LECTURE 5.
THE INNER ASPECT OF THE
MOON-EMBODIMENT OF THE EARTH.
PART 2.
21 November 1911.
In our survey of the
world we have now carried a difficult aspect of it far enough to
discover to some extent the spiritual behind the phenomena of the
external sense-world. Concerning such phenomena, at first outwardly
revealing little of the fact that the spiritual in its own
peculiar form stands behind them, as we experience this spiritual in
our own soul-life — concerning such phenomena we have
recognised that nevertheless spiritual qualities and properties
do stand behind them. For example, in ordinary life we recognise the
properties of heat or fire, and we have learnt to see in these the
expression of sacrifice. In what meets us as air and at any rate, to
our ideas, seems to reveal so little of its spiritual nature, we have
recognised the bestowing virtue of certain Spiritual Beings. And we
have learnt to perceive in water what might be called resignation. It
may just be mentioned here, that in earlier conceptions of the world
there was naturally a greater sense of the spiritual behind the outer
material element, and the fact that specially volatile substances
have been designated “Spirits” may be looked upon as
proving this, for we make a peculiar use of the word
‘Spirit’ to-day. Even in saying “Spiritual”;
and indeed in the outer world it may often occur that people use this
word with very little application to spiritual things, on one
occasion (as some here present are aware) a letter was addressed to a
spiritualist union at Munich, and so little did the postman know what
a spiritualistic circle was, that the letter was delivered to the
Central Committee of Wine and Spirit merchants!
But to-day, when we
wish to study that significant transition in the evolution of
the Earth planet which took place in the passing from ancient Sun to
ancient Moon, we must bear in mind a different kind of development of
the spiritual. We must now start from that point which we reached in
the last lecture, when we came to the subject of
“renunciation.” This, as we have seen, consisted
essentially in the refusal of Beings of exalted Spiritual rank to
accept the sacrifice, which as we were told, consisted for the most
part of will or will-substance. If we represent this to our minds in
such a way that we picture certain Beings desirous of offering the
substance of their will in sacrifice which through the renunciation
of yet higher Beings was rejected, it will be easy to rise to the
conception that this substance was compelled to remain with the
Beings desirous of sacrificing; who were prevented from doing so.
Thus we are introduced to Beings in the Cosmic scheme ready to
contribute with fervour what dwells within them — but who
are not able to do this, are obliged to retain this substance within
them. The Beings whose sacrifice was rejected were unable to
establish a particular connection with still higher Beings, which
might have been established had their offering been accepted. What we
must understand by this is symbolically expressed in the world's
history by the figure of Cain confronting Abel, though there the
contrast is more sharply emphasised. Cain too wished to offer
sacrifice to his God. But it was not pleasing unto God and He would
not accept it. The sacrifice offered by Abel was accepted. What we
must bear in mind in this story is the inner experience which came to
Cain through the rejection of his sacrifice.
If we wish to raise
ourselves to the height necessary for the comprehension of what is
now under consideration, we must clearly realise that in speaking of
the regions referred to, both conceptions and ideas slip into use
regarding them which only have meaning in our ordinary life. It will
be incorrect to speak of ‘Sin’ or
‘wrong-doing’ as coming into being by the rejection of
the sacrifice. Guilt or atonement as we know it in our ordinary life,
could not as yet be spoken of in those regions. Rather must we think
of these Beings in such a way, that on the part of those Higher Ones
who rejected the proffered sacrifice, there is renunciation or
resignation. In the soul described in the last lecture there is
nothing of guilt or omission; on the contrary, it contains all the
greatness and significance to be found in resignation. None the less
the fact remains that in those other Beings who wished to contribute
their sacrifice there arose a feeling, though very faint, which was
the beginning of an opposition to those who rejected it. So that when
at a much later epoch, the story of Cain is brought to our notice our
feeling is represented in an accentuated form. Hence we do not find
in those Beings who continued to evolve from the Sun and to pass over
to the Moon, the same disposition of mind as in Cain; in them the
mood is different in degree. We only really become acquainted with
this if we look into our own souls as we did in the last lecture,
trying to find its counterpart there, and thus get a hint of
that feeling which was developed in the Individualities whose
sacrificial gifts were rejected.
