The
same young man, who acted so honourably on this occasion,
afterwards entered the army as a volunteer in one of the
grenadier battalions.
same young man, who acted so honourably on this occasion,
afterwards entered the army as a volunteer in one of the
grenadier battalions.
Fichte - Nature of the Scholar
The place
had been put in order, the monument repaired, the grave decked with
flowers and garlands. They sang there the first verse of the fine old chorale
Ein'feKte Burg itt unter Gott, and a clergyman delivered an appropriate dis-
course. The house on the New Promenade, in which Fichte for many years
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? "REDEN AN DIE DEUTSCHEN. "
119
upon to arouse themselves to a nobler enterprize, and
never was such a summons pealed forth in tones of more
manly and spirit-stirring energy. The last Address is a
noble appeal to the several classes of society in Germany
to unite, heart and hand, in forwarding the great work of
national regeneration. We quote the peroration:--
"In these addresses the memory of your forefathers speaks
to you. Think that with my voice there are mingled the
voices of your ancestors from the far-off ages of gray anti-
quity, of those who stemmed with their own bodies the tide
of Roman domination over the world, who vindicated with
their own blood the independence of those mountains,
lived, was decorated by the care of the committee for the celebration of the
anniversary with wreaths and laurels, and with draperies of black, red, and
gold, and of black and white, the German and Prussian colours. A memorial
slab was also set up against it--a temporary one to be presently replaced by
one of marble. At the University, Professor Trendelenburg made an excel-
lent speech. Fichte was the first rector of this University. From him, his
eulogist said, it had inherited the obligation to defend independence of
thought and opinion. The Crown Prince was present at the speech, and
afterwards complimented Trendelenburg upon it. The students, the workmen,
and various other corporations celebrated the day; but its most remarkable
feature was unquestionably the grand ceremony at the Victoria Theatre, got
up by the National Verein. The spacious stage, common to both the sum-
mer and the winter theatre, was completely cleared. In the centre of this
platform was a truncated column supporting a colossal bust of Fichte. Be-
hind and on either side of this was a numerous band of chorus singers,
and, behind them, some instrumentalists. At its foot was a slightly-
raised standing-place for the speakers. Dr. Veit, president of the committee,
opened the proceedings in a short speech. M. Berthold Anerbach, better
known as a literary man than as a politician, read a well-composed sketch
of Fichte's life. Deputy Franz Duncker read some very interesting personal
sketches and incidents, furnished by one of Fichte's oldest friends and dis-
ciples. Dr Loewe made a long spech, referring to the tendency of his writ-
ings, and chiefly of a political character. With a few more remarks from
the President, and another chorus by the singers, an evening terminated
which was remarkable for the excellence of its arrangements, and for the
gratification it apparently afforded to all present. " On the same day, a
granite column erected in honour of Fichte at his native village of Ram-
menau, and bearing four marble slabs with appropriate inscriptions, was
inaugurated by a public ceremony. --Ten years later, a memorial to Baron
Stein, erected at Nassau his birth-place in acknowledgment of the debt
which Prussia owes to him, was unveiled on 9th July 1872, in presence
of the Emperor, Empress, and Prince Imperial of Germany.
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? 120
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
plains, and streams, which ye have suffered to fall a prey
to the stranger. They call to you,--'Be you our defenders! --
'hand down our memory to future ages, honourable and
'spotless, as it has come down to you, as you have gloried in
'it, and in your descent from us. Hitherto our struggle has
'been deemed noble, great, and wise;--we have been looked
'upon as the consecrated and inspired ones of a Divine
'World-Plan. Should our race perish with you, then will
'our honour be changed into dishonour, our wisdom into
'folly. For if Germany were ever to be subdued to the Em-
'pire, then had it been better to have fallen before the elder
'Romans than their modern descendants. We withstood
'those, and triumphed; these have scattered you like chaff
'before them. But, as matters now are with you, seek not
'to conquer with bodily weapons, but stand firm and erect
'before them in spiritual dignity. Yours is the greater des-
'tiny,--to found an empire of Mind and Reason,--to destroy
'the dominion of rude physical power as the ruler of the
'world. Do this, and ye shall be worthy of your descent
'from us! '
"With these voices mingle the spirits of your later fa-
thers,--of those who fell in the sacred struggle for freedom
of Religion and of Faith:--' Save our honour too! ' they calL
'To us it had not become wholly clear what it was we fought
'for;--besides our just determination to suffer no outward
'power to control us in matters of conscience, we were also
'led onward by a higher spirit which never wholly unveiled
'itself to our view. To you this spirit is no longer veiled,
'if your power of vision transcend the things of sense;--it
'now regards you with high, clear aspect . The confused
'and intricate combination of sensous and spiritual impulses
'with each other shall no longer govern the world: Mind
'alone, pure from all admixture of sense, shall assume the
'guidance of human affairs. In order that this spirit should
'have liberty to develope itself, and rise to independent
'existence, our blood was shed. It lies with you to give a
'meaning and a justification to the sacrifice, by establishing
'this spirit in its destined supremacy. Should this result
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? "REDEN AN DIE DEUTSCHEN. "
121
'not ensue, as the ultimate end of the previous develop-
'ment of our nation, then were our struggles but a forgotten
'farce, and, the freedom of mind and conscience for which
'we fought, an empty word, since neither mind nor con-
'science should any longer have a place among us. '
"The races yet unborn plead with you:--' You were proud
'of your forefathers,' they cry,--'and gloried in your descent
'from a noble line of men. See that with you the chain is
'not broken;--act so that we also may be proud of you, and
'through you, as through a spotless medium, claim our des-
'cent from the same glorious source. Be not you the cause
'of making us revile our ancestry as low, barbarous, and
'slavish;--of causing us to hide our origin, or to assume a
'foreign name and a foreign parentage, in order that we
'may not, without farther proof, be cast aside and trodden
'underfoot . According as the next generation which pro-
'ceeds from you shall be, so shall be your future fame:
'honourable, if this shall bear honourable witness to you;
'deservedly ignominious, if ye have not an unblemished
'posterity to succeed you, and leave it to the conqueror to
'write your history. Never has a victor been known to 'have either the inclination or the means of passing a just 'judgment on the subdued. The more he degrades them,
'the better does he justify his own position. Who can
'know what great deeds, what excellent institutions, what
'noble manners of many nations of antiquity may have 'passed away into oblivion, because their succeeding genera- 'tions have been enslaved, and have left the conqueror, in
'his own way, and without contradiction, to tell their story? '
"Even the stranger in foreign lands pleads with you, in
so far as he understands himself and knows aright his own
true interest . Yes! there are in every nation minds who can
never believe that the great promises to the human race of
a Kingdom of Law, of Reason, and of Truth, are idle and
vain delusions, and who consequently cherish the conviction
that the present iron-handed time is but a progression to-
wards a better state. These, and with them the whole later
races of humanity, trust in you. A great part of these trace
R
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? 1-2-2
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
their lineage from us; others have received from us religion
and all other culture. Those plead with us, by the common
soil of our Fatherland, the cradle of their infancy, which they
have left to us free,--these by the culture which they have
accepted from us as the pledge of a higher good,--to main-
tain, for their sakes, the proud position which has hitherto
been ours, to guard with jealous watchfulness against even
the possible disappearance, from the great confederation of
a newly-arisen humanity, of that member which is to them
more important than all others; so that when they shall
need our counsel, our example, our cooperation in the pur-
suit and attainment of the true end of this Earthly Life,
they shall not look around for us in vain.
