ODE ON MY BELOVED PHILINE


BY TORSTEN SCHWANKE


At a time when women were largely confined 

To the domestic sphere 

And professional life seemed unthinkable 

For bourgeois women, 

Goethe's novel plays. 

In his Bildungsroman "Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre", 

He juxtaposes his protagonist 

With a character who seems to be downright controversial 

To the prevailing ideal of women. 

In the 18th century, femininity was equated 

With emotion, passivity, innocence, 

Naturalness and motherliness... 


If Philine is perhaps a typical woman 

Of her time after all,

Whose only aim in life is marriage and motherhood, 

Will be discussed below. 

Perhaps, however, she is forced 

To act in such a different way 

And, as a single and professional woman 

Without the protection of her family, 

Has no choice but to accept 

The reputation of an actress. 

The question of whether Philine also 

Undergoes an educational path, 

Like Wilhelm, in the course of the novel 

Will also be the subject of the paper.


The character of Wilhelm Meister 

Will also play an essential role. 

Wilhelm, who from his youth onwards 

Pursues the question of the meaning of life, 

The question of whether education 

Is necessary and important 

Beyond his working life. 

I will look at his ideals and goals in life, 

Both of which were formed in childhood. 

Why a love relationship 

Between Philine and Wilhelm cannot work, 

Indeed seems downright incompatible 

Will also be the subject of this paper. 

To prove this, I will look 

At the prevailing image of women 

In the 18th century, 

Goethe wrote his novel in 1795, 

And the prevailing and accepted relationship 

Between men and women.


The way Goethe introduces Philine to the novel 

Already casts doubt on her submission 

To the prevailing norms of behaviour for women. 

Thus she takes the active part 

In getting to know Wilhelm. 

When the two meet for the first time, 

Wilhelm is in the street 

And Philine is looking out the window of her lodgings. 

Philine makes the first contact 

Wwith Wilhelm under a pretext. 

She sends her boy to him 

With a request for the flowers he is holding. 

Wilhelm sends her the bouquet 

With a compliment, which Philine 

Returns with a friendly greeting. 

Wilhelm, however, does not take the opportunity 

To get closer to Philine; 

For him, the encounter is a kindly adventure. 

Only when Philine appears at the window again 

Does Wilhelm inquire about her 

Aand the acquaintance deepens. 

Philine has to appear at the window 

A second time to recall herself, 

So she undoubtedly takes the active part here 

In making the acquaintance of Wilhelm.


Philine is a working woman, 

She earns her living as an actress. 

Here too she contradicts passivity, 

She earns her living and has a profession.


Her sphere of action is not limited 

To the domestic sphere, 

As is the case with most contemporaries. 

However, she is also dependent on men 

From whose generosity she earns her living.


Until the 18th century, 

Actors were considered dishonourable 

In all Christian countries. 

They were excluded from communion 

And the Christian oath 

And the church refused them a Christian burial. 

So Philine as an actress 

Is in an in-between position, 

On the one hand she is celebrated by her audience, 

On the other she is socially 

On the edge of respectability.


Philine is a woman who does not conform 

To the social norm, 

She shapes her life according to her own ideas. 

She openly lives sexual relationships 

With several men without regard 

For her social standing. 

She is indifferent to her reputation. 

Thus, for Laertes, she is the real Eve,

The figure of seduction and sin par excellence.


Proof that the adjective innocent 

Does not apply to Philine is the song 

Der Schäfer putzt sich zum Tanz, 

Which she performs on an outing. 

The exact wording is not given to the reader 

Because the narrator fears 

The reader might find it tasteless or indecent. 

This song that she recites to the company 

Is pure provocation.


Wilhelm first notices Philine's appearance, 

Her blonde hair which fell 

Carelessly undone around her neck. 

A little later, when they meet in person 

For the first time, Philine wears 

A pair of light high heeled slippers 

And a black mantilla over a white negligee,

Because it was not quite clean,

Her short skirt showed 

The cutest feet in the world. 

This appearance to a stranger, 

Which Wilhelm undoubtedly is at this point, 

Is not befitting of a woman 

In the 18th century. 

Philine is clearly flirting with her charms here. 

Her negligee is white, 

So it is the colour that stands for innocence. 

