I WROTE down the ideas of the Theory of Cognition in Goethe's
World-Conception at a time when Fate had led me into a family
which made possible for me many happy hours within its circle, and a
fortunate chapter of my life. Among my friends there had for a long
time been one whom I had come to hold very dear because of his gay and
sunny disposition, his accurate observations upon life and men, and
his whole manner, so open and loyal. He introduced me and other mutual
friends into his home. There we met, in addition to this friend, two
daughters of the family, his sisters, and a man whom we soon had to
recognize as the fiancé of the elder daughter. In the background of
this family there hovered something we were never able to see. This
was the father of the brother and sisters. He was there, and yet not
there. We learned from the most various sources something about the
man who was to us unknown. According to what we were told, he must
have been somewhat unusual. At first the brother and sisters never
spoke of their father, even though he must have been in the next room.
Then they began, at first very gradually, to make one or another
remark about him. Every word showed a feeling of genuine reverence.
One felt that in this man they honoured a very important person. But
one also felt that they dreaded lest by chance we should happen to see
him.
Our conversations in the family circle were generally of a literary
character, and, in order to refer to this thing or that, many a book
would be brought by the brother or sisters from the father's library.
And the circumstances brought it about that I became acquainted,
little by little, with much which the man in the next room read,
although I never had an opportunity to see him.
At last I could no longer do otherwise than inquire about much that
concerned the unknown man. And thus, from the talk of the brother and
sisters which held back much, and yet revealed much there
gradually arose in my mind an image of a noteworthy personality. I
loved the man, who to me also seemed an important person. I came
finally to reverence in him a man whom the hard experiences of life
had brought to the pass of dealing thenceforward only with the world
within himself, and of foregoing all human intercourse.
One day we visitors were told that the man was ill, and soon afterward
the news of his death had to be conveyed to us. The brother and
sisters entrusted to me the funeral address. I said what my heart
impelled me to say regarding the personality whom I had come to know
only through descriptions. It was a funeral at which only the family,
the fiancé of one daughter, and my friends were present. The brother
and sisters said to me that I had given a true picture of their father
in my funeral address. And from the way they spoke, and from their
tears, I could not but feel that this was their real conviction.
Moreover, I knew that the man stood as near me in the spirit as if I
had had much intercourse with him.
Between the younger daughter and me there gradually came about a
beautiful friendship. She really had in her something of the primal
type of the German maiden. She bore in her soul nothing acquired from
her education, but expressed in her life an original and charming
naturalness together with a noble reserve, and this reserve of hers
caused a like reserve in me. We loved each other, and both of us were
fully aware of this; but neither of us could overcome the fear of
saying that we loved each other. Thus the love lived between the words
we spoke to each other, and not in the words themselves. I felt the
relationship as to our souls was of the most universal kind; but it
found no possibility of taking a single step beyond what is of the
soul.
I was happy in this friendship; I felt my girl friend like something
of the sun in my life. Yet this life later bore us far apart. In place
of hours of happy companionship there then remained only a short-lived
correspondence, followed by the melancholy memory of a beautiful
period of my past life a memory, however, which has through all my
later life arisen again and again from the depths of my soul.
It was at that same time that I once went to Schröer. He was
altogether filled with an impression which he had just received. He
had become acquainted with the poems of Marie Eugenie delle Grazie.
Before him there lay a little volume of her poems, an epic
Herman, a drama Saul, and a story
Die Zigeunerin(1).
Schröer spoke enthusiastically of these poetical
writings. And all these have been written by a young person
before completing her sixteenth year! he said. Then he added
that Robert Zimmermann had said that she was the only genius he had
known in his life.
Schröer's enthusiasm now led me also to read the productions one after
another. I wrote an article about the poet. This brought me the great
pleasure of being permitted to call upon her. During this call I had
the opportunity of a conversation with the poet which has often come
to mind during my life. She had already begun to work upon an
undertaking in the grand style, her epic Robespierre. She
discussed the basic ideas of this composition. Already there was
present in her conversation an undertone of pessimism. I felt in
regard to her as if she meant to represent in such a personality as
Robespierre the tragedy in all idealism. Ideals arise in the human
heart, but they have no power over the horrible destructive action of
nature, empty of all ideals, who utters against all ideals her
pitiless cry: Thou art mere illusion, a fantasm of my own, which
I again and again hurl back into nothingness.
