Voltaire
Berlin,
26 February 1914
Shortly after the death of Voltaire (pen
name of François-Marie Arouet, 1694-1778) Lessing's (Gotthold
Ephraim L., 1729-1781) writing The
Education of the Human Race appeared (1780), and one would like to say that in this
writing you can find the starting point of a historical
consideration in the spiritual-scientific sense. I have
mentioned this writing by Lessing repeatedly in these talks. It
tries to find the causes for the view of the repeated lives
from the consciousness of the eighteenth century.
Someone who tries to think Lessing's
discussions through to the end in this testament of his
intellectual work realises that by the ideas of this writing
coherence comes into the whole structure of the human
historical becoming. We see successive epochs in this
historical becoming of the human being, which differ from each
other. If we look back at ancient epochs, we realise that the
human soul experiences other things, that it searched its
ideals in other things than in later epochs. We can say as it
were that the different epochs of the historical becoming
differ sharply from each other by the character of that what
they can give to the human souls. Sense and coherence come in
this historical becoming if one considers that this human
soul — which could participate in cultural blessings and
impressions of one epoch after the belief that the human being
lives only once —
that this human soul appears for Lessing
and the modern spiritual science in repeated lives on earth.
Thus, it gets out from any epoch what it can give. Then it
experiences a life between death and the next birth in a wholly
spiritual world. It appears in the next epoch again, of course
with some divergences in the individual lives, to carry over
the fruits, the results, and the impressions of the former
epoch to the next one. Therefore, we can say that the human
soul participates in all epochs through the historical
development. Thereby one can really speak taking up the idea of
Lessing once again of a kind of education of the human soul by
the spirits of the successive epochs. If one goes once
spiritual-scientifically even more exactly into that what
exists as elementary beginnings already in Lessing's ideas
about the education of the human race, then one is in the field
of the interpretation of history, where above all our souls
develop only so far as one believes to be today in the wholly
scientific field. Then only one will have history.
Only then, one brings sense and coherence
in the historical becoming; one will recognise how an epoch
builds itself up one after the other, what the souls gain from
the different epochs, why they are positioned in the different
epochs. Then that what spiritual science has to say no longer
appears as something fantastic to many people. Then one smiles
less about the fact that spiritual science assumes not only a
physical-bodily cover of the human being, but that it must
recognise an inner spiritual-mental being of the human being
which one has to consider, however, in such a way that it
develops its different formations and arrangements in the
course of the epochs.
Spiritual-scientifically, we distinguish
three parts in the human soul, as it has developed up to the
present epoch. One may say that the most primitive part of this
arrangement is that in which the blind passions work and the
desires and emotions pulsate, on which, however, also that
works what provides the perception of the physical outside
world for us. We call this part the sentient soul. Then as
distinct from the sentient soul we speak of another soul part
that shows us the human being already with bigger inwardness,
shows him in such a way as he can grasp himself if he turns
away the look from the physical surroundings and rises above
his more unaware desires, emotions, and passions. We call this
higher member of the human soul the intellectual or mind soul
in which the spiritual life of the human being turns already
more inward. We call the highest member of the human soul the
consciousness soul, that member in which, above all, the full
self-awareness of the human being, the purest ego-consciousness
appears.
If we speak about the three soul
members — sentient soul, intellectual or mind soul and
consciousness soul, we do not talk about abstractions or about
arbitrarily constructed concepts and ideas; but we see at the
same time how in the course of the historical development these
three soul members gradually developing.
If we went far back in the historical
becoming, behind the times in which Homer and Hesiod sung in
which the Greek tragic poets lived and the Greek philosophy
originated, we would find what we recognise in the echoes of
the ancient Egyptian and Chaldean cultures even today. The
outer research has already brought many things of them to
light. Spiritual science, however, shows that in the epoch that
dates back behind the eighth to tenth centuries before our
calendar until the second and third millennia the human souls,
that means our souls experienced something that one cannot
compare at all with the modern life. At that time, our modern
thinking that appears as something natural to us in the
scientific worldview would have still been impossible. It would
have also been impossible that the human soul felt isolated and
strictly separated from nature at the most important moments of
its life. All that was still impossible at that time. The human
being felt his soul like living in the whole universe, in the
whole nature, felt like a piece of nature, as the hand had to
feel as a part of the organism if it could have consciousness.
Only with the help of spiritual science, we can imagine the
quite different soul life just today that reached possibly
until the eighth to tenth centuries before our
calendar.
If at that time the human being said, my
desires drive me to put forward a foot, or if he said, I
breathe — or if he felt hunger or saturation, he felt something
in this transition of the inner experience into the movement of
the body that he faced in such a way as he faced other
experiences if he said to himself, it flashes, it is
thundering, or, the wind blusters through the trees. The human
being did not distinguish what he experienced emotionally from
that what took action outdoors; he was with the whole inner
life in nature. For it, however, that he felt himself still as
a member in the big total organism, he had an original
clairvoyance, he could behold in the spiritual world. He saw
nature not in such a way as he sees her today, but ensouled by
spiritual beings to which we work our way up again with the
methods of spiritual science today. It was natural in those
times that one experienced nature ensouled and spiritualised.
