“Old fairy tales that are an expression of the
ancient spiritual secrets of the world, arose such that
those who shaped them for the world harkened
and listened to those who were able to relate the
spiritual secrets to them, so that how they are put
together, their composition, is commensurate with the
spiritual secrets themselves.”
Rudolf Steiner, GA 124
Fairy Tales in the Light of Spiritual Investigation
A
public lecture held in Berlin, February 6, 1913
number of things make it seem precarious to speak about fairy
tales in the light of spiritual investigation. One of them is
the difficulty of the subject itself, since the sources
of a genuine and true fairy tale mood have in fact to be sought
at deep levels of the human soul. The methods of
spiritual research often described by me must follow
convoluted paths before these sources can be
discovered. Genuine fairy tales originate from
sources lying at greater depths of the human soul than is
generally supposed, speaking to us magically out of every epoch
of humanity's development.
A
second difficulty is that, in regard to what is magical
in fairy tales, one has to a considerable extent the feeling
that the original, elementary impression, indeed the
essential nature of the fairy tale itself is destroyed through
intellectual observations and a conceptual
penetration of the fairy tale. If one has the justified
conviction in regard to explanations and commentaries
that they destroy the immediate living impression
the fairy tale ought to make in simply letting it work on one,
then one would far rather not accept explanations
in place of their subtle and enchanting qualities. These well
up from seemingly unfathomable sources of the folk-spirit or of
the individual human soul-disposition. It is really as though
one were to destroy the blossom of a plant, if one intrudes
with one's power of judgment in what wells up so pristinely
from the human soul as do these fairy tale
compositions.
Even so, with the methods of spiritual science it proves
possible nonetheless to illumine at least to some extent
those regions of the soul-life from which fairy tale moods
arise. Actual experience would seem to gainsay the second
reservation as well. Just because the origin of fairy
tales has to be sought at such profound depths of the human
soul, one arrives as a matter of course at the conviction
that what may be offered as a kind of spiritual scientific
explanation remains something that touches the source so
slightly after all as not to harm it by such investigation. Far
from being impoverished, one has the feeling that
everything of profound significance in those
regions of the human soul remains so new, unique and
original that one would like best of all to bring it to
expression oneself in the form of a fairy tale of some kind.
One senses how impossible any other approach is in speaking out
of these hidden sources.
It
may be regarded as entirely natural that someone like
Goethe who attempted, alongside his artistic
activity, to penetrate deeply into the background, into
the sources of existence, in having something to communicate of
the soul's profoundest experiences, did not resort
to theoretical discussion. Instead, having gained insight into
the underlying sources, he makes use of the fairy tale once
again for the soul's most noteworthy experiences. This is what
Goethe did in his
Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful
Lily, wanting, in his fashion, to bring to
expression those profound experiences of the human soul
that Schiller
set forth in a more philosophical-abstract form in his
Letters Concerning the Aesthetic Education of
the Human Race. It lies in the nature of what is magical in
fairy tales that explanations cannot ultimately destroy their
productive mood. For, whoever is able to arrive at the
aforementioned sources from the standpoint of
spiritual investigation, discovers a peculiar fact.
(If I were to say all that I should like to say about the
nature of fairy tales, I would have to hold many lectures.
Hence, it will only be possible today to put forward a few
indications and results of investigation.)
That is to say, whoever seeks to come to the aforementioned
sources from the standpoint of spiritual research finds that
these fairy tale sources lie far deeper down in the human soul
than do the sources of creativity and artistic appreciation
otherwise. This applies even with regard to the most compelling
works of art — the most moving tragedies for instance.
Tragedy depicts what the human soul can experience in
connection with powers the poet tells us derive from the
tremendous destiny uplifting it, while overwhelming the
individual. The shock-waves of tragedy derive from this
destiny, but such that we can say: The entanglements, the
threads spun in the course of the tragedy and unraveled again
are inherent in definite experiences of the human soul in the
external world. These are in many respects hard to foresee,
since for the most part we penetrate only with difficulty
into the particular make up of the individual. Still, they can
be surmised and fathomed in sensing what takes place in
the human soul in consequence of its relation to life. In
experiencing something tragic, one has the feeling, in
one way or another, a particular soul is entangled
in a particular destiny, as this is presented to us.
The
sources of fairy tales and of the moods out of which they arise
lie deeper than these entanglements of tragedy. The
tragic, as well as other forms of artistic expression, results
for us, we may feel, in seeing the human being — for
instance at a particular age, a particular period of life
— at the mercy of certain blows of destiny. In being
affected by a tragedy, we necessarily assume that the
human being is led to the corresponding involvements of
destiny as a result of particular inner experiences. We sense
the need to understand the specific human beings presented to
us in the tragedy with their particular sets of
experiences. A certain circumscribed range of what
is human comes to meet us in the tragedy, as in other works of
art.
In
approaching fairy tales with sympathetic understanding,
we have a different feeling than the one just described, since
the effect of the fairy tale on the human soul is an
original and elemental one, belonging to effects that are hence
unconscious. In sensing what comes to meet us in fairy tales we
find something altogether different from what a human being in
a particular life situation may become involved in. It is
not a matter of a narrowly circumscribed range of human
experience, but of something lying so deep, and so
integral to the soul, as to be “generally human.”
