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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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The Personality of Rudolf Steiner
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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The Personality of Rudolf Steiner
And His Development
By Edouard Schuré
Some Biographical notes on Rudolf Steiner by Edouard Schuré.
From the 1910 Macoy Publishing Company book, The Way of Initiation.
This is the first half of the book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment.
Translated by kind permission of the author from the
introduction to Le Mystère Chrétien et les Mystères
Antiques. Traduit de l'allemand par Edouard Schuré, Librairie
académique, Perrin & Co., 1908, Paris.
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THE PERSONALITY OF RUDOLF STEINER AND HIS DEVELOPMENT
Many of even the most cultivated men of our time have a very mistaken
idea of what is a true mystic and a true occultist. They know these
two forms of human mentality only by their imperfect or degenerate
types, of which recent times have afforded but too many examples. To
the intellectual man of the day, the mystic is a kind of fool and
visionary who takes his fancies for facts; the occultist is a dreamer
or a charlatan who abuses public credulity in order to boast of
an imaginary science and of pretended powers. Be it remarked, to begin
with, that this definition of mysticism, though deserved by some,
would be as unjust as erroneous if one sought to apply it to such
personalities as Joachim del Fiore of the thirteenth century, Jacob
Boehme of the sixteenth, or St. Martin, who is called the
unknown philosopher, of the eighteenth century. No less unjust
and false would be the current definition of the occultist if one saw
in it the slightest connection with such earnest seekers as
Paracelsus, Mesmer, or Fabre d'Olivet in the past, as William Crookes,
de Rochat, or Camille Flammarion in the present. Think what we may of
these bold investigators, it is undeniable that they have opened out
regions unknown to science, and furnished the Blind with new ideas.
No, these fanciful definitions can at most satisfy that scientific
dilettantism which hides its feebleness under a supercilious mask to
screen its indolence, or the worldly scepticism which ridicules all
that threatens to upset its indifference. But enough of these
superficial opinions. Let us study history, the sacred and profane
books of all nations, and the last results of experimental science;
let us subject all these facts to impartial criticism, inferring
similar effects from identical causes, and we shall be forced to give
quite another definition of the mystic and the occultist.
The true mystic is a man who enters into full possession of his inner
life, and who, having become cognisant of his sub-consciousness, finds
in it, through concentrated meditation and steady discipline, new
faculties and enlightenment. These new faculties and this
enlightenment instruct him as to the innermost nature of his soul and
his relations with that impalpable element which underlies all, with
that eternal and supreme reality which religion calls God, and poetry
the Divine. The occultist, akin to the mystic, but differing from him
as a younger from an elder brother, is a man endowed with intuition
and with synthesis, who seeks to penetrate the hidden depths and
foundations of Nature by the methods of science and philosophy; that
is to say, by observation and reason, methods invariable in principle,
but modified in application by being adapted to the descending
kingdoms of Spirit or the ascending kingdoms of Nature, according to
the vast hierarchy of beings and the alchemy of the creative Word.
The mystic, then, is one who seeks for truth, and the divine directly
within himself, by a gradual detachment and a veritable birth of his
higher soul. If he attains it after prolonged effort, he plunges into
his own glowing centre. Then he immerses himself, and identifies
himself with that ocean of life which is the primordial Force.
The occultist, on the other hand, discovers, studies, and contemplates
this same Divine outpouring, given forth in diverse portions, endowed,
with force, and multiplied to infinity in Nature and in Humanity.
According to the profound saying of Paracelsus: he sees in all
beings the letters of an alphabet, which, united in man, form the
complete and conscious Word of life. The detailed analyses that he
makes of them, the syntheses that he constructs with them, are to him
as so many images and forecastings of this central Divine, of this Sun
of Beauty, of Truth and of Life, which he sees not, but which is
reflected and bursts upon his vision in countless mirrors.
The weapons of the mystic are concentration and inner vision; the
weapons of the occultist are intuition and synthesis. Each corresponds
to the other; they complete and presuppose each other.
These two human types are blended in the Adept, in the higher
Initiate. No doubt one or the other, and often, both, are met within
the founders of great religions and the loftiest philosophies. No
doubt also they are to be found again, in a less, but still very
remarkable degree, among a certain number of personages who have
played a great part in history as reformers, thinkers, poets, artists,
statesmen.
