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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Theosophy and Tolstoy
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Theosophy and Tolstoy
Schmidt Number: S-0936
On-line since: 12th December, 2003
A lecture by
Rudolf Steiner
Berlin, November 3, 1904
GA 53
From shorthand notes of a lecture delivered 3rd
November, 1904.
It is the fifth lecture in the series entitled:
Origin and Destination of Humanity
In the collected edition of Rudolf Steiner's works, the volume
containing the German texts is entitled,
Ursprung und Ziel des Menschen. Grundbegriffe der Geisteswissenschaft
(Vol. 53 in the Bibliographic Survey, 1961).
This lecture is also known as:
Tolstoy and the Mission of the Slavic Peoples.
It was translated by Dorothy S. Osmond.
This e.Text edition is provided through the wonderful work of:
Various e.Text Transcribers
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Thanks to an anonymous donation, this lecture has been made available.
A Public Lecture given by Rudolf Steiner in Berlin, 3rd November,
1904.
Life and Form are the two principles that must guide us
through the labyrinth of the manifested world, in multitudinous forms,
life is forever changing, coming to expression in manifold variety.
Life could not manifest outwardly or present itself in the world if it
were not to appear in constantly new forms. The form is the revelation
of the life. But all life would vanish, would be lost in the rigidity
of form, were it not ever and again to become seed for the building of
new forms out of the old. The seed of the plant grows into the developed
form of the plant and this plant must again become seed and give a new
form existence. So it is in nature everywhere and so it is in the
spiritual life of man. In the spiritual life of man and of mankind the
forms also change; life maintains itself through forms of infinite
variety. But life would lose all power were the forms not perpetually
renewed, were not new life to spring forth as seed from old forms. Just
as the epochs change in the course of human history, so also do we see
life changing in infinitely diverse forms during these epochs. In the
lecture on Theosophy and Darwin** we heard of the diverse forms
In which the civilisations of mankind have come to expression. We heard
something of the forms that existed in the ancient Vedic civilisation
of India, changing perpetually through the ancient Persian, the
Chaldean-Babylonian-Assyrian-Egyptian, the Greco-Roman and finally
through the Christian civilisation until our own time. But the
significant point about spiritual development in our own time is that
a common life flows more and more into external forms, for this reason
it may be called the epoch of forms, the epoch when on every hand man
is taught to devote his life to form.
* German text in Nachrichtenblatt, Vol. 23 (1946) Nos. 20 - 22; also
in Gegenwart, Vol. XVIII, No. 2 (May, 1956)
** Berlin, 27th Oct., 1904. German text in Nachrichtenblatt, Vol. 23
(1946) Nos. 10 – 12, also in Gegenwart, Vol. XVIII, No. 1
(April, 1956)
Wherever we look we see the predominance of form. Darwin is the most
brilliant illustration of this. What was it that Darwin investigated
and bequeathed to humanity in his theory? The origin and change of the
forms of animals and plants in the struggle for existence. This
confirms that the attention of science is directed to the outer form,
And what did Darwin openly declare? He asserted that the plants and
animals live out their lives in the most manifold forms but that
originally, according to his conviction, there were forms into which
life was breathed by a Creator of worlds. This is what Darwin himself
says. His eyes are directed to the evolution of forms, of the outer
form, and he himself feels that it is impossible to penetrate into
what imbues these forms with life. He takes this life for granted and
does not attempt to explain it. He pays no heed to it, the question
for him being merely the shape and form which life assumes,
Let us consider life in another domain, in the domain of art. I will
mention one characteristic phenomenon only, in its most radical form.
What a storm of dust was raised in the seventies and eighties of last
century by the catchword Naturalism! I do not mean this in any
derogatory sense, for this catchword is entirely in keeping with the
character of our time. Naturalism emerged again in its extreme form in
Zola, the Frenchman. His descriptions of human life are powerful and
magnificent. Yet for all that his gaze is not focused upon human life
itself but upon the forms in which it manifests. How life comes to
expression in mines, in factories, in city districts where immorality
is the undoing of men, and so forth. Zola describes all these various
manifestations of life, and fundamentally speaking, all naturalists do
the same. Their attention is focused, not upon life itself, but upon
the forms in which life takes expression. And now think of our
sociologists who are concerned with giving details about the forms
which life has assumed and ought to assume in the future.