Coming nearer and
nearer to the earthly life of man, we find this mood in ourselves
— everyone knows it — as uncertainty and at the same time
as torment in the domain which can well be included in the hidden
depths of Soul-life. This feeling with which we are all acquainted
holds sway in the secret depth of our Soul-life, and sometimes pushes
its way up to the surface; and then perhaps its torment is least. We
often go about with these feelings without being aware of them in our
superficial consciousness; yet there they are within us. We might
recall the words of the poet: ‘He alone who longing knows,
knows what I suffer,’ if we wish to convey an idea of the
tormenting nature of this mood with which is connected a certain
degree of pain. The longing to be found in the souls of men, is what
is here meant.
In order to transport
ourselves into what went on spiritually in the evolutionary
phases of ancient Saturn and Sun, it was necessary to raise our
vision to peculiar states of the soul which only appear, so to speak,
when the human soul begins to aspire and prepares for higher
striving. We saw this when we tried to understand the nature of
sacrifice by referring to our own Soul-life, when we tried to
comprehend the nature of the wisdom man can acquire, which we saw
trickling in, and which has its origin in what may be called:
‘readiness to bestow,’ ‘readiness to give’,
even to giving oneself, so to speak. When we come on to the more
earthly conditions which have evolved out of the earlier ones, we
encounter a Soul-mood resembling in many respects what a man may even
yet experience at the present day. But we must quite clearly realise,
that although our Soul-life is fitted into our earth-body, an upper
layer exists over this hidden Soul-life in the depths. Who could fail
to know that there is such a hidden life of the Soul? Life itself
amply teaches us this.
Now in order to make
clear to ourselves something of this hidden life of the Soul, let us
take the case of a child who in his seventh or eighth year, or at
some other age may have experienced some injustice, to which children
are particularly sensitive. He perhaps may have been blamed for
something which he really had not done, but it suited to convenience
of those around him to throw the blame on the child, so as to have an
end of the matter. Now children are very specially sensitive to
unjust accusation; but as life now is, although such an experience
may have bitten deeply into the childish life, the later Soul-life
put another layer of existence over it, and as far as everyday life
is concerned the child forgot it. And indeed it may very well never
crop up again. But suppose that in his fifteenth or sixteenth year
this boy should experience fresh injustice, perhaps at school; then
that which has lain dormant in the depths below the superficial waves
of his soul, begins to stir. The boy need not know that a memory of
what he had formerly endured is rising to the surface, he may have
different concepts and ideas on the subject. But if his earlier
experience had not occurred he would simply have gone home, perhaps
grumbled and complained, and shed a few tears, and that would have
been the end of the matter. The first injustice had however been
experienced, and although, as I make a point of saying, the boy need
have no recollection of it, yet it works! It becomes active beneath
the surface of the Soul-life just as there may be movements beneath
the surface of a calm and glassy sea, and what might have ended in a
few grumblings and tears now becomes the suicide of a schoolboy! Thus
do the hidden depths of the Soul-life play their part on the surface.
The most important of all the forces ruling below in these depths one
which governs every Soul and occasionally emerges in, its original
form, is — longing. We also know the names by which this force
is known to the outer world, but they are only metaphoric and
indefinite, for they express very complicated connections and
thus do not enter a man's consciousness at all.
Take as an example a
phenomenon with which we are all well acquainted; perhaps a man who
lives in great cities is less affected by it, but he will have seen
it in others: — I refer to what is known as
‘home-sickness’. If you investigate into the true nature
of home-sickness you will find it differs fundamentally in
every one. Sometimes it takes one form and sometimes another. One
person may long for the homely stories of the family circle; he does
not know that he is longing for home, he only feels an undefined
craving, an undefined want. Another longs for his mountain, or
for the river on whose banks he used to play, watching the movement
of the rippling water. He is seldom aware of what it is that is
working within him. All these diverse characteristics we include in
the term ‘home-sickness,’ expressing something that may
be active in a thousand forms, and would be more accurately defined
as a kind of longing. And what is this longing? We have just said
that it is a kind of willing, and whenever we investigate this
longing, we find that is of this nature. What kind of willing? It is
a will towards an inclination which in its immediate form cannot be
satisfied; for were it satisfied, the longing would cease. What we
described as longing is an unattainable wish.
