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  <description>Soren A. Kierkegaard is arguably one of, if not the most, prominent theological thinkers to come out of Scandinavia. In this collection of some of his most representative works, L.M. Hollander offers the reader access into the brilliant mind of the Danish philosopher and theologian. Hollander argues in his introduction that Kierkegaard’s works place him “in the front rank of prose writers of the nineteenth century where, both by the power of his utterance and the originality of his thought, he rightfully belongs.” While this prose is admittedly not easy reading, the rewards for working through it are immense. Kierkegaard writes with a firm hand of the role of the Church, the demands of an ethical life, and the marvelous paradox of God becoming the lowliest of men.<br /><br />Laura de Jong<br />CCEL Staff Writer</description>
  <pubHistory />
  <comments>[tr. L.M. Hollander]</comments>
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    <DC.Title>Selections from the Writings of Kierkegaard</DC.Title>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author">Soren Kierkegaard</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Kierkegaard, Soren (1813-1855)</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
    <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">PT8142</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Danish literature</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All; Classic; </DC.Subject>
    <DC.Date sub="Created">2000-07-09</DC.Date>
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    <div1 title="Title Page" id="i" prev="toc" next="ii">
<h1 id="i-p0.1">Selections from the Writings of Kierkegaard</h1>
<h4 id="i-p0.2">Translated by</h4>
<h3 id="i-p0.3">L.M. Hollander</h3>
<p class="Centered" id="i-p1">Adjunct Professor of Germanic Languages
<br />
<img src="files/kierkegaard.jpg" alt="A portrait" id="i-p1.2" />
</p>
</div1>

    <div1 title="Introduction" id="ii" prev="i" next="iii">
<h2 id="ii-p0.1">Introduction</h2>
<p class="left" id="ii-p1">To my Father‑in‑Law</p>
<p class="left" id="ii-p2">The Reverend George Fisher,</p>
<p class="left" id="ii-p3"><i>A
Christian</i></p>
<p id="ii-p4">
<br />
<br />
Creditable
as have been the contributions of Scandinavia to the cultural life
of the race in well‑nigh all fields of human endeavor, it has
produced but one thinker of the first magnitude, the Dane,
Sören A. Kierkegaard.<note place="foot" id="ii-p4.3" n="1">Pronounced <i>Kerkegor.</i></note>  

The
fact that he is virtually unknown to us is ascribable, on the one
hand to the inaccessibility of his works, both as to language and
form; on the other, to the regrettable insularity of English
thought.</p>
<p id="ii-p5">   It is the purpose of this book to remedy the
defect in a measure, and by a selection from his most
representative works to provide a stimulus for a more detailed
study of his writings; for the present times, ruled by material
considerations, wholly led by socializing, and misled by national,
ideals are precisely the most opportune to introduce the bitter but
wholesome antidote of individual responsibility, which is his
message. In particular, students of Northern literature cannot
afford to know no more than the name of one who exerted a potent
and energizing influence on an important epoch of Scandinavian
thought. To mention only one instance, the greatest ethical poem of
our age, "Brand" notwithstanding
Ibsen's curt statement that he "had read little of Kierkegaard and
understood less" undeniably
owes its fundamental thought to him, whether directly or
indirectly.</p>
<p id="ii-p6"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p7">
Of
very few authors can it be said with the same literalness as, of
Kierkegaard that their life is their works: as if to furnish living
proof of his untiring insistance on inwardness, his life, like that
of so many other spiritual educators of the race, is notably poor
in incidents; but his life of inward experiences is all the
richer witness
the "literature within a literature" that came to be within a few
years and that gave to Danish letters a score of immortal
works.</p>
<p id="ii-p8">   Kierkegaard's physical heredity must be
pronounced unfortunate. Being the child of old
parents his
father was, fifty‑seven, his mother forty‑five years.
at his birth (May 5, 1813), he had a weak physique and a feeble
constitution. Still worse, he inherited from his father a burden of
melancholy which he took a sad pride in masking under a show of
sprightliness. His father, Michael Pedersen Kierkegaard, had begun
life as a poor cotter's boy in West Jutland, where he was set to
tend the sheep on the wild moorlands. One day, we are told,
oppressed by loneliness and cold, he ascended a hill and in a
passionate rage cursed God who had given him this miserable
existence the
memory of which "sin against the Holy Ghost" he was not able to
shake off to the end of his long life.<note place="foot" id="ii-p8.1" n="2">An interesting parallel is the story of Peter Williams, as told by George Borrow, <i>Lavengro</i>, chap. 75 ff.</note>  

When
seventeen years old, the gifted lad was sent to his uncle in
Copenhagen, who was a well‑to‑do dealer in woolens and
groceries. Kierkegaard quickly established himself in the trade and
amassed a considerable fortune. This enabled him to withdraw from
active life when only forty, and to devote himself to philosophic
studies, the leisure for which life had till then denied him. More
especially he seems to have studied the works of the rationalistic
philosopher Wolff. After the early death of his first wife who left
him no issue, he married a former servant in his household, also of
Jutish stock, who bore him seven children. Of these only two
survived him, the oldest son later
bishop Peder
Christian, and the youngest son, Sören Åbye.</p>
<p id="ii-p9">  Nowhere does Kierkegaard speak of his mother, a woman
of simple mind and cheerful disposition; but he speaks all the more
often of his father, for whom he ever expressed the greatest love
and admiration and who, no doubt, devoted himself largely to the
education of his sons, particularly to that of his latest born. Him
he was to mould in his own image. A pietistic, gloomy spirit of
religiosity pervaded the household in which the severe father was
undisputed master, and absolute obedience the watchword. Little
Sören, as he himself tells us, heard more of the Crucified and
the martyrs than of the Christ‑child and good angels. Like
John Stuart Mill, whose early education bears a remarkable
resemblance to his, he "never had the joy to be a child." Although
less systematically held down to his studies, in which religion was
the be‑all and end‑all (instead of being banished, as
was the case with Mill), he was granted but a minimum of
out‑door play and exercise. And, instead of strengthening the
feeble body, his father threw the whole weight of his melancholy on
the boy.</p>
<p id="ii-p10">   Nor was his home training, formidably abstract,
counterbalanced by a normal, healthy school‑life. Naturally
introspective and shy, both on account of a slight deformity of his
body and on account of the old‑fashioned clothes his father
made him wear, he had no boy friends; and when cuffed by his more
robust contemporaries, he could defend himself only with his biting
sarcasm. Notwithstanding his early maturity he does not seem to
have impressed either his schoolmates or his teachers by any gifts
much above the ordinary. The school he attended was one of those
semi‑public schools which by strict discipline and consistent
methods laid a solid foundation of humanities ind mathematics for
those who were to enter upon a professional career. The natural
sciences played no rôle whatever.</p>
<p id="ii-p11">   Obedient to the wishes of his father,
Sören chose the study of theology, as had his eldest brother;
but, once relieved from the grind of school at the age of
seventeen, he rejoiced in the full liberty of university life,
indulging himself to his heart's content in all the refined
intellectual and æsthetic enjoyments the gay capital of
Copenhagen offered. He declares himself in later years to be "one
who is penitent" for having in his youth plunged into all kinds of
excesses; but we feel reasonably sure that he committed no excesses
worse than "high living." He was frequently seen at the opera and
the theatre, spent money freely in restaurants and confectionary
shops, bought many, and expensive books, dressed well, and indulged
in such extravagances as driving in a carriage and pair, alone, for
days through the fields and forests of the lovely island of
Zealand. In fact, he contracted considerable debts, so that his
disappointed father decided to put him on an allowance of 500
rixdollars yearly—rather a handsome sum, a hundred years
ago.</p>
<p id="ii-p12">
Naturally,
little direct progress was made in his studies. But while to all
appearances aimlessly dissipating his energies, he showed a
pronounced love for philosophy and kindred disciplines. He lost no
opportunity then offered at the University of Copenhagen to train
his mind along these lines. He heard the sturdily independent
Sibbern's lectures on æstheties and enjoyed a "privatissimum"
on the main issues of Schleiermacher's Dogmatics with his later
enemy, the theologian Martensen, author of the celebrated
"Christian Dogmatics."</p>
<p id="ii-p13">   But there was no steadiness in him. Periods of
indifference to these studies alternated with feverish activity,
and doubts of the truth of Christianity, with bursts of devotion.
However, the Hebraically stern cast of mind of the externally gay
student soon wearied of this rudderless existence. He sighs for an
"Archimedean" point of support for his conduct of life. We find the
following entry in his diary, which prophetically foreshadows some
of the fundamental ideas of his later career: " . . . what I really
need is to arrive at a clear comprehension of what I am to do, not
of what I am to grasp with my understanding, except insofar as this
understanding is necessary for every action. The point is, to
comprehend what I am called to do, to see what the Godhead really
means that I shall do, to find a truth which is truth for me, to
find the idea for which I am willing to live and to die . .
."</p>
<p id="ii-p14">
   This Archimedean point was soon to be furnished
him There came a succession of blows, culminating in the death of
his father, whose silent disapprobation had long been weighing
heavily on the conscience of the wayward son. Even more awful,
perhaps, was a revelation made by the dying father to his sons,
very likely touching that very "sin against the Holy Ghost" which
he had committed in his boyhood and the consequence of which he now
was to lay on them as a curse, instead of his blessing. Kierkegaard
calls it "the great earthquake, the terrible upheaval, which
suddenly forced on me a new and infallible interpretation of all
phenomena." He began to suspect that he had been chosen by
Providence for an extraordinary purpose; and with his abiding
filial piety he interprets his father's death as the last of many
sacrifices he made for him; "for he died, not away from me, but for
me, so that there might yet, perchance, become something of me."
Crushed by this thought, and through the "new interpretation"
despairing of happiness in this life, he clings to the thought of
his unusual intellectual powers as his only consolation and a means
by which his salvation, might be accomplished. He quickly absolved
his examination for ordination (ten years after matriculation) and
determined on his magisterial dissertation.<note place="foot" id="ii-p14.1" n="3">Corresponding, approximately, to our doctoral thesis.</note>  
</p>
<p id="ii-p15">
Already
some years before he had made a not very successful debut in the
world of letters with a pamphlet whose queer title "From the MSS.
of One Still Living" reveals Kierkegaard's inborn love of
mystification and innuendo. Like a Puck of philosophy, with
somewhat awkward bounds and a callow manner, he had there teased
the worthies of his times; and, in particular, taken a good fall
out of Hans Christian Andersen, the poet of the Fairy Tales, who
had aroused his indignation by describing in somewhat lachrymose
fashion the struggles of genius to come into its own. Kierkegaard
himself was soon to show the truth of his own dictum that "genius
does not whine but like a thunderstorm goes straight counter to the
wind."</p>
<p id="ii-p16">   While casting about for a subject worthy of a
more sustained effort—he marks out for study the legends of
Faust, Of the Wandering Jew, of Don Juan, as representatives of
certain basic views of life; the, Conception of Satire among the
Ancients, etc., etc.,—he at last becomes aware of his
affinity with Socrates, in whom he found that rare harmony between
theory and the conduct of life which he hoped to attain
himself.</p>
<p id="ii-p17">
Though
not by Kierkegaard himself counted among the works bearing on the
"Indirect Communication"—presently to be explained—his
magisterial dissertation, entitled "The Conception of Irony, with
Constant Reference to Socrates," a book of 300 pages, is of crucial
importance. It shows that, helped by the sage who would not
directly help any one, he had found the master key: his own
interpretation of life. Indeed, all the following literary output
may be regarded as the consistent development of the simple
directing thoughts of his firstling work. And we must devote what
may seem a disproportionate amount of space to the explanation of
these thoughts if we would enter into the world of his
mind.</p>
<p id="ii-p18">   Not only did Kierkegaard feel kinship with
Socrates. It did not escape him that there was an ominous
similarity between Socrates' times and his own—between the
period of flourishing Attica, eminent in the arts and in
philosophy, when a little familiarity with the shallow phrases of
the Sophists enabled one to have an opinion about everything on
earth and in heaven, and his own Copenhagen in the thirties of the
last century, when Johan Ludvig Heiberg had popularized Hegelian
philosophy with such astonishing success that the very cobblers
were using the Hegelian terminology, with "Thesis, Antithesis, and
Synthesis," and one could get instructions from one's barber, while
being shaved, how to "harmonize the ideal with reality, and our
wishes with what we have attained." Every difficulty could be
"mediated," according to this recipe. And just as the great
questioner of Athens gave pause to his more naïve
contemporaries by his "know thyself," so Kierkegaard insisted that
he must rouse his contemporaries from their philosophic complacency
and unwarranted optimism, and move them to realize that the
spiritual life has both mountain and valley, that it is no flat
plain easy to travel. He intended to show difficulties where the
road had been supposedly smoothed for them.</p>
<p id="ii-p19">  Central, both in the theory and in the practice of
Socrates (according to Kierkegaard), is his irony. The ancient sage
would stop old and young and quizz them skilfully on what they
regarded as common and universally established propositions, until
his interlocutor became confused by some consequence or
contradiction arising unexpectedly, and until he who had been sure
of his knowledge was made to confess his ignorance, or even to
become distrustful of the possibility of knowledge. Destroying
supposedly positive values, this method would seem to lead to a
negative result only.</p>
<p id="ii-p20">
Kierkegaard
makes less (and rather too little) of the positive side of
Socrates' method, his <i>maieutic,</i> or midwifery, by which
we are led inductively from trivial instances to a new definition
of a conception, a method which will fit all cases. Guided by a
lofty personality, this Socratic irony becomes, in Kierkegaard's
definition, merely "the negative liberation of subjectivity"; that
is, not the family, nor society, nor the state, nor any rules
superimposed from outside, but one's innermost self (or
subjectivity) is to be the determining factor in one's life. And
understood thus, irony as a negative element borders on the ethical
conception of life.</p>
<p id="ii-p21">
   Romantic irony, on the other hand, laying main
stress on subjective liberty, represents the æsthetic conduct
of life. It was, we remember, the great demand of the Romantic
period that one live poetically. That is, after having reduced all
reality to possibilities, all existence to fragments, we are to
choose <i>ad libitum</i> one
such possible existence, to consider that one's proper sphere, and
for the rest to look ironically on all other reality as philistine.
Undeniably, this license, through the infinitude of possibilities
open to him, gives the ironist an enthusiastic sense of
irresponsible freedom in which he "disports himself as does
Leviathan in the deep." Again, the "æsthetical individual
is ill
at ease in the world into which he is born. His typical ailment is
a Byronesque <i>Weltschmerz.</i> He would fain mould
the elements of existence to suit himself; that is, "compose" not
only himself but also his surroundings. But without fixed task and
purpose, life will soon lose all continuity ("except that of
boredom") and fall apart into disconnected moods and impulses.
Hence, while supposing himself a superman, free, and his own
master, the æsthetic individual is, in reality, a slave to
the merest accidents. He is not self‑directed,
self‑propelled; but—drifts.</p>
<p id="ii-p22">
Over
against this attitude Kierkegaard now sets the ethical, Christian
life, one with a definite purpose and goal beyond itself. "It is
one thing to compose one's own life , another, to let one's life be
composed. The Christian lets his life be composed; and insofar a
simple Christian lives far more poetically than many a genius." It
would hardly be possible to characterize the contents of
Kierkegaard's first great book, <i>Enten‑Eller</i>
"Either‑Or," more inclusively and tersely.</p>
<p id="ii-p23">   Very well, then, the Christian life, with its
clear directive, is superior to the aesthetic existence. But how is
this: are we not all Christians in Christendom, children of
Christians, baptized and confirmed according to the regulations of
the Church? And are we not all to be saved according to the promise
of Our Lord who died for us? At a very early time Kierkegaard,
himself desperately struggling to maintain his Christian faith
against doubts, had his eyes opened to, this enormous delusion of
modern times and was preparing to battle against it. The great idea
and task for which he was to live and to die—here it was:
humanity is in apparent possession of the divine truth, but utterly
perverts it and, to cap injury with insult, protects and intrenches
the deception behind state sanction and institutions. More
appalling evil confronted not even the early protagonists of
Christianity against heathendom. How was he, single‑handed,
magnificently gifted though he was, to cleanse the temple and
restore its pristine simplicity?</p>
<p id="ii-p24">
  Clearly, the old mistake must not be repeated, to try
to influence and reform the masses by a vulgar and futile
"revival," preaching to them directly and gaining disciples
innumerable. It would only lead again, to the abomination of a lip
service. But a ferment must be introduced which—he
hoped—would gradually restore Christianity to its former
vigor; at least in individuals. So far as the form of his own works
is concerned he was thus bound to use the "indirect method" of
Socrates whom he regards as his teacher. In conscious opposition to
the Sophists who sold their boasted wisdom for money, Socrates not
only made no charges for his instruction but even warned people of
his igorance, insisting that, like a midwife, he only helped people
to give birth to their own thoughts. And owing to his irony
Socrates' relation to his disciples was not in any positive sense a
personal one. Least of all did he wish to found a new "school" or
erect a philosophic "system."</p>
<p id="ii-p25">  Kierkegaard, with Christianity as his goal, adopted
the same tactics. By an attractive æsthetic beginning people
were to be "lured" into envisaging the difficulties to be unfolded
presently, to think for themselves, to form their own conclusions,
whether for or against. The individual was to be appealed to, first
and last—the individual, no matter how humble, who would take
the trouble to follow him and be his reader, "my only reader, the
single individual." "So the religious author must make it his first
business to put himself in touch with men. That is to say, he must
begin aesthetically. The more brilliant his performance, the
better." And then, when he has got them to follow him "he must
produce the religious categories so that these same men with all
the impetus of their devotion to aesthetic 4hings are suddenly
brought up sharp against the religious aspect." The writer's own
personality was to be entirely eliminated by a system of
pseudonyms; for the effect of his teaching was not to be
jeopardized by a distracting knowledge of his personality.
Accordingly, in conscious imitation of Socrates, Kierkegaard at
first kept up a semblance of his previous student life, posing as a
frivolous idler on the streets of Copenhagen, a witty dog incapable
of prolonged serious activity; thus anxiously guarding the secret
of his feverish activity during the lonely hours of the
night.</p>
<p id="ii-p26">  His campaign of the "indirect communication" was thus
fully determined upon; but there was still lacking the impetus of
an elemental passion to start it and give it driving force and
conquering persistence. This also was to be furnished
him.</p>
<p id="ii-p27">   Shortly before his father's death he had made
the acquaintance of Regine Olson, a beautiful young girl of good
family. There followed one of the saddest imaginable engagements.
The melancholy, and essentially lonely, thinker may not at first
have entertained the thought of a lasting attachment; for had he
not, on the one hand, given up all hope of worldly happiness, and
on the other, begun to think of himself as a chosen tool of heaven
not to be bound by the ordinary ties of human affection? But the
natural desire to be as happy as others and to live man's common
lot, for a moment hushed all anxious scruples. And the love of the
brilliant and promising young man with the deep, sad eyes and the
flashing wit was ardently returned by her.</p>
<p id="ii-p28">
  Difficulties arose very soon. It was not so much the
extreme youth and immaturity of the girl—she was barely
sixteen—as against his tremendous mental development, or even
her "total lack of religious pre‑suppositions"; for that
might not itself have precluded a happy union. Vastly more ominous
was his own unconquerable and overwhelming melancholy. She could
not break it. And struggle as he might, he could not banish it.
And, he reasoned, even if he were successful in concealing it from
her, the very concealment were a deceit. Neither would he burden
her with his melancholy by revealing it to her. Besides, some
mysterious ailment which, with Paul, he terms the "thorn in his
flesh," tormented him. The fact that he consulted a physician makes
it likely that it was bodily, and perhaps sexual. On the other
hand, the manner of Kierkegaard's multitudinous references to woman
removes the suspicion of any abnormality. The impression remains
that at the bottom of his trouble there lay his melancholy,
aggravated admittedly by an "insane education," and coupled with an
exaggerated sense of a misspent youth. That nothing else prevented
the union is clear from his own repeated later remarks that, with
more faith, he would have married her.</p>
<p id="ii-p29">  Though to the end of his life he never ceased to love
her, he feels that they must part. But she clings to him with a
rather maudlin devotion, which, to be sure, only increased his
determination. He finally hit on the desperate device of pretending
frivolous indifference to her affections, and acted this sad comedy
with all the dialectic subtleness of his genius, until she
eventually released him. Then, after braving for a while the
philistine indignation of public opinion and the disapproval of his
friends, in order to confirm her in her bad opinion of him, he fled
to Berlin with shattered nerves and a bleeding heart.</p>
<p id="ii-p30">   He had deprived himself of what was dearest to
him in life. For all that, he knew that the foundations of his
character remained unshaken. The voluntary renunciation of a
worldly happiness which was his for the taking intensifies his idea
of being one of' the "few in each generation selected to be a
sacrifice." Thereafter, "his thought is all to him," and all his
gifts are devoted to the service of God.</p>
<p id="ii-p31">   During the first half of the nineteenth
century, more than at any other time, Denmark was an intellectual
dependency of Germany. It was but natural that Kierkegaard, in
search for the ultimate verities, should resort to Berlin where
Schelling was just then beginning his famous course of lectures. In
many respects it may be held deplorable that, at a still formative
stage, Kierkegaard should have remained in the prosaic capital of
Prussia and have been influenced by bloodless abstractions; instead
of journeying to France, or still better, to England whose
empiricism would, no doubt, have been an excellent corrective of
his excessive tendency to speculation. In fact he was quickly
disappointed with Schelling and after four months returned to his
beloved Copenhagen (which he was not to leave thereafter except for
short periods), with his mind still busy on the problems which were
peculiarly his own. The tremendous impulse given by hi§
unfortunate engagement was sufficient to stimulate his sensitive
mind to a produc‑tivity without equal in Danish literature,
to create a "literature within a literature." The fearful inner
collision of motives had lit an inner conflagration which did not
die down for years. "My becoming an author is due chiefly to her,
my melancholy, and my money."</p>
<p id="ii-p32">   About a year afterwards (1843) there appeared
his first great work, "Either‑Or," which at once established
his fame. As in the case of most of his works it will be impossible
to give here more than the barest outline of its plan and contents.
In substance, it is a grand debate between the aesthetic and the
ethic views of life. In his dissertation Kierkegaard had already
characterized the æsthetic point of view. Now, in a brilliant
series of articles, he proceeds to exemplify it with exuberant
detail.</p>
<p id="ii-p33">
The
fundamental chord of the first part is struck in the <i>Diapsalmata</i>—aphorisms which,
like so many flashes of a lantern, illuminate the æsthetic
life, its pleasures and its despair. The æsthetic
individual—this is brought out in the article entitled "The
Art of Rotation"—wishes to be the exception in human society,
shirking its common, humble duties and claiming special privileges.
He has no fixed principle except that he means not to be bound to
anything or anybody. He has but one desire which is, to enjoy the
sweets of life—whether its purely sensual pleasures or the
more refined Epicureanism of the finer things in life and art, and
the ironic enjoyment of one's own superiority over the rest of
humanity; and he has no fear except that he may succumb to
boredom.</p>
<p id="ii-p34">   As a comment on this text there follow a number
of essays in "experimental psychology," supposed to be the fruit of
the æsthete's (A's) leisure. In them the æsthetic life
is exhibited in its various manifestations, in "terms of
existence," especially as to its "erotic stages," from the
indefinite longings of the Page to the fully conscious "sensual
genius" of Don Juan—the examples are taken from Mozart's
opera of this name, which was Kierkegaard's favorite—until
the whole culminates in the famous "Diary of the Seducer,"
containing elements of the author's own engagement, poetically
disguised—a seducer, by the way, of an infinitely reflective
kind.</p>
<p id="ii-p35">
   Following this climax of unrestrained
æstheticism we hear in the second part the stern demands of
the ethical life. Its spokesman, Judge William, rises in defense of
the social institutes, and of marriage in particular, against the
slurs cast on them by his young friend A. He makes it clear that
the only possible outcome of the æsthetic life, with its
aimlessness, its superciliousness, its vague possibilities, is a
feeling of vanity and vexation of spirit, and a hatred of life
itself: despair. One floundering in this inevitable slough of
despond, who earnestly wishes to escape from it and to save himself
from the ultimate destruction of his personality, must choose and
determine to rise into the ethical sphere. That is, he must elect a
definite calling, no matter how humdrum, marry, if possible, and
thus subject himself to the "general law." In a word, instead of a
world of vague possibilities, however attractive, he must choose
the definite circumscription of the individual who is a member of
society. Only thus, will he obtain a balance in his life between
the demands of his personality on the one hand, and of the demands
of society on him. When thus reconciled to his
environment—his "lot"—all the pleasures of the
æsthetic sphere which he resigned will be his again in rich
measure, but in a transfigured sense.</p>
<p id="ii-p36">  Though nobly eloquent in places, and instinct with
warm feeling, this panegyric on marriage and the fixed duties of
life is somewhat unconvincing, and its style undeniably tame and
unctious—at least when contrasted with the Satanic Verve of
most of A's papers. The fact is that Kierkegaard, when considering
the ethical sphere, in order to carry out his plan of contrasting
it with the æsthetic sphere, was already envisaging the
higher sphere of religion, to which the ethical sphere is but a
transition, and which is the only true alternative to the
æsthetic life. At the very end of the book Kierkegaard,
flying his true colors, places a sermon as an "ultimatum,"
purporting to have been written bya pastor on the Jutish Heath. Its
text is that "as against we are always in the wrong," and the tenor
of it, "onlythat truth which edifies is truth for you." It is not
that you must choose either the æsthetic or the ethical view
of life; but that neither the one nor the other is the full
truth—God alone is the truth which must be grasped with all
inwardness. But since we recognize our imperfections, or sins, the
more keenly, as we are developed more highly, our typical relation
to God must be that of repentance; and by repentance as by a step
we may rise into the higher sphere of religion—as will be
seen, a purely Christian thought.</p>
<p id="ii-p37">
A
work of such powerful originality, imposing by its very size, and
published at the anonymous author's own expense, could not but
create a stir among the small Danish reading public. And
notwithstanding Kierkegaard's consistent efforts to conceal his
authorship in the interest of his "indirect communication," it
could not long remain a secret. The book was much, and perplexedly,
discussed, though no one was able to fathom the author's real aim,
most readers being attracted by piquant subjects such as the "Diary
of the Seducer," and regarding the latter half as a feeble
afterthought. As he said himself: "With my left hand I held out to
the world 'Either‑Or,' with my right, 'Two Edifying
Discourses'; but they all—or practically all—seized
with their right hands what I held in my left."</p>
<p id="ii-p38">   These "Two Edifying
Discourses,"<note place="foot" id="ii-p38.1" n="4">Not "Discourses for Edification," cf. the Foreword to <i>Atter Opbyggelige Taler,</i> S. V. vol. iv.</note>  

for
thus he preferred to call them, rather than sermons, because he
claimed no authority to preach—as well as all the many later
ones, were published over his own name, addressed to <i>Den Enkelte</i> "The Single
Individual" "whom with joy and gratitude he calls his reader," and
were dedicated to the memory of his father. They belong among the
noblest books of edification, of which the North has not a
few.</p>
<p id="ii-p39">During
the following three years <i>(1843‑5)</i> Kierkegaard, once
roused to productivity, though undoubtedly kept at his task by the
exertion of marvellous will‑power, wrote in quick succession
some of his most notable works—so original in form, in
thought, in content that it is a well‑nigh hopeless task to
analyze them to any satisfaction. All we can do here is to note the
development in them of the one grand theme which is fundamental to
all his literary activity: how to become a Christian.</p>
<p id="ii-p40">   If the second part of "Either‑Or" was
devoted to an explanation of the nature of the ethical, as against
the æsthetic, conduct of life, inevitably the next task was,
first, to define the nature of the religious life, as against the
merely ethical life; then, to show how the religious sphere may be
attained. This is done in the brilliant twin books <i>Frygt og Baeven</i> "Fear and
Trembling" and <i>Gjentagelsen</i> "Repetition." Both
were published over pseudonyms.</p>
<p id="ii-p41">
"Fear
and Trembling" bears as its subtitle "Dialectic Lyrics." Indeed,
nowhere perhaps, is Kierkegaard's strange union of dialectic
subtlety and intense lyrical power and passion so strikingly in
evidence as in this panegyric on Abraham, the father of faith. To
Kierkegaard he is the shining exemplar of the religious life; and
his greatest act of faith, his obedience to God's command to slay
Isaac. Nothing can surpass the eloquence with which he depicts the
agony of the father, his struggle between the ethical, or general,
law which saith "thou shalt no kill"! and God's specific command.
In the end, Abraham by a grand resolve transgresses the law; and
lo! because he has faith, against certainty, that he will keep
Isaac, and does not merely resign him, as many a tragic hero would
have done, he receives all again, in a new and higher sphere. In
other words, Abraham chooses to be "the exception" and set aside
the general law, as well as does the æsthetic individual;
but, note well: "in fear and trembling," and at the express command
of God! He is a "knight of faith." But because this direct relation
to the divinity necessarily can be certain only to Abraham's self,
his action is altogether incomprehensible to others. Reason recoils
before the absolute paradox of the individual who chooses to rise
superior to the general law.</p>
<p id="ii-p42">  The rise into the religious sphere is always likely
to be the outcome of some severe inner conflict engendering
infinite passion. In the splendidly written <i>Gjentagelse</i> "Repetition" we are
shown <i>ad oculos</i> an
abortive transition into the religious sphere, with a corresponding
relapse into the æsthetic sphere. Kierkegaard's own
love‑story is again drawn upon: the "Young Person" ardently
loves the woman; but discovers to his consternation that she is in
reality but a burden to him since, instead of having an actual,
living relation to her, he merely "remembers" her when she is
present. In the ensuing collision of motives his æsthetically
cool friend Constantin Constantius advises him to act as one
unworthy of her—as did Kierkegaard—and to forget her.
But instead of following this advice, and lacking a deeper
religious background, he flees the town and subsequently transmutes
his trials into poetry—that is, relapses into the
æsthetic sphere: rather than, like Job, whom he apostrophises
passionately, "receiving all again" (having all "repeated") in a
higher sphere. This idea of the resumption of a lower stage into a
higher one is one of Kierkegaard's most original and fertile
thoughts. It is illustrated here with an amazing wealth of
instances.</p>
<p id="ii-p43">   So far, it had been a question of religious
feeling in general—how it may arise, and what its nature is.
In the pivotal work <i>Philosophiske Smuler</i> "Philosophic
Trifles"—note the irony—Kierkegaard throws the
searching rays of his penetrating intellect on the grand problem of
revealed religion: can one's eternal salvation be based on an
historical event? This is the great stumbling block to the
understanding.</p>
<p id="ii-p44">   Hegel's philosophic optimism maintained that
the difficulties of Christianity had been completely "reconciled"
or "mediated" in the supposedly higher synthesis of philosophy, by
which process religion had been reduced to terms which might be
grasped by the intellect. Kierkegaard, fully voicing the claim both
of the intellect and of religion, erects the barrier of the
paradox, impassable except by the act of faith. As will be seen,
this is Tertullian's <i>Credo
quia absurdum.</i><note place="foot" id="ii-p44.1" n="5"><i>De Carne Christi</i>, chap. V, as my friend, Professor A. E. Haydon, kindly points out.</note>  
<br />
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p45">
In
the briefest possible outline his argument is as follows: Socrates
had taught that in reality every one had the truth in him and
needed but to be reminded of it by the teacher who thus is
necessary only in helping the disciple to discover it himself. That
is the indirect communication of the truth. But now suppose that
the truth is not innate in man, suppose he has merely the ability
to grasp it when presented to him. And suppose the teacher to be of
absolute, infinite importance—the Godhead himself, directly
communicating with man, revealing the truth in the shape of man; in
fact, as the lowliest of men, yet insisting on implicit belief in
Him! This, according to Kierkegaard, constitutes the paradox of
faith <i>par excellence.</i>
But this paradox, he shows, existed for the generation
contemporaneous with Christ in the same manner as it does for those
living now. To think that faith was an easier matter for those who
saw the Lord and walked in His blessed company is but a
sentimental, and fatal, delusion. On the other hand, to found one's
faith on the glorious results, now evident, of Christ's appearance
in the world is sheer thoughtlessness and blasphemy. With
ineluctable cogency it follows that "there can be no disciple at
second hand." Now, as well as "1800 years ago," whether in
Heathendom or in Christendom, faith is born of the same conditions:
the resolute acceptance by the individual of the absolute
paradox.</p>
<p id="ii-p46">   In previous works Kierkegaard had already
intimated that what furnished man the impetus to rise into the
highest sphere and to assail passionately and incessantly the
barrier of the paradox, or else caused him to lapse into "demonic
despair," was the consciousness of sin. In the book <i>Begrebet Angest</i> "The Concept of
Sin," he now attempts with an infinite and laborious subtlety to
explain the nature of sin. Its origin is found in the "sympathetic
antipathy" of Dread—that force which at one and the same time
attracts and repels from the suspected danger of a fall and is
present even in the state of innocence, in children. It finally
results in a kind of "dizziness" which is fatal. Yet, so
Kierkegaard contends, the "fall" of man is, in every single
instance, due to a definite act of the will, a "leap"—which
seems a patent contradiction.</p>
<p id="ii-p47">
To
the modern reader, this is the least palatable of Kierkegaard's
works, conceived as it is with a sovereign and almost medieval
disregard of the predisposing undeniable factors of environment and
heredity (which, to be sure, poorly fit his notion of the absolute
responsibility of the individual). Its sombreness is redeemed, to a
certain degree, by a series of marvellous observations, drawn from
history and literature, on the various phases and manifestations of
Dread in human life.</p>
<p id="ii-p48">   On the same day as the book just discussed
there appeared, as a "counter‑irritant," the hilariously
exuberant <i>Forord</i>
"Forewords," a collection of some eight playful but vicious
attacks, in the form of prefaces, on various foolish manifestations
of Hegelianism in Denmark. They are aimed chiefly at the
high‑priest of the "system," the poet Johan Ludvig Heiberg
who, as the <i>arbiter
elegantiarum</i> of the times had presumed to review, with a
plentiful lack of insight, Kierkegaard's activity. But some of the
most telling shots are fired at a number of the individualist
Kierkegaard's pet aversions.</p>
<p id="ii-p49">
His
next great work, <i>Stadier paa
Livets Vei</i> "Stages on Life's Road," forms a sort of
resumé of the results so far gained. The three "spheres" are
more clearly elaborated.</p>
<p id="ii-p50">  The aesthetic sphere is represented existentially by
the incomparable <i>In Vino
Veritas,</i> generally called "The Banquet," from a purely literary
point of view the most perfect of Kierkegaard's works, which, if
written in one of the great languages of Europe, would have
procured him world fame. Composed in direct emulation of Plato's
immortal <i>Symposion,</i> it
bears comparison with it as well as any modern composition
can.<note place="foot" id="ii-p50.1" n="6">Cf. Brandes, S. K. p. 157.</note>  

Indeed,
it excels Plato's work in subtlety, richness, and refined humor. To
be sure, Kierkegaard has charged his creation with such romantic
superabundance of delicate observations and rococo ornament that
the whole comes dangerously near being improbable; whereas the
older work stands solidly in reality.</p>
<p id="ii-p51">   It is with definite purpose that the theme of
the speeches of the five participants in the banquet is love, i.e.,
the relation of the two sexes in love; for it is there the main
battle between the æsthetic and the ethical view of life must
be fought out. Accordingly, Judge William, to whom the last idyllic
pages of "The Banquet" again introduce us, in the second part
breaks another shaft in defense of marriage, which in the ethical
view of life is the typical realization of the "general law." Love
exists also for the ethical individual. In fact, love and no other
consideration whatsoever can justify marriage. But whereas to the
aesthetic individual love is merely eroticism, viz., a passing
self‑indulgence without any obligation, the ethical
individual attaches to himself the woman of his choice by an act of
volition, for better or for worse, and by his marriage vow incurs
an obligation to society. Marriage is thus a synthesis of love and
duty. A pity only that Kierkegaard's astonishingly low evaluation
of woman utterly mars what would otherwise be a classic defence of
marriage.</p>
<p id="ii-p52">
The
religious sphere is shown forth in the third part, <i>Skyldig—Ikke‑Skyldig</i>
"Guilty—Not‑Guilty," with the apt subtitle "A History
of Woe." Working over, for the third time, and in the most intense
fashion, his own unsuccessful attempt to "realize the general law,"
i.e., by marrying, he here presents in the form of a diary the
essential facts of his own engagement, but in darker colors than in
"Repetition." It is broken because of religious incompatibility and
the lover's unconquerable melancholy; and by his voluntary
renunciation, coupled with acute suffering through his sense of
guilt for his act, he is driven up to an approximation of the
religious sphere. Not unjustly, Kierkegaard himself regarded this
as the richest of his works.</p>
<p id="ii-p53">  One may say that "Guilty‑Not‑Guilty"
corresponds to Kierkegaard's own development at this stage.
Christianity is still above him. How may it be attained? This is
the grand theme of the huge book whimsically named "Final
Unscientific Postscript to the Philosophical Trifles," <i>Afstuttende Uvidenskabelig Efterskrift
(1846):</i> "How shall I become a Christian, I, Johannes Climacus,
born in this city, thirty years of age, and not in any way
different from the ordinary run of men"?</p>
<p id="ii-p54">   Following up the results gained in the
"Trifles," the subjectivity of faith is established once for all:
it is not to be attained by swearing to any set of dogmas, not even
Scripture; for who will vouch for its being an absolutely reliable
and inspired account of Christ? Besides, as Lessing had
demonstrated conclusively: historic facts never can become the
proof of eternal verities. Nor can the existence of the Church
through the ages furnish any guarantee for faith—straight
counter to the opinion held by Kierkegaard's famous contemporary
Grundtvig—any more than can mere contemporaneousness
establish a guarantee for those living at the beginning. To sum up:
"One who has an objective Christianity and nothing else, he is
<i>eo ipso</i> a heathen." For
the same reason, "philosophic speculation" is not the proper
approach, since it seeks to understand Christianity objectively, as
an historic phenomenon—which rules it out from the
start.</p>
<p id="ii-p55">
It
is only by a decisive "leap," from objective thinking into
subjective faith, with the consciousness of sin as the driving
power, that the individual may realize (we would say, attain)
Christianity. Nor is it gained once for all, but must ever be
maintained by passionately assailing the paradox of faith, which
is, that one's eternal salvation is based on an historic fact. The
main thing always is the "how," not the "what." Kierkegaard goes so
far as to say that he who with fervency and inwardness prays to
some false god is to be preferred to him who worships the true god,
but without the passion of devotion.</p>
<p id="ii-p56">  In order to prevent any misunderstanding about the
manner of presentation in this remarkable book, it will be well to
add Kierkegaard's own remark after reading a conscientious German
review of his "Trifles": "Although the account given is correct,
every one who reads it will obtain an altogether incorrect
impression of the book; because the account the critic gives is in
the <i>ex cathedra</i> style
<i>(docerende),</i> which will
produce on the reader the impression that the book is written in a
like manner. But this is in my eyes the worst misconception
possible." And as to its peculiar conversational, entertaining
manner which in the most leisurely, legère fashion and in an
all but dogmatic style treats of the profoundest problems, it is
well to recall the similarly popular manner of Pascal in his
<i>Lettres Provinciales.</i>
Like him—and his grand prototype Socrates—Kierkegaard
has the singular faculty of attacking the most abstruse matters
with a chattiness bordering on frivolity, yet without ever losing
dignity.</p>
<p id="ii-p57">  </p>
<p id="ii-p58"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p59">   For four and a half years Kierkegaard had now,
notwithstanding his feeble health, toiled feverishly and, as he
himself states, without even a single day's remission. And "the
honorarium had been rather Socratic": all of his books bad been
brought out at his own expense, and their sale had been, of course,
small. (Of the "Final Postscript," e.g., which had cost him between
500 and 600 rixdollars, only 60 copies were sold). Hardly any one
had understood what the purpose of this "literature" was. He
himself had done, with the utmost exertion and to the best of his
ability, what he set out to do: to show his times, which had
assumed that being a Christian is an easy enough matter, how
unspeakably difficult a matter it really is and what terribly
severe demands it makes on natural man. He now longed for rest and
seriously entertained the plan of bringing his literary career to a
close and spending the remainder of his days as a pastor of some
quiet country parish, there to convert his philosophy into terms of
practical existence. But this was not to be. An incident which
would seem ridicuously small to a more robust nature sufficed to
inflict on Kierkegaard's sensitive mind the keenest tortures and
thus to sting him into a renewed and more passionate literary
activity.</p>
<p id="ii-p60">  As it happened, the comic paper <i>Korsaren</i> "The Corsair" was then at
the heyday of its career. The first really democratic periodical in
Denmark, it stood above party lines and through its malicious,
brilliant satire and amusing caricatures of prominent personalities
was hated, feared, and enjoyed by everybody. Its editor, the Jewish
author Meir Goldschmidt, was a warm and outspoken admirer of the
philosopher. Kierkegaard, on the other hand, had long regarded the
Press with suspicion. He loathed it because it gave expression to,
and thus subtly flattered, the multitude, "the public," "the
mob"—as against the individual, and because it worked with
the terrible weapon of anonymity; but held it especially dangerous
by reason of its enormous circulation and daily repetition of
mischievous falsehoods. So it seemed to him who ever doubted the
ability of the "people" to think for themselves. In a word, the
Press is to him "the evil principle in the modern world." Needless
to say, the tactics of "The Corsair," in particular, infuriated
him.</p>
<p id="ii-p61">  In a Christmas annual (1845) there had appeared a
blundering review, by one of the collaborators on "The Corsair," of
his "Stages on Life's Road." Seizing the opportunity offered,
Kierkegaard wrote a caustic rejoinder, adding the challenge: "Would
that I now soon appear in 'The Corsair.' It is really hard on a
poor author to be singled out in Danish literature by remaining the
only one who is not abused in it." We know now that Goldschmidt did
his best in a private interview to ward off a feud,. but when
rebuffed he turned the batteries of his ridicule on the personality
of his erstwhile idol. And for the better part of a year the
Copenhagen public was kept laughing and grinning about the unequal
trouser legs, the spindle shanks, the inseparable umbrella, the
dialectic propensities, of "Either—Or," as Kierkegaard came
to be called by the populace; for, owing to his peripatetic
habits—acquired in connection with the Indirect
Communication—he had long been a familiar figure on the
streets of the capital. While trying to maintain an air of
indifference, be suffered the tortures of the damned. In his
Journal (several hundred of whose pages are given over to
reflections on this experience) we find exclamations such as this
one: "What is it to be roasted alive at a slow fire, or to be
broken on the wheel or, as they do in warm climates, to be smeared
with honey and put at the mercy of the insects—what is that
in comparison with this torture: to be grinned to
death!"</p>
<p id="ii-p62">   There could be no thought now of retiring to a
peaceful charge in the country. That would have been fleeing from
persecution. Besides, unbeknown perhaps to himself, his pugnacity
was aroused. While under the influence of the "Corsair Feud" (as it
is known in Danish literature) he completes the booklet "A Literary
Review." This was originally intended as a purely æsthetic
evaluation and appreciation of the (then anonymous)
author<note place="foot" id="ii-p62.1" n="7">Mrs. Thomasine Gyllembourg-Ehrensvärd.</note>  

of
the <i>Hverdagshistorier</i>
"Commonplace Stories" that are praised by him for their thoughtful
bodying forth of a consistent view of life which—however
different from his own—yet commanded his respect. He now
appended a series of bitter reflections on the Present Times,
paying his respects to the Press, which he calls incomparably the
worst offender in furnishing people with cheap irony, in forcibly
levelling out and reducing to mediocrity all those who strive to
rise above it intellectually—words applicable, alas! no less
to our own times. To him, however, who in a religious sense has
become the captain of his soul, the becoming a butt of the Press is
but a true test. Looking up, Kierkegaard sees in his own fate the
usual reward accorded by mankind to the courageous souls who dare
to fight for the truth, for the ideal—for Christianity,
against the "masses." In a modern way, through ridicule, he was
undergoing the martyrdom which the blood witnesses of old had
undergone for the sake of their faith. Their task it had been to
preach the Gospel among the heathen. His, he reasoned, was in
nowise easier: to make clear to uncomprehending millions of
so‑called Christians that they were not Christians at all,
that they did not even know what Christianity is: suffering and
persecution, as he now recognizes, being inseparable from the truly
Christian life.</p>
<p id="ii-p63">   First, then, the road had to be cleared,
emphatically, for the truth that Christianity and "the public" are
opposite terms. The collection of "Edifying Discourses in Diverse
Spirits" is thus a religious parallel to the polemic in his
"Review." The first part of these meditations has for text: "The
purity of the heart consists in willing one thing"—and this
one thing is necessarily the good, the ideal; but only he who lives
his life as the individual can possibly will the good—else it
is lived in duplicity, for the world will share his aspirations, he
will bid for the rewards which the bowing before the crowd can give
him. In the second part, entitled "What we may learn from the
Lilies of the Field and the Birds of the Air"—one of
Kierkegaard's favorite texts—the greatest danger to the
ethico-religious life is shown to be the uneasiness about our
material welfare which insidiously haunts our thought‑life,
and, notwithstanding our best endeavors, renders us essentially
slaves to "the crowd"; whereas it is given to man, created in the
image of God, to be as self‑contained, unafraid, hopeful as
are (symbolically) the lily and the bird. The startlingly new
development attained through his recent experiences is most evident
in the third part, "The Gospel of Sufferings," in which absolute
stress is laid on the imitation of Christ in the strictest sense.
Only the "individual" can compass this: the narrow way to salvation
must be traveled alone; and will lead to salvation only if the
world is, literally, overcome in persecution and tribulation. And,
on the other hand, to be happy in this world is equivalent to
forfeiting salvation. Thus briefly outlined, the contents of this
book would seem to be sheer monkish asceticism; but no synopsis,
however full, can hope to give an idea of its lyrical pathos, its
wealth of tender reflections, the great love tempering the stern
severity of its teaching.</p>
<p id="ii-p64">
With
wonderful beauty "The Deeds of Love" <i>(Kjerlighedens Gjerninger)</i>
(1847)
are exalted as the Christian's help and salvation against the
tribulations of the world—love, not indeed of the human kind,
but of man through God. "You are not concerned at all with what
others do to you, but only with what you do to others; and also,
with how you react to what others do to you—you are
concerned, essentially, only with yourself, before God."</p>
<p id="ii-p65">
   In rapid succession there follow "Christian
Discourses"; "The Lily of the Field and the Bird of the Air";
"Sickness Unto Death"
(with the sub‑title "A Christian Psychological Exposition");
"Two Religious Treatises"; "The High Priest, the Publican, the
Sinner"; "Three Discourses on the 0ccasion of Communion on
Friday."</p>
<p id="ii-p66">   In the course of these reflections it had
become increasingly clear to Kierkegaard that the
self‑constituted representative of Christ—the Church
or, to mention only the organization he was intimately acquainted
with, the Danish State Church—had succeeded in becoming a
purely worldly organization whose representatives, far from
striving to follow Christ, had made life quite comfortable for
themselves; retort to which was presently made that by thus
stressing "contemporaneousness" with its aspects of suffering and
persecution, Kierkegaard had both exceeded the accepted teaching of
the Church and staked the attainment of Christianity so high as to
drive all existing forms of it <i>ad absurdum.</i></p>
<p id="ii-p67">   In his <i>Indövelse i Christendom</i>
"Preparation for a Christian Life" and the somber <i>Til Selvprövelse</i>
"For
a Self‑Examation" Kierkegaard returns to the attack with a
powerful re‑examination of the whole question as to how far
modern Christianity corresponds to that of the Founder. Simply, but
with grandiose power, he works out in concrete instances the
conception of "contemporaneousness" gained in the "Final
Postscript"; at the same time demonstrating to all who have eyes to
see, the axiomatic connection between the doctrine of Propitiation
and Christ's life in debasement; that Christianity consists in
absolutely dying to the world; and that the Christianity which does
not live up to this is but a travesty on Christianity. We may think
what we Please about this counsel of perfection, and judge what we
may about the rather arbitrary choice of Scripture passages on
which Kierkegaard builds: no serious reader, no sincere Christian
can escape the searching of heart sure to follow this tremendous
arraignment of humanity false to its divine leader. There is
nothing more impressive in all modern literature than the gallery
of "opinions" voiced by those arrayed against Christ when on
earth—and now—as to what constitutes the
"offense."</p>
<p id="ii-p68">
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p69">
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p70">
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p71">
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p72">
Kierkegaard
had hesitated a long time before publishing the "Preparation for a
Christian Life." Authority‑loving as he was, he shrank from
antagonizing the Church, as it was bound to do; and more
especially, from giving offense to its primate, the venerable
Bishop Mynster who had been his father's friend and spiritual
adviser, to whom he had himself always looked up with admiring
reverence, and whose sermons he had been in the habit of reading at
all times. Also, to be sure, he was restrained by the thought that
by publishing his book he would render Christianity
well‑night unattainable to the weak and the simple and the
afflicted who certainly were in need of the consolations of
Christianity without any additional sufferings interposed and
surely no reader of his devotional works can be in doubt that he
was the most tender‑hearted of men. In earlier, stronger
times, he imagines, he would have been made a martyr for his
opinions; but was he entitled to become a
blood‑witness—he who realized more keenly than any one
that he himself was not a Christian in the strictest sense? In his
"Two Religious Treatises" he debates the question: "Is it
permissible for a man to let himself be killed for the truth?";
which is answered in the negative in "About the Difference between
a Genius and an Apostle"—which consists in the Apostle's
speaking with authority. However, should not the truth be the most
important consideration? His journal during that time offers
abundant proof of the absolute earnestness with which he struggled
over the question.</p>
<p id="ii-p73">