We cannot say, a particular human soul at a particular age of
life, in a certain situation, encounters something of the kind.
Rather, what comes to expression in the fairy tale is so deeply
rooted in the soul that we identify with it no matter whether
as a child in the first years of life, whether in our middle
years, or whether in having grown old.
What comes to expression in the fairy tale accompanies us
throughout our lives in the deepest recesses of the soul. Only,
the fairy tale is often a quite freewheeling and playful,
pictorial expression of underlying experiences. The
aesthetic, artistic enjoyment of the fairy tale may
be as far removed for the soul from the corresponding inner
experience — the comparison can be ventured
— as say, the experience of taste on the tongue
when we partake of food is removed from the
complicated, hidden processes this food undergoes
in the total organism in contributing to building up the
organism. What the food undergoes initially evades human
observation and knowledge. All the human being has is the
enjoyment in tasting. The two things have seemingly
little to do with each other in the first instance, and
from how a particular food tastes, no one is capable of
determining what purpose this food has in the whole
life-process of the human organism. What we
experience in the aesthetic enjoyment of the fairy tale
is likewise far removed from what takes place deep down
in the unconscious, where what the fairy tale
radiates and pours forth out of itself joins forces with the
human soul. The soul has a deep-rooted need to let the
substance of the fairy tale run through its spiritual
“veins,” just as the organism has a need to allow
the nutrients to circulate through it.
Applying the methods of spiritual research that have been
described for penetrating the spiritual worlds, at a
certain stage one acquires knowledge of spiritual processes
that continually take place quite unconsciously in
the depths of the human soul. In normal everyday life,
such spiritual processes unfolding in the soul's depths surface
only occasionally in faint dream experiences caught by
day-consciousness. Awakening from sleep under especially
favorable circumstances, one may have the feeling:
You are emerging out of a spiritual world in which
thinking, in which a kind of pondering has taken place,
in which something has happened in the deep, unfathomable
background of existence. Though apparently similar to
daytime experiences, and intimately connected
with one's whole being, this remains profoundly concealed
for conscious daily life.
For
the spiritual researcher who has made some progress and is
capable of initial experiences in the world of spiritual beings
and spiritual facts, things often proceed in much the same way.
As far as one advances, one still arrives again and again, so
to speak, only at the boundary of a world in which spiritual
processes approach one out of the deep unconscious. These
processes, it must be said, are connected with one's own being.
They can be apprehended almost the same way as a fata
morgana appearing to one's spiritual gaze,
not revealing themselves in their totality.
That is one of the strangest experiences — this peering
into the unfathomable spiritual connections within which the
human soul stands. In attentively following up these
intimate soul occurrences, it turns out that conflicts
experienced in the depths of the soul and portrayed in
works of art, in tragedies, are relatively easy to
survey, as compared to the generally-human soul conflicts
of which we have no presentiment in daily life. Every
person does nonetheless undergo these conflicts at every
age of life.
Such a soul conflict discovered by means of spiritual
investigation takes place for example,
without ordinary consciousness knowing anything of it,
every day on awakening, when the soul emerges from the
world in which it unconsciously resides during sleep and
immerses itself once again in the physical body. As already
mentioned, ordinary consciousness has no notion of this,
and yet a battle takes place every day in the soul's
foundations, glimpsed only in spiritual investigation. This can
be designated the battle of the solitary soul seeking its
spiritual path, with the stupendous forces of natural
existence, such as we face in external life in being helplessly
subjected to thunder and lightning — in experiencing how
the elements vent themselves upon the defenseless human
being.
Though arising with stupendous force, even such rare
occurrences of Nature experienced by the human being are
a trifling matter as compared with the inner battle
taking place unconsciously upon awakening. Experiencing
itself existentially, the soul has now to unite itself with the
forces and substances of the physical body in which it
immerses itself, so as to make use of the senses and of
the limbs once again, these being ruled by natural
forces. The human soul has something like a yearning to
submerge itself in the purely natural, a longing that
fulfils itself with every awakening. There is at the same
time, as though a shrinking back, a sense of helplessness as
against what stands in perpetual contrast to the human
soul — the purely natural, manifesting in the
external corporeality into which it awakens. Strange as
it may sound that such a battle takes place daily in the soul's
foundations, it is nonetheless an experience that does
transpire unconsciously. The soul cannot know precisely what
happens, but it experiences this battle every morning, and each
and every soul stands under the impression of this battle
despite knowing nothing of it — through all that the soul
inherently is, the whole way it is attuned to existence.
