LECTURE III.
HE
changes which take place in the pupil through his occult or
theosophical development as regards his muscular system, and
especially as regards his senses, his sense organs, lead over,
as it were, from man's physical system of sheaths to the
etheric-system, the etheric body. With respect to the muscular
system, the pupil not only feels this muscular system gradually
becoming more mobile — as may also be said with respect
to the other physical organs — but, besides becoming more
alive, he feels this muscular system permeated by a delicate
inner consciousness. It is as though consciousness actually
extended to the muscular system. And without inaccuracy,
speaking as it were in paradox about this experience, we might
say that in the course of his esoteric or theosophical
development the student gradually becomes conscious of his
several muscles and his muscular system in an inner dreamy way;
he always carries his muscular system about with him in such a
way that he entertains vague thoughts, dreams of its activity
in the midst of his ordinary waking consciousness.
It
is always very interesting to grasp the reason of this changing
of the physical sheath because in this perception the student
has something which informs him that in a certain direction he
has made progress. When he begins to feel his several muscles,
so that when for example, contracting and extending them he is
faintly conscious of what is going on, he has a dim feeling of
sympathy which means: something is going on in the muscles.
When the movements of his muscles become ideas to him it is a
proof that he is beginning gradually to feel the etheric body
impregnating the physical body; for what he then actually feels
are the forces of the etheric body which are active in the
muscles. So that when a man begins to have a shadowy feeling of
his several muscles, a dreamy consciousness of himself, as it
were, just as in text-books on anatomy one may see the picture
of a man whose skin has been removed so that only the muscles
appear, that is the beginning of the perception of the etheric
body. Indeed, when one begins to perceive the etheric entity,
it is in a certain sense like this ‘drawing off one's
skin’ and having a shadowy consciousness of one's several
members as of a jointed doll.
Less comfortable, but nevertheless present, is the
sensitiveness when the bone-system begins to draw upon the
consciousness. This is a more uncomfortable feeling, because to
become aware of this bone-system is to be forcibly struck by
the fact of increasing age. It is not precisely pleasant to
notice the faculty for sensation with respect to the
bone-system — not usually felt at all in ordinary life;
but a man begins to feel his bone-system as something like a
shadow within him, when he is developing etherically. And he
then realises that the symbolical representation of death as a
skeleton was in accordance with a certain clairvoyant faculty
of mankind in primeval times, for they knew that in his
skeleton a man gradually learns to feel the approach of
death.
But
much more significant than all this is the experience which the
student has during his esoteric or theosophical development
with respect to his sense organs. Now we know that these sense
organs must really be stripped off when the pupil undergoes an
esoteric development; they must be silent, as it were. The
physical sense organs thereby feel that during esoteric
development they are condemned, as it were, to inactivity; they
are disconnected. Now when they are disconnected as physical
sense-organs, something else comes in their place. The student
first becomes gradually conscious of the sense-organs as
distinct worlds which penetrate him. He learns to feel the eye,
the ears, even the sense of warmth, as if they had been bored
into him. But what he thus learns to feel are not the physical
sense organs, but the etheric forces, the forces of the etheric
body, which act constructively upon the sense organs. So that
when he shuts off the activity of the senses, he sees the
nature of these sense-organs appearing as so many etheric
organisations penetrating him. It is extremely interesting.
To
the extent that during his esoteric development the student
shuts off his eyes, for example, and no longer thinks of
physical sight, to that extent does he learn to recognise
something that penetrates his own organisation like organisms
of light, he then really learns to recognise that the eyes have
gradually come into being through the working of the inner
forces of light upon our organism. For during the time that he
withdraws from all the activity of the physical eyes, he feels
the field of vision to be permeated by the etheric light-forces
which organise the eyes. This is a peculiar phenomenon: when
one shuts off the eyes themselves, one learns through them to
know the forces of light. All physical theories are nothing as
compared to the knowledge of the inner nature of light and its
activity which the student experiences when he has accustomed
himself to eliminate the physical seeing-power of the eyes, and
gradually becomes able, in place of the physical use of the
eyes, to perceive the inner nature of the etheric forces of
light.