Why, then, should these two types of mind, which represent the highest
human faculties, and were formerly the object of universal veneration,
usually appear to us now as merely deformed and travestied? Why have
they become obliterated? Why should they have fallen into such
discredit?
That is the result of a profound cause existing in an inevitable
necessity of human evolution.
During the last two thousand years, but especially since the sixteenth
century, humanity has achieved a tremendous work, namely, the conquest
of the globe and the constitution of experimental science, in what
concerns the material and visible world.
That this gigantic and Herculean task should be successfully
accomplished, it was necessary that there should be a temporary
eclipse of man's transcendental faculties, so that his whole power of
observation might be concentrated on the outer world. These faculties,
however, have never been extinct or even inactive. They lay dormant in
the mass of men; they remained active in the elect, far from the gaze
of the vulgar.
Now, they are showing themselves openly under new forms. Before long
they will assume a leading and directing importance in human
destinies. I would add that at no period of history, whether among the
nations of the ancient Aryan cycle, or in the Semitic civilizations of
Asia and Africa whether in the Græco-Latin world, or in the
middle ages and in modern times, have these royal faculties, for which
positivism would substitute its dreary nomenclature, ever ceased to
operate at the beginning and in the background of all great human
creations and of all fruitful work. For how can we imagine a thinker,
a poet, an inventor, a hero, a master of science or of art, a genius
of any kind, without a mighty ray of those two master-faculties which
make the mystic and the occultist the inner vision and the
sovereign intuition.
Rudolf Steiner is both a mystic and an occultist. These two natures
appear in him in perfect harmony. One could not say which of the two
predominates over the other. In intermingling and blending, they have
become one homogeneous force. Hence a special development in which
outward events play but a secondary part.
Dr. Steiner was born in Upper Austria in 1861. His earliest years were
passed in a little town situated on the Leytha, on the borders of
Styria, the Carpathians, and Hungary. From childhood his character was
serious and concentrated. This was followed by: a youth inwardly
illuminated by the most marvellous intuitions, a young manhood
encountering terrible trials, and a ripe age crowned by a mission
which he had dimly foreseen from his earliest years, but which was
only gradually formulated in the struggle for truth and life. This
youth passed in a mountainous and secluded region, was happy in its
way, thanks to the exceptional faculties that he discovered in
himself. He was employed in a Catholic church as a choir boy. The
poetry of the worship, the profundity of the symbolism, had a
mysterious attraction for him; but, as he possessed the innate gift of
seeing souls, one thing terrified him. This was the secret
unbelief of the priests, entirely engrossed in the ritual and the
material part of the service. There was another peculiarity: no one,
either then or later, allowed himself to talk of any gross
superstition in his presence, or to utter any blasphemy, as if those
calm and penetrating eyes compelled the speaker to serious thought. In
this child, almost always silent, there grew up a quiet and inflexible
will, to master things through understanding. That was easier for him
than for others, for he possessed from the first that self-mastery, so
rare even in the adult, which gives the mastery over others. To this
firm will was added a warm, deep, and almost painful sympathy; a kind
of pitiful tenderness to all beings and even to inanimate nature. It
seemed to him that all souls had in them something divine. But in what
a stony crust is, hidden the shining gold! In what hard rock, in what
dark gloom lay dormant the precious essence! Vaguely as yet did this
idea stir within him he was to develop it later that the
divine soul is present in all men, but in a latent state. It is a
sleeping captive that has to be awakened from enchantment.
To the sight of this young thinker, human souls became transparent,
with their troubles, their desires, their paroxysms of hatred or of
love. And it was probably owing to the terrible things he saw, that he
spoke so little. And yet, what delights, unknown to the world, sprang
from this involuntary clairvoyance! Among the remarkable inner
revelations of this youth, I will instance only one which was
extremely characteristic.
