Es lockt mich das süße Getön Allmächtig zu ewigen Höhn. The sweet notes are calling me Up to the eternal heights with an almighty power D 828 Die junge Nonne Du winkst mir von ferne, Du ewiges Licht! You beckon to me from the distance, You eternal light: D 842 Totengräbers Heimwehe
A young nun hears a storm outside and tries to resolve the storm within her soul. She hears the bells in the tower and feels that she is being summoned ‘to the eternal heights’. A man who has spent his lifetime digging graves stands on the brink of his own grave and realises that there is noone left who can lay him in it. As he looks down into the darkness he sees ‘an eternal light’ beckoning to him.
Both of these characters were created by the same poet, Jacob Nicolaus Craigher de Jachelutta, in 1822. They both represent characters who are ‘on the brink’, who have reached their limits. Having reached the end they (or their poet) invoke the concept of a non-ending eternity.
ROSENCRANTZ: Eternity is a terrible thought. I mean, where's it going to end? . . . GUILDENSTERN: Death followed by eternity. . . the worst of both worlds. It is a terrible thought. Thomas Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead 1966
Does the concept of ‘eternity’ add anything positive to the negative terms ‘im-mortality’ (not dying) and ‘in-finity’ (not ending) or is it essentially synonymous with them as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern seem to think?
Kosegarten made an explicit distinction between ‘infinity’ and ‘eternity’ at the end of ‘Idens Nachtgesang’ (D 227):
Freund, ich bin dein, nicht für den Sand der Zeiten, Der schnellversiegend Chronos Uhr entfleußt, Dein für den Riesenstrom heilvoller Ewigkeiten, Der aus des Ew'gen Urne scheußt. Friend, I am yours, not just for the sands of time Which so quickly run out as they flow through Chronos's timepiece, I am yours for the gigantic river of healthy eternities Which pour out of the urn of the Eternal One.
Here Ida commits herself to the beloved not for an endless or infinite extent of time but in a dimension (a giant stream of eternities) that is beyond time altogether. The same poet makes a similar distinction at the end of ‘Huldigung’ (D 240):
Trennung ist das Los der Zeit! Ewig einigt Ewigkeit! Separation is a feature of time! Eternity unites for ever!
Eternity is therefore not the same concept as ‘infinity’. Nor is it identical with ‘immortality’, as is made clear in Schubart’s ‘Grablied auf einen Soldat’ (D 454). Here the poet observes a military funeral and makes no bones about the deadness of the bones. The soldier fought bravely but is now dead. Whatever is on offer to him in another dimension is not exactly immortality, which would be a cruel denial of the reality of death. The eternity that is offered is in no sense a continuation of the mortal life that has now ended:
Wie du gelebt, so starbst auch du! Schloss'st deine Augen freudig zu Und dachtest: "Aus ist nun der Streit Und Kampf der Zeit, Jezt kommt die ew'ge Seligkeit." Just as you lived, you died in the same way! You closed your eyes joyfully And thought, "The struggle is now over, Time's battle; Now comes eternal blessedness."
Goethe attempted to address the questions raised by the desire to acknowledge human limitations alongside the urge to invoke ‘eternity’ in ‘Grenzen der Menscheit’ (D 716).
Was unterscheidet Götter von Menschen? Dass viele Wellen Vor jenen wandeln, Ein ewiger Strom: Uns hebt die Welle, Verschlingt die Welle, Und wir versinken. Ein kleiner Ring Begränzt unser Leben, Und viele Geschlechter Reihen sich dauernd An ihres Daseins Unendliche Kette. What distinguishes Gods from humans? The fact that many waves Pass by them, An eternal stream: However, the wave lifts us up, The wave engulfs us And we sink. A small ring Borders our life, And many generations Succeed each other unceasingly With their being making up An unending chain.
Yes, we are limited. Of course, we are mortal. However, these very constraints themselves offer a chance of fulfilment and completion. If we see our own life as ‘a small ring’, it itself contains an image of the eternal cycle of reality. A ‘mere’ human life is an essential link in ‘the great chain of being’.
In ‘An Schwager Chronos’ (D 369) Goethe portrays a long coach journey as a metaphor of human life. The traveller sets out full of determination and adventure but the day will end with a headlong plunge into darkness (with the gates of the coaching inn representing the entrance to Hell or the underworld). The highpoint of the journey is the uphill striving in the late morning, when the traveller is granted intimations of eternal life. Here again, there is no contradiction between human boundedness and access to eternity.
Weit, hoch, herrlich der Blick Rings ins Leben hinein, Vom Gebirg zum Gebirg Schwebet der ewige Geist, Ewigen Lebens ahndevoll. Wide, high, majestic is the view All around taking us into life, From mountain range to mountain range The eternal spirit hovers, Full of intimations of eternal life.