This was her conviction. The poet then spoke to me of a further poetic
plan, a Satanid. She would represent the antitype of God as the
Primal Being which is the Power revealing itself to man in terrible,
ruinous nature, empty of the ideal. She spoke with genuine inspiration
of the Power from the abyss of being, dominant over all being. I went
away from the poet profoundly shocked. The greatness with which she
had spoken remained impressed upon me; the content of her ideas was
the opposite of everything which stood before my mind as a view of the
world. But I was never inclined to withhold my interest or my
admiration from that which seemed to me great, even when it repelled
me utterly by its content. Indeed, I said to myself, such opposites in
the world must somewhere find their reconciliation. And this enabled
me to follow what repelled me just as if it lay in the same direction
as the conception held by my own mind.
Shortly after this I was invited again to the home of delle Grazie.
She was to read her Robespierre before a number of persons,
among whom were Schröer and his wife and also a woman friend of his
family. We listened to scenes of lofty poetic rhythm, but with a
pessimistic undertone of a richly coloured naturalism: life painted in
its most terrible aspects. Great human beings, inwardly deceived by
Fate, rose to the surface, or sank below in the grip of tragedy. This
was my impression. Schröer became indignant. For him art ought not to
plunge beneath such abysses of the terrible. The women
withdrew. They had experienced a sort of convulsion. I could not agree
with Schröer, for he seemed to me to be wholly filled with the feeling
that poetry can never be made out of what is terrible in the
experience of the human soul, even though this terrible experience is
nobly endured. Delle Grazie soon after published a poem in which
Nature is celebrated as the highest Power, but in such a way that she
mocks at all ideals, which she calls into existence only in order to
delude man, and which she hurls back into nothingness when this
delusion has been accomplished.
In relation to this composition I wrote a paper entitled
Die Natur und unsere Ideale(2),
which I did not publish but had
privately printed in a small number of copies. In this I discussed the
apparent correctness of delle Grazie's view. I said that a view which
does not shut out the hostility manifested by nature against human
ideals is of a higher order than a superficial optimism
which blinds itself to the abysses of existence. But I also said in
regard to this matter that the free inner being of man creates for
itself that which gives meaning and content to life, and that this
being could not fully unfold itself if a prodigal nature bestowed upon
it from without that which ought to arise within.
Because of this paper I had a painful experience. When Schröer had
received it, he wrote me that, if I thought in such a way about
pessimism, we had never understood one another, and that anyone who
spoke in such a way about nature as I had done in the paper showed
thereby that he could not have taken in a sufficiently profound sense
Goethe's words: Know thyself, and live at peace with the
world.
I was cut to the heart when I received these lines from the person to
whom I felt the most devoted attachment. Schröer could be passionately
aroused when he became aware of a sin against the harmony manifesting
itself in art in the form of beauty. He turned against delle Grazie
when he was forced to observe this sin against his conception. And he
considered the admiration which I felt for the poet as a falling away
both from him and also from Goethe. He failed to see in my paper what
I said regarding the human spirit overcoming from within itself the
obstacles of nature; he was offended because I said that external
nature could not be the creator of true inner satisfaction for man. I
wished to set forth the meaninglessness of pessimism in spite of its
correctness within certain limits; Schröer saw in every concession to
pessimism something which he called the slag from burned-out
spirits.
In the home of Marie Eugenie delle Grazie I passed some of the happy
hours of my life. Saturday evening she always received visitors. Those
who came were persons of divers spiritual tendencies. The poet formed
the centre of the group. She read aloud from her poems; she spoke in
the spirit of her world-conception in very positive language. She cast
the light of these ideas upon human life. It was by no means the light
of the sun. Always in truth only the pale light of the
moon-threatening, overcast skies. But from human dwellings there arose
flames of fire into the dusky air as if carrying the sorrows and
illusions in which men are consumed. All this, nevertheless, humanly
gripping, always fascinating, the bitterness enveloped in the magic
power of a wholly spiritualized personality.