"All Ages,--all the Wise and Good who have ever breathed
the air of this world of ours,--all their thoughts and aspi-
rations towards a Higher Good,--mingle with these voices,
and encompass you about, and raise supplicating hands to-
wards you;--Providence itself, if we may venture so to speak,
and the Divine Plan in the creation of a Human Race,--
which indeed exists only that it may be understood of men,
and by men be wrought out into reality,--plead with you
to save their honour and their existence. Whether those
who have believed that Humanity must ever advance in a
course of ceaseless improvement, and that the great ideas of
its order and dignity were not empty dreams, but the pro-
phetic announcement and pledge of their own future reali-
zation ;--whether those--or they who have slumbered on in
the sluggish indolence of a mere vegetable or animal exis-
tence, and mocked every aspiration towards a higher World
--have had the right,--this is the question upon which it
has fallen to your lot to furnish a last and decisive answer.
The ancient world, with all its nobility and greatness, as well
as all its deficiencies, has fallen,--through its own unworthi-
ness and the might of your forefathers. If there has been
truth in that which I have spoken to you in these Addresses,
then it is you to whom, out of all other modern nations, the
germs of human perfection are especially committed, and on
whom the foremost place in the onward advance towards
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? "REDEN AN DIE DEUTSCHEN. "
123
their development is conferred. If you sink to nothing in
this your peculiar office, then with you the hopes of Hu-
manity for salvation out of all its evils are likewise over-
thrown. Hope not, console not yourselves with the vain
delusion, that a second time, after the destruction of an
ancient civilization, a new culture will arise upon the ruins
of the old, from a half-barbaric people. In ancient times,
such a people existed fully provided with all the requisites
for this mission; they were well known to the cultivated
nation, and were described in its literature; and that na-
tion itself, had it been able to suppose the case of its own
downfall, might have discovered the means of renovation in
this people. To us also the whole surface of the earth is
well known, and all the nations who dwell upon it. Do we
know one, like the ancestral tribe of modern Europe, of
whom like hopes may be entertained? I think that every
man who does not give himself up to visionary hopes and
fancies, but desires only honest and searching inquiry,
must answer this question--No! There is, then, no way
of escape :--if ye sink, Humanity sinks with you, without
hope of future restoration! "--Seldom indeed has the cause
of a nation's independence been pled on grounds so truly
noble and elevating as these!
This spirit-stirring course of public activity was inter-
rupted by a severe illness, which attacked him in the spring
of 1808. It was his first illness, and it took so determined
a hold of his powerful constitution, that he never thoroughly
got rid of its effects. Deep-seated nervous disease, and par-
ticularly an affection of the liver, reduced him to great
weakness, and for a time it seemed doubtful whether his
life could be saved. It was only after some months of suf-
fering that the disease settled down upon a particular limb,
and left him with a rheumatic lameness of the left arm and
right foot, which, with an accompanying inflammation in
the eyes, hindered him for a long time from resuming his
habits of active life. He was removed several times to the
baths of Teplitz with beneficial effect. The tedium of con-
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? 124
MEMOIR OV KICHTE.
valescence was relieved by study of the great authors of
Italy, Spain, and Portugal. At an earlier period of his life
he had made himself acquainted with the languages of these
countries, and had produced many translations from their
poets, particularly an entire version of the first canto of
Dante's Divina Commedia,* and one of the most beautiful
episodes in the Lusiad of Camoens. And now, in the sea-
son of debility and pain, the noble thoughts handed down by
the great poets of the south as an everlasting possession to
the world, became to him the springs of new strength and
dignity. Nor did he cease altogether from literary exer-
tion. During his confinement he undertook a thorough re-
vision of his philosophical lectures, and made extensive pre-
paration for his future academical labours. Much of his
time, too, was occupied in the education of his only son, who
speaks with deep reverence and thankfulness of the instruc-
tions thus imparted to him. Amongst his letters written
during his sickness, we find a touching correspondence with
Ernst Wagner, a true and warm-hearted friend of his coun-
try and of all good men, but whose spirit was crushed al-
most to hopelessness by the pressure of disease and penury.
To him Fichte found means of affording such relief and en-
couragement as prolonged, for some short period at least,
a valuable and upright life.
Of his domestic life during this period, and the manner
in which it too bore the impress of his high soul-elevating
philosophy, we obtain the following interesting and in-
structive glimpse:--" We had a family meeting for worship
every evening, which closed the day worthily and solemnly;
in this the domestics also were accustomed to take a part.
When some verses of a chorale had been sung to the accom-
paniment of the piano, my father began, and discoursed upon
a passage or chapter of the New Testament, especially from
his favourite Evangelist John; or, when particular household
circumstances gave occasion for it, he spoke also a word of
reproof or of comfort. But, as far as I remember, he never
* Printed in the "Vesta" for 1807.
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? UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN.
125
made use of ordinary practical applications of his subject, or
laid down preceptive regulations for conduct; but the ten-
dency of his teaching appeared rather to be to purify the
spirit from the distractions and vanities of common life, and
to elevate it to the Imperishable and Eternal. "--So truly
was his life, in all its relations, the faithful counterpart of
the noble doctrine which he taught.
On Fichte's return to active life he found himself placed,
almost at once, in a position from which he could influence
in no slight degree the destinies of his fatherland. Doubts
had arisen as to the propriety of placing the new University
in a large city like Berlin. It was urged that the metropolis
presented too many temptations to idleness and dissipation
to render it an eligible situation for a seminary devoted to
the education of young men. This was the view entertained
by the Minister Stein, but warmly combated by Wolff,
Fichte, and others. Stein was at length won over, and the
University was opened in 1810. The King gave one of the
finest palaces in Berlin for the purpose, and all the appli-
ances of mental culture were provided on the most liberal
scale. Learned men of the greatest eminence in their re-
spective departments were invited from all quarters,--Wolff,
Fichte, Muller, Humboldt, De Wette, Schleiermacher, Nean-
der, Klaproth, and Savigny,--higher names than these cannot
easily be found in their peculiar walks of literature and
science. By the suffrages of his fellow-teachers, Fichte was
unanimously elected Kector.
Thus placed at the head of an institution from which so
much was expected, Fichte laboured unceasingly to establish
a high tone of morality in the new University, convinced
that thereby he should best promote the dignity as well as
the welfare of his country. His dearest wish was to see
Germany free,--free alike from foreign oppression and from internal reproach. He longed to see the stern sublimity of
old Greek citizenship reappear among a people whom the
conquerors of Greece had failed to subdue. And therefore
it was before all things necessary that they who were to go
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? 126
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
forth as the apostles of truth and virtue, who were to be
the future representatives among the people of all that is
dignified and sacred, should themselves be deeply impressed
with the high nature of their calling, and keep unsullied the
honour which must guide and guard them in the discharge
of its duties. He therefore applied himself to the reforma-
tion of such features in the student-life as seemed irrecon-
cilable with its nobleness,--to the suppression of the Lands-
mannschaften, and of the practice of duelling. Courts of
honour, composed of the students themselves, decided upon
all such quarrels as had usually led to personal encounters.
During his two years' rectorship, Fichte laboured with un-
remitting perseverance to render the University in every
respect worthy of the great purposes which had called it
into existence, and laid the foundation of the character
which it still maintains, of being the best regulated, as well
as one of the most efficient, schools in Germany.