However, one could not think such thoughts as we think the
physical processes but one saw them like in pictures and the
pictures were that what the physical principles are for us, and
something of these pictures is preserved in the legends and
mythologies of the nations, even in the real fairy tales until
today. The human being had a pictorial imagination in ancient
times.
We can gain these things today not only
with the help of spiritual science, but I hope that I have
succeeded in the new edition of my World Views and Approaches to Life in the Nineteenth
Century (final title:
The Riddles of
Philosophy, CW 20) in pointing
to the fact that one can consider the spiritual life completely
philosophically. Then one can realise that a pictorial
imagination existed in primeval times which went over to the
Greek-Latin imagination only gradually, and that the human soul
felt projected in the total organism of the world by the old
pictorial imagination that was felt ensouled. This took place
mainly in the sentient soul.
The Greek-Roman imagination lasting until
the fourteenth, fifteenth centuries preferably demanded the
intellectual or mind soul. I have already tried to show the
quite different feeling and imagination of those times with the
talks on Raphael and Michelangelo. I have explained how the
Greek — later also the members of the Latin culture
— felt
completely one with his “soul body” because in the
Greek world mainly the intellectual or mind soul was developed.
He felt with his soul living within any single member of his
body at the same time. While the preceding times of the
sentient soul had a consciousness of the fact that the human
being is a member of the whole nature, the Greek had a
consciousness that that what lived in his whole body and what
this body can give him is for him the immediate, true sight of
nature at the same time.
This became different in modern times; also
even today, one does not realise these matters with full
thoroughness because one does not yet want to penetrate into
spiritual science. It changed in particular since the aurora of
modern thinking, since Copernicus, Kepler, Galilei, and
Giordano Bruno. For at that time the consciousness soul started
developing. It started developing in such a way that the human
being became a riddle to himself, while he started now feeling
separated with his independent soul from the whole nature,
while he felt his soul as something particular beside the body
at the same time. As strange as it sounds, nevertheless, it is
right that the human soul felt more separated from nature when
the more materialistic tendencies appeared in natural sciences.
What a time arose in the western culture since the fifteenth
century? At this time, a net of lawfulness spreads out as it
were which extends to unlimited spatial widths.
It is great to see Giordano Bruno standing
there in the aurora of modern times and imagining the power of
physical laws extending into infinite widths. However, in these
spatial widths one cannot find what the human being experiences
in his soul. If the ancient Egyptian or Chaldean looked up at
the stars, he felt that from the constellation of the stars a
force arose which was connected with his own moral experience
in this or that way. If the old astrologer looked up at the
stars and felt the human destiny in them, this view of nature
still allowed him to imagine the soul in the work of nature.
Now, however, a time arose which made it to the human being
more and more impossible to imagine the soul within nature.
Since just with the appearance of modern natural sciences the
human being had to struggle with the question: how have I to
position myself to the work of nature from which no longer
anything soul-like shines to me? The human soul had to get
around to asking itself for the position of natural sciences to
the own soul. With Giordano Bruno, we see this fight. He
imagines the own soul as a monad. Although he imagines the
world in the sense of modern natural sciences, he still
imagines it as ensouled by monads.
Leibniz (Gottfried Wilhelm L.,
1646-1710) also imagines the soul as a monad, and he
imagines it in such a way that it can suitably relate to the
world. Leibniz asks, how must the human soul be to be able to
exist in my view of nature? He cannot answer it without
formulating this view of nature in a particular way at the same
time.
Leibniz considers everything as a
combination of monads. If we look into anything of nature, we
find the underlying ensouled monads. What we see is for Leibniz
in such a way, as if we look at a swarm of mosquitoes which
appears like a cloudscape; if we come closer, this cloudscape
disintegrates in the single mosquitoes, and the swarm of
mosquitoes appears to us first only in such a way because we do
not look exactly at it. I have to imagine the view of nature,
Leibniz said, in such a way that the human soul can exist in
it. He was able to do this only if he imagined it as a monad
among monads. Hence, he differentiates monads vaguely living
from day to day, then sleeping, then dreaming monads, then
those as it is the human soul. However, everything else that
originates because everything that we see originating appears
to us only in such a way as a swarm of mosquitoes appears to us
as a cloud. We could enumerate the most brilliant spirits until
our days. We would find that the fight for the knowledge of the
human soul presents itself compared with the modern view of
nature in such a way that the human soul feels, I must be able
to get an idea of that what can arise as a view of nature, and
what does no longer offer any ensoulment of nature. Compared
with this fight is that what appears as a more or less
materialistically coloured monism only an episode that will
pass by. Nevertheless, the human soul that is separated from
its view of nature will strive more and more to gain contents
in itself, that means to arrive at that what it extracted from
nature in old epochs.
