Dictionary of the History of Ideas Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas |
VI. |
V. |
VI. |
I. |
VI. |
V. |
III. |
III. |
VI. |
VI. |
V. |
V. |
III. |
VII. |
VI. |
VI. |
III. |
III. |
II. |
I. |
I. |
I. |
V. |
VII. |
VI. |
V. |
III. |
III. |
III. |
II. |
I. |
I. |
I. |
VI. |
VII. |
III. |
VII. |
VII. |
VII. |
V. |
VI. |
VI. |
VI. |
VI. |
VI. |
VII. |
III. |
IV. |
VI. |
VI. |
VI. |
V. |
V. |
V. |
III. | CLASSICISM IN LITERATURE |
III. |
VII. |
III. |
I. |
V. |
V. |
VII. |
VI. |
I. |
I. |
I. |
I. |
VI. |
III. |
IV. |
III. |
IV. |
IV. |
IV. |
VI. |
VI. |
VI. |
V. |
III. |
VI. |
Dictionary of the History of Ideas | ||
CLASSICISM IN LITERATURE
The term “classicism” is
comparatively new, particu-
larly in
English. Thomas Carlyle used it in 1831 for
the first time, complacently
and prematurely reflecting
that “we are troubled with no
controversies on Ro-
manticism and
Classicism,” in his “Essay on Schiller”
(Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, Centenary
Edition
[1899], II, 172). John Stuart Mill, in 1837, explained
that
the “insurrection against the old traditions of
classicism was
called romanticism” in France (“Armand
Carrel,” Dissertations and Discussions [1867],
I, 233).
Both these early uses refer to the Continental debate.
But
even there the term cannot be traced back very
the discussion waged in Milan. Ermes Visconti uses
classicismo frequently in a series of articles, “Idee
elementari sulla poesia romantica” in the famous “blue
sheet,” Il Conciliatore. (See Discussioni e polemiche sul
romanticismo, ed. E. Bellorini, Bari [1943], I, 436ff.)
Stendhal picked up the term in Milan: he read and
paraphrased Visconti whom he also knew personally,
and then gave in Racine et Shakespeare (1823) the
famous facetious definitions of classicism and romanti-
cism. “Classicism is the literature which gave the
greatest possible pleasure to our great grandfathers,”
while romanticism is the literature which gives us
pleasure now.
But neither in France nor in England was the term
widely used in the
nineteenth century. In England rival
forms which have since dropped out of
use, occur
occasionally. “Classicalism” appears,
e.g., in Elizabeth
Barrett (1839), in John Ruskin (1846), and in
Matthew
Arnold (1857). The alternate form
“classicality” was
used by Ruskin when he referred to
the “vile classi-
cality of
Canova” (Modern Painters, Vol. I). In the
atmosphere of the later nineteenth century generally
hostile to the
eighteenth century, the term “pseudo-
classicism” emerged. James R. Lowell, in his
essay on
Pope (1871) speaks of a “pseudo-classicism, the classi-
cism of red heels and
periwigs” (Literary Essays,
Bos-
ton [1891], IV, 8). In 1885 the word
appeared for the
first time on the title page of an American book.
Thomas Sergeant Perry's From Opitz to Lessing: A
Study of
Pseudo-classicism in Literature. The neutral
term
“neo-classicism” emerges also toward the end of
the
nineteenth century and is still used widely to refer
to the period of
Dryden and Pope. But in that era
“classicism” was
even more successful. It occurs in
Matthew Arnold's essay on Heine (1863).
Walter Pater,
in his essay on romanticism (1876), quotes the defini-
tion of Stendhal and literary
historians increasingly
refer to the age which used to be called
“Augustan”
as the “age of
classicism.” Louis Cazamian's Histoire
de la
littérature anglaise (1925) called a section
“Clas-
sicism
(1702-1740)” and his book was, in English
translation, the
standard English literary history for
many years. Handbooks now contain
chapters “The
Rise of Classicism,” “The
Disintegration of Classicism,”
etc.
Similarly, in France, the term classicisme was
rarely
used in the nineteenth century. It is called a
“neologism” as late as 1863 in Littré's Dictionnaire.
Sainte-Beuve and Taine do not use the
term. It spread
more widely about 1880: Émile Deschanel, in
Le
Romantisme des classiques (1882) uses
the term and
Ferdinand Brunetière, in his review of the book
(“Classiques et romantiques,” in Études critiques sur
L'histoire de la littérature
française, Paris [1890], Vol.