So must we define the
frame of mind of those Beings whose sacrifice was rejected, it was
somewhat of this nature. What we may discover in the depths of our
Soul-life is a heritage coming to us from those primeval times of
which we are now speaking. Just as we have inherited other things
from that ancient stage of evolution, so do we inherit all kinds of
longings, all kinds of repressed wishes impossible to fulfil. It is
in this way we must also conjecture that through the rejection of the
sacrifice during the phase of evolution there came into existence
beings whom we may designate as: Beings with wishes which are
repressed. Now because they were obliged to exercise this repression
they were in a very special position. And as we can hardly rise into
these conditions by means of thought, we must once again turn to
certain conditions in our own Soul, if we wish to feel, to sense the
reflection of them.
A being able to
sacrifice its own will, passes in a certain sense, into the being of
the other. We can feel this even in our human life, we live and move
in one for whom we sacrifice ourselves, we feel glad and satisfied
when in that person's presence. And as we are now speaking of the
sacrifice offered to highest Beings, to more widely-extending,
universal Beings, by others who found their greatest bliss in gazing
up at them, what remains behind as repressed longings and wishes can
never create the same inner disposition of Soul as would have been
theirs if they had been allowed to complete their sacrifice. For if
they had been able to do this what they offered would have passed
over into the other Beings. We might, by way of example suggest, that
if the earth and the other planets could have made sacrifice to the
Sun — they would be with the Sun. But if they were not allowed
to do this, if they had been forced to withhold what they were
preparing to offer up, they would then have been driven back into
themselves. If we can understand what has just been said in these few
words, we observe that at this stage something new enters the
universe. It must be clearly understood that it is impossible to
express this in any other way than by saying that the Beings who were
ready to offer to others all that dwelt within them, were compelled
on the rejection of their sacrifice, to draw all this into
themselves. Do you not guess what now flashed up — that this
was what is called ego-nature which comes out in every form? It is
thus that we must look upon what lives on in the Beings as a heritage
— which later on was poured into evolution, so to speak. We see
egoism flashing up in the weakest form, as longing, but we can also
see it slipping into the evolution of the Cosmos. Thus we see how
Beings devoted to themselves, to their own Ego-nature, would in a
certain respect have been condemned to a one-sided development, to
living only in themselves, if something else had not occurred.
Let us picture a
Being, permitted to make sacrifice; such a one lives in the other
Being, and does so for all time. One not allowed to made sacrifice
can only live within itself. It is thereby shut off from what it
would have experienced in another, in this case a higher Being. Thus
from the outset it is condemned and exiled by evolution to a
one-sided existence, were it not that something here enters evolution
to redress the balance. This is the arrival on the scene of new
Beings who prevent the one-sidedness. Just as on Saturn there were
the Spirits of Will, and on ancient Sun Spirits of Wisdom, so, on
ancient Moon the Spirits of Movement make their appearance; we must
not, however, think of movement in space, but movement rather more
like the nature of thought. Every one knows the expression
“thought-vibrations” though this only refers to the
fluidic movement of our own thought; yet this expression may serve,
if we want to acquire a more comprehensive conception of movement, to
show us that we think of something more than the mere movement from
one place to another, for that is only one of the many forms of
movement. If a number of persons devote themselves to a higher Being
who is expressive of all that is within them, and who accepts all the
sacrifices they offer Him, these people live in that Being as a
plurality in unity, and find full satisfaction in so doing. But if
their sacrifices are rejected, the plurality is driven back upon
itself and is never satisfied. Then came the Spirits of Movement and
in a sense they guide the Beings who would have simply been driven
back upon themselves and bring them into relation with all other
Beings. The Spirits of Movement should not be thought of as merely
bringing about changes of place; they are Beings able to bring forth
something whereby one Being is constantly brought into new relation
with others.
We can form an idea of
what was attained in the Cosmos at this stage if we once more reflect
upon a corresponding disposition of the Soul. Who does not know the
longing when a condition of Soul approaches in which a man is at a
standstill, when he can experience no change! Who does not know the
torment of it, how it drives a man into a state of mind which becomes
unendurable, and which in a merely superficial person takes the
form of boredom? But between the boredom which is as a rule only
ascribed to a shallow-pated person, and that which is an attribute of
noble character in whom dwells what is generated by their own natures
as longing and cannot be satisfied in this world, there are many
intermediate states — what better method is there of quieting
longing than by change? This is proved by the fact that persons who
suffer from it incessantly seek to form relationships to new Beings.
The torment of longing can often be overcome by changing the
conditions to ever new beings.