Hence, we can say: since the age of modern
natural sciences everything aims at deepening the human soul in
itself, and everything points to the modern spiritual science,
which I represent here, that the human soul can get
around — experiencing itself in a spiritual world
— knowing
to be carried by spiritual-divine powers whose outer expression
the outer nature is. As true as the human being when he still
lived in his sentient soul recognised himself as a piece of the
whole nature, as true as the Greek-Latin age, which experienced
itself still in the intellectual or mind soul, did not yet feel
separated from the bodily, the modern human being experiences
himself in the consciousness soul. However, his soul knows
itself separated from nature, since it must get an idea of it
that no longer contains anything mental. The human soul had to
strengthen itself to conjure up the wealth of spiritual
experiences from itself, which can return to that assurance
which it had when it still felt as a member of the ensouled
universe.
Thus, the modern human soul experiences
itself in the development of the consciousness soul since the
fourteenth century. From the eighth, tenth pre-Christian
centuries until the time of the fourteenth, fifteenth
post-Christian centuries the development of the intellectual or
mind soul lasted. We have to recognise that the spiritual life
that the human soul conjures up from itself will be able to
become wealthier and wealthier, so that it can live again in a
spiritual realm. What we experience as the inner recognition of
the consciousness soul began from the fourteenth to sixteenth
centuries on. We live for about four centuries in this
period.
Voltaire lived in the middle of this
period, in the middle between the emerging consciousness soul
and us. You understand this spirit if you put him historically
in this age of the self-experiencing consciousness soul. Since
Voltaire with all his shining spiritual qualities, with his
superior intellectual activity, with all the good qualities he
had is a symptomatic expression of the pursuit of the
consciousness soul, just as he is with all his bad,
questionable qualities.
Two matters must face him in this age. One
is that a glorious view of nature developed during the last
century that got its shine only in the modern natural sciences,
in which however no place was for the human soul grasping
itself. Besides, the most brilliant spirits attempted to solve
that riddle: how does the human soul attain an idea by which it
can assert itself compared to this modern view of nature? The
view of nature becomes more and more glorious; the striving in
the human soul to assert itself to get inner assurance appears
more and more in such a way that we see it like surging up and
down. Since we see the human soul, as if it wants to attempt
repeatedly to find itself compared with the view of nature, but
shies away from it repeatedly because it is helpless to find
that in itself what the consciousness soul has to conjure up in
this time. Thus, we are still fighting and that is the most
important reason why spiritual science has to position itself
in the fight for the inner universe about which I have spoken
in these talks and which the human beings have to
search.
Thus, we see spirits like Descartes, Hume,
Berkeley, and Locke attempting as it were to answer this
riddle: what do I have to do with my soul compared with the
view of the outside nature? One could link to each of these
spirits who face us there. We want to link, for example, to
Locke (John L., 1632-1704).
Locke — who is a symptomatic
expression of that what one searched in the English cultural
life at the beginning of Voltaire's age to understand the
soul — appears to us in the following way. Locke feels, so to
speak, completely defeated by the power of the view of nature,
so that he must say, we can find nothing in our soul except
that, what the soul has taken up only from the outer nature by
the senses. The view of nature works so immensely, so
impressively that Locke wants to limit all human soul life, in
so far it develops knowledge, to that, what the senses induce
in it and what the reason can combine as a world view. He faces
the world in such a way that he says to himself, we find
nothing in the human soul that does not isolate it that does
not show it as a “tabula rasa,” as a blank slate,
before from the outer nature the sensory impressions come which
work on the soul. We realise that the power of the view of
nature is so big and immense that Locke loses the confidence to
find something in the human soul generally. One must consider
the moral-spiritual aspect of Locke's standpoint above all.
Indeed, old traditions, the religions connected the human being
with the spiritual world. Nevertheless, up to the times
of modern natural sciences one believed to be connected with
the spiritual of the world, also with the help of spiritual
links. There was a view of nature now that worked so
overpowering that the human soul did not dare to think anything
about itself. Now the soul stood there — and the view
with which it stood there originated from spirits like Locke
above all.
The human beings said to themselves, we can
know nothing that is not delivered to us by the senses and by
the reason limited to the senses. Now it mattered to develop so
much mental force from the old traditions and emotions that one
could recognise —
beside that what one can recognise only as
a picture of the outer nature — any spiritual-divine
world from which one had to admit that one cannot attain it by
knowledge, even if one believes in it. The view of nature
assumed a form at first that cast off any cognitive connection
of the human soul with the divine-spiritual primordial
ground.
Thus, that worldview and that attitude
towards life originated in which Voltaire was put in his youth
at first. He stood at first before the spirit of his time so
that it made a tremendous impression on him when he fled soon
to England because he had been pursued in France and became
familiar there just with that philosophy of Enlightenment. This
philosophy limited any human cognition generally to the
consideration of the view of nature and still cherished a
divine-spiritual world only because of the temperament of the
soul. Thus, Voltaire's core was occupied, so to speak, by this
world experience, by this soul feeling, and in his so worried
and, however, so clever soul the immediate conviction emerged
that one stands on sure ground only on the ground of the
overpowering physical laws. However, the religious temperament
was strong in him. The soul did not give up its faith in a
connection with a spiritual-divine world.
