THE loneliness I then experienced in respect to that which I bore in
silence within me as my world-conception, while my thoughts were
linked to Goethe on one side and to Nietzsche on the other this
loneliness was my experience also in relation to many other
personalities with whom I felt myself united by bonds of friendship
but who none the less energetically opposed my spiritual life.
The friend whom I had gained in early years but whose ideas and my own
had become mutually so divergent that I had to say to him: Were
that true which you think concerning the essential reality of life,
then I had rather be the block of wood under my feet than a man
this friend still continued bound to me in love and loyalty. His
welcome letters from Vienna always carried me back to the place which
was so dear to me, especially because of the human relationships in
which I was there privileged to live.
But if this friend undertook in his letters to speak about my
spiritual life, a gulf then opened between us. He often wrote me that
I was alienating myself from what is primal in human nature, that I
was rationalizing the impulses of my soul. He had the
feeling that in me the life of feeling was changed into a life of mere
thought, and this he sensed as a certain coldness proceeding from me.
Nothing which I could bring to bear against this view of his could do
any good. I could not avoid seeing that the warmth of his friendship
gradually diminished because he could not free himself of the belief
that I must grow cold as to what was human since I passed my soul-life
in the region of thought.
That, instead of being chilled in this life of thought, I had to take
with me into this life my full humanity in order by this means to lay
hold upon reality in the spiritual sphere this he would never grasp.
He failed to see that the purely human persists, even when it is
raised to the realm of the spirit; nor could he see how it is possible
to live in the sphere of thought; it was his opinion that one can
there merely think and must lose oneself in the cold region of
abstractions.
Thus he made me out a rationalist. In this view of his I
felt there was the grossest misunderstanding of what was reached by my
spiritual paths. All thinking which turns away from reality and spends
itself in the abstract for this I felt the innermost antipathy. I was
in a condition of mind in which I would develop thought drawn from the
sense world only to that stage at which thought tends to veer off into
the abstract; at that point, I said to myself, it ought to lay hold
upon the spirit. My friend saw that I moved in thought out of the
physical world; but he failed to realize that in that very moment I
stepped over into the spiritual. Therefore, when I spoke of the really
spiritual, this was to him quite non-existent, and he received from my
words merely a web of abstract thoughts.
I was deeply grieved by the fact that, when I was really uttering that
which had for me the profoundest import, yet to my friend I was
talking of a nothing. Such was my relationship to many
persons.
What so entered into my life I had to perceive also in my conception
of the understanding of nature. I could recognize as right only that
method of nature-research in which one applies one's thought to the
task of looking through the objective relationships of
sense-phenomena; but I could not admit that one should by means of
thought elaborate concerning the region of sense-perception hypotheses
which then are to be referred to a supersensible reality but which, in
fact, constitute a mere web of abstract thoughts. At that moment in
which thought has completed its work in fixing that which is rendered
clear by the sense-phenomena themselves, when rightly viewed, I did
not desire to begin with the framing of hypotheses, but in perception,
in the experiencing of the spiritual which in reality lives, not
behind the sense world, but within it.
What I then held firmly as my own view in the middle of the 'nineties
I later set down briefly as follows in an article I published in 1900
in No. 16 of the Magazin für Literatur: A scientific
analysis of our activity in cognition leads ... to the conviction that
the questions which we have to address to nature are a result of the
peculiar relationship in which we stand to the world. We are limited
individualities, and for this reason we can become aware of the world
only in fragments. Each piece, of and for itself, is a riddle; or,
otherwise expressed, it is a problem for our understanding. But the
more we come to know the details, the clearer does the world become to
us. One act of becoming aware makes clear the others. Questions which
the world puts to us and which cannot be answered with the means which
the world gives us these do not exist. For monism, therefore, there
are on general principles no limits to knowledge. At one time this or
that may not be clarified, because we are not yet in position, as to
either space or time, to find the things which are there concerned.
But what is not found to-day may be found to-morrow. Limits determined
in this manner are only accidental, such as will vanish with the
progress of experience and of thought. In such cases the formation of
hypotheses legitimately comes into play. Hypotheses should not be
formed in regard to anything which by its nature is inaccessible to
our understanding. The atomic hypothesis is utterly without foundation
when it is considered, not merely as an aid to abstract thought, but
as a declaration regarding real being beyond the reach of our
qualitative experience. A hypothesis must be merely an opinion
regarding a group of facts which, for accidental reasons, is
inaccessible to us but which belongs by nature to the world given to
us.
I stated this view regarding the forming of hypotheses because I
wished to show that limitations of knowledge were not
proven, and that the limitations of natural science were a necessity.