The
sense of warmth is at a lower stage, as it were, and it is
extremely difficult really to shut off sensitivity to heat and
cold; this end is best attained during esoteric development, by
trying not to be disturbed during the time of meditation, by
any feeling of heat. It is therefore good to perform meditation
while surrounded by a temperature which is neither hot nor
cold, so that no irritation is produced by either feeling. If
this can be done, the inner nature of the heat-ether which
radiates through space can gradually be recognised, only then
does a student feel himself in his own body as though permeated
by the true activity of the warmth-ether. Having no longer the
external perception of heat, he can learn the nature of the
warmth-ether through himself.
By
shutting off the sense of taste — of course, it is shut
off during the esoteric exercises — but when he attains
the faculty of calling up the sensation of taste as a memory,
that becomes the means of recognising the so-called chemical
ether, still finer than the light-ether. This also is not very
easy, but it can be experienced.
In
the same way, by shutting off the sense of smell, one may
recognise the life-ether.
The
shutting off of the hearing yields an unique experience. For
this, however, such a power of abstraction must be attained,
that even if something audible is going on around, it is not
heard. Everything audible must be shut out. Then come towards
one, as if piercing one's organism, the forces in the etheric
body which organised our organ of hearing. Thereby a remarkable
discovery is made. These matters really belong to the secrets
of still higher and higher regions. Therefore, there is no
difficulty in stating that it is not possible to understand all
at once all that is said regarding experiences with such a
sense as that of hearing. We make the discovery that this ear,
as man bears it in its wonderful organisation, could not
possibly have been formed through the etheric forces which play
around the earth as such. The light-forces, the etheric forces
of light which play around the earth are inwardly connected
with the formation of our eyes; even though the foundations for
the eyes were already in existence, yet by the formation of the
eye, by its position in the organism, it is inwardly connected
with the forces of the light-ether of the earth. In the same
way, our sense of taste is connected with the forces of the
chemical-ether of the earth, out of which for the most part it
is developed. Our sense of smell is connected with the
life-ether of the earth; it is organised almost exclusively
from the life-ether which plays round the earth. But when our
organ of hearing is met with in occultism during esoteric
development, it shows us that it owes an infinitesimal part of
its being to the etheric forces playing round the earth. It
might be said that the etheric forces which play round the
earth have given the finishing touch to our organ of hearing;
but the latter has been so influenced by these etheric forces
that they have really made it — not more perfect, but
more imperfect; for they can only work upon the ear by their
activities in the air, which continually offers resistance to
them. Hence we may say — although a paradox — that
our organ of hearing is the degenerate manifestation on earth
of a much more delicate organisation previously existing; and
at this stage, through his own experience, the developing
student will know that he brought the ear, the complete organ
of hearing, with him to the earth when he made his way from the
ancient Moon to the Earth; indeed, he will find that this organ
of hearing was much more perfect on the ancient Moon than it is
upon the earth. With respect to the ear, we gradually learn to
feel — we are often obliged to make use of paradoxical
expressions — that we might be saddened by this thought,
because the ear belongs to those organs which, in their entire
arrangement, in their entire structure, bear witness to past
perfections. And one who is gradually approaching the
experience we have thus briefly indicated will understand the
occultist who really gains his knowledge from still deeper
powers, the occultist who tells him: on the ancient Moon, the
ear had much greater significance for man than it has now. At
that time the ear enabled him to live entirely, as it were, in
the music of the spheres which still rang out, in a certain
sense, on the ancient Moon. The ear was so related to the
sounds of the sphere-music, which, although weak as compared to
what it had been before, still rang out on the Moon; it was so
related to these sounds that it received them. On account of
its perfection on the ancient Moon, the ear was, so to say,
always immersed in music. This music on the ancient Moon was
still imparted to the whole of the human organisation; these
waves of music still permeated the human organisation on the
ancient Moon, and the inner life of man was in sympathy with
all the music around him, adapted to the whole musical
environment; the ear was the organ of communication, so that
the outer sphere-music might be imitated in corresponding inner
movements. On the ancient Moon, man still felt himself to be a
sort of instrument on which the cosmos with its forces played,
and the ears in their perfection were at that time on the
ancient Moon intermediary between the players of the cosmos and
the instrument of the human organism. Thus the present
arrangement of the organ of hearing serves to awaken a
remembrance, connected with the idea that by a sort of
deterioration of the organ of hearing man has become incapable
of hearing the music of the spheres; he has emancipated himself
from it, and can only catch the reflection of the sphere-music
in the music of the present day, which, however, can, in
reality, only play in the air surrounding the earth.