Thus we see that while
the earth was passing through her Moon-phase, the Spirits of Movement
brought into the lives of those Beings who were filled with longing
and would otherwise have been desolate--for boredom is also a kind of
desolation — the change which is brought about by movement, a
constantly renewed relation to ever new Beings and new
conditions. Movement in space, movement from one place to another, is
but one form of the more comprehensive movement which has just been
mentioned. When in the morning we have a definite train of thought in
our Soul, not necessarily to be kept to ourselves, but passed on to
others — a ‘movement’ takes place. We can then
overcome one-sidedness of longing by means of variety, by change and
the movement of the things experienced. In outer space there is only
one particular form of change. In this connection let us imagine a
planet in relation to a Sun: if it always occupied the same position
to the Sun, if it never moved, it would be subject to that
one-sidedness, which can only accrue when it presents invariably the
same aspect to the Sun. Then the Spirits of Movement turn the planet
round so as to bring about a change in its conditions. Change of
place is but one of the many forms of change. And the Spirits of
Movement, by bringing change of place into the Cosmos, merely
introduce one specific part of Movement in general.
But as the Spirits of
Movement introduce change and movement into the Universe as we know
it up to the present, something else must follow. We know that in the
whole Cosmic multiplicity in the upward course of development
during this evolution, besides the Spirits of Movement, of
Personality, of Wisdom, and of Will — there is also what we
have called ‘Bestowing Virtue,’ which is radiated forth
as Wisdom, and Spirituality behind air and gas. This then combines
with the Will now transformed into longing, and within these Beings
it becomes what is known to man hardly yet as ‘thoughts’
but as ideas. We can best picture these to ourselves by the ideas
that a man has when he dreams; the fluidic ideas that succeeding one
another in a dream may evoke a conception of what takes place in a
Being in whom the volition of longing dwells, and is guided by the
Spirits of Movement into relation with other Beings. But when this is
thus guided into a relation with the other Beings, it cannot
completely surrender itself — the egotism within it prevents
that; but it is able to take in the transitory idea of the other
Beings, which lives in him like a dream-picture. This is the origin
of what we call the ‘arising’ of pictures of the other
world. At this phase of development we see the arising of the
picture-consciousness. And as we human Beings our selves passed
through this phase of evolution without then possessing our present
earthly ego-consciousness, we must think of ourselves at that time
without that which we can now acquire through our ego, but living and
weaving in the universe, while within us lived something which we can
compare with the present feelings of longing. We can in a certain
fashion realise, if we do not regard these conditions of suffering as
earthly that they could not possibly be so, by reflecting on the
following: — Sorrow and suffering — naturally in its
Soul-form, came at that time into our being and that of other
entities connected with our evolution; through the activity of the
Spirits of Movement the inner nature which would otherwise have been
barren and empty, suffering the tortures of longing, was filled with
the balm which flowed into these Beings in the form of
picture-consciousness, otherwise these Beings would have been
empty-Souled, empty of everything not to be called longing. But the
balm of the pictures was slowly poured in, filling the desolate void
with variety, and thus the Beings were led away from exile and
condemnation. If we take what is here said seriously, it gives us
both the spiritual basis of what developed during the Moon-phase of
our Earth, and of what we now have in the deep subsoil of our
consciousness, for that has stretched over to the earth-stage of our
nature. And this is so imbedded in the subsoil of our Soul, that, as
the disturbance beneath the surface of the sea drives up the waves,
it can influence us, without our being aware of the cause of what
enters our consciousness. Beneath the surface of our ordinary
ego-consciousness we have a Soul-life which can play its part. And
when it does so, what does the Soul-life say? If we bear in mind the
Cosmic subject of this subconscious Soul-life, we can say that what
we can thus trace back to the subsoil of the soul is a bursting-forth
within that which we have acquired through our earth-phase, of what
has moved across from the Moon-phase of evolution. If we clearly
grasp what it is that has come into our nature here on the Earth, we
really have an explanation of what has been spiritually brought over
from the ancient Moon into our Earth-existence.
If we just grasp the
fact that it was necessary, as has just been described, that pictures
should continually arise to assuage the feeling of desolation, we
obtain a conception which is of very great importance and weight:
that of the longing human Soul, in all its yearning emptiness. By the
constant succession of pictures, arising one after the other,
the yearning is satisfied and brought into harmony; but should a
picture remain any length of time the old longing begins to glimmer
faintly afresh in the background — and the Spirits of
Movement call up new pictures. When these have been there for
some little time the longing pushes up again, demanding fresh ones.
