Arthur Schopenhauer was born at No. 117 of the Heiligengeist
Strasse, at Dantzic, on February 22, 1788. His parents on both
sides traced their descent from Dutch ancestry, the
great-grandfather of his mother having occupied some ecclesiastical
position at Gorcum. Dr. Gwinner in his Life does not follow the
Dutch ancestry on the father's side, but merely states that the
great-grandfather of Schopenhauer at the beginning of the
eighteenth century rented a farm, the Stuthof, in the neighbourhood
of Dantzic. This ancestor, Andreas Schopenhauer, received here on
one occasion an unexpected visit from Peter the Great and
Catherine, and it is related that there being no stove in the
chamber which the royal pair selected for the night, their host,
for the purpose of heating it, set fire to several small bottles of
brandy which had been emptied on the stone floor. His son Andreas
followed in the footsteps of his father, combining a commercial
career with country pursuits. He died in 1794 at Ohra, where he had
purchased an estate, and to which he had retired to spend his
closing years. His wife (the grandmother of Arthur) survived him
for some years, although shortly after his death she was declared
insane and incapable of managing her affairs. This couple had four
sons: the eldest, Michael Andreas, was weak-minded; the second,
Karl Gottfried, was also mentally weak and had deserted his people
for evil companions; the youngest son, Heinrich Floris, possessed,
however, in a considerable degree the qualities which his brothers
lacked. He possessed intelligence, a strong character, and had
great commercial sagacity; at the same time, he took a definite
interest in intellectual pursuits, reading Voltaire, of whom he was
more or less a disciple, and other French authors, possessing a
keen admiration for English political and family life, and
furnishing his house after an English fashion. He was a man of
fiery temperament and his appearance was scarcely prepossessing; he
was short and stout; he had a broad face and turned-up nose, and a
large mouth. This was the father of our philosopher.
When he was thirty-eight,
Heinrich Schopenhauer married, on May 16, 1785, Johanna Henriette
Trosiener, a young lady of eighteen, and daughter of a member of
the City Council of Dantzic. She was at this time an attractive,
cultivated young person, of a placid disposition, who seems to have
married more because marriage offered her a comfortable settlement
and assured position in life, than from any passionate affection
for her wooer, which, it is just to her to say, she did not
profess. Heinrich Schopenhauer was so much influenced by English
ideas that he desired that his first child should be born in
England; and thither, some two years after their marriage, the
pair, after making a ditour on the Continent, arrived. But after
spending some weeks in London Mrs. Schopenhauer was seized with
home-sickness, and her husband acceded to her entreaties to return
to Dantzic, where a child, the future philosopher, was shortly
afterwards born. The first five years of the child's life were
spent in the country, partly at the Stuthof which had formerly
belonged to Andreas Schopenhauer, but had recently come into the
possession of his maternal grandfather.
Five years after the birth of his
son, Heinrich Schopenhauer, in consequence of the political crisis,
which he seems to have taken keenly to heart, in the affairs of the
Hanseatic town of Dantzic, transferred his business and his home to
Hamburg, where in 1795 a second child, Adele, was born. Two years
later, Heinrich, who intended to train his son for a business life,
took him, with this idea, to Havre, by way of Paris, where they
spent a little time, and left him there with M. Grigoire, a
commercial connection. Arthur remained at Havre for two years,
receiving private instruction with this man's son Anthime, with
whom he struck up a strong friendship, and when he returned to
Hamburg it was found that he remembered but few words of his
mother-tongue. Here he was placed in one of the principal private
schools, where he remained for three years. Both his parents, but
especially his mother, cultivated at this time the society of
literary people, and entertained at their house Klopstock and other
notable persons. In the summer following his return home from Havre
he accompanied his parents on a continental tour, stopping amongst
other places at Weimar, where he saw Schiller. His mother, too, had
considerable literary tastes, and a distinct literary gift which,
later, she cultivated to some advantage, and which brought her in
the production of accounts of travel and fiction a not
inconsiderable reputation. It is, therefore, not surprising that
literary tendencies began to show themselves in her son,
accompanied by a growing distaste for the career of commerce which
his father wished him to follow. Heinrich Schopenhauer, although
deprecating these tendencies, considered the question of purchasing
a canonry for his son, but ultimately gave up the idea on the score
of expense. He then proposed to take him on an extended trip to
France, where he might meet his young friend Anthime, and then to
England, if he would give up the idea of a literary calling, and
the proposal was accepted.