III) picks it up. In
1889 Georges Pellisier's Le Mouve-
ment littéraire aux XIX
siècle contained an introductory
chapter “Le
classicisme.” In 1897 Louis Bertrand put
the term on the title
page of his book, La Fin du
classicisme et le retour
à l'antiquité, a study of the late
eighteenth-century classical revival in France. But
Gustave Lanson's
standard Histoire de la littérature
française (1894) still avoids the term in the text,
though
two chapter captions use it casually. Louis Bertrand
later
belonged to the group of conservative critics who
early in the twentieth
century launched the anti-
romantic
campaign which accused romanticism of all
the evils brought about by the
French Revolution and
the anarchy of our time. Charles Maurras, the
editor
of the Action française,
Pierre Lasserre, the author of
a violently antiromantic Le Romantisme français
(1907), and the Baron
Seillière who wrote many books
attacking the romantic disease,
made Classicisme a
new slogan in France where it
became also a political
and philosophical war cry. In England T. E.
Hulme
drew heavily on the doctrines of the new French clas-
sicism: his paper “Romanticism
and Classicism” (1913,
published in Speculations, 1924) provided the most
often quoted statement of
the new classicism in Eng-
land. T. S. Eliot
proclaimed his classicism in the Preface
to For Lancelot
Andrewes (1928).
In Germany around 1800 the term “Romantik” be-
came the battle cry of a whole group of
writers. But
the word “Klassik” occurs only in then
unpublished
notes of Friedrich Schlegel. In 1797 he jotted down
the
puzzling statements; Absolute Classik also anni-
hilirt sich selbst
(“absolute classicism thus annihilates
itself”) and
Alle Bildung ist Classik Abstraction
(“Every
structure is classic abstraction”) (Philosophische Lehr-
jahre, ed. E. Behler, Munich [1963], I, 23). “Klassizis-
mus” seems not to be
used at all until Hermann Hettner
in his Literaturgeschichte des achtzehnten Jahrhunderts
(6 vols.,
1856-57) used it in referring to French clas-
sicism. In Wilhelm Scherer's standard Geschichte
der
deutschen Literatur (1883) the term occurs only in
the
Table of Contents. But about that time
“Klassizismus”
in Germany was slowly replaced by the
term “Klassik.”
It seems to have been invented by
Otto Harnack
around 1887: in his Goethe in der Epoche
seiner Vol-
lendung (1887) he
uses it first in quotation marks. He
felt it to be an innovation as he
explained in the preface
to a later book, Der deutsche
Klassizismus im Zeitalter
Goethes (1906): “I could
not this time avoid the un-
pleasant
expressions 'Classicism' and 'classicist,' for
which I usually substitute
'Klassik' and 'klassisch,' be-
cause usage has
given the word 'klassisch' a special
narrow meaning in relation to German
poetry.”
Harnack draws a distinction between “Klassizismus,”
nating the works of Goethe and Schiller. The new term
replaced the older early in the twentieth century:
Friedrich Gundolf, the most prominent literary histo-
rian of the circle around Stefan George, concluded
his book, Shakespeare und der deutsche Geist (1911)
with a chapter “Klassik und Romantik.” In 1922 Fritz
Strich attempted to apply the principles of Wölfflin's
art history and his contrast between Renaissance and
baroque to the conflict between classicism and roman-
ticism in Germany in his Deutsche Klassik und Ro-
mantik: oder Vollendung und Unendlichkeit. The tri-
umph of the new term was soon complete.
The reasons for its success are obvious. Classicism,
in a sense resembling
that of French classicism, is not
a very appropriate term for most of the
writings of
Goethe and Schiller if one excepts the stages in their
careers when they consciously aimed at the imitation
of the ancients. The
term “Klassik” resumes the old
meaning of standard or
model, while the association
with the ancients almost ceases to be felt. It
has become
a term which pries the German classics loose from
international classicism and yet resists the Western
tendency to treat
Goethe and Schiller as romantics.
The noun “classicism” and its variants are, of course,
derivatives of the adjective “classical.” Classicus first
occurs in Aulus Gellius, a Roman
author of the second
century A.D. who in his miscellany Noctes Atticae (19,
8, 15) refers to classicus scriptor, non proletarius,
ap-
plying a term of the Roman taxation classes
to the
ranking of writers. Classicus means there
“first-class,”
“excellent,”
“superior.” The term seems not to have
been used in
the Middle Ages but it reappears in the
Renaissance in Latin and soon in
the vernaculars.