We see an infinitely extensive admiration
of that originating what the modern natural sciences and the
view of nature have brought on one side, and an admiration of
the philosophical discussions that Locke, for example, raised.
On the other side, we see the need originating in him to exert
everything that the human spirit can exert as reasons for such
a view of nature. Nevertheless, he adhered to the old idea of
the immortality of the human soul, to a connection of the human
being with the whole world existence, to the idea of freedom of
the human soul in certain limits. Now a peculiar trait of
Voltaire faces us that shows us how in him completely a
symptomatic expression of that exists what lived in the whole
time.
What we face there becomes maybe most vivid
if I mention another work that appeared almost at the same time
as Lessing's Education of the
Human Race, namely the
Critique of Pure Reason by Kant. Kant
lived since his youth in quite similar conditions concerning
the view of nature, as Voltaire did. Kant was devoted to the
spirit of Enlightenment in the sense of the word. The dictum is
due to him: Enlightenment means that the human soul has the
courage to use its reason. It is contained in the nice
essay What is
Enlightenment? (1784). As to
Voltaire Kant is like the fullest consequence of the impulses
of Enlightenment. Kant faces like Locke and later Hume the
power of the view of nature that showed how the world and the
human soul come about. Since one cannot reject what has come up
as a view of nature. This worked impressively! This view of
nature worked so impressively on Locke that he rejected
everything for knowledge that could not come from the sensory
impressions and the reason. Kant goes forward “in
principle.” He is the thorough, principal man who must
lead back everything to the principles, and, hence, he writes
his Critique of Pure
Reason.
He shows in it how the human being can
generally have knowledge only from the outer nature and how the
human soul can get a practical but not deniable confidence that
can arise from another side than that to which the outer
knowledge is due. In the second edition of his
Critique of Pure Reason
Kant betrayed his position in the preface:
“I had to cancel the knowledge to make room for the
faith.” Kant demands an area for the faith where the
conscience projects where the categorical imperative speaks
which does not give knowledge, however, an impulse to which the
human being has to adhere, and leads to the idea of God and the
idea of freedom. That is why Kant had to tackle with the matter
in principle, while he put the question: if the human soul can
attain no knowledge about itself already under the impulse of
the modern view of nature, how can we receive a reasonable
faith? He asserted a reasonable faith for the human being by
the fact that he cast off the knowledge generally from the area
where something is to be said about the human soul, while he
limited the knowledge to the outer world.
Voltaire did not yet have what Kant had to
reduce to a principle without which he could not live which
then the whole future lives on. He had the logical side only
which said that any cognition limits itself to the physical
knowledge. He had to take out from the power of his personality
what Kant took out in a principle, from something quite
impersonal. Thus, we see Voltaire conjuring up from his
temperament, from his ramble mind in his whole life that is
identical with a side of the cultural life of the eighteenth
century what Kant tried to derive from a principle, the
categorical imperative. We see him repeatedly endeavouring in
his long life to exert his wit and cleverness to say to
himself, we can know nothing compared with the view of nature.
But now human soul, step into the breach and try with wit and
cleverness to bring all reasons whichever they may be whether
good or bad to maintain what must be maintained compared with
the view of nature!
Thus, in Voltaire's temperament and ramble
mind that lived what had shrunk with Kant to an impersonal
principle. Someone who wants to assess human souls must try to
search into the structure of a soul with all its fights that as
it were must maintain for a long life what can disappear from
it by the power and importance of the view of nature
perpetually. If we consider Voltaire in such a way and turn the
glance at that which he created in detail, then he becomes
understandable. Since as he stood there with his soul, he had a
world against himself strictly speaking. Voltaire searched a
spiritual worldview in which God, freedom, and immortality have
space that can be up to the view of nature. Since Voltaire
became a more and more ardent and biased confessor of the
modern scientific view, and this striving lived and developed
in him — because it was the basis of his nature with all the
forms which assumed a surely unpleasant character sometimes in
the course of his life.
Just at the time in which we recognise
Voltaire as the most spirited expression of the struggle of the
human soul to find itself as consciousness soul it was almost
impossible to realise how this struggle of the human soul
relates to an older struggle of the human soul in former
epochs. Voltaire could not get to a pure, noble image of the
Greek culture, for example. The scientific way of thinking
appeared to him much more important and greater than that which
the Greeks had intended with their view of nature that
contained the picture of the mental-spiritual life at the same
time. Therefore, Voltaire had to misjudge an epoch as it were
in which in any form of culture the affinity of the human soul
with the remaining world expressed itself. One can still
recognise this in the figures of Homer and the great Greek
tragic poets, Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. As to
Voltaire, one could not at all compare these Greek tragic poets
to that which humanity reached in his time. To him the Greeks
with their worldviews were human beings who had produced
figments about nature; whereas the age of the great scientific
researchers appeared as that which furthered the human beings
in shorter time than all former epochs had done. Yes, in the
age in which the human soul had to strive to maintain itself
compared with the view of nature it had to become unfair
compared with former ages in which the human soul could still
extract its forces from the surrounding nature, so to speak,
without its assistance.