In the spring of 1803, then, he
accompanied his parents to London, where, after spending some time
in sight-seeing, he was placed in the school of Mr. Lancaster at
Wimbledon. Here he remained for three months, from July to
September, laying the foundation of his knowledge of the English
language, while his parents proceeded to Scotland. English
formality, and what he conceived to be English hypocrisy, did not
contrast favourably with his earlier and gayer experiences in
France, and made an extremely unfavourable impression upon his
mind; which found expression in letters to his friends and to his
mother.
On returning to Hamburg after
this extended excursion abroad, Schopenhauer was placed in the
office of a Hamburg senator called Jenisch, but he was as little
inclined as ever to follow a commercial career, and secretly
shirked his work so that he might pursue his studies. A little
later a somewhat unexplainable calamity occurred. When Dantzic
ceased to be a free city, and Heinrich Schopenhauer at a
considerable cost and monetary sacrifice transferred his business
to Hamburg, the event caused him much bitterness of spirit. At
Hamburg his business seems to have undergone fluctuations. Whether
these further affected his spirit is not sufficiently established,
but it is certain, however, that he developed peculiarities of
manner, and that his temper became more violent. At any rate, one
day in April 1805 it was found that he had either fallen or thrown
himself into the canal from an upper storey of a granary; it was
generally concluded that it was a case of suicide.
Schopenhauer was seventeen at the
time of this catastrophe, by which he was naturally greatly
affected. Although by the death of his father the influence which
impelled him to a commercial career was removed, his veneration for
the dead man remained with him through life, and on one occasion
found expression in a curious tribute to his memory in a dedication
(which was not, however, printed) to the second edition of Die Welt
als Wille und Vorstellung. "That I could make use of and cultivate
in a right direction the powers which nature gave me," he
concludes, "that I could follow my natural impulse and think and
work for countless others without the help of any one; for that I
thank thee, my father, thank thy activity, thy cleverness, thy
thrift and care for the future. Therefore I praise thee, my noble
father. And every one who from my work derives any pleasure,
consolation, or instruction shall hear thy name and know that if
Heinrich Floris Schopenhauer had not been the man he was, Arthur
Schopenhauer would have been a hundred times ruined."
The year succeeding her husband's
death, Johanna Schopenhauer removed with her daughter to Weimar,
after having attended to the settlement of her husband's affairs,
which left her in possession of a considerable income. At Weimar
she devoted herself to the pursuit of literature, and held twice a
week a sort of salon, which was attended by Goethe, the two
Schlegels, Wieland, Heinrich Meyer, Grimm, and other literary
persons of note. Her son meanwhile continued for another year at
the "dead timber of the desk," when his mother, acting under the
advice of her friend Fernow, consented, to his great joy, to his
following his literary bent.
During the next few years we find
Schopenhauer devoting himself assiduously to acquiring the
equipment for a learned career; at first at the Gymnasium at Gotha,
where he penned some satirical verses on one of the masters, which
brought him into some trouble. He removed in consequence to Weimar,
where he pursued his classical studies under the direction of Franz
Passow, at whose house he lodged. Unhappily, during his sojourn at
Weimar his relations with his mother became strained. One feels
that there is a sort of autobiographical interest in his essay on
women, that his view was largely influenced by his relations with
his mother, just as one feels that his particular argument in his
essay on education is largely influenced by the course of his own
training.
