knows, at last, that itself
is the one and only object of its existence, and that only in the
community of all men can this purpose be fulfilled: then will its
mutual creed be couched in an actual fulfilment of Christ's
injunction, "Take no <hi>care</hi> for your life, what ye shall eat,
or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put
on, for your Heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these
things." This Heavenly Father will then be no other than the social
wisdom of mankind, taking Nature and her fulness for the common
weal of all. The crime and the curse of our social intercourse have
lain in this: that the mere physical maintenance of life has been
till now the one object of our <hi>care</hi>,—a real
<hi>care</hi> that has devoured our souls and bodies and well nigh
lamed each spiritual impulse. This <hi>Care</hi> has made man weak
and slavish, dull and wretched; a creature that can neither love
nor hate; a thrall of commerce, ever ready to give up the last
vestige of the freedom of his Will, so only that this <hi>Care</hi>
might be a little lightened.</p>

<p>When the Brotherhood of Man has cast this care
for ever from it, and, as the Greeks upon their slaves, has lain it
on machines,—the artificial slaves of free creative man,
whom he has served till now as the Fetish-votary serves the idol
his own hands have made,—then will man's whole enfranchised
energy proclaim itself as naught but pure <hi>artistic</hi> impulse.
Thus shall we regain, in vastly higher measure, the Grecian element
of life; what with the Greek was the result of natural development,
will be with us the product of ages of endeavour; what was to him a
half-unconscious gift a will remain with us a conquered knowledge;
for what mankind in its wide communion doth truly <hi>know</hi>, can
never more be lost to it.</p>

<p>Only the <hi>Strong</hi> know <hi>Love</hi>; only
Love can fathom <hi>Beauty</hi>; only Beauty can fashion <hi>Art</hi>.
The love of
<pb id="pag58" n="58"/>
weaklings for each other can only manifest as the goad
of lust; the love of the weak for the strong is abasement and fear;
the love of the strong for the weak is pity and forbearance; but
the love of the strong for the strong is <hi>Love</hi>, for it is the
free surrender to one who cannot compel us. Under every fold of
heaven's canopy, in every race, shall men by real freedom grow up
to equal strength; by strength to truest love; and by true love to
beauty. But Art is Beauty energised.</p>

<p>Whatsoever we deem the goal of life, to that we
train our selves and children. The Goth was bred to battle and to
chase, the genuine Christian to abstinence and humility: while the
liegeman of the modern State is bred to seek industrial gain, be it
even in the exercise of art and science. But when life's
maintenance is no longer the exclusive aim of life, and the Freemen
of the Future—inspired by a new and deed-begetting faith, or
better, Knowledge—find the means of life assured by payment
of a natural and reasonable energy; in short, when Industry no
longer is our mistress but our handmaid: then shall we set the goal
of life in joy of life, and strive to rear our children to be fit
and worthy partners in this joy. This training, starting from the
exercise of strength and nurture of corporeal beauty, will soon
take on a pure artistic shape, by reason of our undisturbed
affection for our children and our gladness at the ripening of
their beauty; and each man will, in one domain or other, become in
truth an artist. The diversity of natural inclination will build up
arts in manifold variety and countless forms of each variety, in
fulness hitherto undreamed. And as the Knowledge of all men will
find at last its religious utterance in the one effective Knowledge
of free united manhood: so will all these rich developments of Art
find their profoundest focus in the Drama, in the glorious Tragedy
of Man. The Tragedy will be the feast of all mankind; in
it,—set free from each conventional etiquette,—free,
strong, and beauteous man will celebrate the dolour and delight of
all his love, and consecrate in lofty worth the great Love-offering
of his Death.</p>

<pb id="pag59" n="59"/>

<p>This Art will be <hi>conservative</hi> afresh. Yet
truly of its own immortal force, will it maintain itself and
blossom forth: not merely cry for maintenance, on pretext of some
outward-lying aim. For mark ye well, <hi>this</hi> Art seeks not for
<hi>Gain</hi>!</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>

<p>"Utopia! Utopia!" I hear the mealy-mouthed
wise-acres of our modern State-and-Art-barbarianism cry; the
so-called practical men, who in the manipulation of their daily
practice can help themselves alone with lies and violence,
or—if they be sincere and honest—with ignorance at
best.</p>

<p>"Beautiful ideal! but, alas! like all ideals,
one that can only float before us, beyond the reach of man
condemned to imperfection." Thus sighs the smug adorer of the
heavenly kingdom in which—at least as far as himself is
concerned—God will make good the inexplicable shortcomings of
this earth and its human brood.</p>

