The following musings about Goethe (1749-1832) are excerpted from an article by Thomas De Quincey that appeared in the 8th edition of Encyclopedia Britannica, published in 1852. Goethe is most famous of course for his writing and for Faust. He was also a student of science who published works on biology and optics.
* * *
Everybody must feel that his temperament and constitutional tendency was of that happy quality, the animal so nicely balanced with the intellectual, that with any ordinary measure of prosperity he could not be otherwise than a good man....Yet at the same time we cannot disguise from ourselves that the moral temperament of Goethe was one which demanded prosperity: had he been called to face great afflictions, singular temptations, or a billowy and agitated course of life, our belief is that his nature would have been found unequal to the strife; he would have repeated the mixed and moody character of his father. Sunny prosperity was essential to his nature; his virtues were adapted to that condition. And happily that was his fate. He had no personal misfortunes; his path was joyous in this life; and even the reflex sorrow from the calamities of his friends did not press too heavily on his sympathies; none of these were in excess either as to degree or duration....
Goethe, however, in a moral estimate, will be viewed pretty
uniformly. But Goethe intellectually, Goethe as a power acting upon
the age in which he lived, that is another question. Let us put a
case; suppose that Goethe's death had occurred many years ago, say in
the year 1785, what would have been the general impression? Would
Europe have felt a shock? Would Europe have been
sensible even of the event? Not at all: it would have been obscurely
noticed in the newspapers of Germany, as the
death of a novelist who had produced some effect about ten years
before. In 1832, it was announced by the post-horns of all Europe as
the death of him who had written the Wilhelm Meister,
the Iphigenie, and the Faust, and who had been enthroned
by some of his admirers on the same seat with Homer and Shakespeare,
as composing what they termed the trinity of men of genius. and
yet it is a fact, that, in the opinion of some amongst the
acknowledged leaders of our own literature for the last twenty-five
years, the Werther was superior to all which followed it, and
for mere power was the paramount work of Goethe.
— by Thomas De Quincey
Copyright © 2000, The Daily Objectivist - Reprinted with permission of The Daily Objectivist and Davidmbrown.com.
December 29, 2008