At delle Grazie's side was Laurenz Müllner, a Catholic priest, teacher
of the poet, and later her discreet and noble friend. He was at that
time professor of Christian philosophy in the theological faculty of
the University. The impression he made, not only by his face but in
his whole figure, was that of one whose development had been mental
and ascetic. A sceptic in philosophy, thoroughly grounded in all
aspects of philosophy, in conceptions of art and literature. He wrote
for the Catholic clerical journal, Vaterland, stimulating
articles upon artistic and literary subjects. The poet's pessimistic
view of the world and of life fell always from his lips also.
Both united in a positive antipathy to Goethe; on the other hand,
their interest was directed to Shakespeare and the later poets,
children of the sorrowful burden of life, and of the naturalistic
confusions of human nature. Dostoievsky they loved warmly; Leopold von
Sacher-Masoch they looked upon as a brilliant writer who shrank back
from no truth in order to represent that which is growing up in the
morass of modern life as all too human and worthy of destruction. In
Laurenz Müllner the antipathy to Goethe took on something of the
colour of Catholic theology. He praised Baumgarten's monograph, which
characterized Goethe as the antithesis of that which is deserving of
human endeavour. In delle Grazie there was something like a profound
personal antipathy to Goethe.
About the two were gathered professors of the theological faculty,
Catholic priests of the very finest scholarship. First among them all
was the priest of the Cistercian Order of the Holy Cross, Wilhelm
Neumann. Müllner justly esteemed him because of his comprehensive
scholarship. He said to me once, when in the absence of Neumann I was
speaking with enthusiastic admiration of his broad and comprehensive
scholarship: Yes, indeed, Professor Neumann knows the whole
world and three villages besides. I liked to accompany the
learned man when we went away from delle Grazie's at the same time. I
had many a conversation with this ideal of a scientific
man who was at the same time a true son of his Church. I
would here mention only two of these. One was in regard to the person
of Christ. I expressed my view to the effect that Jesus of Nazareth,
by reason of supramundane influence, had received the Christ into
himself, and that Christ as a spiritual Being has lived in human
evolution since the Mystery of Golgotha. This conversation remained
deeply imprinted in my mind; ever and again it has arisen in memory.
For it was profoundly significant for me. There were really three
persons engaged in that discussion: Professor Neumann and I, and a
third, unseen person, the personification of Catholic dogmatic
theology, visible to spiritual perception as he walked behind the
professor, always beckoning with his finger threateningly, and always
tapping Professor Neumann on the shoulder as a reminder whenever the
subtle logic of the scholar led him too far in agreement with me. It
was noteworthy how often the first clause of the latter's sentences
would be reversed in the second clause. There I was face to face with
the Catholic way of life in one of its best representatives. It was
through him that I learned to esteem it, but also to know it through
and through.
Another time we discussed the question of repeated earth lives. The
professor then listened to me, spoke of all sorts of literature in
which something on this subject could be found; he often nodded his
head lightly, but had no inclination to enter into the merits of a
question which seemed to him very fanciful. So this conversation also
became of great import to me. The uncomfortableness with which Neumann
felt the answers he did not utter in response to my statements was
deeply impressed upon my memory.
Besides these, the Saturday evening callers were the historian of the
Church and other theologians, and in addition I met now and then the
philosopher Adolf Stöhr, Goswine von Berlepsch, the emotionally moving
story-teller Emilie Mataja (who bore the pen-name of Emil Marriot, the
poet and writer Fritz Lemmermayer, and the composer Stross. Fritz
Lemmermayer, with whom I was later on terms of intimate friendship, I
came to know at one of delle Grazie's afternoons. A highly noteworthy
man. Whatever interested him he expressed with inwardly measured
dignity. In his outward appearance he resembled equally the musician
Rubinstein and the actor Lewinsky. With Hebbel he developed almost a
cult. He had definite views on art and life born out of the sagacious
understanding of the heart, and these were unusually fixed. He had
written the interesting and profound romance,
Der Alchemist(3),
and much besides that was characterized by beauty and
depth. He knew how to consider the least things in life from the
view-point of the most vital. I recall how I once saw him in his
charming little room in a side-street in Vienna together with other
friends. He had planned his meal: two soft-boiled eggs, to be cooked
in an instantaneous boiler, together with bread. He remarked with much
emphasis while the water was heating to boil the eggs for us:
This will be delicious! In a later phase of my life I
shall again have occasion to speak of him.
