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Some Aspects of Imagery in Büchner's Woyzeck. Author(s): John A. Mccarthy Source: MLN , Apr., 1976, Vol. 91, No. 3, German Issue (Apr., 1976), pp. 543-551 Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/2907182 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms The Johns Hopkins University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to MLN This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms M Some L N 543 Aspects Although the of views Im of been focused on the pl analogies which contrib drama have been hithe nent images is, one sh the basic tension betwe In this study I cite the scenes does greater jus relationship to the und The opening lines in who is admonishihg hi langsam; eins nach dem the tone and tempo for activity. The very first man with no hope for tence, who says of him der andern Welt. Ich g donnern helfen" (i, 114 The image of frenzied a leitmotif in the ensu that he barely greets M to work, darts home, b crime; he races feveris precipitation is mirror to the moon, then the down world in a frui change of scenes and t unrest. Yet Woyzeck's eluctable urgency of h 1 Only a few studies hav example, G. Bell, "Window 47 (1972), Woyzeck," und 'Idee' 95-108; Modern in A. P. Drama Bichners W senschaftliche Buchgesel 2 G. Buchner, Werke und 1965), p. 113. Hereafter s tions from the play refer This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 544 JOHN A. MCCARTHY ment; the purpose of his life consists only to-mouth sustenance for his small family. T activity is underscored by the progressive physical health. In vain does the reader loo higher state. Woyzeck's life runs its cours which knows no higher purpose than its o pears as the existential plight of a senseless At first sight the cause of the protagonis solely in his extreme social and economic e ery offers us a second view and points tow source, a sort of primum mobile. The som quite so empty headed as is generally assumed,3 for the initial "philosophic" interpretation in the play of the "horrifying sameness of human nature" comes from him. It comes in the form of a symbol: the mill wheel. But it bears no resemblance to the Romantic symbol of Taugenichts. The mill wheel is a most significant symbol in the drama. Incorporated in it are both the busyness of men ("Beschaftigung") designed to kill time and the daily revolution of man's world on its own axis, headed nowhere but in a circle ("Was 'n Zeitverschwendung!"). Gone the Romantic aura of reassuring tranquility and optimism, gone the sense of security under the watchful eye of Providence. The ceaseless, aimless turning of the mill wheel now poignantly symbolizes the eternal sameness and the inconsequence of human existence which gives rise to a feeling of melancholy.4 We are reminded of Buchner's letter to Wilhelmine Jaegle which is filled with despair over man's impotence in the face of human nature, social relation- ships, and the flow of history ("Schaum auf der Welle").5 "Wo soll das 3 The affinity which Buchner felt for the captain has not gone completely unnoticed. Wolfgang Martens, "Zur Karikatur in der Dichtung Buchners (Woyzecks Hauptmann)," GRM, 39 (1958), 70-71, has delineated the several parallels between Woyzeck and the officer. For example, both are gripped by giddiness at the sight of man, both are experimental objects for the doctor, and neither can tolerate utter quiet. Martens concludes that these traits lift the captain out of a purely satirical role, reveal a " trans- and suprasocial ('ibergesellschaftliche') wretchedness of the world order," and bring the captain to the brink of the tragic and comic. These considerations of imagery should strengthen the view of the captain as a reflection of Buchner's Weltschmerz and Woyzeck's disorientation. 4 B. von Wiese, Die deutsche Tragodie von Lessing bis Hebbel (Hamburg: Hoffman & Campe, 1964), p. 520, points out that the monotonous return of the same thing day in and day out leads to "Ermiidung am Leben" and to "Erniichterung durch die Wirklichkeit." In a word, boredom. M. Hamburger, "Georg Buchner," Contraries (New York, Dutton, 1970), p. 182, indicates that boredom is the "apathy that springs from despair." The resultant melancholiness from which the captain suffers was part of a wide-spread phenomenon in the early nineteenth century which was ex- pressed as "damonische Zerrissenheit und sentimentaler Weltschmerz." See Fr. Sengle, Biedermeierzeit (Stuttgart: Metzler, 1971), I, 2. 