Thus, we see the relation of Voltaire to
former times gets a tragic character as it were; and we see him
positioned in his surroundings in entire opposition to the
world which he had grown out, actually.
If one surveys the French cultural life at
the time of Voltaire, one can say that this world still cared
less about the big riddles which the scientific way of thinking
and the arising consciousness soul had to solve. This world
still lived in those traditions that were given as it were to
the world, so that it could develop in complete silence to the
age of Enlightenment, to the age of the conception of itself.
Voltaire saw himself surrounded with a world
— and his
French world was still filled with the most rigid intolerant
Catholic principle —
which wanted to extract anything
mental-spiritual from the traditions, and which refused what
was just dear to him: to be on his own towards the view of
nature.
A tremendous aversion emerged in Voltaire
against the cultural world surrounding him, an aversion that
caused a life full of vicissitudes. He was twice in the
Bastille, in 1717 and 1726; then he had to flee to England in
1726 where he stayed up to 1729. Next he returned to France and
lived since 1734 a longer time secluded at the castle of the
marchioness du Chatelet in Cirey in Lorraine. At that time, he
became engrossed especially in scientific studies that should
show him how the worldview can be grasped in the sense of
modern natural sciences. From that, he got an insight of the
necessary spiritual basic conditions of modern times. One may
argue ever so much against him that he flattered, that he lied,
that he deceived his friends, that he tried often to achieve
something with the lowest means, all that was not nice.
However, a holy enthusiasm was in him that expressed itself
through the often cynical-frivolous form in such a way: the
impulses of the human soul demand that the soul finds a
worldview from itself, renews itself in a worldview that it can
put before itself. At first, he could only have the view of
nature. Hence, ardent hatred arose in him against Catholicism.
He wanted above all to penetrate with his worldview into that
which opposed him. He used any means at his
disposal.
While he faced Catholicism that way, he
found himself cut-off from everything that could connect him
with it. For he hated the facilities and customs of
Catholicism, its rites. He recognised no connection with that
what resulted from his worldview that he wanted to support on
natural sciences. The other matter was that he adhered to God,
freedom, and immortality only because of his temperament, of
his ramble and clever soul, however, only with abstract
thoughts and ideas.
If the Greek looked up to those regions,
where from the human being got his impulses, he saw something
divine-spiritual prevailing there. Let us look at the works of
the Greek tragic poets. We see in them the human world shown,
adjacent to a divine-spiritual world, we see the divine world
working on the world and the destinies of the human beings
influenced by the destinies of the spiritual beings. We see
above all in the images of the old times a lively consciousness
of these spiritual beings existing in poetry. Exactly the same
way as human beings could come to life in the tragedy, in the
epic, these contents of consciousness could come to life in
poetry. They came to life in the poems of Homer! We see in the
age, when the human soul struggled out of the other
co-creatures that the connection with such beings got lost to
it! We can pursue how the supersensible figures still living in
the Greek poetry become more and more abstract, already from
Vergil until the modern times — with the exception
of Dante who wrote his Divine
Comedy on basis of a clairvoyant
inspiration, and with whom these figures are alive again,
indeed, in the form as he could see them.
Nevertheless, everywhere we see these
figures growing paler and paler, and the human beings are left
more and more to their own resources. We recognise that the
poets must refrain more and more from a supersensible world
that they do no longer face. Voltaire was too great to be able
to refrain from the spiritual beings with his survey of life.
His temperament was too big, too comprehensive. This was in his
predisposition. Hence, the strange, the miracle which faces us
as it were already in his youth epic, in the
Henriade (1723) where he describes the destinies of King Henry
IV of France. There we recognise that he cannot confine himself
to what takes place in the outer world. However, we recognise
on the other side that he feels restricted in his action
everywhere, so that he is connected with the words from which
he gets ideas of freedom, immortality and God only with
abstractions. His soul had developed too far to show life in
his Henriade
in all the fights which were fought out at
that time between the various religious and political parties
like somebody who looks only as a human being with scientific
view at it, and who grasps the other human life only as
abstract ideas of God, freedom and immortality. His soul is too
great for that. Hence, we see the longing projecting in
Voltaire to connect the human soul with a supersensible world.
However, we also realise that he cannot behold a humanly
possible supersensible world from Catholicism that he hates.
Since hagiography was only a collection of legends, and Christ
was more or less a devout, good natured enthusiast to
him.
However, Voltaire could not accept that the
human life runs during its most important events only in such a
way, as it happened around Henry IV of France as it looks if
one investigates it with the outer senses and deduces with the
reason. Thus, strange figures appear in the Henriade like the
Discord(e). Why this figure of Discord with the representative
of Enlightenment, with Voltaire? She looks at the events of
France that do not happen in such a way, as she wants it. She
wants more and more disagreement among the human beings, so
that she can achieve her goal. With annoyance, she looks down
at what happens against Rome, and, therefore, she takes to the
road to Rome to come to an understanding with Rome.
