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Goethe’s Prometheus & the Heretical Legacy of the Enlightenment

January 4, 2013

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe stands as a unique figure in modern intellectual thought.  A polymath in the true sense of the word, it is difficult to ascribe to him one conclusive description without leaving out an array of equally apt titles.  His was an artist, a poet, a politician, an amateur scientist, and by proxy of the collective legacy of all of the above, a philosopher.  Equally remarkable is the man’s place in history as a thinker heralded by both the materialist strands of the Enlightenment tradition, and the counter-Enlightenment Romantics of the 19th Century.  By all accounts, the fact that Goethe personally embodied the various opposing ideals of his times probably went a long way in fostering such a bemusing repute amongst his admirers.

He was (by 18th Century standards) a religious heretic, meandering between pantheism, Abrahamic estoricism, and a great deal of what would now be called classic humanism.  Yet, although his spiritual beliefs were heterodox, his politically leanings rested largely within the  conservative tradition, always viewing the revolutionary efforts of his days with a high degree of suspicion, and a consistent aloofness.  Regardless of where the man’s personal leanings stood on an issue, it is undeniable that Goethe’s widespread appeal to such varying audiences stems from his foresight in capturing the mood of the era he was living in for the sake of aesthetic posterity, and the intellectual benefit of the generations molded by the developments of said era.

As mentioned, Goethe himself held to rather undefinable religious positions throughout his active life.  Nevertheless, he had no difficulty in identifying the ideological struggle between traditional religious structure and the emergence of various heretical ideals that have come to symbolize the Enlightenment for many modern observers.  Published in 1789 (just as the Bastille was about to fall in France), “Prometheus” stands as a poetic allegory to the spiritual transition/tension sweeping through religious and politically revolutionary circles throughout Europe.

Conspicuously composed as a diatribe by the rebellious deity Prometheus against an uncharacteristically impotent Zeus (i.e. God), the work begins by declaring the sky Creator’s feebleness in comparison to the earth-dwelling Prometheus.

Now you must leave alone
My Earth for Me,
And my hut, which you did not build,
And my hearth,
The glowing whereof
You envy me.

The divergence from Greek mythology here is of no small significance.  Goethe’s Prometheus is not the tortured deity of antiquity, but a stand-in for the Enlightened spirit of mankind.  During this era the intellectual and technological advances were often seen as either moving away from Divine interpretations, or standing in outright opposition to religious orthodoxy (though it should be noted that many of the figures of the time did draw on their firm religious convictions as inspiration for their work, albeit usually more from a spiritually individualistic, rather than a strictly traditionalist perspective).  Like Enlightened man, Prometheus reclaims the title of Creator away from Zeus (“Now you must leave alone My Earth for Me”–note the capitalization of Me, apropos to the Western custom of using He when referencing the Almighty), and affirms his position as the keeper of his house (“my hut, which you did not build…”).  Furthermore, he accuses the God of envy against the dominance he–Prometheus (i.e. mankind)–has secured for himself on Earth, in direct contrast to the traditional Abrahamic position that man is granted dominion on Earth by God.

I know of nothing poorer
Under the sun, than you, you Gods!
Your majesty
Is barely nourished
By sacrificial offerings
And prayerful exhalations,
And should starve
Were children and beggars not
Fools full of Hope.

Goethe is illustrating the popular sentiment amongst the irreligious sects of his days, comparing the growing turn away from the Divine as a starvation of the gods, except for “children and beggars” still foolish enough to turn to prayer in time of need.  The allusion here is twofold; firstly, it draws on the growing Enlightenment critique that supernatural matters are too childish and superstitious for those with intellectual depth to concern themselves with.  Secondly, it implies how Gods, exhibiting a constant demand for worship and sacrifice from on above, are therefore the more dependent entities in comparison to Prometheus (i.e. man), since their relevance rests on recognition from the earth-dwelling mortals.

Should I honour you? Why?
Have you softened the sufferings,
Ever, of the burdened?
Have you stilled the tears,
Ever, of the anguished?
Was I not forged as a Man
By almighty Time
And eternal Fate,
My masters and thine?