☙
Descendant of:
TIME RELIGIONTexts with this theme:
- Elysium, D 51, D 53, D 54, D 57, D 58, D 60, D 584 (Friedrich von Schiller)
- Nachtgesang (O! gib vom weichen Pfühle), D 119 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Liebesrausch, D 164, D 179 (Theodor Körner)
- Amphiaraos, D 166 (Theodor Körner)
- Vergebliche Liebe, D 177 (Joseph Karl Bernard)
- Kolmas Klage, D 217 (James Macpherson (Ossian) and Anonymous / Unknown writer)
- Der Fischer, D 225 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Idens Nachtgesang, D 227 (Ludwig Theobul Kosegarten)
- Hymne an den Unendlichen, D 232 (Friedrich von Schiller)
- Huldigung, D 240 (Ludwig Theobul Kosegarten)
- Heidenröslein, D 257 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Bundeslied, D 258 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Wonne der Wehmut, D 260 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- An Sie, D 288 (Friedrich Gottlob Klopstock)
- Dem Unendlichen, D 291 (Friedrich Gottlob Klopstock)
- Lambertine, D 301 (Joseph Alois Gleich)
- Die Sterne (Wie wohl ist mir im Dunkeln), D 313 (Ludwig Theobul Kosegarten)
- An Rosa II, D 316 (Ludwig Theobul Kosegarten)
- Schwangesang, D 318 (Ludwig Theobul Kosegarten)
- Klage der Ceres, D 323 (Friedrich von Schiller)
- Fischerlied, D 351, D 364, D 562 (Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis)
- Idens Schwanenlied, D 317 (Ludwig Theobul Kosegarten)
- An Schwager Kronos, D 369 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- An die Natur, D 372 (Friedrich Leopold Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg)
- Die vier Weltalter, D 391 (Friedrich von Schiller)
- Pflügerlied, D 392 (Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis)
- Lebens-Melodien, D 395 (August Wilhelm Schlegel)
- Entzückung, D 413 (Friedrich von Matthisson)
- Lied in der Abwesenheit, D 416 (Friedrich Leopold Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg)
- Widerhall, D 428 (Friedrich von Matthisson)
- Seligkeit, D 433 (Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty)
- Das große Halleluja, D 442 (Friedrich Gottlob Klopstock)
- Grablied auf einen Soldaten, D 454 (Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart)
- An Chloen (Bei der Liebe reinsten Flammen), D 462 (Johann Georg Jacobi)
- Pflicht und Liebe, D 467 (Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter)
- Mignon (So lasst mich scheinen), D 469, D 727, D 877/3 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Lied (Ferne von der großen Stadt), D 483 (Caroline Pichler)
- Gesang der Geister über den Wassern, D 484, D 538, D 705, D 714 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Bei dem Grabe meines Vaters, D 496 (Matthias Claudius)
- Lebenslied, D 508, D Anh. I, 23 (Friedrich von Matthisson)
- Nur wer die Liebe kennt, D 513A (Friedrich Ludwig Zacharias Werner)
- Ganymed, D 544 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Evangelium Johannis 6, Vers 55-58, D 607 (Aegidius Albertinus)
- Blondel zu Marien, D 626 (Josephine von Münk-Holzmeister)
- Viel tausend Sterne prangen, D 642 (August Gottlob Eberhard)
- Abendbilder, D 650 (Johann Peter Silbert)
- Marie (Geistliches Lied), D 658 (Friedrich Leopold von Hardenberg (Novalis))
- Hymne I, D 659 (Friedrich Leopold von Hardenberg (Novalis))
- Hymne II (Geistliches Lied), D 660 (Friedrich Leopold von Hardenberg (Novalis))
- Hymne III (Geistliches Lied), D 661 (Friedrich Leopold von Hardenberg (Novalis))
- Hymne IV (Geistliches Lied), D 662 (Friedrich Leopold von Hardenberg (Novalis))
- Beim Winde, D 669 (Johann Baptist Mayrhofer)
- Die Sternennächte, D 670 (Johann Baptist Mayrhofer)
- Prometheus, D 674 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Die Sterne (Du staunest, o Mensch), D 684 (Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel)
- Nachthymne, D 687 (Friedrich Leopold von Hardenberg (Novalis))
- Der 23. Psalm, D 706 (Moses Mendelssohn)
- Im Walde (Waldesnacht), D 708 (Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel)
- Im Gegenwärtigen Vergangenes, D 710 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Lob der Tränen, D 711 (August Wilhelm Schlegel)
- Versunken, D 715 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Grenzen der Menschheit, D 716 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- Heliopolis I, D 753 (Johann Baptist Mayrhofer)
- Ungeduld, D 795/7 (Wilhelm Müller)
- Hirtenchor, D 797/7 (Wilhelmine Christiane von Chézy)
- Ewige Liebe, D 825A (Ernst Konrad Friedrich Schulze)
- Die junge Nonne, D 828 (Jacob Nicolaus Craigher de Jachelutta)
- Totengräbers Heimwehe, D 842 (Jacob Nicolaus Craigher de Jachelutta)
- Die Allmacht, D 852, D 875A (Johann Ladislaus Pyrker von Felső-Eör )
- Fülle der Liebe, D 854 (Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel)
- An mein Herz, D 860 (Ernst Konrad Friedrich Schulze)
- Hippolits Lied, D 890 (Friedrich von Gerstenbergk and Johanna Henriette Schopenhauer)
- Gott, der Weltschöpfer, D 986 (Johann Peter Uz)