The vast plains of Hungary, the wild Carpathian forests, the old
churches of those mountains in which the monstrance glows brightly as
a sun in the darkness of the sanctuary, were not there for nothing,
but they were helpful to meditation and contemplation,
At fifteen years of age Steiner became acquainted with a herbalist at
that time staying in his country. The remarkable thing about this man
was that he knew not only the species, families, and life of plants in
their minutest details, but also their, secret virtues. One would have
said that he had spent his life in conversing with the unconscious and
fluid soul of herbs and flowers. He had the gift of seeing the vital
principle of plants, their etheric body, and what occultism calls the
elementals of the vegetable world. He talked of it as of a quite
ordinary and natural thing. The calm and coolly scientific tone of his
conversation did but still further excite the curiosity and admiration
of the youth. Later on, Steiner knew that this strange man was a
messenger from the Master, whom as yet he knew not, but who was to be
his real initiator, and who was already watching over him from afar.
What the curious, double-sighted botanist told him, young Steiner
found to be in accordance with the logic of things. That did but
confirm an inner feeling of long standing, and which more and more
forced itself on his mind as the fundamental Law, and as the basis of
the Great All. That is to say: the two-fold current which
constitutes the very movement of the world, and which might be called
the flux and reflux Of the universal life.
We are all witnesses and are conscious of the outward current of
evolution, which urges onward all beings of heaven and of earth
stars, plants, animals, and humanity and causes them to
move forward towards an infinite future, without our perceiving the
initial force which impels then and makes them go on without pause or
rest. But there is in the universe an inverse current, which
interposes itself and perpetually breaks in on the other. It is that
of involution, by which the principles, forces, entities, and
souls which come from the invisible world and the kingdom of the
Eternal infiltrate and ceaselessly intermingle with the visible
reality. No evolution of matter would be comprehensible without this
occult and astral current, which is the great propeller of life, with
its hierarchy of powers. Thus the Spirit, which contains the future in
germ, involves itself in matter; thus matter, which receives
the Spirit, evolves towards the future. While, then, we are
moving on blindly towards the unknown future, this future is
approaching us consciously, infusing itself in the current of the
world and man who elaborate it. Such is the two-fold movement of
time, the out-breathing and the in-breathing of the soul of the world,
which comes from the Eternal and returns thither.
From the age of eighteen, young Steiner possessed the spontaneous
consciousness of this two-fold current a consciousness which is
the condition of all spiritual vision. This vital axiom was forced
upon him by a direct and involuntary seeing of things. Thenceforth he
had the unmistakable sensation of occult powers which were working
behind and through him for his guidance. He gave heed to this force
and obeyed its admonitions, for he felt in profound accordance with
it.
This kind of perception, however, formed a separate category in his
intellectual life. This class of truths seemed to him something so
profound, so mysterious, and so sacred, that he never imagined it
possible to express it in words. He fed his soul, thereon, as from a
divine fountain, but to have scattered, a drop of it beyond would have
seemed to him a profanation.
Beside this inner and contemplative life, his rational and philosophic
mind was powerfully developing. From sixteen to seventeen years of
age, Rudolf Steiner plunged deeply into the study of Kant, Fichte, and
Schelling. When he came to Vienna some years after, he became an
ardent admirer of Hegel, whose transcendental idealism borders on
occultism; but speculative philosophy did not satisfy him. His
positive mind demanded the solid basis of the sciences of observation.
So he deeply studied mathematics, chemistry, mineralogy, botany, and
zoology, These studies, he said, afford a surer
basis for the construction of a spiritual system of the universe than
history and literature. The latter, wanting in exact methods, would
then throw no side-lights on the vast domain of German science.
Inquiring into everything, enamoured of high art, and an enthusiast
for poetry, Steiner nevertheless did not neglect literary studies. As
a guide therein he found an excellent professor in the person of
Julius Schröer, a distinguished scholar of the school of the brothers
Grimm, who strove to develop in his pupils the art of oratory and of
composition. To this distinguished man the young student owed his
great and refined literary culture. In the desert of prevailing
materialism, says Steiner, his house was to me an oasis of
idealism.
