Part 3
In
the Russian spiritual life of the Nineteenth Century, there
come to light directions of thought that bear the same
countenance as the will to war that has unloaded at present
from the East against Middle Europe. To what extent those
persons are right who assert that the reference to this kind of
directions of thought is inappropriate, can be known by him too
who sees in such a reference the right way to the understanding
of the relevant events. What one calls the “causes”
of these events in the ordinary sense can quite certainly not
be sought in such directions of thought of Particular people
— who today aren't even alive anymore. As regards
t h e s e
causes, there will certainly eventually be some
agreement for those who will show that these causes lie with a
number of per sons, whom they will then point to. Against
this way of looking at the issue, no objection shall be made,
its full justification shall not be contested. Yet some
thing else, something no less justified, is the recognition of
the powers and driving forces operative in the historical
process. The directions of thought pointed to here are not
these driving forces; but these driving forces show themselves
u p o n
and
i n
the directions of thought.
Whoever recognizes the directions of thought, holds fast in his
recognition the beings in the folk forces. It can also not be
objected that it is asserted by many with a certain rightness
that the directions of thought that come into question are no
longer alive at present. What is alive in the East flickered up
in souls of thinkers, formed itself back then to thoughts, and
lives at present — in another form — in the will to
war.
What flickered up is the idea of the special mission of the
Russian people. What comes into consideration is the manner of
h o w this idea is brought to bear. In it lives the belief that
the Western European life of the spirit has entered the state
of wizened old age, of decline, and that the Russian Folk
Spirit is called to effect a total renewal, rejuvenation of
this life of the spirit. This idea of rejuvenation grows
to the opinion that all historical progress of the future
coincides with the mission of the Russian People. In the first
half of the Nineteenth Century Khomiakov already builds
out this idea to a comprehensive edifice of doc trine.
This edifice of doctrine is to be found in a work published
only after his death. It is carried by the belief that the
Western European development of the spirit was basically never
set up to find the way to proper humanness. And that the
Russian folk element must first find this way. Khomiakov looks
in his fashion at this Western European development of
the spirit. Into this development has flowed, according to his
kind of view, to begin with, the Roman essential being.
That this has never been able to manifest inner humanity in the
deeds of the world. That on the contrary, it forced upon the
human inward being the forms of external laws of men, and
thought in a rational, materialistic way of what ought to be
taken hold of in the inner weaving of the soul. This external
way of grasping life continued, Khomiakov opines, in the
Christendom of the Western European peoples. That their
Christianity lives in the head, not in the soul's in
most. Now according to Khomiakov's belief, what Western Europe
has as life of the spirit, has been made by modern
“barbarians” — again externalizing after
their fashion what ought to live inwardly — out of the
Roman element and Christendom. That the turning inward will
have to be brought by the Russian people, in keeping with the
higher mission embodied in it by the spiritual world. —
In such an edifice of doctrine, there rumble sensations whose
complete interpretation would necessitate a detailed
characterizing of the Russian folk soul. Such a
characterization would have to point to forces inherent in this
folk soul that will one day occasion it to adapt in a
corresponding way
f o r i t s e l f ,
out of its inner
power, what holds sway in the Western European life of the
spirit and will only then give the Russian people what it can
ripen to in the course of history. What of the result of this
ripening of the Russian people the other peoples will
make fruitful for themselves, the Russian people should leave
up to these peoples. Otherwise, it could fall prey to the sad
misunderstanding of taking a task it has to fulfill
f o r i t s e l f
to be a task for the world, and thereby
taking away its very most essential point. — Since it is
a matter of the rumbling of sensations of such a misunderstood
task, the idea in question did connect it self, in the
heads it appeared in, only all too frequently with political
directions of thought that demonstrate that in these heads this
idea is the expression of the same driving powers that from the
East laid in other people the germ to the pre sent will
to war. Even if on the one hand one will be able to say of the
lovable, poetically high-minded Khomiakov that he expected the
fulfillment of the Russian mission by a peaceful current
of spirit, yet the reminder is also permissible that in his
soul this expectation associated with what Russia would like to
attain as military opponent of Europe. For one will certainly
do him no wrong when one says that in 1829 he took part in the
Turkish War as a volunteer hussar be cause he sensed, in
what Russia was then doing, a first flashing up of its
world-historical mission. — What rumbled in the lovable
Khomiakov often in poetic transfiguration; it rumbled on; and
in a book by Danilevsky Russia and Europe, which toward
the end of the Nineteenth Century was regarded by a number of
personalities as a gospel on the task of Russia, the driving
powers are brought to expression which thought of the
“spiritual task of the Russian people” as fused to
complete unity with a far-reaching will to conquest. One need
but look at the expression this fusion of spiritual willing
with intentions of attack has found be fore all the
world, and one will find clear symptoms of what mattered
t o b e g i n w i t h
to many of those, also,
who wanted to derive the mission of Russia from the essential
being of the spiritual world. This mission is brought together
with the conquest of Constantinople, and it is demanded of the
will which is thereby assigned its direction that without
sensing “love and hate,” it dull itself against all
feeling toward “Reds or Whites, toward demagogues or
despots, to ward the legitimate or revolutionaries,
toward Germans, French, English, or Italians,” that
it regard as “true allies” only those who support
Russia in its striving. It is said that “in Europe the
balance of political driving powers” is especially
pernicious to what Russia must will, and that one must further
“any violation of this balance,”
“whatever side it may come from.” “It is
incumbent upon us to reject forever any cooperation with
European interests.”