Experiences also emerge with respect to other senses, but they
become more and more indistinct, and it would be of little
avail to follow the experiences connected with other
sense-organs, for the simple reason that it is difficult to
explain by means of ordinary human ideas these changes which
take place in one through esoteric development. For example, of
what use would it be as regards what man can now experience on
earth if we were to speak of the sense for language — I
do not mean the sense for speaking? Those who heard the lecture
on Anthroposophy in Berlin already know that there is a special
sense for language. Just as there is a sense for sound, so
there is a special sense, which only has an organ inwardly but
none externally, for the perception of the spoken word itself.
This sense has deteriorated still further, so that to-day there
remains but a last echo of what it was, for instance, on the
ancient Moon. That which to-day has become the sense for
language, the understanding of the words of our fellow-men,
served on the ancient Moon to enable a man to feel himself
consciously in the whole environment, with imaginative
consciousness, to move round the ancient Moon, as it were.
There the sense for language dictated the movements to be made,
showed how to find the way. A gradual acquaintance with this
experiencing the sense for language is made when the student
acquires a perception of the inner value of the vowels and
consonants, as exemplified in mantric sentences. But what the
earthly man generally attains in this respect is but a faint
echo of what the sense for language was at one time.
Thus you see how the pupil gradually gains the perception of
his etheric body; you see how that from which he turns away in
his occult development, namely, the activity of his physical
senses, compensates him on the other side, for it leads him to
the perception of his etheric body. But it is peculiar that
when we experience the perceptions of the etheric body of which
we have just spoken, we feel as if they did not really belong
to us, but as we have already said — as though they
penetrated us from outside. We feel the body of light as though
it were drilled into us, we feel something like a musical
movement inaudible on the earth penetrating us through our ear;
the warmth-ether, however, we do not feel as penetrating but as
permeating us; and we learn to feel in place of the eliminated
taste the activity of the chemical ether working in us, etc.
Thus as compared with what is known as the normal condition,
the pupil feels his etheric body transformed, as though other
conditions were grafted on to it from outside, as it were.
The
pupil now, however, begins to perceive his etheric body more
directly. The most striking change that takes place in the
etheric body, which many do not appreciate at all, and which is
not recognised as a change in the etheric body, although it is
such, is that as a result of esoteric or theosophical
development it becomes very distinctly evident that the power
of memory begins somewhat to diminish. Through esoteric
development, the ordinary memory almost invariably suffers
diminution. At first one's memory becomes poorer. If the
student does not wish to have a less efficient memory, he
cannot undergo an esoteric development. Especially does that
memory cease to be strongly active which may be described as
the mechanical memory, best developed in human beings in
childhood and youth, and generally meant when memory is alluded
to. Many esotericists have to complain of the diminution of
their memory, for it soon becomes perceptible. In any case,
this depreciation of the memory can be observed long before one
perceives the more delicate things which have just been
explained. But as the student, by pursuing correct theosophical
training, can never suffer injury in his physical body —
in spite of its becoming more mobile — neither will his
memory be injured for long. But care must be taken to do the
correct thing. As regards the physical organisation, while the
external body is growing more flexible, while inwardly its
organs are becoming more independent, so that it is more
difficult to bring them into harmony than before, inner
strength must be sought. This is done by means of the six
exercises described in the second part of my book,
An Outline Of Occult Science
(chapter V.).
The student who takes care to acquire these qualities in the right
way will find that he gains as much inner strength as he loses forces
through esoteric development, so that he is able to keep under
control his more mobile physical body.
Now, as regards the memory, we must also do the correct thing.
We lose the memory belonging to the external life: but we need
suffer no injury if we take care to develop more interest, a
deeper interest in all that affects us in life, more concern
than hitherto. We must especially acquire a sympathetic
interest for the things which to us are important. Previously
we developed a more mechanical memory, and the working of this
mechanical memory was fully reliable for a time, even without
any particular liking for the things observed; but this ceases.