But this was not yet the Master whom he sought. Amidst these varied
studies and deep meditations, he could as yet discern the building of
the universe but in a fragmentary way; his inborn intuition prevented
any doubt of the divine origin of things and of a spiritual Beyond. A
distinctive mark of this extraordinary man was that he never knew any
of those crises of doubt and despair which usually accompany the
transition to a definite conviction in the life of mystics and of
thinkers. Nevertheless, he felt that the central light which illumines
and penetrates the whole was still lacking in him. He had reached
young manhood, with its terrible problems. What was he going to do
with his life? The sphinx of destiny was facing him. How should he
solve its problem?
It was at the age of nineteen that the aspirant to the mysteries met
with his guide the Master so long anticipated.
It is an undoubted fact, admitted by occult tradition and confirmed by
experience, that those who seek the higher truth from an impersonal
motive find a master to initiate them at the right moments that is to
say, when they are ripe for its reception. Knock, and it shall
be opened to you, said Jesus. That is true with regard to
everything, but above all with regard to truth. Only, the desire must
be ardent as a flame, in a soul pure as crystal.
The Master of Rudolf Steiner was one of those men of power who live
unknown to the world, under cover of some civil state, to carry out a
mission unsuspected by any but their fellows in the Brotherhood of
self-sacrificing Masters. They take no ostensible part in human
events. To remain unknown is the condition of their power, but their
action is only the more efficacious. For they inspire, prepare, and
direct those who will act in the sight of all. In the present instance
the Master had no difficulty in completing the first and spontaneous
initiation of his disciple. He had only, so to speak, to point out to
him his own nature, to arm him with his needful weapons. Clearly did
he show him the connection between the official and the secret
sciences; between the religious and the spiritual forces which are now
contending for the guidance of humanity; the antiquity of the occult
tradition which holds the hidden threads of history, which mingles
them, separates, and reunites them in the course of ages.
Swiftly he made him clear the successive stages of inner discipline,
in order to attain conscious and intelligent clairvoyance, In a few
months the disciple learned from oral teaching the depth and
incomparable splendour of the esoteric synthesis. Rudolf Steiner had
already sketched for himself his intellectual mission: To
re-unite Science and Religion. To bring back God into Science, and
Nature into Religion. Thus to re fertilize both Art and Life.
But how to set about this vast and daring undertaking? How conquer, or
rather, how tame and transform the great enemy, the Materialistic
science of the day, which is like a terrible dragon covered with its
carapace and couched on its huge treasure? How master this dragon of
modern science and yoke it to the car of spiritual truth? And, above
all, how conquer the bull of public opinion?
Rudolf Steiner's Master was not in the least like himself. He had not
that extreme and feminine sensibility which, though not excluding
energy, makes every contact an emotion and instantly turns the
suffering of others into a personal pain. He was masculine in spirit,
a born ruler of men, looking only at the species, and for whom
individuals hardly existed. He spared not himself, and he did not
spare others. His will was like a ball which, once shot from the
cannon's mouth, goes straight to its mark, sweeping off everything in
its way. To the anxious questioning of his disciple he replied, in
substance:
If thou wouldst fight the enemy, begin by understanding him,
Thou wilt conquer the dragon only by penetrating his skin. As to the
bull, thou must seize him by the horns. It is in the extremity of
distress that thou wilt find thy weapons and thy brothers in the
fight. I have shown thee who thou art, now go and be
thyself!
Rudolf Steiner knew the language of the Masters well enough to
understand the rough path that he was thus commanded to tread; but he
also understood, that this was the only way to attain the end. He
obeyed, and set forth.
From 1880 the life of Rudolf Steiner becomes divided, into three quite
distinct periods: from twenty to thirty years of age (1881
1891), the Viennese period, a time of study and of preparation; from
thirty to forty (1891 1901), the Weimar period, a time of
struggle and combat; from forty to forty-six (1901 1907), the
Berlin period, a time of action and of organization, in which his
thought crystallised into a living work.
I pass rapidly over the Vienna period, in which Steiner took the
degree of Doctor of Philosophy. He afterwards wrote a series of
scientific articles on zoology, geology, and the theory of colours, in
which theosophical ideas appear in an idealist clothing. While acting
as tutor in several families, with the same conscientious devotion
that he gave to everything, he conducted as chief editor a weekly
Viennese paper, the Deutsche Wochenschrift. His friendship with
the Austrian poetess, Marie Eugénie delle Grazie, cast, as it were,
into this period of heavy work a warm ray of sunshine, with a smile of
grace and poetry.