The year of 1812 was an important one for Europe, and
particularly for Germany. The gigantic power of Napoleon
had now reached its culminating point. Joseph Bonaparte
reigned at Madrid, and Murat at Naples;--Austria was sub-
dued, and the fair daughter of the House of Hapsburg had
united her fate to that of the conqueror of her race;--Prus-
sia lay at his mercy;--Holland and the Free Towns were
annexed to the territory of France, which now extended from
Sicily to Denmark. One thing alone was wanting to make
him sole master of the continent of Europe, and that was
the conquest of Russia. His passion for universal dominion
led him into the great military error of his life,--the at-
tempt to conquer a country defended by its climate from
foreign invasion, and which, even if subdued, could never
have been retained. He rushed on to the fate which sooner
or later awaits unbridled ambition. The immense armies of
France were poured through Germany upon the North, to
find a grave amid the snows of Smolensk and in the waters
of the Berezina.
And now Prussia resolved to make a decisive effort to
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? WAR OF LIBERATION.
127
throw off a yoke which had always been hateful to her. The
charm was now broken which made men look on the might
of Napoleon as invincible;--the unconquerable battalions
had been routed; fortune had turned against her former
favourite. The King entered into an alliance with the Rus-
sian Emperor, and in January 1813, having retired from
Berlin to Breslau, he sent forth a proclamation calling upon
the youth of the country to arm themselves in defence of
its liberty. Nobly was his appeal responded to. The nation
rose as one man; all distinctions were forgotten in the high
enthusiasm of the time; prince and peasant, teacher and
scholar, artizan and merchant, poet and philosopher, swelled
the ranks of the army of liberation.
Fichte now renewed his former application to be permit-
ted to accompany the troops in the capacity of preacher or
orator, that he might share their dangers and animate their
courage. Difficulties, however, arose in the way of this ar-
rangement, and he resolved to remain at his post in Berlin,
and to continue his lectures until he and his scholars should
be called personally to the defence of their country. The
other professors united with him in a common agreement
that the widows and children of such of their number as fell
in the war should be provided for by the cares of the survi-
vors. It is worthy of remark, that amid this eager enthu-
siasm Fichte resolutely opposed the adoption of any proceed-
ings against the enemy which might cast dishonour on the
sacred cause of freedom . While a French garrison still held
Berlin, one of his students revealed to him a plan, in which
he himself was engaged, for firing their magazine during the
night. Doubts had arisen in his mind as to the lawfulness
of such a mode of aiding his country's cause, and he had
resolved to lay the scheme before the teacher for whose
opinion he entertained an almost unbounded reverence.
Fichte immediately disclosed the plot to the superintendent
of police, by whose timely interference it was defeated.
The
same young man, who acted so honourably on this occasion,
afterwards entered the army as a volunteer in one of the
grenadier battalions. At the battle of Dennewitz his life
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? 128
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
was preserved in a very remarkable manner. A musket
ball, which struck him during the fight, was arrested in its
fatal progress by encountering a copy of Fichte's "Religions-
lehre," his constant companion and moral safeguard, which
on this occasion served him likewise as a physical ^Egidus.
On examining the book, he found that the ball had been
stopped at these words (p. 249)--"denn alles, was da kommt,
ist der Wille Gottes mit ihm, und drum das Allerbeste,
was da kommen konnte "--(" for everything that comes to
pass is the Will of God with him, and therefore the best that
can possibly come to pass. ")
During the summer of 1813, Fichte delivered from the
Academical chair those views of the existing circumstances
of his country, and of the war in which it was engaged, which
he was prevented from communicating to the army directly.
These lectures were afterwards printed under the title of
"Ueber den Begriff des wahren Kriegs"--(On the Idea of a
true War. ) With a clearness and energy of thought which
seemed to increase with the difficulties and dangers of his
country, he roused an irresistible opposition to proposals of
peace which, through the mediation of Austria, were offered
during the armistice in June and July. The demands of
Napoleon left Germany only a nominal independence; a
brave and earnest people sought for true freedom. "A
stout heart and no peace," was Fichte's motto, and his
countrymen agreed with him. Hostilities were recom-
menced in August 1813.
In the beginning of the winter half-year, Fichte resumed
his philosophical prelections at the University. His subject
was an introduction to philosophy upon an entirely new
plan, which should render a knowledge of his whole sys-
tem much more easily attainable. It is said that this, his
last course of academical lectures, was distinguished by un-
usual freshness and brilliancy of thought, as if he were ani-
mated once more by the energy of youthful enthusiasm,
even while he stood, unconsciously, on the threshold of an-
other world. He had now accomplished the great object of
his life,--the completion, in his own mind, of that scheme
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? WAR OF LIBERATION.
129
of knowledge by which his name was to be known to pos-
terity. Existing in his own thought as one clear and com-
prehensive whole, he believed that he could now communi-
cate it to others, in a simpler and more intelligible form
than it had yet assumed. It was his intention to devote the
following summer to this purpose, and, in the solitude of
some country retreat, to prepare a finished record of his phi-
losophy in its maturity and completeness. But fate had
ordered otherwise.
The vicinity of Berlin to the seat of the great struggle on
which the liberties of Germany were depending rendered it
the most eligible place for the reception of the wounded and
and diseased. The hospitals of the city were crowded, and
the ordinary attendants of these establishments were found
insufficient in number to supply the wants of the patients.
The authorities therefore called upon the inhabitants for
their assistance, and Fichte's wife was one of the first who
responded to the calL The noble and generous disposition
which had rendered her the worthy companion of the philo-
sopher, now led her forth, regardless of danger, to give all
her powers to woman's holiest ministry. Not only did she
labour with unwearied assiduity to assuage the bodily suf-
ferings of the wounded, and to surround them with every
comfort which their situation required and which she had
the power to supply; she likewise poured words of consola-
tion into many a breaking heart, and awakened new strength
and faithfulness in those who were "ready to perish. "
For five months she pursued with uninterrupted devotion
her attendance at the hospitals, and although not naturally
of a strong constitution, she escaped the contagion which
surrounded her. But on the 3d of January 1814 she was
seized with a nervous fever, which speedily rose to an alarm-
ing height, so that almost every hope of her recovery was
lost . Fichte's affection never suffered him to leave her side,
except during the time of his lectures. It is an astonishing
proof of his self-command, that after a day of anxious
watching at the deathbed, as it seemed, of her he held
s
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MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
dearest on earth, he should be able to address his class in
the evening, for two consecutive hours, on the most pro-
found and abstract subjects of human speculation, uncertain
whether, on his return, he might find that loved one still
alive. At length the crisis of the fever was past, and Fichte
received again the faithful partner of his cares, rescued from
the grave.
But even in this season of joy, in the embrace of gratula-
tion he received the seeds of death. Scarcely was his wife
pronounced out of danger than he himself caught the in-
fection, and was attacked by the insidious disease. Its first
symptom was nervous sleeplessness, which resisted the ef-
fects of baths and the other usual remedies. Soon, however,
the true nature of the malady was no longer doubtful, and
during the rapid progress of his illness, his lucid moments
became shorter and less frequent. In one of these he was
told of Blucher's passage of the Rhine, and the final expul-
sion of the French from Germany. That spirit-stirring in-
formation touched a chord which roused him from his un-
consciousness, and he awoke to a bright and glorious vision
of a better future for his fatherland. The triumphant ex-
citement mingled itself with his fevered fancies:--he ima-
gined himself in the midst of the victorious struggle, strik-
ing for the liberties of Germany; and then again it was
against his own disease that he fought, and power of will
and firm determination were the arms by which he was to
conquer it. Shortly before his death, when his son ap-
proached him with medicine, he said, with his usual look of
deep affection--" Leave it alone; I need no more medicine:
I feel that I am well. " On the eleventh day of his illness,
on the night of the 27th January 1814, he died. The last
hours of his life were passed in deep and unbroken sleep.
