"Within ourselves or nowhere must lie the reason for everything"
An approach to Novalis
Eurythmy to the first "Hymn to the Night"
Music from the Cello Suites by J.S. Bach
Text by Hans Paul Fiechter
performed by: Birgit Alles, Konstanze Gundudis, Heike Houben,
Ingrid Schweitzer, Stefan Lenz, Thomas Ahrndt
produced by: Birgit Hering
costume design: Konstanze Gundudis
publicity design: David John
Berlin, November-December 2004
Novalis (1772-1801), German romantic poet and novelist
"The imagination places the world of the future either far above us, or far below, or in a relation of metempsychosis to ourselves. We dream of travelling through the universe - but is not the universe within ourselves? The depths of our spirit are unknown to us - the mysterious way leads inwards. Eternity with its worlds - the past and future - is in ourselves or nowhere. The external world is the world of shadows - it throws its shadow into the realm of light. At present this realm certainly seems to us so dark inside, lonely, shapeless. But how entirely different it will seem to us - when this gloom is past, and the body of shadows has moved away. We will experience greater enjoyment than ever, for our spirit has been deprived."
from Miscellaneous Observations, 1798
Friedrich Leopold, Freiherr von Hardenberg, took his pseudonym Novalis from "de Novali", a name formerly used by his family. Of noble and well-connected stock (a Freiherr was equivalent to a baron), Friedrich Leopold studied philosophy, law and later geology, and served as a government official.
But as Novalis he was the author of poetry and prose whose themes were spiritual, philosophical and romantic. He wrote Hymnen an die Nacht (Hymns to the Night), his only complete collection of poetry, following the death of his first love Sophie von Kühn in 1797.
His work was well thought of during his own lifetime, and he has been called "the prophet of Romanticism". Novalis' friend Friedrich Schiller called the Romantics "exiles pining for a homeland".
Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881), the Scottish author, described Novalis as "an anti-mechanist - a deep man, the most perfect of modern spirit-seers". You can read Carlyle's essay on Novalis (1829) at:
http://novalis.autorenverzeichnis.de/carlyle/2.html