Something else that takes place in the depths of the soul and
can be apprehended by means of spiritual
investigation presents itself at the moment of
falling asleep. Having withdrawn itself from the senses and
from the limbs, having in a sense left the external body
behind in the physical sense-world, what then approaches
the human soul may be called a feeling of its own
“inwardness.” Only then does it go through
the inner battles that arise unconsciously by virtue of its
being bound to external matter in life — and having to
act in accordance with this entanglement. It feels the
attachment to the sense world with which it is burdened
as a hindrance, holding it back morally. Other moral
moods can give us no conception of what thus transpires
unconsciously after falling asleep, when the human soul
is alone with itself. And all sorts of further moods then
take their course in the soul when free of the body, in leading
a purely spiritual existence between falling asleep and waking
up.
However, it should not be supposed that these events taking
place in the soul's depths are not there in the waking state.
Spiritual investigation reveals one very interesting fact
in particular, namely that people not only dream when they
think they do, but all day long. The soul is in truth always
full of dreams, only the human being does not notice this,
since day consciousness is stronger as compared to dream
consciousness. Just as a weaker light is drowned out by a
stronger one, so what continually takes place in the
course of waking consciousness as an ongoing dream-experience
is drowned out by day consciousness. Though not generally
aware of it, we dream all the time. And out of the abundance of
dream experiences, of dreams that remain unconscious,
presenting themselves as boundless in relation to
the experiences of day consciousness, those dreams of
which the human being does actually become conscious, separate
themselves off. They do so much as a single drop of water
might separate itself from a vast lake. But this dreaming
activity that remains unconscious is a
soul-spiritual experience. Things take place there in the
soul's depths. Such spiritual experiences of the
soul located in unconscious regions take their course much as
chemical processes, of which we are unconscious, take place in
the body.
Connecting this with a further fact arising from these
lectures, additional light may be shed on hidden aspects of the
soul-life spoken of here. We have often stressed — this
was emphasized again in the previous lecture — that in
the course of humanity's development on the earth, the
soul-life of human beings has changed. Looking back far enough,
we find that primeval human beings had quite different
experiences from those of the human soul today. We have
already spoken of the fact — and will do so again in
coming lectures — that the primeval human
being in early periods of evolution had a certain original
clairvoyance. In the manner of looking at the world
normal today in the waking state, we receive sense impressions
from an external stimulus. We connect them by means
of our understanding, our reason, feeling and will. This
is merely the consciousness belonging to the present,
having developed out of older forms of human consciousness.
Applying the word in the positive sense, these were clairvoyant
states. In an entirely normal way, in certain intermediate
states between waking and sleeping, human beings were able to
experience something of spiritual worlds. Thus, even if
not yet fully self-conscious, human beings were by no means as
unfamiliar in their normal consciousness with experiences
taking place in the depths of the soul, such as those we have
spoken of today.
In
ancient times human beings perceived more fully their
connection with the spiritual world around them.
They saw what takes place in the soul, the events
occurring deep within the soul, as connected with the
spiritual in the universe. They saw spiritual realities
passing through the soul and felt themselves much more
related to the soul-spiritual beings and facts of the universe.
This was characteristic of the original clairvoyant
state of humanity. Just as it is possible today to come to a
feeling such as the following only under quite
exceptional conditions, in ancient times it occurred
frequently — not only in artistic, but also in
quite primitive human beings.
An
experience of a quite vague and indefinite nature may lie
buried in the depths of the soul, not rising into
consciousness — an experience such as we have
described. Nothing of this experience enters the
conscious life of day. Something is nonetheless there in
the soul, just as hunger is present in the bodily organism. And
just as one needs something to satisfy hunger, so one
needs something to satisfy this indefinite mood deriving
from the experience lying deep within the soul. One then feels
the urge to reach either for an existing fairy tale, for
a saga, or if one is of an artistic disposition,
perhaps to elaborate something of the kind oneself.
Here it is as though all theoretical words one might make use
of amount to stammering; and that is how fairy tales arise.
Filling the soul with fairy tale pictures in this way
constitutes nourishment for the soul as regards the
“hunger” referred to.
In
past ages of humanity's development every human being still
stood closer to a clairvoyant perception of these inner
spiritual experiences of the soul, and with their simpler
constitution people were able — in sensing the hunger
described here far more directly than is the case today
— to seek nourishment from the pictures we possess today
in the fairy tale traditions of various peoples.
The human soul felt a kinship with spiritual existence. Without
understanding them, it sensed more or less consciously
the inner battles it had to undergo, giving pictorial form to
them in pictures bearing only a distant similarity to what had
taken place in the soul's substrata. Yet there is a
palpable connection between what expresses itself in
fairy tales and these unfathomable experiences of the
human soul.
Ordinary experience shows us that a childlike soul
disposition frequently creates something for
itself inwardly, such as a simple “companion”
— a companion really only there for this childlike mind,
accompanying it nonetheless and taking part in the various
occurrences of life. Who does not know, for instance, of
children who take certain invisible friends along with
them through life? You have to imagine that these
“friends” are there when something happens that
pleases the child, participating as invisible spirit
companions, soul companions, when the child experiences
this or that. Quite often one can witness how badly it affects
the child's soul disposition when a
“sensible” person comes, hears the child has
such a soul companion, and now wants to talk it out of this
soul companion, even perhaps considering it salutary for
the child to be talked out of it. The child grieves for its
soul companion. And if the child is receptive for
soul-spiritual moods, this grieving signifies still more. It
can mean the child begins to ail, becoming
constitutionally infirm. This is an altogether real
experience connected with profound inner
occurrences of the human soul.