Fichte died in his fifty-second year, with his bodily and
mental faculties unimpaired by age; scarcely a grey hair
shaded the deep black upon his bold and erect head. In
stature he was low, but powerful and muscular. His step
was firm, and his whole appearance and address bespoke the
rectitude, firmness, and earnestness of his character.
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? ESTIMATE OF HIS CHARACTER.
131
His widow survived him for five years. By the kindness
of the Monarch she was enabled to pass the remainder of
her life in ease and competence, devoting herself to the
superintendence of her son's education. She died on the
29th January 1819, after an illness of seven days.
Fichte died as he had lived,--the priest of knowledge, the apostle of freedom, the martyr of humanity. He belongs to
those Great Men whose lives are an everlasting possession
to mankind, and whose words the world does not willingly
let die. His character stands written in his life, a massive
but severely simple whole. It has no parts;--the depth
and earnestness on which it rests, speak forth alike in his
thoughts, words, and actions. No man of his time--few
perhaps of any time--exercised a more powerful, spirit-stir-
ring influence over the minds of his fellow-countrymen.
The impulse which he communicated to the national
thought extended far beyond the sphere of his personal in-
fluence ;--it has awakened,--it will still awaken,--high
emotion and manly resolution in thousands who never
heard his voice. The ceaseless effort of his life was to rouse men to a sense of the divinity of their own nature;--to fix
their thoughts upon a spiritual life as the only true and real
life;--to teach them to look upon all else as mere show and
unreality; and thus to lead them to constant effort after the
highest Ideal of purity, virtue, independence, and self-denial.
To this ennobling enterprise he consecrated his being;--to it
he devoted his gigantic powers of thought, his iron will, his
resistless eloquence. But he taught it also in deeds more
eloquent than words. In the strong reality of his life,--in
his intense love for all things beautiful and true,--in his in-
corruptible integrity and heroic devotion to the right, we
see a living manifestation of his principles. His life is the
true counterpart of his philosophy;--it is that of a strong,
free, incorruptible man. And with all the sternness of his
morality, he is full of gentle and generous sentiments; of
deep, overflowing sympathies. No tone of love, no soft
breathing of tenderness, fall unheeded on that high royal
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? 132
MEMOIR OF FICIITE.
soul, but in its calm sublimity find a welcome and a home.
Even his hatred is the offspring of a higher love. Truly in-
deed has he been described by one of our own country's
brightest ornaments as a "colossal, adamantine spirit, stand-
ing erect and clear, like a Cato Major among degenerate
men; fit to have been the teacher of the Stoa, and to have
discoursed of beauty and virtue in the groves of Academe. " But the sublimity of his intellect casts no shade on the soft
current of his affections, which flows, pure and unbroken,
through the whole course of his life, to enrich, fertilize, and
adorn it. In no other man of modern times do we find the
stern grandeur of ancient virtue so blended with the kind-
lier humanities of our nature, which flourish best under a
gentler civilization. We prize his philosophy deeply,--it is
to us an invaluable possession, for it seems the noblest ex-
position to which we have yet listened of human nature and
divine truth,--but with reverent thankfulness we acknow-
ledge a still higher debt, for he has left behind him the best
gift which man can bequeath to man,--a brave, heroic
human life.
In the first churchyard from the Oranienburg gate of Ber-
lin, stands a tall obelisk with this inscription:--
THE TEACHERS SHALL SHINE
AS THE BRIGHTNESS OF THE FIRMAMENT;
AND THEY THAT TURN MANY TO RIGHTEOUSNESS
AS THE STARS FOR EVER AND EVER.
It marks the grave of FlCHTE. The faithful partner of his
life sleeps at his feet.
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? ON
THE NATURE OF THE SCHOLAR
MANIFESTATIONS:
LECTURES
DELIVERED AT ERLANGEN
1805.
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? CONTENTS.
Lecture I. -- General Plan.
II. -- Closes Definition of the Meaning of the Divine Idea.
III. -- Of the Progressive Scholar generally, and in particular
of Genius and Industry.
IV. -- Of Integrity in Study.
V. -- How the Integrity of the Student manifests itself.
VI. -- Of Academical Freedom.
VII. -- Of the Finished Scholar in general.
VIII. -- Of the Scholar as Ruler.
IX. --Of the Scholar as Teacher.
X. -- Of the Scholar as Author.
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? 137
LECTURE I.
GENERAL PLAN.
I NOW open the course of public lectures which I have an-
nounced on the roll under the title "De Moribus Erudito-
rum. " This inscription may be translated--" Morality for
the Scholar,"--" On the Vocation of the Scholar,"--" On the
Duty of the Scholar," &c. ;--but in what way soever the title
may be translated and understood, the idea itself demands a
deeper investigation. I proceed to this preliminary inquiry.
Generally speaking, when we hear the word Morality the
the idea is suggested of a formation of character and conduct
according to rule and precept. But it is true only in a
limited sense, and only as seen from a lower point of en-
lightenment, that man is formed by precept, or can form
himself upon precept. On the contrary, from the highest
point--that of absolute truth, on which we here take our
stand,--whatever is to be manifested in the thought or deed
of man, must first be inwardly present in his Nature, and
indeed itself constitute his Nature, being, and life; for that
which lies in the essential Nature of man must necessarily re-
veal itself in his outward life, shine forth in all his thoughts,
desires, and acts, and become his unvarying and unalterable
character. How the freedom of man, and all the efforts by
means of culture, instruction, religion, legislation, to form him
to goodness, are to be reconciled with this truth, is the object
of an entirely different inquiry, into which we do not now
enter. We can here only declare in general, that the two
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? 138 THE NATURE OF THE SCHOLAR.
principles may be thoroughly reconciled, and that a deeper
study of philosophy will clearly show the possibility of their
union.
The fixed disposition and modes of action, or in a word,
the character, of the true Scholar, when contemplated from
the highest point of view, can, properly speaking, only be de-
scribed, not by any means enacted or imposed. On the con-
trary, this apparent and outwardly manifest character of the
true Scholar is founded upon that which already exists with-
in him in his own Nature, independently of all manifesta-
tion and before all manifestation; and it is necessarily
produced and unchangeably determined by this inward
Nature. Hence, if we are to describe his character, we
must first unfold his Nature:--only from the idea of the
latter, can the former be surely and completely deduced. To
make such a deduction from this pre-supposed Nature, is
the proper object of these lectures. Their contents may
therefore be briefly stated: they are--a description of the
Nature of the Scholar, and of its manifestations in the world
of freedom.
The following propositions will aid us in attaining some
insight into the Nature of the Scholar :--
1. The whole material world, with all its adaptations and
ends, and in particular the life of man in this world, are by
no means, in themselves and in deed and truth, that which
they seem to be to the uncultivated and natural sense of
man; but there is something higher, which lies concealed
behind all natural appearance. This concealed foundation
of all appearance may, in its greatest universality, be aptly
named the Divine Idea; and this expression, "Divine Idea,"
shall not in the meantime signify anything more than this
higher ground of appearance, until we shall have more clear-
ly defined its meaning.