On his coming of age Schopenhauer
was entitled to a share of the paternal estate, a share which
yielded him a yearly income of about #150. He now entered himself
at the University of Gvttingen (October 1809), enrolling himself as
a student of medicine, and devoting himself to the study of the
natural sciences, mineralogy, anatomy, mathematics, and history;
later, he included logic, physiology, and ethnography. He had
always been passionately devoted to music and found relaxation in
learning to play the flute and guitar. His studies at this time did
not preoccupy him to the extent of isolation; he mixed freely with
his fellows, and reckoned amongst his friends or acquaintances,
F.W. Kreise, Bunsen, and Ernst Schulze. During one vacation he went
on an expedition to Cassel and to the Hartz Mountains. It was about
this time, and partly owing to the influence of Schulze, the author
of Aenesidemus, and then a professor at the University of
Gvttingen, that Schopenhauer came to realise his vocation as that
of a philosopher.
During his holiday at Weimar he
called upon Wieland, then seventy-eight years old, who, probably
prompted by Mrs. Schopenhauer, tried to dissuade him from the
vocation which he had chosen. Schopenhauer in reply said, "Life is
a difficult question; I have decided to spend my life in thinking
about it." Then, after the conversation had continued for some
little time, Wieland declared warmly that he thought that he had
chosen rightly. "I understand your nature," he said; "keep to
philosophy." And, later, he told Johanna Schopenhauer that he
thought her son would be a great man some day.
Towards the close of the summer
of 1811 Schopenhauer removed to Berlin and entered the University.
He here continued his study of the natural sciences; he also
attended the lectures on the History of Philosophy by
Schleiermacher, and on Greek Literature and Antiquities by F.A.
Wolf, and the lectures on "Facts of Consciousness" and "Theory of
Science" by Fichte, for the last of whom, as we know indeed from
frequent references in his books, he had no little contempt. A year
or so later, when the news of Napoleon's disaster in Russia
arrived, the Germans were thrown into a state of great excitement,
and made speedy preparations for war. Schopenhauer contributed
towards equipping volunteers for the army, but he did not enter
active service; indeed, when the result of the battle of L|tzen was
known and Berlin seemed to be in danger, he fled for safety to
Dresden and thence to Weimar. A little later we find him at
Rudolstadt, whither he had proceeded in consequence of the
recurrence of differences with his mother, and remained there from
June to November 1813, principally engaged in the composition of an
essay, "A Philosophical Treatise on the Fourfold Root of the
Principle of Sufficient Reason," which he offered to the University
of Jena as an exercise to qualify for the degree of Doctor of
Philosophy, and for which a diploma was granted. He published this
essay at his own cost towards the end of the year, but it seems to
have fallen flatly from the press, although its arguments attracted
the attention and the sympathy of Goethe, who, meeting him on his
return to Weimar in November, discussed with him his own theory of
colour. A couple of years before, Goethe, who was opposed to the
Newtonian theory of light, had brought out his Farbenlehre (colour
theory). In Goethe's diary Schopenhauer's name frequently occurs,
and on the 24th November 1813 he wrote to Knebel: "Young
Schopenhauer is a remarkable and interesting man.... I find him
intellectual, but I am undecided about him as far as other things
go." The result of this association with Goethe was his Ueber das
Sehn und die Farben ("On Vision and Colour"), published at Leipzig
in 1816, a copy of which he forwarded to Goethe (who had already
seen the MS.) on the 4th May of that year. A few days later Goethe
wrote to the distinguished scientist, Dr. Seebeck, asking him to
read the work. In Gwinner's Life we find the copy of a letter
written in English to Sir C.L. Eastlake: "In the year 1830, as I
was going to publish in Latin the same treatise which in German
accompanies this letter, I went to Dr. Seebeck of the Berlin
Academy, who is universally admitted to be the first natural
philosopher (in the English sense of the word meaning physiker) of
Germany; he is the discoverer of thermo-electricity and of several
physical truths. I questioned him on his opinion on the controversy
between Goethe and Newton; he was extremely cautious and made me
promise that I should not print and publish anything of what he
might say, and at last, being hard pressed by me, he confessed that
indeed Goethe was perfectly right and Newton wrong, but that he had
no business to tell the world so. He has died since, the old
coward!"