Without dispersing the “aroma” of the fairy tale,
we can sense this simple experience in the fairy tale which
tells of the child and the toad, related by the Brothers
Grimm [in “Tales About Toads”]. They tell
us of the girl who always has a toad accompany her while
eating. The toad, however, only likes the milk. The child
talks to the animal as though with a human being. One day she
wants the toad to eat some of her bread as well. The mother
overhears this; she comes and strikes the animal dead.
The child ails, sickens, and dies.
In
fairy tales we feel soul moods reverberate that do absolutely
in fact take place in the depths of the soul, such that the
human soul is actually not only cognizant of them in
certain periods of life, but simply by virtue of being human,
irrespective of being a child or an adult. Thus, every human
soul can sense something re-echo of what it experiences
without comprehending it — not even raising it into
consciousness — connected with what in the fairy tale
works on the soul as food works on the taste buds. For the
soul, the fairy tale then becomes something similar to the
nutritional substance as applied to the organism. It is
fascinating to seek out in deep soul experiences what re-echoes
in various fairy tales. It would of course be quite a major
undertaking actually to examine individual fairy tales in
this regard, collected as they are in such numbers. This would
require a lot of time. But what can perhaps be illustrated with
a few fairy tales can be applied to all of them, in so far as
they are genuine.
Let
us take another fairy tale also collected by the Brothers
Grimm, the fairy tale of “Rumpelstiltskin.”
A miller asserts to the king that his daughter can spin straw
into gold and is requested to have her come to the castle, so
the king can ascertain her art for himself. The daughter goes
to the castle. She is locked in a room and given a bundle of
straw with which to demonstrate her art. In the room she is
quite helpless. And while she is in this helpless state,
a manikin appears before her. He says to her: “What will
you give me, if I spin the straw into gold for you?” The
miller's daughter gives him her necklace and the little man
thereupon spins the straw into gold for her. The king is quite
amazed, but he wants still more, and she is to spin straw into
gold once again. The miller's daughter is again locked in a
room, and as she sits in front of all the straw, the little man
appears and says, “What will you give me, if I spin the
straw to gold for you?” She gives him a little ring, and
the straw is once more spun into gold by the little man. But
the king wants still more. And when she now sits for the third
time in the room and the little man again appears, she has
nothing further to give him. At that the little man says, if
she becomes queen one day, she is to grant him the first
child she gives birth to. She promises to do so. And when the
child is there, and the little man comes and reminds her of her
promise, the miller's daughter wants a postponement. The
little man then says to her: “If you can tell me what my
name is, you can be free of your promise.” The miller's
daughter sends everywhere, inquiring after every name. In
learning every name, she wants to find out what the little
man's name is. Finally, after a number of vain attempts, she
actually succeeds in discovering his name —
Rumpelstiltskin.
With really no work of art other than fairy tales does one have
such a sense of joy over the immediate picture presented,
while yet knowing of the profound inner soul-experience
out of which the fairy tale is born. Though the
comparison may be trivial, it is perhaps still apt:
Just as a person can be aware of the chemistry of food and
still find a bite to eat flavorful, so it is possible to know
something of the profound inner experiences of soul that are
only experienced, not “known,” and that come
to expression in fairy tale pictures in the manner indicated.
In fact, unknowingly the solitary human soul — it is
after all alone with itself during sleep, as also in the rest
of life even when united with the body — feels and
experiences, albeit unconsciously, the whole disparate
relation in which it finds itself in regard to its own immense
tasks, its place within the divine order of the world.
The
human soul does indeed feel how little it is capable of
in comparing its ability with what external Nature can do, in
transforming one thing into another. Nature is
really a great magician, such as the human soul itself
would like to be. In conscious life it may
light-heartedly look past this gulf between the human
soul and the wise omniscience and omnipotence of the
spirit of Nature. But at deeper levels of soul experience, the
matter is not done away with so easily. There, the human soul
would necessarily go to rack and ruin if it were not after all
to feel within it a more profound being inside the
initially perceptible one, a being it can rely on, of
which it can say to itself: As imperfect as you now still
are — this being within you is cleverer. It is at
work within you; it can carry you to the point of attaining the
greatest skill. It can grant you wings, enabling you to see an
endless perspective spread out before you, leading into a
limitless future. You will be capable of accomplishing
what you cannot as yet accomplish, for within you there is
something that is infinitely more than your
“knowing” self. It is your loyal helper. You must
only gain a relation to it. You have really only to be able to
form a conception of this cleverer, wiser, more skillful being
than you yourself are, residing within you.
In
calling to mind this discourse of the human soul with
itself, this unconscious discourse with the more adroit
part of the soul, we may feel reverberating in this fairy tale
of “Rumpelstiltskin” what the soul experiences in
the miller's daughter who cannot spin straw into gold, but
finds in the little man a skillful, loyal helper. There, deep
in the substrata of the soul — in pictures, the
distinctive aura of which is not destroyed through knowing
their origin — the profound inner life of soul is
given.
