Four Mystery Plays
Introduction
THE four plays here produced
in an English translation in two volumes, are perhaps best described as
Christian Mystery Plays. They are intended to represent the experiences
of the soul during initiation; or in other words, the psychic development
of man up to the moment when he is able to pierce the veil and see into
the beyond. Through this vision he is then able to discover his real
self and carry into effect the cryptic injunction graven on the old
Greek temples
Γνωθι
σεαυτόν,
know thyself. At a later stage he comes to ‘realize’ himself,
and finally learns the true significance of the Second Advent of our Lord.
This process is known as the ‘Rosicrucian’ initiation —
an initiation specially adapted to modern days — the time and manner
of which depend on the individual nature and circumstances of each
person.
The four plays form one
continuous series, and the characters portrayed are of quite an ordinary
kind except that they take more than the usual interest in spiritual
matters, their first desire being so to improve their own mental and
moral state as to make then able to benefit their fellows.
We
find amongst them many types — the occult leader and the seeress
who explains the coming of Christ. We are shown the spiritual development
of an artist, a scientist, a philosopher, a historian, a mystic, and a
man of the world; and we hear too the scoffing cynicism of the materialist
Fox. We are led to realize how the characters are connected on the
physical as well as the spiritual plane; and we learn also about the
nature of elementals and the twin forces of hindrance known as Lucifer
and Ahriman; the former of whom may be described as an embodiment of the
spiritual impulse to action, an impulse always necessary but often
distorted to bring about self-glorification rather than the ambition to
do good; the latter as an embodiment of an influence which seeks to
materialize everything, thus hindering true spiritual growth and freedom.
These two influences are given to man that he may gain free will by having
perfect liberty to guide them in the one direction or in the other.
With regard to the writing
and production of the plays, Doctor Steiner's habit is to write a play
whilst the rehearsals are actually in progress, finishing it a few days
before the first public performance, and the first play was written
and acted in this manner in August, 1910, the second in August, 1911,
the third in August, 1912, and the fourth in August, 1913. It was not
until then that the complete key to the development of the characters
was attainable. The last play explains the progress of the other three,
and, following out the hint given in the second play by the account
of the previous incarnation in the Middle Ages, traces the characters
right back to their earlier incarnation in ancient Egypt.
The plays were performed
in Munich every summer under the personal direction of the author and
were acted by men and women of several nationalities — all students
of his teaching. The audiences numbered some two thousand and were
composed entirely of his followers.
In 1913, owing to the
difficulties and expense incurred each year in securing an appropriate
theatre, his supporters acquired a plot of ground in Munich, and plans
were designed for a theatre of their own, but the Munich authorities
after much prevarication and delay finally prohibited its building.
Because of this, and
because of the hostility which his writings and lectures had aroused in
other parts of Germany, Doctor Steiner was led to set up his theatre in
Switzerland at the little village of Dornach — not far from
Bâle. Here a theatre is being built in accordance with his own
designs and it is hoped that the plays will be performed there regularly
as soon as the edifice is complete.
In conclusion I should
like to express my gratitude to my friends and fellow students
R. T. Gladstone, M.A., Cantab, and
S. M, K. Gandell, M.A., Oxon,
for their most valuable help in the very difficult task of translating
the plays into English verse. Only a translator can appreciate the
difficulties involved in preserving both the sense and rhythm of the
original, and it is no exaggeration to say that without their aid the
production of these works in English would not have been possible at
the present time.
I would also like to
take this occasion of thanking Doctor Steiner himself for permitting me
to attend the rehearsals and assist in the performances of the plays.
It was a great privilege and pleasure for which I can never feel
sufficiently grateful. And last, but not least, I have to thank him for
his ever kind and patient attention to all my questions on the subject
of these plays and of spiritual science in general.
H. COLLISON.
New York, 1919.