Catch-phrases about the materialistic conception of history and about
materialism are much in evidence. But what is the approach of the
sociologists? They do not concern themselves with the soul of man,
with his inmost spirit. They study external life as it presents itself
in the field of economics, how trade and industry prosper in one
district or another, and how the human being is obliged to exist as a
result of these configurations of life. That is how the sociologists
study life. They say: Ethics and the idea of morality are no business
of ours! Create better outer conditions for human beings and the
standard of living will automatically improve. in terns of
Marxism, modern sociology has declared that the external forms of the
economic life, not the forces of ideas, are of paramount importance in
human life.
All this indicates that we have reached a phase of evolution when
attention is focused primarily on the forms of outer existence. If you
think of the greatest writer at the present time you will perceive how
his gaze is riveted on the forms of outer existence because, since he
is also filled with the warmest feeling for the life of the soul, for
a free inner life, he has been reduced to despair by these outer forms
of existence. I refer to Henrik Ibsen.* He is one who depicts life in
most diverse forms, who shows us how life in form always evokes
obstacles, how souls go to pieces and are destroyed by the forms which
life assumes. The way in which he concludes the poem When We Dead
Awaken, is symbolic of the prevailing forgetfulness of the soul
find spirit. It is as though Ibsen wished to say: We men, of modern
civilisation are completely caught up in the external form of life we
so often censure ... and when we awaken, how does the life of
soul present itself to us in the tightly knit forms of society and
thought in the West? That is the fundamental trend in Ibsen's
dramatic works.
* See also Karmic Relationships: Esoteric Studies. Vol. II,
lecture XVI.
Certain flashlights have now been thrown on the form-culture of the
West. In considering Darwinism we saw how this culture is bound up
with the outer, mechanical life of nature and how the soul is yoked to
rigidly circumscribed forms of life and of society. We saw how this
state of things has been reached by slow degrees, how our Fifth Race
(the Aryan Race), starting from the spirituality of the ancient Vedic
culture which recognised by direct Vision that life is filled with
soul, has passed through the Persian, the Chaldean-Babylonian-Egyptian
culture-epochs and then through Greco-Roman culture with its view
shared even by the Greek philosophers that the whole of
nature is ensouled. In the 16th century Giordano Bruno still
recognised the life that fills the whole of nature, the whole universe
and the great world of stars. But in later times, life has become
wholly entangled with external form. This is the lowest standpoint.
Again I do not say this in a derogatory sense, for every standpoint is
necessary. What makes the plant beautiful is the external form, that
which comes forth from the seed. Our cultural life has become
externalised in every possible way. It is inevitably so, and least of
all would it be fitting for theosophists to censure. Just as a culture
imbued with spirit and with life was once necessary, so is a
form-culture necessary for our age. In science we have the Darwinian
view, in art the naturalistic, and in sociology a culture of form.
At this point we must pause and ask ourselves: According to the
principles of spiritual science, what must happen when a form
is actually present? It must be renewed, must again be imbued
with new germinating life!
Those who from this point of view study Zola's contemporary,
Tolstoy, attentively and without bias, find in Tolstoy the
artist, the observer of the various types among the Russian people
the type of the Russian soldier, the martial type described in
War and Peace, and later in Anna Karinina a keynote
quite different from that prevailing in the naturalism of the West.
Tolstoy looks everywhere for something else. He describes the soldier,
the official, the human being belonging to some class of society,
family or race ... but everywhere he is looking for the soul, for
the living soul that comes to expression in one and all, although not
in the same way. He portrays the simple, straightforward workings of
the soul but at different stages and in different forms. What
is life in its diverse forms, in its thousand-fold variety?
this is the basic question running through Tolstoy's works. And then
he is able to understand life even when it seems to annihilate itself
in death. Death is still the great stumbling-block for the
materialistic view of the world. How can a man who regards the outer
material world alone as real, grasp the meaning of death, how can he
get the mastery over life when death stands at its end like a barrier,
filling it with anxiety and terror? Even as an artist Tolstoy has
surmounted this standpoint of materialism. In the novel The Death
of Ivan Ilyitsch you can see with what artistry materialism in its
roost extreme form is transcended, how in this figure of Ivan Ilyitsch
there is complete inner concordance. We have a sick man before us, not
one who is sick in body, but in soul. In everything Tolstoy says, one
thing is clear: he is not of the opinion that there dwells within the
body a soul that has nothing to do with the body; it is obvious from
his words that he regards the constitution of the body as the
expression of the life of soul; the soul, when it is itself sick,
causes sickness in the body; it is the soul that pours through the
veins of the body. This is a portrayal of how life comes to its own.