The first recorded occurrence in French, in Thomas
Sebillet's L'art poétique (1548) refers, surprisingly, to
les bons et classiques poètes français
comme sont entre
les vieux Alain Chartier et Jean Meun (Paris
[1910],
Ch. II, p. 26). The names of these two medieval poets
show
that the word had then no association with classi-
cal antiquity and meant simply “standard” or
“excel-
lent.” It
remains to be found how the term became
soon to be identified with the
ancients, as in the phrase
“classical antiquity.”
“Classical” came to mean Roman
and Greek and still
implied, for obvious reasons, supe-
riority,
authority, and even perfection.
“Classical” became also associated with the class-
room, with the texts taught in schools,
as the ancients
were then the only secular authors studied and they
were studied as models of excellence, both in content
and form. The meaning
“classical” and “classics,” re-
stricted in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries to
the ancients, was later extended to the vernacular
literatures. In England George Sewell, in his introduc
tion to Shakespeare's Poems (a part of Pope's
Shake-
speare,
1725) asked for careful editions of English
authors which “we in
justice owe to our own great
writers, both in Prose, and Poetry. They are
in some
degrees our Classics.” Sewell thought of
Shakespeare
as deserving and getting such treatment. Pope, in 1737,
in
the First Epistle of the Second Book of his Imitations
of
Horace said that “who lasts a century can have no
flaw,/I hold that Wit a Classik, good in law.”
The same expansion of the meaning occurred also
in France, though
surprisingly later than in England.
Pierre-Joseph Thoulier D'Olivet, in his
Histoire de
l'Académie (1729)
complains that “Italy had classical
authors and we as yet have
none” (ed. Livet, Paris
[1858], II, 47). Years later Voltaire in
a letter to the
same abbé D'Olivet, proposed to edit the
“classical
authors” of the French, reserving
Corneille for himself.
Voltaire's own Siècle
de Louis XIV (1751) put that age
next to other golden ages:
that of Leo X, of Augustus,
and of Alexander. Characteristically, the age
of Pericles
is missing from the list. In all these discussions the
implication of “classicity” as mode and standard is
dominant. The remoter model behind the great modern
writer in antiquity is
assumed as a matter of course,
but no more so than when Dante is considered
a “clas-
sic” in Italy or
when Spaniards speak of their Golden
Age. The matter of style did not
enter.
The decisive event for the development of the con-
cept of “classicism” was the great
romantic-classical
debate waged in Germany by the brothers Schlegel.
The transformation of the meaning of the word “clas-
sical” from a term of value to a term for a
stylistic
trend, type, or period in which differences of quality
are
allowed to exist, was the crucial turning point. The
historistic revolution
brought about an awareness of
the existence, side by side, of at least two
literary
traditions. The Schlegelian dichotomy was first ex-
pounded in France by Madame de
Staël in De l'Al-
lemagne (1814) but a few months before the delayed
publication of the book August Wilhelm Schlegel's
Vorlesungen über dramatische Kunst und
Literatur
appeared in a translation by her cousin, Madame
Necker de Saussure. In her Preface (1813) Madame
Necker commented
perceptively: “In Mr. Schlegel's
work the epithet 'classical' is
a simple designation of
a genre, independent of the degree of perfection
with
which the genre is treated.” Madame de Staël's
book
excited violent polemics in France. What had been a
local German
debate became a European one. The
terms “classical”
and “romantic” soon were discussed
in every country
of Europe and of the Americas.
The history of the term reflects the history of its
meaning: at first, in
the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, a term for excellence,
particularly in the
the romantic and historistic revolution, to a term for
a style challenging opposed or parallel styles: romantic,
realist, modern, etc. The exact value put on classicism
will necessarily vary with the context and the polemi-
cal attitude of the writer. Often “classicism” is used
pejoratively to refer to academic, conventional art. In
other situations it assumes again the old meaning of
superior value, perfection, and excellence as in the
French classicist critics of this century or in their
English counterparts, T. E. Hulme and T. S. Eliot. In
different countries different ages are labeled “classi-
cal”: the meaning shifts then from excellence, pre-
scriptive greatness with an implied relation to antiq-
uity, or even a claim of rivalling or surpassing
antiquity, to that of a neutral, objective designation
of a past style of art. The situation differs greatly in
the main countries of Europe.
Italians speak of “classicism” today mainly as apply-
ing to what is usually called the Italian
Renaissance,
or speak of neoclassicismo in the
eighteenth century:
e.g., in the tragedies of Alfieri. But there is in
Italy
no particular feeling that Italy had its classical age,
though
Dante is the great classic in the sense of excel-
lence. A series such as Classici
Italiani includes simply
writers of all epochs and styles of any
eminence.