   When Kierkegaard
finally published "The Preparation for a Christian Life," the
bishop was, indeed, incensed; but he did nothing. Nor did any one
else venture forth. Still worse affront! Kierkegaard had said his
last word, had stated his ultimatum—and it was received with
indifference, it seemed. Nevertheless he decided to wait and see
what effect his books would have for he hesitated to draw the last
conclusions and mortally wound the old man tottering on the brink
of his grave by thus attacking the Church. There followed a three
years' period of silence on the part of Kierkegaard—again
certainly a proof of his utter sincerity. It must be remembered, in
this connection, that the very last thing Kierkegaard desired was
an external reorganization, a "reform," of the Church—indeed,
he firmly refused to be identified with any movement of secession,
differing in this respect vitally from his contemporaries Vinet and
Grundtvig who otherwise had so much in common with him. His only
wish was to infuse life and inwardness into the existing forms. And
far from being inferior to them in this he was here at one with the
Founder and the Early Church in that he states the aim of the
Christian Life to be, not to transform the existing social order,
but to transcend it. For the very same reason, coupled to be sure
with a pronounced aristocratic individualism, he is utterly and
unreasonably indifferent, and even antagonistic, to the great
social movements of his time, to the political upheavals of 1848,
to the revolutionary advances of science.</p>
<p id="ii-p74">   As Kierkegaard now considered his career
virtually concluded, he wrote (1851) a brief account "About my
Activity as an Author" in,which he furnishes his readers a key to
its unfolding—from an aesthetic view to the religious
view—which he considers his own education by Providence; and
indicates it to be his special task to call attention, without
authority, to the religious, the Christian life. His "Viewpoint for
my Activity as an Author," published by his brother only long after
his death, likewise deflnes the purpose of the whole "authorship,"
besides containing important biographical material.</p>
<p id="ii-p75">   At length (January, 1854) Mynster died. Even
then Kierkegaard, though still on his guard, might not have felt
called upon to have recourse to stronger measures if it had liot
been for an unfortunate sentence in the funeral sermon preached by
the now famous Martensen—generally pointed out as the
successor to the primacy—with whom Kierkegaard had already
broken a lance or two. Martensen had declared Mynster to have been
"one of the holy chain of witnesses for the truth <i>(sandhedsvidner)</i> which extends
through the centuries down from the time of the Apostles." This is
the provocation for which Kierkegaard had waited. "Bishop Mynster a
witness for the truth"! he bursts out, "You who read this, you know
well what in a Christian sense is a witness for the truth. Still,
let me remind you that to be one, it is absolutely essential to
suffer for the teaching of Christianity"; whereas "the truth is
that Mynster was wordly‑wise to a degree—was weak,
pleasureloving, and great only as a declaimer." But once more
striking proof of his circumspection and
single‑mindedness—he kept this harsh letter in his desk
for nine months, lest its publication should interfere in the least
with Martensen's appointment, or seem the outcome of personal
resentment.</p>
<p id="ii-p76">  Martensen's reply, which forcefully enough brings out
all that could be said for a milder interpretation of the Christian
categories and for his predecessor, was not as respectful to the
sensitive author as it ought to have been. In a number of newspaper
letters of increasing violence and acerbity Kierkegaard now tried
to force his obstinately silent opponent to his knees; but in vain.
Filled with holy wrath at what he conceived to be a conspiracy by
silence, and evasions to bring to naught the whole infinitely
important matter for which he had striven, Kierkegaard finally
turned agitator. He addressed himself directly to the people with
the celebrated pamphlet series <i>Öeblikket</i> "The Present
Moment" in which he opens an absolutely withering fire of invective
on anything and everything connected with "the existing order" in
Christendom—an agitation the like of which for revolutionary
vehemence has rarely, if ever, been seen. All rites of the
Church—marriage, baptism, confirmation, communion,
burial—and most of all the clergy, high and low, draw the
fiery bolts of his wrath and a perfect hail of fierce, cruel
invective. The dominant note, though varied infinitely, is ever the
same: "Whoever you may be, and whatever the life you live, my
friend: by omitting to attend the public divine service—if
indeed it be your habit to attend it—by omitting to attend
public divine service as now constituted—aiming as it does to
represent the Christianity of the New Testament) you will escape at
least one, and a great, 4b in not attempting to fool God by calling
that the Christianity of the New Testament which is not the
Christianity of the New Testament." And he does not hesitate to use
strong, even coarse, language; he even courts the reproach of
blasphemy in order to render ridiculous in "Official Christianity"
what to most may seem inherently, though mistakenly, a matter of
highest reverence. The swiftness and mercilessness of his attack
seem to have left his contemporaries without a weapon: all they
could do was to shrug their shoulders about the "fanatic," to duck
and wait dumbly until the storm had passed.</p>
<p id="ii-p77">  Nor did it last long. On the second of October, 1855,
Kierkegaard fell unconscious in the street. He was brought to the
hospital where he died on the eleventh of November,—aged 42.
The immense exertions of the last months had shattered his frail
body. And strange: the last of his money bid been used up. He had
said what he thought Providence had to communicate through him. His
strength was gone. His death at this moment would put the crown on
his work. As he said on his death‑bed: "The bomb explodes,
and the conflagration will follow."</p>
<p id="ii-p78">   In appraising Kierkegaard's life and works it
will be found true, as Höffding says, that he can mean much
even to those who do not subscribe to the beliefs so
unquestioningly entertained by him. And however much they may
regret that he poured his noble wine into the old bottles, they
cannot fail to recognize the yeoman's service he did, totii for
sincere Christians in compelling them to rehearse inwardly what
ever tends to become a matter of form: what it means to be a
Christian; and for others, in deepening their sense of individual
responsibility. In fact, every one who has once come under his
influence and has wrestled with this mighty spirit will bear away
some blessing. In its time when, as in our own, the crowd, society,
the millions, the nation, had depressed the individual to an
insignificant atom—and what is worse, in the individual's own
estimation; when shallow altruistic, socializing effort thought
naively that the millenium was at hand, he drove the truth home
that, on the contrary, the individual is the measure of all things;
that we do not live <i>en
masse;</i> that both the terrible responsibility and the great
satisfactions of life inhere in the individual. Again, more
forcibly than any one else in modern times, certainly more cogently
than Pascal, he demonstrated that the possibility of proof in
religion is an illusion; that doubt cannot be combatted by reason,
that it ever will be <i>credo
quia impossibile.</i> In religion, he showed the utter
incompatibility of the æsthetic and the religious life; and
in Christianity, he re‑stated and repointed the principle of
ideal perfection by his unremitting insistence on
contemporaneousness with Christ. It is another matter whether by so
doing Kierkegaard was about to pull the pillars from underneath the
great edifice of Christianity which housed both him and his
enemies: seeing that he himself finally doubted whether it had ever
existed apart from the Founder and, possibly, the
Apostles.</p>
<p id="ii-p79">
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p80">  Kierkegaard is not easy reading. One's first
impression of crabbedness, whimsicality, abstruseness will,
however, soon give way to admiration of the marvellous instrument
of precision language has become in his hands. To be sure, he did
not write for people who are in a hurry, nor for dullards. His
closely reasoned paragraphs and, at times huge, though rhetorically
faultless, periods require concentrated attention, his involutions
and repetitions, handled with such incomparable virtuosity, demand
an everlasting readiness of comprehension on the part of the
reader. On the other hand his philosophic work is delightfully
"Socratic," unconventional, and altogether "un‑textbooklike."
Kierkegaard himself wished that his devotional works should be read
aloud. And, from a purely æsthetic point of view, it ought to
be a delight for any orator to practice on the wonderful periods of
e.g., "The Preparation," or of, say, the parable of the
coach‑horses in "Acts of the Apostles." They alone would be
sufficient to place Kierkegaard in the front rank of prose writers
of the nineteenth century where, both by the power of his utterance
and the originality of his thought, he rightfully
belongs.</p>
<p id="ii-p81">   In laying before an English speaking public
selections from Kierkegaard's works, the translator has endeavored
to give an adequate idea of the various aspects of his highly
disparate works. For this purpose he has chosen a few large pieces,
rather than given tidbits. He hopes to be pardoned for not having a
slavish regard for Kierkegaard's very inconsequential
paragraphing<note place="foot" id="ii-p81.1" n="8">With signal exception of "The Present Moment."</note>  

and
for breaking, with no detriment, he believes, to the thought, some
excessively long paragraphs into smaller units; which will prove
more restful to the eye and more encouraging to the reader. As to
occasional omissions—always indicated by dots—the
possessor of the complete works will readily identify them. In
consonance with Kierkegaard's views on "contemporaneousness," no
capitals are used in "The Preparation" when referring to Christ by
pronouns.</p>
<p id="ii-p82"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p83">   When Kierkegaard died, his influence, like that
of Socrates, was just beginning to make itself felt. The complete
translation into German of all his works<note place="foot" id="ii-p83.1" n="9">In process of publication. Jena.</note>  

and
of many into other languages; the magnificent new edition of his
works<note place="foot" id="ii-p83.2" n="10">Samlede Værker. Copenhagen, 1901-1906 (14 vols.). In the notes abbreviated S. V. Still another edition is preparing.</note> 

and
of his extraordinarily voluminous diaries,<note place="foot" id="ii-p83.3" n="11">Copenhagen, 1909 ff.</note>

now
nearing completion; and the steadily increasing number of books,
pamphlets, and articles from the most diverse quarters testify to
his reaching a growing number of <i>individuals.</i> Below is given a list
of the more important books and articles on Kierkegaard. It does
not aim at completeness.</p>
<p id="ii-p84">
<br />
<br />
L. M. HOLLANDER</p>
<p id="ii-p85">Adjunct
Professor of Germanic Languages, University of Texas,
Austin.</p>
<p id="ii-p86">
<br /><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p87">Bärthold,
A.  
<i>S. K., Eine
Verfasserexistenz eigner Art.   </i>Halberstadt,
1873.</p>
<p id="ii-p88" />
<p id="ii-p89">
Same:
<i>Noten zu S. K.'s
Lebensgeschichte.  </i> Halle, 1876.</p>
<p id="ii-p90"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p91">
Same:
<i>Die Bedeutung der
aesthetischen Schriften S. K.'s. </i> Halle, 1879.</p>
<p id="ii-p92" />
<p id="ii-p93">
Barfod,
H. P.  (Introduction to
the first edition of the Diary.)  Copenhagen, 1869.</p>
<p id="ii-p94" />
<p id="ii-p95">
Bohlin,
Th.  <i>S. K.'s Etiska Askadning. </i> Uppsala, 1918.1</p>
<p id="ii-p96"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p97">Brandes,
G<i>.   S. K., En kritisk
Fremstilling i Grundrids.</i>  Copenhagen,
1877.</p>
<p id="ii-p98"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p99">
Same:
German ed.  
Leipsic, 1879.</p>
<p id="ii-p100"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p101">
Deleuran,
V.  <i>Esquisse d'une étude sur S. K.
Thése,  </i> University of Paris,
1897.</p>
<p id="ii-p102"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p103">
Höffding,
H.   <i> S. K. </i> Copenhagen,
1892.</p>
<p id="ii-p104"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p105">
Same:
German edition (2nd).   Stuttgart, 1902.</p>
<p id="ii-p106"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p107">
Hoffmann,
R. 
<i>K. und die religidse
Gewissheit.</i> Göttingen, 1910.</p>
<p id="ii-p108">
<br /></p>
<p id="ii-p109">
Jensen,
Ch.   <i>S. K.'s religibse
Udvikling.  </i>
Aarhus, 1898.</p>
<p id="ii-p110" />
<p id="ii-p111">
Monrad,
0. P. 
<i>S. K. Sein Leben und seine
Werke.  </i> Jena,
1909.</p>
<p id="ii-p112"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p113">
Münch,
Ph.   <i>Haupt und Grundgedanken der
Philosophie S. K.'s. </i> Leipsic,
1902.</p>
<p id="ii-p114"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p115">
Rosenberg,
P. A. 
<i>S. K., hans Liv, hans
Personlighed og hans Forfatterskab.</i> Copenhagen,
1898.</p>
<p id="ii-p116"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p117">
Rudin,
W., 
<i>S. K.'s Person och
Författerskap. Förste Afdelningen. </i> Stockholm,
1880.</p>
<p id="ii-p118"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p119">
Schrempf,
Ch.   <i>S. K.'s Stellung zu Bibel und
Dogma. </i> Zeitschrift
für Theologie und Kirche, 1891, p. 179.</p>
<p id="ii-p120"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p121">
Same: 
<i>S.</i> <i>K. Ein unfreier Pionier der
Freiheit. </i> (With a
foreword by Höffding)   Frankfort, 1909.</p>
<p id="ii-p122"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p123">
Swenson,
D.   <i>The Anti‑Intellectualism of
K.  </i>
Philosophic Review, 1916, p. 567.</p>
<p id="ii-p124"><br /></p>
<p id="ii-p125">
To
my friends and colleagues, Percy M. Dawson and Howard M. Jones, I
wish also in this place to express my thanks for help and criticism
"in divers spirits."</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Diapsalmata" id="iii" prev="ii" next="iv">
<h2 id="iii-p0.1">DIAPSALMATA<note place="foot" id="iii-p0.2" n="12">Interlude (of aphorisms). Selection.</note>
</h2>
<p class="First" id="iii-p1">
What
is a poet? An unhappy man who conceals profound anguish in his
heart, but whose lips are so fashioned  that when sighs and groans pass
over them they sound like beautiful music. His fate resembles that
of the unhappy men who were slowly roasted by a gentle fire in the
tyrant Phalaris' bull—their shrieks could not reach his ear
to terrify him, to him they sounded like sweet music. And people
flock about the poet and say to him: do sing again; Which means,
would that new sufferings tormented your soul, and: would that your
lips stayed fashioned as before, for your cries would only terrify
us, but your music is delightful. And the critics join them,
saying: well done, thus must it be according to the laws of
aesthetics. Why, to be sure, a critic resembles a poet as one pea
another, the only difference being that he has no anguish in his
heart and no music on his lips. Behold, therefore would I rather be
a swineherd on Amager,<note place="foot" id="iii-p1.1" n="13">A flat island south of the capital, called the "Kitchen Garden of ‑Copenhagen."</note> 
 and be understood
by the swine than a poet, and misunderstood by men.</p>
<p id="iii-p2">
In
addition to my numerous other acquaintances I have still one more
intimate friend—my melancholy. In the midst of pleasure, in
the midst of work, he beckons to me, calls me aside, even though I
remain present bodily. My melancholy is the most faithful
sweetheart I have had—no wonder that I return the
love!</p>
<p id="iii-p3"><br /></p>
<p id="iii-p4">
Of all
ridiculous things the most ridiculous seems to me, to be
busy—to be a man who is brisk about his food and his work.
Therefore, whenever I see a fly settling, in the decisive moment,
on the nose of such a person of affairs; or if he is spattered with
mud from a carriage which drives past him in still greater haste;
or the drawbridge opens up before him; or a tile falls down and
knocks him dead, then I laugh heartily. And who, indeed, could help
laughing? What, I wonder, do these busy folks get done? Are they
not to be classed with the woman who in her confusion about the
house being on fire carried out the firetongs? What things of
greater account, do you suppose, will they rescue from life's great
conflagration?</p>
<p id="iii-p5"><br /></p>
<p id="iii-p6"><br /></p>
<p id="iii-p7">
Let
others complain that the times are wicked. I complain that they are
paltry; for they are without passion. The thoughts of men are thin
and frail like lace, and they themselves are feeble like girl
lace-makers. The thoughts of their hearts are too puny to be
sinful. For a worm it might conceivably be regarded a sin to harbor
thoughts such as theirs, not for a man who is formed in the image
of God. Their lusts are staid and sluggish, their passions sleepy;
they do their duty, these sordid minds, but permit themselves, as
did the Jews, to trim the coins just the least little bit, thinking
that if our Lord keep tab of them ever so carefully one might yet
safely venture to fool him a bit. Fye upon them! It is therefore my
soul ever returns to the Old Testament and to Shakespeare. There at
least one feels that one is dealing with men and women; there one
hates and loves, there one murders one's enemy and curses his issue
through all generations—there one sins.</p>
<p id="iii-p8"><br /></p>
<p id="iii-p9"><br /></p>
<p id="iii-p10">
  Just as, according to the
legend<note place="foot" id="iii-p10.1" n="14">Told by Athenaios.</note>
 Parmeniscus in
the Trophonian cave lost his ability to laugh, but recovered it
again on the island of Delos at the sight of a shapeless block
which was exhibited as the image of the goddess Leto: likewise did
it happen to me. When I was very young I forgot in the Trophonian
cave how to laugh; but when I grew older and opened my eyes and
contemplated the real world, I had to laugh, and have not ceased
laughing, ever since. I beheld that the meaning of life was to make
a living; its goal, to become Chief Justice; that the delights of
love consisted in marrying a woman with ample means; that it was
the blessedness of friendship to help one another in financial
difficulties; that wisdom was what most people supposed it to be;
that it showed enthusiasm to make a speech, and courage, to risk
being fined 10 dollars; that it was cordiality to say "may it
agree, with you" after a repast; that it showed piety to partake of
the communion once a year. saw that and laughed.</p>
<p id="iii-p11">
A strange thing happened to me in my dream. I was rapt into the
Seventh Heaven. There sat all the gods assembled. As a special
dispensation I was granted the favor to have one wish. "Do you wish
for youth," said Mercury, "or for beauty, or power, or a long life;
or do you wish for the most beautiful woman, or any other of the
many fine things we have in our treasure trove? Choose, but only
one thing!" For a moment I was at a loss. Then I addressed the gods
in this wise: "Most honorable contemporaries, I choose one
thing—that I may always have the laughs on MY side." Not one
god made answer, but all began to laugh. From this I concluded that
my wish had been granted and thought that the gods knew how to
express themselves with good taste: for it would surely have been
inappropriate to answer gravely: your wish has been
granted.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="The Banquet" id="iv" prev="iii" next="v">
<h2 id="iv-p0.1">THE BANQUET</h2>


<p class="Centered" id="iv-p1">
IN VINO VERITAS
(THE BANQUET)</p>
<p class="First" id="iv-p2">
It was on one of
the last days in July, at ten o'clock in the evening, when the
participants in that banquet assembled together. Date and year I
have forgotten; indeed this would be interesting only to one's
memory of details: and not to one's recollection of the contents of
what experience. The "spirit of the occasion" and whatever
impressions are recorded in one's mind under that heading, concerns
only one's recollections; and just as generous wine gains in flavor
by passing the Equator, because of the evaporation of its watery
particles, likewise does recollection gain by getting rid of the
watery particles of memory; and yet recollection becomes as little
a mere figment of the imagination by this process as does the
generous wine.</p>
<p id="iv-p3">
The participants
were five in number: John, with the epithet of the Seducer, Victor
Eremita, Constantin Constantius, and yet two others whose names I
have not exactly forgotten‑-which would be a matter of small
importance
but
whose names I did not learn. It was as if these two had no proper
names, for they were constantly addressed by some epithet. The one
was called the Young Person. Nor was he more than twenty and some
years, of slender and delicate build, and of a very dark
complexion. His face was thoughtful; but more pleasing even was its
lovable and engaging expression which betokened a purity of soul
harmonizing perfectly with the soft charm, almost feminine, and the
transparency of his whole presence. This external beauty of
appearance was lost sight of, however, in one's next impression of
him; or, one kept it only in mind whilst regarding a youth nurtured
orto
use a still tenderer expression-‑petted into being, by
thought, and nourished by the contents of his own soul

a
youth who as yet had had nothing to do with the world, had been
neither aroused and fired, nor disquieted and disturbed. Like a
sleep‑walker he bore the law of his actions within himself,
and the amiable, kindly expression of his countenance concerned no
one, but only mirrored the disposition of his soul.</p>
<p id="iv-p4">   The other person they called the
Dressmaker, and that was his occupation. Of him it was impossible
toget a consistent impression. He was dressed according to the very
latest fashion, with his hair curled and perfumed, fragrant with
eau‑de‑cologne. One moment his carriage did not lack
self-possession, whereas in the next it assumed a certain festive
air, a certain hovering motion which, however was kept in rather
definite bounds by the robustness of his figure. Even when he was
most malicious in his speech his voice ever had a touch of the
smooth‑tonguedness of the the shop, the suaveness of the
dealer in fancy‑goods, Which evidently was utterly disgusting
to himself and only satisfied his spirit of defiance. As I think of
him now I understand him better, to be sure, than when I first saw
him step out of his carriage and I involuntarily laughed. At the
same time there is some contradiction left still. He had
transformed or bewitched himself, had by the magic of his own will
assumed the appearance of one almost halfwitted, but had not
thereby entirely satisfied himself; and this is why his
reflectiveness now and then peered forth from beneath his
disguise.</p>
<p id="iv-p5">   As I think of it now it seems
rather absurd that five such persons should get a banquet arranged.
Nor would anything have come of it, I suppose, if Constantin had
not been one of us. In a retired room of a confectioner's shop
where they met at times, the matter had been broached once before,
but had been dropped immediately when the question arose as to who
was to head the undertaking. The Young Person was declared unfit
for that task, the Dressmaker affirmed himself to be too busy.
Victor Eremita did not beg to be excused because "he had married a
wife or bought yoke of oxen which he needed to
prove",<note place="foot" id="iv-p5.1" n="15">Cf. Luke XIV, 19-20.</note>  
but, he said, even if he
should make an exception, for once, and come to the banquet, yet he
would decline the courtesy offered him to preside at it, and he
therewith "entered protest at the proper time.<note place="foot" id="iv-p5.2" n="16">Words used in the banns.</note>  
 This, John considered a work
spoken in due season; because, as he saw it, there was but one
person able to prepare a banquet, and that was the possessor of the
wishing‑table which set itself with delectable things
whenever he said to it "Cover thyself!" He averred that to enjoy
the charms of a young girl in haste was not always the wisest
course; but as to a banquet, he would not wait for it, and
generally was tired of it a long while before it came off. However,
if the plan was to be carried into effect he would make one
condition, which was, that the banquet should be so arranged as to
be served in one course. And that all were agreed on. Also, that
the settings for it were to be made altogether new, and that
afterwards they were to be destroyed entirely; ay, before rising
from table one was to hear the preparation for their destruction.
Nothing was to remain; "not even so much," said the Dressmaker, "as
there is left of a dress after it has been made over into a hat."
"Nothing," said John, "because nothing is more unpleasant than a
sentimental scene, and nothing more disgusting than the knowledge
that somewhere or other there is an external setting which in a
direct and impertinent fashion pretends to be a
reality."</p>
<p id="iv-p6">   When the conversation had thus
become animated, Victor Eremita suddenly arose, struck an attitude
on the floor, beckoned with his hand in the fashion of one
commanding and, holding his arm extended as one lifting a goblet,
he said, with the gesture of one waving a welcome: "With this cup
whose fragrance already intoxicates my senses, whose cool fire
already inflames my blood, I greet you, beloved
fellow‑banqueters, and bid you welcome; being entirely
assured that each one of you is sufficiently satisfied by our
merely speaking about the banquet; for our Lord satisfied the
stomach before satisfying the eye, but the imagination acts in the
reverse fashion." Thereupon he inserted his hand in his pocket,
took from it a cigar‑case, struck a match, and began to
smoke. When Constantin Constantius protested against this sovereign
free way of transforming the banquet planned into an illusory
fragment of life, Victor declared that he did not believe for one
moment that such a banquet could be got up and that, in any case,
it had beena mistake to let it become the subject of discussion in
advance. "Whatever is to be good must come at once; for 'at once'
is the divinest of all categories and deserves to be honored as in
the language of the Romans: <i>ex
templo,</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p6.1" n="17">Which in Latin means both "from the temple" and "at once."</note>  
because it is the starting
point for all that is divine in life, and so much so that what is
not done at once is of evil." However, he remarked, he did not care
to argue this point. In case the others wished to speak and act
differently he would not say a word, but if they wished him to
explain the sense of his remarks more fully he must have leave to
make a speech, because he did not consider it all desirable to
provoke a discussion on the subject.</p>
<p id="iv-p7">  Permission was given him; and as
the others called on him to do so at once, he spoke as follows: "A
banquet is in itself a difficult matter, because even if it be
arranged with ever so much taste and talent there is something else
essential to its success, to‑wit, good luck. And by this I
mean not such matters as most likely would give concern to an
anxious hostess, but something different, a something which no one
can make absolutely sure of: a fortunate harmonizing of the spirit
and the minutiae of the banquet, that fine ethereal vibration of
chords, that soul‑stirring music which cannot be ordered in
advance from the town‑musicians. Look you, therefore is it a
hazardous thing to undertake, beause if things do go wrong, perhaps
from the very start, one may suffer such a depression and loss of
spirits that recovery from it might involve a very long
time.</p>
<p id="iv-p8">  "Sheer habit and thoughtlessness
are father and godfather to most banquets, and it is only due to
the lack of critical sense among people that one fails to notice
the utter absence of any idea in them. In the first place, women
ought never to be present at a banquet. Women may be used to
advantage only in the Greek style, as a chorus of dancers. As it is
the main thing at a banquet that there be eating and drinking,
woman ought not to be present; she cannot do justice to what is
offered; or, if she can, it is most unbeautiful. Whenever a woman
is present the matter of eating and drinking ought to be reduced to
the very slightest proportions. At most, it ought to be no more
than some trifling feminine occupation, to have something to busy
one's hands with. Especially in the country a little repast of this
kind
which,
by the way, should be put at other times than the principal
meals-‑may be extremely delightful; and if so, always owing
to the presence of the other sex. To do like the English, who let
the fair sex retire as soon as the real drinking is to start, is to
fall between two stools, for every plan ought to be a whole, and
the very manner with which I take a seat at the table and seize
hold of knife and fork bears a definite relation to this whole. In
the same sense a political banquet presents an unbeautiful
ambiguity inasmuch as one does not<note place="foot" id="iv-p8.1" n="18">The omission of the negative particle in the original is no doubt unintentional.</note>  
 want to cut down to a very
minimum the essentials of a banquet, and yet does not wish to have
the speeches thought of as having been made over the
cups.</p>
<p id="iv-p9">  "So far, we are agreed, I suppose;
and our number
in
case anything should come of the banquet‑-is correctly
chosen, according to that beautiful rule: neither more than the
Muses nor fewer than the Graces. Now I demand the greatest
superabundance of everything thinkable. That is, even though
everything be not actually there, yet the possibility of having it
must be at one's immediate beck and call, aye, hover temptingly
over the table, more seductive even than the actual sight of it. I
beg to be excused, however, from banqueting on
sulphur‑matches or on a piece of sugar which all are to suck
in turn. My demands for such a banquet will, on the contrary, be
difficult to satisfy; for the feast itself must be calculated to
arouse and incite that unmentionable longing which each worthy
participant is to bring with him. I require that the earth's
fertility be at our service, as though everything sprouted forth at
the very moment the desire for it was born. I desire a more
luxurious abundance of wine than when Mephistopheles needed but to
drill holes into the table to obtain it. I demand an illumination
more splendid than have the gnomes when they lift up the mountain
on pillars and dance in a sea of blazing light. I demand what most
excites the senses, I demand their gratification by deliciously
sweet perfumes, more superb than any in the Arabian Nights. I
demand a coolness which voluptuously provokes desire and breathes
relaxation on desire satisfied. I demand a fountain's unceasing
enlivenment. If Maecenas could not sleep without hearing the
splashing of a fountain, I cannot eat without it. Do not
misunderstand me, I can eat stockfish without it; but I cannot eat
at a banquet without it; I can drink water without it, but I cannot
drink wine at a banquet without it. I demand a host of servants,
chosen and comely, as if I sate at table with the gods; I demand
that there shall be music at the feast, both strong and subdued;
and I demand that it shall be an accompaniment to my thoughts; and
what concerns you, my friends, my demands regarding you are
altogether incredible. Do you see, by reason of all these
demands‑-which are as many reasons against it

I
hold a banquet to be a <i>pium
desideratum,</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p9.1" n="19">Pious wish.</note>  
 and am so far from desiring a
repetition of it that I presume it is not feasible even a first
time."</p>
<p id="iv-p10">
The only one who
had not actually participated in this conversation, nor in the
frustration of the banquet, was Constantin. Without him, nothing
would have been done save the talking. He had come to a different
conclusion and was of the opinion that the idea might well be
realized, if one but carried the matter with a high
hand.</p>
<p id="iv-p11">Then some time passed, and
both the banquet and the discussion about it were forgotten, when
suddenly, one day, the participants received a card of invitation
from Constantius for a banquet the very same evening. The motto of
the Party had been given by him as: <i>In Vino Veritas,</i> because there was
to be speaking, to be sure, and not only conversation; but the
speeches were not to be made except <i>in vino,</i> and no truth was to be
uttered there excepting that which is <i>in vino</i>--when the wine is a
defense of the truth and the truth a defense of the
wine.</p>
<p id="iv-p12">
The place had been
chosen in the woods, some ten miles distant from Copenhagen. The
hall in which they were to feast had been newly decorated and in
every way made unrecognizable; a smaller room, separated from the
hall by a corridor, was arranged for an orchestra. Shutters and
curtains were let down before all windows, which were left open.
The arrangement that the participants were to drive to the banquet
in the evening hour was to intimate to them

and
that was Constantin's idea
what
was to follow. Even if one knows that one is driving to a banquet,
and the imagination therefore indulges for a moment in thoughts of
luxury, yet the impression of the natural surroundings is too
powerful to be resisted. That this might possibly not be the case
was the only contingency he apprehended; for just as there is no
power like the imagination to render beautiful all it touches,
neither is there any power which can to such a degree disturb
all
misfortune
conspiring
if
confronted with reality. But driving on a summer evening does not
lure the imagination to luxurious thoughts, but rather to the
opposite. Even if one does not see it or hear it, the imagination
will unconsciously create a picture of the longing for home which
one is apt to feel in the evening hours

one
sees the reapers, man and maid, returning from their work in the
fields, one hears the hurried rattling of the hay wagon, one
interprets even the far‑away lowing from the meadows as a
longing. Thus does a summer evening suggest idyllic thoughts,
soothing even a restless mind with its assuagement, inducing even
the soaring imagination to abide on earth with an indwelling
yearning for home as the place from whence it came, and thus
teaching the insatiable mind to be satisfied with little, by
rendering one content; for in the evening hour time stands still
and eternity lingers.     
       
 Thus they arrived in
the evening hour: those invited; for Constantin had come out
somewhat earlier. Victor Eremita who resided in the country not far
away came on horseback, the others in a carriage. And just as they
had discharged it, a light open vehicle rolled in through the gate
caarrying a merry company of four journeymen who were entertained
to be ready at the decisive moment to function as a corps of
destruction: just as firemen are stationed in a theatre, for the
opposite reason at once to extinguish a fire.</p>
<p id="iv-p13">
So long as one is
a child one possesses sufficient imagination to maintain one's soul
at the very top‑notch of expectation-‑for a whole hour
in the dark room, if need be; but when one has grown older one's
imagination may easily cause one to tire of the Christmas tree
before seeing it.</p>
<p id="iv-p14">
The folding doors
were opened. The effect of the radiant illumination, the coolness
wafting toward them, the beguiling fragrance of sweet perfumes, the
excellent taste of the arrangements, for a moment overwhelmed the
feelings of those entering; and when, at the same time, strains
ftom the ballet of "Don Juan" sounded from the orchestra, their
persons seemed transfigured and, as if out of reverence for an
unseen spirit about them, they stopped short for a moment like men
who have been roused by admiration and who have risen to
admire.</p>
<p id="iv-p15">
Whoever knows that
happy moment, whoever has appreciated its delight, and has not also
felt the apprehension lest suddenly something might happen, some
trifle perhaps, which yet might be sufficient to disturb all!
Whoever has held the lamp of Aladdin in his hand and has not also
felt the swooning of pleasure, because one needs but to wish?
Whoever has held what is inviting in his hand and has not also
learned to keep his wrist limber to let go at once, if need
be?</p>
<p id="iv-p16">   Thus they stood side by side. Only
Victor stood alone, absorbed in thought; a shudder seemed to pass
through his soul, he almost trembled; he collected himself and
saluted the omen with these words: "Ye mysterious, festive, and
seductive strains which drew me out of the cloistered seclusion of
a quiet youth and beguiled me with a longing as mighty as a
recollection, and terrible, as though Elvira had not even been
seduced but had only desired to be! Immortal Mozart, thou to whom I
owe all; but no! as yet I do not owe thee all. But when I shall
have become an old man
if
ever I do become an old man; or when I shall have become ten years
older
if
ever I do; or when I am become old
if
ever I shall become old; or when I shall die
for
that, indeed, I know I shall: then shall I say: immortal Mozart,
thou to whom I owe all
and
then I shall let my admiration, which is my soul's first and only
admiration, burst forth in all its might and let it make away with
me, as it often has been on the point of doing. Then have I set my
house in order,<note place="foot" id="iv-p16.1" n="20"><scripRef id="iv-p16.2" passage="2 Kings 20,1" parsed="|2Kgs|20|0|0|0;|2Kgs|1|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.20 Bible:2Kgs.1">2 Kings 20,1</scripRef>; <scripRef id="iv-p16.3" passage="Isaiah 38,1" parsed="|Isa|38|0|0|0;|Isa|1|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.38 Bible:Isa.1">Isaiah 38,1</scripRef>.</note>  
  then have I remembered my beloved
one, then have I confessed my love, then have I fully established
that I owe thee all, then am I occupied no longer with thee, with
the world, but only with the grave thought of death."</p>
<p id="iv-p17">Now there came from the orchestra that invitation in which joy triumphs most exultantly, and heaven‑storming soars aloft above Elvira's sorrowful thanks; and gracefully apostrophizing, John repeated: "Viva la liberta" "et veritas," said the Young Person; "but above all, in vino," Constantin interrupted them, seating himself at the table and inviting the others to do likewise.
</p>
<p id="iv-p18">
How easy to prepare a banquet; yet Constantin declared that he never would risk preparing another. How easy to admire; yet Victor declared that he never again would lend words to his admiration; for to suffer a discomfiture is more dreadful than to become an invalid in war! How easy to express a desire, if one has the magic lamp; yet that is at times more terrible than to perish of want!
</p>
<p id="iv-p19">
   They were seated. In the same moment the little company were launched into the very middle of the infinite sea of enjoymentas if with one single bound. Each one had addressed all his thoughts and all his desires to the banquet, had prepared his soul for the enjoyment which was offered to overflowing and in which their souls overflowed. The experienced driver is known by his ability to start the snorting team with a single bound and to hold them well abreast; the well‑trained steed is known by his lifting him­self in one absolutely decisive leap: even if one or the other of the guests perhaps fell short in some particular, cer­tainly Constantin was a good host.
</p>
<p id="iv-p20">
   Thus they banqueted. Soon, conversation had woven its beautiful wreaths about the banqueters, so that they sat garlanded. Now, it was enamored of the food, now of the wine, and now again of itself; now, it seemed to develop into significance, and then again it was altogether slight. Soon, fancy unfolded itselfthe splendid one which blows but once, the tender one which straightway closes its petals; now, there came an exclamation from one of the banqueters: "These truffles are superb," and now, an order of the host: "This Chateau Margaux!" Now, the music was drowned in the noise, now it was heard again. Sometimes the servants stood still as if in pausa, in that decisive moment when a new dish was being brought out, or a new wine was ordered and mentioned by name, sometimes they were all a‑bustle. Sometimes there was a silence for a moment, and then the re‑animating spirit of the music went forth over the guests. Now, one with some bold thought would take the lead in the conversation and the others followed after, almost forgetting to eat, and the music would sound after them as it sounds after the jubilant shouts of a host storming on; now, only the clinking of glasses and the clattering of plates was heard and the feasting proceeded in silence, accompanied only by the music that joyously advanced and again stimulated conversation. Thus they banqueted.
</p>
<p id="iv-p21">
<br />
<br />
	 How poor is language in comparison with that symphony of sounds unmeaning, yet how significant, whether of a battle or of a banquet, which even scenic representation cannot imitate and for which language has but a few words! How rich is language in the expression of the world of ideas, and how poor, when it is to describe reality!
</p>
<p id="iv-p22">
	 Only once did Constantin abandon his omnipresence ill which one actually lost sight of his presence. At the very beginning he got them to sing one of the old drinking songs, "by way of calling to mind that jolly time when men and women feasted together," as he saida proposal which had the positively burlesque effect he had perhaps calculated it should have. It almost gained the upper hand when the Dressmaker wanted them to sing the ditty: "When I shall mount the bridal bed, hoiho!" After a couple of courses had been served Constantin proposed that the banquet should conclude with each one's making a speech, but that precautions should be taken against the speakers' divagating too much. He was for making two conditions, viz., there were to be no speeches until after the meal; and no one was to speak before having drunk sufficiently to feel the power of the wineelse he was to be in that condition in which one says much which under other circumstances one would leave unsaidwithout necessarily having the connection of speech and thought constantly interrupted by hiccoughs
<note place="foot" id="iv-p22.1" n="21">An allusion to the plight of Aristophanes in Plato's Symposion.</note>  
 Before speaking, then, each
one was to declare solemnly that he was in that condition. No
definite quantity of wine was to be required, capacities differed
so widely. Against this proposal, John entered protest. He could
never become intoxicated, he averred, and when he had come to a
certain point he grew the soberer the more he drank. Victor Eremita
was, of the opinion that any such preparatory premeditations to
insure one's becoming drunk would precisely militate against one's
becoming so. If one desired to become intoxicated the deliberate
wish was only a hindrance. Then there ensued some discussion about
the divers influences of wine on consciousness, and especially
about the fact that, in the case
of
a reflective temperament, an excess of wine may manifest itself,
not in any particular <i>impetus</i> but, on the contrary, in
a noticeably cool self‑possession. As to the contents of the
speeches, Constantin proposed that they should deal with love, that
is, the relation between man and woman. No love stories were to be
told though they might furnish the text of one's
remarks.</p>
<p id="iv-p23">The conditions were accepted. All reasonable and just demands a host may make on his guests were fulfilled: they ate and drank, and "drank and were filled with drink," as the Bible has it; <note place="foot" id="iv-p23.1" n="22"><scripRef id="iv-p23.2" passage="Haggai 1, 6" parsed="|Hag|1|0|0|0;|Hag|6|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Hag.1 Bible:Hag.6">Haggai 1, 6</scripRef> (inexact).</note>  
 that is, they drank
stoutly.</p>
<p id="iv-p24">The desert was served. Even if
Victor had not, as yet, had his desire gratified to hear the
splashing of a fountain,
which,
for that matter, he had luckily forgotten since that former
conversation
now
champagne flowed profusely. The clock struck twelve. Thereupon
Constantin commanded silence, saluted the Young Person with a
goblet and the words <i>quod
felix sit faustumque</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p24.1" n="23">May it be fortunate and favorable.</note>  
and bade him to speak
first.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="iv-p25">
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="iv-p26">
(The Young
Person's Speech)</p>
<p id="iv-p27">
</p>
<p id="iv-p28">   The Young Person arose and
declared that he felt the power of the wine, which was indeed
apparent to some degree; for the blood pulsed strongly in his
temples, and his appearance was not as beautiful as before the
meal. He poke as follows:</p>
<p id="iv-p29">    If there be truth in the words of
the poets, dear fellow banqueters, then unrequited love is, indeed,
the greatest of sorrows. Should you require any proof of
this
you
need but listen to the speech of lovers. They say that it is death,
certain death; and the first time they believe it
for
the space of two weeks. The next time they say that it is death;
and finally they will die sometime

as
the result of unrequited love. For that love has killed them, about
that there can obtain no doubt. And as to love's having to take
hold three times to make away with them, that is not different from
the dentist's having to pull three times before he is able to budge
that firmly rooted molar. But, if unrequited love thus means
certain death, how happy am I who have never loved and, I hope,
will only achieve dying some time, and not from unrequited love!
But just this may be the greatest misfortune, for all I know, and
how unfortunate must I then be!</p>
<p id="iv-p30">
The essence of
love probably (for I speak as does a blind man about colors),
probably lies in its bliss; which is, in other words, that the
cessation of love brings death to the lover. This I comprehend very
well as in the nature of a hypothesis correlating life and death.
But, if love is to be merely by way of hypothesis, why, then lovers
lay themselves open to ridicule through their actually falling in
love. If, however, love is something real, why, then reality must
bear out what lovers say about it. But did one in real life ever
hear of, or observe, such things having taken place, even if there
is hearsay to that effect? Here I perceive already one of the
contradictions in which love involves a person; for whether this is
different for those initiated, that I have no means of knowing; but
love certainly does seem to involve people in the most curious
contradictions.</p>
<p id="iv-p31">
 There is no other relation between
human beings which makes such demands on one's ideality as does
love, and yet love is never seen to have it. For this reason alone
I would be afraid of love; for I fear that it might have the power
to make me too talk vaguely about a bliss which I did not feel and
a sorrow I did not have. I say this here since I am bidden to speak
on love, though unacquainted with it
I
say this in surroundings which appeal to me like a Greek symposion;
for I should otherwise not care to speak on this subject as I do
not wish to disturb any one's happiness but, rather, am content
with my own thoughts. Who knows but these thoughts are sheer
imbecilities and vain imaginings
perhaps
my ignorance is explicable from the fact that I never have learned,
nor have wished to learn, from any one, how one comes to love; or
from the fact that I have never yet challenged a woman with a
glancewhich
is supposed to be smart
but
have always lowered my eyes, unwilling to yield to an impression
before having fully made sure about the nature of the power into
whose sphere I am venturing.</p>
<p id="iv-p32">
At this point he
was interrupted by Constantin who expostulated with him because, by
his very confession of never having been in love, he had debarred
himself from speaking. The Young Person declared that at any other
time he would gladly obey an injunction to that effect as he had
often enough experienced how tiresome it was to have to make a
speech; but that in this case he would insist upon his right.
Precisely the fact that one had had no love affair, he said, also
constituted an affair of love; and he who could assert this of
himself was entitled to speak about Eros just because his thoughts
were bound to take issue with the whole sex and not with
individuals. He was granted permission to speak and
continued.</p>

<p id="iv-p33">
Inasmuch as my
right to speak has been challenged, this may serve to exempt me
from your laughter; for I know well that, just as among rustics he
is not considered a man who does not call a tobacco pipe his own,
likewise among men‑folks he is not considered a real man who
is not experienced in love. If any one feels like laughing, let him
laugh
my
thought is, and remains, the essential consideration for me. Or is
love, perchance, privileged to be the only event which is to be
considered after, rather than before, it happens? If that be the
case, what then if I, having fallen in love, should later on think
that it was too late to think about it? Look you, this is the
reason why I choose to think about love before it happens. To be
sure, lovers also maintain that they gave the matter thought, but
such is not the case. They assume it to be essential in man to fall
in love; but this surely does not mean thinking about love but,
rather, assuming it, in order to make sure of getting one's self a
sweetheart.</p>
<p id="iv-p34">In fact, whenever my
reflection endeavors to pin down love, naught but contradiction
seems to remain. At times, it is true, I feel as if something had
escaped me, but I cannot tell what it is, whereas my reflection is
able at once to point out the contradictions in what does occur.
Very well, then, in my opinion love is the greatest
self‑contradiction imaginable, and comical at the same time.
Indeed, the one corresponds to the other. The comical is always
seen to occur in the category of contradictions

which
truth I cannot take the time to demonstrate now; but what I shall
demonstrate now is that love is comical. By love I mean the
relation between man and woman. I am not thinking of Eros in the
Greek sense which has been extolled so beautifully by Plato who, by
the way, is so far from considering the love of woman that he
mentions it only in passing, holding it to be inferior to the love
of youths.<note place="foot" id="iv-p34.1" n="24">Symposion, ch.9.</note>   
 I say, love is comical to a
third person
more
I say not. Whether it is for this reason that lovers always hate a
third person I do not know; but I do know that reflection is always
in such a relation the third person, and for this reason I cannot
love without at the same time having a third person present in the
shape of my reflection.</p>
<p id="iv-p35">
 This surely cannot seem strange to
any one, every one having doubted everything, whereas I am uttering
my doubts only with reference to love. And yet I do think it
strange that people have doubted everything and have again reached
certainty, without as much as dropping a word concerning the
difficulties which have held my thought captive

so
much so that I have, now and then, longed to be freed of
them
freed
by the aid of one, note well, who was aware of these difficulties,
and not of one who in his sleep had a notion to doubt, and to have
doubted, everything, and again in his sleep had the notion that he
is explaining, and has explained, all.<note place="foot" id="iv-p35.1" n="25">This ironic sally refers, not to Descartes' principle of skepsis, but to the numerous Danish followers of Hegel and his "method"; cf. Fear and Trembling, p. 119.</note>  
</p>
<p id="iv-p36">
Let me then have
your attention, dear fellow banqueters, and if you yourselves be
lovers do not therefore interrupt me, nor try to silence me because
you do not wish to hear the explanation. Rather turn away and
listen with averted faces to what I have to say, and what I insist
upon saying, having once begun.</p>
<p id="iv-p37">   In the first place I consider it
comical that every one loves, and every one wishes to love, without
any one ever being able to tell one what is the nature of the
lovable or that which is the real object of love. As to the word
"to love" I shall not discuss it since it means nothing definite;
but as soon as the matter is broached at all we are met by the
question as to what it is one loves. No other answer is ever
vouchsafed us on that point other than that one loves what is
lovable. For if one should make answer, with Plato,<note place="foot" id="iv-p37.1" n="26">Symposion, ch. 24.</note>  
 that one is to love what is
good, one has in taking this single step exceeded the bounds of the
erotic.</p>
<p id="iv-p38">   </p>
<p id="iv-p39">
   The answer may be offered,
perhaps, that one is to love what is beautiful. But if I then
should ask whether to love means to love a beautiful landscape or a
beautiful painting it would be immediately perceived that the
erotic is not, as it were, comprised in the more general term of
the love of things beautiful, but is something entirely of its own
kind. Were a lover
just
to give an example
to
speak as follows, in order to express adequately how much love
there dwelled in him: "I love beautiful landscapes, and my Lalage,
and the beautiful dancer, and a beautiful horse‑-in short,
love all that is beautiful," his Lalage would not be satisfied with
his encomium, however well satisfied she might be with him in all
other respects, and even if she be beautiful; and now suppose
Lalage is not beautiful and he yet loved her!</p>
<p id="iv-p40">   Again, if I should refer the
erotic element to the bisection of which Aristophanes tells
us<note place="foot" id="iv-p40.1" n="27">Ibid., ch. 15-16.</note>  

when he says that
the gods severed man into two parts as one cuts flounders, and that
these parts thus separated sought one another, then I again
encounter a difficulty I cannot get over, which is, in how far I
may base my reasoning on Aristophanes who in his speech

just
because there is no reason for the thought to stop at this
point‑-goes further in his thought and thinks that the gods
might take it into their heads to divide man into three parts, for the sake
of still better fun. For the sake of still better fun; for is it
not true, as I said, that love renders a person ridiculous, if not
in the eyes of others others certainly in the eyes of the
gods?</p>
<p id="iv-p41">
Now, let me assume
that the erotic element resides essentially in the relation between
man and woman
what
is to be inferred from that? If the lover should say to his Lalage:
I love you because you are a woman; I might as well love any other
woman, as for instance, ugly Zoe: then beautiful Lalage would feel
insulted.</p>
<p id="iv-p42">
In what, then,
consists the lovable? This is my question; but unfortunately, no
one has been able to tell me, The individual lover always believes
that, as far as he is concerned, he knows. Still he cannot make
himself understood by any other lover; and he who listens to the
speech of a number of lovers will learn that no two of them ever
agree, even though they all talk about the same thing. Disregarding
those altogether silly explanations which leave one as wise as
before, that is, end by asserting that it is really the pretty feet
of the beloved damsel, or the admired mustachios of the swain,
which are the objects of love
disregarding
these, one will find mentioned, even in the declamations of lovers
in the higher style, first a number of details and, finally, the
declaration: all her lovable ways; and when they have reached the
climax: that inexplicable something I do not know how to explain.
And this speech is meant to please especially beautiful Lalage. Me
it does not please, for I don't understand a word of it and find,
rather, that it contains a double contradiction

first,
that it ends with the inexplicable, second, that it ends with the
inexplicable; for he who intends to end with the inexplicable had
best begin with the inexplicable and then say no more, lest he lay
himself open to suspicion. If he begin with the inexplicable,
saying no more, then this does not prove his helplessness, for it
is, anyway, an explanation in a negative sense; but if he does
begin with something else and lands in the inexplicable, then this
does certainly prove his helplessness.</p>

<p id="iv-p43">   So then we see: to love
corresponds to the lovable; and the lovable is the inexplicable.
Well, that is at least something; but comprehensible it is not, as
little as the inexplicable way in which love seizes on its prey.
Who, indeed, would not be alarmed if people about one, time and
again, dropped down dead, all of a sudden, or had convulsions,
without anyone being able to account for it? But precisely in this
fashion does love invade life, only with the difference that one is
not alarmed thereby, since the lovers themselves regard it as their
greatest happiness, but that one, on the contrary, is tempted to
laugh; for the comical and the tragical elements ever correspond to
one another. Today, one may converse with a person and can fairly
well make him out

tomorrow,
he speaks in tongues and with strange gestures: he is in
love.</p>
<p id="iv-p44">
Now, if to love
meant to fall in love with the first person that came along, it
would be easy to understand that one could give no special reasons
for it; but since to love means to fall in love with one, one
single person in all the world, it would seem as if such an
extraordinary process of singling out ought to be due to such an
extensive chain of reasoning that one might have to beg to be
excused from hear­ing it‑-not so much because it did not
explain anything as because it might be too lengthy to listen to.
But no, the lovers are not able to explain anything at all. He has
seen hundreds upon hundreds of women; he is, perhaps, advanced in
years and has all along felt nothing‑-and all at once he sees
her, her the Only one, Catherine. Is this not comical? Is it not
comical that the relation which is to explain and beautify all
life, love, is not like the mustard seed from which there grows a
great tree,<note place="foot" id="iv-p44.1" n="28">Cf. <scripRef id="iv-p44.2" passage="Matthew 13, 31" parsed="|Matt|13|0|0|0;|Matt|31|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.13 Bible:Matt.31">Matthew 13, 31</scripRef>, etc.</note>  
 but being still smaller is, at
bottom, nothing at all; for not a single antecedent criterion can
be mentioned, as e.g., that the</p>
<p id="iv-p45">
 phenomenon occurred at a certain
age, nor a single reason as to why be should select her, her alone
in all the world
and
that by no means in the same sense as when "Adam chose Eve, because
there was none other."<note place="foot" id="iv-p45.1" n="29">A quotation from Musaeus, <i>Volksmarchen der Deutschen,</i> III,219.</note>  
</p>
<p id="iv-p46">   Or is not the explanation which
the lovers vouchsafe just as comical; or, does it not, rather,
emphasize the comical aspect of love? They say that love renders
one blind, and by this fact they undertake to explain the
phenomenon. Now, if a Person who was going into a dark room to
fetch something should answer, on my advising him to take a light
along, that it was only a trifling matter he wanted and so he would
not bother to take a light along
ah!
then I would understand him excellently well. If, on the other
hand, this same person should take me aside and, with an air of
mystery, confide to me that the thing be was about to fetch was of
the very greatest importance and that it was for this reason that
he was able to do it in the dark

ah!
then I wonder if my weak mortal brain could follow the soaring
flight of his speech. Even if I should refrain from laughing, in
order not to offend him, I should hardly be able to restrain my
mirth as soon as he had turned his back. But at love nobody laughs;
for I am quite prepared to be embarrassed like the Jew who, after
ending his story, asks: Is there no one who will
laugh?<note place="foot" id="iv-p46.1" n="30">The reference is to a situation in Richard Cumberland's (1732-1811) play of "The Jew," known to Copenhagen playgoers in an adaptation.</note>  

