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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Section Name Rudolf Steiner e.Lib

Four Mystery Plays

Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document

Sketch of Rudolf Steiner lecturing at the East-West Conference in Vienna.




Mystery Plays
Main Index
Cover Sheet
Introduction
 
1. Portal
Summary
Beings
Prelude
Scene 1
Scene 2
Scene 3
Scene 4
Scene 5
Scene 6
Scene 7
Interlude
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Scene 11
 
2. Probation
Summary
Beings
Scene 1
Scene 2
Scene 3
Scene 4
Scene 5
Scene 6
Scene 7
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Scene 11
Scene 12
Scene 13
 
3. Guardian
Summary
Beings
Scene 1
Scene 2
Scene 3
Scene 4
Scene 5
Scene 6
Scene 7
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
 
4. Awakening
Summary
Persons
Scene 1
Scene 2
Scene 3
Scene 4
Scene 5
Scene 6
Scene 7
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Scene 11
Scene 12
Scene 13
Scene 14
Scene 15

Four Mystery Plays

The Soul's Awakening

Scene 15

The same. Doctor Strader's Nurse sits waiting. Enter the Secretary.

Secretary:
Soon Benedictus will, I hope, appear
And hear himself the message thou dost bring:
He went a journey and hath just returned.
A great man surely doctor Strader was.
At first I did not have much confidence
In Hilary's tremendous plan of work;
But, as I frequently was in the room
Whilst Strader was engaged in showing him
What further needs his plan of work involved,
All my objections swiftly lost their force.
Aye full of spirit, with the keenest sense
For all things possible and purposeful,
He yet was ever heedful that the goal
Should issue clear, nor would he e'er forestall
With flight of fancied thought his labour's end.
He held himself quite as a mystic should;
As people who are anxious to behold
A lovely view from some tall mountain-crest
Keep plodding on till they have reached the top
Nor try to paint the picture in advance.

Nurse:
A man of lofty spirit and great gifts
Thou knewest hard at work in active life.
I, in the short time it was given me
To render earth's last services to him
Learned to admire his loftiness of soul.
A sweet soul, that, except for seven years
Of utmost bliss, walked aye through life alone.
Their wisdom mystics offered him, — but love
Was all his need; — desire for outward deeds
Was naught but love. Love seeks for many forms
Of life in which to manifest.
And what his soul sought on the mystic path
Was needful to his being's noble fire,
As sleep is to the body after toil.

Secretary:
In him the mystic wisdom was the source
Of outward deeds as well; for all his work
Was ever fully steeped in its ideals.

Nurse:
Because in him love was a natural law,
And he had to unite himself in soul
With all the aspirations of his life;
E'en his last thoughts were still about the work
To which in love he did devote himself —
As people part from beings whom they love
So Strader's soul reluctantly did leave
The work on earth through which his love had poured.

Secretary:
He lived in spirit with full consciousness:
And Theodora was with him as aye
She was in life — true mystic souls feel thus.

Nurse:
Because his loneliness knit him to her,
She stood before him still in death. By her
He felt that he was called to spirit-worlds
To finish there his incompleted task.
For Benedictus just before his death
He wrote a message which I now have come
To give into the mystic leader's hands.
So must the life of this our time on earth
Unfold itself yet further, full of doubt; —
But brightened by sun-beings such as he,
From whom a wider number may receive,
Like planets, light-rays which awaken life.

(Enter Benedictus left. Exit Secretary right.)

Before his strength departed, Strader wrote
These few lines for thee. I have come to bring
His message to his faithful mystic friend.

Benedictus:
And as he set this message down for me
What were the thoughts which occupied his soul?

Nurse:
At first the latest of his plans in life
Lived in his thought; then Theodora came
To join him in the spirit; feeling this
His soul did gently leave its body's sheath.

Benedictus:
My thanks to thee, thou faithful soul, for all
Thy services to him whilst yet on earth.

(Exit Nurse. Benedictus reads Strader's last words.)

(reading)

‘My friend, when I perceived my strength was spent
And saw that opposition to my work
Did not alone from outward sources rise,
But that the inner flaws of my own thought
Were obstacles to check my plan's success,
Once more I saw that vision which I told
Not long ago to thee. But yet this time
The vision ended otherwise. No more
Was Ahriman my foe; a spirit stood
There, in his stead, whom I could clearly feel
To represent my own erroneous thought.
And then did I remember thine own words
About the strengthening of mine own soul's powers.
But thereupon the spirit disappeared.’ —
There are a few more words, — but I cannot
Decipher them — a chaos covers them
By weaving in a veil of active thought.

(Ahriman appears; Benedictus sees him.)

(There is no longer any illusion about Ahriman. His form is much more inhuman; his right arm is bone, his right hand a claw, and he has a cloven hoof.)

Who art thou, who dost take a shadowed life,
From out my chaos, in the soul's domain?

Ahriman (aside):
He sees me, but as yet he knows me not.
And so he will not cause me fearful pain
If I should try to labour by his side.

(To Benedictus.)

I can declare to thee what Strader means
To tell thee further for thy personal good.
And also for thy pupils' mystic path.

Benedictus:
My mystic group will always know itself
To be in touch with Strader's soul, although
The life of sense no longer forms a bridge.
But when a spirit-messenger draws near
And manifests to us from his own worlds,