<p>They live and lie, they sin and suffer, in the
loathliest of actual conditions, in the filthy dregs of an
artificial, and therefore never realised Utopia; they toil and
over-bid each other in every hypocritical art, to maintain the
cheat of this Utopia; from which they daily tumble headlong down to
the dull, prosaic level of nakedest reality,—the mutilated
cripples of the meanest and most frivolous of passions. Yet they
cry down the only natural release from their bewitchment, as
"Chimeras" or "Utopias;" just as the poor sufferers in a madhouse
take their insane imaginings for truth, and truth itself for
madness.</p>

<p>If history knows an actual Utopia, a truly
unattainable ideal, it is that of Christendom; for it has clearly
and plainly shown, and shows it still from day to day, that its
dogmas are <hi>not</hi> realisable. How could those dogmas become
really living, and pass over into actual life: when they were
directed against life itself, and denied and cursed the principle
of living? Christianity is of purely spiritual, and super-spiritual
contents; it preaches humility,
<pb id="pag60" n="60"/>
renunciation, contempt of every
earthly thing; and amid this contempt—Brotherly Love! How
does the fulfilment work out in the modern world, which calls
itself, forsooth, a Christian world, and clutches to the Christian
religion as its inexpugnable basis? As the arrogance of hypocrisy,
as usury, as robbery of Nature's goods, and egoistic scorn of
suffering fellow-men. Whence comes this shocking contradiction
between the ideal and the fulfilment? Even hence: that the ideal
was morbid, engendered of the momentary relaxing and enfeeblement
of human nature, and sinned against its inbred robust qualities.
Yet how strong this nature is, how unquenchable its ever fresh,
productive fulness—it has shown all the more plainly under
the universal incubus of that ideal; which, if its logical
consequences had been fulfilled, would have completely swept the
human race from off the earth; since even abstinence from sexual
love was included in it as the height of virtue. But still ye see
that, in spite of that all-powerful Church, the human race is so
abundant that your Christian-economic State-wisdom knows not what
to do with this abundance, and ye are looking round for means of
social murder, for its uprootal; yea, and would be right glad, were
mankind slain by Christianity, so only that the solitary abstract
god of your own beloved <hi>Me</hi> might gain sufficient elbow-room
upon this earth!</p>

<p>These are the men who cry "Utopia," when the
healthy human understanding <hi>(Menschenverstanda)</hi> appeals from
their insane experiments to the actuality of visible and tangible
Nature; when it demands no more from man's godlike reason 
(<hi>Vernunft</hi>) than that it should make good to us the instinct
of dumb animals, and give us the means of finding for ourselves the
sustenance of our life, set free from care though not from labour!
And, truly, we ask from it no higher result for the community of
mankind, in order that we may build upon this one foundation the
noblest, fairest temple of the true Art of the Future!</p>

<p>The true artist who has already grasped the
proper standpoint, may labour even now—for this standpoint is ever
<pb id="pag61" n="61"/>
present with us—upon the Art-work of the Future! Each of
the sister Arts, in truth, has ever, and therefore also now,
proclaimed in manifold creations the conscience of her own high
purpose. Whereby, then, have the inspired creators of these noble
works from all time suffered, and above all in our present pass?
Was it not by their contact with the outer world, with the very
world for whom their works were destined? What has revolted the
architect, when he must shatter his creative force on bespoken
plans for barracks and lodging-houses? What has aggrieved the
painter, when he must immortalise the repugnant visage of a
millionaire? What the musician, when he must compose his music for
the banquet-table? And what the poet, when he must write romances
for the lending-library? What then has been the sting of suffering
to each? That he must squander his creative powers for gain, and
make his art a handicraft!—And finally, what suffering has
the dramatist to bear, who would fain assemble every art within
Art's master-work, the Drama? The sufferings of all other artists
combined in one!</p>

<p>What <hi>he</hi> creates, becomes an Art-work only
when it enters into open life; and a work of dramatic art can only
enter life upon the stage. But what are our theatrical institutions
of to-day, with their disposal of the ample aid of every branch of
art?—Industrial undertakings: yes, even when supported by a
special subsidy from Prince or State. Their direction is mostly
handed over to the same men who have yesterday conducted a
speculation in grain, and to-morrow devote their well-learned
knowledge to a 'corner' in sugar; or mayhap, have educated their
taste for stage proprieties in the mysteries of back-stairs
intrigue, or such like functions.
<note id="rn12" corresp="n12" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
So long as—in accordance with the prevailing character of public
life, and the necessity it lays upon the theatrical director to
deal with the public in the manner of a clever commercial
speculator—so long as we look upon a
<pb id="pag62" n="62"/>
theatrical institution
as a mere means for the circulation of money and the production of
interest upon capital, it is only logical that we should hand over
its direction, <hi>i.e.</hi>, its exploitation, to those who are
well-skilled in such transactions; for a really artistic
management, and thus such an one as should fulfil the original
purpose of the Theatre, would certainly be but poorly fitted to
carry out the modern aim. For this reason it must be clear to all
who have the slightest insight, that if the Theatre is at all to
answer to its natural lofty mission, it must be completely freed
from the necessity of industrial speculation.</p>