In May 1814 Schopenhauer removed
from Weimar to Dresden, in consequence of the recurrence of
domestic differences with his mother. This was the final break
between the pair, and he did not see her again during the remaining
twenty-four years of her life, although they resumed correspondence
some years before her death. It were futile to attempt to revive
the dead bones of the cause of these unfortunate differences
between Johanna Schopenhauer and her son. It was a question of
opposing temperaments; both and neither were at once to blame.
There is no reason to suppose that Schopenhauer was ever a
conciliatory son, or a companionable person to live with; in fact,
there is plenty to show that he possessed trying and irritating
qualities, and that he assumed an attitude of criticism towards his
mother that could not in any circumstances be agreeable. On the
other hand, Anselm Feuerbach in his Memoirs furnishes us with a
scarcely prepossessing picture of Mrs. Schopenhauer: "Madame
Schopenhauer," he writes, "a rich widow. Makes profession of
erudition. Authoress. Prattles much and well, intelligently;
without heart and soul. Self-complacent, eager after approbation,
and constantly smiling to herself. God preserve us from women whose
mind has shot up into mere intellect."
Schopenhauer meanwhile was
working out his philosophical system, the idea of his principal
philosophical work. "Under my hands," he wrote in 1813, "and still
more in my mind grows a work, a philosophy which will be an ethics
and a metaphysics in one:—two branches which hitherto have been
separated as falsely as man has been divided into soul and body.
The work grows, slowly and gradually aggregating its parts like the
child in the womb. I became aware of one member, one vessel, one
part after another. In other words, I set each sentence down
without anxiety as to how it will fit into the whole; for I know it
has all sprung from a single foundation. It is thus that an organic
whole originates, and that alone will live.... Chance, thou ruler
of this sense-world! Let me live and find peace for yet a few
years, for I love my work as the mother her child. When it is
matured and has come to birth, then exact from me thy duties,
taking interest for the postponement. But, if I sink before the
time in this iron age, then grant that these miniature beginnings,
these studies of mine, be given to the world as they are and for
what they are: some day perchance will arise a kindred spirit, who
can frame the members together and 'restore' the fragment of
antiquity."
By March 1817 he had completed
the preparatory work of his system, and began to put the whole
thing together; a year later Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung:
vier B|cher, nebst einem Anhange, der die Kritik der Kantischen
Philosophie enthdlt ("The World as Will and Idea; four books, with
an appendix containing a criticism on the philosophy of Kant").
Some delay occurring in the publication, Schopenhauer wrote one of
his characteristically abusive letters to Brockhaus, his publisher,
who retorted "that he must decline all further correspondence with
one whose letters, in their divine coarseness and rusticity,
savoured more of the cabman than of the philosopher," and concluded
with a hope that his fears that the work he was printing would be
good for nothing but waste paper, might not be realised. The work
appeared about the end of December 1818 with 1819 on the
title-page. Schopenhauer had meanwhile proceeded in September to
Italy, where he revised the final proofs. So far as the reception
of the work was concerned there was reason to believe that the
fears of Brockhaus would be realised, as, in fact, they came
practically to be. But in the face of this general want of
appreciation, Schopenhauer had some crumbs of consolation. His
sister wrote to him in March (he was then staying at Naples) that
Goethe "had received it with great joy, immediately cut the thick
book, and began instantly to read it. An hour later he sent me a
note to say that he thanked you very much and thought that the
whole book was good. He pointed out the most important passages,
read them to us, and was greatly delighted.... You are the only
author whom Goethe has ever read seriously, it seems to me, and I
rejoice." Nevertheless the book did not sell. Sixteen years later
Brockhaus informed Schopenhauer that a large number of copies had
been sold at waste paper price, and that he had even then a few in
stock. Still, during the years 1842-43, Schopenhauer was
contemplating the issue of a second edition and making revisions
for that purpose; when he had completed the work he took it to
Brockhaus, and agreed to leave the question of remuneration open.
