chapter iii
THE
THREE WORLDS
3.
The Spiritland
Before the spirit can be observed on its further pilgrimage,
the region it enters must first be examined. It is the
“World of the Spirit.” This world is so unlike the
physical that whatever is said about it will appear
fantastic to one who is willing only to trust his physical
senses. And what has already been said in regard to the world
of the soul holds good here to a still higher degree; that is,
to say, one has to use analogies in order to describe it. For
our speech, which for the most part serves only for the
realities of the senses, is not richly blessed with expressions
directly applicable to the “Spiritland.” It is
therefore especially necessary here to ask the reader to take
much that is said as an indication only. For everything
described here is so unlike the physical world that it
can be depicted only in this way. The author is ever conscious
of how inadequately his account describes the experiences of
this region, owing to the imperfect means of expression in
language that is adapted entirely to the physical world.
It
must above all be emphasised that this world is woven out of
the substance of which human thought consists. (The word
“substance,” too, is here used in a far from usual
sense.) But thought, as it lives in earthly man, is only a
shadow picture, a phantom of its true being. As the shadow of
an object on the wall is related to the real object which
throws this shadow, so is the thought that makes its appearance
through a human brain related to the being in the Spiritland
which corresponds to this thought. Now when the spiritual sense
of man is awakened he actually perceives this thought-being,
just as the eye of the senses perceives the table or the chair.
He moves in a region of thought-beings. The corporeal eye
perceives the lion, and the thinking that is directed to the
material world thinks the thought “lion” as a
shadow, a shadowy picture. In “Spiritland”
the spiritual eye sees the thought “lion” as truly
as the corporeal eye sees the physical lion. Here we may again
refer to the analogy already used regarding the Soul-land. Just
as the environment of a man born blind and then operated upon
appear all at once with the new qualities of colour and light,
so is the environment of the person who learns to use his
spiritual eye seen to be filled with a new world, the world of
living thoughts or spirit-beings. There are to be
seen in this world, first the spiritual archetypes of all
things and beings which are present in the physical and in the
soul worlds. Imagine the picture of a painter existing in the
mind before it is painted. This indicates what is meant by the
expression “Archetype.” It does not concern us here
that the painter has not, perhaps, had such an archetype in his
mind before he paints; and that it only gradually develops and
becomes complete during the practical work. In the real
“World of the Spirit,” there are such archetypes
for all things, and the physical things and beings are images
of these archetypes. It is quite understandable when anyone who
trusts only to his outer senses denies this archetypal world,
and holds archetypes to be merely abstractions which the
intellect arrives at by comparing the objects of the senses.
Such a person simply cannot see in this higher world; he knows
the thought-world only in its shadowy abstractness. He does not
know that a man with spiritual vision is as familiar with the
spirit-beings as he himself is with his dog or his cat, and
that the archetypal world has a far more intense reality than
the world of the physical senses.
True, the first insight into “Spiritland” is still
more bewildering than that into the soul-world. For the
archetypes in their true form are very unlike their material
images. They are, however, just as unlike their shadows, the
abstract thoughts. In the spiritual world everything is in
continuous, mobile activity, ceaselessly creating. A state of
rest, a remaining in one place, as in the physical world,
do not exist here. For the archetypes are creative
beings. They are the master builders of all that comes into
being in the physical world and the soul-world. Their forms
change rapidly; and in each archetype lies the possibility of
assuming myriads of specialised formations.
[See also under
Addenda.]
They let the different formations well out of
them, and scarcely is one produced than the archetype sets
about pouring forth the next one. The archetypes stand in more
or less intimate relationships to each other. They do not work
singly. The one requires the help of the other for its
creations. Innumerable archetypes often work together in order
that this or that being in the soul-world or the physical world
may arise.
Besides what is to be perceived by “spiritual
sight” in this “Spiritland,” there is
something else that is to be regarded as “spiritual
hearing.” As soon as the clairvoyant rises out of the
soul-world into the spirit-world, the archetypes that are
perceived sound as well. This “sounding” is
a purely spiritual process. It must be conceived of without any
accompanying thought of physical sound. The observer feels as
if he were in an ocean of tones. And in these tones, in this
spiritual sounding, the beings of the spirit-world express
themselves. The primordial laws of their existence are
expressed in their mutual relationships and affinities, in the
intermingling of their sounds, their harmonies, melodies and
rhythms. What the intellect perceives in the physical world as
law, as idea, reveals itself to the “spiritual ear”
as a spiritual music. (Hence, the Pythagoreans called this
perception of the spiritual world the “Music of the
Spheres.” To one who possesses the “spiritual
ear” this “Music of the Spheres” is not
something merely figurative and allegorical, but a
spiritual reality well known to him.) If one wishes to
gain a conception of this “spiritual music” one
must lay aside all ideas of the music of the senses as
perceived by the “material ear.” For here one is
concerned with “spiritual perception,” that
is, with perception of such a kind as must remain silent for
the “ear of the senses.” In the following
descriptions of the “Spiritland,” reference to this
“spiritual music” will be omitted for the sake of
simplicity. One has only to form a mental picture in which
everything described as “picture,” as
“radiance,” is at the same time sounding. To
each colour, each perception of light, there is a corresponding
spiritual tone, and every combination of colours corresponds to
a harmony, a melody, etc. For one must hold clearly in mind
that even where the sounding prevails, perception by means of
the “spiritual eye” by no means ceases. The
sounding is merely added to the radiance. Therefore,
where archetypes are spoken of in the following pages, the
“Primal Tones” are to be thought of as also
present. Other perceptions arise as well, which by way of
comparison may be termed “spiritual tasting,” and
so on. But it is not proposed to go into these processes here,
since we are concerned with awakening a conception of the
“Spiritland” through certain selected modes of
perception.