However, the garment is no longer entirely clean, 

Just like her innocence. 

The very fact that a woman 

Who is not impeccably dressed 

Rceives two men in her private rooms, 

One of whom is a complete stranger to her, 

And the other a friend, rather than a relative, 

Must have astonished contemporary recipients, 

Or underlined the part of the sensual seductress 

That Philine plays.


The theatre was financed with the help of patrons, 

The actors were dependent 

On the favour of their backers. 

As Laertes tells Wilhelm, Philine and he 

Belong to a group of actors that has disbanded. 

What Laertes does not tell us, 

But which is the consequence of their situation, 

Is that they are looking for a patron 

In order to be able to earn a living as actors. 

So the assumption is that Philine is using 

Her feminine charms to find a backer.


Philine tells Wilhelm and Laertes 

About an incident with two strange men 

With whom she had gone to dinner. 

Already on the way she put 

Their generosity to the test. 

The gentlemen immediately inquired 

About the prices of the various dishes, 

Whereupon Philine takes the order from their hands 

And orders the most expensive dishes. 

She agrees with the landlord beforehand 

That she wants to test the two gentlemen 

And that she is by no means actually 

Ordering the dishes. 

The gentlemen excused themselves for a walk 

While they waited for their order 

And left Philine sitting in the inn 

Without having paid the bill.


Philine laughs at this incident. 

Since she depends on the generosity of men, 

She quickly realised 

That an acquaintance with these gentlemen 

Would not be useful to her 

And therefore broke it off. 

In the course of the novel, 

Philine usually fares a little better 

Than the other actresses. 

With the help of her feminine charms 

And her adaptability, she manages 

To endear herself to the people 

Who can give her advantages. 

For example, she lives in the inhabited castle 

And is a companion of the countess, 

While the rest of the group of actors 

Are housed in a dwelling 

That lacks the most basic necessities.


At their first meeting, 

Philine gives Wilhelm a powder knife 

On which the words "Remember me" 

Are engraved. This personal dedication 

Leads to the assumption 

That this knife is a gift to Philine 

From a former admirer. 

Wilhelm feels obliged by this gift 

To make a greater gift in return, 

Wwhich Philine naturally knows 

And also wanted to achieve. 

Philine is also setting out the framework 

Of the possible relationship between them.


Since generosity secures Philine's livelihood, 

She is also charitable and generous 

Towards poorer people. 

On an excursion, she not only gives away 

All the cash she, Laertes and Wilhelm are carrying, 

But in the end even her hat and jewellery. 

So she not only receives, but also gives.


The status to which women aspired 

In the 18th century was marriage. 

All women sought to attain this state 

As their true destiny. 

The real place of female agency 

Is the domestic world. 

The triad of marriage, motherhood and the home 

Was considered the only true fulfilment 

Of woman's God-given and natural destiny.


It does not appear that marriage 

Is Philine's goal in life. 

She does not hide her frequently changing 

Male relationships, 

Which would certainly be helpful 

In getting a man to marry her 

And thus offer her security. 

She makes no other attempt 

To achieve this security.


Philine's lack of interest in marriage 

Is certainly unusual for the time, 

A marriage would ensure her security 

And social standing. 

Unmarried women missed 

Their most important destiny, 

Were despised and exposed to ridicule. 

This contempt is shown to her 

By Madame Melina. 

As fellow actors, the two women 

Are actually on the same lower social rung, 

The only thing that elevates Madame Melina 

Above Philine is the fact that she is married.


Marriage for Philine would mean 

That she would have to be subordinate 

And faithful to a man, 

But Philine does not think much of faithfulness, 

Since love for her .is a gift to be enjoyed 

By someone without envy 

Or stubbornness. 

She therefore considers jealousy 

And competition among men 

For a woman's favour to be unnecessary. 

Because she does not limit this gift 

To just one man.


Motherhood is considered 

The most beautiful task, 

The highest happiness of a woman 

In the 18th century. 

Philine does not pursue this goal either; 

She finds the pregnant Madame Melina unattractive, 

She says to Laertes, It dresses her so ugly, 

If only I should see no more women of good hope. 

To Wilhelm she says, I can't stand 

The children otherwise, 

Clearly expressing her dislike of motherhood. 