And yet I did not
miss the point, as did the Jew, and as to my laughter I am far from
wanting to insult any one. Quite on the contrary, I scorn those
fools who imagine that their love has such good reasons that they
can afford to laugh at other lovers; for since love is altogether
inexplicable, one lover is as ridiculous as the other. Quite as
foolish and haughty I consider it also when a man proudly looks
about him in the circle of girls to find who may be worthy of him,
or when a girl proudly tosses her head to select or reject; because
such persons are simply basing their thoughts on an unexplained
assumption. No. What busies my thought is love as such, and it is
love which seems ridiculous to me; and therefore I fear it, lest I
become ridiculous in my own eyes, or ridiculous in the eyes of the
gods who have fashioned man thus. In other words, if love is
ridiculous it is equally ridiculous, whether now my sweetheart be a
princess or a servant girl; for the lovable, as we have seen, is
the inexplicable.</p>
<p id="iv-p47">   Look you, therefore do I fear
love, and find precisely in this a new proof of love's being
comical; for my fear is so seriously tragic that it throws light on
the comical nature love. When people wreck a building a sign is
hung up to warn people, and I shall take care to stand from under;
when a bar has been freshly painted a stone is laid in the road to
apprise people of the fact; when a driver is in danger of running a
man over he will shout "look out"; when there have been cases of
cholera in a house a soldier is set as guard; and so forth. What I
mean is that if there is somedanger, one may be warned and will
successfully escape it by heeding the warning. Now, fearing to be
rendered ridiculous by love, I certainly regard it as dangerous; so
whatshall I do to escape it? In other words, what shall I do to
escape the danger of some woman falling in love with me? I am far
from entertaining the thought of being an Adonis every girl is
bound to fall in love with <i>(relata refero,</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p47.1" n="31">I relate what I have been told.</note>  
 for what this means I do not
understand) ‑goodness no! But since I do not know what the
lovable is I cannot, by anymanners of means, know how to escape
this danger.Since, for that matter, the very opposite of beauty may
constitute the lovable; and, finally, since the inexplicable also
is the lovable, I am forsooth in the same situation as the man Jean
Paul speaks of somewhere who, standing on one foot, reads a sign
saying, "fox-traps here," and now does not dare,either to lift his
foot or to set it down. No, love any one I will not, before I have
fathomed what love is; but this I cannot, but have, rather, come to
the conclusion that it is comical. Hence I will not love‑but
alas! I have not thereby avoided the danger, for, since I do not
know what the lovable is and how it seizes me, or how it seizes a
woman with reference to me, I cannot make sure Whether I have
avoided the danger. This is tragical and, in a certain sense, even
profoundly tragical, even if no one is concerned about it, or if no
one is concerned about the bitter contradiction for one who
thinks‑that a something exists which everywhere exercises its
power and yet is not to be definitely conceived by thought and
which, perhaps, may attack from the rear him who in vain seeks to
conceive it. But as to the tragic side of the matter it has its
deep reason in the comic aspects just pointed out. Possibly, every
other person will turn all this upside down and not find that to be
comical which I do, but rather that which I conceive to be
tragical; but this too proves that I am right to a certain extent.
And that for which, if so happens, I become either a tragic or
comic victim is plain enough, viz., my desire to reflect about all
I do, and not imagine I am reflecting about life by dismissing its
every important circumstance with an "I don't care, either
way."</p>
<p id="iv-p48">Man has both a soul and a
body. About this the wisest and best of the race are agreed. Now,
in case one assumes the essence of love to lie in the relation
between man and woman, the comic aspect will show again in the
face-about which is seen when the highest spiritual values express
themselves in the most sensual terms. I am now referring to all
those extraordinary and mystic signals of love

in
short, to all the free‑masonry which forms a continuation of
the above‑mentioned inexplicable something. The contradiction
in which love here involves a person lies in the fact that the
symbolic signs mean nothing at all or

which
amounts to the same
that
no one is able to explain what they do signify. Two loving souls
vow that they will love each the other in all eternity; thereupon
they embrace, and with a kiss they seal this eternal pact. Now I
ask any thinking person whether he would have hit upon that! And
thus there is constant shifting from the one to the other extreme
in love. The most spiritual is expressed by its very opposite, and
the sensual is to signify the most spiritual.Let me assume I am in
love. In that case I would conceive it to be of the utmost
importance to me that the one I love belonged to me for all time.
This I comprehend; for I am now, really, speaking only of Greek
eroticism which has to do with loving beautiful souls. Now when the
person I love had vowed to return my love I would believe her or,
in as far as there remained any doubt in me, try to combat my
doubt. But what happens actually? For if I were in love I would,
probably, behave like all the others, that is, seek to obtain still
some other assurance than merely to believe her I love; which,
though, is plainly the only assurance to *had.</p>
<p id="iv-p49">
   When Cockatoo<note place="foot" id="iv-p49.1" n="32">A character in the Danish playwright Overskou's vaudeville of "Capriciosa" (Comedies III, 184).</note>  
 all at once begins to plume
himself like a duck which is gorged with food, and then emits the
word "Marian," everybody will laugh, and so will I.. I suppose the
spectator finds it comical that Cockatoo, who doesn't love Marian
at all, should be on such intimate terms with her. But suppose,
now, that Cockatoo does love Marian. Would that be comical still?
To me it would; and the comical would seem to me to lie in love's
having become capable of being expressed in such fashion. Whether
now this has been the custom since the beginning of the world makes
no difference whatsoever, for the comical has the prescriptive
right from all eternity to be present in contradictions

and
here is a contradiction. There is really nothing comisal in the
antics of a manikin since we see some one pulling the strings. But
to be a manikin at the beck of something inexplicable is indeed
comical, for the contradiction lies in our not seeing any sensible
reason why one should have to twitch now this leg and now that.
Hence, if I cannot explain what I am doing, I do not care to do it;
and if I cannot understand the power into whose sphere I am
venturing, I do not care to surrender myself to that power. And if
love is so mysterious a law which binds together the extremest
contradictions, then who will guarantee that I might not, one day,
become altogether confused? Still, that does not concern me so
much.</p>
<p id="iv-p50">
 Again, I have heard that some
lovers consider the behavior of other lovers ridiculous. I cannot
conceive how this ridicule is justified, for if this law of love be
a natural law, then all lovers are subject to it; but if it be the
law of their own choice, then those laughing lovers ought to be
able to explain all about love; which, however, they are unable to
do. But in this respect I understand this matter better as it seems
a convention for one lover to laugh at the other because he always
finds the other lover ridiculous, but not himself. If it be
ridiculous to kiss an ugly girl, it is also ridiculous to kiss a
pretty one; and the notion that doing this in some particular way
should entitle one to cast ridicule on another who does it
differently, is but presumptuousness and a conspiracy which does
not, for all that, exempt such a snob from laying himself open to
the ridicule which invariably results from the fact that no one is
able to explain what this act of kissing signifies, whereas it is
to signify all
to
signify, indeed, that the lovers desire to belong to each other in
all eternity; aye, what is still more amusing, to render them
certain that they will. Now, if a man should suddenly lay his head
on one side, or shake it, or kick out with his leg and, upon my
asking him why he did this, should answer "To be sure I don't know,
myself, I just happened to do so, next time I may do something
different, for I did it unconsciously"

ah,
then I would understand him quite well. But if he said, as the
lovers say about their antics, that all bliss lay therein, how
could I help finding it ridiculous

just
as I thought that other man's motions ridiculous, to be sure in a
different sense until he restrained my laughter by declaring that
they did not signify anything. For by doing so he removed the
contradiction which is the basic cause of the comical. It is not at
all comical that the insignificant is declared to signify nothing,
but it is very much so if it be asserted to signify all.</p>
<p id="iv-p51">As regards involuntary
actions, the contradiction arises at the very outset because
involuntary actions are not looked for in a free rational being.
Thus if one supposed that the Pope had a coughing spell the very
moment he was to place the crown on Napoleon's head; or that bride
and groom, in the most solemn moment of the wedding ceremony should
fall to sneezing‑these would be examples of the comical, That
is, the more a given action accentuates the free rational being,
the more comical are involuntary actions. This holds true also in
respect of the erotic gesticulations, where the comical element
appears a second time, owing to the circumstance that the lovers
attempt to explain away the contradiction by attributing to their
gesticulations an absolute value. As is well known, children have a
keen sense of the ridiculous
witness
children's testimony which can always be relied on in this regard.
Now as a rule children , will laugh at lovers, and if one makes
them tell what they have seen, surely no one can help laughing.
This is, perhaps, due to the fact that children omit the point.
Very strange! When the Jew omitted the point no one cared to laugh.
Here, on the contrary, every one laughs because the point is
omitted; since, however, no one can explain what the point
is
why,
then there is no point at all.</p>
<p id="iv-p52">
So the lovers
explain nothing; and those who praise love explain nothing but are
merely intent on
as
one is bidden in the Royal Laws of Denmark
on
saying anent it all which may be pleasant and of good report. But a
man who thinks, desires to have his logical categories in good
order; and he who thinks about love wishes to be sure about his
categories also in this matter. The fact is, though, that people do
not think about love, and a "pastoral science" is still lacking;
for even if a poet in a pastoral poem makes an attempt to show how
love is born, everything is smuggled in again by help of another
person who teaches the lovers how to love!</p>
<p id="iv-p53">
As we saw, the
comical element in love arose from the face‑about whereby the
highest quality of one sphere does not find expression in that
sphere but in the exactly opposite quality of another sphere. It is
comical that the soaring flight of love‑the desire to belong
to each other for all time
lands
ever, like Saft,<note place="foot" id="iv-p53.1" n="33">The glutton in Oehlenschloeger's vaudeville of "Sovedrikken."</note>  
 in the pantry; but still more
comical is it that this conclusion is said to constitute love's
highest expression.</p>

<p id="iv-p54">   Wherever there is a contradiction,
there the comical element is present also. I am ever following that
track. If it be disconcerting to you, dear fellow banqueters, to
follow me in what I shall have to say now, then follow me with
averted countenances. I myself am speaking as if with veiled eyes;
for as I see only the mystery in these matters, why, I cannot see,
or I see nothing.</p>
<p id="iv-p55">
 What is a consequence? If it
cannot, in some way or other, be brought under the same head as its
antecedent why, then it would be ridiculous if it posed as a
consequence. To illustrate: if a man who wanted to take a bath
jumped into the tank and, coming to the surface again somewhat
confused, groped for the rope to hold on to, but caught the
douche‑line by mistake, and a shower now descended on him
with sufficient motivation and for excellent good reason

why,
then the consequence would be entirely in order. The ridiculous
here consisted in his seizing the wrong rope; but there is nothing
ridiculous in the shower descending when one pulls the proper rope.
Rather, it would be ridiculous if it did not come; as for example,
just to show the correctness of my contention about contradictions,
if a man nerved himself with bold resolution in order to withstand
the shock and, in the enthusiasm of his decision, with a stout
heart pulled the line‑and the shower did not come.</p>
<p id="iv-p56">
Let us see now how
it is with regard to love. The lovers wish to belong to each other
for all time, and this they express, curiously, by embracing each
other with all the intensity of the moment; and all the bliss of
love is said to reside therein. But all desire is egotistic. Now,
to be sure, the lover's desire is not egotistic in respect of the
one he loves, but the desire of both in conjunction is absolutely
egotistic in so far as they in their union and love represent a new
ego. And yet they are deceived; for in the same moment the race
triumphs over the individual, the race is victorious, and the
individuals are debased to do its bidding.</p>
<p id="iv-p57">  Now this I find more ridiculous
than what Aristophanes thought so ridiculous. The ridiculous aspect
of his theory of bi-section lies in the inherent contradiction
(which theancient author does not sufficiently emphasize, however).
In considering a person one naturally supposes him to be an entity,
and so one does believe till it becomes apparent that, under the
obsession of love, he is but a half which runs about looking for
its complement. There is nothing ridiculous in half an apple. The
comical would appear if a whole apple turned out to be only half an
apple. In thefirst case there exists no contradiction, but
certainly in the latter. If one actually based one's reasoning on
the figure of speech that woman is but half a person she would not
be ridiculous at all in her love. Man, however, who has been
enjoying civic rights as a whole person, will certainly appear
ridiculous when he takes to running about (and looking for his
other half);<note place="foot" id="iv-p57.1" n="34">Supplied by the translator to complete the sense.</note>  
 for he betrays thereby that
he is but half a person. In fact, the more one thinks about the
matter the more ridiculous it seems; because if man really be a
whole, why, then he will not become a whole in love, but he and
woman would make up one and a half. No wonder, then, that the gods
laugh, and particularly at man.</p>
<p id="iv-p58">   But let me return to my
consequence. When the lovers have found each other, one should
certainly believe that they formed a whole, and in this should lie
the proof of their assertion that they wished to live for each
other for all time. But lo! instead of living for each other they
begin to live for the race, and this they do not even
suspect.</p>
<p id="iv-p59">   What is a consequence? If, as I
observed, one cannot detect in it the cause out of which it
proceeded, the consequence is merely ridiculous, and he becomes a
laughing stock to whom this happens. Now, the fact that the
separated halves have found each other ought to be a complete
satisfaction and rest for them; and yet the consequence is a new
existence. That having found each other should mean a new existence
for the lovers, is comprehensible enough; but not, that a new
existence for a third being should take its inception from this
fact. And yet the resulting consequence is greater than that of
which it is the consequence, whereas such an end as the lovers'
finding each other ought to be infallible evidence of no other,
subsequent, consequence being thinkable.</p>
<p id="iv-p60">   Does the satisfaction of any other
desire show an analogy to this consequence? Quite on the contrary,
the satisfaction of desire is in every other case evinced by a
period of rest; and even if a <i>tristitia</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p60.1" n="35">Dejection. Cf. the Maxim: <i>omne animal post coitune</i> [?] [transcipt unreadable] <i>triste.</i></note>  
 does supervene

indicating
by the way, that every satisfaction of an appetite is
comical
this
<i>tristitia</i> is a
straightforward consequence, though no <i>tristitia</i> so eloquently attests a
preceding comical element as does that following love. It is quite
another matter with an enormous consequence such as we are dealing
with, a consequence of which no one knows whence it comes, nor
whether it will come; whereas, if it does come, it comes as a
consequence.</p>
<p id="iv-p61">   Who is able to grasp this? And yet
that which for the initiates of love constitutes the greatest
pleasure is also the most important thing for them

so
important that they even adopt new names, derived from the
consequence thereof which thus, curiously enough, assumes
retroactive force, The lover is now called father, his sweetheart,
mother; and these names seem to them the most beautiful. And yet
there is a being to whom these names are even more beautiful; for
what is as beautiful as filial piety? To me it seems the most
beautiful of all sentiments; and fortunately I can appreciate the
thought underlying it. We are taught that it is seeming in a son to
love his father. This I comprehend, I cannot even suspect that
there is any contradiction possible here, and I acknowledge
infinite satisfaction in being held by the loving bonds of filial
piety. I believe it is the greatest debt of all to owe another
being one's life. I believe that this debt cannot ever be wiped
out, or even fathomed by any calculation, and for this reason I
agree with Cicero when he asserts that the son is always in the
wrong as against his father; and it is precisely filial piety which
teaches me to believe this, teaches me not even to penetrate the
hidden, but rather to remain hidden in the father. Quite true, I am
glad to be another person's greatest debtor; but as to the
opposite, viz., before deciding to make another person my greatest
debtor, I want to arrive at greater clarity. For to my conception
there is a world of difference between being some person's debtor,
and making some person one's debtor to such an extent that he will
never be able to clear himself.</p>
<p id="iv-p62">   What filial piety forbids the son
to consider, love bids the father to consider. And here
contradiction sets in again. If the son has an immortal soul like
his father, what does it mean, then, to be a father? For must I not
smile at myself when thinking of myself as a father
whereas
the son is most deeply moved when he reflects on the relation he
bears to his father? Very well do I understand Plato when he says
that an animal will give birth to an animal of the same species, a
plant, to a plant of the same species, and thus also man to man
.<note place="foot" id="iv-p62.1" n="36">This statement is to be found, rather, in Aristotle's Ethics II, 6.</note>  

But this explains
nothing, does not satisfy one's thought, and arouses but a dim
feeling; for an immortal soul cannot be born. Whenever, then, a
father considers his son in the light of his son's
immortalitywhich
is, indeed, the essential consideration<note place="foot" id="iv-p62.2" n="37">There is a pun here in the original.</note>  

he
will probably smile at himself, for he cannot, by any means, grasp
in their entirety all the beautiful and noble thoughts which his
son with filial piety entertains about him. If, on the other hand,
he considers his son from the point of view of his animal nature he
must smile again, because the conception of fatherhood is too
exalted an expression for it.</p>
<p id="iv-p63">
Finally, if it
were thinkable that a father influenced his son in such fashion
that his own nature was a condition from which the son's nature
could not free itself, then the contradiction would arise in
another direction; for in this case nothing more terrible is
thinkable than being a father. There is no comparison between
killing a person and giving him life

the
former decides his fate only in time, the other for all eternity.
So there is a contradiction again, and one both to laugh and to
weep about. Is paternity then an illusion

even
if not in the same sense as is implied in Magdelone's speech to
Jeronymus<note place="foot" id="iv-p63.1" n="38">In Holberg's comedy of "Erasmus Montanus," III,6.</note>  

or
is it the most terrible thought imaginable? Is it the greatest
benefit conferred on one, or is it the sweetest gratification of
one's desire
is
it something which just happens, or is it the greatest task of life
?</p>
<p id="iv-p64">Look you, for this reason have
I forsworn all love, for my thought is to me the most essential
consideration. So even if love be the most exquisite joy, I
renounce it, without wishing either to offend or to envy any one;
and even if love be the condition for conferring the greatest
benefit imaginable I deny myself the opportunity therefor

but
my thought I have not prostituted. By no means do I lack an eye for
what is beautiful, by no means does my heart remain unmoved when I
read the songs of the poets, by no means is my soul without sadness
when it yields to the beautiful conception of love; but I do not
wish to becorne unfaithful to my thought. And of what avail were it
to be, for there is no happiness possible for me except my thought
have free sway. If it had not, I would in desperation yearn for my
thought, which I may 
not desert to cleave to a wife, for it is my immortal part and,
hence, of more importance than a wife. Well do I comprehend that if
any thing is sacred it is love; that if faithlessness in any
relation is base, it is doubly so in love; that if any deceit is
detestable, it is tenfold more detestable in love. But my soul is
innocent of blame. I have never looked at any woman to desire her,
neither have I fluttered about aimlessly before blindly plunging,
or lapsing, into the most decisive of all relations. If I knew what
the lovable were I would know with certainty whether I had offended
by tempting any one; but since I do not know, I am certain only of
never having had the conscious desire to do so.</p>
<p id="iv-p65">   Supposing I should yield to love
and be made to laugh; or supposing I should be cast down by terror,
since I cannot find the narrow path which lovers travel as easily
as if it were the broad highway, undisturbed by any doubts, which
they surely have bestowed thought on (seeing our times have,
indeed, reflected about all<note place="foot" id="iv-p65.1" n="39">Cf. note p. 60.</note>  
 and consequently will
comprehend me when I assert that to act unreflectingly is nonsense,
as one ought to have gone through all possible reflections before
acting)
supposing,
I say, 1 should yield to love! Would I not insult past redress my
beloved one if I laughed; or irrevocably plunge her into despair if
I were overwhelmed by terror? For I understand well enough that a
woman cannot be expected to have thought as profoundly about these
matters; and a woman who found love comical (as but gods and men
can, for which reason woman is a temptation luring them to become
ridiculous) would both betray a suspicious amount of previous
experience and understand me least. But a woman who comprehended
the terror of love would have lost her loveliness and still fail to
understand me
she
would be annihilated; which is in nowise my case, so long as my
thought saves me.</p>
<p id="iv-p66">
   Is there no one ready to laugh?
When I began by wanting to speak about the comical element in love
you perhaps, expected to be made to laugh, for it is easy to make
you laugh, and I myself am a friend of laughter; and still you did
not laugh, I believe. The effect of my speech was a different one,
and yet precisely this proves that I have spoken about the comical.
If there be no one who laughs at my speech

well,
then laugh a little at me, dear fellow-banqueters, and I shall not
wonder; for I do not understand what I have occasionally heard you
say about love. Very probably, though, you are among the initiated
as I am not.</p>
<p id="iv-p67">   
 Thereupon the Young
Person seated himself. He had become more beautiful, almost, than
before the meal. Now.he sat quietly, looking down before him,
unconcerned about the others. John the Seducer desired at once to
urge some objections against the Young Person's speech but was
interrupted by Constantin who warned against discussions and ruled
that on this occasion only speeches were in order. John said if
that was the case, he would stipulate that he should be allowed to
be the last speaker. This again gave rise to a discussion as to the
order in which they were to speak, which Constantin closed by
offering to speak forth with, against their recognizing his
authority to appoint the speakers in their turn.</p>




<p class="Centered" id="iv-p68">
(Constantin's
Speech)</p>

<p id="iv-p69">
   Constantin spoke as
follows:</p>
<p id="iv-p70">   There is a time to keep silence,
and a time to speak,<note place="foot" id="iv-p70.1" n="40"><scripRef id="iv-p70.2" passage="Eccles. 3, 7" parsed="|Eccl|3|0|0|0;|Eccl|7|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.3 Bible:Eccl.7">Eccles. 3, 7</scripRef>.</note>  
 and now it seems
to be the time to speak briefly, for our young friend has spoken
much and very strangely. His <i>vis comica</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p70.3" n="41">Comical power.</note>  
 has made us
struggle ancipiti proelio<note place="foot" id="iv-p70.4" n="42">In uncertain battle.</note>  
 because his
speech was full of doubts, as he himself is, sitting there
nowa perplexed man
who knows not whether to laugh, or weep, or fall in love. In fact,
had I had foreknowledge of his speech, such as he demands one
should have of love, I should have forbidden him to speak; but now
it is too late. I shall bid you then, dear fellow‑banqueters,
"gladsome and merry to be," and even if I cannot enforce this I
shall ask you to forget each speech so soon as it is made and to
wash it down with a single draught.</p>
<p id="iv-p71">
And
now as to woman, about whom I shall speak. I too have pondered
about her, and I have finally discovered the category to which she
belongs. I too have sought, but I have found, too, and I have made
a matchless discovery which I shall now communicate to you. Woman
is understood correctly only when placed in the category of "the
joke."</p>
<p id="iv-p72">
   It is man's function to be
absolute, to act in an absolute fashion, or to give expression to
the absolute. Woman's sphere lies in her
relativity.<note place="foot" id="iv-p72.1" n="43">According to the development of these terms in Kierkegaard's previous works, the "absolute" belongs to the ethic, the "relative" to the æsthetic sphere.</note>  
 Between beings so
radically different, no true reciprocal relation can exist.
Precisely in this incommensurability lies the joke. And with woman
the joke was born into the world. It is to be understood, however,
that man must know how to stick to his role of being absolute; for
else nothing is seen

that is to say,
something exceedingly common is seen, viz., that man and woman fit
each other, he as a half man and she as a halfman.</p>
<p id="iv-p73">The joke is not an
æsthetic, but an abortive ethical, category. Its effect on
thought is about the same as the impression we receive if a man
were solemnly to begin making a speech, recite a comma or two with
his pronouncement, then say "hm!"–dash"–and then stop.
Thus with woman. One tries to cover her with the ethical category,
one thinks of human nature, one opens one's eyes, one fastens one's
glances on the most excellent maiden in question, an effort is made
to redeem the claims of the ethical demand; and then one grows ill
at ease and says to one's self: ah, this is undoubtedly a joke! The
joke lies, indeed, in applying that category to her and measuring
her by it, because it would be idle to expect serious results from
her; but just that is the joke. Because if one could demand it of
her it would not be a joke at all. A mighty poor joke indeed it
would be, to place her under the air‑pump and draw the air
out of her–indeed it were a shame; but to blow her up to
supernatural size and let her imagine herself to have attained all
the ideality which a little maiden of sixteen imagines she has,
that is the beginning of the game and, indeed, the beginning of a
highly entertaining performance. No youth has half so much
imaginary ideality as a young girl, but: "We shall soon be even" as
says the tailor in the proverb; for her ideality is but an
illusion.</p>
<p id="iv-p74">   If one fails to consider woman
from this point of view she may cause irreparable harm; but through
my conception of her she becomes harmless and amusing. For a man
there is nothing more shocking than to catch himself twaddling. It
destroys all true ideality; for one may repent of having been a
rascal, and one may feel sorry for not having meant a word of what
one said; but to have talked nonsense, sheer nonsense, to have
meant all one said and behold! it was all nonsense–that is
too disgusting for repentance incarnate to put up with. But this is
not the case with woman. She has a prescriptive right to
transfigure herself‑in less than 24 hours–in the most
innocent and pardonable nonsense; for far is it from her ingenuous
soul to wish to deceive one! indeed, she meant all she said, and
now she says the precise opposite, but with the same amiable
frankness, for now she is willing to stake everything on what she
said last. Now in case a man in all seriousness surrenders to love
he may be called fortunate indeed if he succeeds in obtaining an
insurance–if, indeed, he is able to obtain it anywhere; for
so inflammable a material as woman is most likely to arouse the
suspicions of an insurance agent. Just consider for a moment what
he has done in thus identifying himself with her! If, some fine New
Year's night she goes off like some fireworks he will promptly
follow suit; and even if this should not happen he will have many a
close call. And what may he not lose! He may lose his all; for
there is but one absolute antithesis to the absolute, and that is
nonsense. Therefore, let him not seek refuge in some society for
morally tainted individuals, for he is not morally
tainted—far from it; only, he has been reduced in <i>absurdum</i> and beatified in
nonsense; that is, has been made a fool of.</p>
<p id="iv-p75">   This will never happen among men.
If a man should sputter off in this fashion I would scorn him. If
he should fool me by his cleverness I need but apply the ethical
category to him, and the danger is trifling. If things go too far I
shall put a bullet through his brain; but to challenge a
woman‑what is that, if you please? Who does not see that it
is a joke, just as when Xerxes had the sea whipped? When Othello
murders Desdemona, granting she really had been guilty, he has
gained nothing, for he has been duped, and a dupe he remains; for
even by his murdering her he only makes a concession with regard to
a consequence which originally made him ridiculous; whereas
Elvira<note place="foot" id="iv-p75.1" n="44">Heroine of Mozart's "Don Juan."</note>  

may be
an altogether pathetic figure when arming herself with a dagger to
obtain revenge. The fact that Shakespeare has conceived Othello as
a tragic figure (even disregarding the calamity that Desdemona is
innocent) is to be explained and, indeed, to perfect satisfaction,
by the hero being a colored person. For a colored person, dear
fellow‑banqueters, who cannot be assumed to represent
spiritual qualities—a colored person, I say, who therefore
becomes green in his face when his ire is aroused (which is a
physiological fact), a colored man may, indeed, become tragic if he
is deceived by a woman; just as a woman has all the pathos of
tragedy on her side when she is betrayed by a man. A man who flies
into a rage may perhaps become tragic; but a man of whom one may
expect a developed mentality, he either not become jealous, or he
will become ridiculous if does; and most of all when he comes
running with a dagger in his hand.</p>
<p id="iv-p76">   A Pity that Shakespeare has not
presented us with a comedy of this description in which the claim
raised by a woman's infidelity is turned down by irony; for not
every one who is able to see the comical element in this situation
is able also to develop the thought and give it dramatic
embodiment. Let one but imagine Socrates surprising Xanthippe in
the act—for it would be un‑Socratic even to think of
Socrates being particularly concerned about his wife's infidelity,
or still worse, spying on her—imagine it, and I believe that
the fine smile which transformed the ugliest man in Athens into the
handsomest, would for the first time have turned into a roar of
laughter. It is incomprehensible why Aristophanes, who so
frequently made Socrates the butt of his ridicule, neglected to
have him run on the stage shouting: "Where is she, where is she, so
that I may kill her, i.e., my unfaithful Xanthippe." For really it
does not matter greatly whether or no Socrates was made a cuckold,
and all that Xanthippe may do in this regard is wasted labor, like
snapping one's fingers in one's pocket; for Socrates remains the
same intellectual hero, even with a horn on his forehead. But if he
had in fact become jealous and had wanted to kill
Xanthippe—alas! then would Xanthippe have exerted a power
over him such as the entire Greek nation and his sentence of death
could not—to make him ridiculous.</p>
<p id="iv-p77">   A cuckold is comical, then, with
respect to his wife; but he may be regarded as becoming tragical
with respect to other men. In this fact we may find an explanation
of the Spanish conception of honor. But the tragic element resides
chiefly in his not being able to obtain redress, and the anguish of
his suffering consists really in its being devoid of
meaning—which is terrible enough. To shoot the woman, to
challenge her, to despise her, all this would only serve to render
the poor man still more ridiculous; for woman is the weaker sex.
This consideration enters in everywhere and confuses all. If she
performs a great deed she is admired more than man, because it is
more than was expected of her. If she is betrayed, all the pathos
is on her side; but if a man is deceived one has scant sympathy and
little patience while he is present—and laughs at him whell
his back is turned.</p>
<p id="iv-p78">
   Look you, therefore is it
advisable betimes to consider woman as a joke. The entertainment
she affords is simply incomparable. Let one consider her a fixed
quantity, and one's self a relative one; let one by no means
contradict her, for that would simply be helping her; let one never
doubt what she says but, rather, believe her every word; let one
gallivant about her, with eyes rendered unsteady unspeakable
admiration and blissful intoxication, and with the mincing steps of
a worshipper; let one languishingly fall on one's knees, then lift
up one's eyes up to her languishingly and heave a breath again; let
one do all she bids one, like an obedient slave. And now comes the
cream of the joke. We need no proof that woman can speak, i.e., use
words. Unfortunately, however, she does not possess sufficient
reflection for making sure against her in the long run—which
is, at most, eight days—contradicting herself; unless indeed
man, by contradicting her, exerts a regulative influence. So the
consequence is that within a short time confusion will reign
supreme. If one had not done what she told one to, the confusion
would pass unnoticed; for she forgets again as quickly as she
talks. But since her admirer has done all, and has been at her beck
and call in every instance, the confusion is only too
glaring.</p>
<p id="iv-p79">   The more gifted the woman, the
more amusing the situation. For the more gifted she is, the more
imagination she will possess. Now, the more imagination she
possesses, the greater airs she will give herself and the greater
the confusion which is bound to become evident in the next instant.
In life, such entertainment is rarely had, because this blind
obedience to a woman's whims occurs but seldom. And if it does, in
some languishing swain, most likely he is not qualified to see the
fun. The fact is, the ideality a little maiden assumes in moments
when her imagination is at work is encountered nowhere else,
whether in gods or man; but it is all the more entertaining to
believe her and to add fuel to the fire.</p>
<p id="iv-p80">
As I
remarked, the fun is simply incomparable—indeed, I know it
for a fact, because I have at times not been able to sleep at night
with the mere thought of what new confusions I should live to see,
through the agency of my sweetheart and my humble zeal to please
her. Indeed, no one who gambles in a lottery will meet with more
remarkable combinations than he who has a passion for this game.
For this is sure, that every woman without exception possesses the
same qualifications for being resolved and transfigured in nonsense
with a gracefulness, a nonchalance, an assurance such as befits the
weaker sex.</p>
<p id="iv-p81">   Being a right‑minded lover
one naturally discovers every possible charm in one's beloved. Now,
when discovering genius in the above sense, one ought not to let it
remain a mere possibility but ought, rather, to develop it into
virtuosity. I do not need to be more specific, and more cannot be
said in a general way, yet every one will understand me. Just as
one may find entertainment in balancing a cane on one's nose, in
swinging a tumbler in a circle without spilling a drop, in dancing
between eggs, and in other games as amusing and profitable,
likewise, and not otherwise, in living with his beloved the lover
will have a source of incomparable entertainment and food for most
interesting study. In matters pertaining to love let one have
absolute belief, not only in her protestations of
fidelity—one soon tires of that game—but in all those
explosions of inviolable Romanticism by which she would probably
perish if one did not contrive a safety‑valve through which
the sighs and the smoke, and "the aria of
Romanticism<note place="foot" id="iv-p81.1" n="45">Quotations from Wessel's famous comedy of "Love without Stockings," III, 3.</note>  
" may escape and
make her worshipper happy. Let one compare her admiringly to
Juliet, the difference being only that no person ever as much as
thought of touching a hair on her Romeo's head. With regard to
intellectual matters, let one hold her capable of all and, if one
has been lucky enough to find the right woman, in a trice one will
have a cantankerous authoress, whilst wonderingly shading one's
eyes with one's hand and duly admiring what the little black hen
may yield besides.<note place="foot" id="iv-p81.2" n="46">Viz. besides the eggs she duly furnishes; Holberg, "The Busybody," II, 1.</note>  
 It is altogether
incomprehensible why Socrates did not choose this course of action
instead of bickering with Xanthippe—oh, well! to be sure he
wished to acquire practice, like the riding master who, even though
he has the best trained horse, yet knows how to tease him in such
fashion that there is good reason for breaking him in
again."<note place="foot" id="iv-p81.3" n="47">This figure is said by Diogenes Laertios II,37 to have been used by Socrates himself about his relation to Xanthippe.</note>  
</p>
<p id="iv-p82">   Let me be a little more concrete,
in order to illustrate a particular and highly interesting
phenomenon. A great deal has been said about feminine fidelity, but
rarely with any discretion.<note place="foot" id="iv-p82.1" n="48">The following sentences are not as clear in meaning as is otherwise the case in Kierkegaard.</note>  
 From a purely
æsthetic point of view this fidelity is to be regarded as a
piece of poetic fiction which steps on the stage to find her
lover—a fiction which sits by the spinning wheel and waits
for her lover to come; but when she has found him, or he has come,
why, then æsthetics is at a loss. Her infidelity, on the
other hand, as contrasted with her previous fidelity, is to be
judged chiefly with regard to its ethical import, when jealousy
will appear as a tragic passion. There are three possibilities, so
the case is favorable for woman; for there are two cases of
fidelity, as against one of infidelity. Inconceivably great is her
fidelity when she is not altogether sure of her cavalier; and ever
so inconceivably great is it when he repels her fidelity. The third
case would be her infidelity. Now granted one has sufficient
intellect and objectivity to make reflections, one will find
sufficient justification, in what has been said, for my category of
"the joke." Our young friend whose beginning in a manner deceived
me seemed to be on the point of entering into this matter, but
backed out again, dismayed at the difficulty. And yet the
explanation is not difficult, providing one really sets about it
seriously, to make unrequited love and death correspond to one
another, and providing one is serious enough to stick to his
thought—and so much seriousness one ought to have—for
sake of the joke.</p>
<p id="iv-p83">   Of course this phrase of
unrequited love being death originated either with a woman or a
womanish male. Its origin is easily made out, seeing that it is one
of those categorical outbursts which, spoken with great bravado, on
the spur of the moment, may count on a great and immediate
applause; for although this business is said to be a matter of life
and death, yet the phrase is meant for immediate
consumption—like cream‑puffs. Although referring to
daily experience it by no means binding on him who is to die, but
only obliges the listener to rush post‑haste to the
assistance of the dying lover. If a man should take to using such
phrases it would not be amusing at all, for he would be too
despicable to laugh at. Woman, however, possesses genius, is
lovable in the measure she possesses it, and is amusing at all
times. Well, then, the languishing lady dies of love—why
certainly, for did she not say so herself? In this matter she is
pathetic, for woman has enough courage to say what no man would
have the courage to do—so then she dies! In saying so I have
measured her by ethical standards. Do ye likewise, dear
fellow‑banqueters, and understand your Aristotle aright, now!
He observes very correctly that woman cannot be used in
tragedy.<note place="foot" id="iv-p83.1" n="49">Poetics, chap.15.</note>  
 And very
certainly, her proper sphere is the pathetic and serious
divertissement, the half-hour face, not the five‑act drama.
So then she dies. But should she for that reason not be able to
love again? Why not?—that is, if it be possible to restore
her to life. Now, having been restored to life, she is of course a
new being—another person, that is, and begins afresh and
falls in love for the first time: nothing remarkable in that! Ah,
death, great is thy power; not the most violent emetic and not the
most powerful laxative could ever have the same purging
effect!</p>
<p id="iv-p84">   The resulting confusion is
capital, if one but is attentive and does not forget. A dead man is
one of the most amusing characters to be met with in life. Strange
that more use is not made of him on the stage, for in life he is
seen, now and then. When you come to think of it, even one who has
only been seemingly dead is a comical figure; but one who was
really dead certainly contributes to our entertainment all one can
reasonably expect of a man. All depends on whether one is
attentive. I myself had my attention called to it, one day, as I
was walking with one of my acquaintances. A couple passed us. I
judged from the expression on his face that he knew them and asked
whether that was the case. "Why, yes," he answered, "I know them
very well, and especially the lady, for she is my departed
one."—"What departed one?" I asked.—"Why, my departed
first love," he answered. "Indeed, this is a strange affair. She
said: I shall die. And that very same moment she departed,
naturally enough, by death—else one might have insured her
beforehand in the widow's insurance. Too late! Dead she was and
dead she remained; and now I wander about, as says the poet, vainly
seeking the grave of my lady-love that I may shed my tears
thereon." Thus this broken-hearted man who remained alone in the
world, though it consoled him to find her pretty far along with
some other man.</p>
<p id="iv-p85">
It is
a good thing for the girls, thought I, that they don't have to be
buried, every time they die; for if parents have hitherto
considered a boy‑child to be the more expensive, the girls
might become even more so!</p>
<p id="iv-p86">
A
simple ease of infidelity is not as amusing, by far. I mean, if a
girl should fall in love with some one else and should say to her
lover: "I cannot help it, save me from myself!" But to die from
sorrow because she cannot endure being separated from her lover by
his journey to the West Indies, to have put up with his departure,
however, and then, at his return, be not only not dead, but
attached to some one else for all time—that certainly is a
strange fate for a lover to undergo. No wonder, then, that the
heart‑broken man at times consoled himself with the burthen
of an old song which runs: "Hurrah for you and me, I say, we never
shall forget that day!"</p>
<p id="iv-p87">
Now
forgive me, dear fellow‑banqueters, if I have spoken at too
great length; and empty a glass to love and to woman. Beautiful she
is and lovely, if she be considered æsthetically. That is
undeniable. But, as has often been said, and as I shall say also:
one ought not to remain standing here, but should go
on.<note place="foot" id="iv-p87.1" n="50">Cf. note p. 60. [re: footnote 11 of this document.]</note>  

Consider her,
then, ethically and you will hardly have begun to do so before the
humor of it will become apparent. Even Plato and Aristotle assume
that woman is an imperfect form, an irrational quantity, that is,
one which might some time, in a better world, be transformed into a
man. In this life one must take her as she is. And what this is
becomes apparent very soon; for she will not be content with the
æsthetic sphere, but goes on, she wants to become
emancipated, and she has the courage to say so. Let her wish be
fulfilled and the amusement will be simply incomparable.</p>

<p id="iv-p88">
When
Constantin had finished speaking he forthwith ruled Victor Eremita
to begin. He spoke as follows:</p>



<p class="Centered" id="iv-p89">
(Victor Eremita's
Speech)</p>
<p id="iv-p90">
As
will be remembered, Plato offers thanks to the gods for four
things. In the fourth place he is grateful for having been
permitted to be a contemporary of Socrates. For the three other
boons mentioned by him,<note place="foot" id="iv-p90.1" n="51">They are, that he had been created a man and not an animal, a man and not a woman, a Greek and not a Barbarian (Lactantius, Instit. III, 19,17).</note>  
 an earlier Greek
philosopher<note place="foot" id="iv-p90.2" n="52">Thales of Miletos (Diogenes Laertios I, 33).</note>  
 had already
thanked the gods, and so I conclude that they are worthy our
gratitude. But alas!—even if I wanted to express my gratitude
like these Greeks I would not be able to do so for what was denied
me. Let me then collect my soul in gratitude for the one good which
was conferred on me also—that I was made a man and not a
woman.</p>
<p id="iv-p91">
To be
a woman is something so curious, so heterogeneous and composite
that no predicate will fully express these qualities; and if I
should use many predicates they would contradict one another in
such fashion that only a woman would be able to tolerate the result
and, what is worse, feel happy about it. The fact that she really
signifies less than man—that is not her misfortune, and still
less so if she got to know it, for it might be borne with
fortitude. No, her misfortune consists in her life's having become
devoid of fixed meaning through a romantic conception of things, by
virtue of which, now she signifies all, and now, nothing at all;
without ever finding out what she really does signify and even that
is not her misfortune but, rather, the fact that, being a woman,
she never will be able to find out. As for myself, if I were a
woman, I should prefer to be one in the Orient and as a slave; for
to be a slave, neither more nor less is at any rate something, in
comparison with being, now heyday, now nothing.</p>
<p id="iv-p92">
Even
if a woman's life did not contain such contrasts, the distinction
she enjoys, and which is rightly assumed to be hers as a
woman—a distinction she does not share with man—would
by itself point to the meaninglessness of her life. The distinction
I refer to is that of gallantry. To be gallant to woman is becoming
in men. Now gallantry consists very simply in conceiving in
fantastic categories that person to whom one is gallant. To be
gallant to a man is, therefore, an insult, for he begs to be
excused from the application of fantastic categories to him. For
the fair sex, however, gallantry signifies a tribute, a
distinction, which is essentially its privilege. Ah me, if only a
single cavalier were gallant to them the case would not be so
serious. But far from it! At bottom every man is gallant, he is
unconsciously so. This signifies, therefore, that it is life itself
which has bestowed this perquisite on the fair sex. Woman on her
part unconsciously accepts it. Here we have the same trouble again;
for if only a single woman did so, another explanation would be
necessary. This is life's characteristic irony.</p>
<p id="iv-p93">   Now if gallantry contained the
truth it ought to be reciprocal, i.e., gallantry would be the
accepted quotation for the stated difference between beauty on the
one hand, and power, astuteness, and strength, on the other. But
this is not the case, gallantry is essentially woman's due; and the
fact that she unconsciously accepts it may be explained through the
solicitude of nature for the weak and those created in a
stepmotherly fashion by her, who feel more than recompensed by an
illusion. But precisely this illusion is misfortune. It is not
seldom the case that nature comes to the assistance of an afflicted
creature by consoling him with the notion that he is the most
beautiful. If that is so, why, then we may say that nature made
good the deficiency since now the creature is endowed with even
more than could be reasonably demanded. But to be beautiful
‑only in one's imagination, and not to be overcome, indeed,
by sadness, but to be fooled into an illusion—why, that is
still worse mockery. Now, as to being afflicted, woman certainly is
far from having been treated in a stepmotherly fashion by nature;
still she is so in another sense inasmuch as she never can free
herself from the illusion with which life has consoled
her.</p>
<p id="iv-p94">
   Gathering together one's
impressions of a woman's existence, in order to point out its
essential features, one is struck by the fact that every woman's
life gives one an entirely phantastic impression. In a far more
decisive sense than man she may be said to have turning points in
her career; for her turning points turn everything upside down. In
one of Tieck's<note place="foot" id="iv-p94.1" n="53">German poet of the Romantic School (1773-1853).</note>  
 Romantic dramas
there occurs a person who, having once been king of Mesopotamia,
now is a green-grocer in Copenhagen. Exactly as fantastic is every
feminine existence. If the girl's name is Juliana, her life is as
follows: erstwhile empress in the wide domains of love, and
titulary queen of all the exaggerations of tomfoolery; now, Mrs.
Peterson, corner Bath Street.</p>
<p id="iv-p95">   When a child, a girl is less
highly esteemed than a boy. When a little older, one does not know
exactly what to make of her. At last she enters that decisive
period in which she holds absolute sway. Worshipfully man
approaches her as a suitor. Worshipfully, for so does every suitor,
it is not the scheme of a crafty deceiver. Even the executioner,
when laying down his <i>fasces</i> to go a‑wooing, even
he bends his knee, although he is willing to offer himself up,
within a short time, to domestic executions which he finds so
natural that he is far from seeking any excuse for them in the fact
that public executions have grown so few. The cultured person
behaves in the very same manner. He kneels, he worships, he
conceives his lady‑love in the most fantastic categories; and
then he very quickly forgets his kneeling position—in fact,
he knew full well the while he knelt that it was fantastic to do
so.</p>
<p id="iv-p96">
If I
were a woman I would prefer to be sold by my father to the highest
bidder, as is the custom in the Orient; for there is at least some
sense in such a deal. What misfortune to have been born a womah!
Yet her misfortune really consists in her not being able to
comprehend it, being a woman. If she does complain, she complains
rather about her Oriental, than her Occidental, status. But if I
were a woman I would first of all refuse to be wooed, and resign
myself to belong to the weaker sex, if such is the case, and be
careful—which is most important if one is proud—of not
going beyond the truth. However, that is of but little concern to
her. Juliana is in the seventh heaven, and Mrs. Peterson submits to
her fate.</p>
<p id="iv-p97">   Let me, then, thank the gods that
I was born a man and not a woman. And still, how much do I forego!
For is not all poetry, from the drinking song to the tragedy, a
deification of woman? All the worse for her and for him who admires
her; for if he does not look out he will, all of a sudden, have to
pull a long face. The beautiful, the excellent, all of man's
achievement, owes its origin to woman, for she inspires him. Woman
is, indeed, the inspiring element in life. How many a
love‑lorn shepherd has played on this theme, and how many a
shepherdess has listened to it! Verily, my soul is without envy and
feels only gratitude to the gods; for I would rather be a man,
though in humble station, but really so, than be a woman and an
indeterminate quantity, rendered happy by a delusion—I would
rather be a concrete thing, with a small but definite meaning, than
an abstraction which is to mean all.</p>
<p id="iv-p98">   As I have said, it is through
woman that ideality is born into the world and—what were man
without her! There is many a man who has become a genius through a
woman, many a one a hero, many a one a poet, many a one even a
saint; but he did not become a genius through the woman he married,
for through her he only became a privy councillor; he did not
become a hero through the woman he married, for through her he only
became a general; he did not become a poet through the woman he
married, for through her he only became a father; he did not become
a saint through the woman he married, for he did not marry, and
would have married but one—the one whom he did not marry;
just as the others became a genius, became a hero, became a poet
through the help of the woman they did not marry. If woman's
ideality were in itself inspiring, why, then the inspiring woman
would be the one to whom a man is united for life. But life tells a
different story. It is only by a negative relation to her that man
is rendered productive in his ideal endeavors. In this sense she is
inspiring; but to say that she is inspiring, without qualifying
one's statement, is to be guilty of a paralogism<note place="foot" id="iv-p98.1" n="54">Reasoning against the rules of logic.</note>  
 which one must be
a woman to overlook. Or has any one ever heard of any man having
become a poet through his wife? So long as man does not possess her
she inspires him. It is this truth which gives rise to the
illusions entertained in poetry and by women. The fact that he does
not possess her signifies, either, that he is still fighting for
her—thus has woman inspired many a one and rendered him a
knight; but has any one ever heard of any man having been rendered
a knight valiant through his wife? Or, the fact that he does not
possess her signifies that he cannot obtain her by any manner of
means—thus has woman inspired many a one and roused his
ideality; that is, if there is anything in him worth while. But a
wife, who has things ever so much worth while for her husband, will
hardly arouse any ideal strivings in him. Or, again, the fact that
be does not possess her signifies that he is pursuing an ideal.
Perchance he loves many, but loving many is also a kind of
unrequited love; and yet the ideality of his soul is to be seen in
this striving and yearning, and not in the small bits of
lovableness which make up the sum total of the contributions of all
those he loves.</p>
<p id="iv-p99">
 The highest ideality a woman can
arouse in a man consists, in fact, in the awakening within him of
the consciousness of immortality. The point of this proof lies in
what one might call the necessity of a reply. Just as one may
remark about some play that it cannot end without this or that
person getting in his say, likewise (says ideality) our existence
cannot be all over with death: I demand a reply! This proof is
frequently furnished, in a positive fashion, in the public
advertiser. I hold that to be entirely proper, for if proof is to
be made in the public advertiser it must be made in a positive
fashion. Thus: Mrs. Petersen, we learn, has lived a number of
years, until in the night of the 24th it pleased Providence, etc.
This produces in Mr. Petersen an attack of reminiscences from his
courting days or, to express it quite plainly, nothing but seeing
her again will ever console him. For this blissful meeting he
prepare himself, in the meanwhile, by taking unto himself another
wife; for, to be sure, this marriage is by no means as poetic as
the first—still it is a good imitation. This is the proof
positive. Mr. Petersen is not satisfied with demanding a reply, no,
he wants a meeting again in the hereafter.</p>
<p id="iv-p100">
   As is well known, a base metal
will often show the gleam of precious metal. This is the brief
silver‑gleam. With respect to the base metal this is a tragic
moment, for it must once for all resign itself to being a base
metal. Not so with Mr. Petersen. The possession of ideality is by
rights inherent in every person—and now, if I laugh at Mr.
Petersen it is not because he, being in reality of base metal, had
but a single silver‑gleam; but, rather, because just this
silver‑gleam betrays his having become a base metal. Thus
does the philistine look most ridiculous when, arrayed in ideality,
he affords fitting occasion to say, with Holberg: What! does that
cow wear a fine dress, too?<note place="foot" id="iv-p100.1" n="55">"The Lying-in Room," II, 2.</note>  
</p>
<p id="iv-p101">   The case is this: whenever a woman
arouses ideality in man, and thereby the consciousness of
immortality, she always does so negatively. He who really became a
genius, hero, a poet, a saint through woman, he has by that very
fact seized on the essence of immortality. Now if the inspiring
element were positively present in woman, why, then a man's wife,
and only his wife, ought to awaken inthe consciousness of
immortality. But the reverse holds true. That is, if she is really
to awaken ideality in husband she must die. Mr. Petersen, to be
sure, is not affected, for all that. But if woman, by her death,
does awaken man's ideality, then is she indeed the cause of all the
great things poetry attributes to her; but note well: that which
she did in a positive fashion for him in no wise roused his
ideality. In fact, her significance in this regard becomes the more
doubtful the longer she lives, because she will at length really
begin to wish to signify something positive. However, the more
positive the proof the less it proves; for then Mr. Petersen's
longing will be for some past common experiences whose content was,
to all intents and purposes, exhausted when they were had. Most
positive of all the proof becomes if the object of his longing
concerns their marital spooning—that time when they visited
the Deer Park together! In the same way one might suddenly feel a
longing for the old pair of slippers one used to be so comfortable
in; but that proof is not exactly a proof for the immortality of
the soul. On the other hand, the more negative the proof, the
better it is; for the negative is higher than the positive,
inasmuch as it concerns our immortality, and is thus the only
positive value.</p>
<p id="iv-p102">   Woman's main significance lies in
her negative contribution, whereas her positive contributions are
as nothing in comparison but, on the contrary, pernicious. It is
this truth which life keeps from her, consoling her with an
illusion which surpasses all that might arise in any man's brain,
and with parental care ordering life in such fashion that both
language and everything else confirm her in her illusion. For even
if she be conceived as the very opposite of inspiring, and rather
as the well‑spring of all corruption; whether now we imagine
that with her, sin came into the world, or that it is her
infidelity which ruined all—our conception of her is always
gallant. That is, when hearing such opinions one might readily
assume that woman were really able to become infinitely more
culpable than man, which would, indeed, amount to an immense
acknowledgment of her powers. Alas, alas! the case is entirely
different. There is a secret reading of this text which woman
cannot comprehend; for, the very next moment, all life owns to the
same conception as the state, which makes man responsible for his
wife. One condemns her as man never is condemned (for only a real
sentence is passed on him, and there the matter ends), not with her
receiving a milder sentence; for in that case not all of her life
would be an illusion, but with the case against her being dismissed
and the public, i.e., life, having to defray the costs. One moment,
woman is supposed to be possessed of all possible wiles, the next
moment, one laughs at him whom she deceived, which surely is a
contradiction. Even such a case as that of Potiphar's wife does not
preclude the possibility of her having really been seduced. Thus
has woman an enormous possibility, such as no man has—an
enormous possibility; but her reality is in proportion. And most
terrible of all is the magic of illusion in which she feels herself
happy.</p>
<p id="iv-p103">
Let
Plato then thank the gods for having been born a contemporary of
Socrates: I envy him; let him offer thanks for being a Greek: I
envy him; but when he is grateful for having been born a man and
not a woman I join him with all my heart. If I had been born a
woman and could understand what now I can understand—it were
terrible! But if I had been born a woman and therefore could not
understand it—that were still more terrible!</p>
<p id="iv-p104">   But if the case is as I stated it,
then it follows that one had better refrain from any positive
relation with woman. Wherever she is concerned one has to reckon
with that inevitable hiatus which renders her happy as she does not
detect the illusion, but which would be a man's undoing if he
detected it.</p>
<p id="iv-p105">   I thank the gods, then, that I was
born a man and not a woman; and I thank them, furthermore, that no
woman by some life‑long attachment holds me in duty bound to
be constantly reflecting that it ought not to have been.</p>
<p id="iv-p106">   Indeed, what a passing strange
device is marriage! And what makes it all the stranger is the
suggestion that it is to be a step taken without thought. And yet
no step is more decisive, for nothing in life is as inexorable and
masterful as the marriage tie. And now so important a step as
marriage ought, so we are told, to be taken without reflection! Yet
marriage is not something simple but something immensely complex
and indeterminate. Just as the meat of the turtle smacks of all
kinds of meat, so likewise does marriage have a taste of all manner
of things; and just as the turtle is a sluggish animal, likewise is
marriage a sluggish thing. Falling in love is, at least, a simple
thing, but marriage—! Is it something heathen or something
Christian, something spiritual or something profane, or something
civil, or something of all things? Is it an expression of an
inexplicable love, the elective affinity of souls in delicate
accord with one another; or is it a duty, or a partnership, or a
mere convenience, or the custom of certain countries or is it a
duty, or a partnership, or a mere convenience, or the custom of
certain countries—or is it a little of all these? Is one to
order the music for it from the town musician or the organist, or
is one to have a little from both? Is it the minister or the police
sergeant who is to make the speech and enroll the names in the book
of life—or in the town register? Does marriage blow a tune on
a comb, or does it listen to the whisperings "like to those of the
fairies from the grottoes of a summer night"<note place="foot" id="iv-p106.1" n="56">A quotation from Oehlenschläger's "Aladdin."</note>  
</p>
<p id="iv-p107">
   And now every Darby imagines he
performed such a Potpourri, such incomparably complex music, in
getting married—and imagines that he is still performing it
while living a married life! My dear fellow‑banqueters, ought
we not, in default of a wedding present and congratulations, give
each of the conjugal partners a demerit for re­peated
inattentiveness? It is taxing enough to express a single idea in
one's life; but to think something so complicated as marriage and,
consequently, bring it under one head; to think something so
complicated and yet to do jus­tice to each and every element in
it, and have everything present at the same time—verily, he
is a great man who can accomplish all this! And still every
Benedict accom­plishes it—so he does, no doubt; for does
he not say that he does it unconsciously? But if this is to be done
uncon­sciously it must be through some higher form of
uncon­sciousness permeating all one's reflective powers. But
not a word is said about this! And to ask any married man about it
means just wasting one's time.</p>
<p id="iv-p108">
He who
has once committed a piece of folly will con­stantly be pursued
by its consequences. In the case of mar­riage the folly
consists in one's having gotten into a mess, and the punishment, in
recognizing, when it is too late, what one has done. So you will
find that the married man, now, becomes chesty, with a bit of
pathos, thinking he has done something remarkable in having entered
wedlock; now, puts his tail between his legs in dejection; then
again, praises marriage in sheer self‑defense. But as to a
thought‑unit which might serve to hold together the <i>disjecta membra</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p108.1" n="57">Scattered members.</note>  
 of the most
heterogeneous conceptions of life contained in marriage—for
that we shall wait in vain.</p>
<p id="iv-p109">
Therefore, to be a mere Benedict is humbug, and to be a seducer is humbug, and to wish to experiment with woman for the sake of "the joke" is also humbug. In fact, the two last mentioned methods will be seen to involve concessions to woman on the part of man quite as large as those found in marriage. The seducer wishes to rise in his own estima­tion by deceiving her; but this very fact that he deceives and wishes to deceive—that he cares to deceive, is also a demonstration of his dependence on woman. And the same is true of him who wishes to experiment with her.
</p>
<p id="iv-p110">
   If I were to imagine any possible relation with woman it would be one so saturated with reflecton that it would, for that very reason, no longer be any relation with her at all.To be an excellent husband and yet on the sly seduce every girl; to seem a seducer and yet harbor within one all the ardor of romanticism—there would be something to that, or the concession in the first instance were then annihilated in the second. Certain it is that man finds his true ideality only in such a reduplication. All merely unconscious ex­istence must be obliterated, and its obliteration ever cun­ningly guarded by some sham expression. Such a reduplication is incomprehensible to woman, for it removes from her the possibility of expressing man's true nature in one form. If it were possible for woman to exist in such a reduplication, no erotic relation with her were thinkable. But, her nature being such as we all know it to be, any disturbance of the erotic relation is brought about by man's true nature which ever consists precisely in the annihilation of that in which she has her being.
</p>
<p id="iv-p111">
      Am I then preaching the monastic life and rightly called Eremita? By no means. You may as well eliminate the cloister, for after all it is only a direct expression of spirit­uality and as such but a vain endeavor to express it in direct terms. It makes small difference whether you use gold, or silver, or paper money; but he who does not spend a farthing but is counterfeit, he will comprehend me. He to whom every direct expression is but a fraud, he and he only, is safeguarded better than if he lived in a cloister‑cell—he will be a hermit even if he travelled in an omnibus and night.
</p>
<p id="iv-p112">
Scarcely had Victor finished when the Dressmaker jumped to his feet and threw over a bottle of wine standing before him; then he spoke as follows:
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="iv-p113">(The Dressmaker's Speech)</p>
<p id="iv-p114">
Well spoken, dear fellow-banqueters, well spoken! The longer I hear you speak the more I grow convinced that you are fellow‑conspirators—I greet you as such, I understand you as such; for fellow‑conspirators one can make out from afar. And yet, what know you? What does your bit of theory to which you wish to give the appearance of experience, your bit of experience which you make over into a theory—what does it amount to? For every now and then you believe her a moment and—are caught in a moment! No, I know woman—from her weak side, that is to say, I know her. I shrink from no means to make sure about what I have learned; for I am a madman, and a madman one must be to understand her, and if one has not been one before, one will become a madman, once one understands her. The robber has his hiding place by the noisy high‑road, and the ant‑lion his funnel in the loose sand, and the pirate his haunts by the roaring sea: likewise have I may fashionshop in the very midst of the teeming streets, seductive, irresistible to woman as is the Venusberg to men. There, in a fashion‑shop, one learns to know woman, in a practical way and without any theoretical ado.
</p>
<p id="iv-p115">
Now, if fashion meant nothing than that woman in the heat of her desire threw off all her clothing—why, then it would stand for something. But this is not the ease, fashion is not plain sensuality, not tolerated debauchery, but an illicit trade in indecency authorized as proper. And, just as in heathen Prussia the marriageable girl wore a bell whose ringing served as a signal to the men, likewise is a woman's existence in fashion a continual bell‑ringing, not for debauchees but for lickerish voluptuaries. People hold Fortune to be a woman—ah, yes it is, to be sure, fickle; still, it is fickle in something, as it may also give much; and insofar it is not a woman. No; but fashion is a woman, for fashion is fickleness in nonsense, and is consistent only in its becoming ever more crazy.
</p>
<p id="iv-p116">
One hour in my shop is worth more than days and years without, if it really be one's desire to learn to know woman; in my shop, for it is the only one in the capital, there is no thought of competition. Who, forsooth, would dare to enter into competition with one who has entirely devoted himself, and is still devoting himself, as high‑priest in this idol worship? No, there is not a distinguished assemblage which does not mention my name first and last; and there is not a Middle‑class gathering where my name, whenever mentioned, does not inspire sacred awe, like that of the king; and there is no dress so idiotic but is accompanied by whisters of admiration when its owner proceeds down the hall—provided it bears my name; and there is not the lady of gentle birth who dares pass my shop by, nor the girl of humble origin but passes it sighing and thinking: if only I could afford it! Well, neither was she deceived. I deceive no one; I furnish the finest goods and the most costly, and at the lowest price, indeed, I sell below cost. The fact is, I do not wish to make a profit. On the contrary, every year I sacrifice large sums. And yet do I mean to win, I mean to, I shall spend my last farthing in order to corrupt, in order to bribe, the tools of fashion so that I may win the game. To me it is a delight beyond compare to unroll the most precious stuffs, to cut them out, to clip pieces from genuine Brussels‑lace, in order to make a fool's costume I sell to the lowest prices, genuine goods and in style.
</p>
<p id="iv-p117">
You believe, perhaps, that woman wants to be dressed fashionably only at certain times? No such thing, she wants to be so all the time and that is her only thought. For a woman does have a mind, only it is employed about as well as is the Prodigal Son's substance; and woman does possess the power of reflection in an incredibly high degree, for there is nothing so holy but she will in no time discover it to be reconcilable with her finery—and the chiefest expression of finery is fashion. What wonder if she does discover it to be reconcilable; for is not fashion holy to her? And there is nothing so insignificant but she certainly will know how to make it count in her finery—and the most fatuous expression of finery is fashion. And there is nothing, nothing in all her attire, not the least ribbon, of whose relation to fashion she has not a definite conception and concerning which she is not immediately aware whether the lady who just passed by noticed it; because, for whose benefit does she dress, if not for other ladies!
</p>
<p id="iv-p118">
Even in my shop where she comes to be fitted out à la mode, even there she is in fashion. Just as there is a special bathing costume and a special riding habit, likewise there is a particular kind of dress which it is the fashion to wear to the dressmaker's shop. That costume is not insouciant in the same sense as is the negligée a lady is pleased to be surprised in, earlier in the forenoon, where the point is her belonging to the fair sex and the coquetry lies in her letting herself be surprised. The dressmaker costume, on the other hand, is calculated to be nonchalant and a bit careless without her being embarrassed thereby; because a dressmaker stands in a different relation to her from a cavalier. The coquetry here consists in thus showing herself to a man who, by reason of his station, does not presume to ask for the lady's womanly recognition, but must be content with the perquisites which fall abundantly to his share, without her ever thinking of it; or without it even so much as entering her mind to play the lady before a dressmaker. The point is, therefore, that her being of the opposite sex is, in a certain sense, left out of consideration, and her coquetry invalidated, by the superciliousness of the noble lady who would smile if any one alluded to any relation existing between her and her dressmaker. When visited in her negligée she conceals herself, thus displaying her charms by this very concealment. In my shop she exposes her charms with the utmost nonchalance, for he is only a dressmaker—and she is a woman. Now, her shawl slips down and bares some part of her body, and if I did not know what that means, and what she expects, my reputation would be gone to the winds. Now, she draws herself up, a priori fashion, now she gesticulates a posteriori; now, she sways to and fro in her hips; now, she looks at herself in the mirror and sees my admiring phiz behind her in the glass; now, she minces her words; now, she trips along with short steps; now, she hovers; now, she draws her foot after her in a slovenly fashion; now, she lets herself sink softly into an arm‑chair, whilst I with humble demeanor offer her a flask of smelling salts and with my adoration assuage her agitation; now, she strikes after me playfully; now, she drops her handkerchief and, without as much as a single motion, lets her relaxed arm remain in its pendent position, whilst I bend down low to pick it up and return it to her, receiving a little patronizing nod as a reward. These are the ways of a lady of fashion when in my shop. Whether Diogenes
<note place="foot" id="iv-p118.1" n="58">See Diogenes Lærtios, VI, 37.</note>  
 made any
impression on the Woman who was praying in a somewhat unbecoming
posture, when he asked her whether she did not believe the gods
could see her from behind—that I do not know; but this I do
know, that if I should say to her ladyship kneeling down in church:
"The folds of your gown do not fall according to fashion," she
would be more alarmed than if she had given offense to the gods.
Woe to the outcast, the male Cinderella, who has not comprehended
this! <i>Pro dii
immortales</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p118.2" n="59">By the immortal gods.</note>  
 what, pray, is a
woman who is not in fashion; <i>per deos obsecro,</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p118.3" n="60">I adjure you by the gods.</note>  
 and what when she
is in fashion!</p>
<p id="iv-p119">   Whether all this is true? Well,
make trial of it: let the swain, when his beloved one sinks
rapturously on his breast, whispering unintelligibly: "thine
forever," and hides her head on his bosom—let him but say to
her: "My sweet Kitty, your coiffure is not at all in
fashion."—Possibly, men don't give thought to this; but he
who knows it, and has the reputation of knowing it, he is the most
dangerous man in the kingdom. What blissful hours the lover passes
with his sweetheart before marriage I do not know; but of the
blissful hours she spends in my shop he hasn't the slightest
inkling, either. Without my special license and sanction a marriage
is null and void, anyway—or else an entirely plebeian affair.
Let it be the very moment when they are to meet before the altar,
let her step forward with the very best conscience in the world
that everything was bought in my shop and tried on there—and
now, if I were to rush up And exclaim: "But mercy! gracious lady,
your myrtle wreath is all awry"—why, the whole ceremony might
be postponed, for aught I know. But men do not suspect these
things, one must be a dressmaker to know. So immense is the power
of reflection needed to fathom a woman's thought that only a man
who dedicates himself wholly to the task will succeed, and even
then only if gifted to start with. Happy therefore the man who does
not associate with any woman, for she is not his, anyway, even if,
she be no other man's; for she is possessed by that phantorn born
of the unnatural intercourse of woman's reflection with itself,
fashion. Do you see, for this reason should woman always swear by
fashion—then were there some force in her oath; for after
all, fashion is the thing she is always thinking of, the only thing
she can think together with, and into, everything. For instance,
the glad message has gone forth from my shop to all fashionable
ladies that fashion decrees the use of a particular kind of
head‑dress to be worn in church, and that this
head‑dress, again, must be somewhat different for High Mass
and for the afternoon service. Now when the bells are ringing the
carriage stops in front of my door. Her ladyship descends (for also
this has been decreed, that no one can adjust that head‑dress
save I, the fashion‑dealer), I rush out, making low bows, and
lead her into my cabinet. And whilst she languishingly reposes I
put everything in order. Now she is ready and has looked at herself
in the mirror; quick as any messenger of the gods I hasten in
advance, open the door of my cabinet with a bow, then hasten to the
door of my shop and lay my arm on my breast, like some oriental
slave; but encouraged by a gracious courtesy, I even dare to throw
her an adoring and admiring kiss—now she is seated in her
carriage—oh dear! she left her hymn book behind. I hasten out
again and hand it to her through the carriage window, I permit
myself once more to remind her to hold her head a trifle more to
the right, and herself to arrange things, should her
head‑dress become a bit disordered when descending. She
drives away and is edified.</p>
<p id="iv-p120">   You believe, perhaps, that it is
only great ladies who worship fashion, but far from it! Look at my
sempstresses for whose dress I spare no expense, so that the dogmas
of fashion may be proclaimed most emphatically from my shop. They
form a chorus of half‑witted creatures, and I myself lead
them on as high‑priest, as a shining example, squandering
all, solely in order to make all womankind ridiculous. For when a
seducer makes the boast that every woman's virtue has its price, I
do not believe him; but I do believe that every woman at an early
time will be crazed by the maddening and defiling introspection
taught her by fashion, which will corrupt her more thoroughly than
being seduced. have made trial more than once. If not able to
corrupt her myself I set on her a few of fashion's slaves of her
own nation; for just as one may train rats to bite rats, likewise
is the crazed woman's sting like that of the tarantula. And most
especially dangerous is it when some man lends his help.</p>
<p id="iv-p121">   Whether I serve the Devil or God I
do not know; but I am right, I shall be right, I will be, so long
as I possess a single farthing, I will be until the blood spurts
out of my fngers. The physiologist pictures the shape of woman to
show the dreadful effects of wearing a corset, and beside it he
draws a picture of her normal figure. That is all entely correct,
but only one of the drawings has the validity of truth: they all
wear corsets. Describe, therefore, the miserable, stunted
perversity of the fashion‑mad woman, Describe the insidious
introspection devouring her, and then describe the womanly modesty
which least of all knows about itself—do so and you have
judged woman, have in very truth passed terrible sentence on her.
If ever I discover such a girl who is contented and demure and not
yet corrupted by indecent intercourse with women—she shall
fall nevertheless. I shall catch her in my toils, already she
stands at the sacrificial altar, that is to say, in my shop. With
the most scornful glance a haughty monchalance can assume I measure
her appearance, she perishes with fright; a peal of laughter from
the adjoining room where sit my trained accomplices annihilates
her. And afterwards, when I have gotten her rigged up <i>à la mode</i> and she looks
crazier than a lunatic, as crazy as one who would not be accepted
even in a lunatic asylum, then she leaves me in a state of
bliss—no man, not even a god, were able to inspire fear in
her; for is she not dressed in fashion?</p>
<p id="iv-p122">
Do you
comprehend me now, do you comprehend why I call you
fellow‑conspirators, even though in a distant way? Do you now
comprehend my conception of woman? Everything in life is a matter
of fashion, the fear of God is a matter of fashion, and so are
love, and crinolines, and a ring through the nose. To the utmost of
my ability will I therefore come to the support of the exalted
genius who wishes to laugh at the most ridiculous of all animals.
If woman has reduced everything to a matter of fashion, then will
I, with the help of fashion, prostitute her, as she deserves to be;
I have no peace, I the dressmaker, my soul rages when I think of my
task—she will yet be made to wear a ring through her nose.
Seek therefore no sweetheart, abandon love as you would the most
dangerous neighborhood; for the one whom you love would also be
made to go with a ring through her nose.</p>