At that time I did this as to the understanding of nature only in a
side reference. But this way of forming thoughts had always laid down
the road for me to advance farther by means of the knowledge of spirit
beyond that point at which one dependent upon the knowledge of nature
reached the inevitable limitation. A contentment of soul
and profound inner satisfaction were mine at Weimar by reason of the
artistic element brought into the city by the art school and the
theatre, and the musical people associated with these.
In the teachers and students of painting in the art school there was
revealed what was then struggling out of the ancient traditions toward
a new and direct perception and reflection of nature and life. A good
many among these painters might properly have been considered
seekers. How that which the painter had as colour on his
palette or in his colour-pot could be applied to the surface in such a
way that what the artist created should bear a right relationship to
Nature as she lives and becomes visible to man's eyes in creating
this was the question which was constantly heard in the most varied
forms, in a manner stimulating, often pleasantly fanciful, and from
the artistic experience of which there originated the numerous
paintings that were displayed by Weimar artists in the frequent art
exhibitions.
My artistic experience was not then so broad as my relation to
experiences in the realm of knowledge. Yet I sought in the stimulating
intercourse with the Weimar artists for a spiritual conception of the
artistic. To retrospective memory, that which I then experienced in my
own mind seems very chaotic when the modern painter who sensed the
mood of light and atmosphere and wished to give these back took up
arms against the ancients who knew from tradition how this
or that was handled. There was in many of them a spiritualized
striving derived from the most primitive forces of the soul to be
true in the reproduction of nature.
Not thus chaotic, however, but in most significant forms appeared to
my mind the life of a young painter whose artistic way of revealing
himself harmonized with my own evolution in the direction of artistic
fantasy. This artist, then in the bloom of youth, was for some time in
the closest intimacy with me. Him also life has borne far away from
me; but I have often recalled in memory the hours we spent together.
The soul-life of this young man was all light and colour.
What others expressed in ideas he uttered by means of colours in
light. Indeed, his understanding worked in such a way that he
combined things and events of life as one combines colours, not as
mere thoughts combine which the ordinary man shapes from the world.
This young artist was once at a wedding festival to which I also had
been invited. The usual festival speeches were being made. The pastor
took as content of his talk the meaning of the words bride and groom.
I endeavoured to discharge the duty of speaking which rested upon me
because I was a frequent visitor at the friendly home from which the
bride came by talking of the delightful experiences which the guests
were permitted to enjoy at that home. I spoke because I was expected
to speak. And I was expected to make the sort of speech
belonging to a wedding feast. So I took little pleasure in
the role I had to play. After me arose the young painter,
who also had long been a friend of the family. From him no one
expected anything; for everybody knew that such ideas as are embodied
in toasts simply did not belong to him. He began somewhat as follows:
Over the glimmering red crest of the hill the glance of the sun
poured lovingly. Clouds breathing above the hill and in the gleam of
the sun; glowing red slopes facing the sunlight, blending into
triumphal arches of spiritual colours giving a pathway to earth for
the downward striving light. Flower surfaces far and wide; above these
the air, gleaming yellow, slips into the flowers awakening the life in
them ... He spoke in this way for a long while. He had suddenly
forgotten all the wedding merriment about him and begun in the
spirit to paint. I do not know why he ceased thus to speak in
painter fashion; I suppose his coat-tail was pulled by someone who was
very fond of him, but who also wished equally that the guests should
come to a peaceful enjoyment of the wedding roast meat.
The young painter's name was Otto Fröhlich. He often sat with me in my
room, and we took walks and excursions together. While Otto Fröhlich
was with me, he was always painting in the spirit. In his
company one could forget that the world has any other content than
light and colour. Such was my feeling about this young friend. I know
that whatever I had to say to him I placed before his mind clothed in
colours in order to make myself intelligible to him. And the young
painter really succeeded in so guiding his brush and so laying on the
colours that his pictures were in a high degree a reflection of his
own luxuriant, living colour fantasies. When he painted the trunk of a
tree, there appeared on the canvas, not the delineated shapes of a
picture, but rather that which light and colour reveal from within
themselves when the tree-trunk gives them the opportunity to manifest
their life.
In my own way I was seeking for the spiritual substance of colour in
light. In him I was forced to see the secret of the being of colour.
In Otto Fröhlich there stood beside me a man who individually bore
instinctively within him as his experience that which I was seeking
for the taking up of the colour-world through the human soul.
It gave me pleasure to be able through this very search of mine to
give the young friend many a stimulus. The following was an instance.