And here we find a remarkable understanding of death, not as theory or
dogma but in the life of feeling. This conception of the soul
makes it possible to think of death not as an end but as an outpouring
of the personality into the universe, a merging into infinitude, and
the rediscovery of the self in the great primal Spirit of the world.
The problem of death is here solved by the artist in a wonderful way.
Death has become a blessing in life. a dying man feels the
metamorphosis from the one form of life to the other.
As a contemporary of the naturalists in the domain of art, Leo Tolstoy
was one who sought for life, who enquired into the riddle of life in
its different forms. This riddle of life in its scientific as
well as in its religious aspect lay at the very centre of his
soul, at the very core of his thinking and feeling. He strove to
fathom this riddle, seeking for life wherever it encountered him.
Hence he has become the prophet of a new era that must supersede our
own, an era that in contrast to the trend of natural science will
again experience and know the reality of life. In Tolstoy's whole
judgment of Western culture we see the expression of a spirit who
represents fresh, childlike life, a spirit who strives to imbue this
life into evolving humanity, a spirit who cannot rest content with a
mature, nay an over-mature culture manifesting in external forms. This
indicates the nature of Tolstoy's antagonism to Western culture. It is
from this point of view that he criticises the forms of society and of
life indeed everything else current in the West; this is
the point of view on which his judgment is based.
In Darwinism, as we heard, Western science succeeded in grasping the
forms of life. But Darwin himself declared that he was not able
to understand anything of the life he postulates as a given reality.
The whole of Western culture is founded on the observation of form
external form in the evolution of mineral, plant, animal, man.
Open any book on Western science and you will find that it is
form which is everywhere brought into prominence. Western researchers
have themselves declared that they are confronted by the riddle of
life and are unable to fathom it. Ever and again, when information
about life is expected from scientists, we hear the words:
Ignoramus, ignorabimus (we do not know, we shall never know).
Science is able to say something about how life is expressed in forms,
but knows nothing about the operations of life itself. It despairs of
being able to solve this riddle and merely says: Ignorabimus we
shall never know. Tolstoy discovered the true principle for
contemplation of life. I will read an important passage from his essay
On Life,* which will show you how he emphasises the principle
of life as contrasted with all science of the forms of life.
The false science of our day (i.e. in the West)
assumes that we know what we cannot know, and that we cannot
know the one thing we really do know. A man with this false knowledge
assumes that he knows all that presents itself to him in space and
time, and that he does not know what his reasonable consciousness
tells him.
Such a roan imagines that good in general, and his own good in
particular, are the most unknowable of all things for him; his
reasonable consciousness seems to him almost equally unknowable, he
himself as an animal seems rather more knowable, animals and plants
more knowable still, and inanimate and infinitely diffused matter
seems to him the most knowable of all.
Something similar happens with regard to man's sight. A man always
unconsciously directs his look first to objects that are farthest away
and which therefore seem simplest in colour and outline: the sky, the
horizon, the distant fields and woods. The farther those things are
away the more definitely and simply do they present themselves, while
the nearer an object is the more complex are its outlines and
colour. ... Is it not the same with man's false knowledge?
What is indubitably known to him, his reasonable consciousness,
appears to him unknowable because it is not simple, while what la
certainly incomprehensible to him illimitable and eternal
matter seems to him to be the most knowable of all things
because its very remoteness from him makes it appear simple*
In reality it is just the reverse. (p. 53)
* All the quotations are from Tolstoy's work On Life and essays on
religion. Translated by Aylmer Maude. O.U.P. 1934.