2. A certain part of the meaning of this Divine Idea of
the world is accessible to, and conceivable by, the cultivated
mind; and, by the free activity of man, under the guidance
of this Idea, may be impressed upon the world of sense and
represented in it.
had been put in order, the monument repaired, the grave decked with
flowers and garlands. They sang there the first verse of the fine old chorale
Ein'feKte Burg itt unter Gott, and a clergyman delivered an appropriate dis-
course. The house on the New Promenade, in which Fichte for many years
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? "REDEN AN DIE DEUTSCHEN. "
119
upon to arouse themselves to a nobler enterprize, and
never was such a summons pealed forth in tones of more
manly and spirit-stirring energy. The last Address is a
noble appeal to the several classes of society in Germany
to unite, heart and hand, in forwarding the great work of
national regeneration. We quote the peroration:--
"In these addresses the memory of your forefathers speaks
to you. Think that with my voice there are mingled the
voices of your ancestors from the far-off ages of gray anti-
quity, of those who stemmed with their own bodies the tide
of Roman domination over the world, who vindicated with
their own blood the independence of those mountains,
lived, was decorated by the care of the committee for the celebration of the
anniversary with wreaths and laurels, and with draperies of black, red, and
gold, and of black and white, the German and Prussian colours. A memorial
slab was also set up against it--a temporary one to be presently replaced by
one of marble. At the University, Professor Trendelenburg made an excel-
lent speech. Fichte was the first rector of this University. From him, his
eulogist said, it had inherited the obligation to defend independence of
thought and opinion. The Crown Prince was present at the speech, and
afterwards complimented Trendelenburg upon it. The students, the workmen,
and various other corporations celebrated the day; but its most remarkable
feature was unquestionably the grand ceremony at the Victoria Theatre, got
up by the National Verein. The spacious stage, common to both the sum-
mer and the winter theatre, was completely cleared. In the centre of this
platform was a truncated column supporting a colossal bust of Fichte. Be-
hind and on either side of this was a numerous band of chorus singers,
and, behind them, some instrumentalists. At its foot was a slightly-
raised standing-place for the speakers. Dr. Veit, president of the committee,
opened the proceedings in a short speech. M. Berthold Anerbach, better
known as a literary man than as a politician, read a well-composed sketch
of Fichte's life. Deputy Franz Duncker read some very interesting personal
sketches and incidents, furnished by one of Fichte's oldest friends and dis-
ciples. Dr Loewe made a long spech, referring to the tendency of his writ-
ings, and chiefly of a political character. With a few more remarks from
the President, and another chorus by the singers, an evening terminated
which was remarkable for the excellence of its arrangements, and for the
gratification it apparently afforded to all present. " On the same day, a
granite column erected in honour of Fichte at his native village of Ram-
menau, and bearing four marble slabs with appropriate inscriptions, was
inaugurated by a public ceremony. --Ten years later, a memorial to Baron
Stein, erected at Nassau his birth-place in acknowledgment of the debt
which Prussia owes to him, was unveiled on 9th July 1872, in presence
of the Emperor, Empress, and Prince Imperial of Germany.
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? 120
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
plains, and streams, which ye have suffered to fall a prey
to the stranger. They call to you,--'Be you our defenders! --
'hand down our memory to future ages, honourable and
'spotless, as it has come down to you, as you have gloried in
'it, and in your descent from us. Hitherto our struggle has
'been deemed noble, great, and wise;--we have been looked
'upon as the consecrated and inspired ones of a Divine
'World-Plan. Should our race perish with you, then will
'our honour be changed into dishonour, our wisdom into
'folly. For if Germany were ever to be subdued to the Em-
'pire, then had it been better to have fallen before the elder
'Romans than their modern descendants. We withstood
'those, and triumphed; these have scattered you like chaff
'before them. But, as matters now are with you, seek not
'to conquer with bodily weapons, but stand firm and erect
'before them in spiritual dignity. Yours is the greater des-
'tiny,--to found an empire of Mind and Reason,--to destroy
'the dominion of rude physical power as the ruler of the
'world. Do this, and ye shall be worthy of your descent
'from us! '
"With these voices mingle the spirits of your later fa-
thers,--of those who fell in the sacred struggle for freedom
of Religion and of Faith:--' Save our honour too! ' they calL
'To us it had not become wholly clear what it was we fought
'for;--besides our just determination to suffer no outward
'power to control us in matters of conscience, we were also
'led onward by a higher spirit which never wholly unveiled
'itself to our view. To you this spirit is no longer veiled,
'if your power of vision transcend the things of sense;--it
'now regards you with high, clear aspect . The confused
'and intricate combination of sensous and spiritual impulses
'with each other shall no longer govern the world: Mind
'alone, pure from all admixture of sense, shall assume the
'guidance of human affairs. In order that this spirit should
'have liberty to develope itself, and rise to independent
'existence, our blood was shed. It lies with you to give a
'meaning and a justification to the sacrifice, by establishing
'this spirit in its destined supremacy. Should this result
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? "REDEN AN DIE DEUTSCHEN. "
121
'not ensue, as the ultimate end of the previous develop-
'ment of our nation, then were our struggles but a forgotten
'farce, and, the freedom of mind and conscience for which
'we fought, an empty word, since neither mind nor con-
'science should any longer have a place among us. '
"The races yet unborn plead with you:--' You were proud
'of your forefathers,' they cry,--'and gloried in your descent
'from a noble line of men. See that with you the chain is
'not broken;--act so that we also may be proud of you, and
'through you, as through a spotless medium, claim our des-
'cent from the same glorious source. Be not you the cause
'of making us revile our ancestry as low, barbarous, and
'slavish;--of causing us to hide our origin, or to assume a
'foreign name and a foreign parentage, in order that we
'may not, without farther proof, be cast aside and trodden
'underfoot . According as the next generation which pro-
'ceeds from you shall be, so shall be your future fame:
'honourable, if this shall bear honourable witness to you;
'deservedly ignominious, if ye have not an unblemished
'posterity to succeed you, and leave it to the conqueror to
'write your history. Never has a victor been known to 'have either the inclination or the means of passing a just 'judgment on the subdued. The more he degrades them,
'the better does he justify his own position. Who can
'know what great deeds, what excellent institutions, what
'noble manners of many nations of antiquity may have 'passed away into oblivion, because their succeeding genera- 'tions have been enslaved, and have left the conqueror, in
'his own way, and without contradiction, to tell their story? '
"Even the stranger in foreign lands pleads with you, in
so far as he understands himself and knows aright his own
true interest . Yes! there are in every nation minds who can
never believe that the great promises to the human race of
a Kingdom of Law, of Reason, and of Truth, are idle and
vain delusions, and who consequently cherish the conviction
that the present iron-handed time is but a progression to-
wards a better state. These, and with them the whole later
races of humanity, trust in you. A great part of these trace
R
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? 1-2-2
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
their lineage from us; others have received from us religion
and all other culture. Those plead with us, by the common
soil of our Fatherland, the cradle of their infancy, which they
have left to us free,--these by the culture which they have
accepted from us as the pledge of a higher good,--to main-
tain, for their sakes, the proud position which has hitherto
been ours, to guard with jealous watchfulness against even
the possible disappearance, from the great confederation of
a newly-arisen humanity, of that member which is to them
more important than all others; so that when they shall
need our counsel, our example, our cooperation in the pur-
suit and attainment of the true end of this Earthly Life,
they shall not look around for us in vain.