In the following year the second edition was issued (500 copies of
the first volume, and 750 of the second), and for this the author
was to receive no remuneration. "Not to my contemporaries," says
Schopenhauer with fine conviction in his preface to this edition,
"not to my compatriots—to mankind I commit my now completed work,
in the confidence that it will not be without value for them, even
if this should be late recognised, as is commonly the lot of what
is good. For it cannot have been for the passing generation,
engrossed with the delusion of the moment, that my mind, almost
against my will, has uninterruptedly stuck to its work through the
course of a long life. And while the lapse of time has not been
able to make me doubt the worth of my work, neither has the lack of
sympathy; for I constantly saw the false and the bad, and finally
the absurd and senseless, stand in universal admiration and honour,
and I bethought myself that if it were not the case, those who are
capable of recognising the genuine and right are so rare that we
may look for them in vain for some twenty years, then those who are
capable of producing it could not be so few that their works
afterwards form an exception to the perishableness of earthly
things; and thus would be lost the reviving prospect of posterity
which every one who sets before himself a high aim requires to
strengthen him."
When Schopenhauer started for
Italy Goethe had provided him with a letter of introduction to Lord
Byron, who was then staying at Venice, but Schopenhauer never made
use of the letter; he said that he hadn't the courage to present
himself. "Do you know," he says in a letter, "three great
pessimists were in Italy at the same time—Byron, Leopardi, and
myself! And yet not one of us has made the acquaintance of the
other." He remained in Italy until June 1819, when he proceeded to
Milan, where he received distressing news from his sister to the
effect that a Dantzic firm, in which she and her mother had
invested all their capital, and in which he himself had invested a
little, had become bankrupt. Schopenhauer immediately proposed to
share his own income with them. But later, when the defaulting firm
offered to its creditors a composition of thirty per cent,
Schopenhauer would accept nothing less than seventy per cent in the
case of immediate payment, or the whole if the payment were
deferred; and he was so indignant at his mother and sister falling
in with the arrangement of the debtors, that he did not correspond
with them again for eleven years. With reference to this affair he
wrote: "I can imagine that from your point of view my behaviour may
seem hard and unfair. That is a mere illusion which disappears as
soon as you reflect that all I want is merely not to have taken
from me what is most rightly and incontestably mine, what,
moreover, my whole happiness, my freedom, my learned leisure depend
upon;—a blessing which in this world people like me enjoy so rarely
that it would be almost as unconscientious as cowardly not to
defend it to the uttermost and maintain it by every exertion. You
say, perhaps, that if all your creditors were of this way of
thinking, I too should come badly off. But if all men thought as I
do, there would be much more thinking done, and in that case
probably there would be neither bankruptcies, nor wars, nor gaming
tables."
In July 1819, when he was at
Heidelberg, the idea occurred to him of turning university
lecturer, and took practical shape the following summer, when he
delivered a course of lectures on philosophy at the Berlin
University. But the experiment was not a success; the course was
not completed through the want of attendance, while Hegel at the
same time and place was lecturing to a crowded and enthusiastic
audience. This failure embittered him, and during the next few
years there is little of any moment in his life to record. There
was one incident, however, to which his detractors would seem to
have attached more importance than it was worth, but which must
have been sufficiently disturbing to Schopenhauer—we refer to the
Marquet affair. It appears on his returning home one day he found
three women gossiping outside his door, one of whom was a
seamstress who occupied another room in the house. Their presence
irritated Schopenhauer (whose sensitiveness in such matters may be
estimated from his essay "On Noise"), who, finding them occupying
the same position on another occasion, requested them to go away,
but the seamstress replied that she was an honest person and
refused to move. Schopenhauer disappeared into his apartments and
returned with a stick. According to his own account, he offered his
arm to the woman in order to take her out; but she would not accept
it, and remained where she was. He then threatened to put her out,
and carried his threat into execution by seizing her round the
waist and putting her out. She screamed, and attempted to return.
Schopenhauer now pushed her out; the woman fell, and raised the
whole house. This woman, Caroline Luise Marquet, brought an action
against him for damages, alleging that he had kicked and beaten
her. Schopenhauer defended his own case, with the result that the
action was dismissed. The woman appealed, and Schopenhauer, who was
contemplating going to Switzerland, did not alter his plans, so
that the appeal was heard during his absence, the judgment
reversed, and he was mulcted in a fine of twenty thalers. But the
unfortunate business did not end here. Schopenhauer proceeded from
Switzerland to Italy, and did not return to Berlin until May 1825.