<p id="iv-p123">   Thereupon John, called the
Seducer, spoke as follows:</p>
<p id="iv-p124">
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="iv-p125">
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="iv-p126">
(The
Speech of John the Seducer)</p>
<p id="iv-p127">
</p>
<p id="iv-p128">My dear boon
companions, is Satan plaguing you? For, indeed, you speak like so
many hired mourners, your eyes are red with tears and not with
wine. You almost move me to tears also, for an unhappy lover does
have a miserable time of it in lif e. <i>Hinc illae
lacrimae</i>.<note place="foot" id="iv-p128.1" n="61">Therefore those tears.</note>  
 I, however, am a
happy lover, and my only wish is to remain so. Very possibly, that
is one of the concessions to woman which Victor is so afraid of.
Why not? Let it be a concession! Loosening the lead foil of this
bottle of champagne also is a concession; letting its foaming
contents flow into my glass also is a concession; and so is raising
it to my lips—now I drain it—<i>concedo.</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p128.2" n="62">I concede.</note>  
 Now, however, it
is empty, hence I need no more concessions. Just the same with
girls. If some unhappy lover has bought his kiss too dearly, this
proves to me only that he does not know, either how to take what is
coming to him or how to do it. I never pay too much for this sort
of thing—that is a matter for the girls to decide. What this
signifies? To me it signifies the most beautiful, the most
delicious, and well‑nigh the most persuasive, <i>argumentum ad hominem;</i> but since
every woman, at least once in her life, possesses this
argumentative freshness I do not see any reason why I should not
let myself be persuaded. Our young friend wishes to make this
experience in his thought. Why not buy a cream puff and be content
with looking at it? I mean to enjoy. No mere talk for me! Just as
an old song has it about a kiss: <i>es ist kaum zu sehn, es ist nur filr
Lippen, die genau sich verstehn</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p128.3" n="63">It can hardly be seen, it is but for lips which understand each other exactly.</note>  
—understand
each other so exactly that any reflection about the matter is but
an impertinence and a folly. He who is twenty and does not grasp
the existence of the categorical imperative "enjoy
thyself"—he is a fool; and he who does not seize the
opportunity is and remains a Christianfelder.<note place="foot" id="iv-p128.4" n="64">Christiansfeld , a town in South Jutland, was the seat of a colony of Herrhutian Pietists.</note>  
</p>
<p id="iv-p129">
However, you all
are unhappy lovers, and that is why you are not satisfied with
woman as she is. The gods forbid! As she is she pleases me, just as
she is. Even Constantin's category of "the joke" seems to contain a
secret desire. I, on the other hand, I am gallant. And why not?
Gallantry costs nothing and gives one all and is the condition for
all, erotic pleasure. Gallantry is the Masonic language of the
senses and of voluptuousness, between man and woman. It is a
natural language, as love's language in general is. It consists not
of sounds but of desires disguised and of ever changing wishes.
That an unhappy lover may be ungallant enough to wish to convert
his deficit into a draught payable in immortality—that I
understand well enough. That is to say, I for my part do not
understand it; for to me a woman has sufficient intrinsic value. I
assure every woman of this, it is the truth; and at the same time
it is certain that I am the only one who is not deceived by this
truth. As to whether a despoiled woman is worth less than
man—about that I find no information in my price list. I do
not pick flowers already broken, I leave them to the married men to
use for Shrove‑tide decoration. Whether e. g. Edward, wishes
to consider the matter again, and again fall in love with
Cordelia,<note place="foot" id="iv-p129.1" n="65">The reference is to the "Diary of the Seducer" (in "Either—Or," part I). Edward is the scorned lover of Cordelia who is seduced by John.</note>  
 or simply repeat
the affair in his reflection —that is his own business. Why
should I concern myself with other peoples' affairs! I explained to
her at an earlier time what I thought of her; and, in truth, she
convinced me, convinced me to my absolute satisfaction, that my
gallantry was well applied.</p>
<p id="iv-p130">
<i>Concedo.
Concessi.</i><note place="foot" id="iv-p130.1" n="66">I concede. I have conceded.</note>  
 If I should meet
with another Cordelia, why then I shall enact a comedy "Ring number
2."<note place="foot" id="iv-p130.2" n="67">Reference to a comedy by Farquhar, which enjoyed a moderate popularity in Copenhagen.</note>  

But
you are unhappy lovers and have conspired together, and are worse
deceived than the girls, notwithstanding that you are richly
endowed by nature. But decision—the decision of desire, is
the most essential thing in life. Our young friend will always
remain an onlooker. Victor is an unpractical enthusiast. Constantin
has acquired his good sense at too great a cost; and the fashion
dealer is a madman. Stuff and nonsense! With all four of you busy
about one girl, nothing would come of it.</p>
<p id="iv-p131">
Let
one have enthusiasm enough to idealize, taste enough to join in the
clinking of glasses at the festive board of enjoyment, sense enough
to break off—to break off absolutely, as does Death, madness
enough to wish to enjoy all over again—if you have all that
you will be the favorite of gods and girls.</p>
<p id="iv-p132">But of what avail
to speak here? I do not intend to make proselytes. Neither is this
the place for that. To be sure I love wine, to be sure I love the
abundance of a banquet—all that is good; but let a girl be my
company, and then I shall be eloquent. Let then Constantin have my
thanks for the banquet, and the wine, and the excellent
appointments—the speeches, however, were but indifferent. But
in order that things shall have a better ending I shall pronounce a
eulogy on woman.</p>
<p id="iv-p133">   Just as he who is to speak in
praise of the divinity must be inspired by the divinity to speak
worthily, and must therefore be taught by the divinity as to what
he shall say, Likewise he who would speak of women. For woman, even
less than the divinity, is a mere figment of man's brain, a
day‑dream, or a notion that occurs to one and which one pay
argue about <i>pro et
contra.</i> Nay, one learns from woman alone what to say of her.
And the more teachers one has had, the better. The first time one
is a disciple, the next time one is already over the chief
difficulties, just as one learns in formal and learned disputations
how to use the last opponent's compliments against a new opponent.
Nevertheless nothing is lost. For as little as a kiss is a mere
sample of good things, and as little as an embrace is an exertion,
just as little is this experience exhaustive. In fact it is
essentially different from the mathematical proof of a theorem,
which remains ever the same, even though other letters be
substituted. This method is one befitting mathematics and ghosts,
but not love and women, because each is a new proof, corroborating
the truth of the theorem in a different manner. It is my joy that,
far from being less perfect than man, the female sex is, on the
contrary, the more perfect. I shall, however, clothe my speech in a
myth; and I shall exult, on woman's account whom you have so
unjustly maligned, if my speech pronounce judgment on your souls,
if the enjoyment of her beckon you only to flee you, as did the
fruits from Tantalus; because you have fled, and thereby insulted,
woman. Only thus, forsooth, may she be insulted, even though she
scorn it, and though punishment instantly falls on him who had the
audacity. I, however, insult no one. That is but the notion of
married men, and a slander; whereas, in reality, I respect her more
highly than does the man she is married to.</p>
<p id="iv-p134">   Originally there was but one sex,
so the Greeks relate, and that was man's. Splendidly endowed he
was, so he did honor to the gods—so splendidly endowed that
the same happened to them as sometimes happens to a poet who has
expended all his energy on a poetic invention: they grew jealous of
man. Ay, what is worse, they feared that he would not willingly bow
under their yoke; they feared, though with small reason, that he
might cause their very heaven to totter. Thus they had raised up a
power they scarcely held themselves able to curb. Then there was
anxiety and alarm in the council of the gods. Much had they
lavished in their generosity on the creation of man; but all must
be risked now, for reason of bitter necessity; for all was at
stake—so the gods believed—and recalled he could not
be, as a poet may recall his invention. And by force he could not
be subdued, or else the gods themselves could have done so; but
precisely of that they despaired. He would have to be caught and
subdued, then, by a power weaker than his own and yet
stronger—one strong enough to compel him. What a marvellous
power this would have to be! However, necessity teaches even the
gods to surpass themselves in inventiveness. They sought and they
found. That power was woman, the marvel of creation, even in the
eyes of the gods a greater marvel than man—a discovery which
the gods in their näiveté could not help but applaud
themselves for. What more can be said in her praise than that she
was able to accomplish what even the gods did not believe
themselves able to do; and what more can be said in her praise than
that she did accomplish it! But how marvellous a creation must be
hers to have accomplished it.</p>
<p id="iv-p135">
It was
a ruse of the gods. Cunningly the enchantress was fashioned, for no
sooner had she bewitched man than she changed and caught him in all
the circumstantialities of existence. It was that the gods had
desired. But what, pray, can be more delicious, or more entrancing
and bewitching, than what the gods themselves contrived, when
battling for their supremacy, as the only means of luring man? And
most assuredly it is so, for woman is the only, and the most
seductive, power in heaven and on earth. When compared with her in
this sense man will indeed be found to be exceedingly
imperfect.</p>
<p id="iv-p136">
And
the stratagem of the gods was crowned with success; but not always.
There have existed at all times some men—a few—who have
detected the deception. They perceive well enough woman's
loveliness—more keenly, indeed than the others—but they
also suspect the real state of affairs. I call them erotic natures
and count myself among them. Men call them seducers, woman has no
name for them—such persons are to her unnameable. These
erotic natures are the truly fortunate ones. They live more
luxuriously than do the very gods, for they regale themselves with
food more delectable than ambrosia, and they drink what is more
delicious than nectar; they eat the most seductive invention of the
gods' most ingenious thought, they are ever eating dainties set for
a bait—ah, incomparable delight, ah, blissful fare—they
are ever eating but the dainties set for a bait; and they are never
caught. All other men greedily seize and devour it, like bumpkins
eating their cabbage, and are caught. Only the erotic nature fully
appreciates the dainties set out for bait—he prizes them
infinitely. Woman divines this, and for that reason there is a
secret understanding between him and her. But he knows also that
she is a bait, and that secret he keeps to himself.</p>
<p id="iv-p137">
    That nothing more marvellous,
nothing more delicious, nothing more seductive, than woman can be
devised, for that vouch the gods and their pressing need which
hightened their powers of invention; for that vouches also the fact
that they risked all, and in shaping her moved heaven and
earth.</p>
<p id="iv-p138">
    I now forsake the myth. The
conception "man" corresponds to his "idea." I can therefore, if
necessary, think of an individual man as existing. The idea of
woman, on the other hand, is so general that no one single woman is
able to express it completely. She is not contemporaneous with man
(and hence of less noble origin), but a later creation, though more
perfect than he. Whether now the gods took some part from him
whilst he slept, from fear of waking him by taking too much; or
whether they bisected him and made woman out of the one
half—at any rate it was man who was partitioned. Hence she is
the equal of man only after this partition. She is a delusion and a
snare, but is so only afterwards, and for him who is deluded. She
is finiteness incarnate; but in her first stage she is finiteness
raised to the highest degree in the deceptive infinitude of all
divine and human illusions. Now, the deception does not
exist—one instant longer, and one is deceived.</p>
<p id="iv-p139">
She is
finiteness, and as such she is a collective: one woman represents
all women. Only the erotic nature comprehends this and therefore
knows how to love many without ever being deceived, sipping the
while all the delights the cunning gods were able to prepare. For
this reason, as I said, woman cannot be fully expressed by one
formula, but is, rather, an infinitude of finalities. He who wishes
to think her "idea" will have the same experience as he who gazes
on a sea of nebulous shapes which ever form anew, or as he who is
dazed by looking over the waves whose foamy crests ever mock one's
vision; for her "idea" is but the workshop of possibilities. And to
the erotic nature these possibilities are the everlasting reason
for his worship.</p>
<p id="iv-p140">   So the gods created her delicate
and ethereal as if out of the mists of the summer night, yet goodly
like ripe fruit; light like a bird, though the repository of what
attracts all the world—light because the play of the forces
is harmoniously balanced in the invisible center of a negative
relation;<note place="foot" id="iv-p140.1" n="68">I.e., evidently, she does not exist because of herself; hence she is in a "negative" relation to herself. The center of this relation is "what attracts all the world."</note>  
 slender in
growth, with definite lines, yet her body sinuous with beautiful
curves; perfect, yet ever appearing as if completed but now; cool,
delicious, and refreshing like new-fallen snow, yet blushing in coy
transparency; happy like some pleasantry which makes one forget all
one's sorrow; soothing as being the end of desire, and satisfying
in herself being the stimulus of desire. And the gods had
calculated that man, when first beholding her, would be amazed, as
one who sees himself, though familiar with that sight—would
stand in amaze as one who sees himself in the splendor of
perfection—would stand in amaze as one who beholds what he
did never dream he would, yet beholds what, it would seem, ought to
have occurred to him before—sees what is essential to life
and yet gazes on it as being the very mystery of existence. It is
precisely this contradiction in his admiration which nurses desire
to life, while this same admiration urges him ever nearer, so that
he cannot desist from gazing, cannot desist from believing himself
familiar with the sight, without really daring to approach, even
though he cannot desist from desiring.</p>
<p id="iv-p141">When the gods had thus planned her form they were seized with fear lest they might not have the wherewithal to give it existence; but what they feared even more was herself. For they dared not let her know how beautiful she was, apprehensive of having some one in the secret who might spoil their ruse. Then was the crowning touch given to their wondrous creation: they made her faultless; but they concealed all this from her in the nescience of her innocence, and concealed it doubly from her in the impenetrable mystery of her modesty. Now she was perfect, and victory certain. Inviting she had been before, but now doubly so through her shyness, and beseeching through her shrinking, and irresistible through herself offering resistance. The gods were jubilant. And no allurement has ever been devised in the world so great as is woman, and no allurement is as compelling as is innocence, and no temptation is as ensnaring as is modesty, and no deception is as matchless as is woman. She knows of nothing, still her modesty is instinctive divination. She is distinct from man, and the separating wall of modesty parting them is more decisive than Aladdin's sword separating him from Gulnare;
<note place="foot" id="iv-p141.1" n="69">In Oehlenschläger's "Aladdin."</note>  
 and yet, when like
Pyramis he puts his head to this dividing wall of modesty, the
erotic nature will perceive all pleasures of desire divined within
as from afar.</p>
<p id="iv-p142">   Thus does woman tempt. Men are
wont to set forth the most precious things they possess as a
delectation for the gods, nothing less will do. Thus is woman a
show‑bread. the gods knew of naught comparable to her. She
exists, she is present, she is with us, close by; and yet she is
removed from us to an infinite distance when concealed in her
modesty‑until she herself betrays her hiding place, she knows
not how: it is not she herself, it is life which informs on her.
Roguish she is like a child who in playing peeps forth from his
hiding place, yet her roguishness is inexplicable, for she does not
know of it herself, she is ever mysterious‑mysterious when
she casts down her eyes, mysterious when she sends forth the
messengers of her glance which no thought, let alone any word, is
able to follow. And yet is the eye the "interpreter" of the soul!
What, then, is the explanation of this mystery if the interpreter
too is unintelligible? Calm she is like the hushed stillness of
eventide, when not a leaf stirs; calm like a consciousness as yet
unaware of aught. Her heart‑beats are as regular as if life
were not present; and yet the erotic nature, listening with his
stethoscopically practiced ear, detects the dithyrambic pulsing of
desire sounding along unbeknown. Careless she is like the blowing
of the wind, content like the profound ocean, and yet full of
longing like a thing biding its explanation. My friends! My mind is
softened, indescribably softened. I comprehend that also my life
expresses an idea, even if you do not comprehend me. I too have
discovered the secret of existence; I too serve a divine
idea—and, assuredly, I do not serve it for nothing. If woman
is a ruse of the gods, this means that she is to be seduced; and if
woman is not an "idea," the true inference is that the erotic
nature wishes to love as many of them as possible.</p>
<p id="iv-p143">What luxury it is
to relish the ruse without being duped, only the erotic nature
comprehends. And how blissful it is to be seduced, woman alone
knows. I know that from woman, even though I never yet allowed any
one of them time to explain it to me, but re‑asserted my
independence, serving the idea by a break as sudden as that caused
by death; for a bride and a break are to one another like female
and male.<note place="foot" id="iv-p143.1" n="70">In the Danish, a pun on the hominyms <i>en brud</i> and <i>et brud.</i></note> 
 Only woman is
aware of this, and she is aware of it together with her seducer. No
married man will ever grasp this. Nor does she ever speak with him
about it. She resigns herself to her fate, she knows that it must
be so and that she can be seduced only once. For this reason she
never really bears malice against the man who seduced her. That is
to say, if he really did seduce her and thus expressed the idea.
Broken marriage vows and that kind of thing is, of course, nonsense
and no seduction. Indeed, it is by no means so great a misfortune
for a woman to be seduced. In fact, it is a piece of good fortune
for her. An excellently seduced girl may make an excellent wife. If
I myself were not fit to be a seducer—however deeply I feel
my inferior qualifications in this respect—if I chose to be a
married man, I should always choose a girl already seduced, so that
I would not have to begin my marriage by seducing my wife.
Marriage, to be sure, also expresses an idea; but in relation to
the idea of marriage that quality is altogether immaterial which is
the absolutely essential condition for my idea. Therefore, a
marriage ought never to be planned to begin as though it were the
beginning of a story of seduction. So much is sure: there is a
seducer for every woman. Happy is she whose good fortune it is to
meet just him.</p>
<p id="iv-p144">
Through marriage, on the other hand, the gods win their victory. In it the once seduced maiden walks through life by the side of her husband, looking back at times, full of longing, resigned to her fate, until she reaches the goal of life. She dies; but not in the same sense as man dies. She is volatilized and resolved into that mysterious primal element of which the gods formed her—she disappears like a dream, like an impermanent shape whose hour is past. For what is woman but a dream, and the highest reality withal! Thus does the erotic nature comprehend her, leading her, and being led by her in the moment of seduction, beyond time—where she has her true existence, being an illusion. Through her husband, on the other hand, she becomes a creature of this world, and he through her.
 </p>
 <p id="iv-p145">Marvellous nature! If I did not admire thee, a woman would teach me; for truly she is the venerabile of life. Splendidly didst thou fashion her, but more splendidly still in that thou never didst fashion one woman like another. In man, the essential is the essential, and insofar always alike; but in woman the adventitious is the essential, and is thus an inexhaustible source of differences. Brief is her splendor; but quickly the pain is forgotten, too, when the same splendor is proffered me anew. It is true, I too am aware of the unbeautiful which may appear in her thereafter; but she is not thus with her seducer.
   </p>
   <p id="iv-p146">They rose from the table. It needed but a hint from Constantin, for the participants understood each other with military precision whenever there was a question of face or turn about. With his invisible baton of command, elastic like a divining rod in his hand, Constantin once more touched them in order to call forth in them a fleeting reminiscence of the banquet and the spirit of enjoyment which had prevailed before but was now, in some measure, submerged through the intellectual effort of the speeches—in order that the note of glad festivity which had disappeared might, by way of resonance, return once more among the guests in a brief moment of recollection. He saluted with his full glass as a signal of parting, emptying it, and then flinging it against the door in the rear wall. The others followed his example, consummating this symbolic action with all the solemnity of adepts. Justice was thus done the pleasure of stopping short—that royal pleasure which, though briefer, yet is more liberating than any other pleasure. With a libation this pleasure ought to be entered upon, with the libation of flinging one's glass into destruction and oblivion, and tearing one's self passionately away from every memory, as if it were a danger to one's life: this libation is to the gods of the nether world. One breaks off, and strength is needed to do that, greater strength than to sever a knot by a sword‑blow; for the difficulty of the knot tends to arouse one's passion, but the passion required for breaking off must be of one's own making. In a superficial sense the result is, of course, the same; but from an artistic int of view there is a world of difference between something ceasing or simply coming to an end, and it being broken off by one's own free will—whether it is a mere occurrence or a passionate decision; whether it is all over, like a school song, because there is no more to it, or whether it is terminated by the Cæsarian operation of one's own Pleasure; whether it is a triviality every one has experienced, or the secret which escapes most.
   </p>
   <p id="iv-p147">Constantin's flinging his beaker against the door was intended merely as a symbolic rite; nevertheless, his so doing was, in a way, a decisive act; for when the last glass was shattered the door opened, and just as he who presumpuously knocked at Death's door and, on its opening, beheld the powers of annihilation, so the banqueters beheld the corps of destruction ready to demolish everything—a memento which in an instant put them to flight from that place, while at the very same moment the entire surroundings had been reduced to the semblance of ruin.
   </p>
   <p id="iv-p148">A carriage stood ready at the door. At Constantin's invitation they seated themselves in it and drove away in good spirits; for that tableau of destruction which they left behind had given their souls fresh elasticity. After having covered a distance of several miles a halt was made. Here Constantin took his leave as host, informing them that five carriages were at their disposal—each one was free to suit his own pleasure and drive wherever he wanted, whether alone or in company with whomsoever he pleased. Thus a rocket, propelled by the force of the powder, ascends at a single shot, remains collected for an instant, in order then to spread out to all the winds.

   </p>
   <p id="iv-p149">While the horses were being hitched to the carriages the nocturnal banqueters strolled a little way down the road. The fresh air of the morning purified their hot blood with its coolness, and they gave themselves up to it entirely. Their forms, and the groups in which they ranged themselves, made a phantastic impression on me. For when the morning sun shines on field and meadow, and on every creature which in the night found rest and strength to rise up jubilating with the sun—in this there is only a pleasing, mutual understanding; but a nightly company, viewed by the morning light and in smiling surroundings, makes a downright uncanny impression. It makes one think of spooks which have been surprised by daylight, of subterranean spirits which are unable to regain the crevice through which they may vanish, because it is visible only in the dark; of unhappy creatures in whom the difference between day and night has become obliterated through the monotony of their sufferings.
  </p>
  <p id="iv-p150">A foot path led them through a small patch of field toward a garden surrounded by a hedge, from behind whose concealment a modest summer‑cottage peeped forth. At the end of the garden, toward the field, there was an arbor formed by trees. Becoming aware of people being in the arbor, they all grew curious, and with the spying glances of men bent on observation, the besiegers closed in about that pleasant place of concealment, hiding themselves, and as eager as emissaries of the police about to take some one by surprise. Like emissaries of the police—well, to be sure, their appearance made the misunderstanding possible that it was they whom the minions of the law might be looking for. Each one had occupied a point of vantage for peeping in, when Victor drew back a step and said to his neighbor, "Why, dear me, if that is not Judge William and his wife!"
  </p>
  <p id="iv-p151">They were surprised—not the two whom the foliage concealed and who were all too deeply concerned with their domestic enjoyment to be observers. They felt themselves too secure to believe themselves an object of any one's observation excepting the morning sun's which took pleasure in looking in to them, whilst a gentle zephyr moved the boughs above them, and the reposefulness of the countryside, as well as all things around them girded the little arbor about with peace. The happy married couple was not surprised and noticed nothing. That they were a married couple was clear enough; one could perceive that at a glance—alas! if one is something of an observer one's self. Even if nothing in the wide world, nothing, whether overtly or covertly, if nothing, I say, threatens to interfere with the happiness of lovers, yet they are not thus secure when sitting together. They are in a state of bliss; and yet it is as if there were some power bent on separating them, so firmly they clasp one another; and yet it is as if there were some enemy present against whom they must defend themselves; ,and yet it is as if they could never become, sufficiently reassured. Not thus married people, and not thus that married couple in the arbor. How long they had been married, however, that was not to be determined with certainty. To be sure, the wife's activity at the tea‑table revealed a sureness of hand born of practice, but at the same time such almost childlike interest in her occupation as if she were a newly married woman and in that middle condition when she is not, as yet, sure whether marriage is fun or earnest, whether being a housewife is a calling, or a game, or a pastime. Perhaps she had been married for some longer time but did not generally preside at the tea‑table, or perhaps did so only out here in the country, or did it perhaps only that morning which, possibly, had a special significance for them. Who could tell? All calculation is frustrated to a certain degree by the fact that every personality exhibits some originality which keeps time from leaving its marks. When the sun shines in all his summer glory one thinks straightway that there must be some festal occasion at hand—that it cannot be so for every‑day use, or that it is the first time, or at least one of the first times; for surely, one thinks, it cannot be repeated for any length of time. Thus would think he who saw it but once, or saw it for the first time; and I saw the wife of the justice for the first time. He who sees the object in question every day may think differently; provided he sees the same thing. But let the judge decide about that!
     </p>
	 <p id="iv-p152">As I remarked, our amiable housewife was occupied. She poured boiling water into the cups, probably to warm them, emptied them again, set a cup on a platter, poured the tea and served it with sugar and cream—now all was ready; was it fun or earnest? In case a person did not relish tea at other times—he should have sat in the judge's place; for just then that drink seemed most inviting to me. only the inviting air of the lovely woman herself seemeo to me more inviting.
</p>
<p id="iv-p153">
It appeared that she had not had time to speak until then. Now she broke the silence and said, while serving him his tea: "Quick, now, dear, and drink while it is hot, the morning air is quite cool, anyway; and surely the least I can do for you is to be a little careful of you." "The least?" the judge answered laconically. "Yes, or the most, or the only thing." The judge looked at her inquiringly, and whilst he was helping himself she continued: "You interrupted me yesterday when I wished to broach the subject, but I have thought about it again; many times I have thought about it, and now particularly, you know yourself in reference to whom: it is certainly true that if you hadn't married, you would have been far more successful in your career." With his cup still on the platter the judge sipped a first mouthful with visible enjoyment, thoroughly refreshed; or was it perchance the joy over his lovely wife; I for my part believe it was the latter. She, however, seemed only to be glad that it tasted so good to him. Then he put down his cup on the table at his side, took out a cigar, and said: "May I light it at your chafing‑dish"? "Certainly," she said, and handed him a live coal on a tea‑spoon. He lit his cigar and put his arm about her waist whilst she leaned against his shoulder. He turned his head the other way to blow out the smoke and then he let his eyes rest on her with a devotion such as only a glance can reveal; yet he smiled, but this glad smile had in it a dash of sad irony. Finally he said: "Do you really believe so, my girl?" "What do you mean?" she answered. He was silent again, his smile gained the upper hand, but his voice remained quite serious, nevertheless. "Then I pardon you your previous folly, seeing that you yourself have forgotten it so quickly; thou speakest as one of the foolish women speaketh
<note place="foot" id="iv-p153.1" n="71"><scripRef id="iv-p153.2" passage="Job 2,10" parsed="|Job|2|0|0|0;|Job|10|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Job.2 Bible:Job.10">Job 2,10</scripRef>.</note>  
—what great
career should I have had?" His wife seemed embarrassed for a moment
by this return, but collected her wits quickly and, now explained
her meaning with womanly eloquence. The judge looked down before
him, without interrupting her; but as she continued he began to
drum on the table with the fingers of his right hand, at the same
time humming a tune. The words of the song were audible for a
moment, just as the pattern of a texture now becomes visible, now
disappears again; and then again they were heard no longer as he
hummed the tune of the song: "The goodman he went to the forest, to
cut the wands so white." After this melodramatic performance,
consisting in the justice's wife explaining herself whilst he
hummed his tune, the dialogue set in again. "I am thinking," he
remarked, "I am thinking you are ignorant of the fact that the
Danish Law permits a man to castigate his wife<note place="foot" id="iv-p153.3" n="72">According to the Jutland Laws (A. D. 1241) a man is permitted to punish his wife, when she has misbehaved, with stick and with rod, but not with weapon. In the Danish Law (1683) this right is restricted to children and servants. S.V.</note>   
 —a pity
only that the law does not indicate on which occasions it is
permitted." His wife smiled at his threat and continued: "Now why
can I never get you to be serious when I touch on this matter? You
do not understand me: believe me, I mean it sincerely, it seems to
me a very beautiful thought. Of course, if you weren't my husband I
would not dare to entertain it; but now I have done so, for your
sake and for my sake; and now be nice and serious, for my sake, and
answer me frankly." "No, you can't get me to be serious, and a
serious answer you won't get; I must either laugh at you, or make
you forget it, as before, or beat you; or else you must stop
talking, about it, or I shall have to make you keep silent about it
some other way. You see, it is a joke, and that is why there are so
many ways out." He arose, pressed a kiss on her brow, laid her arm
in his, and then disappeared in a leafy walk which led from the
arbor.</p>


<p id="iv-p154">The arbor was
empty; there was nothing else to do, so the hostile corps of
occupation withdrew without making any gains. Still, the others
were content with uttering some malicious remarks. The company
returned but missed Victor. He had rounded the corner and, in
walking along the garden, had come up to the country home. The
doors of a garden‑room facing the lawn were open, and
likewise a window. Very probably he had seen something which
attracted his attention. He leapt into the window, and leapt out
again just as the party were approaching, for they had been looking
for him. Triumphantly he held up some papers in his hand and
exclaimed: "One of the judge's manuscripts!<note place="foot" id="iv-p154.1" n="73">Containing the second part of "Stages on Life's Road." entitled "Reflections on Marriage in Refutation of Objections."</note>
 Seeing that I
edited his other works it is no more than my duty that I should
edit this one too." He put it into his pocket; or, rather, he was
about to do so; for as he was bending his arm and already had his
hand with the manuscript half‑way down in his pocket I
managed to steal it from him.</p>
<p id="iv-p155">    But who, then, am I? Let no one
ask! If it hasn't occurred to you before to ask about it I am over
the difficulty—for now the worst is behind me. For that
matter, I am not worth asking about, for I am the least of all
things, people would put me in utter confusion by asking about me.
I am pure existence, and therefore smaller, almost, than nothing. I
am "pure existence" which is present everywhere but still is never
noticed; for I am ever vanishing. I am like the line above which
stands the <i>summa
summarum</i>—who cares about the line? By my own strength I
can accomplish nothing, for even the idea to steal the manuscript
from Victor was not my own idea; for this very idea which, as a
thief would say, induced me to "borrow" the manuscript, was
borrowed from him. And now, when editing, this manuscript, I am,
again, nothing at all; for it rightly belongs to the judge. And as
editor, I am in my nothingness only a kind of nemesis on Victor,
who imagined that he had the prescriptive right to do
so.</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Fear and Trembling" id="v" prev="iv" next="vi">
<h2 id="v-p0.1">FEAR AND TREMBLING</h2>

<p class="Centered" id="v-p1">
INTRODUCTION</p>
<p id="v-p2" />
<p class="First" id="v-p3">
   Not only in the
world of commerce but also in the world of ideas our age has
arranged a regular clearance-sale. Everything may be had at such
absurdedly low prices that very soon the question will arise
whether any one cares to bid. Every waiter with a speculative turn
who carefully marks the significant progress of modern philosophy,
every lecturer in philosophy, every tutor, student, every
sticker-and‑quitter of philosophy—they are not content
with doubting everything, but "go right on." It might, possibly, be
ill‑timed and inopportune to ask them whither they are bound;
but it is no doubt polite and modest to take it for granted that
they have doubted everything—else it were a curious statement
for them to make, that they were proceeding onward. So they have,
all of them, completed that preliminary operation and, it would
seem, with such ease that they do not think it necessary to waste a
word about how they did it. The fact is, not even he who looked
anxiously and with a troubled spirit for some little point of
information, ever found one, nor any instruction, nor even any
little dietetic prescription, as to how one is to accomplish this
enormous task. "But did not Descartes proceed in this fashion?"
Descartes, indeed! that venerable, humble, honest thinker whose
writings surely no one can read without deep
emotion—Descartes did what he said, and said what he did.
Alas, alas! that is a mighty rare thing in our times! But
Descartes, as he says frequently enough, never uttered doubts
concerning his faith. . . .</p>
<p id="v-p4">
   In our times, as
was remarked, no one is content with faith, but "goes right on."
The question as to whither they are proceeding may be a silly
question; whereas it is, a sign of urbanity and culture to assume
that every one has faith, to begin with, for else it were a curious
statement for them to make, that they are proceeding further. In
the olden days it was different. Then, faith was a task for a whole
life‑time because it was held that proficiercy in faith was
not to be won within a few days or weeks. Hence, when the tried
patriarch felt his end approaching, after having fought his battles
and preserved his faith, he was still young enough at heart not to
have forgotten the fear and trembling which disciplined his youth
and which  the mature
man has under control, but which no one entirely
outgrows—except insofar as he succeeds in "going on" as early
as possible. The goal which those venerable men reached at
last—at that spot every one starts, in our times, in order to
"proceed further.". . .</p>
<p id="v-p5">
</p>
<p id="v-p6">
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="v-p7">
PREPARATION</p>
<p id="v-p8">There lived a man
who, when a child, had heard the beautiful Bible story of how God
tempted Abraham and how he stood the test, how he maintained his
faith and, against his expectations, received his son back again.
As this man grew older he read this same story with ever greater
admiration; for now life had separated what had been united in the
reverent simplicity of the child. And the older he grew, the more
frequently his thoughts reverted to that story. His enthusiasm
waxed stronger and stronger, and yet the story grew less and less
clear to him. Finally he forgot everything else in thinking about
it, and his soul contained but one wish, which was, to behold
Abraham; and but one longing, which was, to have been witness to
that event. His desire was, not to see the beautiful lands of the
Orient, and not the splendor of the Promised Land, and not the
reverent couple whose old age the Lord had blessed with children,
and not the venerable figure of the aged patriarch, and not the
god‑given vigorous youth of Isaac—it would have been
the same to him if the event had come to pass on some barren heath.
But his wish was, to have been with Abraham on the three days'
journey, when he rode with sorrow before him and with Isaac at his
side. His wish was, to have been present at the moment when Abraham
lifted up his eyes and saw Mount Moriah afar off; to have been
present at the moment when he left his asses behind and wended his
way up to the mountain alone with Isaac. For the mind of this man
was busy, not with the delicate conceits of the imagination, but
rather with his shuddering thought.</p>
<p id="v-p9">
The
man we speak of was no thinker, he felt no desire to go beyond his
faith: it seemed to him the most glorious fate to be remembered as
the Father of Faith, and a most enviable lot to be possessed of
that faith, even if no one knew it.</p>
<p id="v-p10">
The
man we speak of was no learned exegetist, be did not even
understand Hebrew—who knows but a knowledge of Hebrew might
have helped him to understand readily both the story and
Abraham.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="v-p11">
I.</p>
<p id="v-p12">
And
God tempted Abraham and said unto him: take Isaac, thine only son,
whom thou lovest and go to the land Moriah and sacrifice him there
on a mountain which I shall show thee.<note place="foot" id="v-p12.1" n="74">Freely after <scripRef id="v-p12.2" passage="Genesis 22" parsed="|Gen|22|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22">Genesis 22</scripRef>.</note>
</p>
<p id="v-p13">It was in the
early morning, Abraham arose betimes and had his asses saddled. He
departed from his tent, and Isaac with him; but Sarah looked out of
the window after them until they were out of sight. Silently they
rode for three days; but on the fourth morning Abraham said not a
word but lifted up his eyes and beheld Mount Moriah in the
distance. He left his servants behind and, leading Isaac by the
hand, he approached the mountain. But Abraham said to himself: "I
shall surely conceal from Isaac whither he is going." He stood
still, he laid his hand on Isaac's head to bless him, and Isaac
bowed down to receive his blessing. And Abraham's aspect was
fatherly, his glance was mild, his speech admonishing. But Isaac
understood him not, his soul would not rise to him; he embraced
Abraham's knees, he besought him at his feet, he begged for his
young life, for his beautiful hopes, he recalled the joy in
Abraham's house when he was born, he reminded him of the sorrow and
the loneliness that would be after him. Then did Abraham raise up
the youth and lead him by his hand, and his words were full of
consolation and admonishment. But Isaac understood him not. He
ascended Mount Moriah, but Isaac understood him not. Then Abraham
averted his face for a moment; but when Isaac looked again, his
father's countenance was changed, his glance wild, his aspect
terrible, he seized Isaac and threw him to the ground and said:
"Thou foolish lad, believest thou I am thy father? An
idol‑worshipper am I. Believest thou it is God's cornmand?
Nay, but my pleasure." Then Isaac trembled and cried out in his
fear: "God in heaven, have pity on me, God of Abraham, show mercy
to me, I have no father on earth, be thou then my father!" But
Abraham said softly to himself : "Father in heaven, I thank thee.
Better is it that he believes me inhuman than that he should lose
his faith in thee."</p>
<p id="v-p14" />
<p id="v-p15">
</p>
<p id="v-p16">
When
the child is to be weaned, his mother blackens her breast; for it
were a pity if her breast should look sweet to him when he is not
to have it. Then the child believes that her breast has changed;
but his mother is ever the same, her glance is full of love and as
tender as ever. Happy he who needed not worse means to wean his
child!</p>
<p id="v-p17"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="v-p18" />
<p class="Centered" id="v-p19">II.</p>
<p id="v-p20"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p21">
   It was in the
early morning. Abraham arose betimes and embraced Sarah, the bride
of his old age. And Sarah kissed Isaac who had taken the shame from
her—Isaac, her pride, her hope for all coming generations.
Then the twain rode silently along their way, and Abraham's glance
was fastened on the ground before him; until on the fourth day,
when he lifted up his eyes and beheld Mount Moriah in the distance;
but then his eyes again sought the ground. Without a word he put
the fagots in order and bound Isaac, and without a word he
unsheathed his knife. Then he beheld the ram God had chosen, and
sacrificed him, and wended his way home. . . . From that day on
Abraham grew old. He could not forget that God had required this of
him. Isaac flourished as before; but Abraham's eye was darkened, he
saw happiness no more.</p>
<p id="v-p22">
When
the child has grown and is to be weaned, his mother will in
maidenly fashion conceal her breast. Then the child has a mother no
longer. Happy the child who lost not his mother in any other
sense!</p>
<p id="v-p23"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p24"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="v-p25">
III.</p>
<p id="v-p26" />
<p id="v-p27">
It was
in the early morning. Abraham arose betimes he kissed Sarah, the
young mother, and Sarah kissed Isaac, her joy, her delight for all
times. And Abraham rode on his way, lost in thought—he was
thinking of Hagar and her son whom he had driven out into the
wilderness. He ascended Mount Moriah and he drew the
knife.</p>
<p id="v-p28">It was a calm
evening when Abraham rode out alone, and he rode to Mount Moriah.
There he cast himself down on his face and prayed to God to forgive
him his sin in that he had been about to sacrifice his son Isaac,
and in that the father had forgotten his duty toward his son. And
yet oftener he rode on his lonely way, but he found no rest. He
could not grasp that it was a sin that he had wanted to sacrifice
to God his most precious possession, him for whom he would most
gladly have died many times. But, if it was a sin, if he had not
loved Isaac thus, then could he not grasp the possbility that he
could be forgiven : for what sin more terrible ?</p>
<p id="v-p29" />
<p id="v-p30"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p31">
When
the child is to he weaned, the mother is not without sorrow that
she and her child are to be separated more and more, that the child
who had first lain under her heart, and afterwards at any rate
rested at her breast, is to be so near to her no more. So they
sorrow together for that brief while. Happy he who kept his child
so near to him and needed not to sorrow more!</p>
<p id="v-p32"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p33"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="v-p34">IV.</p>
<p id="v-p35"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p36">
It was
in the early morning. All was ready for the journey in the house of
Abraham. He bade farewell to Sarah; and Eliezer, his faithful
servant, accompanied him along the way for a little while. They
rode together in peace, Abraham and Isaac, until they came to Mount
Moriah. And Abraham prepared everything for the sacrifice, calmly
and mildly; but when his father turned aside in order to unsheath
his knife, Isaac saw that Abraham's left hand was knit in despair
and that a trembling shook his frame—but Abraham drew forth
the knife.</p>
<p id="v-p37">
Then
they returned home again, and Sarah hastened to meet them; but
Isaac had lost his faith, No one in all the world ever said a word
about this, nor did Isaac speak to any man concerning what he had
seen, and Abraham suspected not that any one had seen
it.</p>
<p id="v-p38">   When the child
is to be weaned, his mother has the stronger food ready lest the
child perish. Happy he who has in readiness this stronger
food!</p>
<p id="v-p39"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p40"><br /></p>
<h3 id="v-p40.2">
A
PANEGYRIC ON ABRAHAM</h3>
<p id="v-p41">
If a consciousness of the eternal were not implanted in man; if the basis of all that exists were but a confusedly fermenting element which, convulsed by obscure passions, Produced all, both the great and the insignificant; if under everything there lay a bottomless void never to be filled what else were life but despair? If it were thus, and if there were no sacred bonds between man and man; if one generation arose after another, as in the forest the leaves of one season succeed the leaves of another, or like the songs of birds which are taken up one after another; if the generations of man passed through the world like a ship passing through the sea and the wind over the desert—a fruitless and a vain thing; if eternal oblivion were ever greedily watching for its prey and there existed no power strong enough to wrest it from its clutches—how empty were life then, and how dismal! And therefore it is not thus; but, just as God created man and woman, he likewise called into being the hero and the poet or orator. The latter cannot perform the deeds of the hero—he can only admire and love him and rejoice in him. And yet he also is happy and not less so; for the hero is, as it were, his better self with which he has fallen in love, and he is glad he is not himself the hero, so that his love can express itself in admiration.
</p>
<p id="v-p42">
The poet is the genius of memory, and does nothing but recall what has been done, can do nothing but admire what has been done. He adds nothing of his own, but he is Jealous of what has been entrusted to him. He obeys the choice of his own heart; but once he has found what he has been seeking, he visits every man's door with his song and with his speech, so that all may admire the hero as he does, and be proud of the hero as he is. This is his achievement, his humble work, this is his faithful service in the house of the hero. If thus, faithful to his love, he battles day and night against the guile of oblivion which wishes to lure the hero from him, then has he accomplished his task, then is he gathered to his hero who loves him as faithfully; for the poet is as it were the hero's better self, unsubstantial, to be sure, like a mere memory, but also transfigured as is a memory. Therefore shall no one be forgotten who has done great deeds; and even if there be delay, even if the cloud of misunderstanding obscure the hero from our vision, still his lover will come some time; and the more time has passed, the more faithfully will he cleave to him.