5 G. Buchner, Sdmtliche Werke und Briefe, ed. Werner P. Lehmann (Hamburg: Chr. Wegner, 1971), II, 425-426. Hereafter cited in text by volume and page number. This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms M L N 545 hinaus?", the captain waste of time. As soo becomes something whether seen from th its momentary actuali cal framework. The p point of view) has b turning of the mill w In a letter written a the mill wheel. Its re for the poet. He writ so groB Gelisten nach und Ruh .... Heute un lese nicht; morgen g regelma3ig und orden Uhr" (II, 463; italics m expansion of meaning tence. The world, o caught on the tread imagery seems to say Schwarzwalder Uhr) a lifeless mechanism.6 eighteenth centuries Supreme Engineer, re tion. The teleological, torture, kolonie." a dim fores The imagery of the mill wheel and the clock intensify the "entsetzliche Gleichheit der Menschennatur" lamented by Bichner. Combined they convey the picture of man and his world as part and parcel of an automated system which allows for no alteration of the predestined cycle of vertiginous repetition. Man is a programmed robot. The mechanicalness of human nature itself, connoted in the first scene, is subsequently de- veloped into a major image in Woyzeck. The mechanical repetition of human actions parallels the involuntary revolutions of the wheel of life. The question of morality raised in this same scene serves as a springboard for reflection on human nature itself. Of interest in this regard is not the 6 The clock motif in Biichner's writings is expanded even further in Leonce und Lena to include the death aspect when Leonce is made to say: "Das Picken der Totenuhr in unserer Brust is langsam, undjeder Tropfen Blut mil3t seine Zeit, und unser Leben ist ein schleichend Fieber" (II, ii, 101). The remark can be seen as a summation of Woyzeck's situation. The once vital function of the three sisters Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, who spun the thread of life, assigned each man's destiny, and severed the thread at death, has been replaced by a machine. This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 546 JOHN A. MCCARTHY captain's definition of morality, but rather officer's reproof. As a well-disciplined sol his superior, but simply states in justifica und Blut" and further: ".. es kommt einem nur so die Natur" (i, 114). The officer reiterates the phrase "Fleisch und Blut" and develops the thought further in a manner which elucidates its sexual overtones. The captain intends only to explain to Woyzeck that he knows what Woyzeck means because he too has experienced the sensation; however, much more is revealed for the mechanicalness of human love is poignantly expressed: "Fleisch und Blut? Wenn ich am Fenster lieg, wenn's geregnet hat, und den wei3en Strumpfen so nachseh, wie sie uber die Gassen springen- verdammt, Woyzeck, da kommt mir die Liebe! Ich habe auch Fleisch und Blut" (i, 114). The impression conveyed is not one of love, but one of unadulterated lust, which is activated automatically when the appropriate stimulus is present ("weiBe Striimpfe"). Woyzeck's reply, therefore, is an implicit admission, that he has a child because he was unable to control his sexual impulses. The captain's explanation thus serves to illustrate the mechanical aspect of love, which ultimately obfuscates the original spiritual quality of Woyzeck's specific love for Marie. Because the scene "Beim Hauptmann" introduces the decisive images of the mill wheel and of man as a sexual automaton there appears to be greater justification for placing it at the beginning of the drama as Bergemann does. The mechanical characteristics of sexual love become more pronounced in the liaison between the drum major and Marie. In the terminology used to describe the incipient affair the many references to animals or animal husbandry are designed to underscore the further dehumanization (i.e., despiritualization) of love. At their first encounter Marie remarks with admiration that "he walks like a lion" (iii, 115) and begins immediately to make eyes at him. Later Marie compares his chest to that of a steer and his beard to a lion's (vii, 121). She calls him simply "Mann" (vii, 121), because for her, to put it colloquially, he is just a good lay. For his part, the drum major treats Marie like a sex object, "ein Weibsbild ... zur Zucht von Tambourmajors" (iv, 117). He admires her carriage and her coloration as if he were examining a fine horse. In the "seduction" scene Marie and the drum major encounter one another like prime specimens of the two sexes, more animal than human in their attitude.7 When the drum major attempts to take his "wild Tier" (vii, 121), Marie half-heartedly resists but 7 von Wiese, p. 531, calls them "instinktsicher." Mautner, p. 513, notes the "korperlich-animalische" overtones of Marie's language. Hermann Pongs, Das Bild in der Dichtung (Marburg: Elvertsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1969), III, 632, compares the actions of the drum major and the non-commissioned officer in the market scene with the horse's "verniinftigen Viehigkeit." This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms M L N 547 immediately yields re Her comment suggest tite is too powerful to nature as Woyzeck i another vital part of relentless gyration of spondently laments: " intimates here a kind and Kathe after Woy The unthinking besti four ("Buden. Lichte Bude"), and seven ("B and man to an animal ("Staub, Sand, Dreck" they are presented vo However, the animal when it is clothed and (albeit "viehische") " trasts with the "dehu ment the poet once m there faire betes."9 was no l'amour basic en dif tout Two scenes later we learn that Woyzeck has "pissed" on the street like a dog (vii, 119). Buchner establishes an obvious parallel to the horse's behavior when it relieved itself during the performance in order to contradict the doctor's theory of free will. In answering the