July 14, 1859.—I have just read
“Faust” again. Alas, every year I am fascinated afresh by this
somber figure,
this restless life. It is the type of suffering
toward which I myself gravitate, and I am always finding in the
poem
words which strike straight to my heart. Immortal, malign, accursed
type! Specter of my own
conscience, ghost of my own torment, image
of the ceaseless struggle of the soul which has not yet found its
true aliment, its peace, its faith—art thou not the typical example
of a life which feeds upon itself, because it
has not found its God,
and which, in its wandering flight across the worlds, carries within
it, like a comet, an
inextinguishable flame of desire, and an agony
of incurable disillusion? I also am reduced to nothingness, and
I
shiver on the brink of the great empty abysses of my inner being,
stifled by longing for the unknown,
consumed with the thirst for the
infinite, prostrate before the ineffable. I also am torn sometimes by
this blind
passion for life, these desperate struggles for
happiness, though more often I am a prey to complete exhaustion
and
taciturn despair. What is the reason of it all? Doubt—doubt of
one's self, of thought, of men, and of
life—doubt which enervates
the will and weakens all our powers, which makes us forget God and
neglect
prayer and duty—that restless and corrosive doubt which
makes existence impossible and meets all hope with
satire.
July 17, 1859.—Always and everywhere
salvation is torture, deliverance means death, and peace lies in sacrifice. If we would win our pardon,
we must kiss the fiery crucifix. Life is a series of agonies, a
Calvary,
which we can only climb on bruised and aching knees. We
seek distractions; we wander away; we deafen and
stupefy ourselves
that we may escape the test; we turn away oar eyes from the via
dolorosa; and yet there is
no help for it—we must come back to it
in the end. What we have to recognize is that each of us carries
within
himself his own executioner—his demon, his hell, in his
sin; that his sin is his idol, and that this idol, which
seduces the
desire of his heart, is his curse.
Die unto sin! This great saying of
Christianity remains still the highest theoretical solution of the
inner life.
Only in it is there any peace of conscience; and without
this peace there is no peace....
Amiel's Journal
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