Alfred Stross, the composer, was a gifted man, but one tinged with a
profound pessimism. When he took his seat at the piano in delle
Grazie's home and played his études, one had the feeling: Anton
Bruckner's music reduced to airy tones which would fain flee this
earthly existence. Stross was little understood; Fritz Lemmermayer was
inexpressibly devoted to him.
Both Lemmermayer and Stross were intimate friends of Robert Hamerling.
Through them I was led later into a brief correspondence with
Hamerling, to which I shall refer again. Stross finally died of a
serious illness in spiritual darkness.
The sculptor Hans Brandstadter I also met at delle Grazie's. Even
though unseen, there hovered over all this group of friends, through
frequent wonderful descriptions of him almost like hymns of praise,
the historian of theology Werner. Delle Grazie loved him more than
anyone else. Never once did he appear on a Saturday evening when I was
able to be present. But his admirer showed us the picture of the
biographer of Thomas Aquinas from ever new angles, the picture of the
good, lovable scholar who remained naïve even to extreme old age. One
imagined a man so selfless, so absorbed in the matter about which he
spoke as a historian, so exact, that one said, If only there
were many such historians!
A veritable fascination ruled over these Saturday evening gatherings.
After it had grown dark, a lamp was lighted under a shade of some red
fabric, and we sat in a circular space of light which made the whole
company festive. Then delle Grazie would frequently become
extraordinarily talkative especially when those living at a distance
had gone and one was permitted to hear many a word that sounded like
sighs from the depths in the after-pangs of grievous days of fate. But
one listened also to genuine humour over the personalities of life,
and tones of indignation over the corruption in the press and
elsewhere. Between-whiles there were the sarcastic, often caustic,
remarks of Müllner on all sorts of philosophical, artistic, and other
themes. Delle Grazie's house was a place in which pessimism revealed
itself in direct and vital force, a place of anti-Goetheanism.
Everyone listened whenever I spoke of Goethe; but Laurenz Müllner held
the opinion that I ascribed to Goethe things which really had little
to do with the actual minister of the Grand-duke Karl August.
Nevertheless for me every visit at this house and I knew that I was
welcomed there was something for which I am inexpressibly grateful;
I felt that I was in a spiritual atmosphere which was of genuine
benefit to me. For this purpose I did not require agreement in ideas;
I required earnest and striving humanity susceptible to the spiritual.
I was now between this house, which I frequented with much pleasure,
and my teacher and fatherly friend Karl Julius Schröer, who, after the
first visit, never again appeared at delle Grazie's. My emotional
life, drawn in both directions by sincere love and esteem, was
actually torn in two. But it was just at this time that those thoughts
first came to maturity in me which later formed the volume
Die Philosophie der Freiheit(4).
In the unpublished paper
about delle Grazie mentioned above, Nature and Our Ideals,
there lie the germs of the later book in the following sentences:
Our ideals are no longer so superficial as to be satisfied with
a reality often so flat and so empty. Yet I cannot believe that there
is no means whereby to rise above the profound pessimism which comes
from this knowledge. This elevation comes to me when I look into our
inner world, when I enter more intimately into the nature of our ideal
world. This is a self-contained world, complete in itself, which can
neither win anything nor lose anything by reason of the transitoriness
of the external. Do not our ideals, if these are really living
individualities, possess an existence for themselves independently of
the kindness or unkindness of nature? Even though the lovely rose may
for ever be shattered by the pitiless gusts of the wind, it has
fulfilled its mission, for it has rejoiced hundreds of human eyes; if
to-morrow it should please murderous nature to destroy the whole
starry sky, yet for thousands of years men have gazed up reverently
toward it, and this is enough. Not the existence in time, no, but the
inner being of things, constitutes their completion. The ideals of our
spirits are a world for themselves, which must also live for
themselves, and which can gain nothing from the co-operation of a good
nature. What a pitiable creature man would be if he could not gain
satisfaction within his own ideal world, but must first to this end
have the co-operation of nature! What divine freedom remains to us if
nature guides and guards us like helpless children tied to leading
strings? No, she must deny us everything, in order that, when
happiness comes to us, this shall all be the result of our free
selves. Let nature destroy every day what we shape in order that we
may every day experience anew the joy of creation! We would fain owe
nothing to nature; everything to ourselves.