Or,
let us take another fairy tale. — Please do not take it
amiss, however, if I connect this with matters having an
apparently personal tinge, though not at all meant
in a personal sense. The essential point will become
clear in adding a few observations.
In
my
Esoteric Science you will find a
description of world evolution. It is not my
intention to talk specifically about this now —
that can be left for another occasion. In this world evolution
our earth is spoken of as having gone through certain stages as
a planet in the cosmos, comparable to human lives that
follow one upon the other. Just as the individual human being
goes through lives that follow each other sequentially, so our
earth has gone through various planetary life-stages,
various incarnations. In spiritual science, we
speak, for certain reasons, of the earth as having gone through
a kind of “Moon” existence before beginning its
“Earth” existence, and prior to this a kind of
“Sun” existence. Thus, we may speak of a
Sun-existence, a planetary predecessor existence of our
Earth-existence, as having been present in a primeval
past — an ancient Sun, with which the earth was still
united. Then, in the course of evolution a splitting off of Sun
and earth took place. From what had originally been
“Sun,” the moon separated itself off as well,
and our sun of today, which is not the original Sun, but only a
piece of it, so to speak. Thus, we may speak, as it were, of
the original Sun and of its successor, the sun of today.
And we may also refer to the moon of today as a product of the
old Sun. If spiritual scientific investigation
follows the evolution of the earth retrospectively
to where the second sun, the sun of today, developed as an
independent cosmic body, it has to be said that at that
time, of the creatures that might have been externally
perceptible to the senses, among the animals, only
those existed that had developed to the stage of the
fishes.
These things can all be looked up more precisely in
Esoteric
Science.
They can be discovered only by means of spiritual
scientific investigation. At the time they had been
discovered and written down by me in
Esoteric Science, the fairy tale in
question was quite unknown to me. That is the personal
factor I should like to add here. I am able to establish
with certainty that it was quite unknown to me, since I
only later came across it in Wilhelm
Wundt's Ethnic Psychology [published in 10
volumes, 1900-1920], whose sources I only then followed up
further.
Before briefly outlining the fairy tale, I should like to say
one thing in advance: Everything the spiritual researcher is
able to investigate in this way in the spiritual
world — and the things just referred to do have to be
investigated in the spiritual world, since they are
otherwise no longer extant — everything
investigated in this way presents a world with which the
human soul is united even so. We are connected with this world
in the deepest recesses of our souls. It is always present,
indeed we unconsciously enter this spiritual world in normal
life upon falling asleep. Our soul is united with it and has
within it not only the soul's experiences during sleep, but
also those relating to the whole of evolution referred to
here. Were it not paradoxical, one would like to say: in
the unconscious state, the soul knows of this and
experiences itself in the ongoing stream issuing from the
original Sun and subsequently from the daughter sun we
now see shining in the sky, as well as from the moon, also a
descendant of the original Sun. And in addition, the soul
experiences the fact that it has undergone an existence,
soul-spiritually, in which it was not yet connected with
earthly matter, in which it could look down on earthly
processes; for instance, on the time in which the fish species
were the highest animal organisms, where the present sun,
the present moon, arose and split off from the Earth. In
unconscious regions, the soul is linked to these
events.
We
shall now briefly follow the outline of a fairy tale found
among primitive peoples, who tell us: There was once a man. As
a human being, he was, however, actually of the nature of tree
resin and could only perform his work during the night, since,
had he carried out his work by day, he would have been melted
by the Sun. One day, however, it happened that he did go out by
day, in order to catch fish. And behold, the man who actually
consisted of tree resin, melted away. His sons decided to
avenge him. And they shot arrows. They shot arrows that formed
certain figures, towering one over the other, so that a
ladder arose reaching up to heaven. They climbed up this
ladder, one of them during the day, the other during the night.
One of them became the sun, and the other became the
moon.
It
is not my habit to interpret such things in an abstract
way and to introduce intellectual concepts. But it is a
different matter to have a feeling for the results of
investigation — that the human soul in its depths is
united with what happens in the world, to be grasped only
spiritually, that the human soul is connected with all
this and has a hunger to savor its deepest unconscious
experiences in pictures. In citing the fairy tale just
outlined, one feels a reverberation of what the human
soul experienced as the original Sun, and as the arising
of sun and moon during the fish epoch of the Earth. It was in
some respects a quite momentous experience for me
— this is once more the personal note — when I came
across this fairy tale, long after the facts I have mentioned
stood printed in my Esoteric Science. Though the
notion of interpreting the whole matter abstractly still does
not occur to me, a certain kindred feeling arises when I
consider world evolution in the context of another,
parallel portrayal — when I give myself up to the
wonderful pictures of this fairy tale.