"All Ages,--all the Wise and Good who have ever breathed
the air of this world of ours,--all their thoughts and aspi-
rations towards a Higher Good,--mingle with these voices,
and encompass you about, and raise supplicating hands to-
wards you;--Providence itself, if we may venture so to speak,
and the Divine Plan in the creation of a Human Race,--
which indeed exists only that it may be understood of men,
and by men be wrought out into reality,--plead with you
to save their honour and their existence. Whether those
who have believed that Humanity must ever advance in a
course of ceaseless improvement, and that the great ideas of
its order and dignity were not empty dreams, but the pro-
phetic announcement and pledge of their own future reali-
zation ;--whether those--or they who have slumbered on in
the sluggish indolence of a mere vegetable or animal exis-
tence, and mocked every aspiration towards a higher World
--have had the right,--this is the question upon which it
has fallen to your lot to furnish a last and decisive answer.
The ancient world, with all its nobility and greatness, as well
as all its deficiencies, has fallen,--through its own unworthi-
ness and the might of your forefathers. If there has been
truth in that which I have spoken to you in these Addresses,
then it is you to whom, out of all other modern nations, the
germs of human perfection are especially committed, and on
whom the foremost place in the onward advance towards
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? "REDEN AN DIE DEUTSCHEN. "
123
their development is conferred. If you sink to nothing in
this your peculiar office, then with you the hopes of Hu-
manity for salvation out of all its evils are likewise over-
thrown. Hope not, console not yourselves with the vain
delusion, that a second time, after the destruction of an
ancient civilization, a new culture will arise upon the ruins
of the old, from a half-barbaric people. In ancient times,
such a people existed fully provided with all the requisites
for this mission; they were well known to the cultivated
nation, and were described in its literature; and that na-
tion itself, had it been able to suppose the case of its own
downfall, might have discovered the means of renovation in
this people. To us also the whole surface of the earth is
well known, and all the nations who dwell upon it. Do we
know one, like the ancestral tribe of modern Europe, of
whom like hopes may be entertained? I think that every
man who does not give himself up to visionary hopes and
fancies, but desires only honest and searching inquiry,
must answer this question--No! There is, then, no way
of escape :--if ye sink, Humanity sinks with you, without
hope of future restoration! "--Seldom indeed has the cause
of a nation's independence been pled on grounds so truly
noble and elevating as these!
This spirit-stirring course of public activity was inter-
rupted by a severe illness, which attacked him in the spring
of 1808. It was his first illness, and it took so determined
a hold of his powerful constitution, that he never thoroughly
got rid of its effects. Deep-seated nervous disease, and par-
ticularly an affection of the liver, reduced him to great
weakness, and for a time it seemed doubtful whether his
life could be saved. It was only after some months of suf-
fering that the disease settled down upon a particular limb,
and left him with a rheumatic lameness of the left arm and
right foot, which, with an accompanying inflammation in
the eyes, hindered him for a long time from resuming his
habits of active life. He was removed several times to the
baths of Teplitz with beneficial effect. The tedium of con-
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? 124
MEMOIR OV KICHTE.
valescence was relieved by study of the great authors of
Italy, Spain, and Portugal. At an earlier period of his life
he had made himself acquainted with the languages of these
countries, and had produced many translations from their
poets, particularly an entire version of the first canto of
Dante's Divina Commedia,* and one of the most beautiful
episodes in the Lusiad of Camoens. And now, in the sea-
son of debility and pain, the noble thoughts handed down by
the great poets of the south as an everlasting possession to
the world, became to him the springs of new strength and
dignity. Nor did he cease altogether from literary exer-
tion. During his confinement he undertook a thorough re-
vision of his philosophical lectures, and made extensive pre-
paration for his future academical labours. Much of his
time, too, was occupied in the education of his only son, who
speaks with deep reverence and thankfulness of the instruc-
tions thus imparted to him. Amongst his letters written
during his sickness, we find a touching correspondence with
Ernst Wagner, a true and warm-hearted friend of his coun-
try and of all good men, but whose spirit was crushed al-
most to hopelessness by the pressure of disease and penury.
To him Fichte found means of affording such relief and en-
couragement as prolonged, for some short period at least,
a valuable and upright life.
Of his domestic life during this period, and the manner
in which it too bore the impress of his high soul-elevating
philosophy, we obtain the following interesting and in-
structive glimpse:--" We had a family meeting for worship
every evening, which closed the day worthily and solemnly;
in this the domestics also were accustomed to take a part.
When some verses of a chorale had been sung to the accom-
paniment of the piano, my father began, and discoursed upon
a passage or chapter of the New Testament, especially from
his favourite Evangelist John; or, when particular household
circumstances gave occasion for it, he spoke also a word of
reproof or of comfort. But, as far as I remember, he never
* Printed in the "Vesta" for 1807.
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? UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN.
125
made use of ordinary practical applications of his subject, or
laid down preceptive regulations for conduct; but the ten-
dency of his teaching appeared rather to be to purify the
spirit from the distractions and vanities of common life, and
to elevate it to the Imperishable and Eternal. "--So truly
was his life, in all its relations, the faithful counterpart of
the noble doctrine which he taught.
On Fichte's return to active life he found himself placed,
almost at once, in a position from which he could influence
in no slight degree the destinies of his fatherland. Doubts
had arisen as to the propriety of placing the new University
in a large city like Berlin. It was urged that the metropolis
presented too many temptations to idleness and dissipation
to render it an eligible situation for a seminary devoted to
the education of young men. This was the view entertained
by the Minister Stein, but warmly combated by Wolff,
Fichte, and others. Stein was at length won over, and the
University was opened in 1810. The King gave one of the
finest palaces in Berlin for the purpose, and all the appli-
ances of mental culture were provided on the most liberal
scale. Learned men of the greatest eminence in their re-
spective departments were invited from all quarters,--Wolff,
Fichte, Muller, Humboldt, De Wette, Schleiermacher, Nean-
der, Klaproth, and Savigny,--higher names than these cannot
easily be found in their peculiar walks of literature and
science. By the suffrages of his fellow-teachers, Fichte was
unanimously elected Kector.
Thus placed at the head of an institution from which so
much was expected, Fichte laboured unceasingly to establish
a high tone of morality in the new University, convinced
that thereby he should best promote the dignity as well as
the welfare of his country. His dearest wish was to see
Germany free,--free alike from foreign oppression and from internal reproach. He longed to see the stern sublimity of
old Greek citizenship reappear among a people whom the
conquerors of Greece had failed to subdue. And therefore
it was before all things necessary that they who were to go
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? 126
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
forth as the apostles of truth and virtue, who were to be
the future representatives among the people of all that is
dignified and sacred, should themselves be deeply impressed
with the high nature of their calling, and keep unsullied the
honour which must guide and guard them in the discharge
of its duties. He therefore applied himself to the reforma-
tion of such features in the student-life as seemed irrecon-
cilable with its nobleness,--to the suppression of the Lands-
mannschaften, and of the practice of duelling. Courts of
honour, composed of the students themselves, decided upon
all such quarrels as had usually led to personal encounters.
During his two years' rectorship, Fichte laboured with un-
remitting perseverance to render the University in every
respect worthy of the great purposes which had called it
into existence, and laid the foundation of the character
which it still maintains, of being the best regulated, as well
as one of the most efficient, schools in Germany.
