天下书楼
会员中心 我的书架

chapter 25

(快捷键←)[上一章]  [回目录]  [下一章](快捷键→)

music and tragic myth are equally the expression of the dionysian capacity of a people, and are inseparable from each other. both originate in an ultra apollonian sphere of art; both transfigure a region in the delightful accords of which all dissonance, just like the terrible picture of the world, dies charmingly away; both play with the sting of displeasure, trusting to their most potent magic;[pg 186] both justify thereby the existence even of the "worst world." here the dionysian, as compared with the apollonian, exhibits itself as the eternal and original artistic force, which in general calls into existence the entire world of phenomena: in the midst of which a new transfiguring appearance becomes necessary, in order to keep alive the animated world of individuation. if we could conceive an incarnation of dissonance—and what is man but that?—then, to be able to live this dissonance would require a glorious illusion which would spread a veil of beauty over its peculiar nature. this is the true function of apollo as deity of art: in whose name we comprise all the countless manifestations of the fair realm of illusion, which each moment render life in general worth living and make one impatient for the experience of the next moment.

at the same time, just as much of this basis of all existence—the dionysian substratum of the world—is allowed to enter into the consciousness of human beings, as can be surmounted again by the apollonian transfiguring power, so that these two art-impulses are constrained to develop their powers in strictly mutual proportion, according to the law of eternal justice. when the dionysian powers rise with such vehemence as we experience at present, there can be no doubt that, veiled in a cloud, apollo has already descended to us; whose grandest beautifying influences a coming generation will perhaps behold.

that this effect is necessary, however, each one would most surely perceive by intuition, if once he found himself carried back—even in a dream—into[pg 187] an old-hellenic existence. in walking under high ionic colonnades, looking upwards to a horizon defined by clear and noble lines, with reflections of his transfigured form by his side in shining marble, and around him solemnly marching or quietly moving men, with harmoniously sounding voices and rhythmical pantomime, would he not in the presence of this perpetual influx of beauty have to raise his hand to apollo and exclaim: "blessed race of hellenes! how great dionysus must be among you, when the delian god deems such charms necessary to cure you of your dithyrambic madness!"—to one in this frame of mind, however, an aged athenian, looking up to him with the sublime eye of ?schylus, might answer: "say also this, thou curious stranger: what sufferings this people must have undergone, in order to be able to become thus beautiful! but now follow me to a tragic play, and sacrifice with me in the temple of both the deities!"

先看到这(加入书签) | 推荐本书 | 打开书架 | 返回首页 | 返回书页 | 错误报告 | 返回顶部