This freedom, one may say, is only a dream! While we think that
we are free, we obey the iron necessity of nature. The loftiest
thoughts that we conceive are merely the fruit of the blind power of
nature within us. But we surely should finally admit that a being who
knows himself cannot be unfree! ... We see the web of law ruling over
things, and this it is which constitutes necessity. In our knowledge
we possess the power to separate the natural laws from things; and
must we ourselves be nevertheless without a will, slaves to these same
laws?
These thoughts I did not evolve out of a spirit of controversy; but I
was forced to set forth what my perception of the spiritual world said
to me in opposition to a view of life which I had to consider as being
at the opposite pole from my own, but which I none the less profoundly
reverenced because it was revealed to me from the depths of true and
earnest souls.
At the very time during which I enjoyed such stimulating experiences
at the home of delle Grazie, I had the privilege of entering also a
circle of the younger Austrian poets. Every week we had a free
expression and mutual sharing together of whatever one or the other
had produced. The most varied characters met in this gathering. Every
view of life and every temperament was represented, from the
optimistic, naïve painter of life to the leaden-weighted pessimist.
Fritz Lemmermayer was the soul of the group. There was present
something of the storm which the Hart brothers, Karl Henckel, and
others had loosed in the German Empire against the old in
the spiritual life of the time. But all this was tinged with Austrian
amiability. Much was said about how the time had come in
which new tones must sound forth in all spheres of life; but this was
done with that disapproval of radicalism which is characteristic of
the Austrian.
One of the youngest of this circle was Joseph Kitir. He devoted his
effort to a form of lyric to which he had been inspired by Martin
Greif. He did not wish to bring subjective feelings to expression; he
wished to set forth an event or situation objectively, and yet as if
this had been observed, not with the senses, but with the feelings. He
did not wish to say that he was enchanted; but rather he would paint
the enchanting event, and its enchantment should act upon hearer or
reader without the poet's statement. Kitir did really beautiful things
in this way. His soul was naïve. A little while after this he bound
himself more closely to me. In this circle I now heard an
Austro-German poet spoken of with great enthusiasm, and I afterward
became familiar with some of his poems. These made a deep impression
upon me. I endeavoured to meet the poet. I asked Fritz Lemmermayer,
who knew him well, and also some others whether the poet could not be
invited to our gatherings.
But I was told that he could not be dragged there with a four-horse
team. He was a recluse, they said, and would not mingle with people.
But I was deeply desirous of knowing him. Then one evening the whole
company went out and roamed over to the place where the knowing
ones could find him. It was a little wine-shop in a street
parallel to Kärtnerstrasse. There he sat in one corner, his glass of
red wine not a small one before him. He sat as if he had sat there
for an indefinitely long time, and would continue to sit indefinitely
long. Already a rather old gentleman, but with shining, youthful eyes,
and a countenance which showed the poet and idealist in the most
delicate and most speaking lines. At first he did not see us enter.
For it was clear that in the nobly shaped head a poem was taking form.
Fritz Lemmermayer had first to take him by the arm; then he turned his
face in our direction and looked at us. We had disturbed him. His
perplexed glance could not conceal this; but he showed it in the most
amiable fashion. We took our places around him. There was not space
enough for so many to sit in the cramped little room. It was now
remarkable how the man who had been described as a recluse
showed himself in a very short while as enthusiastically talkative. We
all had the feeling that with what our minds were then exchanging in
conversation we could not remain in the dull closeness of that room.
And there was now not much difficulty in bringing the
recluse with us to another Lokal. Except for him
and one other acquaintance of his who had for a long time mingled with
our circle, we were all young; yet it soon became evident that we had
never been so young as on this evening when the old gentleman was with
us, for he was really the youngest of us all.