Now one could say that all that is
allegory. However, just from poetic impulses one has to say
what I have just said: this Discord accepts completely
realistic forms, so that one cannot consider her as mere
allegory. Voltaire describes, for example, that she comes to
the pope, that she is alone with him, and that she gets him
around. There she behaves like a flirtatious person of the age
of Voltaire; she carries out all possible arts of seduction.
Just from the poetic impulses, I would like to say, I do not
give an allegory credit for that it is able to sway the pope
for the political party in France. With that what the pope can
give her she returns to France, works as an agitator, appears
in the figure of Saint Francis, as Augustine to the monks, goes
from city to city, from village to village, and when she wants
that Henry III does not win, she manages to seduce the
Dominican monk Jacques Clement. Voltaire put everything into
this portrayal what he had on his mind against Catholicism in
the sense of his freethinking.
It is interesting to recognise how far
Voltaire goes in the representation of this Dominican monk who
should be seduced by Discord, so that he causes the doom of
Henry III and Henry IV. A prayer is stated in the Henriade,
which Clement, the monk, sends to heaven. I would like to read
out this prayer, so that you get the feeling for that what
lived in his soul against Catholicism from which he expected
that one of his devout followers sends the following prayer to
heaven:
O God! Whose vengeful justice should
descend
To crush the tyrant, and thy faith
defend
Is murder now, and heresy thy
care
Thy wrath unjust, must we, thy children,
bear?
Too long the partial trial we
endure,
Too long a Godless monarch reigns
secure.
Raise thy dread arm, o God! Thy people
save,
Descend upon the king, thy anger
gave;
Spirits of ruin his approach
proclaim,
Ye Heav'ns announce his wrath in show'rs of
flame!
Their trembling host, avenging lightnings
blast,
Their chiefs, their soldiers perish to the
last!
Let their two kings expire before my
eyes,
Drive them like wither'd leaves, when
storms arise;
Sav'd by thy arm, thy League its voice
shall raise
And o'er their breathless bodies chant thy
praise!
Stopp'd by these accents in her mid
career,
Discord, in air suspended hung to
hear;
The dropt to Hell, and from its dungeon
drew
The fiercest fiend those fiery regions
knew;
Fanaticism! — Nature abhors the
name,
Unown'd the monster from Religion
came;
Nurs'd in her bosom, arm'd for her
defence,
His aim destruction, zeal his fair
pretence.
The Dominican monk prays this to cause the
death of Henry III and Henry IV, he prays to heaven, so that
God sends death. Discord is attracted by this prayer of the
monk, enters his cell, and calls “Fanaticism” as
confederate from hell. Voltaire presents a figure again to us
quite really! How does he speak of Fanaticism from which/whom
he assumes that he finds his best support in the principles of
the national disposition in modern times? He speaks about
him:
'Twas he on Raba's plains, near Arnon's
flood,
Taught Ammon's wretched race the rites of
blood;
To Moloc's shrine, the frantic mother
led,
To slay her infant which her womb had
bred!
He form'd the vow which Jepthe's lips
exprest,
And plung'd his #8224 in his daughter's
breast!
'Twas he, at Aulis, Calchas voice
inspir'd,
When Iphigenia's blood the priest
requir'd;
Thy forests, France, were long his dark
abode,
Where streams of blood to fierce Teutates
flow'd;
Still does affrighted memory
retain
The sacred murders of the Druid
fane;
Rome, falling, own'd the God' mysterious
birth,
From Pagan temples to the church
retir'd,
The fiend, with rage, Christ's meck
disciples fir'd;
Teaching the patient martyrs of his
word,
To brandish persecution's bloody
sword.
'Twas he, that furious sect in London
bred,
By whom too good, too weak, a monarch
bled!
Madrid and Lisbon yet his rites
disgrace;
He lights those piles where Israel's
hapless race,
By Christian priests, in yearly triumph
thrown,
Their fathers' heav'n-taught faith, in
flames atone!
Robed in Religion's vestments to our
eyes,
Still from the church, he borrow'd his
disguise ...
(Translation published by Burton and
Co., London, 1797)
Discord fetches this guy from the gorges of
Hell. From this guy Clement gets the #8224 with which he
wounds Henry III, so that he dies.
We see spiritual powers working in
Voltaire's poem that way. We realise that God sent down Louis
the Saint, the ancestor of the kings, to encourage Henry IV,
to instil wisdom into him as it were. Voltaire does not shrink
back from putting words in the king's mouth what should happen
in the history of France. We realise also that he links the
time of Henry IV in an even worse sense to the fact that
— after
Henry had first advanced triumphantly and got tired then
— he leads
back this to the fact that Discord led him to the “temple
of love” where he tired in unhappy love, until he is
called again to a new fight. One reads this portrayal of the
temple of love as he presents it as a kind of magic service
that the adversaries of Henry IV are addicted to, as a kind of
devil service with altars and rituals, which play a role with
certain parties. One can say that Voltaire tends not by his
reason, not by his intellect, not by that what he becomes from
his fight for the consciousness soul but by his ramble
temperament, by the sum of his emotions, to connect the whole
human life with a spiritual world. However, in that struggle of
the human soul, which takes place in the forecourt of the
spiritual life, before one could think of spiritual science, is
the tragedy of Voltaire that he must search the connection of
the outer life with a spiritual world where he wants to show
true experiences of the human life. Nevertheless, he can do it
only insufficiently. Hence, the Henriade appears as
an “unreadable” poem today because everything that
Voltaire could exert along these lines is based on traditions
which he hates because he feels unable to portray the secret
forces anyhow which are working in the human
evolution.