It
is necessary, in the first place, to distinguish the different
kinds of archetypes from one another. In the
“Spiritland,” too, one has to distinguish between a
number of grades or regions in order to find one's way among
them. Here also, as in the soul-world, the different regions
are not to be thought of as lying one above the other like
strata, but as mutually interpenetrating and pervading each
other. The first region contains the
“archetypes” of the physical world in so far as it
is not endowed with life. The archetypes of the minerals are to
be found here — also those of the plants; but the latter
only in so far as they are purely physical, that is, in so far
as the life in them is not taken into account. In the same way
one finds here the archetypes of the physical forms of the
animals and of human beings. This does not exhaust all that is
to be found in this region but merely illustrates it by the
readiest examples. This region forms the basic scaffolding of
the “Spiritland.” It can be likened to the solid
land of the physical earth. It forms the
“continental” mass of the “Spiritland.”
Its relationship with the physical corporeal world can only be
described by means of an illustration. One gains some idea of
it in the following way. Picture a limited space filled with
physical bodies of the most varied kinds. Then think these
bodies away and conceive in their place cavities in space,
having their forms. The intervening spaces, on the other hand,
which were previously empty, must be thought of as filled with
the most varied forms, having manifold relationships with
the physical bodies spoken of above. This is somewhat like the
appearance presented by the lowest region of the archetypal
world. In it, the things and beings which become embodied in
the physical world are present as “spatial
cavities.” And in the intervening spaces the mobile
activity of the archetypes (and of the “spiritual
music”) plays out its course. At the time of physical
embodiment the spatial cavities become as it were filled with
physical matter. If anyone were to look into space with both
physical and spiritual eyes, he would see the physical bodies,
and in between, the mobile activity of the creative
archetypes.
The
second region of the “Spiritland” contains the
archetypes of life. But here this life forms a perfect unity.
It streams through the world of spirit like a fluid element, as
it were like blood pulsating through everything. It may be
likened to the sea and the water systems of the physical earth.
Its distribution, however, is more like the distribution of the
blood in the animal body than that of the seas and rivers. This
second stage of the “Spiritland” could be described
as Flowing Life, formed of thought-substances. In this element
are the creative Primal Forces, producing everything that
appears in physical reality as living being. Here it is evident
that all life is a unity, that the fife in man is related to
the life of all his fellow-creatures.
The
archetypes of whatever is of the nature of soul must be
designated as the third region of the “Spiritland.”
Here we find ourselves in a much finer and rarer element than
in the first two regions. To use a comparison it can be called
the air or atmosphere of the “Spiritland.”
Everything that goes on in the souls of both the other worlds
has here its spiritual counterpart. Here all feelings,
sensations, instincts, passions, etc., are again present, but
in a spiritual way. The atmospheric processes in this aerial
region correspond with the sorrows and joys of the creatures in
the other worlds. The longing of a human soul appears here as a
gentle zephyr; an outbreak of passion is like a stormy blast.
One who can form conceptions of what is here under
consideration, pierces deep into the sighing of every creature
when he directs his attention to it. One can for example speak
here of storms with flashing lightning and rolling
thunder; and if one investigates the matter one finds that the
passions of a battle waged on earth are expressed in such
“spirit tempests.”
The
archetypes of the fourth region are not immediately related to
the other worlds. They are in certain respects Beings who
govern the archetypes of the three lower regions and mediate
their working together. They are accordingly occupied with the
ordering and grouping of these subordinate archetypes. From
this region therefore a more comprehensive activity proceeds
than from the lower ones.
The
fifth, sixth and seventh regions differ essentially from the
preceding ones. For the Beings in these regions supply the
archetypes with the impulses for their activity. In them are to
be found the creative forces of the archetypes themselves. He
who is able to rise to these regions comes to know the
purposes which underlie our world.
[That such a term as “purposes” is
also meant in the sense of a “simile” is obvious from
what was said above about the difficulties of expression in
language. It is not intended to revive the old “doctrine
of purpose.”]
The archetypes lie here still like living germ-entities ready
to assume the most manifold forms of thought-beings. If these
germ-entities are projected into the lower region they well up,
as it were, and manifest themselves in the most varied shapes.
The ideas through which the human spirit manifests itself
creatively in the physical world are the reflection, the
shadow, of these germinal thought-beings of the higher
spiritual world. The observer with the “ear of
spirit” rises from the lower regions of the
“Spiritland” to these higher ones, becomes aware
that sounds and tones are changed into a “spiritual
language.” He begins to perceive the “spiritual
word” through which the things and beings do not now make
known to him their nature in music alone, but express it in
“words.” They utter to him what is called in
spiritual science their “eternal names.”
We
must picture to ourselves that these thought-germinal-beings
are of a composite nature. Out of the element of the
thought-world only the germ-sheath, as it were, is taken. And
this surrounds the true life kernel. With it we have
reached the confines of the “three worlds,” for the
“kernel” has its origin in still higher
worlds. When man was described above according to his component
parts this “life kernel” of the human being was
specified, and its components were called “Life
Spirit” and “Spirit Man.” There are similar
“life kernels” for other beings in the Cosmos. They
originate in higher worlds and are placed in the three which
have been described, in order to accomplish their tasks in
them.
The
human spirit will now be followed on its further
pilgrimage through the “Spiritland” between
two embodiments or incarnations. In the course of the
description the conditions and distinguishing characteristics
of this “land” will once more come clearly into view.
[See also under
Addenda.]
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