Philine does not fit at all into the image 

Of women in the 18th century 

When she aspires neither to the state of marriage 

Nor to motherhood, 

Bth of which were considered 

The only goals of women. 

Philine rather embodies the joie de vivre 

And the ease of living as she wishes, 

As contemporary readers are more familiar with 

From men than from women.


The way in which Goethe takes Philine 

Out of the novel 

Seems particularly striking here; 

She is pregnant and lives together 

With Friedrich in a wild marriage. 

Even Friedrich finds nothing more informal 

And ridiculous than she, 

Philine in this state appears just 

As absurd to him as she does to Wilhelm.


Philine hides in her condition, 

She does not present it 

As the fulfilment of her womanly life, 

Which may also be due to the fact 

That she is not sure whether Friedrich 

Is really the father, 

And that she has a child as an unmarried woman.


When Wilhelm first sees Philine, 

The first thing he notices is 

That a pleasant cheerfulness 

Animated her face. 

This cheerfulness embodies a quality 

Wilhelm lacks. He is a serious 

And introverted man, 

Often lost in his thoughts.


Philine catches his eye 

Bbecause she draws attention to herself 

And she is a well-educated wench to him. 

In contrast, Wilhelm's first impression 

Of the beautiful Amazon, Natalie, 

His future wife, is almost contrasting. 

He never thought he had seen anything 

More noble or more amiable than Natalie. 

Philine embodies serenity for him, 

Physical attraction, 

And she is a symbol of the easy 

And unconstrained life 

He leads around her. 

Later, when Wilhelm joins the Tower Society 

And sees himself at the goal 

Of shaping his character, 

There is also no longer room for Philine 

At Wilhelm's side. 

Wilhelm is not satisfied with the kind of life 

He leads with Philine at the theatre society 

As he continues his search for identity. 

Philine is therefore not a figure 

That stands for Wilhelm's future. 

As Philine and Natalie stand next to each other, 

I, Wilhelm, never thought I had seen 

Such a distance. 

Natalie embodies inner beauty and humanity. 

There is something motherly and protective 

About the way she takes off her coat 

And puts it on the badly injured Wilhelm 

That fascinates him.


Furthermore, it is Philine's profession 

That exerts a captivating effect on Wilhelm. 

As an actress, she embodies 

Part of the maternal world he covets 

And into which he has fled. 

He admires both Philine and Mariane 

For their social indeterminacy. 

A state he would like to achieve.


These things, cheerfulness and acting, 

Remind Wilhelm of Mariane, 

The figure of his ideal love. 

At first Wilhelm tries to project 

His love onto Philine, but Philine 

Is a woman who is only loyal 

To her own ideals 

And cannot be moulded 

Into Wilhelm's ideal woman. 

Thus, despite a fixed appointment 

With Wilhelm and Laertes, 

She has gone away with two strangers, 

Whereupon Wilhelm rebukes her inconsistency. 

His pride is hurt 

Because she does not attach enough importance 

To the date with him and amuses herself elsewhere. 

As the novel progresses, 

Wilhelm is repeatedly forced to realise 

That Philine is neither prepared 

To be monogamous 

Nor to make him the centre of her life. 

The consequence of this observation is 

That he refuses her. 

For him, there is only the possibility 

Of an absolute, monogamous relationship.


Philine sees in Wilhelm first and foremost 

What she sees in all men, 

A potential patron. 

With Wilhelm, too, she uses her powers 

Of seduction to be able 

To steer him in her favour. 

When Melina asks Wilhelm for a loan 

For some acting props, 

Melina does not yet receive a concrete promise.


Philine then approaches him. 

She sits down with him on the bench, 

Kisses him in public 

And approaches him cold and fine as she is,

In a way he considers completely inappropriate. 

Philine just laughs and says 

The passers-by thought 

They were a newly married couple. 

Wilhelm, in order not to give scandal,

Is forced to play the part of the patient husband. 

Philine justifies her behaviour 

By inducing Wilhelm to stay with her 

And not continue his trading trip. 

After this incident on the bench, 

Wilhelm wants to follow Philine to her room, 

But is stopped by Melina. 

Wilhelm, his mind completely on Philine, 

Unthinkingly assures Melina of the loan. 