Especially characteristic is the position the fine-minded
Russian philosopher Vladimir Solovieff has taken toward
these directions of thought and sensation. Solovieff can
be regarded as one of the most significant embodiments of
Russian essential being of spirit. In his works there lives
beautiful philosophical power, noble upward spiritual vision,
mystical depth. Yet he too was long imbued with the idea
rumbling in the heads of his fellow countrymen of the lofty
mission of the Russian element. With him too this idea
associated with the other one about the exhausted-ness of the
Western European element. For him, the reason Western
Europe was not able to help the world to the revealing of full
inmost humanity was that this Western Europe had expected
salvation from the development of the individual powers
inherent in man. Yet in such striving out of man's own powers,
Solovieff could see only an unspiritual false path, from which
mankind had to be redeemed by this: that without human doing,
by a miracle, spiritual power would pour itself from other
worlds onto the earth, and that that folk element which was
chosen to receive this power would become the savior of a
mankind that had lost its way. In the essential being of the
Russian people he saw what was prepared to receive such an
extra-human power, and hence to be the savior of true humanity.
Solovieff's growing together with the
Russian essential being got to the point where in his soul the
rumbling of the Russian ideal was pleased to look benevolently
for a time upon others who were likewise possessed by this
rumbling. Yet this was only able to be so until his soul, which
was filled with genuine idealism, awakened to the feeling sense
that this rumbling was based on the misconception of a future
ideal for the Russian people's own development. He made the
discovery that many others do not speak at all about which
ideal the Russian people strives after for its own
salvation, but rather that they make the Russian people,
as it presently is, itself to an idol. And through this
discovery, Solovieff became the harshest critic of those who,
under the flag of a mission of the Russian people, were
introducing into the will of the nation, as wholesome driving
powers of further spirit development, the attacker instincts
directed against Western Europe. Out of the doctrine of
Danilevsky's book Russia and Europe, the question was
staring at Solovieff: why must Europe look with concern at what
is coming about within the borders of Russia? And in the soul
of the Russian this question takes on the form: “Why does
Europe not love us?” And Solovieff, who saw the Russian
attacker instincts in the garb of the ideas of the
world-historical mission of Russia especially spoken out
in Danilevsky's book, found in his way the answer to this
question in a critique of this book (1888). Danilevsky had
opined, “Europe fears us as the newer and higher cultural
Type, called to replace the wizened old age of the
Romanic-Germanic civilization.” Solovieff quotes this as
Danilevsky's belief. And to it he replies: “Nevertheless,
both the content of Danilevsky's book and his later admissions
and those of his like-minded friend — meaning Strakhov,
who advocated Danilevsky's ideas after his death — lead
to a different answer: Europe looks upon us as an opponent and
with worry because in the Russian people there live dark and
unclear elemental forces, because its spiritual and
cultural powers are meager and insufficient, whereas its
demands make their appearance blatantly, and sharply
defined. Mightily the calls resound out to Europe of what the
Russian people wills as a nation, that it wants to annihilate
Turkey and Austria, defeat Germany, wants to seize
Constantinople, and if possible, India too. And when they
ask us, in place of what we seize and destroy, what favors we
want to bestow on mankind, what spiritual and cultural
rejuvenation we want to bring into world evolution, we
must either be silent or babble meaningless clichés. And
if Danilevsky's bitter confession that Russia is
beginning to fall ill is just, then instead of the
question: why does Europe not love us? we would have to occupy
ourselves rather with a different one, a question closer to us
and more important to us: why and wherefore are we ill?
