Lecture XI
IN
OUR last study evenings
various aspects were brought forward which all pointed to the hidden
co-operation between man and the spiritual worlds. Spiritual beings
are actually around us continually, and not only around us but, in a
certain respect, continually passing through us; we live with them all
the time. We must not suppose, however, that a relation is established
between man and the spiritual beings of his environment, merely in the
somewhat cruder respect which we considered in our last studies. A relation
is also formed between man and the spiritual world through his many
varied interests of thought and deeds. In our last two studies we have
had to indicate spiritual beings of a somewhat subordinate character.
But from earlier lectures we know that we also have to do with spiritual
beings who stand above man and that connections and relationships likewise
exist between man and more sublime spiritual beings. We have said that
there are lofty spiritual beings living around us who do not consist
of physical body, etheric body, astral body, and so on, upwards, as man,
but who have an etheric body as their lowest member. They are invisible
to ordinary sight since their bodily nature is a fine etheric one and
man's gaze looks through it. And then we come to still higher
spiritual beings whose lowest member is the astral body, presenting
an even less dense bodily nature.
All these beings stand
in a certain relation to man, and the main point for us today is this:
Man can positively so act as to come into quite definite relations
to such beings here in his life on earth. According as men here on the
earth do this or that in their situation in life, so do they establish
all the time relationship with the higher worlds, however improbable
that may seem to the man of the present enlightened age — as one
says — which is not in the least enlightened in regard to many
deep truths of life.
Let us take in the first
place beings who have as their lowest bodily nature an etheric body,
who live around us in this fine etheric body, and send down to us their
forces and manifestations. Let us set such beings mentally before us
and ask ourselves: Can man do something on this earthly planet —
or better — have men from time immemorial done something so as
to give these beings a link, a bridge, through which they come to a
more intensive influence upon the whole human being? Yes, from time
immemorial men have done something towards it! We must go deeper into
many feelings and ideas that we touched on in the last lectures if we
would form a clear thought about this bridge.
We picture then that these
beings live, so to speak, out of the spiritual worlds and extend their
etheric body forward from there; they need no physical body like man.
But there is a physical bodily element through which they can bring
their etheric body into connection with our earthly sphere — an
earthly bodily element which we can set up and which forms a bond of
attraction for these beings to descend with their etheric bodies and
find an opportunity to dwell among men.
Such opportunities for
spiritual beings to dwell among men are given, for instance, by the
temple of Greek architecture, the Gothic cathedral. When we set up in
our earthly sphere those forms of physical reality with the relationship
of lines and forces possessed by a temple or a plastic work of sculpture,
then these form an opportunity for the etheric bodies of these beings
to press on all sides into these works of art which we have set up.
Art is a true and actual uniting link between man and the spiritual
worlds. In those forms of art expressed in space we have on earth physical
bodily conditions into which beings with etheric bodies sink down.
Beings which have the
astral body as their lowest member need, however, something different
here on earth as the bond between the spiritual world and our earth,
and that is the art of music, the phonetic art. A space through which
streams musical tones is an opportunity for the freely-changing, self-determined
astral body of higher beings to manifest in it. The Arts and what they
are for man thus acquire a very real significance. They form the magnetic
forces of attraction for the spiritual beings whose mission it is to
have a connection with man, and who wish to have it. Our feelings are
deepened towards human artistic creation and acquire an appreciation
of art when we look at things in this way. Yet they can be deepened
still more if we realize from spiritual science the true source of man's
artistic creation and artistic appreciation. To come to this realization
we must consider in somewhat more detail the different forms of man's
consciousness.
On various occasions,
as you know, we have pointed out that in the waking man the physical
body, etheric body, astral body and ego are all before us, while in
the sleeping man the physical and etheric bodies lie on the bed, the
ego and astral body are outside them. For our present purpose it will
be well to observe in more detail these two states of consciousness
which alternate for everyone within twenty-four hours. In the first
place man has the physical body, then the etheric or life body, then
what we call roughly the astral body, the soul body, which belongs to
the astral body but is united with the etheric body. That is the member
which is possessed too by the animal here below on the physical plane.
