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Delphi Collected Works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Illustrated) ( PDFDrive )

succedaneum that will move us, will delight us. The intention of the author is of

less  importance  to  us  than  our  own  enjoyment,  and  we  need  a  charm  that  is

adapted for us.”



CHAPTER VII.

One evening a dispute arose among our friends about the novel and the drama,

and  which  of  them  deserved  the  preference.  Serlo  said  it  was  a  fruitless  and

misunderstood  debate:  both  might  be  superior  in  their  kinds,  only  each  must

keep within the limits proper to it.

“About  their  limits  and  their  kinds,”  said  Wilhelm,  “I  confess  myself  not

altogether clear.”

“Who is so?” said the other; “and yet perhaps it were worth while to come a

little closer to the business.”

They conversed together long upon the matter; and, in fine, the following was

nearly the result of their discussion: —

“In the novel as well as in the drama, it is human nature and human action that

we  see.  The  difference  between  these  sorts  of  fiction  lies  not  merely  in  their

outward form, — not merely in the circumstance that the personages of the one

are  made  to  speak,  while  those  of  the  other  have  commonly  their  history

narrated. Unfortunately many dramas are but novels, which proceed by dialogue;

and it would not be impossible to write a drama in the shape of letters.

“But, in the novel, it is chiefly sentiments and events that are exhibited; in the

drama,  it  is  characters  and  deeds.  The  novel  must  go  slowly  forward;  and  the

sentiments of the hero, by some means or another, must restrain the tendency of

the whole to unfold itself and to conclude. The drama, on the other hand, must

hasten: and the character of the hero must press forward to the end: it does not

restrain, but is restrained. The novel-hero must be suffering, — at least he must

not  in  a  high  degree  be  active:  in  the  dramatic  one,  we  look  for  activity  and

deeds. Grandison, Clarissa, Pamela, the Vicar of Wakefield, Tom Jones himself,

are,  if  not  suffering,  at  least  retarding,  personages;  and  the  incidents  are  all  in

some sort modelled by their sentiments. In the drama the hero models nothing by

himself; all things withstand him; and he clears and casts away the hinderances

from off his path, or else sinks under them.”

Our friends were also of opinion, that, in the novel, some degree of scope may

be  allowed  to  Chance,  but  that  it  must  always  be  led  and  guided  by  the

sentiments of  the personages:  on  the other  hand, that  Fate,  which, by  means  of

outward,  unconnected  circumstances,  carries  forward  men,  without  their  own

concurrence, to an unforeseen catastrophe, can have place only in the drama; that

Chance may produce pathetic situations, but never tragic ones; Fate, on the other

hand, ought always to be terrible, — and is, in the highest sense, tragic, when it




brings  into  a  ruinous  concatenation  the  guilty  man,  and  the  guiltless  that  was

unconcerned with him.

These  considerations  led  them  back  to  the  play  of  “Hamlet,”  and  the

peculiarities  of  its  composition.  The  hero  in  this  case,  it  was  observed,  is

endowed more properly with sentiments than with a character: it is events alone

that push him on, and accordingly the play has in some measure the expansion of

a novel. But as it is Fate that draws the plan, as the story issues from a deed of

terror, and the hero is continually driven forward to a deed of terror, the work is

tragic in the highest sense, and admits of no other than a tragic end.

The  book-rehearsal  was  now  to  take  place,  to  which  Wilhelm  had  looked

forward as to a festival. Having previously collated all the parts, no obstacle on

this  side  could  oppose  him.  The  whole  of  the  actors  were  acquainted  with  the

piece: he endeavored to impress their minds with the importance of these book-

rehearsals. “As you require,” said he, “of every musical performer, that he shall,

in  some  degree,  be  able  to  play  from  the  book:  so  every  actor,  every  educated

man,  should  train  himself  to  recite  from  the  book,  to  catch  immediately  the

character  of  any  drama,  any  poem,  any  tale  he  may  be  reading,  and  exhibit  it

with  grace  and  readiness.  No  committing  to  memory  will  be  of  service,  if  the

actor  have  not,  in  the  first  place,  penetrated  into  the  sense  and  spirit  of  his

author: the mere letter will avail him nothing.”

Serlo declared that he would overlook all subsequent rehearsals, — the last

rehearsal itself, — if justice were but done to these rehearsals from the book.

“For, commonly,” said he, “there is nothing more amusing than to hear an actor

speak of study: it is as if freemasons were to talk of building.”

The  rehearsal  passed  according  to  their  wishes;  and  we  may  assert,  that  the

fame and favor which our company acquired afterwards had their foundation in

these few but well-spent hours.

“You did right, my friend,” said Serlo, when they were alone, “in speaking to

our fellow-laborers so earnestly; and yet I am afraid they will scarcely fulfil your

wishes.”


“How so?” asked Wilhelm.

“I have noticed,” answered Serlo, “that, as easily as you may set in motion the

imaginations of men, gladly as they listen to your tales and fictions, it is yet very

seldom  that  you  find  among  them  any  touch  of  an  imagination  you  can  call

productive.  In  actors  this  remark  is  strikingly  exemplified.  Any  one  of  them  is

well  content  to  undertake  a  beautiful,  praiseworthy,  brilliant  part;  and  seldom

will any one of them do more than self-complacently transport himself into his

hero’s  place,  without  in  the  smallest  troubling  his  head  whether  other  people

view him so or not. But to seize with vivacity what the author’s feeling was in



writing; what portion of your individual qualities you must cast off, in order to

do justice to a part; how, by your own conviction that you are become another

man,  you  may  carry  with  you  the  convictions  of  the  audience;  how,  by  the

inward  truth  of  your  conceptive  power,  you  can  change  these  boards  into  a

temple, this pasteboard into woods, — to seize and execute all this, is given to

very  few.  That  internal  strength  of  soul,  by  which  alone  deception  can  be

brought about; that lying truth, without which nothing will affect us rightly, —

have, by most men, never even been imagined.

“Let us not, then, press too hard for spirit and feeling in our friends. The surest

way  is  first  coolly  to  instruct  them  in  the  sense  and  letter  of  the  play,    —    if

possible,  to  open  their  understandings.  Whoever  has  the  talent  will  then,  of  his

own  accord,  eagerly  adopt  the  spirited  feeling  and  manner  of  expression;  and

those who have it not will at least be prevented from acting or reciting altogether

falsely. And among actors, as indeed in all cases, there is no worse arrangement

than for any one to make pretensions to the spirit of a thing, while the sense and

letter of it are not ready and clear to him.”





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