It will be noticed that when undergoing a theosophical or
esoteric development it is easy to forget things. But only
those things fly away for which one has not a sympathetic
interest, which one does not particularly care for, which do
not become part of one's soul, as it were. On the other hand,
that which appeals to one's soul fixes itself in the memory all
the more. Therefore, the student must try systematically to
bring this about. The following may be experienced. Let us
imagine a man in his youth, before he came to Theosophy when he
read a novel he was quite unable to forget it; he could relate
it again and again. Later, when he has come into Theosophy, if
he reads a novel, it very often vanishes from his mind; he
cannot recount it. But if a student takes a book, of which he
has been told — or tells himself — that it might be
valuable, and reads it through once and then tries directly
afterwards to repeat it mentally, and not only to repeat it,
but repeat it backwards, the last matters first and the first
last; if he takes the trouble to go through certain details a
second time, if he becomes so absorbed in it that he even takes
a piece of paper and writes brief thoughts on it, and tries to
put the question: — what aspect of this subject specially
interests me — then he will find that in this way he
develops a different kind of memory. It will not be the same
memory. By using it, the difference can be accurately observed.
When we use the human memory, things come into our soul as
remembrances; but if, in the manner just described, we
systematically acquire a memory as an esotericist or
theosophist, then it is as though the things thus experienced
had remained stationary in time. We learn to look back into
time, as it were, and it really seems as though we were looking
at what we were remembering; indeed, we shall notice that the
things become more and more picture-like and the memory more
and more imaginative. If we have acted in the manner just
described — for instance, with a book — then, when
it is necessary to bring the matter to mind again, we need only
meet with something in some way connected with it, and we shall
look back, as it were, at the occasion when we were studying
the book, and see ourselves reading it. The remembrance does
not arise, but the whole picture appears. Then we are able to
notice that, while previously we only read the book, now the
contents actually appear. We see them as at a distance in time;
the memory becomes a seeing of pictures at a distance in time.
This is the very first beginning, elementary to be sure, of
gradually learning to read the Akashic Record. The memory is
replaced by learning to read in the past. And very often a man
who has gone through a certain esoteric development may have
almost entirely lost his memory, yet he is none the worse for
it, because he sees things in retrospect. He sees those with
which he himself was connected, with special clearness. I am
now saying something which, if it were said to anyone not
connected with Theosophy, would only make him laugh. He could
not help laughing, because he could not form any idea of what
it means when an esotericist tells him that he no longer has
any memory, and yet that he knows quite well what has happened,
because he can see it in the past. The first man would say:
‘What you have is in reality a very excellent
memory,’ for he cannot conceive of the change that has
taken place. It is a change in the etheric body that has
brought it about.
Then, as a rule, this changing of the memory is connected with
something else, viz., we form, we might say, a new opinion
about our inner man. For we cannot acquire this retrospective
vision without at the same time adopting a certain standpoint
as regards our experience. Thus when at a later date a man
looks back at something he has done, as in the case described
above about the book, for instance, when he sees himself in
that position, he will, of course, have to judge for himself
whether he was wise or foolish so to occupy himself. With this
retrospect there is closely united another experience, viz., a
sort of self-criticism. The pupil at this stage cannot do
otherwise than define his attitude towards his past. He will
reproach himself about some things; he will be glad he has
attained others. In short, he cannot do otherwise than judge
the past he thus surveys, so that, in fact, he becomes a
sterner judge of himself, of his past life. He feels within him
the etheric body becoming active, the etheric body which
— as may be seen by the retrospect after death —
has the whole of his past within it; he feels this etheric body
as included in himself, as something that lives in him and
defines his value. Indeed, such a change takes place in the
etheric body that very often he feels the impulse to make this
self-retrospect and observe one thing or another, so as to
learn in quite a natural manner to judge of his own worth as a
man. While in ordinary life one lives without being aware of
the etheric body, in the retrospective view of one's own life
it can be perceived, and this gradually rouses in the student
an impulse to make greater efforts when he undergoes an
esoteric development. The esoteric life makes it necessary for
one to pay more attention to one's merits and demerits, errors
and imperfections.