In 1890 Steiner was summoned to collaborate in the archives of Goethe
and Schiller at Weimar, to superintend the re-editing of Goethe's
scientific works. Shortly after, he published two important works,
Truth and Science
and
The Philosophy of Liberty.
The occult powers that guided me, he says, forced,
me to introduce spiritualistic ideas imperceptibly into the current
literature of the time. But in these various tasks he was but
studying his ground while trying his strength. So distant was the goal
that he did not dream of being able to reach it as yet. To travel
round the world in a sailing vessel, to cross the Atlantic, the
Pacific and the Indian Ocean, in order to return to a European port,
would have seemed easier to him. While awaiting the events that would
allow him to equip his ship and to launch it on the open sea, he came
into touch with two illustrious personalities who helped to determine
his intellectual position in the contemporary world.
These two persons were the celebrated philosopher, Friedrich
Nietzsche, and the no less famous naturalist, Ernst Haeckel.
Rudolf Steiner had just written an impartial treatise on the author of
Zarathustra. In consequence of this, Nietzsche's sister begged
the sympathetic critic to come and see her at Naumburg, where her
unhappy brother was slowly dying. Madame Foerster took the visitor to
the door of the apartment where Nietzsche was lying on a couch in a
comatose condition, inert, stupefied. To Steiner there was something
very significant in this melancholy sight. In it he saw the final act
in the tragedy of the would-be superman.
Nietzsche, the author of Beyond Good and Evil had not, like the
realists of Bismarckian imperialism, renounced idealism, for he was
naturally intuitive; but in his individualistic pride he sought to cut
off the spiritual world from the universe, and the divine from human
consciousness. Instead of placing the superman, of whom he had a
poetic vision, in the spiritual kingdom, which is his true sphere, he
strove to force him into the material world, which alone was real in
his eyes. Hence, in that splendid intellect arose a chaos of ideas and
a wild struggle which finally brought on softening of the brain. To
explain this particular case, it is needless to bring in atavism or
the theory of degeneracy. The frenzied combat of ideas and of
contradictory sentiments, of which this brain was the battlefield, was
enough. Steiner had done justice to all the genius that marked the
innovating ideas of Nietzsche, but this victim of pride,
self-destroyed by negation, was to him none the less a tragic instance
of the ruin of a mighty intellect which madly destroys itself in
breaking away from spiritual intelligence.
Madame Foerster did her utmost to enroll Dr. Steiner under her
brother's flag. For this she used all her skill, making repeated
offers to the young publicist to become editor and commentator of
Nietzsche's works. Steiner withstood her insistence as best he could,
and ended by taking himself off altogether, for which Madame Foerster
never forgave him. She did not know that Rudolf Steiner bore within
him the consciousness of a work no less great and more valuable than
that of her brother.
Nietzsche had been merely an interesting episode in the life of the
esoteric thinker on the threshold of his battlefield. His meeting with
the celebrated naturalist, Ernst Haeckel, on the contrary, marks a
most important phase in the development of his thought. Was not the
successor of Darwin apparently the most formidable adversary of the
spiritualism of this young initiate, of that philosophy which to him
was the very essence of his being and the breath of his thought?
Indeed, since the broken link between man and animal has been
re-joined, since man can no longer believe in a special and
supernatural origin, he has begun altogether to doubt his divine
origin and destiny. He no longer sees himself as anything but one
phenomenon among so many phenomena, a passing form amidst so many
forms, a frail and chance link in a blind evolution. Steiner, then, is
right in saying; The mentality deduced from natural sciences is
the greatest power of modern times. On the other hand, he knew
that this system merely reproduces a succession of external forms
among, living beings, and not the inner and acting forces of life. He
knew it from personal initiation, and a deeper and vaster view of the
universe. So also he could exclaim with more assurance than most of
our timid spiritualists and startled theologians: Is the human
soul then to rise on the wings of enthusiasm to the summits of the
True, the Beautiful, and the Good, only to be swept away into
nothingness, like a bubble of the brain? Yes, Haeckel was the
Adversary. It was materialism in arms, the dragon with all his scales,
his claws, and his teeth.