The agility of Voltaire's soul was
necessary to keep up itself towards the fact that it can get
inner contents less and less from the outer view of nature.
Already in the Henriade, with those
figures which are mythological figures and do not appear at all
as mere allegories one notes Voltaire's soul fighting and
looking for something that it can tie the human life to, and
still finding nothing. One must consider this side of Voltaire
and will properly appreciate what he did to understand the
human development. Therefore, his marvellous characteristic of
Charles XII and Louis XIV is so exemplary, in spite of all
defects because for him the biggest riddle was how one
experiences historical becoming. Which forces work in it, which
work in the environment of the human becoming?
Because of the power that the view of
nature exerted on him, he must express himself with all power
and cynicism, besides, so to speak, kicking over the traces
everywhere, for example, if he incriminates the Maid of Orleans
of everything that he regards as superstition. But just
Voltaire's soul is such by which one can recognise how souls
feel which face the pulse of time in such a way that they do
not hear it beating, but feel in the pulse of their own blood
that an age comes to an end and a new age is not yet
there. — One feels the tragic of this soul that asks, how do I
find purchase compared with the new picture of nature? Today we
would ask, how does the consciousness soul struggle out in the
human being? We find the answer if we look at Voltaire who
looks at everything that France could produce as outer culture
and to whom the old traditional powers became abstract which
are delivered from prehistory. He describes the heaven, the
hell — the heaven even splendidly in a certain respect -, in
which Henry IV is taken up by Louis the Saint. He describes how
the spiritual forces divide the natural forces, how worlds work
into each other, —
and how all that gnaws, nevertheless, at
the deepest subconscious soul grounds which search the hold
where the soul can be anchored with its deepest divine being.
However, Voltaire cannot find this anchor.
When the decade approached in which
Voltaire died, a seed was put in a soul to search the primary
source of knowledge in the human being that immerses itself not
only in nature but that can also become engrossed in the
spiritual universe. When Voltaire had died, Goethe bore the
idea of his Faust
in himself. Goethe gets out a figure,
actually, of that what Voltaire would have called the most
superstitious image, a figure which shows us how to search the
deepest longing, the deepest wanting and the highest cognition
of the human soul. Under the influence of this look into the
deepest depths of the human soul, Goethe put a figure that is
rather similar to Voltaire: Mephistopheles, save that Faust who
searches the birth of the consciousness soul in another way
says to Mephistopheles: “In your Nothingness I hope to
find my All!” (verse
6256). Strictly speaking, these
words sound to Voltaire from Goethe who searched the striving
of modern times for the consciousness soul and its anchorage in
the spiritual worlds in another way than Voltaire did. Voltaire
is like the star of a declining world to which any striving is
directed to achieve the consciousness soul and into which the
scientific worldview shines which very strongly forces to the
consciousness soul. Voltaire is still the greatest star of this
declining world, although he cannot find what extends the human
soul again to a spiritual world. Nothing is more typical for
Voltaire than a quotation that he did about Corneille (Pierre
C., 1606-1684, French dramatist) in his history of Louis XIV.
There he says that Corneille edited a French translation of the
booklet The Imitation of
Christ by Thomas à Kempis
(~1380-1471), and he would have heard that the French
translation would have had 32 editions. He cannot believe this
and says: “for it seems to me so unbelievable that a
healthy soul can read this book to an end only once.”
There we see expressed how Voltaire could not find the
possibility to open a source to the spiritual world in his
inside.
Today we say that spiritual science is a
real continuation of that to which the scientific worldview
forces the human being, but also that this spiritual science is
a real continuation of the Goethean worldview. We speak of the
fact that in the human being a second human being lives who can
experience himself emotionally, we speak with the words of
Goethe: “Two souls live, alas, in my breast.”
Nevertheless, we speak of it in such a way that the
spiritual-mental of the human being searches its
spiritual-mental native country and can find it. We talk again
in spiritual science of a spiritual world to which the human
being belongs with his spiritual being as he belongs with his
bodily physical to the physical world. However, the view of
nature overpowers Voltaire so that he has no feeling for the
“second human being” in the human being. While soon
after him Goethe lets his Faust strive with all power for that
second human being who strives from the physical-bodily human
being to the spiritual worlds, we realise with Voltaire that he
can understand nothing of such a second human being. A
quotation relating to this second human being is very typical:
“So much I have endeavoured to find that we are two,
nevertheless, I have found in the end that I am only
one.” He cannot admit that this second human being is in
him. He has taken care, but this is his tragedy: in the end, he
can only find that he is only one who is bound to his brain.