The Western scientist looks first and foremost at immobile, lifeless
matter. Then he perceives how plants, animals and human beings are
built out of this as the result of the working of chemical and
physical forces, be perceives how lifeless matter is stirred into
movement, conglomerates and finally gives rise to the movements of the
brain. Only he cannot grasp how life itself comes into being, for what
he is investigating is nothing but the form in which life is
manifesting. Tolstoy says in effect: Life is our immediate concern, we
are within life, nay we are life; if we think that we shall
understand life by investigating and observing it in form, we shall
never do so. We need only contemplate life in ourselves, we need only
experience life and then we have grasped it. Those who
believe that it is impossible to grasp the reality of life itself do
not understand it at all. Tolstoy investigates what the human
being is able to apprehend as his life, although the overcomplicated
mode of thinking cannot grasp it in the broad outlines of simple
thought. If you would truly understand form, you must look into
its innermost essence. If you are willing only to investigate the laws
of nature in their outer expression, how can you hope to discover how
life that is subjected to reason differs from life that is not?
Organisms are healthy and become sick in accordance with identical
laws; the sickness and the health of a human being are governed by
exactly the same laws. Again Tolstoy speaks significant words
in his essay On Life:
However strong or rapid a man's movements may be in his death
struggle, in madness, in delirium, in drunkenness or even in a
paroxysm of passion, we do not recognise life in him, we do not treat
him as a living man, we only admit the possibility of life in him. But
however weak and motionless a man may be, if we see that his animal
personality is in subjection to reason, we recognise life in him and
treat him accordingly. (p. 62)
Tolstoy means that the outer form has significance only when we do not
merely study it from outside but grasp that which is not form, which
is only spirit the inmost essence. If we try merely to
understand the form we can never penetrate to the actual life; but we
shall understand the forms if, starting from life, we then pass to the
form.
But Tolstoy did not approach his problem from the scientific side
alone; he approached it from the moral and ethical side as well. How,
as human beings, do we reach this true life with its law that extends
into the outer form? Tolstoy asks himself: How do I, how do other men
satisfy the needs of our own well-being? How can I achieve the
satisfaction of my own personal life? If his starting-point is that of
animal life, a man has no other question than: How do I gratify the
needs of the external form of life? This is an inferior
viewpoint. A somewhat higher one is held by those who say: It is not a
matter of the gratification of the needs of an individual; the
individual has to lend himself to the common weal, to be a member of
society moreover to care not only for what satisfies the form
of his own external life but to see to it that the needs of this form
of life among all living beings are satisfied. We must be members of a
community, we must make our needs subordinate to its needs.
Subordination of the needs of the individual to those of the community
this is regarded as the ideal by many moralists and
sociologists in Western culture. But says Tolstoy this
is not the highest viewpoint, for what have I still in mind except the
external form? How one lives in the community, how one participates in
it this, after all, is a matter only of the external form. And
these external forms are perpetually changing. If my own personal life
is not to be the aim, why should the life of the many be the aim? If
the welfare of the single individual's form of life is not an ideal,
no ideal of common welfare can be produced by an accumulation of
individuals. The ideal cannot be the welfare of an individual, nor can
it be the welfare of all, for this is a matter only of the forms in
which life is contained. Where is life to be recognised? To what are
we to put ourselves in subjection, if not to the needs dictated
by our lower nature? If not to what common welfare or humanity
prescribes?
That which in the individual and in the community alike craves for
well-being and happiness is the life itself in the most manifold
forms. It therefore behoves us not to shape our ethical, our
innermost, ideal according to external forms, but according to what is
vouchsafed as the ideal to the inmost essence of the soul itself by
the indwelling God. That is why Tolstoy reaches out again for a higher
kind of Christianity which he regards as the true Christianity.
Seek not the kingdom of God in outer manifestations in the
forms but within you. What your duty is will become
clear to you when you knowingly experience the life of the soul, when
you allow yourself to be inspired by the God within you, when you give
ear to the utterances of your soul. Let not the forms engross you,
great and impressive though they may be! Go bade to the original,
undivided life, to the divine life within you yourself. When a man
does not take the ethical ideals, the cultural ideals, into himself
from outside, but lets that which arises in his heart, that which the
Godhead has imbued into his soul, stream forth from his soul, then he
has ceased to live only in form; then he is moral in the true sense.
This is inner morality, and inspiration.
From this standpoint Tolstoy strives for a complete renewal of all
conceptions of life and of the world in the form of what he calls
‘original Christianity.’ In his view, Christianity has been
externalised, has adapted itself to the diverse forms of life produced
by culture and civilisation in the different centuries. And he awaits
an era when form will be vibrant with new, inner life, when life will
again be apprehended in direct experience. Therefore he is never tired
of exhorting in ever new connections that it is a matter of
experiencing the simplicity of the soul's existence, not the
complex existence which all the time is trying to learn something new.