In France, the seventeenth century is considered the
classical age:
Corneille, Racine, Molière, Pascal, La
Fontaine are the classics.
Early in the nineteenth cen-
tury beginning
particularly with Chateaubriand, the
French seventeenth century was exalted
as the classical
age in sharp contrast to the eighteenth century which
to a modern literary historian may appear stylistically
and in critical
theory largely a direct continuation of
the seventeenth century. But in the
early nineteenth
century the two periods were contrasted for reasons
which can be called political: the seventeenth century
appealed to the
conservative reaction, while the eight-
eenth-century literature bore the stigma of having
prepared and
even caused the French Revolution. Dé-
siré Nisard was, in his Histoire de la
littérature française
(4 vols., 1844-61),
the most influential propounder of
this conception. The French spirit, he
assumes, reached
perfection in the seventeenth century, while
everything
since appears as decadence. He regards the French
classical
age as parallel to that of the great Augustus
while—as he had
argued in an earlier book, Études
des
mœurs et de critique sur les poètes latins de la
décadence (2 vols., 1834)—the age of Silver
Latin
corresponds to the French nineteenth century.
With the triumphs on the stage of the actress Rachel
in seventeenth-century
tragedies, and the great success
of François Ponsard's tragedy Lucrèce in 1843, some-
thing like a comeback of classicism seemed assured.
Ponsard rather coyly pretended hardly to remember
that one used
to distinguish between “Classics and
romantics, or people who
were called something like
that.” But nothing came of this
revival. The new en-
thusiasts for classical
antiquity preferred to speak of
the “pagan school” or
named their style néo-grec.
It was rather a
new Hellenism which saw itself as very
different from the tradition of
French classicism.
Sainte-Beuve's famous essay “Qu'est-ce qu'un
clas-
sique?” (1850) must be
seen in this context. While
insisting on the Greco-Latin tradition
Sainte-Beuve
aims at enlarging the concept. He recognizes the exist-
ence of something transcending the French
tradition:
Homer, Dante, and Shakespeare are also classics,
though
they do not conform to the demands of what
we would call French classicism.
This kind of classi-
cism, with its rules,
Sainte-Beuve knows, is definitely
a thing of the past. Still, he pleads, we
must preserve
the notion and the cult of the classics and at the same
time widen it and make it more generous (Causeries
du
Lundi, Vol. III).
In England, the period generally referred to today
as the Age of Classicism,
has no comparable standing,
because, in the later view, the age of Dryden
and Pope
was surpassed by the Elizabethan age and particularly
by
Shakespeare and Milton. The English classicists did
not call themselves by
that name. They spoke of the
imitation of the ancients or the observance of
the rules.
Under the impact of the romantic movement their
reputation
declined early in the nineteenth century and
they were looked upon as
belonging to a bygone age,
which was called variously the Augustan Age, the
Age
of Pope, the Age of Queen Anne, but not the Classical
Age.
Macaulay, in 1820, spoke of “the Critical School
of
Poetry”; others referred to it as “the French
School,” a disparaging term, as it implied that the
English
poets were derivative from France. This was
the assumption behind Pope's
well-known lines (from
the First Epistle of the Second Book in Imitations of
Horace [1737]):
Her Arts victorious trimph'd o'er our Arms.
of the Restoration of 1660 when the Stuarts returned
from exile in France. This dependence of the English
classics on the French has been since disputed: vio-
lently, e.g., by Thomas De Quincey, in 1851, who
denied that “either Dryden or Pope was even slightly
influenced by French literature” (Collected Writings,
ed. D. Masson [1896], XI, 61) and more sensibly by
modern scholars who pointed out the native elements
in English neo-classicism (e.g., P. S. Wood, in Modern
theory in England to Ben Jonson.
This pushes the matter back into the past of the
history of criticism, to
the sources common to both
French and English literature of the
neo-classical, i.e.,
Aristotelian and Horatian theory, which was formu-
lated in Italy late in the fifteenth and
early in the
sixteenth century and codified in Julius Caesar Scali-
ger's
Poetics (1561) and by the Dutch humanists, Vossius
and Heinsius. Ben Jonson paraphrased and translated
these writers in his
Discoveries (see J. E. Spingarn, “The
Sources of Jonson's Discoveries,” in Modern Philology,
1 [1905]) and French seventeenth-century critics were
clearly influenced both by the Italians and the Dutch.
(See also Edith G.