I myself experienced in a high degree the intensive colours which
Nietzsche describes in the Zarathustra chapter on the
most hateful man. This Valley of Death, described
like a painting by Nietzsche, held for me much of the secret of the
life of colour.
I gave Otto Fröhlich the advice to paint poetically the picture done
by Nietzsche in word colours of Zarathustra and the most hateful man.
He did this. And now something really remarkable came to pass. The
colours concentrated themselves, glowing and very expressive, in the
figure of Zarathustra. But this figure as such did not come out fully,
since in Fröhlich the colours themselves could not yet unfold
themselves to the extent of creating Zarathustra. But so much the more
living did the colour variations boil up into the green
snakes in the valley of the most hateful man. In this part of
the picture all of Fröhlich lived. But now the most hateful
man There it would have required the line, the characteristic of
painting. This Fröhlich refused. He did not yet know how there
actually lives in colour the secret of causing the spiritual to take
on form through the very handling of the colour itself. So the
most hateful man became a reproduction of the model called by
the Weimar painters Füllsack. I do not know whether this
was really the name of the man always used by the painters when they
wished to deal with the characteristically hateful; but I know that
Füllsack's hatefulness was no longer merely conventional,
but had something of genius in it. But to place him thus unchanged as
a copy in the picture where Zarathustra's soul revealed itself shining
in countenance and in apparel, when the light conjures forth true
colour-being out of its intercourse with the green snakes this
ruined the painting of Fröhlich. Thus the picture failed to become
what I had hoped might come to pass through Otto Fröhlich.
Although I could not but realize the sociability in my nature, yet at
Weimar I never felt in overwhelming measure the impulse to betake
myself where the artists, and all who felt socially bound up with
them, spent the evenings.
This was in a romantic Artists' Club remodeled out of an
old smithy opposite the theatre. There, united together in a
dim-coloured light, sat the teachers and students of the Academy of
Painting; there sat actors and musicians. Whoever sought for
sociability must feel himself impelled to go to this place in the
evenings. And I did not feel so impelled just for the reason that I
did not seek companionship, but thankfully accepted it when
circumstances brought it to me.
In this way I became acquainted with individual artists in other
social groups, but did not come to know the artistic world.
To know certain artists at Weimar in those days was of vital value.
For the tradition of the Court and the extraordinarily sympathetic
personality of the Grand-duke Carl Alexander gave to the city an
artistic standing which drew to Weimar, in one relation or another,
everything artistic which was active in that period.
There, first of all, was the theatre with the good old
traditions disinclined in its leading representatives to allow a
naturalistic flavour to come into evidence. And where the modern would
fain show itself and expunge many a pedantry, which nevertheless was
always associated with good traditions, there modernity was kept far
away from that which Brahm propagated on the stage and Paul Schlenther
through the press as the modern conception. Among these
Weimar moderns the chief of all was that wholly artistic
noble fire-spirit, Paul Wiecke. To see such men take in Weimar the
first steps of their artistic career gave one an ineradicable
impression, and was a comprehensive school of life. Paul Wiecke used
the basement of a theatre which, because of its traditions, annoyed
the elemental artist. Very stimulating hours have I spent at the home
of Paul Wiecke. He was on terms of intimate friendship with my friend
Julius Wahle, and because of this I came very close to him. It was
often delightful to hear Wiecke grumbling over almost everything that
he must endure when he had to do the dress rehearsals for a new
performance. Then, with this in mind, to see him play the role that he
had so abused, and which nevertheless, through his noble endeavour
after style and through his beautiful spiritualizing fire, afforded
one a rare enjoyment.
Richard Strauss was then making his beginning in Weimar. He was second
director along with Lassen. The first compositions of Richard Strauss
were performed in Weimar. The musical craving of this personality
revealed itself as a piece of the very spiritual life of Weimar. Such
a joyful unreserved acceptance of something which in the act of its
acceptance became an exciting problem of art was then possible at
Weimar alone. Round about one the peace of the traditional a highly
prized and worthy mood; now enters amid this Richard Strauss with his
Zarathustra Symphony or even his music for the buffoon.
Everything wakes up in tradition, reverence, worth; but it wakes up in
such a way that the assent is lovable, the dissent harmless and the
artist can find in the most beautiful way the reaction to his own
creation.
How many hours long we sat at the first performance of Richard
Strauss's music drama Guntram, in which the lovable and humanly
so distinguished Heinrich Zeller played the leading rôle and almost
sang himself out of voice!