Physically, Russia is still fairly strong, as shown in
the latest Russian war; so our malady is a moral one. There
weigh upon us, according to the words of an old author, the
sins hidden in the folk character and not coming to our
awareness — and so it is needful above all to bring these
up into the light of bright consciousness. As long as we are
spiritually bound and paralyzed, all our elemental instincts
must cause us only harm. The essential, indeed the only
essential question for true patriot ism is not the
question about the power of Russia and about its calling, but
about its sins.”
One
will have to point to these directions of will coming to light
in the East of Europe if one wants to speak of
o p e r a t i v e
forces in the attacker will of this East; what came to
expression through Tolstoy represents
i n o p e r a t i v e
forces.
This doctrine of the “mission of Russia” can
receive an illumination by this: that side by side with it, one
contemplates an example of how such a mission of a people
is sensed within that life of spirit which the speakers of this
mission look down upon as upon a life of spirit condemned
to wizened old age. Schiller stood especially close to Fichte
in his life of thought when in his Letters
Concerning the Aesthetic Education of Man he sought for a
prospect that lets man behold in himself the
“higher,” the “true man.” If one enters
into the soul mood that holds sway in these aesthetic letters
of Schiller's, one will be able to find in them a high point of
German perceptive feeling. Schiller is of the opinion that man
can become unfree toward two sides in his life. He is unfree
when he faces the world in such a way that he lets the things
affect him only through the necessity of the senses; then the
sense world governs him, and his spirituality subordinates
itself to it. But also when man obeys only the necessity
holding sway in his Reason he is unfree. Reason has its own
demands, and if he submits to these demands, man cannot
experience the free holding sway of his will in the rigid
necessity of reason. Through the reason-necessity, he does live
on a spiritual level, but the spirituality subjugates the
sense life. Man becomes free when he can experience in such a
way what affects the senses that in the sense-perceptible
something spiritual manifests, and when he experiences the
spiritual itself in such a way that it can be pleasing to him
like what affects the senses. That is the case when man stands
before the work of art, when the sense impression becomes
spiritual pleasure, when what is experienced spiritually,
transfiguring the sense impression, is felt. On this
path, man becomes “completely man.” Many prospects
that result from this way of mind shall be disregarded here.
Only one thing that is striven for with this Schiller view
shall be pointed out. One of the paths is sought on which man,
through his relationship to the world, finds in himself the
“higher man.” This path is sought out of the
contemplation of the human entity. Just really place beside
this way of mind, which wants to speak humanly in man with man
himself, the other, which supposes that the Russian folk
quality is the one that in contrast to other folk qualities
must lead the world to true humanity.
Fichte seeks to characterize this way of mind inherent in the
essential being of the German attitude in his Speeches
to the German Nation with the words: “There are
peoples who, while themselves retaining their peculiarities and
wanting them honored, also let the other peoples have
theirs, and do not begrudge them, and grant them; without doubt
the Germans belong to these, and this trait is so deeply
founded in their entire past and present life in the world that
very often, in order to be just both towards the contemporary
world abroad and towards antiquity, they are unjust towards
themselves. Again there are other peoples whose narrowly
ingrown self never allows them the freeness of separating off
for a cool and calm contemplation of what is foreign, and who
are therefore compelled to believe there is only one way of
qualifying as an educated person, and that every time this way
is the one that some chance has cast precisely upon them
at this point in time; that all other people in the world have
no other calling than to become as they are, and that they
ought to pay them the greatest thanks if they are willing to
take upon themselves the pains of thus forming them. Between
peoples of the first kind, an interplay of mutual
formation and education most beneficial to the
development of man in general takes place, and an
interpenetration in which nevertheless each one, with the good
will of the other, remains himself. Peoples of the second kind
are able to educate nothing, for they are unable to take hold
of anything in its existent state; they only want to annihilate
everything that stands existent, and outside of them
selves everywhere produce an empty place, in which they can
only keep repeating their own shape; even their initial
apparent entry into foreign customs is only the good-natured
condescension of the educator toward the apprentice who is now
still feeble but gives good hope; even the figures of the
perfection of the ancient world they do not like, until they
have wrapped them in their garment, and if they could, they
would wake them up from the tombs to educate them after
their fashion.” That is how Fichte passes verdict
concerning some national peculiarities; only, after this
judgment there follows straightway a sentence in tended
to take away from this judgment any tinge of a national
arrogance of his own: “To be sure, far be the audacity
from me to accuse any existent nation as a whole and without
exception of that narrow-mindedness. Let us rather assume that
here too those who do not express themselves are the better
ones.”
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