The misotheistic aspersions as the start of the quote are a rhetorical framing of the fatalistic powerlessness endemic to existence; in which the concept of omnipotence is rendered incoherent, as gods and men are left equally susceptible to the entropy of time and fate (referred to as masters of both the Divine and the mortal).  However, despite the recognition of cosmic fatalism, the tone of Goethe’s poem elicits a staunch resolve to stand high in defiance to the harsh realities of life:

Do you somehow imagine
That I should hate Life,
Flee to the desert,
Because not every
Flowering dream should bloom?

With these lines, the prose is drawing on the mindset that harsh reality is preferable to wishful thinking, and that one’s life is better spent creating order out of the inevitable destitute amongst us.  This is a reflection of the optimism that surrounded the mood of the Enlightenment, where the leading belief among prominent thinkers was how man had reached the time to cast off the restrictive practices of old, that he can revere himself through investigation of the natural world, and use his knowledge to create a better world in life, rather than praying for one to come hereafter (whether or not in hindsight the terrors of the later French Revolution serve as a testament against this Enlightenment era notion is another matter altogether).

Prometheus finishes his monologue by affirming the greater spirit of man, to not deny his greater and (one would presume) earthly faculties, but above all else to not look towards the heavens on which to bestow one’s reverence.  In short, it proclaims man as the heir to the counter-Divine legacy of Prometheus:

Here I sit, I form humans
After my own image;
A race, to be like me,
To sorrow, to weep,
To enjoy and delight itself,
And to heed you not at all -
Like me!

It ought to be remembered that Goethe is simply putting into prose a dramatized sentiment that captures one facet of the era he lived in, and it would be a mistake to conflate the poet’s personal convictions with those found throughout “Prometheus.”  The Enlightenment was a time of great progress in human understanding, but it also stood as a transitional phase where revolutionary ideals threatened to collide (and, indeed, did collide) with traditional austerity.  Goethe’s role as both a participant, detractor, and historian of the era survives as an invaluable transcription of an intellectual tradition all of us in the modern world have inherited (for better or worse).

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5 Comments
  1. Reblogged this on monadsamadhi and commented:
    I love this article because the fact that Prometheus questions God and his strength and who is to say that God is who he says he is? What if…there is another…