question why he did it, Woyzeck uses the same explanation cited earlier to explain his illegitimate child: "Aber, Herr Doktor, wenn einem die Natur kommt" (vii, 119). By association Buchner seems to imply that "love" is as mechanical and automatic as the renal function. Man is thus nothing but a marionette. Aesthetically, it is striking that Buchner has so effectively intertwined the nascent love affair between Marie and the drum major with the develop- ment of the animal and puppet motifs, so that they are seen as complementary movements. In the final analysis Marie and the drum major 8 The phrase "unideale Natur" in this context (v, 118) is reminiscent of the author's use of it in rejecting idealism in literature and science. See the letter to his family dated July 28, 1835 (II, 444); also Lenz, I, 87 and "Uber Schadelnerven," II, 292. 9 Cited by Wolfgang Martens, "Zum Menschenbild Georg Bichners Woyzeck und die Marionszene in Dantons Tod," Wege der Forschung, 53 (Darmstadt: Wis- senschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1965), p. 379, n. 11. This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 548 JOHN A. MCCARTHY are mere puppets on the wheel of life a Schwarzwdlder Uhr with the passing of time Besides the images of the mill wheel and t bild of the play is accentuated by the danc the scene in the inn where Marie and the moment is not an isolated instance but rather the culmination of the ver- tiginous motion which underlies the entire play, and which has been prefigured in the mill wheel's circular path, in Woyzeck's gyrating haste, and in ths characters' relentless animalism. Once again it is the opening scene in Bergemann's arrangement which first prepares us for the dance image, albeit in an indirect manner with respect to a sense of vertigo. There the captain urges Woyzeck: "Langsam, Woyzeck, langsam .... Er macht mir ganz schwindlig" (i, 113). The dizziness caused by the protagonist's sense of urgency in the first scene is later associated with the dizzying plunge into the depths of despair upon learning of Marie's infidelity. Horrified, Woyzeck bolts from the captain presumably to seek out Marie. The officer follows his flight with his eyes and remarks: "Mir wird ganz schwindlig vor den Menschen. Wie schnell!" (ix, 123). At this point it is unclear whether the captain's vertigo is caused merely by a sense of Woyzeck's alacrity or also by a sense of his despair. However, this additional source of giddiness is blatantly expressed in the confrontation between Woyzeck and Marie. Her infidelity rends the last thread of meaning which had still imparted a purpose to Woyzeck's crazed existence; her faithlessness means for him that man is nothing but a mindless animal, indistinguishable from the bete. Woyzeck stands on the brink of the human void and peers into the abyss called man. The intuitive recognition of man's powerlessness makes him reel with anguish as he calls out in terms reminiscent of the captain's sense of vertigo: "Jeder Mensch ist ein Abgrund; es schwindelt einem, wenn man hinabsieht" (x, 123). Thereafter giddiness becomes an openly major motif in the drama and is closely linked with the revelation of man as a volitientless machine; from that moment on Woyzeck is unable to rid himself of a feeling of a downward, swirling motion. From his barracks he hears the dance music and can have no peace. Tortured he cries out: "Es dreht sich mir vor den Augen. Tanz, Tanz!" (xi, 124). Giddiness, implying 10 The puppet-like aspects of human nature play a prominent role in Leonce und Lena as well. For example, Valerio says of the princely pair: "Sehen Sie hier, meine Herren und Damen, zwei Personen beiderlei Geschlechts, ein Mannchen und ein Weibchen, einen Herrn und eine Dame! Nichts als Kunst und Mechanismus, nichts als Pappendeckel und Uhrfedern! Jede hat eine feine, feine Feder von Rubin unter dem Nagel der kleinen Zehe am rechten Fu3, man druckt ein klein wenig, und die Mechanik lauft voile fiinfzig Jahre" (III, iii, 108). Furthermore, Valiero refers to "der Mechanismus der Liebe" (ibid.) which has been set in motion. In keeping with the aristocratic backgrounds of Leonce und Lena, however, the mechanical expression of love is befittingly more sophisticated. This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms M L N 549 the maelstrom of the The vertigo motif th The dizzying sensatio the passionate giddin unrestrainable raving ed in the words "imm sexual connotations o mer zu, immer zu! Dr Sonn aus, daB alles in Unzucht sich ibereinander wilzt, Mann und Weib, Mensch und Vieh?! Tut's am hellen Tag, tut's einem auf den Handen wie die Miicken!