Kern, The Influence of Heinsius and
Vossius upon French
Dramatic Theory, Baltimore
[1949].) The direct influence of
Boileau on Dryden and
Pope is undeniable as is the influence of
Molière on
Wycherley. There were many other contacts, which
should not, however, obscure the substantial originality
of the great
poets, Dryden and Pope, and of the great-
est
prose writer of the time, Jonathan Swift.
Still, the English eighteenth-century writers could
never after 1800 assume
the position of authority which
the French classics of the age of Louis XIV
or Goethe
and Schiller assumed in France or Germany. In recent
decades, with the general antiromantic reaction, much
has been done to
rehabilitate the “classical” English
literature,
particularly in scholarly circles. T. S. Eliot
exalted Dryden (see Homage to John Dryden, 1924).
Pope has found many
defenders and admirers: even
his translation of Homer has been reinstated
as a tri-
umph of the art of adaptation. Dr.
Johnson has always
had a following, mainly as person and sage.
Scholarly
efforts to revive the eighteenth century, particularly
in
the United States, are often motivated by a nostalgia
for a time which is
assumed to have been still a coher-
ent society
with its proper hierarchy of classes, a tran-
quil refuge from the stresses of our time. But the figure
of the
misanthropic Dean belies this conception. T. S.
Eliot is right in saying
that “we have no classic age,
and no classic poet in
English,” though he reminds us
that “unless we are
able to enjoy the work of Pope,
we cannot arrive at a full understanding of
English
poetry” (What is a Classic?,
London [1945]).
Germans still recognize six Klassiker: Klopstock,
Lessing, Wieland, Herder, Goethe, and Schiller (Wil-
helm Münch, “Über den Begriff des
Klassikers” in Zum
deutschen Kultur- und
Bildungsleben, Berlin [1912]), an
extremely heterogeneous
group of which Klopstock
today would appear to belong to what is usually
called
sentimentalism; Lessing, in spite of his polemics
against the
practices of French tragedy, is a ration-
alistic classicist who worshipped Aristotle; Wieland is
rather a man of the Enlightenment whose art strikes
us often as
rococo; Herder would seem an irrationalistic
preromantic. It is difficult
to see how a writer like
Herder can be called klassisch. In 1767 he exclaimed
“O the cursed word
'Classisch'” (Sämtliche Werke,
ed.
B. Suphan, I, 412) and he attacked Goethe's and Schil-
ler's turning toward classicism as a betrayal of
his
teachings.
Goethe and Schiller did not call themselves
Klas-
siker
and actually had an ambiguous attitude toward
the whole enterprise of
establishing a classical litera-
ture.
Goethe, in 1795, in an article, “Literarischer
Sansculottismus” argued that no German author con-
siders himself klassisch and that
he would not desire
“the revolutions which could prepare
classical works
in Germany” (Sämtliche Werke, Jubiläumsausgabe,
XXXVI,
141). The paper was written when the French
Revolution had not yet run its
course: Goethe feared
the dangers of centralization and the abolition of
the
little German states, with one of which (the Duchy
of Weimar) he
was closely identified, since “classical”
meant to
him writing which would express the unity
of a nation. Only after the
Schlegels had excited the
great debate did Goethe use the term more
freely,
either denying the distinction and clinging to the older
meaning of excellence or taking sides against the ro-
mantics. A letter in 1804 reports that Goethe rejected
the
difference between the romantic and the classic
because
“everything excellent is eo ipso
classic” (Letter
by Heinrich Voss, Jr., to L. R. Abeken, 26
January 1804,
in Goethe's Gespräche, ed.
von Biedermann, Wies-
baden [1949], p. 163).
But later in 1829 Goethe made
the famous pronouncement to Eckermann:
“I call the
Classic the healthy, the Romantic the
sickly” (April
12, 1829, Gespräche
mit Goethe, Houben ed., Leipzig
[1948], pp. 263-64). Goethe
was then disturbed by
what he considered the excesses of the German ro-
mantics such as E. T. A. Hoffmann and he
disliked the
new French roman
frénétique, particularly Victor
Hugo's
Notre Dame de Paris (1831). He had lost
sight
of the much wider meaning of the contrast, though,
in a
conversation in 1830 with Eckermann, Goethe
claimed wrongly that the
Schlegels merely renamed
Schiller's distinction between the naive and the
senti-
mental (ibid., 21 March 1830, pp.
322-23). Goethe
himself always professed to stand above the battle. In
Helena and particularly in the figure of Euphorion
Goethe aimed at “reconciliation of the two poetic
forms” (ibid., 16 December 1829, p. 299). While
Goethe viewed
the debate rather detachedly, he was,
during his lifetime, fast becoming
the German
Klas-
siker
or at least one of the two great Klassiker.
