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English Pages 242 [262] Year 1911
iLllLP-Ji|i:'J^,
.il^JlLl
THE VITALITY OF PLATONISM AND OTHER
ESSAYS
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS ILontron: FETTER LANE, E.G. C.
CLAY, Manager
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(StsinhutQl)
loo,
:
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gorfe: (JTalrutta:
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CO., Ltd.
:
THE VITALITY OF PLATONISM AND OTHER
ESSAYS
BY
JAMES ADAM LATE FELLOW AND SENIOR TUTOR OF EMMANUEL COLLEGE,
CAMBRIDGE
EDITED BY
HIS
WIFE
ADELA MARION ADAM
Cambridge at
the University Press 191
1
A3
Cambrilrge
PRINTED BY JOHN CLAY, M.A.
AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS
TOIC (J)|ATAT0IC
CYNecTi'oic
cmoi
re kai cyNTpAnezoic,
OYK ACHMOY noAeooc noAiTAic
'EMMANOYHA, ToAe TO BiBAiAApiON
eyMeNec n^pA eYMeNoyc KexApicGoa.
ei
MEN 0lAOCO(|)HTeON, (|)lAOC04)HTeON, TeON, dept), and also that ''just as our Soul, which is Air, holds us together, so also breath and Air encompass the whole Universe^" You will remember that Plato, too, in speaking of this theory, compares the i\ir to a ^dOpov or pedestal For the most part, however, supporting the earth I when Euripides writes in this vein, it is Aether and In a poet, of course, not Air which he calls Zeus. for
^
'
884 ff. Phaedo 99
-^
b.
Diels p. 22
^ 6,
25
§ 2.
;
The Aether
47
not to expect a clear distinction between
we ought
two
these
in Etiritides
although
concepts,
Anaxagoras had no doubt,
Euripides,
already differentiated them.
word ''Aether" partly as having a greater wealth of poetical and religious associations Thus in one fragment' we read than '\\ir." the
prefers
yata
koX Aio? AlOijp
/xeyto-T?;
" Mightiest Earth
and Aether of Zeus
"
Aether "home of Zeus," though Euripides sometimes describes the element Zeus's Aether," the Aether in in that way, but just which Zeus consists, the Aether of which Zeus is that
I
is,
believe,
not
''
made, in no respect different from Zeus himself. The remainder of the fragment clearly shews that
Zeus
is
here
identified
continues the poet,
''
is
with
'^^ether,"
Aether.
men and gods
the father of
womb
;
the falling rain
and Earth receives into her of dewy drops, and bears mortal men, aye, and But the most food, and the tribes of wild beasts." characteristic tion
is
example
in
Euripides of this identifica-
contained in the well-known lines opas Tov
v\j/ov
:
revs' aTretpov alO^pa
Kal yrjv Trept^ i)(pv&' vypal% Iv ayKciAais
TovTOV vo/xt^€ Zyjva, rovS rjyov Oiov^
thus translated by ^Ir
Way
;
:
:
"Seest thou the boundless ether there on high That folds the earth around with dewy arms? This deem thou Zeus, this reckon one with God." 1
839 Nauck^.
-
Fr.
aV^pOJTTOtS
941.
Cf.
6l'0{J.d^€TaL,
877
aA/V
alBrjp
tiktu
ae,
KOpa,
Zcvs
os
The Divine Origin of
48
Soul
the
more than a touch of what W. K. CHfford called ''cosmic emotion" in these verses. Nowhere, however, does ancient literature furnish a more There
is
expression
perfect
cosmic
of
feeling
or
a
finer
example of the poetical treatment of a philosophical conception than we meet with in a less known fragment of Euripides descriptive of the aetherial creative reason indwelling in the world :
ere
Tov avTOcfiVu, tov iv alOiptio
pvfx^ia TToivToiv i)(op€V€L^.
o;)(Xos
"Thee,
op^vaia
who
self-begotten,
in ether rolled
Ceaselessly round, by mystic links dost bind
The nature of all things, whom veils enfold Of light, of dark night flecked with gleams of gold, Of star-hosts dancing round thee without end."