Or,
as a further example, let us take a peculiar
Melanesian fairy tale. Before speaking of this
fairy tale, let us remind ourselves that, as shown by spiritual
investigation, the human soul is also closely linked to
prevailing occurrences and facts of the universe. Even if
stated rather too graphically, it is still nonetheless true in
a certain respect, from a spiritual scientific point of
view, if we say: When the human soul leaves the physical body
in sleep, it leads an existence in direct connection with
the entire cosmos, feeling itself related to the entire cosmos.
We may remind ourselves of the relationship of the
human soul, or for example, of the human “I” with
the cosmos — at least with something of
significance in the cosmos. We direct our gaze to the plant
world and tell ourselves: The plant grows, but it can
only do so under the influence of the sun's light and warmth.
We have before us the plant rooted in the earth. In spiritual
science we say: the plant consists of its physical body
and of the life-body which permeates it. But that does not
suffice for the plant to grow and unfold itself. For
that, the forces are required that work on the plant from
the sun.
If
we now contemplate the human body while the human being
sleeps, this sleeping human body is in a sense equivalent to a
plant. As a sleeping body it is comparable to the plant in
having the same potential to grow as the plant. However, the
human being is emancipated from the cosmic order which envelops
the plant. The plant has to wait for the sun to exert its
influence on it, for the rising and setting of the sun. It is
bound to the external cosmic order. The human being is not so
bound. Why not? Because what spiritual science points out is in
fact true: the human being exerts an influence from the
“I” — outside the physical body in sleep
— upon the plant-like physical body, equivalent to what
the sun exerts on the plant. Just as the sun pours its light
out over the plants, so does the human “I” pour its
light over the now plant-like physical body when the human
being sleeps. As the sun “reigns” over the plants,
so the human “I” reigns, spiritually, over the
plant-like sleeping physical body. The “I” of the
human being is thus related to the sun-existence. Indeed,
the “I” of the human being is itself a kind of
“sun” for the sleeping human body, and brings about
its enlivening during sleep, brings it about that those forces
are replenished that have been used up in the waking
state. If we have a feeling for this, then we recognize how the
human “I” is related to the sun. Spiritual science
shows us in addition that, just as the sun traverses the arc of
heaven — I am of course speaking of the apparent movement
of the sun — and in a certain respect the effect of its
rays differs according to whether it stands in this or that
constellation of the zodiac, so the human
“I” also goes through various phases in its
experience. Thus, from one phase it works in one way, from a
different phase it works in another way on the physical body.
In spiritual science one acquires a feeling for how the sun
works differently onto the earth according to
whether it does so, for example, from the constellation
of Aries, or from the constellation of Taurus, and
so on. For that reason, one does not speak of the sun in
general, but of its effect in connection with the twelve signs
of the zodiac — indicating the correspondence of the
changing “I” with the changing activity of the
sun.
Let
us now take everything that could only be sketched here, but
which is developed further in
Esoteric Science, as something to be
gained as soul-spiritual knowledge. Let us regard it as
what takes place in the depths of the soul and remains
unconscious but takes place in such a way that it signifies an
inner participation in the spiritual forces of the cosmos
that manifest themselves in the fixed stars and planets. And
let us compare all this, proclaimed by spiritual science as the
secrets of the universe, with a Melanesian fairy tale, that I
shall again outline only briefly:
On
a country road lies a stone. This stone is the mother of Quatl.
And Quatl has eleven brothers. After the eleven brothers
and Quatl have been created, Quatl begins to create the
present world. In this world he created, a difference
between day and night was still unknown. Quatl then learns that
there is an island somewhere, on which there is a
difference between day and night. He travels to this
island and brings a few inhabitants from this island back
to his country. And, by virtue of their influence on those in
his country, they too come to experience the alternating states
of sleeping and waking, and the rising and setting of the sun
takes place for them as a soul experience.
It
is remarkable what reverberates once again in this fairy tale.
Considering the fairy tale as a whole there re-echoes, with
every sentence, so to speak, something of world secrets,
something of what, in the sense of spiritual science, the soul
experiences in its depths. One then has to say: The sources of
fairy tale moods, of fairy tales generally, lie in hidden
depths of the human soul. These fairy tales are presented in
the form of pictures, since external happenings have to
be made use of in order to provide what is to be spiritual
nourishment for the hunger that wells up as an
outcome of the soul's experiences. Though we are far
removed from the actual experiences in question, we can
sense how they reverberate in the fairy tale
pictures.
With this in mind, we need not wonder that the finest, most
characteristic fairy tales are those handed down from former
ages when people still had a certain clairvoyant
consciousness and found easier access to the sources of
these fairy tale moods. Further, it need not surprise us
that in regions of the world where human beings stand
closer to spirituality than do the souls of the Occident, for
example in India, in the Orient in general, fairy tales can
have a much more distinctive character.