  </p>
  <p id="v-p43">No, no one shall be forgotten who was great in this world. But each hero was great in his own way, and each one was eminent in proportion to the great things he loved. For he who loved himself became great through himself, and he who loved others became great through his devotion, but he who loved God became greater than all of these. Everyone of them shall be remembered, but each one became great in proportion to his trust. One became great by the possible; another, by hoping for the eternal; hoped for the impossible, he became greater than all of these. Every one shall be remembered; but each one was great in proportion to the power with which he strove. For he who strove with the world became great by overcoming himself; but he who strove with God, he became the greatest of them all. Thus there have been struggles in the world, man against man, one against a thousand; but he who struggled with God, he became greatest of them all. Thus there was fighting on this earth, and there was he who conquered everything by his strength, and there was he who conquered God by his weakness. There was he who, trusting in himself, gained all; and there was he who, trusting in his strength sacrificed everything; but he who believed in God was greater than all of these. There was he who was great through his strength, and he who was great through his wisdom, and he who was great through his hopes, and he who was great through his love; but Abraham was greater than all of these—great through the strength whose power is weakness, great through the wisdom whose secret is folly, great through the hope whose expression is madness, great through the love which is hatred of one's self.
</p>
<p id="v-p44">
  Through the urging of his faith Abraham left the land of his forefathers and became a stranger in the land of promise. He left one thing behind and took one thing along: he left his worldly wisdom behind and took with him faith. For else he would not have left the land of his fathers. but would have thought it an unreasonable demand. Through his faith he came to be a stranger in the land of promise, where there was nothing to remind him of all that had been dear to him, but where everything by its newness tempted his soul to longing. And yet was he God's chosen, he in whom the Lord was well pleased! Indeed, had he been one cast off, one thrust out of God's mercy, then might he have comprehended it; but now it seemed like a mockery of him and of his faith. There have been others who lived in exile from the fatherland which they loved. They are not forgotten, nor is the song of lament forgotten in which they mournfully sought and found what they had lost. Of Abraham there exists no song of lamentation. It is human to complain, it is human to weep with the weeping; but it is greater to believe, and more blessed to consider him who has faith.

  </p>
  <p id="v-p45">Through his faith Abraham received the promise that in his seed were to be blessed all races of mankind. Time passed, there was still the possibility of it, and Abraharn had faith. Another man there was who also lived in hopes. Time passed, the evening of his life was approaching; neither was he paltry enough to have forgotten his hopes: neither shall he be forgotten by us! Then he sorrowed, and his sorrow did not deceive him, as life had done, but gave him all it could; for in the sweetness of sorrow he became possessed of his disappointed hopes. It is human to sorrow, it is human to sorrow with the sorrowing; but it is greater to have faith, and more blessed to consider him who has faith.

       </p>
	   <p id="v-p46">No song of lamentation has come down to us from Abraham. He did not sadly count the days as time passed; he did not look at Sarah with suspicious eyes, whether she was becoming old; he did not stop the sun's course lest Sarah should grow old and his hope with her; he did not lull her with his songs of lamentation. Abraham grew old, and Sarah became a laughing‑stock to the people; and yet was he God's chosen, and heir to the promise that in his seed were to be blessed all races of mankind. Were it, then, not better if he had not been God's chosen? For what is it to be God's chosen? Is it to have denied to one in one's youth all the wishes of youth in order to have them fulfilled after great labor in old age?
	   </p>
	   <p id="v-p47">But Abraham had faith and steadfastly lived in hope. Had Abraham been less firm in his trust, then would he have given up that hope. He would have said to God: "So it is, perchance, not Thy will, after all, that this shall come to pass. I shall surrender my hope. It was my only one, it was my bliss. I am sincere, I conceal no secret grudge for that Thou didst deny it to me." He would not have remained forgotten, his example would have saved many a one; but he would not have become the Father of Faith. For it is great to surrender one's hope, but greater still to abide by it steadfastly after having surrendered it; for it is great to seize hold of the eternal hope, but greater till to abide steadfastly by one's worldly hopes after having rendered them.
	     </p>
		 <p id="v-p48">Then came the fulness of time. If Abraham had not had faith, then Sarah would probably have died of sorrow, and Abraham, dulled by his grief, would not have understood the fulfilment, but would have smiled about it as a dream of his youth.  But Abraham had faith, and therefore he remained young; for he who always hopes for the best, him life will deceive, and he will grow old; and he who is always prepared for the worst, he will soon age; but he who has faith, he will preserve eternal youth. Praise, therefore, be to this story! For Sarah, though advanced in age, was young enough to wish for the pleasures of a mother, and Abraham, though grey of hair, was young enough to wish to become a father. In a superficial sense it may be considered miraculous that what they wished for came to pass, but in a deeper sense the miracle of faith is to be seen in Abraham's and Sarah's being young enough to wish, and their faith having preserved their wish and therewith their youth. The promise he had received was fulfilled, and he accepted it in faith, and it came to pass according to the promise and his faith; whereas Moses smote the rock with his staff but believed not.
		 </p>
		 <p id="v-p49">There was joy in Abraham's house when Sarah celebrated the day of her Golden Wedding. But it was not to remain thus; for once more was Abraham to be tempted. He had struggled with that cunning power to which nothing is impossible, with that ever watchful enemy who never sleeps, with that old man who outlives all—he had struggled with Time and had preserved his faith. And now all the terror of that fight was concentrated in one moment. "And God tempted Abraham, saying to him: take now thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.
<note place="foot" id="v-p49.1" n="75"><scripRef id="v-p49.2" passage="Genesis 20, 11" parsed="|Gen|20|0|0|0;|Gen|11|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.20 Bible:Gen.11">Genesis 20, 11</scripRef> f.</note>
</p>
<p id="v-p50">All was lost,
then, and more terribly than if a son had never been given him! The
Lord had only mocked Abraham, then! Miraculously he had realized
the unreasonable hopes of Abraham; and now he wished to take away
what be had given. A foolish hope it had been, but Abraham had not
laughed when the promise had been made him. Now all was
lost—the trusting hope of seventy years, the brief joy at the
fulfilment of his hopes. Who, then, is he that snatches away the
old man's staff, who that demands that he himself shall break it in
two? Who is he that renders disconsolate the grey hair of old age,
who is he that demands that he himself shall do it? Is there no
pity for the venerable old man, and none for the innocent child?
And yet was Abraham God's chosen one, and yet was it the Lord that
tempted him. And now all was to be lost I The glorious remembrance
of him by a whole race, the promise of Abraham's seed‑all
that was but a whim, a passing fancy of the Lord, which Abraham was
now to destroy forever! That glorious treasure, as old as the faith
in Abraham's heart, and many, many years older than Isaac, the
fruit of Abraham's life, sanctified by prayers, matured in
struggles—the blessing on the lips of Abraham: this fruit was
now to be plucked before the appointed time, and to remain without
significance; for of what significance were it if Isaac was to be
sacrificed? That sad and yet blessed hour when Abraham was to take
leave f rom all that was dear to him, the hour when he would once
more lift up his venerable head, when his face would shine like the
countenance of the Lord, the hour when he would collect his whole
soul for a blessing strong enough to render Isaac blessed all the
days, of his life‑that hour was not to come! He was to say
farewell to Isaac, to be sure, but in such wise that he himself was
to remain behind; death was to part them, but in such wise that
Isaac was to die. The old man was not in happiness to lay his hand
on Isaac's head when the hour of death came, but, tired of life, to
lay violent hands on Isaac. And it was God who tempted him. Woe,
woe to the messenger who would have come before Abraham with such a
command! Who would have dared to be the messenger of such dread
tidings? But it was God that tempted Abraham.</p>
<p id="v-p51">
But
Abraham had faith, and had faith for this life. Indeed, had his
faith been but concerning the life to come, then might he more
easily have cast away all, in order to hasten out of this world
which was not his. . . .</p>
<p id="v-p52">
But
Abraham had faith and doubted not, but trusted that the improbable
would come to pass. If Abraham had doubted, then would he have
undertaken something else, something great and noble; for what
could Abraham have undertaken but was great and noble! He would
have proceeded to Mount Moriah, he would have cloven the wood, and
fired it, and unsheathed his knife—he would have cried out to
God: "Despise not this sacrifice; it is not, indeed, the best I
have; for what is an old man against a child foretold of God; but
it is the best I can give thee. Let Isaac never know that he must
find consolation in his youth." He would have plunged the steel in
his own breast. And he would have been admired throughout the
world, and his name would not have been forgotten; but it is one
thing to be admired and another, to be a lode‑star which
guides one troubled in mind.</p>
<p id="v-p53">
But
Abraham had faith. He prayed not for mercy and that he might
prevail upon the Lord: it was only when just retribution was to be
visited upon Sodom and Gomorrha that Abraham ventured to beseech
Him for mercy.</p>
<p id="v-p54">
   We read in Scripture: "And
God did tempt Abraham, and said unto him, Abraham: and he said,
Behold here I am."<note place="foot" id="v-p54.1" n="76"><scripRef id="v-p54.2" passage="Genesis 22,1" parsed="|Gen|22|0|0|0;|Gen|1|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22 Bible:Gen.1">Genesis 22,1</scripRef>.</note>

You,
whom I am now addressing did you do likewise? When you saw the dire
dispensations of Providence approach threateningly, did you not
then say to the mountains, Fall on me; and to the hills, Cover
me?<note place="foot" id="v-p54.3" n="77"><scripRef id="v-p54.4" passage="Luke 23, 30" parsed="|Luke|23|0|0|0;|Luke|30|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23 Bible:Luke.30">Luke 23, 30</scripRef>.</note>

Or, if
you were stronger in faith, did not your step linger along the way,
longing for the old accustomed paths, as it were? And when the
voice called you, did you answer, then, or not at all, and if you
did, perchance in a low voice, or whispering? Not thus Abraham, but
gladly and cheerfully and trustingly, and with a resonant voice he
made answer: "Here am I" And we read further: "And Abraham rose up
early in the morning.<note place="foot" id="v-p54.5" n="78"><scripRef id="v-p54.6" passage="Genesis 22, 3" parsed="|Gen|22|0|0|0;|Gen|3|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Gen.22 Bible:Gen.3">Genesis 22, 3</scripRef> and 9.</note>

He
made haste as though for some joyous occasion, and early in the
morning he was in the appointed place, on Mount Moriah. He said
nothing to Sarah, nothing to Eliezer, his steward; for who would
have understood him? Did not his temptation by its very nature
demand of him the vow of silence? "He laid the wood in order, and
bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar upon the wood. And
Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his
son." My listener! Many a father there has been who thought that
with his child he lost the dearest of all there was in the world
for him; yet assuredly no child ever was in that sense a pledge of
God as was Isaac to Abraham. Many a father there has been who lost
his child; but then it was God, the unchangeable and inscrutable
will of the Almighty and His hand which took it. Not thus with
Abraham. For him was reserved a more severe trial, and Isaac's fate
was put into Abraham's hand together with the knife. And there he
stood, the old man, with his only hope! Yet did he not doubt, nor
look anxiously to the left or right, nor challenge Heaven with his
prayers. He knew it was God the Almighty who now put him to the
test; he knew it was the greatest sacrifice which could be demanded
of him; but he knew also that no sacrifice was too great which God
demanded—and he drew forth hisknife.</p>
<p id="v-p55">Who strengthened
Abraham's arm, who supported his right arm that it drooped not
powerless? For he who contemplates this scene is unnerved. Who
strengthened Abraham's soul so that his eyes grew not too dim to
see either Isaac or the ram? For he who contemplates this scene
will be struck with blindness. And yet, it is rare enough that one
is unnerved or is struck with blindness, and still more rare that
one narrates worthily what there did take place between father and
son. To be sure, we know well enough—it was but a
trial!</p>
<p id="v-p56">
If
Abraham had doubted, when standing on Mount Moriah; if he had
looked about him in perplexity; if he had accidentally discovered
the ram before drawing his knife; if God had permitted him to
sacrifice it instead of Isaac—then would he have returned
home, and all would have been as before, he would have had Sarah
and would have kept Isaac; and yet how different all would have
been! For then had his return been a flight, his salvation an
accident, his reward disgrace, his future, perchance, perdition.
Then would he have borne witness neither to his faith nor to God's
mercy, but would have witnessed only to the terror of going to
Mount Moriah. Then Abraham would not have been forgotten, nor
either Mount Moriah. It would be mentioned, then, not as is Mount
Ararat on which the Ark landed, but as a sign of terror, because it
was there Abraham doubted.</p>
<p id="v-p57">Venerable
patriarch Abraham! When you returned home from Mount Moriah you
required no encomiums to console you for what you had lost; for,
indeed, you did win all and still kept Isaac, as we all know. And
the Lord did no more take him from your side, but you sate gladly
at table with him in your tent as in the life to come you will, for
all times. Venerable patriarch Abraham! Thousands of years have
passed since those times, but still you need no late‑born
lover to snatch your memory from the power of oblivion, for every
language remembers you—and yet do you reward your lover more
gloriously than any one, rendering him blessed in your bosom, and
taking heart and eyes captive by the marvel of your deed. Venerable
patriarch Abraham! Second father of the race! You who first
perceived and bore witness to that unbounded passion which has but
scorn for the terrible fight with the ragring elements and the
strength of brute creation, in order to struggle with God; you who
first felt that sublimest of all passions, you who found the holy,
pure, humble expression for the divine madness which was a marvel
to the heathen—forgive him who would speak in your praise, in
case he did it not fittingly. He spoke humbly, as if it concerned
the desire of his heart; he spoke briefly, as is seemly; but he
will never forget that you required a hundred years to obtain a son
of your old age, against all expections; that you had to draw the
knife before being permitted to keep Isaac; he will never forget
that in a hundred and thirty years you never got farther than to
faith.</p>
<p id="v-p58"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p59"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="v-p60">
PRELIMINARY
EXPECTORATION</p>
<p id="v-p61">
An old
saying, derived from the world of experience, has it that "he who
will not work shall not eat.<note place="foot" id="v-p61.1" n="79">Cf. Thessalonians 3, 10.</note>

But,
strange to say, this does not hold true in the world where it is
thought applicable; for in the world of matter the law of
imperfection prevails, and we see, again and again, that he also
who will not work has bread to eat—indeed, that he who sleeps
has a greater abundance of it than he who works. In the world of
matter everything belongs to whosoever happens to possess it; it is
thrall to the law of indifference, and he who happens to possess
the Ring also has the Spirit of the Ring at his beck and call,
whether now he be Noureddin or Aladdin<note place="foot" id="v-p61.2" n="80">In <i>Aladin,</i> Oehlenschläger's famous dramatic poem, Aladdin, "the cheerful son of nature," is contrasted with Noureddin, representing the gloom of doubt and night.</note>

and he
who controls the treasures of this world, controls them, howsoever
he managed to do so. It is different in the world of spirit. There,
an eternal and divine order obtains, there the rain does not fall
on the just and the unjust alike, nor does the sun shine on the
good and the evil alike;<note place="foot" id="v-p61.3" n="81"><scripRef id="v-p61.4" passage="Matthew 5, 45" parsed="|Matt|5|0|0|0;|Matt|45|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5 Bible:Matt.45">Matthew 5, 45</scripRef>.</note>

but
there the saying does hold true that he who will not work shall not
eat, and only he who was troubled shall find rest, and only he who
descends into the nether world shall rescue his beloved, and only
he who unsheathes his knife shall be given Isaac again. There, he
who will not work shall not eat, but shall be deceived, as the gods
deceived Orpheus with an immaterial figure instead of his beloved
Euridice,<note place="foot" id="v-p61.5" n="82">Cf. not the legend but Plato's Symposion.</note>

deceived him
because he was love‑sick and not courageous, deceived him
because he was a player on the cithara rather than a man.. There,
it avails not to have an Abraham for one's father,<note place="foot" id="v-p61.6" n="83"><scripRef id="v-p61.7" passage="Matthew 3, 9" parsed="|Matt|3|0|0|0;|Matt|9|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.3 Bible:Matt.9">Matthew 3, 9</scripRef>.</note>

or to
have seventeen ancestors. But in that world the saying about
Israel's maidens will hold true of him who will not work: he shall
bring forth wind;<note place="foot" id="v-p61.8" n="84"><scripRef id="v-p61.9" passage="Isaiah 26, 18" parsed="|Isa|26|0|0|0;|Isa|18|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.26 Bible:Isa.18">Isaiah 26, 18</scripRef>.</note>

but he
who will work shall give birth to his own father.</p>
<p id="v-p62">
There
is a kind of learning which would presumptuously introduce into the
world of spirit the same law of indifference under which the world
of matter groans. It is thought that to know about great men and
great deeds is quite sufficient, and that other exertion is not
necessary. And therefore this learning shall not eat, but shall
perish of hunger while seeing all things transformed into gold by
its touch. And what, forsooth, does this learning really know?
There were many thousands of contemporaries, and countless men in
after times, who knew all about the triumphs of Miltiades; but
there was only one whom they rendered sleepless.<note place="foot" id="v-p62.1" n="85">Themistocles, that is; see Plutarch, Lives.</note>

There
have existed countless generations that knew by heart, word for
word, the story of Abraham; but how many has it rendered
sleepless?</p>
<p id="v-p63">  Now the story of Abraham has the
remarkable property of always being glorious, in however limited a
sense it is understood; still, here also the point is whether one
means to labor and exert one's self. Now people do not care to
labor and exert themselves, but wish nevertheless to understand the
story. They extol Abraham, but how? By expressing the matter in the
most general terms and saying: "the great thing about him was that
he loved God so ardently that he was willing to sacrifice to Him
his most precious possession." That is very true; but "the most
precious possession" is an indefinite expression. As one's
thoughts, and one's mouth, run on one assumes, in a very easy
fashion, the identity of Isaac and "the most precious
possession"—and meanwhile he who is meditating may smoke his
pipe, and his audience comfortably stretch out their legs. If the
rich youth whom Christ met on his way<note place="foot" id="v-p63.1" n="86"><scripRef id="v-p63.2" passage="Matthew 19,16" parsed="|Matt|19|0|0|0;|Matt|16|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.19 Bible:Matt.16">Matthew 19,16</scripRef>f.</note>
had
sold all his possessions and given all to the poor, we would extol
him as we extol all which is great—aye, would not understand
even him without labor; and yet would he never have become an
Abraham, notwithstanding his sacrificing the most precious
possessions he had. That which people generally forget in the story
of Abraham is his fear and anxiety; for as regards money, one is
not ethically responsible for it, whereas for his son a father has
the highest and most sacred responsibility. However, fear is a
dreadful thing for timorous spirits, so they omit it. And yet they
wish to speak of Abraham.</p>
<p id="v-p64">
So
they keep on speaking, and in the course of their speech the two
terms Isaac and "the most precious thing" are used alternately, and
everything is in the best order. But now suppose that among the
audience there was a man who suffered with sleeplessness—and
then the most terrible and profound, the most tragic, and at the
same time the, most comic, misunderstanding is within the range of
possibility. That is, suppose this man goes home and wishes to do
as did Abraham; for his son is his most precious possession. If a
certain preacher learned of this he would, perhaps, go to him, he
would gather up all his spiritual dignity and exclaim: "'Thou
abominable creature, thou scum of humanity, what devil possessed
thee to wish to murder son?" And this preacher, who had not felt
any particular warmth, nor perspired while speaking about Abraham,
this preacher would be astonished himself at the earnest wrath with
which he poured forth his thunders against that poor wretch;
indeed, he would rejoice over himself, for never had he spoken with
such power and unction, and he would have said to his wife: "I am
an orator, the only thing I have lacked so far was the occasion.
Last Sunday, when speaking about Abraham, I did not feel thrilled
in the least."</p>
<p id="v-p65">
  Now, if this same orator had just
a bit of sense to spare, I believe he would lose it if the sinner
would reply, in a quiet and dignified manner: "Why, it was on this
very same matter you preached, last Sunday!" But however could the
preacher have entertained such thoughts? Still, such was the case,
and the preacher's mistake was merely not knowing what he was
talking about. Ah, would that some poet might see his way clear to
prefer such a situation to the stuff and nonsense of which novels
and comedies are full! For the comic and the tragic here run
parallel to infinity. The sermon probably was ridiculous enough in
itself, but it became infinitely ridiculous through the very
natural consequence it had. Or, suppose now the sinner was
converted by this lecture without daring to raise any objection,
and this zealous divine now went home elated, glad in the
consciousness of being effective, not only in the pulpit, but
chiefly, and with irresistible power, as a spiritual guide,
inspiring his congregation on Sunday, whilst on Monday he would
place himself like a cherub with flaming sword before the man who
by his actions tried to give the lie to the old saying that "the
course of the world follows not the priest's word."</p>
<p id="v-p66">
If, on
the other hand, the sinner were not convinced of his error his
position would become tragic. He would probably be executed, or
else sent to the lunatic asylum—at any rate, he would become
a sufferer in this world; but in another sense I should think that
Abraham rendered him happy; for he who labors, he shall not
perish.</p>
<p id="v-p67">
Now
how shall we explain the contradiction contained in that sermon? Is
it due to Abraham's having the reputation of being a great
man—so that whatever he does is great, but if another should
undertake to do the same it is a sin, a heinous sin ? If this be
the case I prefer not to participate in such thoughtless
laudations. If faith cannot make it a sacred thing to wish to
sacrifice one's son, then let the same judgment be visited on
Abraham as on any other man. And if we perchance lack the courage
to drive our thoughts to the logical conclusion and to say that
Abraham was a murderer, then it were better to acquire that
courage, rather than to waste one's time on undeserved encomiums.
The fact is, the ethical expression for what Abraham did is that he
wanted to murder Isaac; the religious, that he wanted to sacrifice
him. But precisely in this contradiction is contained the fear
which may well rob one of one's sleep. And yet Abraham were not
Abraham without this fear. Or, again, supposing Abraham did not do
what is attributed to him, if his action was an entirely different
one, based on conditions of those times, then let us forget him;
for what is the use of calling to mind that past which can no
longer become a present reality?—Or, the speaker had perhaps
forgotten the essential fact that Isaac was the son. For if faith
is eliminated, having been reduced to a mere nothing, then only the
brutal fact remains that Abraham wanted to murder Isaac—which
is easy for everybody to imitate who has not the faith—the
faith, that is, which renders it most difficult for him. . .
.</p>
<p id="v-p68"><br /></p>
<p id="v-p69">
  Love has its priests in the poets,
and one bears at times a poet's voice which worthily extols it. But
not a word does one hear of faith. Who is there to speak in honor
of that passion? Philosophy "goes right on." Theology sits at the
window with a painted visage and sues for philosophy's favor,
offering it her charms. It is said to be difficult to understand
the philosophy of Hegel; but to understand Abraham, why, that is an
easy matter! To proceed further than Hegel is a wonderful feat, but
to proceed further than Abraham, why, nothing is easier!
Personally, I have devoted a considerable amount of time to a study
of Hegelian philosophy and believe I understand it fairly well; in
fact, I am rash enough to say that when, notwithstanding an effort,
I am not able to understand him in some passages, is because he is
not entirely clear about the matter himself. All this intellectual
effort I perform easily and naturally, and it does not cause my
head to ache. On the other hand, whenever I attempt to think about
Abraham I am, as it were, overwhelmed. At every moment I am aware
of the enormous paradox which forms the content of Abraham's life,
at every moment I am repulsed, and my thought, notwithstanding its
passionate attempts, cannot penetrate into it, cannot forge on the
breadth of a hair. I strain every muscle in order to envisage the
problem—and become a paralytic in the same moment.</p>
<p id="v-p70">
   I am by no means
unacquainted with what has been admired as great and noble, my soul
feels kinship with it, being satisfied, in all humility, that it
was also my cause the hero espoused; and when contemplating his
deed I say to myself: <i>"jam
tua causa agitur."</i><note place="foot" id="v-p70.1" n="87">Your cause, too, is at stake.</note>

I am
able to identify myself with the hero; but I cannot do so with
Abraham, for whenever I have reached his height I fall down again,
since he confronts me as the paradox. It is by no means my
intention to maintain that faith is something inferior, but, on the
contrary, that it is the highest of all things; also that it is
dishonest in philosophy to offer something else instead, and to
pour scorn on faith; but it ought to understand its own nature in
order to know what it can offer. It should take away nothing; least
of all, fool people out of something as if it were of no value. I
am not unacquainted with the sufferings and dangers of life, but I
do not fear them, and cheerfully go forth to meet them. . . . But
my courage is not, for all that, the courage of faith, and is as
nothing compared with it. I cannot carry out the movement of faith:
I cannot close my eyes and confidently plunge into the
absurd—it is impossible for me; but neither do I boast of it.
. .</p>
<p id="v-p71">
Now I
wonder if every one of my contemporaries is really able to perform
the movements of faith. Unless I am much mistaken they are, rather,
inclined to be proud of making what they perhaps think me unable to
do, viz., the imperfect movement. It is repugnant to my soul to do
what is so often done, to speak inhumanly about great deeds, as if
a few thousands of years were an immense space of time. I prefer to
speak about them in a human way and as though they had been done
but yesterday, to let the great deed itself be the distance which
either inspires or condemns me. Now if I, in the capacity of tragic
hero—for a higher flight I am unable to take—if I had
been summoned to such an extraordinary royal progress as was the
one to Mount Moriah, I know very well what I would have done. I
would not have been craven enough to remain at home; neither would
I have dawdled on the way; nor would I have forgot my
knife—just to draw out the end a bit. But I am rather sure
that I would have been promptly on the spot, with every thing in
order—in fact, would probably have been there before the
appointed time, so as to have the business soon over with. But I
know also what I would have done besides. In the moment I mounted
my horse I would have said to myself: "Now all is lost, God demands
Isaac, I shall sacrifice him, and with him all my joy—but for
all that, God is love and will remain so for me; for in this world
God and I cannot speak together, we have no language in
common."</p>
<p id="v-p72">
Possibly, one or
the other of my contemporaries will be stupid enough, and jealous
enough of great deeds, to wish to persuade himself and me that if I
had acted thus I should have done something even greater than what
Abraham did; for my sublime resignation was (he thinks) by far more
ideal and poetic than Abraham's literal‑minded action. And
yet this is absolutely not so, for my sublime resignation was only
a substitute for faith. I could not have made more than the
infinite movement (of resignation) to find myself and again repose
in myself. Nor would I have loved Isaac as Abraham loved him. The
fact that I was resolute enough to resign is sufficient to prove my
courage in a human sense, and the fact that I loved him with my
whole heart is the very presupposition without which my action
would be n. me; but still I did not love as did Abraham, for else I
ould have hesitated even in the last minute, without, for that
matter, arriving too late on Mount Moriah. Also, I would have
spoiled the whole business by my behavior; for if I had had Isaac
restored to me I would have been embarrassed. That which was an
easy matter for Abraham would have been difficult for me, I mean,
to rejoice again in Isaac; for he who with all the energy of his
soul <i>proprio motu et propriis
auspiciis</i><note place="foot" id="v-p72.1" n="88">By his own impulse and on his own responsibility.</note>

has
made the infinite movement of resignation and can do no more, he
will retain possession of Isaac only in his sorrow.</p>
<p id="v-p73">
  But what did Abraham? He arrived
neither too early nor too late. He mounted his ass and rode slowly
on his way. And all the while he had faith, believing that God
would not demand Isaac of him, though ready all the while to
sacrifice him, should it be demanded of him. He believed this on
the strength of the absurd; for there was no question of human
calculation any longer. And the absurdity consisted in God's, who
yet made this demand of him, recalling his demand the very next
moment. Abraham ascended the mountain and whilst the knife already
gleamed in his hand he believed—that God would not demand
Isaac of him. He was, to be sure, surprised at the outcome; but by
a double movement he had returned at his first state of mind and
therefore received Isaac back more gladly than the first time. . .
.</p>
<p id="v-p74">
On
this height, then, stands Abraham. The last stage he loses sight of
is that of infinite resignation. He does really proceed further, he
arrives at faith. For all these caricatures of faith, wretched
lukewarm sloth, which thinks. "Oh, there is no hurry, it is not
necessary to worry before the time comes"; and miserable
hopefulness, which says: "One cannot know what will happen, there
might perhaps," all these caricatures belong to the sordid view of
life and have already fallen under the infinite scorn of infinite
resignation.</p>
<p id="v-p75">
Abraham, I am not
able to understand; and in a certain sense I can learn nothing from
him without being struck with wonder. They who flatter themselves
that by merely considering the outcome of Abraham's story they will
necessarily arrive at faith, only deceive themselves and wish to
cheat God out of the first movement of faith—it were
tantamount to deriving worldly wisdom from the paradox. But who
knows, one or the other of them may succeed in doing this; for our
times are not satisfied with faith, and not even with the miracle
of changing water into wine—they "go right on" changing wine
into water.</p>
<p id="v-p76">
   Is it not preferable to
remain satisfied with faith, and is it not outrageous that every
one wishes to "go right on". If people in our times decline to be
satisfied with love, as is proclaimed from various sides, where
will we finally land? In worldly shrewdness, in mean calculation,
in paltriness and baseness, in all that which renders man's divine
origin doubtful. Were it not better to stand fast in the faith, and
better that he that standeth take heed lest he
fall;<note place="foot" id="v-p76.1" n="89">Cf. <scripRef id="v-p76.2" passage="I Cor. 10,12" parsed="|1Cor|10|0|0|0;|1Cor|12|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.10 Bible:1Cor.12">I Cor. 10,12</scripRef>.</note> 

for
the movement of faith must ever be made by virtue of the absurd,
but, note well, in such wise that one does not lose the things of
this world but wholly and entirely regains them.</p>
<p id="v-p77">
   As far as I am concerned, I
am able to describe most excellently the movements of faith; but I
cannot make them myself. When a person wishes to learn how to swim
he has himself suspended in a swimming‑belt and then goes
through the motions; but that does not mean that he can swim. In
the same fashion I too can go through the motions of faith; but
when I am thrown into the water I swim, to be sure (for I am not a
wader in the shallows), but I go through a different set of
movements, to‑wit, those of infinity; whereas faith does the
opposite, to‑wit, makes the movements to regain the finite
after having made those of infinite resignation. Blessed is he who
can make these movements, for he performs a marvellous feat, and I
shall never weary of admiring him, whether now it be Abraham
himself or the slave in Abraham's house, whether it be a professor
of philosophy or a poor servant‑girl: it is all the same to
me, for I have regard only to the movements. But these movements I
watch closely, and I will not be deceived, whether by myself or by
any one else. The knights of infinite resignation are easily
recognized, for their gait is dancing and bold. But they who
possess the jewel of faith frequently deceive one because their
bearing is curiously like that of a class of people heartily
despised by infinite resignation as well as by faith—the
philistines.</p>
<p id="v-p78">  Let me admit frankly that I have
not in my experience encountered any certain specimen of this type;
but I do not refuse to admit that as far as I know, every other
person may be such a specimen. At the same time I will say that I
have searched vainly for years. It is the custom of scientists to
travel around the globe to see rivers and mountains, new stars,
gay‑colored birds, misshapen fish, ridiculous races of men.
They abandon themselves to a bovine stupor which gapes at existence
and believe they have seen something worth while. All this does not
interest me; but if I knew where there lived such a knight of faith
I would journey to him on foot, for that marvel occupies my
thoughts exclusively. Not a moment would I leave him out of sight,
but would watch how he makes the movements, and I would consider
myself provided for life, and would divide my time between watching
him and myself practicing the movements, and would thus use all my
time in admiring him,</p>
<p id="v-p79">
As I
said, I have not met with such a one; but I can easily imagine him.
Here he is. I make his acquaintance and am introduced to him. The
first moment I lay my eyes on him I push him back, leaping back
myself, I hold up my hands in amazement and say to myself: "Good
Lord! that person? Is it really he—why, he looks like a
parish‑beadle!" But it is really he. I become more closely
acquainted with him, watching his every movement to see whether
some trifling incongruous movement of his has escaped me, some
trace, perchance, of a signalling from the infinite, a glance, a
look, a gesture, a melancholy air, or a smile, which might betray
the presence of infinite resignation contrasting with the
finite.</p>
<p id="v-p80">
But
no! I examine his figure from top to toe to discover whether there
be anywhere a chink through which the infinite might be seen to
peer forth. But no! he is of a piece, all through. And how about
his footing? Vigorous, altogether that of finiteness, no citizen
dressed in his very best, prepared to spend his Sunday afternoon in
the park, treads the ground more firmly. He belongs altogether to
this world, no philistine more so. There is no trace of the
somewhat exclusive and haughty demeanor which marks off the knight
of infinite resignation. He takes pleasure in all, things, is
interested in everything, and perseveres in whatever he does with
the zest characteristic of persons wholly given to worldly things.
He attends to his business, and when one sees him one might think
he was a clerk who had lost his soul in doing double bookkeeping,
he is so exact. He takes a day off on Sundays. He goes to church.
But no hint of anything supernatural or any other sign of the
incommensurable betrays him, and if one did not know him it would
be impossible to distinguish him in the congregation, for his brisk
and manly singing proves only that he has a pair of good
lungs.</p>
<p id="v-p81">  In the afternoon he walks out to
the forest. He takes delight in all he sees, in the crowds of men
and women, the new omnibusses, the Sound—if one met him on
the promenade one might think he was some shopkeeper who was having
a good time, so simple is his joy; for he is not a poet, and in
vain have I tried to lure him into betraying some sign of the
poet's detachment. Toward evening he walks home again, with a gait
as steady as that of a mail‑carrier. On his way he happens to
wonder whether his wife will have some little special warm dish
ready for him, when he comes home—as she surely has—as,
for instance, a roasted lamb's head garnished with greens. And if
he met one minded like him he is very likely to continue talking
about this dish with him till they reach the East Gate, and to talk
about it with a zest befitting a <i>chef.</i> As it happens, he has not
four shillings to spare, and yet he firmly believes that his wife
surely has that dish ready for him. If she has, it would be an
enviable sight for distinguished people, and an inspiring one for
common folks, to see him eat, for he has an appetite greater than
Esau's. His wife has not prepared it—strange, he remains
altogether the same.</p>
<p id="v-p82">
  Again, on his way he passes a
building lot and there meets another man. They fall to talking, and
in a trice he erects a building, freely disposing of everything
necessary. And the stranger will leave him with the impression that
he has been talking with a capitalist—the fact being that the
knight of my admiration is busy with the thought that if it really
came to the point he would unquestionably have the means
wherewithal at his disposal.</p>
<p id="v-p83">
   Now he is lying on his
elbows in the window and looking over the square on which he lives.
All that happens there, if it be only a rat creeping into a
gutter‑hole, or children playing together—everything
engages his attention, and yet his mind is at rest as though it
were the mind of a girl of sixteen. He smokes his pipe in the
evening, and to look at him you would swear it was the
green‑grocer from across the street who is lounging at the
window in the evening twilight. Thus he shows as much unconcern as
any worthless happy‑go‑lucky fellow; and yet, every
moment he lives he purchases his leisure at the highest price, for
he makes not the least movement except by virtue of the absurd; and
yet, yet—indeed, I might become furious with anger, if for no
other reason than that of envy—and yet, this man has
performed, and is performing every moment, the movement of infinity
. . . He has resigned everything absolutely, and then again seized
hold of it all on the strength of the absurd. . .</p>
<p id="v-p84">  But this miracle may so easily
deceive one that it will be best if I describe the movements in a
given case which may illustrate their aspect in contact with
reality; and that is the important point. Suppose, then, a young
swain falls in love with a princess, and all his life is bound up
in this love. But circumstances are such that it is out of the
question to think of marrying her, an impossibility to translate
his dreams into reality. The slaves of paltriness, the frogs in the
sloughs of life, they will shout, of course: "Such a love is folly,
the rich brewer's widow is quite as good and solid a match." Let
them but croak. The knight of infinite resignation does not follow
their advice, he does not surrender his love, not for all the
riches in the world. He is no fool, he first makes sure that this
love really is the contents of his life, for his soul is too sound
and too proud to waste itself on a mere intoxication. He is no
coward, he is not afraid to let his love insinuate itself into his
most secret and most remote thoughts, to let it wind itself in
innumerable coils about every fiber of his consciousness—if
he is disappointed in his love he will never be able to extricate
himself again. He feels a delicious pleasure in letting love thrill
his every nerve, and yet his soul is solemn as is that of him who
has drained a cup of poison and who now feels the virus mingle with
every drop of his blood, poised in that moment between life and
death.</p>
<p id="v-p85">
Having thus imbibed love, and being wholly absorbed in it, he does not lack the courage to try and dare all. He surveys the whole situation, he calls together his swift thoughts which like tame pigeons obey his every beck, he gives the signal, and they dart in all directions. But when they return, every one bearing a message of sorrow, and explain to him that it is impossible, then he becomes silent, he dismisses them, he remains alone; and then he makes the movement. Now if what I say here is to have any significance, it is of prime importance that the movement be made in a normal fashion. The knight of resignation is supposed to have sufficient energy to concentrate the entire contents of his life and the realization of existing conditions into one single wish. But if one lacks this concentration, this devotion to a single thought; if his soul from the very beginning is scattered on a number of objects, he will never be able to make the movement—he will be as worldly‑wise in the conduct of his life as the financier who invests his capital in a number of securities to win on the one if he should lose on the other; that is, he is no knight. Furthermore, the knight is supposed to possess sufficient energy to concentrate all his thought into a single act of consciousness. If he lacks this concentration he will only run errands in life and will never be able to assume the attitude of infinite resignation; for the very minute he approaches it he will suddenly discover that he forgot something so that he must remain behind. The next minute, thinks he, it will be attainable again, and so it is; but such inhibitions will never allow him to make the movement but will, rather, tend to him sink ever deeper into the mire.
</p>
<p id="v-p86">Our knight, then, performs the movement—which movement? Is he intent on forgetting the whole affair, which, too, would presuppose much concentration? No, for the knight does not contradict himself, and it is a contradiction to forget the main contents of one's life and still remain the same person. And he has no desire to become another person; neither does he consider such a desire to smack of greatness. Only lower natures forget themselves and become something different. Thus the butterfly has forgotten that it once was a caterpillar—who knows but it may forget her that it once was a butterfly, and turn into a fish! Deeper natures never forget themselves and never change their essential qualities. So the knight remembers all; but precisely this remembrance is painful. Nevertheless, in his infinite resignation he has become reconciled with existence. His love for the princess has become for him the expression of an eternal love, has assumed a religious character, has been transfigured into a love for the eternal being which, to be sure, denied him the fulfilment of his love, yet reconciled him again by presenting him with the abiding consciousness of his love's being preserved in an everlasting form of which no reality can rob him. . . .
</p>
<p id="v-p87">Now, he is no longer interested in what the princess may do, and precisely this proves that he has made the movement of infinite resignation correctly. In fact, this is a good criterion for detecting whether a person's movement is sincere or just make‑believe. Take a person who believes that he too has resigned, but lo! time passed, the princess did something on her part, for example, married a prince, and then his soul lost the elasticity of its resignation. This ought to show him that he did not make the movement correctly, for he who has resigned absolutely is sufficient unto himself. The knight does not cancel his resignation, but preserves his love as fresh and young as it was at the first moment, he never lets go of it just because his resignation is absolute. Whatever the princess does, cannot disturb him, for it is only the lower natures who have the law for their actions in some other person, i.e. have the premises of their actions outside of themselves. . . .
</p>
<p id="v-p88">Infinite resignation is the last stage which goes before faith, so that every one who has not made the movement of infinite resignation cannot have faith; for only through absolute resignation do I become conscious of my eternal worth, and only then can there arise the problem of again grasping hold of this world by virtue of faith.
</p>
<p id="v-p89">We will now suppose the knight of faith in the same case. He does precisely as the other knight, he absolutely resigns the love which is the contents of his life, he is reconciled to the pain; but then the miraculous happens, he makes one more movement, strange beyond comparison, saying: "And still I believe that I shall marry her—marry her by virtue of the absurd, by virtue of the act that to God nothing is impossible." Now the absurd is not one of the categories which belong to the understanding proper. It is not identical with the improbable, the unforeseen, the unexpected. The very moment our knight resigned himself he made sure of the absolute impossibility, in any human sense, of his love. This was the result reached by his reflections, and he had sufficient energy to make them. In a transcendent sense, however, by his very resignation, the attainment of his end is not impossible; but this very act of again taking possession of his love is at the same time a relinquishment of it. Nevertheless this kind of possession is by no means an absurdity to the intellect; for the intellect all the while continues to be right, as it is aware that in the world of finalities, in which reason rules, his love was and is, an impossibility. The knight of faith realizes this fully as well. Hence the only thing which can save him is recourse to the absurd, and this recourse he has through his faith. That is, he clearly recognizes the impossibility, and in the same moment he believes the absurd; for if he imagined he had faith, without at the same time recognizing, with all the passion his soul is capable of, that his love is impossible, he would be merely deceiving himself, and his testimony would be of no value, since he had not arrived even at the stage of absolute resignation. . . .
</p>
<p id="v-p90">This last movement, the paradoxical movement of faith, I cannot make, whether or no it be my duty, although I desire nothing more ardently than to be able to make it. It must be left to a person's discretion whether he cares to make this confession; and at any rate, it is a matter between him and the Eternal Being, who is the object of his faith, whether an amicable adjustment can be affected. But what every person can do is to make the movement of absolute resignation, and I for my part would not hesitate to declare him a coward who imagines he cannot perform it. It is a different matter with faith. But what no person has a right to, is to delude others into the belief that faith is something of no great significance, or that it is an easy matter, whereas it is the greatest and most difficult of all things.
</p>
<p id="v-p91">But the story of Abraham is generally interpreted in a different way. God's mercy is praised which restored Isaac to him—it was but a trial! A trial. This word may mean much or little, and yet the whole of it passes off as quickly as the story is told: one mounts a winged horse, in the same instant one arrives on Mount Moriah, and presto one sees the ram. It is not remembered that Abraham only rode on an ass which travels but slowly, that it was a three days' journey for him, and that he required some additional time to collect the firewood, to bind Isaac, and to whet his knife.

</p>
<p id="v-p92">And yet one extols Abraham. He who is to preach the sermon may sleep comfortably until a quarter of an hour before he is to preach it, and the listener may comfortably sleep during the sermon, for everything is made easy enough, without much exertion either to preacher or listener. But now suppose a man was present who suffered with sleeplessness and who went home and sat in a corner and reflected as follows: "The whole lasted but a minute, you need only wait a little while, and then the ram will be shown and the trial will be over." Now if the preacher should find him in this frame of mind, I believe he would confront him in all his dignity and say to him: "Wretch that thou art, to let thy soul lapse into such folly; miracles do not happen, all life is a trial." And as he proceeded he would grow more and more passionate, and would become ever more satisfied with himself; and whereas he had not noticed any congestion in his head whilst preaching about Abraham, he now feels the veins on his forehead swell. Yet who knows but he would stand aghast if the sinner should answer him in a quiet and dignified manner that it was precisely this about which he preached the Sunday before.

</p>
<p id="v-p93">Let us then either waive the whole story of Abraharn, or else learn to stand in awe of the enormous paradox which constitutes his significance for us, so that we may learn to understand that our age, like every age, may rejoice if it has faith. If the story of Abraham is not a mere nothing, an illusion, or if it is just used for show and as a pastime, the mistake cannot by any means be in the sinner's wishing to do likewise; but it is necessary to find out how great was the deed which Abraham performed, in order that the man may judge for himself whether he has the courage and the mission to do likewise. The comical contradiction in the procedure of the preacher was his reduction of the story of Abraham to insignificance whereas he rebuked the other man for doing the very same thing.