Goethe, after the great international success of the
Sorrows of Young Werther (1774) fell into comparative
(1797) and the effect of the collection of epigrams,
Xenien, written in collaboration with Schiller, gave
him a commanding position in German literature.
Goethe's towering reputation was secured first by the
brothers Schlegel who played him up against Schiller
yet did not consider either Schiller or Goethe classics.
Friedrich Schlegel hoped as early as 1800 that Goethe
would accomplish the task of “harmonizing the classi-
cal and romantic” (Gespräch über die Poesie, in Kri-
tische Schriften, ed. W. Rasch, Munich [1956], p. 334).
In August Wilhelm Schlegel's Lectures on Dramatic
Art and Literature (1809-11) Goethe is discussed with
the romantic drama written in the wake of Shake-
speare. While Goethe's reputation as a great poet and
sage steadily grew in the first decades of the nineteenth
century and while his writings began to penetrate into
the schools, neither he nor Schiller was considered a
Klassiker or as representing “classicism” for a long
time. The whole early nineteenth century in Germany,
dominated as it was by Romantic theory and taste,
would not have considered the term “classicism” flat-
tering. Friedrich Schlegel, in 1800, referred con-
temptuously to the “so-called classical poets of the
English: Pope, Dryden and whoever else” (Gespräch
über die Poesie, ibid., p. 288).
August Wilhelm Schlegel's influential lecture courses
treated all forms of
classicism, French, English, and
German with polemical harshness. The
literary histo-
ries of the time avoided the
terms “classicism” and
“classical.” Thus Gervinus in his standard Geschichte
der poetischen Nationalliteratur der
Deutschen (5 vols.,
1835-42) never refers to Goethe or Schiller
as
Klas-
sisch
or Klassiker. Gervinus thought rather that the
new edition of Faust (1808) put Goethe “in the
van-
guard of romantic trends”
(Leipzig [1871-74], V, 789).
The same is true of other histories such as A.
F. C.
Vilmar's popular Geschichte der deutschen National-
literatur
(1857). Not until Rudolf Gottschall's Die
deutsche
Nationalliteratur des 19. Jahrhunderts (1854)
were Goethe and
Schiller called consistently die
Klassiker.
In 1867, when the privileges protecting the
reprinting of the works of
Goethe and Schiller were
abolished, Klassikerausgaben began to proliferate.
With the establishment of the
German Empire the
works of Goethe and Schiller assumed more and more
the role of a national palladium: a cultural heritage
surrounded by almost
superstitious awe. The founding
of the Goethe-Gesellschaft (1885), the publication of
the 143-volume
edition of Goethe's complete works
known as Weimarer
Ausgabe and the emergence of a
new academic profession, Goethe-philologie, are symp-
toms of this victory. Only in the twentieth century
did more
detached views of the German classics be-
come
possible in Germany.
In retrospect it is obvious that the term
“classicism”
is a nineteenth-century term. It occurs
first in Italy in
1818, in Germany in 1820, in France in 1822, in
Russia
in 1830, in England in 1831. In Germany about 1887
the new term
Klassik, first used casually by Friedrich
Schlegel in 1797, expelled Klassizismus. Clearly the
terms have something in common: the reference to
excellence, to authority,
and to the relation to antiq-
uity. In the
countries we have discussed “classicism”
refers
however to three distinct bodies of literature:
the French seventeenth
century, the English late
seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, and
the
very late eighteenth-century German literature. They
differ widely
in their substance and form, their claim
to authority and greatness, and
even in their relation
to antiquity. French classicism has preserved its
im-
mense prestige, but recent scholarship
has minimized
its debt to antiquity. Henri Peyre, in Qu'est-ce que le
classicisme? (1935) has emphasized the
distinctness and
uniqueness of French classicism and argued that
“the
relations between French literature of the seventeenth
century and that of antiquity were much looser than
it is usually
assumed” (Le Classicisme
français, New
York [1942], p. 32). English classicism
has remained
mainly a scholar's delight and preserve. The German
classics, even if reduced to Goethe and Schiller, loom
still large on the
literary horizon. French and English
classicism is far more
“Latin” than German classicism
which is more
self-consciously “Greek.” In a history
of European
styles of literature based on an analogy
with art history, French
classicism will appear as
closely related to the baroque: it has many
baroque
features which are however, muted and subdued as Leo
Spitzer
has shown persuasively in “Die klassische
Dämpfung in
Racines Stil,” found in Romanische Stil-
und Literatur-studien (Marburg
[1931], I, 135-268).