Mr Way,
to
whom
compares the familiar
this translation
lines of
"I have
A
presence that disturbs
is
due, justly
Wordsworth
me
:
felt
with the joy
Of elevated thoughts a sense sublime Of something far more deeply interfused, Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns. ;
And And
A
the round ocean,
motion and a
We
rolls
may
spirit, ''the
through
say,
I
soul of
all
all
living air.
mind
of
man
:
that impels
spirit
All thinking things,
And
and the
the blue sky, and in the
objects of
all
thought,
things."
think, that in this all-pervading all '
the worlds," as he sometimes
593 Nauck-.
Euripides and Wordsworth calls
Wordsworth
it,
unity of Nature
have
it
the true and essential
finds
embraces, as Euripides would
the "nature of
said,
"Even
—
all
things,"
one essence of pervading
as
49
light
Shines in the brightest of ten thousand stars
And
meek worm that feeds in the dewy grass."
the
Couched
The
her lonely lamp
between Euripides and Wordsworth is here complete and in Virgil, too, we have exactly parallel
;
the
same conception
:
deum namque
omnes
per
ire
terrasque tractusque maris caelumque profundum'.
Some may be
disposed
to
this
call
philosophy,
and others, perhaps, religion but in truth it is only one particular way of trying to express that omnipresent unity which poetry and religion make us feel, which science also presupposes, and which it is perhaps the ultimate others
will
call
it
poetry,
;
goal of a philosophy of the sciences
believed
it
was
But to return. notice
named,
that this
— to I
in
think
each
—
Plato, at least,
demonstrate and of
it
is
the
apprehend.
deserving of particular three
poets
I
have
kind of poetical pantheism, or Nature-
mysticism, as
it
may more
appropriately be called,
accompanied not only by a deeper sense of the unity between man and nature, but also by a human weal and woe" profounder sympathy with It was a true than we readily find elsewhere. is
'*
instinct that '
A. E.
prompted Tennyson
Georgics
4.
221
f.
:
to put together in
also in Ae/ieid 6.
724
ff.
4
The Divine Origin of
50
the
Soul
a single stanza these two characteristics of Virgil's
poetry
:
"Thou
that seest Universal
Nature moved by Universal Mind;
Thou
majestic in thy sadness
At the doubtful doom of human kind."
The power inherent in Nature dwells also ''in the mind of man," so that the link which binds us to the one
us also
unites
remember
the
to
You
other.
will
that the later Stoics expressly founded
human brotherhood on
their doctrine of in all
men
that "
moves through
great
and
the presence
of the koivo% \6yos, or universal reason
lesser
all
things, mingling with the
Marcus Aurelius,
lights\"
for
example, reminds us that man's brotherhood with
mankind depends not on blood, or the generative but on community in mind (vov kolvcji/lo) each man's mind, he says, is God and an efflux from God" and God is ef? Sta iravToiv /cat ovcria "one God, one essence stretching through all fjiia, all
seed,
:
;
things"',"
present in Nature as well as in man.
humanism
of Euripides
is
but the language of the heart
mere accident
—
The
not an intellectual dogma, yet
;
it is
more than a
would rather say it is the operation of a law of nature that the most profoundly human of tragedians should have been the author of the greatest
I
—
nature-drama
of
antiquity,
I
mean,
of
course, the Bacchae.
So
far,
I
have spoken only of the peculiar kind ^
"
Hymn XII. 26.
of Cleanthes
1
2 3
f.
yjj
^
—
N
of Euripides
attire-mysticism,
51
sometimes found in That which Pindar calls " the gods" Euripides. has become, under the TO yap ian jiovov eV Sewv influence, perhaps, of Diogenes, an immanent, all-
of poetical theology which
is
—
embracing aetherial substance designated by the name of Zeus. Let us now turn from the divine to the human, and consider one or two of those passages in which the poet has in view the doctrine The fragment most of man's affinity to God.
commonly is
by the ancients
cited
in this
connexion
the line 6 vovs ya/j
"The
Our
first
iariv iv cKatrro) ^€os^.
qfx