Neither need we be surprised that in the German fairy tales
that Jacob
and Wilhelm
Grimm collected in the form told them by relatives and
others, often simple people, we come upon accounts reminiscent
of the periods of European life in which the great heroic
sagas arose. Fairy tales contain attributes found in the
great heroic sagas. It need not surprise us to hear that it
belatedly came to light that the most significant fairy tales
are even older than the heroic sagas. Heroic sagas after
all show human beings only at a particular age of life and in
particular situations, while what lives in fairy tales is of a
generally-human nature, accompanying human beings at
every age, from their first to their last breath. It need not
surprise us if the fairy tale also insistently depicts,
for example, what we have referred to as a profound experience
of the soul, the feeling of the soul's inadequacy on awakening
in regard to the forces of Nature it helplessly faces and
is only a match for, if it has the consolation of knowing
at the same time: Within you, there is something that
transcends your personal self, and makes you in a certain
respect the victor once again over the forces of Nature.
In
sensing this mood, one has a feeling for why human beings so
often find themselves up against giants in fairy tales. Why do
these giants appear? Well, as an image, these giants arise as a
matter of course from the whole tone of the soul in wanting to
make its way into the body again in the morning, seeing itself
confronted by the “giant” forces of Nature
occupying the body. What the soul senses there as a battle,
what it then feels is altogether real — not in rational
terms, but as corresponds to depictions of the manifold battles
of the human being with giants. When all this comes to meet it,
it clearly senses how it possesses only one thing, its
shrewdness, in this whole battle — in its stand in
confronting giants. For, this entails the feeling: You could
now reenter your body, but what are you, as against the
immense forces of the universe! However, you do have
something not there in these giants, and that is cunning
— reason! This does in fact stand unconsciously
before the soul, even if it has also to say to itself, that it
can do nothing against the immense forces of the universe. We
see how the soul transposes this literally into a picture
in giving expression to the mood in question:
A
man goes along a country road and comes to an inn. In the inn
he asks for milk-soup [blancmange]. Flies enter the
soup. He finishes eating the milk-soup, leaving the flies. Then
he strikes the plate, counts the flies he has killed, and
brags: “A hundred at one blow!” The innkeeper hangs
a sign around his neck: “He has killed a hundred at
one blow.” Continuing along the country road, this man
comes to a different region. There a king looks out the
window of his castle. He sees the man with the sign
around his neck and says to himself: I could well use him. He
takes him into his service and assigns him a definite task. He
says to him: “You see, the problem is, whole packs of
bears always come into my kingdom. If you have struck a
hundred dead, then you can certainly also strike the bears dead
for me.” The man says: “I am willing to do
it!” But, until the bears are there, he wants a good wage
and proper meals, for, having thought about it, he says to
himself: If I can't do it, I shall at least have lived well
until then. — When the time came, and the bears were
approaching, he collected all kinds of food and various good
things bears like to eat. Then he approached them and
laid these things out. When the bears got there, they ate until
they were full to excess, finally lying there as though
paralyzed; and now he struck them dead one after the
other. The king arrived and saw what he had accomplished.
However, the man told him: “I simply had the bears jump
over a stick and chopped off their heads at the same
time!” Delighted, the king assigns him another
task. He says to him: “Now the giants will soon
also be coming into my land, and you must help me against them
as well.” The man promised to do so. And when the time
approached, he again took a quantity of provisions with him,
including a lark and a piece of cheese. On actually
encountering the giants, he first entered into a
conversation with them about his strength. One of the
giants said: “We shall certainly show you that we are
stronger,” taking a stone and crushing it in his hand.
Then he said to the man: “That is how strong we are! What
can you do as compared to us?” Another giant took
an arrow, shooting it so high that only after a long time
did the arrow come down again and said: “That's how
strong we are! What can you do as compared to us?”
At this, the man who had killed a hundred at one blow said:
“I can do all that and more!” He took a small piece
of cheese and a stone, spreading the stone with cheese, and
said to the giants: “I can squeeze water out of a
stone!” And he squashed the cheese so that water squirted
out of it. The giants were astonished at his strength in
being able to squeeze water from a stone. Then the man took the
lark and let it fly off, saying to the giants: “Your
arrow came back down again, the one I have shot, however, goes
up so high that it does not come back down at all!” For
the lark did not return at all. At that, the giants were so
amazed, they agreed among themselves that they would only be
able to overcome him with cunning. They no longer thought
of being able to overcome him with the strength of
giants. Nonetheless, they did not succeed in outwitting him; on
the contrary, he outwitted them. While they all slept, he
put an inflated pig's bladder over his head, inside which there
was some blood. The giants had said to themselves: Awake,
we shall not be able to get the better of him, so we shall do
it while he sleeps. They struck him while he slept,
smashing the pig's bladder. Seeing the blood that spurted
out, they thought they had finished him off. And they soon fell
asleep. In the peaceful quiet that overcame them,
they slept so soundly that he was able to put an end to
them.
Even though, like some dreams, the fairy tale ends here
somewhat indefinitely and on an unsatisfactory note, we
nonetheless have before us a portrayal of the battle of the
human soul against the forces of Nature — first
against the “bears,” then against the
“giants.” But something else becomes evident
in this fairy tale. We have the man who has “killed a
hundred at one blow.” We have an echo of what lives at
the deepest unconscious levels of the soul: the consolation in
becoming aware of its own shrewdness over against these
stronger, overwhelming forces. It is not a good thing when what
has been presented artistically in pictures is interpreted
abstractly. That is not at all what matters. On the other
hand, nothing of the artistic form of the fairy tale is
diminished if one has a feeling for the fact that the
fairy tale is an after-echo of events taking place deep within
the soul. These events are such that we can know a great deal
about them, as much as one can come to know by means of
spiritual investigation — yet, in immersing ourselves in
fairy tales and experiencing them, they still remain original
and elementary.