Steiner's desire to understand this man and to do him justice as to
all that was great in him, to fathom his theory so far as it was
logical and plausible, was only the more intense. In this fact one
sees all the loyalty and all the greatness of his comprehensive mind.
The materialistic conclusions of Haeckel could have no influence on
his own ideas which came to him from a different science; but he had a
presentiment that in the indisputable discoveries of the naturalist he
should find the surest basis of an evolutionary spiritualism and a
rational theosophy.
He began, then, to study eagerly the History of Natural
Creation. In it Haeckel gives a fascinating picture of the
evolution of species, from the amoeba to man. In it he shows the
successive growth of organs, and the physiological process by which
living beings have raised themselves to organisms more and more
complex and more and more perfect. But in this stupendous
transformation, which implies millions and millions of years, he never
explains the initial force of this universal ascent, nor the series of
special impulses which cause beings to rise step by step. To these
primordial questions, Haeckel has never been able to reply except by
admitting spontaneous generation [note 2], which
is tantamount to a miracle as great as the creation of man by God from
a clod of earth. To a theosophist like Steiner, on the other hand, the
cosmic force which elaborates the world comprises in its spheres,
fitted one into another, the myriad's of souls which crystallise and
incarnate ceaselessly in all beings. He, who saw the underside
of creation, could but recognise and admire the extent, of the
all-round gaze with which Haeckel surveyed his above. It was in
vain that the naturalist would deny the divine Author of the universal
schemes he proved it in spite of himself, in so well describing His
work. As to the theosophist, he greeted, in the surging of species and
in the breath which urges them onward Man in the making, the
very thought of God the visible expression of the planetary Word
[note 3].
While thus pursuing his studies, Rudolf Steiner recalled the saying of
his Masters To conquer the dragon, his skin must be
penetrated. While stealing within the carapace of present-day
materialism, he had seized his weapons. Henceforth he was ready for
the combat. He needed but a field of action to give battle, and a
powerful aid to uphold him therein. He was to find his field in the
Theosophical Society, and his aid in a remarkable woman.
In 1897 Rudolf Steiner went to Berlin to conduct a literary magazine,
and to give lectures there.
On his arrival, he found there a branch of the Theosophical Society.
The German branch of this Society was always noted for its great
independence, which is natural in a country of transcendental
philosophy and of fastidious criticism. It had already made a
considerable contribution to occult literature through the interesting
periodical, The Sphinx, conducted by Dr. Hübbe-Schleiden, and
Dr. Carl du Prel's book Philosophie der Mystik. But, the
leaders having retired, it was almost over with the group. Great
discussions and petty wranglings divided the theosophists beyond the
Rhine. Should Rudolf Steiner enter the Theosophical Society? This
question forced itself urgently upon him, and it was of the utmost
gravity, both for himself and for his cause.
Through his first Master, through the brotherhood with which he was
associated, and by his own innermost nature, Steiner belongs to
another school of occultism, I mean to the esoteric Christianity of
the West, and most especially to the Rosicrucian initiation.
After mature consideration he resolved to join the Theosophical
Society of which he became a member in 1902. He did not, however,
enter it as a pupil of the Eastern tradition, but as an initiate of
Rosicrucian esotericism who gladly recognised the profound depth of
the Hindu Wisdom and offered it a brotherly hand to make a magnetic
link between the two. He understood that the two traditions were not
meant to contend with each other, but to act in concert, with complete
independence, and thus to work for the common good of civilisation.
The Hindu tradition, in fact, contains the greatest treasure of occult
science as regards cosmogony and the prehistoric periods of humanity,
while the tradition of Christian and Western esotericism looks from
its immeasurable height upon the far-off future and the final
destinies of our race. For the past contains and prepares the future,
as the future issues from the past and completes it.
Rudolf Steiner was assisted in his work by a powerful recruit and one
of inestimable value in the propagandist work that he was about to
undertake.