I was completely captivated by the charm of this personality. It was
at once clear to me that this man must have produced much that was
more significant than what he had published, and I pressed him with
questions regarding this. He answered almost timidly: Yes, I
have besides at home some cosmic things. I succeeded in
persuading him to promise that he would bring these the next evening
that we could see him.
It was thus that I became acquainted with Fercher von Steinwand. A
poet from the Karntnerland, pithy, full of ideas, idealistic in his
sentiments. He was the child of poor people, and had passed his youth
amid great hardships. The distinguished anatomist Hyrtl came to know
his worth, and made possible for him the sort of existence in which he
could live wholly in his poems, thoughts, and conceptions. For a
considerable time the world knew very little of him. After the
appearance of his first poem, Gräfin Seelenbrand, Robert
Hamerling brought him into full recognition.
After that night we never needed again to go for the
recluse. He appeared almost regularly on our evenings. I
was extremely glad when on one of these evenings he brought along one
of his cosmic things. It was the
Chor der Urtriebe(5)
and the
Chor der Urträume(6),
poems
in which feelings live in swinging rhythm which seem as if they
penetrated into the very creative forces of the world. There hover
ideas as if actual beings in splendid euphony, forming themselves into
pictures of the Powers which in the beginning created the world. I
consider the fact that I came to know Fercher von Steinwand as one of
the most important events of my youth; for his personality acted like
that of a sage who reveals his wisdom in genuine poetry.
I had struggled with the riddle of man's repeated earth lives. Many a
perception in this direction had come to me when I came close to men
who in the habit of their lives, in the impress of their personalities
revealed clearly the signs of a content within their beings which one
would not expect to find in what they had inherited through birth or
acquired afterward through experience. But in the play of countenance,
in every gesture of Fercher, I saw the essence of a soul which could
only have been formed in the time from the beginning of the Christian
evolution, while Greek paganism was still influencing this evolution.
One does not arrive at such a view when one thinks only of those
expressions of a personality which press immediately upon one's
attention; it is aroused in one rather by the intuitively perceived
marks of the individuality which seem to accompany such direct
expressions but which in reality deepen these expressions
immeasurably. Moreover, one does not attain to this view when one
seeks for it, but only when the strong impression remains active in
retrospect, and becomes like the memory of an experience in which that
which is essential in the external life falls away and the usually
unessential begins to speak a deeply significant language.
Whoever observes men in order to solve the riddle of their previous
earth-lives will certainly not reach his goal. Such observation one
must feel to be an offence which does injury to the one observed, for
one can hope for the present disclosure of the long past of a man only
through the dispensation of fate coming from the outer spiritual
world.
It was in the very time of my life which I am now describing that I
succeeded in attaining to these definite views of the repeated
earth-lives of man. Before this time I was not far from the
conceptions, but they had not yet come out of indeterminate lines to
sharply defined impressions. Theories, however, in regard to such
things as repeated earth-lives, I did not form in my own thoughts; I
took them into my understanding out of literature or other sources of
information as something illuminating, but I did not theorize about
them. And now, since I was conscious within myself of real perception
in this region, I was in a position to have the conversation mentioned
above with Professor Neumann. A man is not to be blamed if he becomes
convinced of the truth of repeated earth-lives and other insights
which can be attained only in supersensible ways; for a complete
conviction in this region is possible also to the sound and
unprejudiced human understanding, even though the man has not yet
attained to actual perception. Only the way of theorizing in this
region was not my own way.
During the time when concrete perceptions were more and more forming
within me in regard to repeated earth-lives, I became acquainted with
the theosophical movement, which had been initiated by H. P.
Blavatsky. Sinnett's Esoteric Buddhism came into my hands through a
friend to whom I had spoken in regard to these things. This book, the
first from the theosophical movement with which I became familiar,
made upon me no impression whatever. And I was glad that I had not
read this book before I had experienced perception out of the life of
my own soul. For the content of the book was repellent to me, and my
antipathy against this way of representing the supersensible might
well have prevented me from going farther at once upon the road which
had been pointed out to me.
- The Gipsy.
- Nature and Our Ideals.
- The Alchemist.
- The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
- The Chorus of Primal Instincts.
- The Chorus of Primal Dreams.
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