This was his deep tragedy about which Voltaire himself helped
by his cynicism, even by his frivolity. Subconscious soul
depths, the second human being in the human being in connection
with a spiritual world, — the upper
consciousness was not allowed to confess that to itself. The
upper consciousness needed numbing. He could find that in the
outer experience because the outer experience dedicated itself
to the magnificent, clever worldview that he could create
within the most inconsistent soul experiences.
Thus, we can understand that Voltaire
had a rather rough ride to manage with himself, and that he
wanted many a numbing. One must already look at the greatness
of this man to understand such paradoxical matter that he
feigned a severe illness and called for the priest one
day — it was in Switzerland where he did so many
benefits —,
so that the priest came along to give him
the last rites. After he had received the sacraments, he jumped
up and said that to the priest, it was only a joke, and mocked
him. However, one must even live in such “derived”
world that does not have the real connection of the human soul
with the spiritual worlds as Voltaire lived in such a world and
could not come to the connection to which he wanted to
come.
If we look once again at Goethe, he takes a
“vagrant” —
Faust — to show how the
deepest impulses arise in the human soul. If we pursue the
whole life of Goethe, we realise how he tries to find the human
character in its full juiciness in the simplest souls. Voltaire
completely lives in a derived layer, in his educated class
where everything is uprooted. There he cannot find what ties
together the human soul with a spiritual world, and thus he can
even speak to that derived layer. Today we can hardly
understand that a spirit like Voltaire says: “I do not
deign to write for shoemakers and dressmakers; to give those
anything that they can believe in, apostles are good for that,
not I.” He does not want his holiest conviction to be
treated as we would want it today, namely that it penetrates
into any human soul. However, he does the typical quotation
that he writes only for the educated class because he grew out
of it: “Only an upper class can understand heaven and
earth which arise to my enlightened mind; the lowlife is in
such a way that the silliest heaven and the silliest earth is
just the best for it!”
In this respect, Voltaire lives within a
dying cultural sphere. This is his tragedy. However, such
cultural spheres also have the possibility to develop maturity
concerning certain tendencies. Voltaire developed that
maturity. It expresses itself in his clever, urgent judgement
that does not confuse itself, even in the joke, it expresses
itself in his healthy way — even if he is
frivolous —
to work on the world and to relate to the
world in a way. Thus, one can also understand that a spirit who
was so great in many a respect, as Frederick the Great
(1712-1786), could feel attracted to Voltaire, could push off
him again, allowed him to return after some time repeatedly,
saying about him, this Voltaire deserves, actually, nothing
better than to be a learnt slave, but I estimate what he can
give me as his French. He could still give him even more than
only the element of language. I have tried to indicate this
today.
One can understand that the eighteenth
century that had to put everything in the right light on one
side what hampered the emerging consciousness soul what had to
show a certain greatness, however, just in the downward spirit
of the cultural current. One can understand that this had to be
expressed in such a peculiar way just with Voltaire. You see
Voltaire in the right light if you put that as a counter-image
what we have found as the positive, as the continuing in the
sense of Lessing or Goethe for the pursuit of the consciousness
element. Indeed, what I have spoken about Voltaire today can
serve only to cause a consciousness of how difficult it is to
gain an objective picture just of this peculiar man: He fought
for many things, he strove for live as something natural today
in us — also in those who do not intend at all to read
Voltaire's writings.
Yes, one can say just with Voltaire that
humanity can outgrow his writings; but it cannot outgrow what
he was as a force because it has to remain always as a part of
the spiritual striving of humanity. Since what had to result as
the liberation of the human soul is based on the fact that at
first something had to be cleared away by such a decomposing,
one would like to say, Mephistophelian spirit like Voltaire.
One is not surprised that similar applies to the historical
picture of Voltaire what happened to his mortal remains. In
the honorary burial parts of the Pantheon in Paris they were buried
first; when another political current got the power, it was
exhumed again and dissipated; then when the third political
current replaced the previous one, the bones were collected
again and buried. Some people state now that these bones
fetched back again are not the real ones. The historical
picture of Voltaire will be right which is portrayed from the
one side like that of a liberator from bondage, like an apostle
of tolerance, on the other side, however, is denigrated so
much. With the whole complexity of Voltaire's personality, it
can easily happen if one considers the historical picture of
Voltaire objectively that then some people maybe say that it is
not right, as the bones buried in the pantheon are not the real
ones. Nevertheless, I say, if spiritual science can fulfil its
task in the present and future, the picture of the great
destroyer, of that who abolished so much, can maybe arise
before spiritual science in its full objectivity.
Since Voltaire is a human being
— he
pronounced it even towards Frederick the Great
— with all
mistakes of a human being and, one would even like to say, a
human being with all “miracles” of a human being
who is well-suited to fulfil the poet's saying:
By the parties' favour and hatred
confused,
His portrayal of character fluctuates in
history. (Schiller in the
prologue of “Wallenstein”)
His personality was such that his picture
can only “fluctuate.” However, although it
fluctuates, one has to confess compared with the picture of
Voltaire with those to whom he is likeable as well as with
those to whom he is unpleasant that he was, nevertheless, a
great human being who filled a place in the ongoing education
of the human race.
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