In
researching them, it is certainly agreeable to know that fairy
tales present what the soul needs on account of its
deepest experiences, as we have indicated. At
the same time, no fairy tale mood is destroyed in
arriving at a deeper recognition of the sources of
subconscious life. Presented only abstractly, we find
these sources are impoverished for our consciousness,
whereas the fairy tale form is really the more comprehensive
one for expressing the deepest experiences of the soul.
It
is then comprehensible that Goethe
expressed in the significant and evocative pictures of
the
Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the
Beautiful Lily what he was abundantly able to
experience, and which Schiller chose to express in
abstract-philosophical concepts. Thus, despite having thought a
great deal, Goethe wanted to say in pictures what he felt
concerning the deepest underlying strata of human
soul-life. And because the fairy tale relates in this way to
the innermost soul, it is precisely the form most suited to the
child. For it may be said of fairy tales that they have brought
it about that what is most profound in spiritual life is
expressed in the simplest possible form. In fact, one
gradually comes to feel that in all conscious artistic
life there is no greater art than that which completes the path
from the uncomprehended depths of soul-life to the
delightful, often playful pictures of the fairy
tale.
An
art capable of expressing in the most self-evident form what is
hard to comprehend is the greatest and most natural art, an art
intimately related to the human being. And just because, in the
case of the child, the essential human being is still united in
an unspoilt way with the whole of existence, with the whole of
life, the child especially needs the fairy tale as
nourishment for its soul. What depicts spiritual powers
can come alive more fully in the child. The childlike soul may
not be enmeshed in abstract theoretical concepts if it is
not to be obliterated. It has to remain connected with what is
rooted in the depths of existence.
Hence, we can do nothing of greater benefit for the soul of the
child than in allowing what unites the human being with the
roots of existence to act upon it. As the child still has to
work creatively on its own physical formation,
summoning the formative forces for its own growth, for
the unfolding of its natural abilities, it senses wonderful
soul nourishment in fairy tale pictures that connect it with
the roots of existence. Since, even in giving themselves
over to what is rational and intellectual, human
beings can still never be wholly torn away from the roots of
existence, they gladly turn again at every age to the fairy
tale, provided they are of a sufficiently healthy and
straightforward soul disposition. For there is no stage
of life and no human situation that can estrange us altogether
from what flows from fairy tales — in consequence of
which we could cease having anything more to do with what is
most profound in human nature or have no sense for what is so
incomprehensible for the intellect, expressed in
the self-evident, simple, primitive fairy tale and fairy tale
mood.
Hence, those who have concerned themselves for a long
time with restoring to humanity the fairy tales that had been
rather glossed over by civilization, individuals such as
the Brothers
Grimm, understandably had the feeling — even if
they did not adopt a spiritual scientific view —
that they were renewing something that belongs intimately
to human nature. After an intellectual culture had
done its part over a period of centuries to estrange the human
soul, including the soul of the child, such collections of
fairy tales as those of the Brothers
Grimm have quite properly found their way again to all
human beings receptive for such things. In this way they have
become once more the common heritage of children's souls,
indeed of all human souls. They will do so
increasingly, the more spiritual science is not
just taken as theory, but becomes an underlying mood of the
soul, uniting it more and more in feeling with the spiritual
roots of its existence. [In 1856 Wilhelm
Grimm wrote: “Common to all fairy tales is a
residual faith reaching back into ancient times, expressing
itself in a pictorial grasp of supersensible
things.”]
In
this way, by means of the dissemination of spiritual science,
what genuine fairy tale collectors, those truly receptive
for fairy tales as well as those who present them have
declared, will prove well-founded. This is what a certain
individual, a true friend of fairy tales, often said in
lectures I was able to hear. [This is in all probability a
reference to
Rudolf Steiner's friend and teacher Karl
Julius Schröer (1825-1900), professor of
literature at the Technische Hochschule (Institute
of Technology) in Vienna, discoverer of the Oberufer Christmas
Plays, and described by
Rudolf Steiner as “a researcher in the style of
the Brothers
Grimm.” (Document of Barr, Sept. 1907.)] It is a
wonderfully poetic utterance which at the same time
summarizes what results from such spiritual scientific
considerations as we have presented today. It may be
formulated in words this man spoke — knowing as he
did how to love fairy tales, collecting them, and appreciating
them. He always liked to add the saying:
“Fairy tales and sagas are comparable to a good angel,
granted human beings as a companion from birth on their life's
wanderings, to be a trustworthy comrade throughout
— offering comradeship, and making life
inwardly into a truly ensouled fairy tale!”
[Note: Schröer was in turn quoting Wilhelm Grimm]
Translated by Peter Stebbing
|