English classicism seems most closely related to
the
Enlightenment, to realism, though on occasion it has
affinities
with what could be called rococo in its artistic
style. This seems true of
Pope's Rape of the Lock
(Friedrich Brie, Englische Rokoko-epik, Munich [1927]).
German
classicism even in its most self-conscious stage
appears often romantic or
possibly nostalgic and
utopian as did also the contemporary classicism
else-
where. The elegiac note is prominent
in André Chénier
and the painters and sculptors of the
return to antiq-
uity. David, Canova, and
Thorvaldsen have a strong
sentimental streak. The dream of the golden age
is
never far away (Rudolf Zeitler, Klassizismus
und
Utopia, Uppsala [1954]). The Empire style of
Napoleon
is classicistic: but Napoleon carried Werther and Ossian
about with him.
The revival of classicism late in the nineteenth and
early in the twentieth
century was strongest and most
articulate in France. Charles Maurras (1868-1952)
sicism” with him and his followers was part of a general
ideological scheme in which monarchism, belief in the
Roman Church as an institution, a concept of history,
of France and its past, were amalgamated into a co-
herent ideology which had strong political appeal. But
the Action française became discredited by its collabo-
ration with the Germans during the second World War.
Many other contemporaries, often in violent disagree-
ment with Maurras and his group, also embraced what
they called classicism: Julien Benda, a violent anti-
romantic polemicist, highly rationalistic in outlook,
recommended classicism. For a time even André Gide
considered himself “the best representative of classi-
cism,” as he told Émile Henriot in 1921. Its secret was
“modesty,” the tendency toward litotes, understate-
ment. Gide argued that there are classics only in
France, if one excepts Goethe; classicism is a French
invention, elsewhere it remained artificial as the case
of Alexander Pope shows. (See “Billets à Angèle”
Œuvres complètes [1932], Vol. XI.) When the critic
Jacques Rivière returned from German captivity after
the first World War and assumed the editorship of La
Nouvelle Revue française he promised, in his statement
of purpose, to “... describe what seems to us to fore-
shadow a classical renaissance, not literal and purely
imitative... but a deep, inner classicism” (La Nouvelle
Revue française, 13 [June 1919], 8). Also Paul Valéry
considered himself a classicist and defended even the
most arbitrary rules and restrictions. Discipline, purity,
form, restraint are classicist motifs in his poetics.
French neo-classicism radiated abroad. The two
American neo-humanists, Paul
Elmer More and Irving
Babbitt drew on the earlier versions of French anti-
romantic thought, particularly on
Brunetière. Babbitt
referred with approval to Maurras but was
shocked
to discover that Lasserre's book on romanticism was
displayed
in a bookshop in the Quartier Saint Germain
along with books advocating the
restoration of the
monarchy. Babbitt remained a good American repub-
lican who had no use for “an
impossible political and
religious reaction” (Preface to The New Laokoön,
Bos-
ton [1910]). Babbitt was T. S. Eliot's
teacher at Harvard
and must have influenced his literary ideology.
Eliot
read Maurras, dedicated his booklet on Dante
(1929)
to Maurras, and recognized the great influence of
Maurras on
his intellectual development (Nouvelle
Revue
Française,
11 [1923], 619-25). Eliot's “classi-
cism” has however only a
very general similarity with
Maurras'. In describing modern classicism as
“a tend-
ency toward a higher and
clearer conception of Rea-
son, and a more severe
and serene control of the
emotions by Reason” he quotes a
heterogeneous list
of names: Sorel, Maurras, Benda, Hulme, Maritain,
and
Babbitt (Criterion,
4 [1926], 5). T. E. Hulme preceded
Eliot in his admiration for the French neo-classicism
but could
not have influenced Eliot as Hulme's essays,
Speculations, were printed only in 1924; Eliot's posi-
tion had been reached much earlier in the
twentieth
century.
In Germany there were also attempts to revive
classicism: Paul Ernst
(1866-1933) spoke in these
terms, Hugo von Hofmannsthal showed such tenden-
cies, as did the whole circle around
Stefan George, but
one cannot speak of a concerted movement. The same
is true of Russia where the symbolist poet Vyacheslav
Ivanov (1866-1949)
was a classical scholar, and the
group which called itself Acmeists resumed
classical
themes and forms.