  2. Let me start by saying that by reading Prometheus it seems to me Goethe himself is such a mythical character, thus his monologue is in itself his cry for shying away from conventional beliefs in God, Gods and Goddesses. This is prominently expressed in this line;
    “Now you must leave alone
    My Earth for Me,”
    It is understandable considering the period in history Goethe writes such lines; he would feel a sense of outrage and downright revolt against the ever present and crushing force of the conventional belief in Deities. He seems to elevate human kind (or at least parts of it) to the level of God for the sake of making humanity “god-like” as the sole force of his own destiny, by refuting the idea of divine intervention which at this point has proven to be a complete failure in addressing humanity’s cry for social justice on any level. Prometheus, thus humanity/Goethe must take a stand in declaring and accepting the fact humanity is its own creator of reality as it stands at such a time. What it is to be admired at this time about Goethe is the innate realization that not just one God is “guilty” of mankind’s tumbling social structure as seen by the imminent fall of autocracy (symbolized by monarchy) and raise of the masses to achieve equality and universal rights at a better life.
    “I know of nothing poorer
    Under the sun, than you, you Gods!”
    This sentence seems to enrich the ideas/ideals mentioned above to which Goethe seems to subscribe at this point. By expressing both a sense of dubious pity and outright defiance as well as cynical admittance to the impotence of such deities. He understands that an enlightened mind does not need to look up into the heavens in order to achieve a better life, but must look within himself in order to bring forth change, were it not for the deluded, uneducated and poor masses, who still cling to the old ideas that god/s is the sole giver and taker were it not for offering and prayers in time of needs for survival, as expressed in the last sentences;
    “By sacrificial offerings
    And prayerful exhalations,
    And should starve
    Were children and beggars not
    Fools full of Hope.”
    “Should I honour you? Why?”
    The rhetorical question Goethe poses in this following line is understandable. Why indeed must we honor the gods where by looking back as far as human history allows, such entities have never given anything to humanity which said humanity could not give/create itself? Considering how Christianity was for centuries not only a burden, but an absolute power of anguish inflicting source of doom. Thus, Goethe tries to raise human kind to the epitome of god-like creature.
    “Was I not forged as a Man
    By almighty Time
    And eternal Fate,
    My masters and thine?’ – If human kind was forged as such, why than it must adhere to the established enforced belief only god/s are able to give us what we cannot give ourselves? Aren’t we masters of our own lives, our own reality (for better or worse)? Why look upwards when all we need to do is look around us to find the answers to help what plagues humanity throughout history?
    “Do you somehow imagine
    That I should hate Life,
    Flee to the desert,
    Because not every
    Flowering dream should bloom?”
    It is very admirable how Goethe seems to bring forth the old idea that only through self-sacrifice, only through denying ourselves any earthly possessions or goods, we can achieve eternal life. If we are “ordered” to sacrifice our best animals in order to please god/s, which by the way they will never get to feast on, what are we left to eat for ourselves in the end? If we are told to leave behind our earthly possessions (everything we value, including our families) and go into the desert like Jesus and Mohamed were asked and did in the so called “holy scriptures”, what are we doing this for/ what is the end result of such a peculiar act? Are we supposed to add to our earthly pain even more such a pain, by denying ourselves even the most basics of human needs such as food and water? Who are we pleasing in this case, is it some divine creature, and if such a being does exist, what kind of sadistic need is He/She trying to quench? Personally, I have never subscribed to the idea that by denying ourselves anything we can reach enlightenment or be closer to the divine, on the contrary, by doing so all we accomplish is a self-serving sense that we are better than most, holy than most and thus entitled to push forth our on beliefs onto others for :I have seen the light and the Divine spoke to me and through me” as the saying goes on many texts.
    “Here I sit, I form humans, After my own image;” – indeed, for the time in which Prometheus was written, a force had been born and was ever growing where by using new, enlightened ideas a new man was being created, though with its flaws, he was able to suffer and rejoice at the same time. He (human kind), was the master of his own existence and well-being such as shown in this last sentences;
    ”A race, to be like me,
    To sorrow, to weep,
    To enjoy and delight itself,
    And to heed you not at all -
    Like me!”
    I would like to remind you, that though Goethe’s passion is admirable and noble in essence, like any other human being trying to dwell in maters of humanity, sociology, philosophy, ethics and religious dogma, it fails to universalize such ideas by continuing to cling to the old. He sees “evil” in religious dogma, in eternal gods/goddesses, yet he fails to see how humanity itself is the source of its own demise, suffering and social injustice. It is very easy to point up to the heavens and blame some fictitious entity, meanwhile forgetting/dismissing (most times purposely) the innate human trait of afflicting one another for the sake of personal gain. In order to truly be enlightened one must also look deep within him/herself and acknowledge not just humanity’s but also the individual’s shortcomings.
    Prometheus may indeed be a very important piece of literary critique toward outside “heavenly” creatures, but it fails to deal with the internal struggle of humanity with its own demons.

    • “Prometheus may indeed be a very important piece of literary critique toward outside “heavenly” creatures, but it fails to deal with the internal struggle of humanity with its own demons.”

      Yes, indeed. This is why I make a point to emphasis how Goethe can be best read as a man writing within the transitional social mores he’s living through, rather than someone leading the defiance against orthodoxy. “Prometheus” appears to be Goethe’s attempt to transcribe a sentiment emerging in his times (one that he may have had at least partial sympathies towards), but its importance in literature definitely does not lie in its prospect as a revolutionary prose, so much as its documentation that a deeper zeitgeist shift was taking place in society and permeating to a growing number of social circles.

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  1. An Essay Response on “Goethe’s Prometheus & the Heretical Legacy of the Enlightenment” written by The AntiNietzsche « Infernal Deity of a Psychotic Mind

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