But
something deeper becomes perceptible, connected with the
etheric body, something that could also be perceived formerly,
though not so strongly: that is one's temperament. Upon the
changing of the etheric body depends the greater sensitivity of
the earnest Theosophist or esotericist towards his own
temperament. Let us note a special case in which this can be
particularly observed, namely, in a person of a melancholic
temperament, inclined to melancholy, a person of such a
melancholic temperament who has not become an esotericist, nor
studied Theosophy, and goes through the world in such a way,
that many things make him surly and morose, many things draw
forth his all too disapproving criticism, and he approaches
things as a rule in such a manner that they arouse his sympathy
and antipathy more strongly than they would perhaps in the case
of a phlegmatic person. When a melancholy person of such a
disposition, whether of the intense kind inclining to
moroseness, turning away from, despising, hating the whole
world, or the milder degree of mere sensitiveness to the
world's opinion — for there are many grades and shades
between these two — when such a person enters upon an
esoteric or theosophical development, his temperament becomes
essentially the basis from which to perceive his etheric body.
He becomes susceptible to the system of forces producing his
melancholy and perceives it clearly within him, and, while
formerly he merely turned his discontent against the external
impressions received from the world, he now begins to turn this
discontent against himself. It is very necessary that in an
esoteric development self-knowledge should be carefully
exercised, and that the student inclined to melancholy should
exercise this introspection, which enables him to take this
change quietly and calmly. For while formerly the world was
very often odious to him, he now becomes odious to himself; he
begins to criticise himself, so that obviously he is
dissatisfied with himself. We can only judge these things
rightly, my dear friends, when we look at what is called
temperament in the right way. A melancholy person is such
simply because in him the melancholy temperament is
accentuated; for fundamentally every human being has all four
temperaments in his soul. In certain things a melancholy person
is also phlegmatic, in others he is sanguine, in others again
choleric; the melancholy temperament only stands out more
prominently in him than the phlegmatic, sanguine, and choleric.
And a phlegmatic person is not one possessing no other
temperament but the phlegmatic, but in him the phlegmatic
temperament is more prominent, and the other temperaments
remain more in the background of his soul. It is the same with
the other temperaments.
Now, just as the change in the etheric body of the decidedly
melancholy person takes the form of turning his melancholy
against himself, as it were, so do changes and new sensations
appear with respect to the other temperamental qualities. But,
through wise self-knowledge, esoteric development can bring
about a distinct feeling that the mischief occasioned by the
predominating temperament can be repaired by bringing about
changes in the other temperaments also, changes which will, as
it were, balance the principal change in the predominating
temperament. It is only necessary to recognise how the changes
in the other temperaments appear.
Let
us suppose that a phlegmatic person becomes an esotericist
— it will be difficult for him, but let us suppose that
he can be brought to be a really good esotericist. The
phlegmatic person who receives strong impressions is sometimes
powerless against them; so that often the phlegmatic
temperament, if not yet too much corroded by materialism, is in
no sense a wholly bad preliminary condition for an esoteric
development; only it must appear in a nobler form than its
usual distorted manifestation. When such a phlegmatic person
becomes an esotericist, the phlegmatic temperament then changes
in a peculiar manner. The phlegmatic person then has a very
strong inclination to observe himself very carefully, and for
this reason the phlegmatic temperament to which this process
gives the least pain is not a bad preliminary condition for an
esoteric development when such can be entered upon, because it
is practically adapted to a certain calm self-observation. What
the phlegmatic person perceives within him does not disturb him
as it does the melancholic person, and, therefore, when he
makes self-observations, they as a rule go even deeper than
those of the melancholic person, who is positively kept back by
his wrath against himself. Therefore, a phlegmatic person is,
as it were, the best pupil for serious theosophical
development.
Now, as already stated, every man has within him all the
temperaments, and in the case of a melancholy person the
melancholic temperament predominates. He has also within him,
for example, the phlegmatic temperament. In the melancholy
person we can always find aspects which prove him to be a
phlegmatic individual towards certain things. Now, if the
melancholy person becomes an esotericist, while, on the one
hand, he will certainly set to work severely on himself, so
that self-reproaches are bound to come, if one is able to guide
him in any way, his attention should be turned to the things
with respect to which he was previously phlegmatic. His
interest must be aroused in things for which he previously had
none. If this can be accomplished, then the evils produced
through his melancholy are to a certain extent paralysed.