When this promise is made, 

Friedrich intervenes and, instead of Wilhelm, 

Rushes to Philine's room. 

Although Wilhelm is so jealous of Friedrich 

That he might have pulled the boy backwards 

Down the stairs by the hair, 

His self-discipline regains the upper hand 

And he does not show his passionate feelings, 

But evades the situation.


This incident shows that Philine is calculating 

And lives for the moment. 

Since she is without a commitment 

And knows full well that Wilhelm 

Has the means to secure her one with Melina, 

She approaches him and thus gets her way. 

However, it is not Philine as a person 

Who binds Wilhelm to the theatre in the long run, 

But the money he has lent Melina 

That is his legitimisation to stay 

With the acting troupe.


Philine does not only approach Wilhelm 

Out of calculation, however, 

She also loves the challenge 

That the disciplined Wilhelm poses for her. 

With his modesty, he is a right stick for her, 

Ad it is precisely because of this 

That she justifies her interest in him. 

Philine is a woman used to pleasing men, 

Wilhelm's stubborn aloofness challenges Philine. 

She gets a kick out of teasing him. 

For example, she puts her slippers 

In front of his bed. 

Wilhelm searches the whole room for her 

He searched more and more assiduously, 

Indeed a mischievous onlooker 

Might have thought he was searching 

In order to find. 

Wilhelm's inner struggle 

Between inclination and propriety 

Continues constantly in Philine's presence. 

On the one hand, he desires her presence; 

On the other, he considers it inappropriate 

And could not reconcile it 

With his concept of decency and morality. 

The two experience their only night of love, 

Under the cover of darkness. 

Wilhelm has enjoyed too much wine 

To be able to maintain his resistance, 

Which Philine takes advantage of. 

The next morning, Wilhelm cannot accept 

That he has given in to his weakness 

And imagines that it was his Mariane. 

With this distortion of the facts, 

He creates a legitimisation for the favour 

He has enjoyed and flees 

From the reality he cannot bear.


Philine and Wilhelm are two 

Completely different characters. 

While Wilhelm is a serious man 

Whose goal is to shape his character, 

Philine lives by the motto Carpe Diem. 

She sings the song 

The Shepherd preens himself for the dance 

To cheer up the company. 

Although Wilhelm can find no moral merit 

And nothing poetic in her singing, 

He does praise the way she performs it. 

Again, as from the first moment, 

He remains only on the surface. 

Philine's lightness and light-heartedness 

Fascinate him, as does her appearance. 

He leaves out the moral things 

That inevitably contribute 

To the formation of character 

In his assessment of Philine. 

This leads to the assumption 

That she is out of the question for Wilhelm 

As a potential partner, since for him 

character building is an essential goal in life.


Philine falls in love with Wilhelm, 

But still remains true to her ideals in this love, 

Saying to him, And if I love you, what's it to you?

Wilhelm and Philine have a fundamentally 

Different conception of love. 

While Wilhelm seeks absolute fulfilment in love, 

Which is also part of his identity, 

For Philine love is a gift 

Someone enjoys without envy or stubbornness. 

These are two views that are incompatible. 

It is also difficult to imagine Philine, 

The pleasant sinner, at Wilhelm's side, 

In the narrowness and seriousness 

Of a bourgeois life, 

Which he chooses at the end. 

While for Philine the theatre is only 

A means to an end, 

Namely her profession that secures her livelihood, 

For Wilhelm it means much more. 

He seeks absolute identification with his role,

The theatre is for him a means 

By which he wants to achieve his goal, 

The shaping of his character. 

In the end, however, he has to realise 

That he has no talent as an actor 

And chooses a bourgeois life at Natalie's side.


The desire that Wilhelm undoubtedly 

Has for Philine remains largely unexpressed. 

As far as Wilhelm is able, 

He denies the feelings he has for her. 

They are only acted out 

When the initiative comes from Philine 

And when she deceives him. 

For example, she disguises Friedrich 

And makes Wilhelm believe he is Mariane. 

Just like the night of love they share, 

Philine only gains Wilhelm's favour 

By means of deception 

And not with the help of true feelings.


At the same time, Wilhelm does not manage 

To recognise Philine's loyalty. 

He does not see that she stays with him 

After the raid by the drama society 

And that she cares for him. 