Now with respect to the Soul-life such as this the momentous sentence
must be pronounced: that if this longing can only be satisfied by a
continual flow of pictures following one after the other, there would
be no end to the infinite flow. The only thing that can supervene on
this is what must come if the endless flow of pictures is to be
replaced by something else, something that is able to redeem it by
something other than mere pictures — namely, by realities! In
other words, the planetary embodiment of our earth through which we
have passed, when pictures were brought to us by the activity of the
Spirits of Movement, must be replaced by that planetary phase of the
earth's embodiment which we can the phase of redemption. We shall see
presently that the earth is to be called the ‘Planet of
Redemption,’ just as her last embodiment — that of the
Moon-existence may be called the ‘Planet of
Longing’; longing capable of satisfaction yet flowing on
endlessly. And while we live in the consciousness belonging to this
earth, in which as we know redemption comes to us through the Mystery
of Golgotha — there arises continually within us from the
subsoil of our soul, a never-ceasing craving for redemption. It is as
though, on the surface, we had the waves of our ordinary
consciousness — while below, in the depths of the ocean of the
Soul-life, is longing, which is the ocean-bed of our Soul. This
strives continually to ascend to one who accomplishes the sacrifice,
the Universal Being, Who is able to satisfy the longing once and for
all time — not in a never-ceasing succession of pictures.
The earth-man already
feels moods such as these, and they are the very best he is capable
of feeling. The citizens of earth of our time who feel this longing
— which belongs to this particular age of ours — are
those who enter our own movement of Spiritual Science. In external
life people have become acquainted with all that can satisfy the
ordinary superficial individual consciousness; but from the
subconsciousness pushes up that which in its individuality can
never be satisfied, but yearns for the central basis of life. This
basis can only be provided by a universal science which occupies
itself with the totality rather than with the individuality. That
which rises from the subconsciousness must in the mind of
to-day be brought into touch with application to the study of
universal Being living in the world; otherwise that which ascends
from the subsoil of the Soul will be further longing for something
which can never be attained. In this sense anthroposophy is a
response to those longings which dwell in the depths of the Soul. As
everything that happens in the world has had a prelude, we need not
wonder at a man who at the present day longs through spiritual
science for satisfaction for the powers of his Soul, above all, when
the unconscious Soul-forces akin to longings, burn up ardently as
longing. Suppose that he, through living in an earlier age, in which
this spiritual wisdom had not been given, had been unable to have it,
and had come to long for it, to have a persistent longing for it,
unable to grasp the meaning of life, just because he was an
eminently great Soul. If only something could have flowed into his
Soul, drowning, silencing the longing for ideas while he yearned for
an end to this search for ideas — the greater the yearning, the
more intense the search. And is it not like a voice expressing itself
to us, the utterance of a spirit living at a time when it could not
yet have the Spiritual wisdom which, like balsam, is shed forth into
the longing Soul, when we hear Heinrich Von Kleist writing to a
friend. In the following words we seem to hear him say: —
‘Who would desire to be happy in this world! I could almost
say, shame on you if you wished to be. Would it not be short-sighted,
noble man, to strive for anything here below, where all ends in
death! We meet here, three Springs long we love, and then we shun
each other for an eternity. And what is worth striving for, if love
be not? Oh! There must be something more than love, happiness, fame,
and so on; something of which our Souls do not even dream. It can be
no evil spirit at the head of the world, He is only not understood.
Do not we smile too when children cry? Just think of the endless
continuity! Myriads of ages, each having its own life, and to each a
manifested existence like this world of ours! What is the name of the
little star we see in the sky when the night is clear and we gaze at
Sirius? All this immense firmament but a speck of dust compared with
infinity! Tell me, is this nothing but a dream? At night when we are
reposing between our linen sheets, we have a wider aspect, richer in
intuition than thoughts can grasp or words describe. Come, let us do
something good, and die in doing it! One of the million deaths we
have already died, and shall yet die. It is as though we pass from
one room to another. Lo! The world to me appears enclosed in a nest
of boxes, the smallest exactly like the biggest!’ — (From
a letter written by Heinrich Von Kleist, in 1806.)