The year of 1812 was an important one for Europe, and
particularly for Germany. The gigantic power of Napoleon
had now reached its culminating point. Joseph Bonaparte
reigned at Madrid, and Murat at Naples;--Austria was sub-
dued, and the fair daughter of the House of Hapsburg had
united her fate to that of the conqueror of her race;--Prus-
sia lay at his mercy;--Holland and the Free Towns were
annexed to the territory of France, which now extended from
Sicily to Denmark. One thing alone was wanting to make
him sole master of the continent of Europe, and that was
the conquest of Russia. His passion for universal dominion
led him into the great military error of his life,--the at-
tempt to conquer a country defended by its climate from
foreign invasion, and which, even if subdued, could never
have been retained. He rushed on to the fate which sooner
or later awaits unbridled ambition. The immense armies of
France were poured through Germany upon the North, to
find a grave amid the snows of Smolensk and in the waters
of the Berezina.
And now Prussia resolved to make a decisive effort to
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? WAR OF LIBERATION.
127
throw off a yoke which had always been hateful to her. The
charm was now broken which made men look on the might
of Napoleon as invincible;--the unconquerable battalions
had been routed; fortune had turned against her former
favourite. The King entered into an alliance with the Rus-
sian Emperor, and in January 1813, having retired from
Berlin to Breslau, he sent forth a proclamation calling upon
the youth of the country to arm themselves in defence of
its liberty. Nobly was his appeal responded to. The nation
rose as one man; all distinctions were forgotten in the high
enthusiasm of the time; prince and peasant, teacher and
scholar, artizan and merchant, poet and philosopher, swelled
the ranks of the army of liberation.
Fichte now renewed his former application to be permit-
ted to accompany the troops in the capacity of preacher or
orator, that he might share their dangers and animate their
courage. Difficulties, however, arose in the way of this ar-
rangement, and he resolved to remain at his post in Berlin,
and to continue his lectures until he and his scholars should
be called personally to the defence of their country. The
other professors united with him in a common agreement
that the widows and children of such of their number as fell
in the war should be provided for by the cares of the survi-
vors. It is worthy of remark, that amid this eager enthu-
siasm Fichte resolutely opposed the adoption of any proceed-
ings against the enemy which might cast dishonour on the
sacred cause of freedom . While a French garrison still held
Berlin, one of his students revealed to him a plan, in which
he himself was engaged, for firing their magazine during the
night. Doubts had arisen in his mind as to the lawfulness
of such a mode of aiding his country's cause, and he had
resolved to lay the scheme before the teacher for whose
opinion he entertained an almost unbounded reverence.
Fichte immediately disclosed the plot to the superintendent
of police, by whose timely interference it was defeated.
The
same young man, who acted so honourably on this occasion,
afterwards entered the army as a volunteer in one of the
grenadier battalions. At the battle of Dennewitz his life
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? 128
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
was preserved in a very remarkable manner. A musket
ball, which struck him during the fight, was arrested in its
fatal progress by encountering a copy of Fichte's "Religions-
lehre," his constant companion and moral safeguard, which
on this occasion served him likewise as a physical ^Egidus.
On examining the book, he found that the ball had been
stopped at these words (p. 249)--"denn alles, was da kommt,
ist der Wille Gottes mit ihm, und drum das Allerbeste,
was da kommen konnte "--(" for everything that comes to
pass is the Will of God with him, and therefore the best that
can possibly come to pass. ")
During the summer of 1813, Fichte delivered from the
Academical chair those views of the existing circumstances
of his country, and of the war in which it was engaged, which
he was prevented from communicating to the army directly.
These lectures were afterwards printed under the title of
"Ueber den Begriff des wahren Kriegs"--(On the Idea of a
true War. ) With a clearness and energy of thought which
seemed to increase with the difficulties and dangers of his
country, he roused an irresistible opposition to proposals of
peace which, through the mediation of Austria, were offered
during the armistice in June and July. The demands of
Napoleon left Germany only a nominal independence; a
brave and earnest people sought for true freedom. "A
stout heart and no peace," was Fichte's motto, and his
countrymen agreed with him. Hostilities were recom-
menced in August 1813.
In the beginning of the winter half-year, Fichte resumed
his philosophical prelections at the University. His subject
was an introduction to philosophy upon an entirely new
plan, which should render a knowledge of his whole sys-
tem much more easily attainable. It is said that this, his
last course of academical lectures, was distinguished by un-
usual freshness and brilliancy of thought, as if he were ani-
mated once more by the energy of youthful enthusiasm,
even while he stood, unconsciously, on the threshold of an-
other world. He had now accomplished the great object of
his life,--the completion, in his own mind, of that scheme
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? WAR OF LIBERATION.
129
of knowledge by which his name was to be known to pos-
terity. Existing in his own thought as one clear and com-
prehensive whole, he believed that he could now communi-
cate it to others, in a simpler and more intelligible form
than it had yet assumed. It was his intention to devote the
following summer to this purpose, and, in the solitude of
some country retreat, to prepare a finished record of his phi-
losophy in its maturity and completeness. But fate had
ordered otherwise.
The vicinity of Berlin to the seat of the great struggle on
which the liberties of Germany were depending rendered it
the most eligible place for the reception of the wounded and
and diseased. The hospitals of the city were crowded, and
the ordinary attendants of these establishments were found
insufficient in number to supply the wants of the patients.
The authorities therefore called upon the inhabitants for
their assistance, and Fichte's wife was one of the first who
responded to the calL The noble and generous disposition
which had rendered her the worthy companion of the philo-
sopher, now led her forth, regardless of danger, to give all
her powers to woman's holiest ministry. Not only did she
labour with unwearied assiduity to assuage the bodily suf-
ferings of the wounded, and to surround them with every
comfort which their situation required and which she had
the power to supply; she likewise poured words of consola-
tion into many a breaking heart, and awakened new strength
and faithfulness in those who were "ready to perish. "
For five months she pursued with uninterrupted devotion
her attendance at the hospitals, and although not naturally
of a strong constitution, she escaped the contagion which
surrounded her. But on the 3d of January 1814 she was
seized with a nervous fever, which speedily rose to an alarm-
ing height, so that almost every hope of her recovery was
lost . Fichte's affection never suffered him to leave her side,
except during the time of his lectures. It is an astonishing
proof of his self-command, that after a day of anxious
watching at the deathbed, as it seemed, of her he held
s
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? 130
MEMOIR OF FICHTE.
dearest on earth, he should be able to address his class in
the evening, for two consecutive hours, on the most pro-
found and abstract subjects of human speculation, uncertain
whether, on his return, he might find that loved one still
alive. At length the crisis of the fever was past, and Fichte
received again the faithful partner of his cares, rescued from
the grave.
But even in this season of joy, in the embrace of gratula-
tion he received the seeds of death. Scarcely was his wife
pronounced out of danger than he himself caught the in-
fection, and was attacked by the insidious disease. Its first
symptom was nervous sleeplessness, which resisted the ef-
fects of baths and the other usual remedies. Soon, however,
the true nature of the malady was no longer doubtful, and
during the rapid progress of his illness, his lucid moments
became shorter and less frequent. In one of these he was
told of Blucher's passage of the Rhine, and the final expul-
sion of the French from Germany. That spirit-stirring in-
formation touched a chord which roused him from his un-
consciousness, and he awoke to a bright and glorious vision
of a better future for his fatherland. The triumphant ex-
citement mingled itself with his fevered fancies:--he ima-
gined himself in the midst of the victorious struggle, strik-
ing for the liberties of Germany; and then again it was
against his own disease that he fought, and power of will
and firm determination were the arms by which he was to
conquer it. Shortly before his death, when his son ap-
proached him with medicine, he said, with his usual look of
deep affection--" Leave it alone; I need no more medicine:
I feel that I am well. " On the eleventh day of his illness,
on the night of the 27th January 1814, he died. The last
hours of his life were passed in deep and unbroken sleep.