Twentieth-century neo-classicism is and often was
escapist and academic: in
France it combined with
xenophobia, with a violent nationalism conscious of
its
opposition to everything Nordic, German, and roman-
tic. But the neo-classical movement provided also
something of aesthetic importance: a resistance against
the abolition of
art and the rejection of beauty which
culminated recently in pop and op
art, concrete poetry,
and electronic music. Neo-classicism may be a
narrow
taste and assumes a specific image of man but Phidias
and
Vergil, Raphael and Titian, Racine and Goethe will
always provide a center
of security, a point of stillness,
an exemplification of what is art, or at
least one kind
of art, admired through the ages. In this sense the
concept of classicism is likely to survive and is likely
to be restored in
the future. It is not merely a historical
concept but a living idea.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The history of the term has hardly been investigated.
Some remarks are
to be found in Pierre Moreau, Le Classi-
cisme des romantiques (Paris, 1932);
Henri Peyre, Le Classi-
cisme français (New York, 1942), Ch II,
“Le Mot Classi-
cisme,” deals with the word
“classique” and has nothing
to say about
“classicisme” as a word; Ernst Robert Curtius,
Europäische Literatur und lateinisches
Mittelalter (Bern,
1948), esp. pp. 251ff.; Harry Levin,
“Contexts of the Classi-
cal,” in his Contexts of Criticism
(Cambridge, Mass., 1957),
pp. 38-54; Georg Luck, “Scriptor
Classicus,” in Comparative
Literature,
10 (1958), 150-58; René Wellek,
“The Term and
Concept of Classicism in Literary
History,” in Aspects of
the Eighteenth
Century, ed. Earl R. Wasserman (Baltimore,
1965), pp. 105-28;
also in Proceedings of the IVth Congress
of the
International Comparative Literature Association:
Fribourg,
1964 (The Hague, 1966), pp. 1049-67.
Most other discussions of “classicism” are
analytical,
ideological, or historical. Here is a small selection: P.
Van
Tieghem, “Classique,” in Revue de synthèse historique,
41
(1931), 238-41, is purely analytical; Gerhart
Rosenwaldt,
“Zur Bedeutung des Klassischen in der bildenden Kunst,”
Zeitschrift für Aesthetik,
11 (1916), on page 125 contains
a striking
definition: Klassisch ist ein Kunstwerk das voll
dass dem Bedürfniss nach Stilisierung und Nachahmung in
gleicher Weise Genüge getan ist (“A work of art is classical
that is completely stylized without deviating from nature,
so that the requirements of both stylization and imitation
are equally well met”); Helmut Kuhn, “'Klassisch' als his-
torischer Begriff,” in Werner Jaeger, ed., Das Problem des
Klassischen und die Antike (Stuttgart, 1933, reprint 1961),
pp. 109-28; idem, Concinnitas: Beiträge zum Problem des
Klassischen. Heinrich Wölfflin zum achtzigsten Geburtstag
... zugeeignet (Basel, 1944); Kurt Herbert Halbach, “Zum
Begriff und Wesen der Klassik,” in Festschrift Paul Kluck-
hohn und Hermann Schneider gewidmet... (Tübingen,
1948), pp. 166-94; Heinz Otto Burger, ed., Begriffsbestim-
mung der Klassik und des Klassischen, Wege der Forschung,
Vol. 210 (Darmstadt, 1971); W. Tatarkiewicz, “Les quatre
significations du mot 'classique,'” Revue Internationale de
Philosophie, 43 (1958), 5-11; E. F. Carritt, “Classicism,”
ibid., 23-36.
Fritz Ernst, Der Klassizismus in Italien, Frankreich
und
Deutschland (Zurich, 1924), is a thin sketch. Sherard Vines,
The Course of English Classicism from the Tudor to
the
Victorian Age (London, 1930), is lively but confused.
Two
books on Goethe's fame are relevant: Reinhard Buchwald,
Goethezeit und Gegenwart (Stuttgart, 1949),
and Wolfgang
Leppmann, The German Image of
Goethe (Oxford, 1961),
German version: Goethe
und die Deutschen (Stuttgart, 1962).
Three encyclopedia entries merit attention: Antonio
Viscardi,
“Classicismo” in Dizionario
letterario Bompiani
delle opere (Milan, 1947), I, 22-43;
Henri Peyre, “Le Classi-
cisme,” in Encyclopédie de la
Pléiade. Histoire des littéra-
tures (Paris, 1956), II,
110-39; and W. B. Fleischmann,
“Classicism,” in
Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, ed. A.
Preminger (Princeton, 1965), pp. 136-41.
RENÉ WELLEK
[See also Ancients and Moderns; Baroque; Criticism; En-lightenment; Historicism; Mimesis; Nature; Romanticism;
Style; Ut pictura poesis.]
Dictionary of the History of Ideas | ||