-Weib! Das Weib ist heiB, heil3-Immer zu, immer zu" (xii, 125). All the images discussed thus far are joined in this passage: the revolutions of the mill wheel return in the "Dreht euch!" and are coupled with the rampant sexuality of the dance motif: "Walzt euch!". The unthinking animality of human relationships is forcefully expressed by the word groupings, "Mann und Weib, Mensch und Vieh," as well as by the mental image of men copulating like gnats. Finally, the rhythmic recurrence of the phrase "immer zu" calls to mind the horrible sameness of nature and embraces Woyzeck's vertiginous terror at the mechanicalness of love and the resultant meaninglessness of life. He collapses in a dizzying swoon (xii, 125). In his extreme mental state Marie's "immer zu, immer zu" seems to Woyzeck to be reiterated by those mysterious, subterranean voices which have haunted him from the beginning. The voices seem to repeat the words as a command to kill Marie. From the original "immer zu" a new phrase gradually evolves: "stich tot, tot" (xiii, 125). It is a helpless lashing out at an incomprehensible fate. The phases of development leading up to the stabbing are transparent: from the ineluctable turning of the mill wheel and Woyzeck's nervous agitation arises the passionate frenzy of the dance; from the sexual dance rite comes the murderous rage. The originally circular motion evolves into a frantic perpendicular movement: "auf und nieder, immer wieder" (as the obscene ditty goes).11 After the bloody deed Woyzeck returns to the inn and dances with Kathe, upon whom his sexual attention is now centered. His advances close the circle; he is still caught in the same cycle of life, trotting along the same vertiginous path, the victim of uncontrollable forces. "Tanzt alle, immer zu! schwitzt und stinkt!" (xxiii, 131) he urges his fellow man, because that is all they have. The "tanzt alle" expresses the whirling motion again, the "immer zu" recalls the headlong passion, the "schwitzt und stinkt" implies man's animality. The images of the mill wheel, the man-animal, and the whirling dance " Mautner, p. 520, has pointed out the psychoanalytic connection here between sexuality and brutality. This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 550 JOHN A. MCCARTHY convey a disconsolate Menschenbild. Man is powe laws; he is "mere foam on the crest of the wav images and metaphors tend to support the antim the play. For example, the ground upon which 115), the romantic mood is only "a piece of rott merely a "wilted sunflower," the earth an "overt child who "sits abandoned and cries its heart ou imagery has little bearing on the social and econ the drama. The purpose in citing them has been least as much, if not more, importance is to be symbols, as to the economic and social indictme work. Woyzeck's suffering and ineptitude woul the mechanicalness of the condition humaine, th the condition sociale. It will be remembered that Biuchner referred to both conditions in his oft-quoted letter to his fiancee: "Ich finde in der Menschennatur eine entsetzliche Gleichheit, in den menschlichen Ver- hiltnissen eine unabwendbare Gewalt. Allen und Keinen verliehen" (II, 425). In the same letter the poet wrote: "Der Ausspruch: es mul3ja ArgerniB kommen, aber wehe dem, durch den es kommt-ist schauderhaft. Was ist das, was in uns ligt, mordet, stiehlt?" (II, 426). Buchner did not want to pursue the thought. But as a scientist he felt obligated to think the thought to its apparent conclusion, for in his Zurich Probevorlesung almost three years later, the promising researcher claimed: "Alles, was ist, ist um seiner selbst Willen da. Das Gesetz dieses Seins zu suchen, ist das Ziel der, der teleologischen gegeniiberstehenden Ansicht, die ich die philosophische nennen will" (II, 292). Woyzeck, which was written at the same time, might be looked upon as a literary answer to the question. The solution would appear to be: man lies, steals, and murders because he is a mere man, not divine.12 As "unideale Natur" he is compelled to obey the commands of his inner nature and his outer world.13 There is no telos behind these laws; 12 von Wiese, p. 524, draws the following conclusion about the statement "es muB ja ArgerniB kommen" and its implied guilt: "Aber diese Schuld hat mit Freiheit und sittlicher Selbstbestimmung eigentlich nichts mehr zu tun, sondern zeigt die Kreatur nur in ihrer Abhangigkeit von einer als Qual erlebten und dennoch notwendigen Existenz. Der Abfall Gottes von sich selbst, als er in die Welt einging, bedeutet fur den Menschen eine als Schmerz und Schuld erlebte Endlichkeit, die bereits im Ursprung unfrei ist und unter dem Fluch des MuB steht" (italics mine). 13 This view of man is remarkably similar to one expressed by Fyodor Dosteyevsky twenty-eight years later in the story "Notes from Underground": ... [man] is something like a piano key or an organ stop; . .there are natural laws in the universe, and whatever happens to him happens outside his will, as it were, by itself, in accordance with the laws of nature." Notes from Underground, White Nights, The Dream of a Ridicu- lous Man, trans. A. R. MacAndrew (New York: Signet, 1961), p. 109. The deter- This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms M LN 551 nature the is aimless. O end life is sen society an extension of bygone idealism The Weltund Men relentless, unprodu his course. The deat to a halt; the whee disturbing picture play's dominant im language of Woyzec which tend to enha imagery is used "no whole play with a h the language of me University of Pennsylv JOHN A ministic conception o Another major simila doubt in the "Philoso 14 Hamburger, p. 197 ment holds true This content downloaded from 115.69.39.23 on Thu, 21 Oct 2021 12:06:58 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms for W