The longing expressed
in these words was felt by a man who could not then find anything
able to satisfy it — such as a modern thinker may find if he
studies Anthroposophy in the right way. The writer of these words
took his own life 100 years ago, shooting first his friend, Henriette
Vogel and then himself, and now he rests on the banks of Lake Vann in
that lonely grave which for a century has closed over his remains.
In speaking of the
frame of mind which best illustrates what we are endeavouring
to grasp, when we speak of the combined action of the sacrifice of
will held back in longing, of the satisfaction of this longing, which
could only come through the Spirits of Motion, and the urge towards
its ultimate satisfaction, only to come on the planet of
redemption — a singular Karmic link has caused us to speak
here, in accordance with our ordinary programme, on the very day
which reminds us of how a great mind expressed this undefined longing
in the grandest of words, and finally poured it forth in the most
tragic act in which longing could be embodied. How can we fail to
recognise that this man's spirit in its entirety as he stands before
us, is an actual living embodiment of that which dwells in the
depths of the Soul, which we must trace back to something other than
the life of earth if we wish to recognise it? Has not Heinrich Von
Kleist described in the most significant manner what may live within
a man (a description of which you will find at the very beginning of
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Mankind), as something
transcending him and driving him, and which he will only understand
later on if he does not snap the threads of his life before! Think of
his ‘Penthesilea’; how much more there is in her than she
can span with her earthly consciousness! We should not be able to
describe her at all, did we not take for granted that her Soul was
immeasurably further advanced than the narrow little soul (although
it was a great one) which she could span with her earthly
consciousness. Hence a situation must arise which artistically
introduces the whole process of the Drama. Indeed, it was necessary
to prevent the whole transaction — which Kleist introduces with
Achilles — from being grasped with the higher
consciousness; otherwise the whole tragedy could not be
perceived. Hence Achilles is called ‘her’ Achilles. What
lies in the higher consciousness must be plunged into the
non-conscious. Again, what part does this subconsciousness play in
Katchen Von Heilbronn, especially in the remarkable relation
between her and Wetter Von Strahl, which plays no part in the higher
consciousness, but in the deeper strata of the Soul where dwells the
forces of which man knows nothing, which pass from one to another.
When we have this before us we can trace the spiritual nature of the
world's forces of gravity and attraction. For instance, in the
scene where Katchen stands before her admirers, do we not feel what
lives in the subconsciousness, and how it is related to what is
outside in the world which has been dryly called the forces of our
planet's attractions? Yet only 100 years ago a truly penetrating and
striving mind was not able to find his way into that
subconsciousness. But it must be done to-day. And the tragedy of a
Prince of Homburg strikes us in a very different way now. I
should like to know how an abstract thinker, one who accounts for
everything by reason alone, could account for a figure such as the
Prince of Homburg, who carried out all his great deeds in a kind of
dream-state, even those leading finally to victory. Kleist indicates
very clearly that he could not possibly gain the victory by means of
his higher consciousness, for as far as that was concerned he was not
a particularly great man, for he whines and whimpers over everything
he has to do. Only when by a special effort of the will, he brings up
what dwells in the depths of his Soul, does he play the man.
What still belongs to
a man as heritage of the old Moon consciousness cannot be brought to
the surface by abstract science, but by that science which has many
sides, and can lay hold in a delicate and subtle way of spiritual
contours: that is, Spiritual Science. The greatest unites
itself with the mediocre and the ordinary.
Thus we see that
Anthroposophy shows that the conditions we are experiencing in
our Souls to-day are connected with the Cosmos, with the Universe. We
see also, however, how that which we experience in the Soul to-day
can alone provide us with an understanding of the spiritual
foundation of things. We see, too, that our era had to come to
satisfy what was yearned for in the age preceding our own, when men
longed for what cannot be given until our age. We feel a kind of
veneration for such men, who could not find their bearings as regards
what they longed for in their hearts, and what the world could not
give them. When we recollect that all human life is linked together,
and that the man of to-day can devote his life to those spiritual
movements which — as their destiny shows bygone men have so
long desired — we cannot but feel a veneration for them. So, on
the centenary of the tragic death of one who was consumed by that
longing, we may in a sense point to Anthroposophy or Spiritual
Science as being the redemption of mankind from that longing. This
day may serve to remind us how tragically and stormily that which
Anthroposophy is able to give us, has been desired and longed for.
This is a thought that we may well take hold of, which perhaps is
also theosophical, on the centenary of the death of one of the
greatest German poets.
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