The ideal prescribed by Tolstoy is that the simplicity of the soul
must be maintained, that the intricacies of external science, of
external artistic presentation, the luxury-adjuncts of modern life.
must be resolved Into the simplicity inherent in the soul of every
human being, no matter in what form of life and society he is placed.
And so Tolstoy is a stern critic of the various forms of Western
European culture, of Western science. He declares that this science,
like theology, has little by little stiffened into a body of dogmas
and that Western scientists give one the impression of being outright
dogmatists, filled with wrongly directed intellect. He passes stern
judgment on these scientists, above all on the ideal striven for in
these forms of science, and on those who regard the final goal of all
endeavour to be our material welfare. For centuries past mankind has
been at pains to make forms preeminent, regarding external
possessions, external well-being as the highest goal. And now
we know that this should not be censured but regarded as inevitable -
well-being must not be limited to particular ranks or classes, but
shared by one and all. Certainly there is no objection to be
made to this, but it is against the form in which Western
sociology and Western socialism endeavour to achieve it that Tolstoy
directs his attacks. What does this socialism proclaim? Its aim is the
transformation of the external forms of life. Material culture itself
is to lead men to a higher level, to a higher standard of life. And
then, so it is believed, those whose conditions improve, whose,
prosperity increases, will also have a higher ethical standard. All
ethical endeavour on the part of socialism is directed toward
revolutionising the outer form of the conditions of existence.
It is this attitude which Tolstoy attacks, For the obvious result of
the evolution of culture has been the development of the most manifold
differences of rank and class. Can you possibly believe that if you
make this culture of form preeminent, you will actually produce an
ideal civilisation? No, you must take hold of the human being where he
himself creates form. You must enrich his soul, imbue his soul with
divine-moral forces, and then, acting from the very source of life, he
will change the form. That is Tolstoy's socialism and it is his view
that no renewal of moral end ethical culture can ever arise from any
metamorphosis of the form-culture of the West, but that this renewal
must be brought about by the soul, from within outwards. Hence he is
not a preacher of dogmas but the champion of a complete transformation
of the human soul. He does not say: Man's ethical standard is raised
when the outer conditions of his life improve ... but he says: It
is just because you have based yourselves on outer forms that you have
brought upon yourselves the wretchedness of your existence. Not until
you transform the human being from within will you be able to surmount
this form of life. In sociology, as well as in Darwinism, we have the
last offshoots of the old form-culture. But then we have, too, the
preliminary factors for a new culture of life. Just as in the
former case we have the line of descent, here we have the line of
ascent. As little as an aged man who has already attained his settled
form of life is capable of complete self-renewal, as little can an old
culture produce a new form of life. It is from the child with its
fresh forces of growth that the new form of life springs
inwardly quickened from what is as yet undifferentiated and
able to unfold into infinite diversity. Hence in the Russian people
Tolstoy sees a people not yet entangled in Western forms of culture;
it is within this people that the life of the future must germinate.
From his observation of the Slav people who still regard the European
ideals of culture European science as well as European art
with apathetic indifference, Tolstoy declares that in this
people there lives an undifferentiated spirit which must become the
bearer of the future ideal of culture. It is there that he sees the
hope of the future. His judgment is based on the great law of
evolution, on that law which teaches us the principle of the change of
forms and the perpetually new, germinal up-welling of life,
In the tenth chapter of his essay On Life, he says:
And the law we know in ourselves as the law of our life is the
same law by which all the external phenomena of the universe are
ordered, only with this difference, that in ourselves we know this law
as that which we must ourselves fulfill, while in external phenomena
we know it as the law by which things take place without our
participation. (p. 47)
Thus Tolstoy himself bears witness to life that is evolving, that is
eternally subject to change. We should be very poor representatives of
spiritual science were we unable to understand such a phenomenon
aright and were only to preach ancient truth. Why do we study the
ancient wisdom? Because this ancient wisdom teaches us to understand
life in its depths, because it reveals to us how the Divine manifests
ever and again in an infinite variety of form. Anyone who becomes a
dogmatist, who speaks only about the ancient wisdom without ears or
words for happenings of the immediate present, is anything but a
worthy representative of spiritual science. The ancient wisdom is not
taught to us in order that we shall repeat it in words but in order