</p>
<p id="v-p94">But should we then cease to speak about Abraham? I certainly think not. But if I were to speak about him I would first of all describe the terrors of his trial. To that end leechlike I would suck all the suffering and distress out of the anguish of a father, in order to be able to describe what Abraham suffered whilst yet preserving his faith. I would remind the hearer that the journey lasted three days and a goodly part of the fourth—in fact, these three and half days ought to become infinitely longer than the few thousand years which separate me from Abraham. I would  remind him, as I think right, that every person is still permitted to turn about before trying his strength on this formidable task; in fact, that he may return every instant in repentence. Provided this is done, I fear for nothing. Nor do I fear to awaken great desire among people to attempt to emulate Abraham. But to get out a cheap edition of Abraham and yet forbid every one to do as he did, that I call ridiculous.
<note place="foot" id="v-p94.1" n="90">The above, with the omissions indicated, constitutes about one-third of "Fear and Trembling."</note>
</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Preparation for a Christian Life" id="vi" prev="v" next="vii">
<h2 id="vi-p0.1">PREPARATION FOR A CHRISTIAN LIFE</h2>



<p class="Centered" id="vi-p1">I<note place="foot" id="vi-p1.1" n="91">First Part; comprising about one-fourth of the whole book.</note>  
</p>

<p class="Centered" id="vi-p2">
"COME HITHER UNTO
ME,</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p3">
ALL YE THAT LABOR AND
ARE HEAVY LADEN,</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p4">
AND I WILL GIVE YOU
REST."</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p5">
(MATTHEW
11,28.)</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p6" />
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p7" />
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p8">
THE
INVITATION</p>

<p class="Centered" id="vi-p9">
I</p>

<p class="First" id="vi-p10">
"C o m e  h i t h e r!"—It is not at
all strange if he who is in danger and needs help—speedy,
immediate help, perhaps—it is not strange if he cries out:
"come hither"! Nor it is strange that a quack cries his wares:
"come hither, I cure all maladies"; alas, for in the case of the
quack it is only too true that it is the physician who has need of
the sick. "Come hither all ye who at extortionate prices can pay
for the cure—or at any rate for the medicine; here is physic
for everybody—who can pay; come hither!"</p>
<p id="vi-p11">
In all other cases,
however, it is generally true that he who can help must be sought;
and, when found, may be difficult of access; and, if access is had,
his help may have to be implored a long time; and when his help has
been implored a long time, he may be moved only with difficulty,
that is, he sets a high price on his services; and sometimes,
precisely when he refuses payment or generously asks for none, it
is only an expression of how infinitely high he values his
services. On the other hand, he<note place="foot" id="vi-p11.1" n="92">I. e. Christ; cf. Introduction p. 41 for the use of small letters.</note>  

who sacrificed himself,
he sacrifices himself, here too; it is indeed he who seeks those in
need of help, is himself the one who goes about and calls, almost
imploringly: "come hither!" He, the only one who can help, and help
with what alone is indispensable, and can save from the one truly
mortal disease, he does not wait for people to come to him, but
comes himself, without having been called; for it is he who calls
out to them, it is he who holds out help—and what help!
Indeed, that simple sage of antiquity<note place="foot" id="vi-p11.2" n="93">Socrates.</note>  

was as infinitely right
as the majority who do the opposite are wrong, in setting no great
price, whether on himself or his instruction; even if he thus in a
certain sense proudly expressed the utter difference in kind
between payment and his services. But he was not so solicitous as
to beg any one to come to him, notwithstanding—or shall I say
because?—he was not altogether sure what his help signified;
for the more sure one is that his help is the only one obtainable,
the more reason has he, in a human sense, to ask a great price for
it; and the less sure one is, the more reason has he to offer
freely the possible help he has, in order to do at least something
for others. But he who calls himself the Savior, and knows that he
is, he calls out solicitously: "come hither unto me!"</p>
<p id="vi-p12">
   "Come hither a l
l   y
e!"—Strange! For if he who, when it comes to the point,
perhaps cannot help a single one—if such a one should
boastfully invite everybody, that would not seem so very strange,
man's nature being such as it is. But if a man is absolutely sure
of being able to help, and at the same time willing to help,
willing to devote his all in doing so, and with all sacrifices,
then he generally makes at least one reservation; which is, to make
a choice among those he means to help. That is, however willing one
may be, still it is not everybody one cares to help; one does not
care to sacrifice one's self to that extent. But he, the only one
who can really help, and really help everybody—the only one,
therefore, who really can invite everybody—he makes no
conditions whatever; but utters the invitation which, from the
beginning of the world, seems to have been reserved for him: "Come
hither all ye!" Ah, human self-­sacrifice, even when thou art
most beautiful and noble, when we admire thee most: this is a
sacrifice still greater, which is, to sacrifice every provision for
one's own self, so that in one's willingness to help there is not
even the least partiality. Ah, the love that sets no price on one's
self, that makes one forget altogether that he is the helper, and
makes one altogether blind as to who it is one helps, but
infinitely careful only that he be a sufferer, whatever else he may
be; and thus willing unconditionally to help
everybody—different, alas! in this from everybody!</p>
<p id="vi-p13">
"Come hither u n t o  m e!" Strange! For human compassion also, and willingly, does something for them that labor and are heavy laden; one feeds the hungry, clothes the naked, makes charitable gifts, builds charitable institutions, and if the compassion be heartfelt, perhaps even visits those that labor and are heavy laden. But to invite them to come to one, that will never do, because then all one's household and manner of living would have to be changed. For a man cannot himself live in abundance, or at any rate in well‑being and happiness, and at the same time dwell in one and the same house together with, and in daily intercourse with, the poor and miserable, with them that labor and are heavy laden! In order to be able to invite them in such wise, a man must himself live altogether in the same way, as poor as the poorest, as lowly as the lowliest, familiar with the sorrows and sufferings of life, and altogether belonging to the same station as they, whom he invites, that is, they who labor and are heavy laden. If he wishes to invite a sufferer, he must either change his own condition to be like that of the sufferer, or else change that of the sufferer to be like his own; for if this is not done the difference will stand out only the more by contrast. And if you wish to invite all those who suffer—for you may make an exception with one of them and change his condition—it can be done only in one way, which is, to change your condition so as to live as they do; provided your life be not already lived thus, as was the case with him who said: "Come hither unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden!" Thus said he; and they who lived with him saw him, and behold! there was not even the least thing in his manner of life to contradict it. With the silent and truthful eloquence of actual performance his life expresses—even though he had never in his life said these words—his life expresses: "Come hither unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden"! He abides by his word, or he him­self is the word; he is what he says, and also in this sense he is the Word.
<note place="foot" id="vi-p13.1" n="94">John I,1.</note>  
</p>
<p id="vi-p14">
<br />
"A l l  y e  t h a t  l a b o r  a n d  a r e  h e a v y  l a d e n." Strange! His only concern is lest there be a single one who labors and is heavy laden who does not hear this invitation. Neither does he fear that too many will come. Ah, heart-room makes house‑room; but where wilt thou find heart-room, if not in his heart? He leaves it to each one how to understand his invitation: he has a clear conscience about it, for he has invited all those that labor and are heavy laden.
</p>
<p id="vi-p15">But what means it, then, to labor and be heavy laden? Why does he not offer a clearer explanation so that one may know exactly whom he means, and why is he so chary of his words? Ah, thou narrow-minded one, he is so chary of his words, lest he be narrow‑minded; and thou narrow‑hearted one, he is so chary of his words lest he be narrow‑hearted. For such is his love—and love has regard to all—as to prevent any one from troubling and searching his heart whether he too be among those invited. And he who would insist on a more definite explanation, is he not likely to be some self‑loving person who is calculating whether this explanation does not particularly fit himself; one who does not consider that the more of such exact explanations are offered, the more certainly some few would be left in doubt as to whether they were invited? Ah man, why does thine eye see only thyself, why is it evil because he is good?
<note place="foot" id="vi-p15.1" n="95"><scripRef id="vi-p15.2" passage="Matthew 20,15" parsed="|Matt|20|0|0|0;|Matt|15|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.20 Bible:Matt.15">Matthew 20,15</scripRef>.</note>

The invitation to all
men opens the arms of him who invites, and thus he stands of aspect
everlasting; but no sooner is a closer explanation attempted which
might help one or the other to another kind of certainty, than his
aspect would be transformed and, as it were, a shadow of change
would pass over his countenance.</p>
<p id="vi-p16">
"I  w i l l  g i v e  y o u  r e s t." Strange! For then the
words "come hither unto me" must be understood to mean: stay with
me, I am rest; or, it is rest to remain with me. It is not, then,
as in other cases where he who helps and says "come hither" must
afterwards say: "now depart again," explaining to each one where
the help he needs is to be found, where the healing herb grows
which will cure hirn, or where the quiet spot is found where he may
rest frorn labor, or where the happier continent exists where one
is not heavy laden. But no, he who opens his arms, inviting every
one—ah, if all, all they that labor and are heavy laden came
to him, he would fold them all to his heart, saying: "stay with me
now; for to stay with me is rest." The helper himself is the help.
Ah, strange, he who invites everybody and wishes to help everybody,
his manner of treating the sick is as if calculated for every sick
man, and as if every sick man who comes to him were his only
patient. For otherwise a physician divides his time among many
patients who, however great their number, still are far, far from
being all mankind. He will prescribe the medicine, he will say what
is to be done, and how it is to be used, and then he will
go—to some other patient; or, in case the patient should
visit him, he will let him depart. The physician cannot remain
sitting all day with one patient, and still less can he have all
his patients about him in his home, and yet sit all day with one
patient without neglecting the others. For this reason the helper
and his help are not one and the same thing. The help which the
physician prescribes is kept with him by the patient all day so
that he may constantly use it, whilst the physician visits him now
and again; or he visits the physician now and again. But if the
helper is also the help, why, then he will stay with the sick man
all day, or the sick man with him—ah, strange that it is just
this helper who invites all men!</p>

<p class="Centered" id="vi-p17">
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p18">
II</p>

<p class="Centered" id="vi-p19">COME HITHER ALL YE THAT LABOR AND
ARE HEAVY LADEN,</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p20">I WILL GIVE YOU REST.</p>

<p id="vi-p21">
  What enormous multiplicity, what an
almost boundless adversity, of people invited; for a man, a lowly
man, may, indeed, try to enumerate only a few of these
diversities—that he who invites must invite all men, even if
every one especially and individually.</p>
<p id="vi-p22">
  The invitation goes forth,
then—along the highways and byways, and along the loneliest
paths; aye, goes forth ere there is a path so lonely that one man
only, and no one else, knows of it, and goes forth where there is
but one track, the track of the wretched one who fled along that
path with his misery, that and no other track; goes forth even
where there is no path to show how one may return: even where the
invitation penetrates and by itself easily and surely finds its way
back—most easily, indeed, when it brings the fugitive along
to him that issued the invitation. Come hither, come hither all ye,
also thou, and thou, and thou, too, thou loneliest of all
fugitives!</p>
<p id="vi-p23">
Thus the invitation
goes forth and remains standing, wheresoever there is a parting of
the ways, in order to call out. Ah, just as the trumpet call of the
soldiers is directed to the four quarters of the globe, likewise
does this invitation sound wherever there is a meeting of roads;
with no uncertain sound—for who would then come?—but
with the certitude of eternity.</p>
<p id="vi-p24">  It stands by the parting of the
ways where worldly and earthly sufferings have set down their
crosses, and calls out: Come hither, all ye poor and wretched ones,
ye who in poverty must slave in order to assure yourselves, not of
a care‑free, but of a toilsome, future; ah, bitter
contradiction, to have to slave for—a s s u r i n
g  one's self of that
under which one groans, of that which one  f l e e s!  Ye despised and overlooked ones,
about whose existence no one, aye, no one is concerned, not so much
even as about some domestic animal which is of greater value! Ye
sick, and halt, and blind, and deaf, and crippled, come
hither!—Ye bed‑ridden, aye, come hither, ye too; for
the invitation makes bold to invite even the
bed‑ridden—to come! Ye lepers; for the invitation
breaks down all differences in order to unite all, it wishes to
make good the hardship caused by the difference in men, the
difference which seats one as a ruler over millions, in possession
of all gifts of fortune, and drives another one out into the
wilderness—and why? (ah, the cruelty of it!) because (ah, the
cruel human inference!) b e c a u s e  he is wretched, indescribably
wretched. Why then? Because he stands in need of help, or at any
rate, of compassion. And why, then? Because human compassion is a
wretched thing which is cruel when there is the greatest need of
being compassionate, and compassionate only when, at bottom, it is
not true compassion! Ye sick of heart, Ye who only through your
anguish learned to know that a man's heart and an animal's heart
are two different things, and what it means to be sick at
heart—what it means when the physician may be right in
declaring one sound of heart and yet heart‑sick; ye whom
faithlessness deceived and whom human sympathy—for the
sympathy of man is rarely late in coming—whom human sympathy
made a target for mockery; all ye wronged and aggrieved and
ill‑used; all ye noble ones who, as any and everybody will be
able to tell you, deservedly reap the reward of ingratitude (for
why were ye simple enough to be noble, why foolish enough to be
kindly, and disinterested, and faithful)—all ye victims of
cunning, of deceit, of backbiting, of envy, whom baseness chose as
its victim and cowardice left in the lurch, whether now ye be
sacrificed in remote and lonely places, after having crept away in
order to die, or whether ye be trampled underfoot in the thronging
crowds where no one asks what rights ye have, and no one, what
wrongs ye suffer, and no one, where ye smart or how ye smart,
whilst the crowd with brute force tramples you into the
dust—come ye hither!</p>
<p id="vi-p25">   The invitation stands at the
parting of the ways, where death parts death and life. Come hither
all ye that sorrow and ye that vainly labor! For indeed there is
rest in the grave; but to sit by a grave, or to stand by a grave,
or to visit a grave, all that is far from lying in the grave; and
to read to one's self again and again one's own words which he
knows by heart, the epitaph which one devised one's self and
understands best, namely, who it is that lies buried h e r e, all
that is not the same as to lie buried one's self. In the grave
there is rest, but by the grave there is no rest; for it is said:
so far and no farther, and so you may as well go home again. But
however often, whether in your thoughts or in fact, you return to t
h a t  grave—you
will never get any farther, you will not get away from the spot,
and this is very trying and is by no means rest. Come ye hither,
therefore: here is the way by which one may go farther, here is
rest by the grave, rest from the sorrow over loss, or rest in the
sorrow of loss—through him who everlastingly re‑unites
those that are parted, and more firmly than nature unites parents
with their children, and children with their parents—for,
alas! they were parted; and more closely than the minister unites
husband and wife—for, alas! their separation did come to
pass; and more indissollubly than the bond of friendship unites
friend with friend—for, alas! it was broken. Separation
penetrated everywhere and brought with it sorrow and unrest; but
here is rest!—Come hither also ye who had your abodes
assigned you among the graves, ye who are considered dead to human
society, but neither missed nor mourned—not buried and yet
dead; that is, belonging neither to life nor to death;
ye,  alas! to whom
human society cruelly closed its doors and for whom no grave has as
yet opened itself in pity—come hither, ye also, here is rest,
and here is life!</p>
<p id="vi-p26">  The invitation stands at the
parting of the ways, where the road of sin turns away from the
inclosure of innocence—ah, come hither, ye are so close to
him; but a single step in the opposite direction, and ye are
infinitely far from him. Very possibly ye do not yet stand in need
of rest, nor grasp fully what that means; but still follow the
invitation, so that he who invites may save you from a predicament
out of which it is so difficult and dangerous to be saved; and so
that, being saved, ye may stay with him who is the Savior of all,
likewise of innocence. For even if it were possible that innocence
be found somewhere, and altogether pure: why should not innocence
also need a savior to keep it safe from evil?—The invitation
stands at the parting of the ways, where the road of sin turns
away, to enter more deeply into sin. Come hither all ye who have
strayed and have been lost, whatever may have been your error and
sin: whether one more pardonable in the sight of man and
nevertheless perhaps more frightful, or one more terrible in the
sight of man and yet, perchance, more pardonable; whether it be one
which became known here on earth or one which, though hidden, yet
is known in heaven—and even if ye found pardon here on earth
without finding rest in your souls, or found no pardon because ye
did not seek it, or because ye sought it in vain: ah, return and
come hither, here is rest!</p>
<p id="vi-p27">   The invitation stands at the
parting of the ways, where the road of sin turns away for the last
time and to the eye is lost in perdition. Ah, return, return, and
come hither! Do not shrink from the difficulties of the retreat,
however great; do not fear the irksome way of conversion, however
laboriously it may lead to salvation; whereas sin with winged speed
and growing pace leads forward or—downward, so easily, so
indescribably easy—as easily, in fact, as when a horse,
altogether freed from having to pull, cannot even with all his
might stop the vehicle which pushes him into the abyss. Do not
despair over each relapse which the God of patience has patience
enough to pardon, and which a sinner should surely have patience
enough to humble himself under. Nay, fear nothing and despair not:
he that sayeth "come hither," he is with you on the way, from him
come help and pardon on that way of conversion which leads to him;
and with him is rest.</p>
<p id="vi-p28">
  Come hither all, all ye—with
him is rest; and he will raise no difficulties, he does but one
thing: he opens his arms. He will not first ask you, you
sufferer—as righteous men, alas, are accustomed to, even when
willing to help—"Are you not perhaps yourself the cause of
your misfortune, have you nothing with which to reproach yourself?"
It is so easy to fall into this very human error, and from
appearances to judge a man's success or failure: for instance, if a
man is a cripple, or deformed, or has an unprepossessing
appearance, to infer that therefore he is a bad man; or, when a man
is unfortunate enough to suffer reverses so as to be ruined or so
as to go down in the world, to infer that therefore he is a vicious
man. Ah, and this is such an exquisitely cruel pleasure, this being
conscious of one's own righteousness as against the
sufferer—explaining his afflictions as God's punishment, so
that one does not even—dare to help him; or asking him that
question which condemns him and flatters our own righteousness,
before belping him. But he will not ask you thus, will not in such
cruel fashion be your benefactor. And if you are yourself conscious
of your sin he will not ask about it, will not break still further
the bent reed, but raise you up, if you will but join him. He will
not point you out by way of contrast, and place you outside of
himself, so that your sin will stand out as still more terrible,
but he will grant you a hiding place within him; and hidden within
him your sins will be hidden. For he is the friend of sinners. Let
him but behold a sinner, and he not only stands still, opening his
arms and saying "come hither," nay, but he stands—and waits,
as did the father of the prodigal son; or he does not merely remain
standing and waiting, but goes out to search, as the shepherd went
forth to search for the strayed sheep, or as the woman went to
search for the lost piece of silver. He goes—nay, he has
gone, but an infinitely longer way than any shepherd or any woman,
for did he not go the infinitely long way from being God to
becoming man, which he did to seek sinners?</p>
<p id="vi-p29">
</p>
<p id="vi-p30">III</p>

<p class="Centered" id="vi-p31">COME HITHER UNTO ME</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p32">ALL YE THAT LABOR AND ARE
HEAVYLADEN,</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p33">AND I WILL GIVE YOU
REST.</p>

<p id="vi-p34">   "C o m e  h i t h e r!" For he supposes
that they that labor and are heavy laden feel their burden and
their labor, and that they stand there now, perplexed and
sighing—one casting about with his eyes to discover whether
there is help in sight anywhere; another with his eyes fixed on the
ground, because he can see no consolation; and a third with his
eyes staring heavenward, as though help was bound to come from
heaven—but all seeking. Therefore he sayeth: "come hither!"
But he invites not him who has ceased to seek and to
sorrow.‑"C o m e 
h i t h e r!" For he who invites knows that it is a mark of true
suffering, if one walks alone and broods in silent
disconsolateness, without courage to confide in any one, and with
even less self‑confidence to dare to hope for help. Alas, not
only he whom we read about was possessed of a dumb
devil.<note place="foot" id="vi-p34.1" n="96"><scripRef id="vi-p34.2" passage="Luke 11, 14" parsed="|Luke|11|0|0|0;|Luke|14|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.11 Bible:Luke.14">Luke 11, 14</scripRef>.</note>  

No suffering which does
not first of all render the sufferer dumb is of much significance,
no more than the love which does not render one silent; for those
sufferers who run on about their afflictions neither labor nor are
heavy laden. Behold, therefore the inviter will not wait till they
that labor and are heavy laden come to him, but calls them
lovingly; for all his willingness to help might, perhaps, be of no
avail if he did not say these words and thereby take the first
step; for in the call of these words: "come hither unto me!" he
comes himself to them. Ah, human compassion—sometimes,
perhaps, it is indeed praiseworthy self‑restraint, sometimes,
perhaps, even true compassion, which may cause you to refrain from
questioning him whom you suppose to be brooding over a hidden
affliction; but also, how often indeed is this compassion but
worldly wisdom which does not care to know too much! Ah, human
compassion—how often was it not pure curiosity, and not
compassion, which prompted you to venture into the secret of one
afflicted; and how burdensome it was—almost like a punishment
of your curiosity—when he accepted your invitation and came
to you! But he who sayeth these redeeming words "Come hither!" he
is not deceiving himself in saying these words, nor will he deceive
you when you come to him in order to find rest by throwing your
burden on him. He follows the promptings of his heart in saying
these words, and his heart follows his words; if you then follow
these words, they will follow you back again to his heart. This
follows as a matter of course—ah, will you not follow the
invitation?—"C o m e  h i t h e r!" For supposes that
they that labor and are heavy laden are so orn out and overtaxed,
and so near swooning that they have forgotten, as though in a
stupor, that there is such thing as consolation. Alas, or he knows
for sure that there is no consolation and no help unless it is
sought from him; and therefore must he call out to them "Come
hither!"</p>
<p id="vi-p35" />
<p id="vi-p36">
  </p>
<p id="vi-p37">
   "C o m e  h i t h e r!" For is it not so
that every society has some symbol or token which is worn by those
who belong to it? When a young girl is adorned in a certain manner
one knows that she is going to the dance: Come hither all ye that
labor and are heavy laden—come hither! You need not carry an
external and visible badge; come but with A­ your head anointed
and your face washed, if only you labor in your heart and are heavy
laden.</p>
<p id="vi-p38">
</p>
<p id="vi-p39">
  </p>
<p id="vi-p40">
   "Come hither!" Ah, do not
stand still and consider; nay, consider, consider that with every
moment you stand still after having heard the invitation you will
hear the call more faintly and thus withdraw from it, even though
you are standing still.—"Come hither!" Ah, however weary and
faint you be from work, or from the long, long and yet hitherto
fruitless search for help and salvation, and even though you may
feel as if you could not take one more step, and not wait one more
moment, without dropping to the ground: ah, but this one step and
here is rest!—"Come hither!" But if, alas, there be one who
is so wretched that he cannot come?—Ah, a sigh is sufficient;
your mere sighing for him is also to come hither.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p41">
THE PAUSE</p>

<p class="Centered" id="vi-p42">
COME HITHER UNTO
ME</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p43">
ALL YE THAT LABOR AND
ARE HEAVY LADEN,</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p44">
AND I SHALL GIVE YOU
REST.</p>

<p id="vi-p45">  Pause now! But what is there to
give pause? That which in the same instant makes all undergo an
absolute change—so that, instead of seeing an immense throng
of them that labor and are heavy laden following the invitation,
you will in the end behold the very opposite, that is, an immense
throng of men who flee back shudderingly, scrambling to get away,
trampling all down before them; so that, if one were to infer the
sense of what had been said from the result it produced, one would
have to infer that the words had been "<i>procul o procul este profani",</i>
rather than "come hither"—that gives pause which is
infinitely more important and infinitely more decisive: THE PERSON
OF HIM WHO INVITES. Not in the sense that he is not the man to do
what he has said, or not God, to keep what he has promised; no, in
a very different sense.</p>


<p id="vi-p46">  Pause is given by the fact that he
who invites is, and insists on being, the definite historic person
he was 1800 years ago, and that he as this definite person, and
living under the conditions then obtaining, spoke these words of
invitation.—He is not, and does not wish to be, one about
whom one may simply know something from history (i.e. world
history, history proper, as against Sacred History) ; for from
history one cannot "learn" anything about him, the simple reason
being that nothing can be "known" about him.—He does not wish
to be judged in a human way, from the results of his life; that is,
he is and wishes to be, a rock of offense and the object of faith.
To judge him after the consequences of his life is a blasphemy, for
being God, his life, and the very fact that he was then living and
really did live, is infinitely more important than all the
consequences of it in history.</p>


<p class="Centered" id="vi-p47">a.</p>

<p id="vi-p48">
  Who spoke these words of
invitation?</p>

<p id="vi-p49">  He that invites. Who is he? Jesus
Christ. Which Jesus Christ? He that sits in glory on the right side
of his Father? No. From his seat of glory he spoke not a single
word. Therefore it is Jesus Christ in his lowliness, and in the
condition of lowliness, who spoke these words.</p>
<p id="vi-p50">  Is then Jesus Christ not the same?
Yes, verily, he is today, and was yesterday, and 1800 years ago,
the same who abased himself, assuming the form of a
servant—the Jesus Christ who spake these words of invitation.
It is also he who hath said that he would return again in glory. In
his return in glory he is, again, the same Jesus Christ; but this
has not yet come to pass.</p>
<p id="vi-p51">   Is he then not in glory now?
Assuredly, that the Christian  b e l i e v e s. But it was in
his lowly condition that he spoke these words; he did not speak
them from his glory. And about his return in glory nothing can be
known, for this can in the strictest sense be a matter of belief
only. But a believer one cannot become except by having gone to him
in his lowly condition—to him, the rock of offense and the
object of faith. In other shape he does not exist, for only thus
did he exist. That he will return in glory is indeed expected, but
can be expected and believed only by him who believes, and has
believed, in him as he was here on earth.</p>
<p id="vi-p52">
Jesus Christ is, then,
the same; yet lived he 1800 years ago in debasement, and is
transfigured only at his return. As yet he has not returned;
therefore he is still the one in lowly guise about whom we believe
that he will return in glory. Whatever he said and taught, every
word he spoke, becomes <i>eo
ipso</i> untrue if we give it the appearance of having been spoken
by Christ in his glory. Nay, he is silent. It is the  l o w l y  Christ who speaks. The space of
time between (i.e. between his debasement and his return in glory)
which is at present about 1800 years, and will possibly become many
times 1800—this space of time, or else what this space of
time tries to make of Christ, the worldly information about him
furnished by world history or church history, as to who Christ was,
as to who it was who really spoke these words—all this does
not concern us, is neither here nor there, but only serves to
corrupt our conception of him, and thereby renders untrue these
words of invitation.</p>
<p id="vi-p53">  It is untruthful of me to impute to
a person words which he never used. But it is likewise untruthful,
and the words he used likewise become untruthful, or it becomes
untrue that he used them, if I assign to him a nature essentially
unlike the one he had when he did use them. Essentially unlike; for
an untruth concerning this or the other trifling circumstance will
not make it untrue that "he" said them. And therefore, if it please
God to walk on earth in such strict incognito as only one
all‑powerful can assume, in guise impenetrable to all men; if
it please him—and why he does it, for what purpose, that he
knows best himself; but whatever the reason and the purpose, it is
certain that the incognito is of essential significance—I
say, if it please God to walk on earth in the guise of a servant
and, to judge from his appearance, exactly like any other man; if
it please him to teach men in this guise—if, now, any one
repeats his very words, but gives the saying the appearance that it
was God that spoke these words: then it is untruthful; for it is
untrue that he said these words.</p>


<p class="Centered" id="vi-p54">b.</p>
<p id="vi-p55">
</p>
<p id="vi-p56">  Can one from
history<note place="foot" id="vi-p56.1" n="97">Kierkegaard's note: by history we mean here profane history world history, history as such, as against Sacred History.</note>  

learn to know anything
about Christ?</p>
<p id="vi-p57"> </p>
<p id="vi-p58">  No. And why not? Because one cannot
"know" anything at all about "Christ"; for he is the paradox, the
object of faith, and exists only for faith. But all historic
information is communication of "knowledge." Therefore one cannot
learn anything about Christ from history. For whether now one learn
little or much about him, it will not represent what he was in
reality. Hence one learns something else about him than what is
strictly true, and therefore learns nothing about him, or gets to
know something wrong about him; that is, one is deceived. History
makes Christ look different from what he looked in truth, and thus
one learns much from history about—Christ? No, not about
Christ; because about him nothing can be "known," he can only be
believed.</p>


<p class="Centered" id="vi-p59">
c.</p>

<p id="vi-p60">  Can one prove from history that
Christ was God?</p>
<p id="vi-p61"> </p>
<p id="vi-p62">  Let me first ask another question:
is any more absurd contradiction thinkable than wishing to PROVE
(no matter, for the present, whether one wishes to do so from
history, or from whatever else in the wide world one wishes to
prove it) that a certain person is God? To maintain that a certain
person is God—that is, professes to be God—is indeed a
stumbling block in the purest sense. But what is the nature of a
stumbling block? It is an assertion which is at variance with all
(human) reason. Now think of proving that! But to prove something
is to render it reasonable and real. Is it possible, then, to
render reasonable and real what is at variance with all reason?
Scarcely; unless one wishes to contradict one's self. One can prove
only that it is at variance with all reason. The proofs for the
divinity of Christ given in Scripture, such as the miracles and his
resurrection from the grave exist, too, only for faith; that is,
they are no "proofs," for they are not meant to prove that all this
agrees with reason but, on the contrary, are meant to prove that it
is at variance with reason and therefore a matter of
faith.</p>
<p id="vi-p63">
First, then, let us
take up the proofs from history. "Is it not 1800 years ago now that
Christ lived, is not his name proclaimed and reverenced throughout
the world, has not his teaching (Christianity) changed the aspect
of the world, having victoriously affected all affairs: has then
history not sufficiently, or more than sufficiently, made good its
claim as to who he was, and that he was‑God?" No, indeed,
history has by no means sufficiently, or more than sufficiently,
made good its claim, and in fact history cannot accomplish this in
all eternity. However, as to the first part of the statement, it is
true enough that his name is proclaimed throughout the
world—as to whether it is reverenced, that I do not presume
to decide. Also, it is true enough that Christianity has
transformed the aspect of the world, having victoriously affected
all affairs, so victoriously indeed, that everybody now claims to
be a Christian.</p>
<p id="vi-p64">
But what does this
prove? It proves, at most, that Jesus Christ was a great man, the
greatest, perhaps, who ever lived. But that he was God—stop
now, that conclusion shall with God's help fall to the
ground.</p>
<p id="vi-p65">  Now, if one intends to introduce
this conclusion by assuming that Jesus Christ was a man, and then
considers the 1800 years of history (i.e. the consequences of his
life), one may indeed conclude with a constantly rising
superlative: he was great, greater, the greatest, extraordinarily
and astonishingly the greatest man who ever lived. If one begins,
on the other hand, with the assumption (of faith) that he was God,
one has by so doing stricken out and cancelled the 1800 years as
not making the slightest difference, one way or the other, because
the certainty of faith is on infinitely higher plane. And one
course or the other one must take; but we shall arrive at sensible
conclusions only if we take the latter.</p>
<p id="vi-p66">
   If one takes the former
course one will find it impossible—unless by committing the
logical error of passing over into different category—one
will find it impossible in the conclusion suddenly to arrive at the
new category "God"; that is, one cannot make the consequence, or
consequences, of—a man's life suddenly prove at a certain
point in the argument that this man was God. If such a procedure
were correct one ought to be able to answer satisfactorily a
question like this: what must the consequence be, how great the
effects, how many centuries must elapse, in order to infer from the
consequences of a man's life—for such was the
assumption—that he was God; or whether it is really the case
that in the year 300 Christ had not yet been entirely proved to be
God, though certainly the most extraordinarily, astonishingly,
greatest man who had ever lived, but that a few more centuries
would be necessary to prove that he was God. In that case we would
be obliged to infer that people the fourth century did not look
upon Christ as God, and still less they who lived in the first
century; whereas the certainty that he was God would grow with
every century. Also, that in our century this certainty would be
greater than it had ever been, a certainty in comparison with which
the first centuries hardly so much as glimpsed his divinity. You
may answer this question or not, it does not matter.</p>
<p id="vi-p67">  In general, is it at all possible
by the consideration of the gradually unfolding consequences of
something to arrive at conclusion different in quality from what we
started with? Is it not sheer insanity (providing man is sane) to
let one's judgment become so altogether confused as to land in the
wrong category? And if one begins with such a mistake, then how
will one be able, at any subsequent point, to infer from the
consequences of something, that one has to deal with an altogether
different, in fact, infinitely different, category? A
foot‑print certainly is the consequence of some creature
having made it. Now I may mistake the track for that of, let us
say, a bird; whereas by nearer inspection, and by following it for
some distance, I may make sure that it was made by some other
animal. Very good; but there was no infinite difference in quality
between iny first assumption and my later conclusion. But can I on
further consideration and following the track still further, arrive
at the conclusion: therefore it was a spirit—a spirit that
leaves no tracks? Precisely the same holds true of the argument
that from the consequences of a human life—for that was the
assumption—we may infer that therefore it was God.</p>
<p id="vi-p68">
Is God then so like
man, is there so little difference between the two that, while in
possession of my right senses, I may begin with the assumption that
Christ was human? And, for that matter, has not Christ himself
affirmed that he was God? On the other hand, if God and man
resemble each other so closely, and are related to each other to
such a degree—that is, essentially belong to the same
category of beings, then the conclusion "therefore he was God" is
nevertheless just humbug, because if that is all there is to being
God, then God does not exist at all. But if God does exist and,
therefore, belongs to a category infinitely different from man,
why, then neither I nor any one else can start with the assumption
that Christ was human and end with the conclusion that therefore he
was God. Any one with a bit of logical sense will easily recognize
that the whole question about the consequences of Christ's life on
earth is incommensurable with the decision that he is God. In fact,
this decision is to be made on an altogether different plane: man
must decide for himself whether he will believe Christ to be what
he himself affirmed he was, that is, God, or whether he will not
believe so.</p>
<p id="vi-p69">
   What has been said—mind
you, providing one will take the time to understand it—is
sufficient to make a logrical mind stop drawing any inferences from
the consequences of Christ's life: that therefore he was God. But
faith in its own right protests against every attempt to approach
Jesus Christ by the help of historical information about the
consequences of his life. Faith contends that this whole attempt
is  b l a s p h e m o u
s. Faith contends that the only proof left unimpaired by unbelief
when it did away with all the other proofs of the truth of
Christianity, the proof which—indeed, this is complicated
business—I say, which unbelief invented in order to prove the
truth of Christianity—the proof about which so excessively
much ado has been made in Christendom, the proof of 1800 years: as
to this, faith contends that it is—b l a s p h e m
y.</p>
<p id="vi-p70">   With regard to a man it is
true that the consequences of his life are more important than his
life. If one, then, in order to find out who Christ was, and in
order to find out by some inference, considers the consequences of
his life: why, then one changes him into a man by this very
act—a man who, like other men, is to pass his examination in
history, and history is in this case as mediocre an examiner as any
half‑baked teacher in Latin.</p>
<p id="vi-p71">
  But strange! By the
help of history, that is, by considering the consequences of his
life, one wishes to arrive at the conclusion that therefore,
therefore he was God; and faith makes the exactly opposite
contention that he who even begins with this syllogism is guilty of
blasphemy. Nor does the blasphemy consist in assuming
hypothetically that Christ was a man. No, the blasphemy consists in
the thought which lies at the bottom of the whole business, the
thought without which one would never start it, and of whose
validity one is fully and firmly assured that it will hold also
with regard to Christ—the thought that the consequences of
his life are more important than his life; in other words, that he
is a man. The hypothesis is: let us assume that Christ was a man;
but at the bottom of this hypothesis, which is not blasphemy as
yet, there lies the assumption that, the consequences of a man's
life being more important than his life, this will hold true also
of Christ. Unless this is assumed one must admit that one's whole
argument is absurd, must admit it before beginning—so why
begin at all? But once it is assumed, and the argument is started,
we have the blasphemy. And the more one becomes absorbed in the
consequences of Christ's life, with the aim of being able to make
sure whether or no he was God, the more blasphemous is one's
conduct; and it remains blasphemous so long as this consideration
is persisted in.</p>
<p id="vi-p72">
  Curious coincidence:
one tries to make it appear that, providing one but thoroughly
considers the consequences of Christ's life, this "therefore" will
surely be arrived at—and faith condemns the very beginning of
this attempt as blasphemy, and hence the continuance in it as a
worse blasphemy.</p>
<p id="vi-p73">
"History," says faith,
"has nothing to do with Christ." With regard to him we have only
Sacred History (which is different in kind from general history),
Sacred History which tells of his life and career when in
debasement, and tells also that he affirmed himself to be God. He
is the paradox which history never will be able to digest or
convert into a general syllogism. He is in his debasement the same
as he is in his exaltation—but the 1800 years, or let it be
18,000 years, have nothing whatsoever to do with this. The
brilliant consequences in the history of the world which are
sufficient, almost, to convince even a professor of history that he
was God, these brilliant consequences surely do not represent his
return in glory! Forsooth, in that case it were imagined rather
meanly! The same thing over again: Christ is thought to be a man
whose return in glory can be, and can become, nothing else than the
consequences of his life in history—whereas Christ's return
in glory is something absolutely different and a matter of faith.
He abased himself and was swathed in rags—he will return in
glory; but the brilliant consequences in history, especially when
examined a little more closely, are too shabby a glory—at any
rate a glory of an altogether incongruous nature, of which faith
therefore never speaks, when speaking about his glory. History is a
very respectable science indeed, only it must not become so
conceited as to take upon itself what the Father will do, and
clothe Christ in his glory, dressing him up with the brilliant
garments of the consequences of his life, as if that constituted
his return. That he was God in his debasement and that he will
return in glory, all this is far beyond the comprehension of
history; nor can all this be got from history, excepting by an
incomparable lack of logic, and however incomparable one's view of
history may be otherwise.</p>
<p id="vi-p74">
  How strange, then, that one ever
wished to use history in order to prove Christ divine.</p>


<p class="Centered" id="vi-p75">d.</p>
<p id="vi-p76">
  Are the consequences of Christ's
life more important than his life?</p>

<p id="vi-p77">
  No, by no means, but rather the
opposite; for else Christ were but a man.</p>
<p id="vi-p78">  There is really nothing remarkable
in a man having lived. There have certainly lived millions upon
millions of men. If the fact is remarkable, there must have been
something remarkable in a man's life. In other words, there is
nothing remarkable in his having lived, but his life was remarkable
for this or that. The remarkable thing may, among other matters,
also be what he accomplished; that is, the consequences of his
life.</p>
<p id="vi-p79">
   But that God lived here on
earth in human form, that is infinitely remarkable. No matter if
his life had had no consequences at all—it remains equally
remarkable, infinitely remarkable, infinitely more remarkable than
all possible consequences. Just try to introduce that which is
remarkable as something secondary and you will straightway see the
absurdity of doing so: now, if you please, whatever remarkable is
there in God's life having had remarkable consequences? To speak in
this fashion is merely twaddling.</p>
<p id="vi-p80">
   No, that God lived here on
earth, that is what is infinitely remarkable, that which is
remarkable in itself. Assuming that Christ's life had had no
consequences whatsoever—if any one then undertook to say that
therefore his life was not remarkable it would be blasphemy. For it
would be remarkable all the same; and if a secondary remarkable
characteristic had to be introduced it would consist in the
remarkable fact that his life had no consequences. But if one
should say that Christ's life was remarkable because of its
consequences, then this again were a blasphemy; for it is his life
which in itself is the remarkable thing.</p>
<p id="vi-p81">
There is nothing very
remarkable in a man's having lived, but it is infinitely remarkable
that God has lived. God alone can lay so much emphasis on himself
that the fact of his having lived becomes infinitely more important
than all the consequences which may flow therefrom and which then
become a matter of history.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p82">e.</p>

<p id="vi-p83">
A comparison between
Christ and a man who in his life endured the same treatment by his
times as Christ endured.</p>

<p id="vi-p84">
Let us imagine a man,
one of the exalted spirits, one who was wronged by his times, but
whom history later reinstated in his rights by proving by the
consequences of his life who he was. I do not deny, by the way,
that all this business of proving from the consequences is a course
well suited to "a world which ever wishes to be deceived." For he
who was contemporary with him and did not understand who he was, he
really only imagines that he understands when he has got to know it
by help of the consequences of the noble one's life. Still, I do
not wish to insist on this point, for with regard to a man it
certainly holds true that the consequences of his life are more
important than the fact of his having lived.</p>
<p id="vi-p85">  Let us imagine one of these exalted
spirits. He lives among his contemporaries without being
understood, his significance is not recognized—he is
misunderstood, and then mocked, persecuted, and finally put to
death like a common evil‑doer. But the consequences of his
life make it plain who he was; history which keeps a record of
these consequences re‑instates him in his rightful position,
and now he is named in one century after another as the great and
the noble spirit, and the circumstances of his debasement are
almost completely forgotten. It was blindness on the part of his
contemporaries which prevented them from compre­hending his
true nature, and wickedness which made them mock him and deride
him, and finally put him to death. But be no more concerned about
this; for only after his death did he really become what he was,
through the conse­nces of his life which, after all, are by far
more im­portant than his life.</p>
<p id="vi-p86">
   Now is it not possible that
the same holds true with rega­rd to Christ? It was blindness
and wickedness on the part of those times<note place="foot" id="vi-p86.1" n="98">Cf. the claim of the Pharisees, Matth.23, 30: "If we had been in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets."</note>  
but
be no more concerned about this, history has now re‑instated
him, from history we know now who Jesus Christ was, and thus
justice is done him.</p>
<p id="vi-p87">  Ah, wicked thoughtlessness which
thus interprets Sacred istory like profane history, which makes
Christ a man! But can one, then, learn anything from history about
Jesus? (cf. b) No, nothing. Jesus Christ is the object of
faith  Again—ah, the impious
thoughtlessness!—for one to presume to say about Christ's
abasement: "Let us be concerned o more about his abasement."
Surely, Christ's abasement as not something which merely happened
to him—even if was the sin of that generation to crucify him;
was surely ot something that simply happened to him and, perhaps,
would not have happened to him in better times. Christ
himself  w i s h e
d  to be abased and
lowly. His abasement (that is, his walking on earth in humble
guise, though being God) is therefore a condition of his own
making, something he wished to be knotted together, a dialectic
knot no one shall presume to untie, and which no one will for that
matter, until he himself shall untie it when returning in his
glory.</p>
<p id="vi-p88">  His case is, therefore, not the
same as that of a man who, through the injustice inflicted on him
by his times, was not allowed to be himself or to be valued at his
worth, while history revealed who he was; for Christ himself wished
to be abased—it is precisely this condition which he desired.
Therefore, let history not trouble itself to do him justice, and
let us not in impious thoughtlessness presumptuously imagine that
we as a matter of course know who he was. For that no one knows;
and he who believes it must become contemporaneous with him in his
abasement. When God chooses to let himself be born in lowliness,
when he who holds all possibilities in his hand assumes the form of
a humble servant, when he fares about defenseless, letting people
do with him what they list: he surely knows what he does and why he
does it; for it is at all events he who has power over men, and not
men who have power over him so let not history be so impertinent as
to wish to reveal, who he was.</p>
<p id="vi-p89">  Lastly—ah the
blasphemy!—if one should presume to say that the persecution
which Christ suffered expresses something accidental! If a man is
persecuted by his generation it does not follow that he has the
right to say that this would happen to him in every age. Insofar
there is reason in what posterity says about letting bygones be
bygones. But it is different with Christ! It is not he who by
letting himself be born, and by appearing in Palestine, is being
examined by history; but it is he who examines, his life is the
examination, not only of that generation, but of   m a n k i n d. Woe unto the
generation that would presumptuously dare to say: "let bygones be
bygones, and forget what he suffered, for history has now revealed
who he was and has done justice by him."</p>
<p id="vi-p90">  If one assumes that history is
really able to do this, then the abasement of Christ bears an
accidental relation to him; that is to say, he thereby is made a
man, an extraordinary man to whom this happened through the
wickedness of that generation—a fate which he was far from
wishing to suffer, for he would gladly (as is human) have become a
great man; whereas Christ voluntarily chose to be the lowly one
and, although it was his purpose to save the world, wished also to
give expression to what the "truth" suffered then, and must suffer
in every generation. But if this is his strongest desire, and if he
will show himself in his glory only at his return, and if he has
not returned as yet; and if no generation may be without
repentance, but on the contra­ry every generation must consider
itself a partner in the guilt of that generation: then woe to him
who presumes to deprive him of his lowliness, or to cause what he
suffered to be forgotten, and to clothe him in the fabled human
glory of the historic consequences of his life, which is neither
here nor there.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p91">f.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p92">
The Misfortune of
Christendom</p>

<p id="vi-p93">  But precisely this is the
misfortune, and has been the misfortune, in Christendom that Christ
is neither the one nor the other—neither the one he was when
living on earth, nor he who will return in glory, but rather one
about whom we have learned to know something in an inadmissible way
from history—that he was somebody or other of great account.
In an inadmissible and unlawful way we have learned to  k n o w  him; whereas to believe in him is
the only permissible mode of approach. Men have mutually confirmed
one another in the opinion that the sum total of information about
him is available if they but consider the result of his life and
the following 1800 years, i.e. the consequences. Gradually, as this
became accepted as the truth, all pith and strength was distilled
out of Christianity; the paradox was relaxed, one became a
Christian without noticing it, without noticing in the least the
possibility of being offended by him. One took over Christ's
teachings, turned them inside out and smoothed them down—he
himself guaranteeing them, of course, the man whose life had had
such immense consequences in history! All became plain as
day—very naturally, since Christianity in this fashion became
heathendom.</p>
<p id="vi-p94">
  There is in Christendom an
incessant twaddling on Sundays about the glorious and invaluable
truths of Christianity, its mild consolation. But it is indeed
evident that Christ lived 1800 years ago; for the rock of offense
and object of faith has become a most charming fairy‑story
character, a kind of divine good old man.<note place="foot" id="vi-p94.1" n="99">One is here irresistibliy reminded of passages in Ibsen's "Brand," e. g., Brand's conversation with Einar, in Act I. Cf. also p. 207 and Introduction p. 1.</note>  

People have not the
remotest idea of what it means to be offended by him, and still
less, what it means to worship. The qualities for which Christ is
magnified are precisely those which would have most enraged one, if
one had been contemporaneous with him; whereas now one feels
altogether secure, placing implicit confidence in the result and,
relying altogether on the verdict of history that he was the great
man, concludes therefore that it is correct to do so. That is to
say, it is the correct, and the noble, and the exalted, and the
true, thing—if it is he who does it; which is to say, again,
that one does not in any deeper sense take the pains to understand
what it is he does, and that one tries even less, to the best of
one's ability and with the help of God, to be like him in acting
rightly and nobly, and in an exalted manner, and truthfully. For,
not really fathoming it in any deeper sense, one may, in the
exigency of a contemporaneous situation, judge him in exactly the
opposite way. One is satisfied with admiring and extolling and is,
perhaps, as was said of a translator who rendered his original word
for word and therefore without making sense, "too conscientious,"
—one is, perhaps, also too cowardly and too weak to wish to
understand his real meaning.</p>
<p id="vi-p95">
Christendom has done
away with Christianity, without being aware of it. Therefore, if
anything is to be done about it, the attempt must be made to
re‑introduce Christianity.</p>
<p id="vi-p96"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p97">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p98">
II</p>
<p id="vi-p99">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p100">
He who invites is,
then, Jesus Christ in his abasement, it is he who spoke these words
of invitation. It is not from his glory that they are spoken. If
that were the case, then Christianity were heathendom and the name
of Christ taken in vain, and for this reason it cannot be so. But
if it were the case that he who is enthroned in glory had said
these words: Come hither—as though it were so altogether easy
a matter to be clasped in the arms of glory—well, what
wonder, then, if crowds of men ran to him! But they who thus throng
to him merely go on a wild goose chase, imagining they  k n o w  who Christ is. But that no
one  k n o w
s;  and in order to
believe in him one has to begin with his abasement.</p>
<p id="vi-p101">
He who invites and
speaks these words, that is, he whose words they are—whereas
the same words if spoken by some one else are, as we have seen, an
historic falsification—he is the same lowly Jesus Christ, the
humble man, born of a despised maiden, whose father is a carpenter,
related to other simple folk of the very lowest class, the lowly
man who at the same time (which, to be sure, is like oil poured on
the fire) affirms himself to be God.</p>
<p id="vi-p102">
It is the lowly Jesus
Christ who spoke these words. And no word of Christ, not a single
one, have you permission to appropriate to yourself, you have not
the least share in him, are not in any way of his company, if you
have not become his contemporary in lowliness in such fashion that
you have become aware, precisely like his contemporaries, of his
warning: "Blessed is he whosoever shall not be offended in
me."<note place="foot" id="vi-p102.1" n="100"><scripRef id="vi-p102.2" passage="Matthew 11, 6" parsed="|Matt|11|0|0|0;|Matt|6|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.11 Bible:Matt.6">Matthew 11, 6</scripRef>.</note>  

You have no right to
accept Christ's words, and then lie him away; you have no right to
accept Christ's words, and then in a fantastic manner, and with the
aid of history, utterly change the nature of Christ; for the
chatter of history about him is literally not worth a
fig.</p>
<p id="vi-p103">  It is Jesus Christ in his lowliness
who is the speaker. It is historically true that he said these
words; but so soon as one makes a change in his historic status, it
is false to say that these words were spoken by him.</p>
<p id="vi-p104">
This poor and lowly
man, then, with twelve poor fellows as his disciples, all from the
lowest class of society, for some time an object of curiosity, but
later on in company only with sinners, publicans, lepers, and
madmen; for one risked honor, life, and property, or at any rate
(and that we know for sure) exclusion from the synagogue, by even
letting one's self be helped by him—come hither  n o w,  all ye that labor and are heavy
laden! Ah, my friend, even if you were deaf and blind and lame and
leprous, if you, which has never been seen or heard before, united
all human miseries in your misery—and if he wished to help
you by a miracle: it is possible that (as is human) you would fear
more than all your sufferings the punishment which was set on
accepting aid from him, the punishment of being cast out from the
society of other men, of being ridiculed and mocked, day after day,
and perhaps of losing your life. It is human (and it is
characteristic of being human) were you to think as follows: "no,
thank you, in that case I prefer to remain deaf and blind and lame
and leprous, rather than accept aid under such
conditions."</p>
<p id="vi-p105">
"Come hither, come
hither, all, ye that labor and are heavy laden, ah, come hither,"
lo! he invites you and opens his arms. Ah, when a gentlemanly man
clad in a silken gown says this in a pleasant, harmonious voice so
that the words pleasantly resound in the handsome vaulted church, a
man in silk who radiates honor and respect on all who listen to
him; ah, when a king in purple and velvet says this, with the
Christmas tree in the background on which are hanging all the
splendid gifts he intends to distribute, why, then of course there
is some meaning in these words! But whatever meaning you may attach
to them, so much is sure that it is not Christianity, but the exact
opposite, something as diametrically opposed to Christianity as may
well be; for remember who it is that invites!</p>
<p id="vi-p106">  And now judge for
yourself—for that you have a right to do; whereas men really
do not have a right to do what is so often done, viz. to deceive
themselves. That a man of such appearance, a man whose company
every one shuns who has the least bit of sense in his head, or the
least bit to lose in the world, that he—well, this is the
absurdest and maddest thing of all, one hardly knows whether to
laugh or to weep about it—that he—indeed, that is the
very last word one would expect to issue from his mouth, for if he
had said: "Come hither and help me," or: "Leave me alone," or:
"Spare me," or proudly: "I despise you all," we could understand
that perfectly—but that such a man says: "Come hither to me!"
why, I declare, that looks inviting indeed! And still further: "All
ye that labor and are heavy laden"—as though such folk were
not burdened enough with troubles, as though they now, to cap all,
should be exposed to the consequences of associating with him. And
then, finally: "I shall give you rest." What's that?—h
e  help them? Ah, I am
sure even the most good‑natured joker who was contemporary
with him would have to say: "Surely, that was the thing he should
have undertaken last of all—to wish to help others, being in
that condition himself ! Why, it is about the same as if a beggar
were to inform the police that he had been robbed. For it is a
contradiction that one who has nothing, and has had nothing,
informs us that he has been robbed; and likewise, to wish to help
others when one's self needs help most." Indeed it is, humanly
speaking, the most harebrained contradiction, that he who literally
"hath not where to lay his head," that he about whom it was spoken
truly, in a human sense, "Behold the man!"—that he should
say: "Come hither unto me all ye that suffer—I shall
help!"</p>
<p id="vi-p107">  Now examine yourself—for that
you have a right to do, You have a right to examine yourself, but
you really do not have a right to let yourself without
self‑examination be deluded by "the others" into the belief,
or to delude yourself into the belief, that you are a
Christian—therefore examine yourself: supposing you were
contemporary with him! True enough he—alas! he affirmed
himself to be God! But many another madman has made that
claim—and his times gave it as their opinion that he uttered
blasphemy. Why, was not that precisely the reason why a punishment
was threatened for allowing one's self to be aided by him? It was
the godly care for their souls entertained by the existing order
and by public opinion, lest any one should be led astray: it was
this godly care that led them to persecute him in this fashion.
Therefore, before any one resolves to be helped by him, let him
consider that he must not only expect the antagonism of men,
but—consider it well!—even if you could bear the
consequences of that step—but consider well, that the
punishment meted out by men is supposed to be God's punishment of
him, "the blasphemer"—of him who invites!</p>
<p id="vi-p108">
Come hither n o w all
ye that labor and are heavy laden!</p>
<p id="vi-p109">
How now? Surely this is
nothing to run after—some little pause is given, which is
most fittingly used to go around about by way of another street.
And even if you should not thus sneak out in some way—always
providing you feel yourself to be contemporary with him—or
sneak into being some kind of Christian by belonging to
Christendom: yet there will be a tremendous pause given, the pause
which is the very condition that faith may arise: you are given
pause by the possibility of being offended in him.</p>
<p id="vi-p110">
But in order to make it
entirely clear, and bring it home to our minds, that the pause is
given by him who invites, that it is he who gives us pause and
renders it by no means an easy, but a peculiarly difficult, matter
to follow his invitation, because one has no right to accept it
without accepting also him who invites—in order to make this
entirely clear I shall briefly review his life under two aspects
which, to be sure, show some difference though both  e s s e n t i a l l y  pertain to his abasement. For it
is always an abasement for God to become man, even if he were to be
an emperor of emperors; and therefore he is not  e s s e n t i a l l y  more abased because he is a poor,
lowly man, mocked, and as Scripture adds,<note place="foot" id="vi-p110.1" n="101"><scripRef id="vi-p110.2" passage="Luke 18,32" parsed="|Luke|18|0|0|0;|Luke|32|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18 Bible:Luke.32">Luke 18,32</scripRef>.</note>  

spat upon.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p111">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p112">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p113">
THE FIRST PHASE OF HIS
LIFE</p>
<p id="vi-p114">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p115">  And now let us speak about him in a
homely fashion, just as his contemporaries spoke about him, and as
one speaks about some contemporary—let him be a man of the
same kind as we are, whom one meets on the street in passing, of
whom one knows where he lives and in what story, what his business
is, who his parents are, his family, how he looks and how he
dresses, with whom he associates, "and there is nothing
extraordinary about him, he looks as men generally look"; in short,
let us speak of him as one speaks of some contemporary about whom
one does not make a great ado; for in living life together with
these thousands upon thousands of  r e a l   people there is no room for
a fine distinction like this: "Possibly, this man will be
remembered in centuries to come," and "at the same time he
is  r e a l l
y  only a clerk in some
shop who is no whit better than his fellows." Therefore, let us
speak about him as contemporaries speak about some contemporary. I
know very well what I am doing; and I want you to believe that the
canting and indolent world‑historic habit we have of always
reverently speaking about Christ (since one has learned all about
it from history, and has heard so much about his having been
something very extraordinary, indeed, or something of that
kind)—that reverent habit, I assure you, is not worth row of
pins but is, rather, sheer thoughtlessness, hypocrisy, and as such
blasphemy; for it is blasphemy to reverence thoughtlessly him whom
one is either to believe in or to be offended in.</p>
<p id="vi-p116">  It is the lowly Jesus Christ, a
humble man, born of a maiden of low degree, whose father is a
carpenter. To be sure, his appearance is made under conditions
which are bound to attract attention to him. The small nation among
whom he appears, God's Chosen People as they call themselves, live
in anticipation of a Messiah who is to bring a golden period to
land and people. You must grant that one form in which he appears
is as different as possible from what most people would have
expected. On the other hand, his appearance corresponds more to the
ancient prophecies with which the people are thought to have been
familiar. Thus he presents himself. A predecessor has called
attention to him, and he himself fastens attention very decidedly
on himself by signs and wonders which are noised abroad in all the
land—and he is the hero of the hour, surrounded by unnumbered
multitudes of people wheresoever he fares. The sensation aroused by
him is enormous, every one's eyes are fastened on him, every one
who can go about, aye even those who can only crawl, must see the
wonder—and every one must have some opinion about him, so
that the purveyors of ready‑made opinions are put to it
because the demand is so furious and the contradictions so
confusing. And yet he, the worker of miracles, ever remains the
humble man who literally hath not where to lay his head.</p>
<p id="vi-p117">
And let us not forget:
signs and wonders as contemporary events have a markedly greater
elasticity in repelling or attracting than the tame stories
generally re‑hashed by the priests, or the still tamer
stories about signs and wonders that happened—1800 years ago!
Signs and wonders as contemporary events are something plaguy and
importunate, something which in a highly embarrassing manner almost
compels one to have an opinion, something which, if one does not
happen to be disposed to believe, may exasperate one excessively by
thus forcing one to be contemporaneous with it. Indeed, it renders
existence too complicated, and the more so, the more thoughtful,
developed, and cultured one is. It is a peculiarly ticklish matter,
this having to assume that a man who is contemporaneous with one
really performs signs and wonders; but when he is at some distance
from one, when the consequences of his life stimulate the
imagination a bit, then it is not so hard to imagine, in a fashion,
that one believes it.</p>
<p id="vi-p118">As I said, then, the people are
carried away with him; they follow him jubilantly, and see signs
and wonders, both those which he performs and those which he does
not perform, and they are glad in their hope that the golden age
will begin, once he is king. But the crowd rarely have a clear
reason for their opinions, they think one thing today and another
tomorrow. Therefore the wise and the critical will not at once
participate. Let us see now what the wise and the critical must
think, so soon as the first impression of astonishment and surprise
has subsided.</p>
<p id="vi-p119">  The shrewd and critical man would
probably say: "Even assuming that this person is what he claims to
be, that is, something extraordinary—for as to his affirming
himself to be God I can, of course, not consider that as anything
but an exaggeration for which I willingly make allowances, and
pardon him, if I really considered him to be something
extraordinary; for I am not a pedant—assuming then, which I
hesitate to do, for it is a matter on which I shall at any rate
suspend my judgment—assuming then that he is really
performing miracles: is it not an inexplicable mystery that this
person can be so foolish, so weak‑minded, so altogether
devoid of worldly wisdom, so feeble, or so good‑naturedly
vain, or whatever else you please to call it—that he behaves
in this fashion and almost forces his benefactions on men? Instead
of proudly and commandingly keeping people away from himself at a
distance marked by their profoundest submission, whenever he does
allow himself to be seen, at rare occasions: instead of doing so,
think of his being accessible to every one, or rather himself going
to every one, of having intercourse with everybody, almost as if
being the extraordinary person consisted in his being everybody's
servant,<note place="foot" id="vi-p119.1" n="102"><scripRef id="vi-p119.2" passage="Matthew 20, 27" parsed="|Matt|20|0|0|0;|Matt|27|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.20 Bible:Matt.27">Matthew 20, 27</scripRef>f.</note>  