<p>How were this possible? Shall this solitary
institution be released from a service to which all men, and every
associate enterprise of man, are yoked to-day? Yes: it is precisely
the Theatre, that should take precedence of every other institution
in this emancipation; for the Theatre is the widest-reaching of
Art's institutes, and the richest in its influence; and till man
can exercise in freedom his noblest, his artistic powers, how shall
he hope to become free and self-dependent in lower walks of life?
Since already the service of the State, the military service, is at
least no longer an industrial pursuit, let us begin with the
enfranchisement of public art; for, as I have pointed out above, it
is to <hi>it</hi> that we must assign an unspeakably lofty mission,
an immeasurably weighty influence on our present social upheaval.
More and better than a decrepit religion to which the spirit of
public intercourse gives the lie direct more effectually and
impressively than an incapable statesmanship which has long since
host its compass: shall the ever-youthful Art, renewing its
freshness from its own well-springs and the noblest spirit of the
times, give to the passionate stream of social tumult—now
dashing against rugged precipices, now lost in shallow
swamps—a fair and lofty goal, the goal of noble Manhood.</p>

<p>If ye friends of Art are truly concerned to know
it saved from the threatening storms: then hear me, when I tell you
that it is no mere question of preserving Art, but of first
allowing it to reach its own true fill of life!</p>

<pb id="pag63" n="63"/>

<p>Is it your real object, ye <hi>honourable</hi>
Statesmen, confronted with a dreaded social
overthrow,—against which, mayhap, ye strive because your
shattered faith in human nature's purity prevents your
understanding how this overthrow can help but make a bad condition
infinitely worse,—is it, I say, your object to graft upon
this mighty change a strong and living pledge of future nobler
customs? Then lend us all your strength, to give back Art unto
itself and to its lofty mission!</p>

<p>Ye suffering brethren, in every social grade,
who brood in hot displeasure how to flee this slavery to money and
become free men: fathom ye our purpose, and help us to lift up Art
to its due dignity; that so we may show you how ye raise mechanical
toil therewith to Art; and the serf of industry to the
fair,'self-knowing man who cries, with smiles begotten of
intelligence, to sun and stars, to death and to eternity: "Ye, too,
are mine, and I your lord!"</p>

<p>Ye to whom I call, were ye at one with us in
heart and mind, how easy were it to your Will to set the simple
rules to work, whose following must infallibly ensure the
flourishing of that mightiest of all art-establishments,—the
Theatre! In the first place it would be the business of the State
and the Community to adjust their means to this end: that the
Theatre be placed in a position to obey alone its higher and true
calling. This end will be attained when the Theatre is so far
supported that its management need only be a purely artistic one;
and no one will be better situated to carry this out than the
general body of the artists themselves, who unite their forces in
the art-work and assure the success of their mutual efforts by a
fit conception of their task. Only the fullest freedom can bind
them to the endeavour to fulfil the object for sake of which they
are freed from the fetters of commercial speculation; and this
object is Art, which the free man alone can grasp, and not the
slave of wages.</p>

<p>The judge of their performance, will be the free
public. Yet, to make this public fully free and independent when
face to face with Art, one further step must be taken
<pb id="pag64" n="64"/>
along this road: the public must have <hi>unbought</hi> admission to the
theatrical representations. So long as money is indispensable for
all the needs of life, so long as without pay there remains naught
to man but air, and scarcely water: the measures to be taken can
only provide that the actual stage-performances, to witness which
the populace assembles, shall not take on the semblance of <hi>work
paid by the piece</hi>,—a mode of regarding them which
confessedly leads to the most humiliating misconception of the
character of art-productions,—but it must be the duty of the
State, or rather of the particular Community, to form a common
purse from which to recompense the artists for their performance as
a whole, and not in parts.</p>

<p>Where means should not suffice for this, it were
better, both now and always, to allow a theatre which could only be
maintained as a commercial undertaking, to close its doors for
ever; or at least, for so long as the community's demand had not
proved strong enough to bring about the necessary sacrifice for its
supply.</p>

<p>When human fellowship has once developed its
manly beauty and nobihity,—in such a way as we shall not
attain, however, by the influence of our Art alone, but as we must
hope and strive for by union with the great and inevitably
approaching social revolution,—then will theatrical
performances be the first associate undertaking from which the idea
of wage or gain shall disappear entirely. For when, under the above
conditions, our education more and more becomes an artistic one,
then shall we be ourselves all thus far artists: that we can join
together in free and common service for the one great cause of Art,
in its special manifestment, abandoning each sidelong glance at
gain.</p>