that we shall live it, and learn to understand what is round
about us. The development of our own race, which has been separating
into different forms from the time of the ancient Indian civilisation
up to our own, is accurately described and portrayed in that ancient
wisdom, which speaks, too, of the development to come in the future,
in our own immediate future. It tells us that we are standing at the
starting-point of a new world-era. Our reason, our intelligence, have
developed as this result of the passage through the different domains
of existence. The powers of our physical intellect have attained their
greatest triumph in the form-culture of our time. Intellect has
penetrated the natural laws of form and has achieved mastery of them
in the stupendous advances made in applied technology, in the
standards of our life. We stand now at the starting-point of an epoch
when something must pour into this intellect, something that must lay
hold of and mould the human being from within outwards. That is why
the Theosophical Movement has chosen as its guiding principle and aim,
the establishment of the kernel of universal brotherhood among men
without distinction of creed, class, sex or colour: it is the
life that is to be sought in all these forms. The spiritual
ideal hovering before us is an ideal of Love, an ideal which the human
being, when he becomes conscious of divinity, experiences as the other
divine principle that is within himself. The culture of intellect, of
the spirit, is called by Theosophy, Manas; Buddhi is the
principle that is inwardly pervaded by love, the principle that
arrives only for such wisdom as is filled with love. And just as our
race has produced a culture founded on intellect the next stage will
be a culture where the individual, filled with love, acts out of his
inner, divine nature, without losing his bearings in the chaos of the
external world, be it in the domain of science or the social life. If
we have this conception of the spiritual ideal we may claim to have
understood it rightly and then we shall not fail to recognise a
personality who, living among us, is striving to instill into the
evolution of humanity the Impulse of a new life.
Much of what Tolstoy says about the essential nature of man is in
perfect accord with this. Let me read just one more passage that is
particularly characteristic of his ethical and moral ideal:
The whole life of such people is directed to the supposed
increase of the welfare of their personality. And the good of their
personality appears to them to consist in the gratification of its
needs; and these needs are all those conditions of individual
existence to which their attention is directed. The needs of which
they are conscious those to which they have directed their
attention always grow to infinite proportions as a result of
this attention, and the gratification of these overgrown needs hides
from them the demands of their true Life. (pp. 82/3)
Tolstoy therefore says in effect: The reasoning consciousness is not
enclosed within the confines of the personality. Personality is a
quality of the animal and of man as an animal. Reasoning consciousness
is an attribute of man alone. Not until man learns to become
impersonal, to let the impersonal life hold sway in him, will he grow
out of a culture of form into a culture of life despite the
continuing development of outer form. Man learns to live on rightly
into the future when his being is steeped in the eternal, the
imperishable. The culture based on intellect must be superseded by
Buddhi, the culture based on wisdom. The most important factors here
are those forces which operate in life itself.
It behoves us to recognise and understand such a truth. The greatness
of Leo Tolstoy lies in this: he has shown that the ideals are not to
be found outside, in the material world, but can spring forth
from the soul.
Notes and references: The following passage is from Lecture VI of
the Course The Gospel of St. John in relation to the other three
Gospels, especially the Gospel of St. Luke:
... Such a thinker merits the very greatest respect, above
all in the West, where whole libraries are filled with lengthy
philosophical dissertations on the same thing which Tolstoy expounds
with greatness and power in a single work such as his essay On
Life. There are pages in Tolstoy's writings where with an
elemental force, certain deep knowledge of theosophical truth is set
forth.
See also: Tolstoy and Carnegie. Lecture given 28th Jan. 1909.
At the end of a lecture given in Berlin, 30th September, 1905, (the
fifth of the so-called Thirty-one Lectures, Dr. Steiner
says:
Buddhi-Manas must now be developed. Man must learn to do
something more than mere speaking. With his speaking he must combine
another force, such as is found in the works of Tolstoy. What
Tolstoy actually says is of less importance than the fact that behind
what he says there is an elemental force which has in it something of
Buddhi-Manas. The reason why Tolstoy's writings make such a strong
impression is that they contain, in contrast to Western European
culture, something new and rudimental. The element of uncouthness in
Tolstoy's writings will be leveled out as time goes on. Tolstoy is
merely an instrument of a higher spiritual force which was also behind
the Gothic Initiate Wulfila. This spiritual force uses Tolstoy as its
instrument.
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