Caroline Marquet renewed her complaints before the courts, stating
that his ill-usage had occasioned a fever through which she had
lost the power of one of her arms, that her whole system was
entirely shaken, and demanding a monthly allowance as compensation.
She won her case; the defendant had to pay three hundred thalers in
costs and contribute sixty thalers a year to her maintenance while
she lived. Schopenhauer on returning to Berlin did what he could to
get the judgment reversed, but unsuccessfully. The woman lived for
twenty years; he inscribed on her death certificate, "Obit anus,
obit onus"
The idea of marriage seems to
have more or less possessed Schopenhauer about this time, but he
could not finally determine to take the step. There is sufficient
to show in the following essays in what light he regarded women.
Marriage was a debt, he said, contracted in youth and paid off in
old age. Married people have the whole burden of life to bear,
while the unmarried have only half, was a characteristically
selfish apothegm. Had not all the true philosophers been
celibates—Descartes, Leibnitz, Malebranche, Spinoza, and Kant? The
classic writers were of course not to be considered, because with
them woman occupied a subordinate position. Had not all the great
poets married, and with disastrous consequences? Plainly,
Schopenhauer was not the person to sacrifice the individual to the
will of the species.
In August 1831 he made a
fortuitous expedition to
Frankfort-on-the-Main—an
expedition partly prompted by the outbreak of
cholera at Berlin at the time,
and partly by the portent of a dream (he
was credulous in such matters)
which at the beginning of the year had
intimated his death. Here,
however, he practically remained until his
death, leading a quiet,
mechanically regular life and devoting his
thoughts to the development of
his philosophic ideas, isolated at first,
but as time went on enjoying
somewhat greedily the success which had
been denied him in his earlier
days. In February 1839 he had a moment of
elation when he heard from the
Scientific Society of Drontheim that he
had won the prize for the best
essay on the question, "Whether free will
could be proved from the evidence
of consciousness," and that he had
been elected a member of the
Society; and a corresponding moment of
despondency when he was informed
by the Royal Danish Academy of the
Sciences at Copenhagen, in a
similar competition, that his essay on
"Whether the source and
foundation of ethics was to be sought in an
intuitive moral idea, and in the
analysis of other derivative moral
conceptions, or in some other
principle of knowledge," had failed,
partly on the ground of the want
of respect which it showed to the
opinions of the chief
philosophers. He published these essays in 1841
under the title of "The Two
Fundamental Problems of Ethics," and ten
years later Parerga und
Paralipomena the composition of which had
engaged his attention for five or
six years. The latter work, which
proved to be his most popular,
was refused by three publishers, and when
eventually it was accepted by
Hayn of Berlin, the author only received
ten free copies of his work as
payment. It is from this book that all
except one of the following
essays have been selected; the exception is
"The Metaphysics of Love," which
appears in the supplement of the third
book of his principal work. The
second edition of Die Welt als Wille
und Vorstellung appeared in 1844,
and was received with growing
appreciation. Hitherto he had
been chiefly known in Frankfort as the son
of the celebrated Johanna
Schopenhauer; now he came to have a following
which, if at first small in
numbers, were sufficiently enthusiastic, and
proved, indeed, so far as his
reputation was concerned, helpful. Artists
painted his portrait; a bust of
him was made by Elizabeth Ney. In the
April number of the Westminster
Review for 1853 John Oxenford, in an
article entitled "Iconoclasm in
German Philosophy," heralded in England
his recognition as a writer and
thinker; three years later Saint-Reni
Taillandier, in the Revue des
Deux Mondes, did a similar service for
him in France. One of his most
enthusiastic admirers was Richard Wagner,
who in 1854 sent him a copy of
his Der Ring der Nibelungen, with the
inscription "In admiration and
gratitude." The Philosophical Faculty of
the University of Leipzic offered
a prize for an exposition and