Indeed, this profoundly sympathetic man, Heinrich Zeller even he had
to leave Weimar in order to become what he did become. He had the most
beautiful elemental gift of song. He needed for his unfolding an
environment which, with the utmost patience, permitted that such a
gift should in developing itself experiment over and over again. And
so the evolution of Heinrich Zeller is to be numbered among the most
human and beautiful things which one could ever experience. Besides,
Zeller was such a lovable personality that one must count the hours
one could spend with him among the most stimulating possible. And thus
it came about that, although I did not often think of going in the
evening to the Artists' Club, yet, if Heinrich Zeller met me and said
I must go with him, I always yielded gladly to this demand.
The state of things at Weimar had also its dark side. That which is
traditional and peace-loving often held the artist back as if in a
sort of seclusion. Heinrich Zeller became very little known to the
world outside of Weimar. What was at first suited to enable him to
spread his wings later crippled these wings. And so it was always with
my dear friend Otto Fröhlich. He needed, like Zeller, the artistic
soil of Weimar, but the dim spiritual atmosphere absorbed him too much
in its artistic comfort.
And one felt this artistic comfort in the pressure of
Ibsen's spirit and that of other moderns. There one shared with
everything the battle waged by the dramatist, for example, in order
to find the style for a Nora. Such a seeking as one could there
observe occurs only where, through the propagation of the old stage
traditions, one meets with difficulties in the effort to represent
what comes from poets who have begun, not like Schiller with the
stage, but like Ibsen with life.
But one also shares in this reflection of this modernism out of the
artistic comfort of the theatrical public. One ought to
find a middle way between the two circumstances: first, that one is a
dweller in classical Weimar, and, on the other hand, that
what has made Weimar great has been its constant understanding for the
new.
It is with great happiness that I remember the productions of Wagner's
music dramas at which I was present in Weimar. The Director von
Bronsart developed a specially understanding devotion to this type of
theatrical productions.
Heinrich Zeller's voice then reached its most exquisite value. A
remarkable gift as a singer belonged to Frau Agnes Stavenhagen, wife
of the pianist Bernhard Stavenhagen, who was also for a long time
director at the theatre. Frequent music festivals brought the
representative artists of the time and their works to Weimar. One saw
there, for example, Mahler as director at a music festival when he was
just getting his start. Ineradicable was the impression of the way in
which he used the baton not aiding music in the flood of forms, but as
the experience of a supersensible hidden something visibly pointing
amid the forms.
What came before my mind from these Weimar events seemingly quite
unrelated to me is really deeply united with my life. For these were
excitations and states which I experienced as pertaining in the
deepest manner to me. Often afterwards, when I have encountered a
person, or the work of a person, with whom I have shared experiences
at his beginning at Weimar, I have recalled with gratitude this Weimar
period through which so much became intelligible because so much had
gathered from elsewhere there to pass through its germinal stage. Thus
I then experienced in Weimar the artistic strivings in such a way that
in regard to most of these I had my own opinion, often very little in
harmony with those of other persons. But at the same time I was just
as intensely interested in everything which others felt as in my own
feelings. Here also there came to pass within me a twofold mental
life.
This was a genuine discipline of the mind, brought to me by life
itself in the course of destiny, in order that I might find my way out
from the either or of abstract intellectual judgment. This
sort of judgment erects barriers separating the mind from the
spiritual world. In this there are not beings and occurrences which
admit of such an either or judgment. In the presence of
the supersensible one must become many-sided. One must not merely
learn theoretically, but must take everything to dwell in the
innermost emotions of the soul's life, in order to view everything
from the most manifold points of view. Such standpoints as
materialism, realism, idealism, spiritualism, as these have been
elaborated in the physical world by personalities with abstract ways
of thinking into comprehensive theories in order that they may signify
something for things in themselves, these lose all interest for one
who knows the supersensible. He knows, for example, that materialism
cannot be anything else but the view of the world from that point from
which it reveals itself in material phenomena.
It is a practical training in this direction when one finds oneself in
the midst of an existence which brings the life whose waves beat
outside of one's own so inward as to become as close as one's own
judgments and feelings. But for me this was true of much in Weimar. It
seems to me that at the close of the century this ceased to be true
there. Until then the spirit of Goethe and of Schiller still rested
upon everything. And the lovable old Grand-duke, who moved about with
such distinction in Weimar and its vicinity, had as a boy seen Goethe.
He truly felt very strongly his Your Highness, but he
always showed that he felt himself a second time ennobled through the
work that Goethe did for Weimar.
It was the spirit of Goethe which worked so powerfully from all
directions at Weimar that to me a certain side of the experience of
what was happening there became the practical mental discipline in the
right conception of the supersensible worlds.
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