For Wilhelm, only the encounter 

With the Amazon counts. 

Nor does he realise that she wants him 

To share in the advantages 

She has through her acquaintances with men, 

Such as when she gets him a room 

At the Countess's better lodgings, 

Which he refuses. 

Or that she puts him in a good light 

With the countess he fancies 

And allows him to meet her.


The turning point for Wilhelm 

Is the robbery of the drama society 

During which he meets the Amazon. 

From then on, Wilhelm pursues his goal again: 

He did not want to continue 

A strolling life haphazardly, 

But purposeful steps were to mark 

His course in the future. 

That Philine is part of the ambling life 

Is shown by the fact that he asks her 

To leave him alone 

When he recovers from the wound of the attack 

And later is not pleased to meet her again at Serlo.


A relationship between Wilhelm and Philine 

Seems unthinkable, 

As they are simply too different. 

Even in his childhood, he knows 

That he wants a woman 

Who has more inwardness to offer than Philine.


I was particularly captivated 

By Chlorinde with all her doings. 

The manly femininity, 

Tthe calm fullness of her existence 

Had more effect on the spirit 

That was beginning to develop 

Than the made charms of Armida, 

Although I did not despise her garden.


For Wilhelm, Philine possesses 

The charms of Armida, 

But it is Chlorinde who captivates him.


As an actress, Philine lives a free, 

Self-determined and largely independent life, 

Which is otherwise difficult to achieve 

For a woman of her time.


She can deal with the fact 

That she does not find recognition 

In the bourgeois world. 

When she earns disdain 

Because she behaves in public 

In a way that is not proper, 

She responds by cutting faces in the back. 

She only seeks recognition and conformity 

When it is to her advantage.


She can also accept that men reduce her 

To her sensual side. 

She virtually challenges them, 

For example by putting her slippers 

In front of Serlo 

And thus deepening the conversation 

About the cuteness of her feet.


Philine uses her success with men 

To secure her livelihood. 

She has no connection with a man 

From whose acquaintance she derives no advantage. 

However, she leads this life by choice, 

As there were few opportunities 

For women of the time 

To lead independent and self-reliant lives, 

And acting was one of them.


Philine is the controversial figure 

To Wilhelm's strictly moral approach to life. 

In the course of his apprenticeship years, 

She confronts Wilhelm with the sensual, 

Easy-going side of life. 

She acts as a siren, so to speak, who tempts him. 

But Wilhelm chooses Natalie as a woman 

Who has more character development. 

Wilhelm seeks access to women 

Through the mind. 

Thus, his adoration for the Countess 

Takes place only through his imagination, 

And the proposal of marriage 

To Therese is made, 

After careful consideration, by letter. 

Wilhelm lacks passion and impulsiveness, 

And a possible connection to a woman 

Only takes place after careful consideration. 

He regards the woman at his side 

As property, possession and thing. 

He demands absolute and unconditional 

Love and fidelity, 

Which he himself is also able to give. 

However, Wilhelm lacks knowledge 

Of human nature and empathy, 

So that he tends to project his desires 

And ideas onto people, thereby failing 

To recognise themselve.


Philine also undergoes a change 

In the course of the novel. 

At the beginning of the novel, for example, 

She is without a commitment 

And is in search of a patron, 

And therefore has many male acquaintances 

At this time. At the end of the novel, 

However, she finds herself in a state 

That does not make her happy at all, 

She is pregnant. 

In complete contrast to the beginning of the novel, 

She lives a secluded life, 

Hides away and lives with a man. 

So she is in exactly the situation 

She did not aspire to. 

Philine certainly does not experience 

An educational path, in the sense 

Of character development, in this novel.


Philine functions more as a negative example 

For contemporary readers, 

Because not only the hero of the novel, 

But also the reader should be educated. 

The readers are made aware 

Of the consequences of a life without morals.


Since Wilhelm has not found his identification 

Through the profession of actor, 

He gives up the free life to marry 

And lead a life with the Tower Society, 

Which represents the reform aristocracy. 

This nobility leads a life 

That approaches the bourgeois 

And he renounces a representative life. 

Wilhelm thus chooses a life 

Between the world of social indeterminacy 

And bourgeois confinement. 

A life in which Philine cannot find a place.