Mlle. Marie von Sivers, a Russian by birth, and of an unusually varied
cosmopolitan education (she writes and speaks Russian, French, German,
and English equally well), had herself also reached Theosophy by other
roads, after long seeking for the truth which illumines all because it
illumines the very depths of our own being. The extreme refinement of
her aristocratic nature, at once modest and proud, her great and
delicate sensitiveness, the extent and balance of her intelligence,
her artistic and mental endowments, all made her wonderfully fitted
for the part of an agent and an apostle. The Oriental theosophy had
attracted and delighted her without altogether convincing her. The
lectures of Dr. Steiner gave her the light which convinces by casting
its beams on all sides, as from a transplendent centre. Independent
and free, she, like many Russians in good society, sought for some
ideal work to which she could devote all her energies. She had found
it. Dr. Steiner having been appointed General Secretary of the German
Section of the Theosophical Society, Mlle. Marie von Sivers became his
assistant. From that time, in spreading the work throughout Germany
and the adjacent countries, she displayed a real genius for
organisation, maintained with unwearied activity.
As for Rudolf Steiner, he had already given ample proof of his
profound thought and his eloquence. He knew himself, and he was master
of himself. But such faith, such devotion must have increased his
energy a hundred-fold, and given wings to his words. His writings on
esoteric questions followed one another in rapid succession
[note 4].
He delivered lectures in Berlin, Leipzig, Cassel, Munich, Stuttgart,
Vienna, Budapest, etc. All his books are of a high standard. He is
equally skilled in the deduction of ideas in philosophical order, and
in rigorous analysis of scientific facts. And when he so chooses, he
can give a poetical form to his thought, in original and striking
imagery. But his whole self is shown only by his presence and his
speech, private or public. The characteristic of his eloquence is a
singular force, always gentle in expression, resulting undoubtedly
from perfect serenity of soul combined with wonderful clearness of
mind. Added to this at times is an inner and mysterious vibration
which makes itself felt by the listener from the very first words.
Never a word that could shock or jar. From argument to argument, from
analogy to analogy, he leads you on from the known, to the unknown.
Whether following up the comparative development of the earth and of
man, according to occult tradition, through the Lemurian, Atlantean,
Asiatic, and European periods; whether explaining the physiological
and psychic constitution of man as he now is; whether enumerating the
stages of Rosicrucian initiation, or commenting on the Gospel of St.
John and the Apocalypse, or applying his root-ideas to mythology,
history, and literature, that which dominates and guides his discourse
is ever this power of synthesis, which co-ordinates facts under one
ruling idea and gathers them together in one harmonious vision. And it
is ever this inward and contagious fervour this secret music of the
soul, which is, as it were, a subtle melody in harmony with the
Universal Soul.
Such, at least, is what I felt on first meeting him and listening to
him two years ago. I could not better describe this undefinable
feeling than be recalling, the saying of a poet-friend to whom I was
showing the portrait of the German theosophist. Standing before those
deep and clear-seeing eyes, before that countenance, hollowed by
inward struggles, moulded by a lofty spirit which has proved its
balance on the heights and its calm in the depths, my friend
exclaimed: Behold a master of himself and of life!
1 Translated by kind permission of the author from the
introduction to Le Mystère Chrétien et les Mystères Antiques.
Traduit de l'allemand par Edouard Schuré, Librairie académique,
Perrin & Co., 1908, Paris.
2 A speech delivered in Paris, 28th August 1878. See also
Haeckel's History of Natural Creation, 13th lecture.
3 This is how Dr. Steiner himself describes the famous
German naturalists Haeckel's personality is captivating. It is the most
complete contrast to the tone of his writings. If Haeckel had but made
a slight study of the philosophy of which he speaks, not even as a
dilettante, but like a child, he would have drawn the most lofty
spiritual conclusions from his phylo-genetic studies. Haeckel's
doctrine is grand, but Haeckel himself is the worst of commentators on
his doctrine. It is not by showing our contemporaries the weak points
in Haeckel's doctrine that we can promote intellectual progress, but
by pointing out to them the grandeur of his phylo-genetic
thought. Steiner has developed these ideas in two works; Welt
und Lebensanschauungen im 19ten Jahrhundert (Theories of the
Universe, and of Life in the Nineteenth Century), and Haeckel und
seine Gegner (Haeckel and his Opponents).
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