<p>Art and its institutes, whose desired
organisation could here be only briefly touched on, would thus
become the herald and the standard of all future communal
institutions. The spirit that urges a body of artists to the
attainment of its own true goal, would be found again in every
other social union which set before itself a definite and honourable
<pb id="pag65" n="65"/>
aim; for if we reach the right, then all our future
social bearing cannot but be of pure artistic nature, such as alone
befits the noble faculties of man.</p>

<p>Thus would <hi>Jesus</hi> have shown us that we
all alike are men and brothers; while <hi>Apollo</hi> would have
stamped this mighty bond of brotherhood with the seal of strength
and beauty, and led mankind from doubt of its own worth to
consciousness of its highest godlike might. Let us therefore erect
the altar of the future, in Life as in the living Art, to the two
subhimest teachers of mankind:—<hi>Jesus, who suffered for all
men; and Apollo, who raised them to their joyous dignity!</hi></p>
</div> 

</body>
<back>

<div type="notes" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Notes</head>

<note id="n01" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn01" anchored="yes">
<p><xref resp="url" type="http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=2121" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">Book XXI</xref>. chap i.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n02" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn02" anchored="yes">
<p>Even Carlyle can only betoken this as the "Death of the Anarchies: or a
world once more built wholly on Fact better or worse; and the lying
jargoning professor of Sham-Fact. . . become a species extinct, and
well <hi>known</hi> to be gone down to Tophet!"—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n03" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn03" anchored="yes">
<p><hi>"Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde</hi>;"—see 
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0079" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">end of the present volume</xref>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n04" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn04" anchored="yes">
<p>We have no English equivalents of these words, except in the adjectival form:
<hi>voluntary</hi> and <hi>involuntary</hi>, in which there lies the
same confusion of ideas as that for which Wagner here upbraids
himself; and even now, when Schopenhauer's definition of the "Will"
is pretty generally accepted, it would seem better, for clearness'
sake, to delimit the term hy some such prefix as the
"<hi>Inner</hi>," or "<hi>Instinctive</hi>" Will, in order to
distinguish it from the "Outer" or "Intellectual" Choice. In this
series of translations I shall endeavour to render such expressions
in the sense the author here indicates.—W. A. E.</p>
</note>

<note id="n05" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn05" anchored="yes">
<p><hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi>= Qualities appealing to the senses; or again,
the bent to an objective method of viewing things. Hence it may at
times be best rendered by <hi>Physicalism</hi> or <hi>Materialism</hi>;
at others, by <hi>Physical perception, Physical contemplation,</hi>
or even—borrowing from
Carlyle—<hi>Five-sense-philosophy</hi>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n06" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn06" anchored="yes">
<p>To use the now more customary antithesis: <hi>Socialism</hi> v.
<hi>Individualism</hi>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n07" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn07" anchored="yes">
<p>"In the <hi>National</hi> you will shortly see an important article of mine:
<hi>Art and Revolution</hi>, which I believe will also appear in
German at Wigand's in Leipzig."—From Wagner's letter to
Uhlig, of 9th August 1849.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n08" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn08" anchored="yes">
<p>Volumes III. and IV. of the <hi>Gesammelte Schriften</hi>, or "Collected
Writings."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n09" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn09" anchored="yes">
<p>1868; Constantin Frantz.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n10" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn10" anchored="yes">
<p>In the original text of both the present treatise and <hi>The Art-work of
the Future</hi>, the expression "<hi>öffentlich</hi>" is
frequently made use of. In English the only available equivalent is
that which I have here employed, viz.: "public"; but our word
"public" must be stretched a little in its significance, to answer
to Richard Wagner's purpose. When he speaks of "public art" or
"public life," it must be borne in mind that the idea of
officialdom or State-endowment is not necessarily included; but
rather the word is employed in the sense in which we use it when
talking of a "public appearance"; thus "public art" will mean such
an art as is not merely designed for private or home consumption.
—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n11" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn11" anchored="yes">
<p>R. Wagner to F. Heine, March 18, '41:—"This showed me still more
decidedly that the religious-catholic part of my <hi>Rienzi</hi>
libretto was a chief stumbling-block. . . . If in my <hi>Rienzi</hi>
the word 'Church' is not allowed to stand," &amp;c.—To W.
Fischer, Dec. 8, '41:—"Sixteen singers must remain for the
Priests, or on account of the censorship, aged Citizens."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n12" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn12" anchored="yes">
<p>It is impossible to realise the full sting of this allusion, without
having read in "<hi>Wagner's Letters to Uhlig</hi>" (H. Grevel &amp;
Co.) the account of the author's own experience at Dresden of the
conduct of these gentry.—TR.</p>
</note>

</div> 
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