The
characteristic of the sanguine person in external life is that
he likes to hurry from one impression to another, unwilling to
keep to one impression. Such a one becomes a peculiar
esotericist. He changes in a very peculiar way through the
alteration of his etheric body: the moment he tries to acquire
esotericism, or another tries to impart it to him, he becomes
phlegmatic towards his own inner being, so that under certain
circumstances the sanguine person is at first the least
promising — as regards his temperament — for an
esoteric development. When the sanguine person comes to
esotericism or theosophical life — as he very frequently
does, for he is interested in all sorts of things, and so,
among other things, in Theosophy or esotericism, though his
interest may not be serious or permanent — he must
acquire a sort of self-observation; but he does this with great
indifference, he does not care to look into himself. He is
interested in this or that in himself, but his interest is not
very deep. He discovers all sorts of interesting qualities
within himself; but he is at once satisfied with that, and he
speaks enthusiastically of this or that interesting quality,
but he has soon forgotten the whole matter again — even
what he had observed in himself. And those who approach
esotericism from a momentary interest and soon leave it again
are chiefly the sanguine natures. In the next lecture we shall
try to illustrate what I am now explaining in words by a
drawing of the etheric body on the blackboard; we shall then
sketch, in addition, the changes in the etheric body through
theosophical or esoteric development.
It
is different, again, in the case of the choleric temperament.
It is almost impossible, or, at any rate, very seldom possible,
to make a choleric an esotericist; if the choleric temperament
is especially prominent in him as personality, it is
characteristic that he rejects all esotericism, he does not
wish to have anything to do with it. Still, it may happen
through the karmic conditions of his life that a choleric
person may be brought to esotericism; but it will be difficult
for him to make changes in his etheric body, for the etheric
body of the choleric proves to be particularly dense, and can
only be influenced with difficulty. In the melancholy
individual the etheric body is like an india-rubber ball (this
is a trivial comparison, but it will convey what I wish to say)
from which the air has escaped: when one presses a dent made in
it, it remains for some time; in the choleric, the etheric body
is like an india-rubber ball well inflated, filled with air. An
attempt to make a dent in it not only produces no permanent
effect, but is perceptibly resisted. The etheric body of the
choleric is not at all yielding, but knotty and hard. Hence the
choleric himself has a difficult task to change his etheric
body. He can do nothing with himself. Therefore, from the
outset he rejects esoteric development, which is to change him;
he cannot lay hold of himself, as it were. But when the
choleric realises the seriousness of life, or similar things,
or when there is a little melancholic ring in his temperament,
then by means of this melancholy he can be led so to develop
the choleric note in his human organism that he now works with
all the intensity of his force on his resisting etheric body.
And if he then succeeds in producing changes in his etheric
body he rouses within him a very special quality; through his
esoteric development he becomes more capable than other people
of presenting external facts in an orderly and profound manner
in their causative or historical connection. And one who is
capable of judging a well-written history — which is not,
as a rule, written by esotericists — a history which
really depicts the facts, will always find the beginning, the
unconscious, instinctive beginning of that which the choleric
esotericist could do as an historian, as a narrator or
describer. Men like Tacitus, for instance, were at the
beginning of such an instinctive, esoteric development; hence
the wonderful, incomparable descriptions given by Tacitus. As
an esotericist, who reads Tacitus, one knows that this unique
kind of history-writing depends upon the very special working
of a choleric temperament into the etheric body. This appears
especially in writers who have undergone an esoteric
development. Even though the outer world may not accept it,
this is the case with Homer. Homer owed his vivid glorious
power of delineation to the choleric temperament working into
his etheric body. And many other things could be pointed out in
this realm which in external life would prove, or at least
verify the fact, that when he undergoes an esoteric development
the choleric renders himself specially capable of clearly
representing the world in its reality, in its causative
connections. When the choleric undergoes an esoteric
development, his works, even in their external structure, one
might say, bear the character of truth and reality. Thus we see
that in the changes of the etheric body the life of man is very
clearly expressed; the form it has hitherto taken is more
perceptible than is otherwise the case in the present
incarnation. In esoteric development temperaments become more
strongly perceptible, and it is specially important in true
self-knowledge to take this observation of temperaments into
account. We shall speak further on these matters in the next
lecture.
|