as if the extraordinary
person he claims to be were marked by his being concerned only lest
men should fail to be benefited by him—in short as if being
an extraordinary person consisted in being the most solicitous of
all persons. The whole business is inexplicable to me—what he
wants, what his purpose is, what end he has in mind, what he
expects to accomplish; in a word, what the meaning of it all is. He
who by so many a wise saying reveals so profound an insight into
the human heart, he must certainly know what I, using but half of
my wits, can predict for him, viz. that in such fashion one gets
nowhere in the world—unless, indeed, despising prudence, one
consistently aims to make a fool of one's self or, perchance, goes
so far in sincerity as to prefer being put to death; but anyone
desiring that must certainly be crazy. Having such profound
knowledge of the human heart he certainly ought to know that the
thing to do is to deceive people and then to give one's deception
the appearance of being a benefaction conferred on the whole race.
By doing so one reaps all advantages, even the one whose enjoyment
is the sweetest of all, which is, to be called by one's
contemporaries a benefactor of the human race—for, once in
your grave, you may snap your fingers at what posterity may have to
say about you. But to surrender one's self altogether, as he does,
and not to think the least of one's self—in fact, almost to
beg people to accept these benefactions: no, I would not dream of
joining his company. And, of course, neither does he invite me;
for, indeed, he invites only them that labor and are heavy
laden."</p>
<p id="vi-p120">  Or he would reason as follows: "His
life is simply a fantastic dream. In fact, that is the mildest
expression one can use about it; for, when judging him in this
fashion, one is good‑natured enough to forget altogether the
evidence of sheer madness in his claim to be God. This is wildly
fantastical. One may possibly live a few years of one's youth in
such fashion. But he is now past thirty years. And he is literally
nothing. Still further, in a very short time he will necessarily
lose all the respect and reputation he has gained among the people,
the only thing, you may say, he has gained for himself. One who
wishes to keep in the good graces of the people—the riskiest
chance imaginable, I will admit—he must act differently. Not
many months will pass before the crowd will grow tired of one who
is so altogether at their service. He will be regarded as a ruined
person, a kind of outcast, who ought to be glad to end his days in
a corner, the world forgetting, by the world forgot; providing he
does not, by continuing his previous behavior, prefer to maintain
his present attitude and be fantastic enough to wish to be put to
death, which is the unavoidable consequence of persevering in that
course. What has he done for his future? Nothing. Has he any
assured position? No. What expectations has he? None. Even this
trifling matter: what will he do to pass the time when he grows
older, the long winter nights, what will he do to make them
pass—why, he cannot even play cards! He is now enjoying a bit
of popular favor—in truth, of all movable property the most
movable—which in a trice may turn into an enormous popular
hatred of him.—Join his company? No, thank you, I am still,
thank God, in my right mind.</p>
<p id="vi-p121">  Or he may reason as follows: "That
there is something exrtaordinary about this person—even if
one reserves the right, both one's own and that of common sense, to
refrain from venturing any opinion as to his claim of being
God—about that there is really little doubt. Rather, one
might be indignant at Providence's having entrusted such a person
with these powers—a person who does the very opposite what he
himself bids us do: that we shall not cast our pearls before the
swine; for which reason he will, as he himself predicts, come to
grief by their turning about and trampling him under their feet.
One may always expect this of swine; but, on the other hand, one
would not expect that he who had himself called attention to this
likelihood, himself would do precisely<note place="foot" id="vi-p121.1" n="103">The original here does not agree with the sense of the passage.</note>  

what he knows one
should not do. If only there were some means of cleverly stealing
his wisdom—for I shall gladly leave him in indisputed
possession of that very peculiar thought of his that he is
God—if one could but rob his wisdom without, at the same
time, becoming his disciple! If one could only steal up to him at
night and lure it from him; for I am more than equal to editing and
publishing it, and better than he, if you please. I undertake to
astonish the whole world by getting something altogether different
out of it; for I clearly see there is something wondrously profound
in what he says, and the misfortune is only that he is the man he
is. But perhaps, who knows, perhaps it is feasible, anyway, to fool
him out of it. Perhaps in that respect too he is good—natured
and simple enough to communicate it quite freely to me. It is not
impossible; for it seems to me that the wisdom he unquestionably
possesses, evidently has been entrusted to a fool, seeing there is
so much contradiction in his life.—But as to joining his
company and becoming his disciple—no indeed, that would be
the same as becoming a fool oneself."</p>
<p id="vi-p122">   Or he might reason as
follows: "If this person does indeed mean to further what is good
and true (I do not venture to decide this), he is helpful at least,
in this respect, to Youths and inexperienced people. For they will
be benefited, in this serious life of ours, by learning, the sooner
the better, and very thoroughly—he opens the eyes even of the
blindest to this—that all this pretense of wishing to live
only for goodness and truth contains a considerable admixture of
the ridiculous. He proves how right the poets of our times are when
they let truth and goodness be represented by some
half‑witted fellow, one who is so stupid that you can knock
down a wall with him. The idea of exerting one's self, as this man
does, of renouncing everything but pains and trouble, to be at beck
and call all day long, more eager than the busiest family
physician—and pray why? Because he makes a living by it? No,
not in the very least; it has never occurred to him, as far as I
can see, to want somethg in in return. Does he earn any money by
it? No, not a red cent—he has not a red cent to his name, and
if he did he would forthwith give it away. Does he, then, aspire to
a position of honor and dignity in the state? On the contrary, he
loathes all worldly honor. And he who, as I said, condemns all
worldly honor, and practices the art of living on nothing; he who,
if any one, seems best fitted to pass his life in a most
comfortable <i>dolce far
niente</i>—which is not such a bad thing—: he lives
under a greater strain than any government official who is rewarded
by honor and dignity, lives under a greater strain than any
business man who earns money like sand. Why does he exert himself
thus, or (why this question about a matter not open to question ?)
why should any one exert himself thus—in order to attain to
the happiness of being ridiculed, mocked, and so forth? To be sure,
a peculiar kind of pleasure! That one should push one's way through
a crowd to reach the spot where money, honor, and glory are
distributed—why, that is perfectly understandable; but to
push forward to be whipped: how exalted, how Christian, how
stupid!"</p>
<p id="vi-p123">  Or he will reason as follows: "One
hears so many rash opinions about this person from people who
understand nothing—and worship him; and so many severe
condemnations of him by those who, perhaps, misunderstand him after
all. As for me, I am not going to allow myself to be accused of
venturing a hasty opinion. I shall keep entirely cool and calm; in
fact, which counts for still more, I am conscious of being as
reasonable and moderate with him as is possible. Grant
now—which, to be sure, I do only to a certain
extent—grant even that one's reason is impressed by this
person. What, then, is my opinion about him? My opinion is, that
for the present, I can form no opinion about him. I do not mean
about his claim of being God; for about that I can never in all
eternity have an opinion. No, I mean about him as a man. Only by
the consequences of his life shall we be able to decide whether he
was an extraordinary person or whether, deceived by his
imagination, he applied too high a standard, not only to himself,
but also to humanity in general. More I cannot do for him, try as I
may—if he were my only friend, my own child, I could not
judge him more leniently, nor differently, either. It follows from
this, to be sure, that in all probability, and for good reasons, I
shall not ever be able to have any opinion about him. For in order
to be able to form an opinion I must first see the consequences of
his life, including his very last moments; that is, he must be dead
then, and perhaps not even then, may I form an opinion of him. And,
even granting this, it is not really an opinion about him, for he
is then no more. No more is needed to say why it is impossible for
me to join him while he is living. The  a u t h o r i t y  he is said to show in his
teaching can have no decisive influence in my case; for it is
surely easy to see that his thought moves in a circle. He quotes as
authority that which he is to prove, which in its turn can be
proved only by the consequences of his life; provided, of course,
it is not connected with that fixed idea of his about being God,
because if it is  t h e
r e f o r e  he has
this authority (because he is God) the answer must be:
yes—if!  So much,
however, I may admit, that if I could imagine myself living in some
later age, and if the consequences of his life as shown in history
had made it plain that he was the extraordinary person he in a
former age claimed to be, then it might very well be—in fact,
I might come very near, becoming his disciple."</p>
<p id="vi-p124">
An ecclesiastic would
reason as follows: "For an impostor and demagogue he has, to say
the truth, a remarkable air of honesty about him; for which reason
he cannot be so absolutely dangerous, either, even though the
situation looks dangerous enough while the squall is at its height,
and ever, though the situation looks dangerous enough with his
enormous popularity—until the squall has passed over and the
people—yes, precisely the people—overthrow him again.
The honest thing about him is his claim to be the Messiah when he
resembles him so little as he does. That is honest, just as if some
one in preparing bogus paper-money made the bills so poorly that
every one who knows the least about it cannot fail to detect the
fraud.—True enough, we all look forward to a Messiah, but
surely no one with any sense expects God himself to come, and every
religious person shudders at the blasphemous attitude of this
person. We look forward to a Messiah, we are all agreed on that.
But the governance of the world does not go forward tumultuously,
by leaps and bounds; the development of the world, as is indicated
by the very fact that it is a development, proceeds by evolution,
not by revolution. The true Messiah will therefore look quite
different, and will arrive as the most glorious flower, and the
highest development, of that which already exists. Thus will the
true Messiah come, and he will proceed in an entirely different
fashion: he will recognize the existing order as the basis of
things, he will summon all the clergy to council and present to
them the results accomplished by him, as well as his
credentials—and then, if he obtain the majority of the votes
when the ballot is cast, he will be received and saluted as the
extraordinary person, as the one he is: the
Messiah.<note place="foot" id="vi-p124.1" n="104">Björnson's play of "Beyond Human Power," Part I, <scripRef id="vi-p124.2" passage="Act 2" parsed="|Acts|2|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2">Act 2</scripRef>, reads like an elaboration of these views.</note>  
</p>
<p id="vi-p125">  "However, there is a duplicity in
this man's behavior; he assumes too much the rôle of judge.
It seems as if he wished to be, at one and the same time, both the
judge who passes sentence on the existing order of things, and the
Messiah. If he does not wish to play the rôle of the judge,
then why his absolute isolation, his keeping at a distance from all
which has to do with the existing order of things? And if he does
not wish to be the judge, then why his fantastic flight from
reality to join the ignorant crowd, then why with the haughtiness
of a revolutionary does he despise all the intelligence and
efficiency to be found in the existing order of things? And why
does he begin afresh altogether, and absolutely from the bottom up,
by the help of—fishermen and artisans? May not the fact that
he is an illegitimate child fitly characterize his entire relation
to the existing order of things? On the other hand, if he wishes to
be only the Messiah, why then his warning about putting a piece of
new cloth unto an old garment.<note place="foot" id="vi-p125.1" n="105"><scripRef id="vi-p125.2" passage="Matthew 9, 16" parsed="|Matt|9|0|0|0;|Matt|16|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.9 Bible:Matt.16">Matthew 9, 16</scripRef>.</note>  

For these words are
precisely the watchwords of every revolution since they are
expressive of a person's discontent with the existing order and of
his wish to destroy it. That is, these words reveal his desire to
remove existing conditions, rather than to build on them and better
them, if one is a reformer, or to develop them to their highest
possibility, if one is indeed the Messiah. This is duplicity. In
fact, it is not feasible to be both judge and Messiah. Such
duplicity will surely result in his downfall.<note place="foot" id="vi-p125.3" n="106">The following passage is capable of different interpretations in the original.</note>  

The climax in the life
of a judge is his death by violence, and so the poet pictures it
correctly; but the climax in the life of the Messiah cannot
possibly be his death. Or else, by that very fact, he would not be
the Messiah, that is, he whom the existing order expects in order
to deify him. This duplicity has not as yet been recognized by the
people, who see in him their Messiah; but the existing order of
things cannot by any manner of means recognize him as such. The
people, the idle and loafing crowd, can do so only because they
represent nothing less than the existing order of things. But as
soon as the duplicity becomes evident to them, his doom is sealed.
Why, in this respect his predecessor was a far more definitely
marked personality, for he was but one thing, the judge. But what
confusion and thoughtlessness, to wish to be both, and what still
worse confusion, to acknowledge his predecessor as the
judge—that is, in other words, precisely to make the existing
order of things receptive and ripe for the Messiah who is to come
after the judge, and yet not wish to associate himself with the
existing order of things!"</p>
<p id="vi-p126">And the philosopher would reason as
follows: "Such dreadful or, rather, insane vanity, that a single
individual claims to be God, is a thing hitherto unheard of. Never
before have we been witness to such an excess of pure subjectivity
and sheer negation. He has no doctrines, no system of philosophy,
he knows really nothing, he simply keeps on repeating, and making
variations on, some unconnected aphoristic sentences, some few
maxims, and a couple of parables by which he dazzles the crowd for
whom he also performs signs and wonders; so that they, instead of
learning something, or being improved, come to believe in one who
in a most brazen way constantly forces his subjective views on us.
There is nothing objective or positive whatever in him and in what
he says. Indeed, from a philosophical point of view, he does not
need to fear destruction for he has perished already, since it is
inherent in the nature of subjectivity to perish. One may in all
fairness admit that his subjectivity is remarkable and that, be it
as it may with the other miracles, he constantly repeats his
miracle with the five small loaves,<note place="foot" id="vi-p126.1" n="107"><scripRef id="vi-p126.2" passage="Matthew 14, 17" parsed="|Matt|14|0|0|0;|Matt|17|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.14 Bible:Matt.17">Matthew 14, 17</scripRef>.</note>  

viz., by means of a few
lyric utterances and some aphorisms he rouses the whole country.
But even if one were inclined to overlook his insane notion of
affirming himself to be God, it is an incomprehensible mistake,
which, to be sure, demonstrates a lack of philosophic training, to
believe that God could reveal himself in the form of an individual.
The race, the universal, the total, is God; but the race surely is
not an individual! Generally speaking, that is the impudent
assumption of subjectivity, which claims that the individual is
something extraordinary. But sheer insanity is shown in the claim
of an individual to be God. Because if the insane thing were
possible, viz. that an individual might be God, why, then this
individual would have to be worshipped, and a more beastly
philosophic stupidity is not conceivable."</p>
<p id="vi-p127">  The astute statesman would reason
as follows: "That at present this person wields great power is
undeniable—entirely disregarding, of course, this notion of
his that he is God. Foibles like these, being idiosyncrasies, do
not count against a man and concern no one, least of all a
statesman. A statesman is concerned only with what power a man
wields; and that he does wield great power cannot, as I have
remarked, be denied. But what he intends to do, what his aim is, I
cannot make out at all. If this be calculation it must be of an
entirely new and peculiar order, not so altogether unlike what is
otherwise called madness. He possesses points of considerable
strength; but he seems to defeat, rather than to use, it; he
expends it without  h i
m s e l f  getting any
returns. I consider him a phenomenon with which—as ought to
be one's rule with all phenomena—a wise man should not have
anything to do, since it is impossible to calculate him or the
catastrophe threatening his life. It is possible that he will be
made king. It is possible, I say; but it is not impossible, or
rather, it is just as possible, that he may end on the gallows. He
lacks earnestness in all his endeavors. With all his enormous
stretch of wings he only hovers and gets nowhere. He does not seem
to have any definite plan of procedure, but just hovers. Is it for
his nationality he is fighting, or does he aim at a communistic
revolution? Does he wish to establish a republic or a kingdom? With
which party does he affiliate himself to combat which party, or
does he wish to fight all parties ?</p>
<p id="vi-p128">
"I have anything to do
with him?—No, that would be the very last thing to enter my
mind. In fact, I take all possible precautions to avoid him. I keep
quiet, undertake nothing, act as if I did not exist; for one cannot
even calculate how he might interfere with one's undertakings, be
they ever so unimportant, or at any
rate, how one might become involved in the vortex of his
activities. Dangerous, in a certain sense enormously dangerous, is
this man. But I calculate that I may ensnare him precisely by doing
nothing. For overthrown he must be. And this is done most safely by
letting him do it himself, by letting him stumble over himself. I
have, at least at this moment, not sufficient power to bring about
his fall; in fact, I know no one who has. To undertake the least
thing against him now, means to be crushed one's self. No, my plan
is constantly to exert only negative resistance to him, that is, to
do nothing, and he will probably involve himself in the enormous
consequences he draws after him, till in the end he will tread on
his own train, as it were, and thus fall."</p>
<p id="vi-p129">
  And the steady citizen would reason
as follows (which would then become the opinion of his family) :
"Now, let us be human, everything is good when done in moderation,
too little and too much spoil everything, and as a French saying
has it which I once heard a traveling salesman use: every power
which exceeds itself comes to a fall—and as to this person,
his fall is certainly sure enough. I have earnestly spoken to my
son and warned and admonished him not to drift into evil ways and
join that person. And why? Because all people are running after
him. That is to say, what sort of people? Idlers and loafers,
street‑walkers and tramps, who run after everything. But
mightly few of the men who have house and property, and nobody who
is wise and respected, none after whom I set my clock, neither
councillor Johnson, nor senator Anderson, nor the wealthy broker
Nelson—oh no! they know what's what. And as to the ministry
who ought to know most about such matters—ah, they will have
none of him. What was it pastor Green said in the club the other
evening? 'That man will yet come to a terrible end,' he said. And
Green, he can do more than preach, you oughtn't to hear him Sundays
in church so much as Mondays in the club—I just wished I had
half his knowledge of affairs! He said quite correctly, and as if
spoken out of my own heart: 'Only idlers and loafers are running
after that man.' And why do they run after him? Because he performs
some miracles. But who is sure they are miracles, or that he can
confer the same power on his disciples? And, in any case, a miracle
is somethng mightly uncertain, whereas the certain is the certain.
Every serious father who has grown‑up children must be truly
alarmed lest his sons be seduced and join that man together with
the desperate characters who follow him—desperate characters
who have nothing to lose. And even these, how does he help them?
Why, one must be mad to wish to be helped in this fashion. Even the
poorest beggar is brought to a worse estate than his former one, is
brought to a pass he could have escaped by remaining what he was,
that is, a beggar and no more."</p>
<p id="vi-p130">
  And the mocker, not the one hated
on account of his malice, but the one who is admired for his wit
and liked for his good nature, he would reason as follows: "It is,
after all, a rich idea which is going to prove useful to all of us,
that an individual who is in no wise different from us claims to be
God. If that is not being a benefactor of the race then I don't
know what charity and beneficence are. If we assume that the
characteristic of being God—well, who in all the world would
have hit on that idea? How true that such an idea could not have
entered into the heart of man<note place="foot" id="vi-p130.1" n="108">Cf. <scripRef id="vi-p130.2" passage="1 Cor. 2, 9" parsed="|1Cor|2|0|0|0;|1Cor|9|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.2 Bible:1Cor.9">1 Cor. 2, 9</scripRef>.</note>  
—but
if we assume that it consists in looking in no wise different from
the rest of us, and in nothing else: why, then we are all
gods.  Q. E. D. Three
cheers for him, the inventor of a discovery so extraordinarily
important for mankind! Tomorrow I, the undersigned, shall proclaim
that I am God, and the discoverer at least will not be able to
contradict me without contradicting himself. At night all cats are
gray; and if to be God consists in looking like the rest of us,
absolutely and altogether like the rest of mankind: why, then it is
night and we all are . . ., or what is it I wanted to say: we all
are God, every one of us, and no one has a right to say he isn't as
well off as his neighbor. This is the most ridiculous situation
imaginable, the contradiction here being the greatest, imaginable,
and a contradiction always making for a comical effect. But this is
in no wise my discovery, but solely that of the discoverer: this
idea that a man of exactly the same appearance as the rest of us,
only not half so well dressed as the average man, that is, a poorly
dressed person who, rather than being God, seems to invite the
attention of the society for the relief of the poor—that he
is God! I am only sorry for the director of the charitable society
that he will not get a raise from this general advancement of the
human race but that he will, rather, lose his job on account of
this, etc."</p>
<p id="vi-p131">
Ah, my friend, I know
well what I am doing, I know my responsibility, and my soul is
altogether assured of the correctness of my procedure. Now then,
imagine yourself a contemporary of him who invites. Imagine
yourself to be a sufferer, but consider well to what you expose
yourself in becoming his disciple and following him. You expose
yourself to losing practically everything in the eyes of all wise
and sensible and respected men. He who invites demands of you that
you surrender all, give up everything; but the common sense of your
own times and of your contemporaries will not give you up, but will
judge that to join him is madness. And mockery will descend cruelly
upon you; for while it will almost spare him, out of compassion,
you will be thought madder than a march‑hare for becoming his
disciple. People will say: "That  h e  is a wrong‑headed
enthusiast, that can't be helped. Well and good; but to
become—in all seriousness—his disciple, that is the
greatest piece of madness imaginable. There surely is but one
possibility of being madder than a madman, which is the higher
madness of joining a madman in all seriousness and regarding him as
a sage."</p>
<p id="vi-p132">   Do not say that the whole
presentation above is exaggerated. Ah, you know (but, possibly,
have not fully realized it) that among all the respectable men,
among all the enlightened and sensible men, there was but
one—though it is easily possible that one or the other of
them, impelled by curiosity, entered into conversation with
him—that there was but one among them who sought him in all
seriousness.<note place="foot" id="vi-p132.1" n="109"><scripRef id="vi-p132.2" passage="John 3, 1" parsed="|John|3|0|0|0;|John|1|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.3 Bible:John.1">John 3, 1</scripRef>f.</note>  

And he came to
him—in the night! And as you know, in the night one walks on
forbidden paths, one chooses the night to go to places of which one
does not like to be known as a frequenter. Consider the opinion of
the inviter implid in this—it was a disgrace to visit him,
something no man of honor could afford to do, as little as to pay a
nightly visit to—but no, I do not care to say in so many
words what would follow this "as little as."</p>
<p id="vi-p133">
Come hither to me now
all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest.</p>
<p id="vi-p134"><br /></p>
<p id="vi-p135"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p136">
THE SECOND PHASE OF HIS
LIFE</p>
<p id="vi-p137">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p138">
   His end was what all the wise
and the sensible, the statesmen and the citizens and the mockers,
etc., predicted it would be. And as was later spoken to him, in a
moment when, it would seem, the most hardened ought to have been
moved to sympathy, and the very stones to tears: "He saved others;
let him save himself,"<note place="foot" id="vi-p138.1" n="110"><scripRef id="vi-p138.2" passage="Luke 23, 35" parsed="|Luke|23|0|0|0;|Luke|35|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23 Bible:Luke.35">Luke 23, 35</scripRef>.</note>  

and as it has been
repeated thousands upon thousands of times, by thousands upon
thousands: "What was it he spoke of before, saying his hour was not
yet come<note place="foot" id="vi-p138.3" n="111"><scripRef id="vi-p138.4" passage="John 2, 4" parsed="|John|2|0|0|0;|John|4|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.2 Bible:John.4">John 2, 4</scripRef>, etc.</note>  
—is
it come now, perchance?"—It has been repeated, alas, the
while the single individual, the believer, shudders whenever
considering—while yet unable to refrain from gazing into the
depth of what to men is a meaningless absurdity—shudders when
considering that God in human guise, that his divine teaching, that
these signs and wonders which might have made a very Sodom and
Gomorrha reform its ways, in reality produced the exact opposite,
and caused the teacher to be shunned, hated, despised.</p>
<p id="vi-p139">  Who he is, one can recognize more
easily now when the powerful ones and the respected ones, and all
the precautionary measures of those upholding the existing order,
have corrected any wrong conception one might have entertained
about him at first—now when the people have lost their
patience to wait for a Messiah, seeing that his life, instead of
rising in dignity, lapsed into ever greater degradation. Who, pray,
does not recognize that a man is judged according to the society in
which he moves—and now, think of his society! Indeed, his
society one might well designate as equivalent to being expelled
from "human society"; for his society are the lowest classes of the
people, with sinners and publicans among them, people whom
everybody with the slightest self‑respect shuns for the sake
of his good name and reputation—and a good name and
reputation surely are about the least one can wish to preserve. In
his company there are, furthermore, lepers whom every one flees,
madmen who can only inspire terror, invalids and
wretches—squalor and misery. Who, then, is this person that,
though followed by such a company, still is the object of the
persecution of the mighty ones? He is one despised as a seducer of
men, an impostor, a blasphemer! And if any one enjoying a good
reputation refrains from expressing contempt of him, it is really
only a kind of compassion; for to fear him is, to be sure,
something different.</p>
<p id="vi-p140">
Such, then, is his
appearance; for take care not to be influenced by anything that you
may have learned after the event—as, how his exalted spirit,
with an almost divine majesty, never was so markedly manifest as
just them. Ah, my friend, if you were the contemporary of one who
is not only himself "excluded from the synagogue" but, as you will
remember, whose very help meant being "excluded from the
synagogue"—I say, if you were the contemporary of an outcast,
who in every respect answers to that term, (for everything has two
sides) : then you will scarcely be the man to explain all this in
terms directly contrary to appearances;<note place="foot" id="vi-p140.1" n="112">The passage is not quite clear. Probably, you will not be the man to explain this phenomenon in the very opposite terms, viz., as the divinity himself.</note>  

or, which is the same
thing, you will not be the "single individual" which, as you well
know, no one wants to be, and to be which is regarded as a
ridiculous oddity, perhaps even as a crime.</p>
<p id="vi-p141">  And now—for they are his
society chiefly—as to his apostles! What absurdity; though
not—what new absurdity, for it is quite in keeping with the
rest—his apostles are some fishermen, ignorant people who but
the other day followed their trade. And tomorrow, to pile one
absurdity on the other, they are to go out into the wide world and
transform its aspect. And it is he who claims to be God, and these
are his duly appointed apostles! Now, is he to make his apostles
respected, or are perhaps the apostles to make him respected? Is
he, the inviter, is he an absurd dreamer? Indeed, his procession
would make it seem so; no poet ­could have hit on a better
idea. A teacher, a sage, or whatever you please to call him, a kind
of stranded genius, who affirms himself to be God—surrounded
by a jubilant mob, himself accompanied by some publicans,
criminals, and lepers; nearest to him a chosen few, his apostles.
And these judges so excellently competent as to what truth is,
these fishermen, tailors, and shoe‑makers, they do not only
admire him, their teacher and master, whose every word is wisdom
and truth; they do not only see what no one else can see, his
exaltedness and holiness, nay, but they see God in him and worship
him. Certainly, no poet could invent a better situation, and it is
doubtful if the poet would not forget the additional item that this
same person is feared by the mighty ones and that they are scheming
to destroy him. His death alone can reassure and satisfy them. They
have set an ignominious punishment on joining his company, on
merely accepting aid from him; and yet they do not feel secure, and
cannot feel altogether reassured that the whole thing is mere
wrongheaded enthusiasm and absurdity. Thus the mighty ones. The
populace who had idolized him, the populace have pretty nearly
given him up, only in moments does their old conception of him
blaze forth again. In all his existence there is not a shred the
most envious of the envious might envy him to have. Nor do the
mighty ones envy his life. They demand his death for safety's sake,
so that they may have peace again, when all has returned to the
accustomed ways, peace having been made still more secure by the
warning example of his death.</p>
<p id="vi-p142">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p143">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p144">  These are the two phases of his
life. It began with the people's idolizing him, whereas all who
were identified with the existing order of things, all who had
power and influence, vengefully, but in a cowardly and hidden
manner, laid their snares for him—in which he was caught,
then? Yes, but he perceived it well. Finally the people discover
that they had been deceived in him, that the fulfilment he would
bring them answered least of all to their expectations of wonders
and mountains of gold. So the people deserted him and the mighty
ones drew the snare about him—in which he was caught, then?
Yes, but he perceived it well. The mighty ones drew the snare
together about him—and thereupon the people, who then saw
themselves completely deceived, turned against him in hatred and
rage.</p>
<p id="vi-p145">
And—to include
that too—compassion would say; or, among the compassionate
one—for compassion is sociable, and likes to assemble
together, and you will find spitefulness and envy keeping company
with whining soft‑headedness: since, as a heathen philosopher
observed long ago, no one is so ready to sympathize as an envious
person—among the compassionate ones the verdict would be: it
is really too bad that this good‑hearted fellow is to come to
such an end. For he was really a good sort of fellow. Granting it
was an exaggeration to claim to be God, he really was good to the
poor and the needy, even if in an odd manner, by becoming one of
them and going about in the company of beggars. But there is
something touching in it all, and one can't help but feel sorry for
the poor fellow who is to suffer such a miserable death. For you
may say what you will, and condemn him as strongly as you will, I
cannot help feeling pity for him. I am not so heard‑hearted
as not to feel compassion."</p>
<p id="vi-p146">
We have arrived at the
last phase, not of Sacred History, as handed down by the apostles
and disciples who believed in Christ, but of profane history, its
counterpart.</p>
<p id="vi-p147">
Come hither now, all ye
that labor and are heavy laden: that is, if you feel the need, even
if vou are of all sufferers the most miserable—if you feel
the need of being helped in this fashion, that is, to fall into
still greater suffering, then come hither, he will help
you.</p>
<p id="vi-p148"><br /></p>
<p id="vi-p149"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p150">
III</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p151">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p152">
THE INVITATION AND THE
INVITER</p>
<p id="vi-p153">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p154">
   Let us forget for a little
while what, in the strictest sense, constitutes the "offense";
which is, that the inviter claims to be God. Let us assume that he
did not claim to be more than a man, and let us then consider the
inviter and his invitation.</p>
<p id="vi-p155">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p156">  The invitation is surely inviting
enough. How, then, shall one explain the bad relation which did
exist, this terribly wrong relation, that no one, or practically no
one, accepted the invitation; that, on the contrary, all, or
practically all—alas! and was it not precisely all who were
invited?—that practically all were at one in offering
resistance to the inviter, in wishing to put him to death, and in
setting a punishment on accepting aid from him? Should one not
expect that after an invitation such as he issued all, all who
suffered, would come crowding to him, and that all they who were
not suffering would crowd to him, touched by the thought of such
compassion and mercy, and that thus the whole race would be at one
in admiring and extolling the inviter? How is the opposite to be
explained? For that this was the outcome is certain enough; and the
fact that it all happened in those remote times is surely no proof
that the generation then living was worse than other generations!
How could any one be so thoughtless as to believe that? For whoever
gives any thought to the matter will easily see that it happened in
that generation only because they chanced to be contemporaneous
with him. How then explain that it happened—that all came to
that terribly wrong end, so opposite to what ought to have been
expected?</p>
<p id="vi-p157">
   Well, in the
first place, if the inviter had looked the figure which purely
human compassion would have him be; and, in the second place, if he
had entertained the purely human conception of what constitutes
man's misery—why, then it would probably not have
happened.</p>
<p id="vi-p158">   I n  t h e  f i r s t  p l a c e:  According to this human
conception of him he should have been a most generous and
sympathetic person, and at the same time possessed of all
qualifications requisite for being able to help in all troubles of
this world, ennobling the help thus extended by a profound and
heartfelt human compassion. Withal (so they would imagine him) he
should also have been a man of some distinction and not without a
certain amount of human self‑assertion—the consequence
of which would be, however, that he would neither have been able,
in his compassion, to reach down to all sufferers, nor yet to have
comprehended, fully what constitutes the misery of man and of
mankind.</p>
<p id="vi-p159">
  But divine compassion, the
infinite  u n c o n c e
r n  which takes
thought only of those that suffer, and not in the least of one's
self, and which with absolute unconcern takes thought of all that
suffer: that will always seem to men only a kind of madness, and
they will ever be puzzled whether to laugh or to weep about it.
Even if nothing else had militated against the inviter, this alone
would have beer sufficient to make his lot hard in the
world.</p>
<p id="vi-p160">
  Let a man but try a little while to
practice divine compassion, that is, to be somewhat unconcerned in
his compassion., and you will at once perceive what the opinion of
mankind would be. For example: let one who could occupy some higher
rank in society, let him not (preserving all the while the
distinction of his position) lavishly give to the poor, and
philanthropically (i.e. in a superior fashion) visit the poor and
the sick and the wretched—no, let him give up altogether the
distinction of his position and in all earnest choose the company
of the poor and the lowly, let him live altogether with the people,
with workmen, hodmen, mortarmixers, and the like! Ah, in a quiet
moment, when not actually  b e h o l d i n g  him, most of us will be moved to
tears by the mere thought of it; but no sooner would they s e e him
in this company—him who might have attained to honor and
dignity in the world—see him walking along in such goodly
company, with a bricklayer's apprentice on his right side and a
cobbler's boy on his left, but—well, what then? First they
would devise a thousand explanations to explain that it is because
of queer notions, or obstinacy, or pride, or vanity that he chooses
this mode of life. And even if they would refrain from attributing
to him these evil motives they will never be reconciled with the
sight of him—in this company. The noblest person in the world
will be tempted to laugh, the moment he  s e e s  it.</p>
<p id="vi-p161">
  And if all the clergymen in the
world, whether in velvet or in silk or in broadcloth or in satin,
contradicted me I would say: "You lie, you only deceive people with
your Sunday sermons. Because it will always be possible for a
contemporary to say about one so compassionate (who, it is to be
kept in mind, is our contemporary): "I believe he is actuated by
vanity, and that is why I laugh and mock at him; but if he were
truly compassionate, or had I been contemporary with him, the noble
one—why then!" And now, as to those exalted ones "who were
not understood by men"—to speak in the fashion of the usual
run of sermons—why, sure enough, they are dead. In this
fashion these people succeed in playing hide and seek. You simply
assume that every contemporary who ventures out so far is actuated
only by vanity; and as to the departed, you assume that they are
dead and that they, therefore, were among the glorious
ones.</p>
<p id="vi-p162">
   It must be remembered, to be
sure, that every person, wishes to maintain his own level in life,
and this fixed point, this steady endeavor, is one of the causes
which limit  h u m a
n  compassion to a
certain sphere. The cheesemonger will think that to live like the
inmate of a poorhouse is going too far in expressing one's
sympathy; for the sympathy of the cheese‑monger is biased in
one regard which is, his regard of the opinion of other
cheese‑mongers and of the saloon‑keepers. His
compassion is therefore not without its limitations. And thus with
every class—and the journalists, living as they do on the
pennies of the poor, under the pretense of asserting and defending
their rights, they would be the first to heap ridicule on this
unlimited compassion.</p>
<p id="vi-p163">   To identify one's
self wholly and literally with him who is most miserable (and this,
only this, is  d i v i
n e  compassion), that
is to men the "too much" by which one is moved to tears, in a quiet
Sunday hour, and about which one unconsciously bursts into laughter
when one sees it in   r e a l i t y.  The fact is, it is too exalted a
sight for daily use; one must have it at some distance to be able
to support it. Men are not so familiar with exalted virtue to
believe it at once. The contradiction seen here is, therefore, that
this exalted virtue manifests itself in reality,
in daily life, quite literally the daily life. When the poet or the
orator illustrates this exalted virtue, that is, pictures it in a
poetical distance from real life, men are moved; but to see this
exalted virtue in reality, the reality of daily life, here in
Copenhagen, on the Market Square, in the midst of busy
every‑day life !
And when the poet or the orator does touch people it is only for a
short time, and just so long are men able to believe, almost, in
this exalted virtue. But to see it in real life every
day !
To be sure, there is an enormous contradiction in the statement
that the most exalted of all has become the most every‑day
occurrence!</p>
<p id="vi-p164">   Insofar, then, it was certain
in advance what would be the inviter's fate, even if nothing else
had contributed to his doom. The absolute,<note place="foot" id="vi-p164.1" n="113">Here, the unreserved identification with human suffering above referred to.</note>  

or all which makes for
an absolute standard, becomes by that very fact the victim. For men
are willing enough to practice sympathy and self‑denial, are
willing enough to strive for wisdom, etc.; but they wish themselves
to determine the standard and to have that read: "to a certain
degree." They do not wish to do away with all these splendid
virtues. On the contrary, they want at
a bargain and in all comfort to
have the appearance and the name of practicing them. Truly divine
compassion is therefore necessarily the victim so soon as it shows
itself in this world. It descends on earth out of compassion for
mankind, and yet it is mankind who trample upon it. And whilst it
is wandering about among them, scarcely even the</p>
<p id="vi-p165">
sufferer dares to flee
to it, for fear of mankind. The fact is, it is most important for
the world to keep up the appearance of being compassionate; but
this it made out by divine compassion to be a
falsehood and
therefore: away with divine compassion!</p>
<p id="vi-p166">
   But now the inviter
represented precisely this divine compassion and
therefore he was sacrificed, and therefore even those that suffered
fled from him; for they comprehended (and, humanly speaking, very
exactly), what is true of most human infirmities, that one is
better off to remain what one is than to be helped by
him.</p>
<p id="vi-p167">
   In the second place: the
inviter likewise had an other, and altogether different, conception
than the purely human one as to what constitutes man's misery. And
in this sense only he was intent on helping; for he had with him
neither money, nor medicine, nor anything else of this
kind.</p>
<p id="vi-p168">
  Indeed, the inviter's appearance is
so altogether different from what human compassion would imagine it
that he is a downright offense to men. In a purely human sense
there is something positively cruel something
outrageous, something so exasperating as to make one wish to kill
that person in
the fact of his inviting to him the poor and the 'sick and the
suffering, and then not being able to do anything for them, except
to promise them remission of their sins. "Let us be human, man is
no spirit. And when a person is about to die of starvation and you
say to him: I promise you the gracious remission of your
sins that
is revolting cruelty. In fact it is ridiculous, though too serious
a matter to laugh about."</p>
<p id="vi-p169">
  Well (for in quoting these
sentiments I wish merely to let offended man discover the
contradiction and exaggerate it it
is not I who wish to exaggerate), well then, the real intention of
the inviter was to point out that sin is the destruction of
mankind. Behold now, that makes room, as the invitation also made
room, almost as if he had said  <i>procul, o procul este profani,</i> or
as if, even though he had not said it, a voice had been heard which
thus interpreted the "come hither" of the invitation. There surely
are not many sufferers who will follow the invitation. And ever, if
there were one who, although aware that from this inviter no actual
worldly help was to be expected, nevertheless had sought refuge
with him, touched by his compassion: now even he will flee from
him. For is it not almost a bit of sharp practice to profess to be
here out of compassion, and then to speak about sin?</p>
<p id="vi-p170">
Indeed, it is a piece
of cunning, unless you are altogether certain that you are a
sinner. If it is tooth‑ache which bothers you, or if your
house is burned to the ground, but if it has escaped you that you
are a sinner why,
then it was cunning on his part. It is a bit of sharp practice of
him to assert: "I heal all manner of disease," in order to say,
when one approaches him: "the fact is, I recognize only one
disease, which is sin of
that I shall cure all them 'that labor and are heavy laden,' all
them that labor to work themselves free of the power of sin, that
labor to resist the evil, and to vanquish their weakness, but
succeed only in being laden." Of this malady he cures "all"
persons; even if there were but a single one who turned to him
because of this malady: he heals all persons. But to come to him on
account of any other disease, and only because of that, is about as
useful as to look up an eye‑doctor when you have fractured
your leg.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p171">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p172">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p173">
CHRISTIANITY AS THE
ABSOLUTE; CONTEMPORANEOUSNESS</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p174">
WITH CHRIST</p>
<p id="vi-p175">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p176">
With its invitation to
all "that labor and are heavy laden" Christianity has entered the
world, not as
the clergy whimperingly and falsely introduce it as
a shining paragon of mild grounds of consolation; but as the
absolute. God wills it so because of His love, but it is God who
wills it, and He wills it as He wills it. He does not choose to
have His nature changed by man and become a nice, that is to say,
humane, God; but He chooses to change the nature of man because of
His love for them. Neither does He care to hear any human
impertinence concerning the why and wherefore of Christianity, and
why it entered the world: it is, and is to be, the absolute.
Therefore all the relative explanations which may have been
ventured as to its why and wherefore are entirely beside the point.
Possibly, these explanations were suggested by a kind of human
compas­sion which believes it necessary to haggle a
bit God
very likely does not know the nature of man very well, His
de­mands are a bit exorbitant, and therefore the clergymen just
haggle and beat Him down a bit.<note place="foot" id="vi-p176.1" n="114">Cf. Note p. 178.</note>  

Maybe the clergy hit
upon that idea in order to stand well with men and reap some
advantage from preaching the gospel; for if its de­mands are
reduced to the purely human, to the demands which arise in man's
heart, why, then men will of course think well of it, and of course
also of the amiable preacher who knows how to make Christianity so
mild if
the Apostl­es had been able to do that the world would have
esteemed them highly also in their time. However, all this is the
absolute. But what is it good for, then is
it not a downright torment? Why, yes, you may say so: from the
stand­point of the relative, the absolute is the greatest
torment. In his dull, lanquid, sluggish moments, when man is
domin­ated by his sensual nature, Christianity is an absurdity
to him since it is not commensurable with any definite "wherefore?"
But of what use is it, then? Answer: peace! it is the absolute. And
thus it must be represented; that is, in a fashion which makes it
appear as an absurdity to the sensual nature of man. And therefore
is it, ah, so true and, in still another sense, so true when the
worldly­-wise man who is contemporaneous with Christ condemns
him with the words: "he is literally
nothing"­ quite
true, for he is the absolute. And, being absolute, Christianity has
come in the world, not as a consolation in the human sense; in
fact, quite on the contrary, it is ever reminding one how the
Christian must suffer in order to become, or to remain, a
Christian sufferings
which he may, if you please, escape by not electing to be a
Christian.</p>
<p id="vi-p177">  There is, indeed, an unbridgeable
gulf fixed between God and man. It therefore became plain to those
contemporary with Christ that the process of becoming a Christian
(that is, being changed into the likeness of God) is, in a human
sense, a greater torment and wretchedness and pain than the
greatest conceivable human suffering, and moreover a crime in the
eyes of one's contemporaries. And thus will it always be; that is,
if becoming a Christian in reality means becoming contemporaneous
with Christ. And if becoming a Christian does not have that
meaning, then all your chatter about becoming a Christian is a
vanity, a delusion and a snare, and likewise a blasphemy and a sin
against the Holy Ghost.</p>
<p id="vi-p178">   For with regard to the
absolute there is but one time, viz. the present. He who is not
contemporaneous with the absolute, for him it does not exist at
all. And since Christ is the absolute, it is evident that in
respect of him there is but one situation: contemporaneousness. The
three, or seven, or fifteen, or seventeen, or eighteen hundred
years which have elapsed since his death do not make the least
difference, one way or the other. They neither change hin, nor
reveal, either, who he was; for his real nature is revealed only to
faith.</p>
<p id="vi-p179">  Christ, let me say so with the
utmost seriousness, is not an actor; neither is he a merely
historical personage since, being the paradox, he is an extremely
unhistorical personage. But precisely this is the difference
between poetry and reality: contemporaneousness.<note place="foot" id="vi-p179.1" n="115">As my friend, H. M. Jones, points out, the following passage is essentially Aristotellian: "The true difference is that one (history) relates what has happened, the other (poetry) what may happen"; Poetics," Chap. IX.</note>  

The difference between
poetry and history is no doubt this, that history is what has
really happened, and poetry, what is possible, the action which is
supposed to have taken place, the life which has taken form in the
poet's imagination. But that which really happened (the past) is
not necessarily reality, except in a certain sense, viz., in
contrast with poetry. There is still lacking in it the criterion of
truth (as inwardness) and of all religion, there is still lacking
the criterion: the truth FOR YOU. That which is past is not a
reality for
me, but only my time is. That which you are contemporaneous with,
that is reality for
you. Thus every person has the choice to be contemporaneous with
the age in which he is living and
also with one other period, with that of Christ's life here on
earth; for Christ's life on earth, or Sacred History, stands by
itself, outside of history.</p>
<p id="vi-p180">   History you may read and hear
about as a matter of the past. Within its realm you can, if you so
care, judge actions by their results. But in Christ's life here on
earth there is nothing past. It did not wait for the assistance of
any subsequent results in its own time, 1800 years ago; neither
does it now. Historic Christianity is sheer moonshine and
un‑Christian muddle‑headedness. For those true
Christians who in every generation live a life contemporaneous with
that of Christ have nothing whatsoever to do with Christians of the
preceding generation, but all the more with their contemporary,
Christ. His life here on earth attends every generation, and every
generation severally, as Sacred History; his life on earth is
eternal contemporaneousness. For this reason all learned lecturing
about Christianity, which has its haunt and hiding‑place in
the assumption that Christianity is something which belongs to the
past and to the 1800 years of history, this lecturing is the most
unChristian of heresies, as every one would readily recognize if he
but tried to imagine the generation contemporeanous with Christ
as lecturing!
No, we must ever keep in mind that every generation (of the
faithful) is contemporaneous with him.</p>
<p id="vi-p181">
  If you cannot master yourself so as
to make yourself contemporaneous with him and thus become a
Christian; or if he cannot, as your contemporary, draw you to
himself, then you will never be a Christian. You may, if you please
honor, praise, thank, and with all worldly goods reward him who
deludes you into thinking that you are a Christian;
nevertheless he
deceives you. You may count yourself happy that you were not
contemporaneous with one who dared to assert this; or you may be
exasperated to madness by the torment, like that of the
gadfly,<note place="foot" id="vi-p181.1" n="116">Cf. Plato's "Apologia" where Socrates is made to say of himself that he is inflicted on the Athenians like a gadfly on a horse, in order to keep them awake.</note>  

of being
contemporaneous with one who says this to your face: in the first
case you are deceived, whereas in the second you have least had a
chance to hear the truth.</p>
<p id="vi-p182">
   If you cannot bear this
contemporaneousness, and not bear to see this sight in
reality if
you cannot prevail upon yourself to go out into the
street and
behold! it is God in that loathsome procession; and if you cannot
bear to think that this will be your condition also if you kneel
and worship him: then you are not essentially a Christian. In that
case, what you will have to do is to admit the fact unconditionally
to yourself, so that you may, above all, preserve humility, and
fear and trembling, when contemplating what it means really to be a
Christian. For that way you must proceed, in order to learn and to
practice how to flee to grace, so that you will not seek it in
vain; but do not, for God's sake, go to any one to be "consoled."
For to be sure it is written: "blessed are the eyes which see the
things that ye see,"<note place="foot" id="vi-p182.1" n="117"><scripRef id="vi-p182.2" passage="Luke 10,23" parsed="|Luke|10|0|0|0;|Luke|23|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10 Bible:Luke.23">Luke 10,23</scripRef>.</note> 

which word the priests
have on the tips of their tongues curiously
enough; at times, perhaps, even to defend a worldly finery which,
if conterrporary with Christ, would be rather
incongruous as
if these words had not been said solely about those contemporaries
of his who believed. If his exaltation had been evident to the eyes
so that every one without any trouble could have beheld it, why
then it would be incorrect to say that Christ abased himself and
assumed the guise of a servant, and it would be superflous to warn
against being offended in him; for why in the world should one take
offense in an exalted one arrayed in glory? And how in the world
will you explain it that Christ fared so ill and that everybody
failed to rush up admiringly to behold what was so plain? Ah no,
"he hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see him, there
is no beauty that we should desire him" (<scripRef id="vi-p182.3" passage="Isaiah 53, 2" parsed="|Isa|53|0|0|0;|Isa|2|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Isa.53 Bible:Isa.2">Isaiah 53, 2</scripRef>*)
[*Kierkegaard's own note.] ; and there was t o all appearances
nothing remarkable about him who in lowly guise, and by performing
signs and wonders, constantly presented the possibility of offense,
who claimed to be God in
lowly guise; which therefore expresses: in the first place, what
God means by compassion, and by one's self needing to be humble and
poor if one wishes to be compassionate; and in the second place,
what God means by the misery of mankind. Which, again, in both
instances is extremely different from what men mean by these things
and which every generation, to the end of time, has to learn over
again from the beginning, and beginning in every respect at the
same point where those who were contemporary with Christ had to
start; that is, to practice these things as contemporaries of
Christ. Human impatience and unruliness is, of course, of no avail
whatsoever. No man will be able to tell you in how far you may
succeed in becoming essentially a Christian. But neither will
anxiety and fear and despair help one. Sincerity toward God is the
first and the last condition, sincerity in confessing to one's self
just where one stands, sincerity before God in ever aiming at one's
task. However slowly one may proceed, and if it be but
crawling one
is, at any rate, in the right position and is not misled and
deceived by the trick of changing the nature of Christ who, instead
of being God, is thereby made to represent that sentimental
compassion which is man's own invention; by which men, instead of
being lifted up to heaven by Christianity, are delayed on their way
and remain human and no more.</p>
<p id="vi-p183"><br /></p>
<p id="vi-p184"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vi-p185">THE MORAL</p>
<p id="vi-p186">
<br /></p>
<p id="vi-p187">
"And what, then, does
all this signify?" It signifies that every one, in silent
inwardness before God, is to feel humility before what it means to
be in the strictest sense a Christian; is to confess sincerely
before God what his position is, so that he may worthily partake of
the grace which is offered to every one who is not perfect, that
is, to every one. And it means no more than that. For the rest let
him attend to his work and find joy in it, let him love his wife,
rejoicing in her, let him raise his children to be a joy to him,
and let him love his fellow‑men and enjoy life. God will
surely let him know if more is demanded of him, and will also help
him to accomplish it; for in the terrifying language of the law
this sounds so terrible because it would seem as if man by his own
strength were to hold fast to Christ, whereas in the language of
love it is Christ that holds fast to him. As was said, then, God
will surely let him know if more is demanded of him. But what is
demanded of every one is that he humble himself in the presence of
God under the demands of ideality. And therefore these demands
should be heard, and heard again and again in all their
absoluteness. To be a Christian has become a matter of no
importance whatever a
mummery, something one is anyway, or something one acquires more
readily than a trick. In very truth, it is high time that the
demands of ideality were heard.</p>
<p id="vi-p188">   "But if being a Christian is
something so terrifying and awesome, how in all the world can a man
get it into his head to wish to accept Christianity?" Very simply
and, if you so wish, quite according to Luther: only the
consciousness of sin, if I may express myself so, can force
one from
the other side, grace exerts the attraction can
force one into this terror. And in the same instant the Christian
ideal is transformed, and is sheer mildness, grace, love, and pity.
Looking at it any other way, however, Christianity is, and shall
ever be, the greatest absurdity, or else the greatest terror.
Approach is had only through the consciousness of sin, and to
desire to enter by any other way amounts to a crime of
lèse‑majesté against Christianity.</p>
<p id="vi-p189">  But sin, or the fact that you and
I, individually, are sinners, has at present either been done away
with, or else the demands have been lowered in an unjustifiable
manner. both in life the
domestic, the civic, as well as the ecclesiastic and
in science which has invented the new doctrine of sin in general.
As an equivalant, one has hit upon the device of helping men into
Christianity, and keeping them in it, by the aid of a knowledge of
world‑historic events, of that mild teaching, the exalted and
profound spirit of it, about Christ as a friend, etc.,
etc. all
of which Luther would have called stuff and nonsense and which is
really blasphemy, aiming as it does at fraternizing impudently with
God and with Christ.</p>
<p id="vi-p190">   Only the consciousness of
being a sinner can inspire one with absolute respect for
Christianity. And just because Christianity demands absolute
respect it must and shall, to any other way of looking at it, seem
absurdity or terror; just because only thereby can the qualitative
and absolute emphasis fall on the fact that it is only the
consciousness of being a sinner which will procure entrance into
it, and at the same time give the vision which, being absolute
respect, enables one to see the mildness and love and compassion of
Christianity.</p>
<p id="vi-p191">  The poor in spirit who acknowledge
themselves to be sinners, they do not need to know the least thing
about the difficulties which appear when one is neither simple nor
humble‑minded. But when this humble consciousness of one's
self, i. e., the individual's, being a sinner is
lacking aye,
even though one possessed all human ingenuity and wisdom, and had
all accomplishments Possible to man: it will profit him little.
Christianity will in the same degree rise terrifying before him and
transform itself into absurdity or terror; until he learns, either
to renounce it, or else, by the help of what is nothing less than
scientific propædeutics, apologetics, etc., that is, through
the torments of a contrite heart, to enter into Christianity by the
narrow path, through the consciousness of sin.</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="The Present Moment" id="vii" prev="vi" next="viii">
<h2 id="vii-p0.1">SELECTIONS FROM</h2>
<h2 id="vii-p0.2">THE PRESENT
MOMENT<note place="foot" id="vii-p0.3" n="118">Selections.</note>  
</h2>
<p id="vii-p1">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p2">
BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION</p>
<p id="vii-p3">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p4">
(No. I, 1)</p>
<p id="vii-p5">
<br /></p>
<p class="First" id="vii-p6">
Plato says somewhere in his "Republic" that things will go well
only when those men shall govern the state who do not desire to
govern. The idea is probably that, assuming the necessary
capability, a man's reluctance to govern affords a good guarantee
that he will govern well and efficiently; whereas a man desirous of
governing may very easily either abuse his power and become a
tyrant, or by his desire to govern be brought into an unforeseen
situation of dependence on the people he is to rule, so that his
government really becomes an illusion.</p>
<p id="vii-p7">   This observation applies also
to other relations where much depends on taking things seriously:
assuming there is ability in a man, it is best that he show
reluctance to meddle with them. To be sure, as the proverb has it:
"where there is a will there is a way"; but true seriousness
appears only when a man fully equal to his task is forced, against
his will, to undertake it against
his will, but fully equal to the task.</p>
<p id="vii-p8">
In this sense I may say of myself that I bear a correct relation to
the task in hand: to work in the present moment; for God knows that
nothing is more distasteful to me.</p>
<p id="vii-p9">
  