Fichte died in his fifty-second year, with his bodily and
mental faculties unimpaired by age; scarcely a grey hair
shaded the deep black upon his bold and erect head. In
stature he was low, but powerful and muscular. His step
was firm, and his whole appearance and address bespoke the
rectitude, firmness, and earnestness of his character.
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? ESTIMATE OF HIS CHARACTER.
131
His widow survived him for five years. By the kindness
of the Monarch she was enabled to pass the remainder of
her life in ease and competence, devoting herself to the
superintendence of her son's education. She died on the
29th January 1819, after an illness of seven days.
Fichte died as he had lived,--the priest of knowledge, the apostle of freedom, the martyr of humanity. He belongs to
those Great Men whose lives are an everlasting possession
to mankind, and whose words the world does not willingly
let die. His character stands written in his life, a massive
but severely simple whole. It has no parts;--the depth
and earnestness on which it rests, speak forth alike in his
thoughts, words, and actions. No man of his time--few
perhaps of any time--exercised a more powerful, spirit-stir-
ring influence over the minds of his fellow-countrymen.
The impulse which he communicated to the national
thought extended far beyond the sphere of his personal in-
fluence ;--it has awakened,--it will still awaken,--high
emotion and manly resolution in thousands who never
heard his voice. The ceaseless effort of his life was to rouse men to a sense of the divinity of their own nature;--to fix
their thoughts upon a spiritual life as the only true and real
life;--to teach them to look upon all else as mere show and
unreality; and thus to lead them to constant effort after the
highest Ideal of purity, virtue, independence, and self-denial.
To this ennobling enterprise he consecrated his being;--to it
he devoted his gigantic powers of thought, his iron will, his
resistless eloquence. But he taught it also in deeds more
eloquent than words. In the strong reality of his life,--in
his intense love for all things beautiful and true,--in his in-
corruptible integrity and heroic devotion to the right, we
see a living manifestation of his principles. His life is the
true counterpart of his philosophy;--it is that of a strong,
free, incorruptible man. And with all the sternness of his
morality, he is full of gentle and generous sentiments; of
deep, overflowing sympathies. No tone of love, no soft
breathing of tenderness, fall unheeded on that high royal
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? 132
MEMOIR OF FICIITE.
soul, but in its calm sublimity find a welcome and a home.
Even his hatred is the offspring of a higher love. Truly in-
deed has he been described by one of our own country's
brightest ornaments as a "colossal, adamantine spirit, stand-
ing erect and clear, like a Cato Major among degenerate
men; fit to have been the teacher of the Stoa, and to have
discoursed of beauty and virtue in the groves of Academe. " But the sublimity of his intellect casts no shade on the soft
current of his affections, which flows, pure and unbroken,
through the whole course of his life, to enrich, fertilize, and
adorn it. In no other man of modern times do we find the
stern grandeur of ancient virtue so blended with the kind-
lier humanities of our nature, which flourish best under a
gentler civilization. We prize his philosophy deeply,--it is
to us an invaluable possession, for it seems the noblest ex-
position to which we have yet listened of human nature and
divine truth,--but with reverent thankfulness we acknow-
ledge a still higher debt, for he has left behind him the best
gift which man can bequeath to man,--a brave, heroic
human life.
In the first churchyard from the Oranienburg gate of Ber-
lin, stands a tall obelisk with this inscription:--
THE TEACHERS SHALL SHINE
AS THE BRIGHTNESS OF THE FIRMAMENT;
AND THEY THAT TURN MANY TO RIGHTEOUSNESS
AS THE STARS FOR EVER AND EVER.
It marks the grave of FlCHTE. The faithful partner of his
life sleeps at his feet.
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? ON
THE NATURE OF THE SCHOLAR
MANIFESTATIONS:
LECTURES
DELIVERED AT ERLANGEN
1805.
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? CONTENTS.
Lecture I. -- General Plan.
II. -- Closes Definition of the Meaning of the Divine Idea.
III. -- Of the Progressive Scholar generally, and in particular
of Genius and Industry.
IV. -- Of Integrity in Study.
V. -- How the Integrity of the Student manifests itself.
VI. -- Of Academical Freedom.
VII. -- Of the Finished Scholar in general.
VIII. -- Of the Scholar as Ruler.
IX. --Of the Scholar as Teacher.
X. -- Of the Scholar as Author.
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? 137
LECTURE I.
GENERAL PLAN.
I NOW open the course of public lectures which I have an-
nounced on the roll under the title "De Moribus Erudito-
rum. " This inscription may be translated--" Morality for
the Scholar,"--" On the Vocation of the Scholar,"--" On the
Duty of the Scholar," &c. ;--but in what way soever the title
may be translated and understood, the idea itself demands a
deeper investigation. I proceed to this preliminary inquiry.
Generally speaking, when we hear the word Morality the
the idea is suggested of a formation of character and conduct
according to rule and precept. But it is true only in a
limited sense, and only as seen from a lower point of en-
lightenment, that man is formed by precept, or can form
himself upon precept. On the contrary, from the highest
point--that of absolute truth, on which we here take our
stand,--whatever is to be manifested in the thought or deed
of man, must first be inwardly present in his Nature, and
indeed itself constitute his Nature, being, and life; for that
which lies in the essential Nature of man must necessarily re-
veal itself in his outward life, shine forth in all his thoughts,
desires, and acts, and become his unvarying and unalterable
character. How the freedom of man, and all the efforts by
means of culture, instruction, religion, legislation, to form him
to goodness, are to be reconciled with this truth, is the object
of an entirely different inquiry, into which we do not now
enter. We can here only declare in general, that the two
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? 138 THE NATURE OF THE SCHOLAR.
principles may be thoroughly reconciled, and that a deeper
study of philosophy will clearly show the possibility of their
union.
The fixed disposition and modes of action, or in a word,
the character, of the true Scholar, when contemplated from
the highest point of view, can, properly speaking, only be de-
scribed, not by any means enacted or imposed. On the con-
trary, this apparent and outwardly manifest character of the
true Scholar is founded upon that which already exists with-
in him in his own Nature, independently of all manifesta-
tion and before all manifestation; and it is necessarily
produced and unchangeably determined by this inward
Nature. Hence, if we are to describe his character, we
must first unfold his Nature:--only from the idea of the
latter, can the former be surely and completely deduced. To
make such a deduction from this pre-supposed Nature, is
the proper object of these lectures. Their contents may
therefore be briefly stated: they are--a description of the
Nature of the Scholar, and of its manifestations in the world
of freedom.
The following propositions will aid us in attaining some
insight into the Nature of the Scholar :--
1. The whole material world, with all its adaptations and
ends, and in particular the life of man in this world, are by
no means, in themselves and in deed and truth, that which
they seem to be to the uncultivated and natural sense of
man; but there is something higher, which lies concealed
behind all natural appearance. This concealed foundation
of all appearance may, in its greatest universality, be aptly
named the Divine Idea; and this expression, "Divine Idea,"
shall not in the meantime signify anything more than this
higher ground of appearance, until we shall have more clear-
ly defined its meaning.
2. A certain part of the meaning of this Divine Idea of
the world is accessible to, and conceivable by, the cultivated
mind; and, by the free activity of man, under the guidance
of this Idea, may be impressed upon the world of sense and
represented in it.