Authorship well,
I confess that I find it pleasant; and I may as well admit that I
have dearly loved to write in
the manner, to be sure, which suits me. And what I have loved to do
is precisely the opposite of working in the present moment. What I
have loved is precisely remoteness from the present
moment that
remoteness in which, like a lover, I may dwell on my thoughts and,
like an artist in love with his instrument, entertain myself with
language and lure from it the expressions demanded by my
thoughts ah
blissful entertainment! In an eternity I should not weary of this
occupation.</p>
<p id="vii-p10">
To contend with men well,
I do like it in a certain sense; for I have by nature a temperament
so polemic that I feel in my element only when surrounded by men's
mediocrity and meanness. But only on one condition, viz., that I be
permitted to scorn them in silence and to satisfy the master
passion of my soul: scorn opportunity
for which my career as an author has often enough given me.</p>
<p id="vii-p11">   I am therefore a man of whom
it may be said truthfully that he is not in the least desirous to
work in the present moment very
probably I have been called to do so for that very reason.</p>
<p id="vii-p12">
Now that I am to work in the present moment I must, alas! say
farewell to thee, beloved remoteness, where there was no necessity
to hurry, but always plenty of time, where I could wait for hours
and days and weeks for the proper expression to occur to me;
whereas now I must break with all such regards of tender love
.   <note place="foot" id="vii-p12.1" n="119">The following sentence is not clear in the original.</note>  
And
now that I am to work in the present moment I find that there will
be not a few persons whom I must oblige by paying my respects to
all the insignificant things which mediocrity with great
self‑importance will lecture about; to all the nonsense which
mediocre people, by interpreting into my words their own
mediocrity, will find in all I shall write; and to all the lies and
calumnies to which a man is exposed against whom those two great
powers in society: envy and stupidity, must of necessity
conspire.</p>
<p id="vii-p13">   Why, then, do I wish to work
in the present moment? Because I should forever repent of not
having done so, and forever repent of having been discouraged by
the consideration that the generation now living would find a
representation of the essential truths of Christianity interesting
and curious reading, at most; having accomplished which they will
calmly remain where they are; that is, in the illusion that they
are Christians and that the clergy's toying with Christianity
really is Christianity.</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p14">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p15">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p16">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p17">A
PANEGYRIC ON THE HUMAN RACE</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p18">
OR</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p19">
PROOF THAT THE NEW TESTAMENT IS NO LONGER TRUE</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p20">(No. 11, 5)</p>
<p id="vii-p21">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p22">
In the New Testament the Savior of the World, our Lord Jesus
Christ, represents the matter in this way: "Strait is the gate, and
narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that
find it.<note place="foot" id="vii-p22.1" n="120"><scripRef id="vii-p22.2" passage="Matthew 7, 14" parsed="|Matt|7|0|0|0;|Matt|14|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Matt.7 Bible:Matt.14">Matthew 7, 14</scripRef>.</note>  
"</p>
<p id="vii-p23"><br /></p>
<p id="vii-p24">
now,
however, just to confine ourselves to Denmark, the way is as broad
as a road can possibly be; in fact, the broadest in Denmark, for it
is the road we all travel. At the same time it is in all respects a
comfortable way, and the gate as wide as it is possible for a gate
to be; for certainly a gate cannot be wider than to let all men
pass through <i>en
masse:</i></p>
<p id="vii-p25">   therefore, the New Testament
is no longer true '.</p>
<p id="vii-p26">   All credit is due to the
human race! For thou, oh Savior of the World, thou didst entertain
too low an estimate of the human race, so that thou didst not
foresee the exalted plan which, in its perfectibility, it may reach
by steadily continued endeavor!</p>
<p id="vii-p27">
To such an extent, then, is the New Testament no longer true: the
way is the broadest possible, the gate the widest possible, and we
are all Christians. In fact, I may venture still
further I
am enthusiastic about it, for you see I am writing a panegyric on
the human race I
venture to assert that the average Jew living among us is, to a
certain degree, a Christian just as well as we others: to such an
extent are we all Christians, and to such an extent is the New
Testament no longer true.</p>
<p id="vii-p28">   And, since the point is to
find out all which may be adduced to extol the human race, one
ought while
having a care not to mention anything which is not true one
ought to watch that nothing, nothing escape one which in this
connection may serve as a proof or even as a suggestion. So I
venture still further without
wishing to be too positive, as I lack definite information on this
subject and would like, therefore, to refer the matter to
specialists in this line to decide :
whether there are not present among our domestic animals, or at any
rate the nobler ones, such as the horse, the dog, and the cow,
indications of a Christian spirit. It is not improbable. Consider
what it means to live in a Christian state, among a Christian
people, where everything is Christian and everybody is a Christian
and where one, turn where one may, sees nothing but Christians and
Christianity, truth and martyrs for the truth it
is not at all unlikely that this exerts an influence on the nobler
domestic animals and thereby again which
is ever of the utmost importance, according to the opinion both of
veterinarians and of clergymen an
influence on their progeny. We have all read of Jacob's ruse, how
in order to obtain spotted lambs he put party‑colored twigs
into the watering troughs, so that the ewes saw nothing but mottled
things and then brought forth spotted lambs. Hence it is not
improbable although
I do not wish to be positive, since I do not belong to the
profession, but would rather have this passed on by a committee
composed of both clergymen and veterinarians I
say, it is not improbable that the result will finally be that the
domestic animals living in a Christian nation will produce a
Christian progeny. The thought almost takes away my breath. To be
sure, in that case the New Testament will to the greatest possible
extent have ceased to be true.</p>
<p id="vii-p29">
Ah, Thou Savior of the World, when Thou saidst with great concern:
"When the Son of man cometh, shall He find Faith on the
earth?<note place="foot" id="vii-p29.1" n="121"><scripRef id="vii-p29.2" passage="Luke 18, 8" parsed="|Luke|18|0|0|0;|Luke|8|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Luke.18 Bible:Luke.8">Luke 18, 8</scripRef>.</note>  
 and
when Thou didst bow Thy head in death, then didst Thou least of all
think that Thy expectations were to be exceeded to such a degree,
and that the human race would in such a pretty and touching way
render the New Testament no longer true, and Thy significance
almost doubtful; for such nice creatures certainly also needed a
Savior!<note place="foot" id="vii-p29.3" n="122">The last line of this piece of bloody irony is not clear in the original (S. V. XIII, 128). It will make better sense if one substitutes "da" for the first "de."</note>  
</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p30">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p31">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p32">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p33">
IF WE ARE REALLY CHRISTIANS THEN
WHAT IS GOD?</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p34">
(No. 11, 8)</p>
<p id="vii-p35">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p36">
If it is not so that
all we mean by being "Christians" is a delusion that
all this machinery, with a State Church and thousands of
spiritual‑worldly councillors of chancery, etc., is a
stupendous delusion which will not be of the least help to us in
the life everlasting but, on the contrary, will be turned into an
accusation against us if
this is not so; for if it is, then let us, for the sake of life
everlasting, get rid of it, the sooner the better </p>
<p id="vii-p37">   if it is not so, and if what
we understand by being a Christian really is to be a Christian:
then what is God in Heaven?</p>
<p id="vii-p38">
   He is the most
ridiculous being that ever existed, His Word is the most ridiculous
book which has ever appeared; for to move heaven and earth, as He
does in his Word, and to threaten with hell and everlasting
damnation in
order to obtain as His result what we understand by being
Christians (and our assumption was that we  a r e  true Christians) well,
now, has anything so ridiculous ever been seen before? Imagine that
a fellow with a loaded pistol in his hand held up a person and said
to him, "I shall shoot you"; or imagine, what is still more
terrible, that he said, "I shall seize you and torture you to death
in the most horrible manner, if" now
watch, here's the point "if
you do not render your life here on earth as profitable and as
enjoyable as you can": would not that be utterly ridiculous? For to
obtain that effect it certainly is not necessary to threaten one
with a loaded pistol and the most painful torture; in fact, it is
possible that neither the loaded pistol nor the most painful
torture would be able to deter him from making his life as
comfortable as he can. And the same is true when, by fear of
eternal punishment (terrible threat!), and by hope of eternal
salvation, He wishes to bring about‑well, to make us what we
a r e (for what we call Christian is, as we have seen, really being
Christian), to make us well,
to make us what we are; that is, make men live as they please; for
to abstain from committing crimes is nothing but common
prudence!</p>
<p id="vii-p39">   The most terrible blasphemy
is the one of which "Christianity" is guilty, which is, to
transform the God of the Spirit into a
ridiculous piece of nonsense. And the stupidest kind of worship,
more stupid than any idolatry ever was among the heathen, and more
stupid than to worship as a god some stone, or an ox, or an
insect more
stupid than anything, is to adore as god a
fool!</p>
<p id="vii-p40"><br /></p>
<p id="vii-p41"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p42">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p43">
DIAGNOSIS</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p44">
(No. IV, 1)</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p45">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p46">1.</p>
<p id="vii-p47">
Every physician will admit that by the correct diagnosis of a
malady more than half the fight against it is won; also, that if a
correct diagnosis has not been made, all skill and all care and
attention will be of little avail.</p>
<p id="vii-p48">
   The same is true
with regard to religion.</p>
<p id="vii-p49">   We are agreed to let stand
the claim that in "Christendom" we are Christians, every one of us;
and then we have laid and, perhaps, will lay, emphasis now on this,
now on that, side of the teachings of the Scriptures.</p>
<p id="vii-p50">
   But the truth is:
we are not only not Christians no,
we are not even the heathen to whom Christianity may be taught
without misgivings, and what is worse, we are prevented through a
delusion, an enormous delusion (viz. "Christendom," the Christian
state, a Christian country, a Christian world) from becoming
Christians.</p>
<p id="vii-p51">   And then the suggestion is
made to one to continue untouched and unchanged this delusion and,
rather, to furnish a new presentation of the teachings of
Christ.<note place="foot" id="vii-p51.1" n="123">This suggestion had actually been made to Kierkegaard in the course of his attacks on Martensen.</note>  
</p>
<p id="vii-p52">   This has been suggested; and,
in a certain sense, it is altogether fitting. Just because one
lives in a delusion (not to speak even of being interested in
keeping up the delusion), one is bound to desire that which will
feed the malady a
common enough observation this the
sick man desiring precisely those things which feed his malady.</p>
<p id="vii-p53">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p54">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p55">2.</p>
<p id="vii-p56">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p57">
Imagine a hospital. The patients are dying off like so many flies.
The methods are changed, now this way, now that: of no avail! What
may be the cause? The cause lies in the building the
whole building is tainted. The patients are put down as having
died, the one of this, the other of that, disease, but strictly
speaking this is not true; for they all died from the taint which
is in the building.</p>
<p id="vii-p58">   The same is true in religion.
That religious conditions are wretched, and that people in respect
of their religion are in a wretched condition, nothing is more
certain. So one ventures the opinion that if we could but have a
new hymn‑book; and another, if we could but have a new
service‑book; and a third, if we could but have a musical
service, etc., etc. that
then matters would mend.</p>
<p id="vii-p59">
   In vain; for the
fault lies in the edifice. The whole ramshackle pile of a State
Church which has not been aired, spiritually speaking, in times out
of mind the
air in it has developed a taint. And therefore religious life has
become diseased or has died out; alas, for precisely that which the
worldly mind regards as health is, in a Christian sense,
disease just
as, vice versa, that which is healthy in a Christian sense, is
regarded as diseased from a worldly point of view.</p>
<p id="vii-p60">   Then let the ramshackle pile
collapse, get it out of the way, close all these shops and booths
which are the only ones which are excepted from the strict Sunday
regulations, forbid this official double‑dealing, put them
out of commission, and provide for them, for all these quacks: even
though it is true that the royally attested physician is the
acceptable one, and he who is not so attested is a quack: in
Christianity it is just the reverse; that is, the royally attested
teacher is the quack, is a quack by the very fact that he is
royally attested and
let us worship God again in simplicity, instead of making a fool of
him in splendid edifices; let us be in earnest again and stop
playing; for a Christianity preached by royal officials who are
payed and insured by the state and who use the police against the
others, such a Christianity bears about the same relation to the
Christianity of the New Testament as swimming with the help of a
cork‑belt or a bladder does to swimming alone‑it is
mere play.</p>
<p id="vii-p61">   Yes, let that come about.
What Christianity needs is not the stifling protection of the
state ah
no, it needs fresh air, it needs persecution and the
protection of God. The state does only mischief in averting
persecution and surely is not the medium through which God's
protection can be conducted. Whatever you do, save Christianity
from the state, for with its protection it overlies Christianity
like a fat woman overlying her child with her carcass, beside
teaching Christianity the most abominable bad habits as,
e.g., to use the police force and to call that Christianity.</p>
<p id="vii-p62">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p63">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p64">3.</p>
<p id="vii-p65">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p66">   A person is growing thinner
every day and is wasting away. What may the trouble be? For surely
he is not suffering want! "No, sure enough," says the doctor, "that
is not the trouble. The trouble is precisely with his eating, with
his eating in season and out of season, with his eating without
being hungry, with his using stimulants to produce an appetite, and
in this manner ruining his digestion, so that he is wasting away as
if he suffered want." The same is true in religion. The worst of
all is to satisfy a craving which has not as yet made its
appearance, to anticipate it, or worse
still by
the help of stimulants to produce something which looks like a
craving, which then is promptly satisfied. Ah, the shame of it! And
yet this is exactly what is being done in religion where people are
in very truth fooled out of the real meaning of life and helped to
waste their lives. That is in very truth, the effect of this whole
machinery of a state church and a thousand royal officials who,
under the pretense of being spiritual guides for the people, trick
them out of the highest thing in life, which is, the solicitude
about one's self, and the need which would surely of itself find a
teacher or minister after its own mind; whereas now the
need and
it is just the growth of this sense of a need which gives life its
highest significance whereas
now this need does not arise at all, but on the contrary is
forestalled by being satisfied long before it can arise. And this
is the way, they claim, this is the way to continue the work which
the Savior of Mankind did begin stunting
the human race as they do. And why is this so? Because there happen
to be a thousand and one royal officials who have to support their
families by furnishing what is called spiritual
guidance for men's souls!</p>
<p id="vii-p67">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p68">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p69">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p70">
THE CHRISTIANITY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT;</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p71">
THE CHRIS­TANITY OF "CHRISTENDOM"</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p72">(No. V, 4)</p>
<p id="vii-p73">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p74">
The intention of Christianity was: to change everything.</p>
<p id="vii-p75">    The result, the Christianity of
"Christendom" is: everything, literally everything, remained as it
had been, with just the difference that to everything was affixed
the attribute "Christian" and
for the rest (strike up, fiddlers!) we live in
Heathendom so
merrily, so merrily the dance goes around; or, rather, we live in a
Heathendom made more refined by the help of Life Everlasting and by
help of the thought that, after all, it is all Christian!</p>
<p id="vii-p76">
Try it, point to what you will, and you shall see that I am right
in my assertion.</p>
<p id="vii-p77">   If what Christianity demanded
was chastity, then away with brothels! But the change is that the
brothels have remained just as they did in Heathendom, and the
proportion of prostitutes remained the same, too; to be sure, they
became "Christian" brothels! A brothel‑keeper is a
"Christian" brothel‑keeper, he is a Christian as well as we
others. Exclude him from church membership? "Why, for goodness
sake," the clergyman will say, "what would things come to if we
excluded a single paying member?" The brothel‑keeper dies and
gets a funeral oration with a panegyric in proportion to the amount
he pays. And after having earned his money in a manner which, from
a Christian point of view, is as filthy and base as can be (for,
from a Christian point of view it would be more honorable if he had
stolen it) the clergyman returns home. He is in a hurry, for he is
to go to church in order to deliver an oration or, as Bishop
Martensen would say, "bear witness."</p>
<p id="vii-p78">   But if Christianity demanded
honesty and uprightness, and doing away with this swindle, the
change which really came about was this: the swindling has remained
just as in Heathendom, "every one (every Christian) is a thief in
his own line"; only, the swindling has taken on the predicate
"Christian." So we now have "Christian" swindling and
the "clergyman" bestows his blessing on this Christian community,
this Christian state, in which one cheats just as one did in
Heathendom, at the same time that one pays the "clergyman," that
is, the biggest swindler of hem all, and thus cheats one's self
into Christianity.</p>
<p id="vii-p79">   And if Christianity demanded
seriousness in life and doing away with the praise and approbation
of vanity why,
everything has remained as before, with just this diference that it
has assumed the predicate "Christian." Thus the trumpery business
with decorations, titles, and rank, etc. has become
Christian and
the clergyman (that most decent of all indecencies, that most
ridiculous of all ridiclous hodge‑podges), he is as pleased
as Punch to be decorated himself with
the "cross." The cross? Why, certainly; for in the Christianity of
"Christendom" has not the cross become something like a child's
hobby‑horse and tin‑trumpet?</p>
<p id="vii-p80">
   And so with
everything. There is implanted in man no stronger instinct, after
that of self‑preservation, than the instinct of reproduction;
for which reason Christianity seeks to reduce its strength,
teaching that it is better not to marry; "but if they cannot
contain, let them marry; for it better to marry than to burn." But
in Christendom the propogation of the race has become the serious
business of life and of Christianity; and the clergyman that
quintessence of nonsense done up in long clothes the
clergyman, the teacher of Christianity, of the Christianity of the
New Testament, has his income adjusted to the fact that the human
race is active in propagating the race, and gets a little something
for each child!</p>
<p id="vii-p81">   As I said, look about you and
you will find that everything is as I told you: the change from
Heathendom consists in everything remaining unchanged but having
assumed the predicate "Christian."</p>
<p id="vii-p82"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p83">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p84">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p85">
MODERN RELIGIOUS GUARANTEES</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p86">
(No. V, 8)</p>
<p id="vii-p87">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p88">
In times long, long past people looked at matters in this fashion:
it was demanded of him who would be a teacher of Christianity that
his life should be a guarantee for the teachings he proclaimed.</p>
<p id="vii-p89">   This idea was abandoned long
ago, the world having become wiser and more serious. It has learned
to set little store by these illiberal and sickly notions of
personal responsibility, having learned to look for purely
objective ends. The demand is made now of the teacher that his life
should guarantee that what he has to say is entertaining and
dramatic stuff, amusing, and purely objective.</p>
<p id="vii-p90">Some
examples. Suppose you wanted to speak about Christianity, that is,
the Christianity of the New Testament which expresses preference
for the single state and
suppose you yourself are unmarried: why, my dear man! you ought not
to speak on this subject, because your congregation might think
that you meant what you said and become disquieted, or it might
feel insulted that you thus, very improperly, mixed in your own
affairs. No, dear sir, it will take a little longer before you are
entitled to speak seriously on this matter so as really to satisfy
the congregation. Wait till you have buried your first wife and are
well along with your second wife: then it will be time for you to
stand before your congregation to preach and "bear witness" that
Christianity prefers the single state then
you will satisfy them altogether; for your life will furnish the
guarantee that it is all tomfoolery and great fun, or that what you
say is interesting.
Indeed, how interesting! For just as, to make it interesting, the
husband must be unfaithful to his wife and the wife to her husband,
likewise truth becomes interesting, intensely interesting, only
when one lets one's self be carried away by one's feelings, be
fascinated by them but
of course does the precise opposite and thus in an underhand manner
is re‑assured in persisting in one's ways.</p>
<p id="vii-p91">   Do you wish to speak about
Christianity's teaching contempt for titles and decorations and all
the follies of fame and
should you happen to be neither a person of rank nor anything of
the kind: Why, my dear sir! You ought not to undertake to speak on
this subject. Why, your congregation might think you were in
earnest, or feel insulted by such a lack of tact in forcing your
personality on their notice. No, indeed, you ought to wait till you
have a lot of decorations, the more the merrier; you ought to wait
till you drag along with a rigmarole of titles, so many that you
hardly know yourself what you are called: then is your time come to
stand before your congregation to preach and "bear
witness" and
you will undoubtedly satisfy them; for your life will then furnish
the guarantee that it is but a dramatic divertisement, an
interesting forenoon entertainment.</p>
<p id="vii-p92">Is it your
intention to preach Christianity in poverty, and insist that only
thus it is taught in truth and
you happen to be very literally a poor devil: Why, my dear sir! You
ought not to venture to speak on this subject. Why, your
congregation might think you were in earnest, they might become
afraid and lose their good humor, and they might be very
unpleasantly affected by thus having poverty thrust in on them. No
indeed, first get yourself some fat living, and when you have had
it so long that your promotion to one still fatter is to be
expected: then is your time come to stand before your congregation
and to preach and "bear witness" and
you will satisfy them; for your life then furnishes the guarantee
that it is just a joke, such as serious men like to indulge in, now
and then, in theatre or in church, as a sort of recreation to
gather new strength for making money.</p>
<p id="vii-p93">
And that is the way they honor God in the churches! And then these
silk and velvet orators weep, they sob, their voice is drowned in
tears! Ah, if it be true (and it is, since God Himself has said
so), if it be true that He counts the tears of the afflicted and
puts them into His bottle,<note place="foot" id="vii-p93.1" n="124">Allusion to <scripRef id="vii-p93.2" passage="Psalm 56, 9" parsed="|Ps|56|0|0|0;|Ps|9|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Ps.56 Bible:Ps.9">Psalm 56, 9</scripRef>; also to a passage in one of Bishop Mynster's sermons (S. V.).</note>  

then woe to these orators, if God has counted also their Sunday
tears and put them into His bottle! And woe to us all if God really
heeds these Sunday tears especially
those of the speakers, but also those of the listeners! For a
Sunday preacher would indeed be right if he said and,
oratorically, this would have a splendid effect, especially if
accompanied by his own tears and suppressed sobs he
would be right if he said to his audience: I shall count all the
futile tears you have shed in church, and with them I shall step
accusingly before you on the Day of Judgment indeed,
he is right; only please not to forget that, after all, the
speaker's own dramatic tears are by far more dreadful than the
thoughtless tears of his listeners.</p>
<p id="vii-p94"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p95">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p96">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p97">
WHAT SAYS THE FIRE‑MARSHAL</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p98">
(No. VI, 5)</p>
<p id="vii-p99">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p100">
That a man who in some fashion or other has what one calls a
"cause," something he seriously purposes to accomplish and
there are other persons who make it their business to counteract,
and antagonize, and hurt him that
he must take measures against these his enemies, this will be
evident to every one. But that there is a well‑intentioned
kindness by far more dangerous, perhaps, and one that seems
calculated to prevent the serious accomplishment of his mission,
this will not at once be clear to every one.</p>
<p id="vii-p101">   When a person suddenly falls
ill, kindly‑intentioned folk will straightway rush to his
help, and one will suggest this, another that and
if all those about him had a chance to have their way it would
certainly result in the sick man's death; seeing that even one
person's well‑meaning advice may be dangerous enough. And
even if nothing is done, and the advice of neither the assembled
and well‑meaning crowd nor of any one person is taken, yet
their busy and flurried presence may be harmful, nevertheless,
inasmuch as they are in the way of the physician.</p>
<p id="vii-p102">
   Likewise at a
fire. Scarcely has the alarm of fire been sounded but a great crowd
of people will rush to the spot, good and kindly and sympathetic,
helpful people, the one with a bucket, the other with a basin,
still another with a hand‑squirt all
of them goodly, kindly, sympathetic, helpful persons who want to do
all they can to extinguish the fire.</p>
<p id="vii-p103">   But what says the
fire‑marshal? The fire‑marshal, he says well,
at other times the fire‑marshal is a very pleasnt and refined
man; but at a fire he does use coarse lanuage he
says or, rather, he roars out: "Oh, go to hell with your buckets
and hand‑squirts!" And then, when these well‑meaning
people feel insulted, perhaps, and think it highly improper to be
treated in this fashion, and would like at least to be treated
respectfully what
says the fire-marshal then? Well, at other times the
fire‑marshal is a very pleasant and refined gentleman who
will show every one the respect due him; but at a fire he is
somewhat different he
says: "Where the devil is the police?" And when the policemen
arrive he says to them: "Rid me of these damn people with their
buckets and hand‑squirts; and if they won't clear out, then
club them on their heads, so that we get rid of them
and
 can
get at the fire!"</p>
<p id="vii-p104">
   That is to say,
in the case of a fire the whole way of looking at things is a very
different one from that of quiet every‑day life. The
qualities which in quiet every‑day life render one
well‑liked, viz., good‑nature and kindly well
m­eaning, all this is repaid, in the case of a fire, with
abusive language and finally with a crack on the head.</p>
<p id="vii-p105">
    And this is just as it should be.
For a conflagration is a serious business; and wherever we have to
deal with a se­rious business this well‑intentioned
kindness won't do at all. Indeed, any serious business enforces a
very different mode of behavior which is: either‑or. Either
you are able really to do something, and really have something to
do here; or else, if that be not the case, then the serious
business demands precisely that you take yourself away. And if you
will not comprehend that, the fire‑marshal proposes to have
the police hammer it into your head; which may do you a great deal
of good, as it may help to render you a little serious, as is
befitting so serious a business as a fire.</p>
<p id="vii-p106">   But what is true in the case
of a fire holds true also in matters of the spirit. Wherever a
cause is to be promoted, or an enterprise to be seen through, or an
idea to be served ‑you may be sure that when he who really is
the man to do it, the right man, he who, in a higher sense has and
ought to have command, he who is in earnest and can make the matter
the serious business it really is you
may be sure that when he arrives at the spot, so to say, he will
find there a nice company of easy‑going, addle‑pated
twaddlers who, pretending to be engaged in serious business, dabble
in wishing to serve this cause, to further that enterprise, to
promote that idea a
company of addle‑pated fools who will of course consider
one's unwillingness to make common cause with them (which
unwillingness precisely proves one's seriousness) and
then enters into the process of history. But unfortunately this
process (how ridiculous a supposition!) consists not in purifying
the idea, which never is purer than at its inception; oh no, it
consists in gradually and increasingly botching, bungling, and
making a mess of, the idea, in using up the idea, in indeed,
is not this the opposite of filtering? adding
the impurer elements which it originally lacked: until at last, by
the enthusiastic and mutually appreciative efforts of successive
generations, the idea has absolutely disappeared and the very
opposite of the original idea is now called the idea, which is then
asserted to have arisen through a historic process by which the
idea is purified and elevated.</p>
<p id="vii-p107">   When finally the right man
arrives, he who in the highest sense is called to the
task for
all we know, chosen early and slowly educated for this
business which
is, to throw light on the matter, to set fire to this jungle which
is a refuge for all kinds of foolish talk and delusions and
rascally tricks when
he comes he will always find a nice company of addle‑pated
fools and twaddlers who, surely enough, do think that, perhaps,
things are wrong and that "something must be done about it"; or who
have taken the position, and talk a good deal about it, that it is
preposterous to be self‑important and talk about it. Now if
he, the right man, is deceived but a single instant and thinks that
it is this company who are to aid him, then it is clear he is not
the right man. If he is deceived and has dealings with that
company, then providence will at once take its hand off him, as not
fit. But the right man will see at a glance, as the
fire‑marshal does, that the crowd who in the kindness of
their hearts mean to help in extinguishing a conflagration by
buckets and hand‑squirts the
right man will see that the same crowd who here, when there is a
question, not of extinguishing a fire, but rather of setting
something on fire, will in the kindness of their hearts wish to
help with a sulphur match <i>sans</i> fire or a wet
spill he
will see that this crowd must be got rid of, that he must not have
the least thing in common with this crowd, that he will be obliged
to use the coarsest possible language against them he
who perhaps at other times is anything but coarse. But the thing of
supreme importance is to be rid of the crowd; for the effect of the
crowd is to hamstring the whole cause by robbing it of its
seriousness while heartfelt sympathy is pretended. Of course the
crowd will then rage against him, against his incredible arrogance
and so forth. This ought not to count with him, whether for or
against, In all truly serious business the law of :
either or,
prevails. Either, I am the man whose serious business this is, I am
called to it, and am willing to take a decisive risk; or, if this
be not the case, then the seriousness of the business demands that
I do not meddle with it at all. Nothing is more detestable and
mean, and nothing discloses and effects a deeper demoralization,
than this lackadaisical wishing to enter "somewhat" into matters
which demand an <i>aut aut,
aut Caesar aut nihil</i>,<note place="foot" id="vii-p107.1" n="125">Either or; either Cæsar or nothing (Cæsare Borgia's slogan).</note>  

this taking just a little part in something, to be so wretchedly
lukewarm, to twaddle about the business, and then by twaddling to
usurp through a lie the attitude of being better than they who wish
not to have anything whatever to do with the whole
business to
usurp through a lie the attitude of being better, and thus to
render doubly difficult the task of him whose business it really
is.</p>
<p id="vii-p108">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p109">
<i><br /></i></p>
<p id="vii-p110">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p111">
CONFIRMATION AND WEDDING CEREMONY;</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p112">
CHRISTIAN COMEDY OR
WORSE STILL</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p113">
(No. VII, 6)</p>
<p id="vii-p114">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p115">
   Pricks of
conscience (insofar as they may be assumed in this
connection) pricks
of conscience seem to have convinced "Christendom" that it was,
after all, going too far, and that it would not do this
beastly farce of becoming a Christian by the simple method of
letting a royal official give the infant a sprinkle of water over
his head, which is the occasion for a family gathering with a
banquet to celebrate the day.</p>
<p id="vii-p116">
This won't do, was the opinion of "Christendom," for the
opportunity ought to be given the baptized individual to indorse
personally his baptismal vows.</p>
<p id="vii-p117">   For this purpose the rite of
confirmation was devised a
splendid invention, providing we take two things for granted: in
the first place, that the idea of divine worship is to make God
ridiculous; and in the second place, that its purpose is to give
occasion for family celebrations, parties, a jolly evening, a
banquet which is different from other banquets in that
it ah,
exquisite in
that it, "at the same time" has a religious significance.</p>
<p id="vii-p118">
"The tender child," thus Christendom, "can of course not assume the
baptismal vow personally, for this requires a real personality."
Consequently there was chosen is
this a stroke of genius or just ingenious? there
was chosen the age of 14 or 15 years, the schoolboy age. This real
personality that
is all right, if you please he
is equal to the task of personally assuming responsibility for the
baptismal vow taken in behalf of the infant.</p>
<p id="vii-p119">   A boy of fifteen! Now, if it
were a matter of 10 dollars, his father would probably say: "No, my
boy, I can't let you have all that money, you are still too green
for that." But for a matter touching his eternal salvation where
the point is to assume, with all the seriousness one's personality
is capable of, and as a personality, responsibility for what
certainly could not in any profounder sense be called
serious when
a child is bound by a vow: for that the age of fifteen is
excellently fitting.</p>
<p id="vii-p120">
Excellently fitting. Oh yes if, as was remarked above, divine
worship serves a double purpose, viz., to render God ridiculous in
a very adroit manner if
you may call it so and
to furnish the occasion for graceful family celebrations. In that
case it is indeed excellently fitting, as everything is on that
occasion; as is, likewise, the customary bibllical lesson for the
day which, you will remember, begins: "Then the same day at
evening, when the doors were shut"<note place="foot" id="vii-p120.1" n="126"><scripRef id="vii-p120.2" passage="John 20, 19" parsed="|John|20|0|0|0;|John|19|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:John.20 Bible:John.19">John 20, 19</scripRef> "Where the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you."</note>  
 and
this text is particularly suitable to a Confirmation Sunday. One is
truly edified when hearing a clergyrnan read it on a Confirmation
Sunday.</p>
<p id="vii-p121">   As is easily perceived, then,
the confirmation ceremony is still worse nonsense than the baptism
of infants, just because confirmation pretends to supply what was
lacking at the baptism, viz., a real personality capable of making
a vow in a matter touching one's eternal salvation. In another
sense this nonsense is, to be sure, ingenious enough, as serving
the self‑interest of the clergy who understand full well that
if the decision concerning a man's religion were reserved until he
had reached maturity (which were the only Christian, as well as the
only sensible, way), many might possess character enough to refuse
to become Christians by an act of hypocrisy. For this reason "the
clergyman" seeks to gain control of men in their infancy and their
youth, so that they would find it diffictilt, upon reaching a more
mature age, to break a "sacred" vow dating, to he sure, from one's
boyhood, but which would, perhaps, still be a serious enough matter
to many a one. Hence the clergy take hold of the infants, the
youths, and receive sacred promises and the like from them. And
what that man of God, "the clergyman," does, why, that is, of
course, a God‑fearing action. Else, analogy might, perhaps,
demand that to the ordinance forbidding the sale of spirituous
liquors to minors there should be added one forbidding the taking
of solemn vows concerning one's eternal salvation from boys;
which ordinance would look toward preventing the clergy, who
themselves are perjurors, from working in
order to salve their own consciences from
working toward the greatest conceivable shipwreck which is, to make
all society become perjured; for letting boys of fifteen bind
themselves in a matter touching their eternal salvation is a
measure which is precisely calculated to have that effect.</p>
<p id="vii-p122">   The ceremony of confirmation
is, then, in itself a worse piece of nonsense than the baptism of
infants. But in order to miss nothing which might, in any
conceivable manner, contribute to render confirmation the exact
opposite of what it purports to be, this ceremony has been
connected with all manner of worldly and civil affairs, so that the
significance of confirmation lies chiefly in the certificate
of character which the minister makes out; without which
certificate no boy or girl will be able to get on at all in
life.<note place="foot" id="vii-p122.1" n="127">This was, until very recently, the universal rule in Protestant Scandinavia and Germany.</note>  
</p>
<p id="vii-p123">
   The whole thing
is a comedy; and perhaps something might be done to add greater
dramatic illusion to the solemnity; as e.g., passing an ordinance
forbidding any one to be confirmed in a jacket, as not becoming a
real personality; likewise, a regulation ordering male candidates
for confirmation to wear a beard during the ceremony, which beard
might, of course, be taken off for the family celebration in the
evening, or be used in fun and merrymaking.</p>
<p id="vii-p124">
I am not now attacking the community they
are led astray; they cannot be blamed for liking this kind of
divine worship, seeing that they are left to their own devices and
deceived by their clergyman who has sworn an oath on the New
Testament. But woe to these clergymen, woe to them, these sworn
liars! I know there have been mockers at religion, and I know how
much they would have given to be able to do what I do; but they
were not able to, because God was not with them. It is different
with me. Originally as well disposed to the clergy as few have
been, and very ready to help them, I have undergone a change of
heart in the opposite direction, owing to their attitude. And the
Almighty is with me, and He knows how the whip is to be handled so
that the blows take effect, and that laughter must be that whip,
handled with fear and trembling therefor
am I used.</p>
<p id="vii-p125"><br /></p>
<p id="vii-p126">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p127">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p128">
THE WEDDING CEREMONY</p>
<p id="vii-p129">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p130">
True worship of God consists, very simply, in doing God's will.</p>
<p id="vii-p131">
But that kind of divine service has never suited man's wishes. That
which occupies man's mind at all times, that which gives rise to
science<note place="foot" id="vii-p131.1" n="128">It is to be borne in mind that Danish <i>videnskab</i>, like German <i>Wissenschaft</i>, embraces the humanities and theology as well.</note>  

and makes science spread into many, many sciences, and into
interminable detail; that of which, and for which, thousands of
clergymen and professors live, that which forms the contents of the
history of Christendom, by the study of which the clergyman or the
professor to be is trained is
to get a different kind of worship arranged, the main point of
which would be: to do what one pleases, but in such fashion that
the name of God and the invocation of God be brought into
connection therewith; by which arrangement man imagines himself
safeguarded against ungodliness whereas,
alas! just this procedure is the most unqualified ungodliness.</p>
<p id="vii-p132">   For example: a man has the
intention to make his living by killing people. To be sure, he
knows from the Word of God that this is not permissible, that God's
will is: thou shalt not kill! "All right," thinks he, "but this way
of serving God will not serve my purposes at
the same time I don't care to be among the ungodly ones, either."
So what does he do but get hold of some priest who in God's name
blesses his dagger. Ah, <i>c'est
bien autre chose!</i></p>
<p id="vii-p133">In the Scriptures
the single state is recommended. "But," says man, "that kind of
worship really does not serve my purposes and
surely, you can't say that I am an ungodly person; and such an
important step as marriage (which <i>nota bene</i> God counsels against,
His opinion being, in fact, that the important thing is not to take
"this important step") should
I take such an important step without making sure of God's
blessing?" Bravo! "That is what we have the priest for, that man of
God, he will bestow the blessing on this important step <i>(nota bene</i> concerning which the
most important thing was not to take it at all) and so it will be
acceptable to God" and
so I have my own way; and my own way becomes the way of worshipping
God; and the priest has his own way and gets his ten dollars, which
are not earned in such a simple way as, for example, by brushing
people's clothes, or by serving out beer and brandy oh
no! Was he not active on behalf of God? To earn ten dollars in this
fashion is: serving God. Bravissimo!</p>
<p id="vii-p134">
What depth of nonsense and abomination! If something is not
pleasing to God, does it perhaps become pleasing to Him by
having why,
that is aggravating the mischief! by
having a clergyman along who why,
that is aggravating the mischief still more! who
gets ten dollars for declaring it pleasant to God?</p>
<p id="vii-p135">   Let us consider the marriage
ceremony still further! In His word God recommends the single
state. Now suppose two young people want to be married. To be sure,
they ought certainly to know, themselves, what Christianity is,
seeing that they call themselves Christians; but never mind that
now. The lovers then apply to the
clergyman; and the clergyman is, we remember, pledged by his oath
on the New Testament (which <i>nota bene</i> recommends the single
state). Now, if he is not a liar and a perjuror who makes his money
in the very shabbiest fashion, he would be bound to take the
following course: at most he could, with human compassion for this
human condition of being in love, say to them: "Dear children, I am
the one to whom you should turn last of all; to turn to me on this
occasion is, indeed, as strange as if one should turn to the chief
of police and ask him how best to steal. My duty is to employ all
means to restrain you. At most, I can say, with the words of the
Apostle (for they are not the words of Our Lord), I can say to you:
well, if it must be, and you cannot contain, why, then find some
way of getting together; for 'it is better to marry than to
burn.'<note place="foot" id="vii-p135.1" n="129"><scripRef id="vii-p135.2" passage="I Cor. 7,9" parsed="|1Cor|7|0|0|0;|1Cor|9|0|0|0" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.7 Bible:1Cor.9">I Cor. 7,9</scripRef>.</note>  

I know very well that you will be likely to shudder when I speak in
this manner about what you think is the most beautiful thing in
life; but I must do my duty. And it is therefore I said to you that
to me you should have applied last of all."</p>
<p id="vii-p136">
 
It is different in "Christendom." The priest oh
dear me! if
there are but two to clap together, why certainly! Indeed, if the
persons concerned turned to a midwife they would perhaps not be as
sure to be confirmed in their conviction that their intention is
pleasing to God.  
 </p>
<p id="vii-p137">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p138">
      And so they are married; i.e.
man has his own way, and this having his own way strategically
serves at the same time as divine worship, God's name being
connected with it. They are married by
the priest! Ah, for having the clergyman along is just what
reassures one the
man who, to be sure, is pledged by his oath to preach the New
Testament, but who for a consideration of ten dollars is the
pleasantest company one could desire that
man he guarantees that this act is true worship of God.</p>
<p id="vii-p139">
In a Christian sense one ought to say: precisely the fact that a
priest is in it, precisely that is the worst thing about the whole
business. If you want to be married you ought, rather, be married
by a smith; for then if
it were admissible to speak in this fashion then
it might possibly escape God's attention; whereas, if there is a
priest along it can certainly not escape His attention. Precisely
the fact of the clergyman's being there makes it as criminal an
affair as possible call
to mind what was said to a man who in a storm at sea invoked the
gods: "By all means do not let the gods notice that you are
aboard!" Thus one might say here also: By all means try to avoid
calling in a priest. The others, the smith and the lovers, have not
pledged themselves by an oath on the New Testament, so matters are
not as bad if
it be admissible to speak in this fashion as
when the priest assists with his holy
presence.</p>
<p id="vii-p140"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p141">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p142">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p143">AN ETERNITY TO
REPENT IN!</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p144">
(No. VIII, 3)</p>
<p id="vii-p145">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p146">
Let me relate a story. I did not read it in a book of devotion but
in what is generally called light reading. Yet I do not hesitate to
make use of it, and indicate its source only lest any one be
disturbed if he should happen to be acquainted with it, or find out
at some later time where it is from lest
he be disturbed that I had been silent about this.</p>
<p id="vii-p147">   Once upon a time there lived
somewhere in the East a poor old couple. Utterly poor they were,
and anxiety about the future naturally grew when they thought of
old age approaching. They did not, indeed, constantly assail heaven
with their prayers, they were too God‑fearing to do that; but
still they were ever praying to God for help.</p>
<p id="vii-p148">      Then one morning it happened
that the old woman found an exceeding large jewel on the
hearth‑stone, which she forthwith showed to her husband, who
recognized its value and easily perceived that now their poverty
was at an end.</p>
<p id="vii-p149">
What a bright future for these old people, and what gladness! But
frugal and pious as they were they decided not to sell the jewel
just yet, since they had enough wherewithal to live still one more
day. But on the morrow they would sell it, and then a new life was
to begin for them.</p>
<p id="vii-p150">
In the following night the woman dreamed that she was transported
to Paradise. An angel showed her about the splendors which only an
Oriental imagination can devise. He showed her a hall in which
there stood long rows of arm‑chairs gemmed all over with
precious stones and pearls. These, so the angel explained, were the
seats of the pious. And last of all he pointed out to her the one
destined for herself. When regarding it more closely she discovered
that a very large jewel was lacking in the back of the chair, and
she asked the angel how that might be. He ah,
watch now, for here is the point! The angel answered: "That was the
jewel which you found on your hearth‑stone. It was given you
ahead of time, and it cannot be put in again."</p>
<p id="vii-p151">      In the morning the woman told
her husband this dream. And she was of the opinion that it was
better, perhaps, to endure in poverty the few years still left to
them to live, rather than to be without that jewel in all eternity.
And her pious husband was of the same opinion.</p>
<p id="vii-p152">
      So in the evening they laid
the jewel on the hearth‑stone and prayed to God to take it
away again. And next morning it had disappeared, for certain; and
what had become of it the old folks well knew: it was in its right
place again.</p>
<p id="vii-p153">  </p>
<p id="vii-p154">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p155">   This man was in truth happily
married, and his wife a sensible woman. But even if it were true,
as is maintained so often, that it is men's wives who cause them to
lose sight of eternal values: even if all men remained unmarried,
there would still be in every one of us an impulse, more ingenious
and more pressing and more unremitting than a woman, which will
cause him to use a wrong measure and to think a couple of years, or
ten years, or forty years, so enormous a length of time that even
eternity were quite brief in comparison; instead of these years
being asnothing when compared with the infinite duration of
eternity.</p>
<p id="vii-p156">      Therefore, heed this well!
You may by worldly wisdom escape perhaps what it has pleased God to
unite with the condition of one's being a Christian, that is,
sufferings and tribulations; you may, and to your own destruction,
by cleverly avoiding the difficulties, perhaps, gain what God has
forever made incompatible with being a Christian, that is, the
enjoyment of pleasures and all earthly goods; you may, fooled by
your own worldly wisdom, perhaps, finally perish altogether, in the
illusion that you are on the right way because you have gained
happiness in this world: and then you
will have an eternity to repent in! An eternity to repent in; to
repent that you did not employ your time in doing what might be
remembered in all eternity; that is, in truth to love God, with the
consequence that you suffer the persecution of men in this
life.</p>
<p id="vii-p157">
Therefore, do not deceive yourself, and of all deceivers fear most
yourself! Even if it were possible for one, with regard to
eternity, to take something ahead of time, you would still deceive
yourself just by having something ahead of time and
then an eternity to repent in!</p>
<p id="vii-p158"><br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p159">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p160">
<br /></p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p161">A
DOSE OF DISGUST WITH LIFE</p>
<p class="Centered" id="vii-p162">
(No. IX, 3)</p>
<p id="vii-p163">
<br /></p>
<p id="vii-p164">
Just as man as
is natural desires
that which tends to nourish and revive his love of life, likewise
he who wishes to live with eternity in mind needs a constant dose
of disgust with life lest he become foolishly enamored of this
world and, still more, in order that he may learn thoroughly to be
disgusted and bored and sickened with the folly and lies of this
wretched world. Here is a dose of it:</p>
<p id="vii-p165">
 
God Incarnate is betrayed, mocked, deserted by absolutely all men;
not a single one, literally not a single one, remains faithful to
him and
then, afterwards, afterwards, oh
yes, afterwards, there were millions of men who on their knees made
pilgrimage to the places where many hundred years ago His feet,
perhaps, trod the ground; afterwards, afterwards oh
yes, afterwards, millions worshipped a splinter of the cross on
which He was crucified!</p>
<p id="vii-p166">  And so it
was always when men were contemporary with the great; but
afterwards, afterwards oh
yes, afterwards!</p>
<p id="vii-p167">
     
Must one then not loathe being human?</p>
<p id="vii-p168">And
again, must one not loathe being human? For these millions who on
their knees made pilgrimage to His grave, this throng of people
which no power on earth was able to overcome: but one thing were
necessary, Christ's return and
all these millions would quickly regain their feet to run their
way, so that the whole throng were as if blown away; or would, in a
mass, and erect enough, rush upon Christ in order to kill him.</p>
<p id="vii-p169">That
which Christ and the Apostles and every martyr desires, and desires
as the only thing: that we should follow in His footsteps, just
that is the thing which mankind does not like or does not find
pleasure in.</p>
<p id="vii-p170">
   
No, take away the danger so
that it is but play, and then the batallions of the human race will
(ah, disgusting!) will perform astonishing feats in aping Him; and
then instead of an imitation of Christ we get (ah, disgusting!), we
get that sacred buffoonery under
guidance and command (ah, disgusting!) of sworn clergymen who do
service as sergeants, lieutenants, etc. ordained
men who therefore have the Holy Spirit's special assistance in this
serious business.</p>


		</div1>

    <!-- added reason="AutoIndexing" -->
    <div1 title="Indexes" id="viii" prev="vii" next="viii.i">
      <h1 id="viii-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

      <div2 title="Index of Scripture References" id="viii.i" prev="viii" next="toc">
        <h2 id="viii.i-p0.1">Index of Scripture References</h2>
        <insertIndex type="scripRef" id="viii.i-p0.2" />

<!-- added reason="insertIndex" class="scripRef" -->
<!-- Start of automatically inserted scripRef index -->
<div class="Index">
<p class="bbook">Genesis</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=0#v-p54.2">1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=0#v-p54.6">3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=0#v-p49.2">11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=0#v-p49.2">20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=0#v-p12.2">22</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=0#v-p54.2">22</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Gen&amp;scrCh=22&amp;scrV=0#v-p54.6">22</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">2 Kings</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Kgs&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=0#iv-p16.2">1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=2Kgs&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=0#iv-p16.2">20</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Job</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Job&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#iv-p153.2">2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Job&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=0#iv-p153.2">10</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Psalms</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=0#vii-p93.2">9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Ps&amp;scrCh=56&amp;scrV=0#vii-p93.2">56</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Ecclesiastes</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=0#iv-p70.2">3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Eccl&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=0#iv-p70.2">7</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Isaiah</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=0#iv-p16.3">1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#vi-p182.3">2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=0#v-p61.9">18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=26&amp;scrV=0#v-p61.9">26</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=38&amp;scrV=0#iv-p16.3">38</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Isa&amp;scrCh=53&amp;scrV=0#vi-p182.3">53</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Haggai</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Hag&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=0#iv-p23.2">1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Hag&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=0#iv-p23.2">6</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Matthew</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=0#v-p61.7">3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=5&amp;scrV=0#v-p61.4">5</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=6&amp;scrV=0#vi-p102.2">6</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=0#vii-p22.2">7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=0#vi-p125.2">9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=0#v-p61.7">9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=0#vi-p102.2">11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=13&amp;scrV=0#iv-p44.2">13</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=0#vi-p126.2">14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=0#vii-p22.2">14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=15&amp;scrV=0#vi-p15.2">15</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=0#v-p63.2">16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=16&amp;scrV=0#vi-p125.2">16</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=17&amp;scrV=0#vi-p126.2">17</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=19&amp;scrV=0#v-p63.2">19</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=0#vi-p15.2">20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=0#vi-p119.2">20</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=27&amp;scrV=0#vi-p119.2">27</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=31&amp;scrV=0#iv-p44.2">31</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Matt&amp;scrCh=45&amp;scrV=0#v-p61.4">45</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Luke</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=8&amp;scrV=0#vii-p29.2">8</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=0#vi-p182.2">10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=11&amp;scrV=0#vi-p34.2">11</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=14&amp;scrV=0#vi-p34.2">14</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=0#vi-p110.2">18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=18&amp;scrV=0#vii-p29.2">18</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=23&amp;scrV=0#vi-p138.2">23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=23&amp;scrV=0#vi-p182.2">23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=23&amp;scrV=0#v-p54.4">23</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=30&amp;scrV=0#v-p54.4">30</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=32&amp;scrV=0#vi-p110.2">32</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Luke&amp;scrCh=35&amp;scrV=0#vi-p138.2">35</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">John</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=1&amp;scrV=0#vi-p132.2">1</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#vi-p138.4">2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=3&amp;scrV=0#vi-p132.2">3</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=4&amp;scrV=0#vi-p138.4">4</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=19&amp;scrV=0#vii-p120.2">19</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=John&amp;scrCh=20&amp;scrV=0#vii-p120.2">20</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">Acts</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=Acts&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#vi-p124.2">2</a>  
 </p>
<p class="bbook">1 Corinthians</p>
 <p class="bref">
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=2&amp;scrV=0#vi-p130.2">2</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=7&amp;scrV=0#vii-p135.2">7</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=0#vi-p130.2">9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=9&amp;scrV=0#vii-p135.2">9</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=10&amp;scrV=0#v-p76.2">10</a>  
 <a class="TOC" href="?scrBook=1Cor&amp;scrCh=12&amp;scrV=0#v-p76.2">12</a>  
 </p>
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