But then we know — and you can read it in my
Theosophy
— that united with these three members is what one generally comprises
under “I.” The “I” is actually a threefold being:
sentient soul, intellectual or mind soul, consciousness soul, and we
know that the consciousness soul is again connected with what we call
spirit-self or Manas. If we place this more particularized membering
of the human being before us then we can say:
What we call the sentient
soul — which moreover belongs to the astral body and is of astral
nature — detaches itself when man goes to sleep, but a part of
the soul body remains in connection with the etheric body that lies
on the bed. What is essentially withdrawn is sentient soul, intellectual
or mind soul, and consciousness soul; with the waking man all this is
bound together and active in him all the time. Thus whatever goes on
in the physical body works on the whole inner nature, on sentient soul,
intellectual soul, and also on the consciousness soul. All that works
upon man in ordinary life with its disorder and chaos, the disordered
impressions which he receives from morning to evening — only think
of the impressions from the din and rattle of a great city — these
are all continued into the members which in waking consciousness are
united with the physical and etheric bodies. In the night man's
inner being — sentient soul, intellectual soul, consciousness
soul — is in the astral world and from there draws for itself
the forces and harmonies which have been lost for it through the chaotic
impressions of the day. What in a comprehensive sense we call man's
ego-soul is thus in a more ordered, more spiritual world than during
the day. In the morning the inner soul nature emerges from this spirituality
and enters the three-fold bodily nature of physical body, etheric body
and that part of the astral body which is united with the etheric body,
even during the night.
Now if man were never
to sleep, that is, were never to draw fresh strengthening forces out
of the spiritual world, then everything living in his physical body
and permeating it with forces would become increasingly undermined.
Since, however, a strong inner nature submerges every morning into the
forces of the physical body, new order enters, one might say there is
a rebirth of the forces. Thus man's soul element brings with it
from the spiritual world something for each of the body's members,
something which works when the inner soul nature and the outer physical
instrument are together.
Now what takes place in
the interaction of the soul inwardness and the actual physical instrument
is able — if man is sensitive in the night for the reception of
the harmonies in the spiritual world — to permeate the forces
— not the substances — of the physical body, with what one
might call the “forces of space.” Since in our present civilization
man is so much estranged from the spiritual world, these “space-forces”
have little effect upon him. Where the inner being of the soul clashes
with the densest member of the human body, the forces have to be very
strong if they are to manifest in the robust physical body. In older
culture-epochs the soul brought back impulses with it that permeated
the physical body and men therefore perceived that forces were always
going through physical space, that it was by no means an indifferent
empty space but interwoven by forces in every direction. There was a
feeling for this distribution of forces in space which was caused through
the relationships that have been described. You can realize this through
an example.
Think of one of the painters
belonging to the great times of art when there was still a strong feeling
for the forces working in space. You could see in the work of such a
painter how he paints a group of three angels in space. You stand before
the picture and have a definite feeling: These angels cannot fall, it
is obvious that they are hovering, they support each other mutually
through the active forces of space. People who make this inner dynamic
their own through that interaction of the inner soul and the physical
body have the feeling: That must be so, the three angels maintain themselves
in space. You will find this in the case of many of the older painters,
less so in more recent ones. However greatly one may esteem Bocklin,
the figure which hovers above his “Pieta” produces in everyone
the feeling that at any moment it must tumble down, it does not support
itself in space.
All these forces going
to and fro in space which are to be felt so strongly are realities,
actualities — and all architecture proceeds out of this space-feeling.
The origin of genuine architecture is solely the laying of stone or
brick in the lines there already in space — one does nothing at
all but make visible what is already present in space ideally, spiritually
laid out; one fills in material. In the purest degree this feeling of
space was possessed by the Greek architect who brought to manifestation
in all the forms of his temple what lives in space, what one can feel
there. The simple relation, that the column supports either the horizontal
or the sloping masses — embodied lines, as it were — is
purely a reproduction of spiritual forces to be found in space, and
the whole Grecian temple is nothing else than a filling-out with material
of what is living in space. The Greek temple is therefore the purest
architectural thought, crystallized space. And however strange it may
seem to the modern man, because the Greek temple is a physical corporeality
put together out of thoughts, it is the opportunity for those figures
whom the Greeks have known as the figures of their Gods to come with
their etheric bodies into real contact with the spatial lines familiar
to them and be able to dwell within them.
It is more than a mere
phrase to say that the Grecian temple is a dwelling-place of the God.
To someone having a real feeling in such matters the Greek temple has
a quality that makes one picture that far and wide no human being existed,
nor was there anyone inside it. The Greek temple needs no-one to observe
it, no-one to enter it. Think to yourself of the Greek temple standing
alone and far and wide there is no-one. It is then as it should be at
its most intensive. Then it is the shelter of the God who is to dwell
in it, because the God can dwell in the forms. Only thus does one really
understand Greek architecture, the purest architecture in the world.
Egyptian architecture
— let us say, in the Pyramids — is something quite different.
We can only touch on these things now. There the spatial relations,
the space-lines, are so arranged that in their forms they point the
paths to the soul to float up to the spiritual worlds. We are given
the forms that are expressed in the Egyptian Pyramids from the paths
taken by the soul from the physical world into the spiritual world.
And in every kind of architecture we have thoughts that are only to
be understood by spiritual cognition.
In the Romanesque architecture
with its rounded arches, which has formed churches with central and
side naves, with transept and apse, so that the whole is a Cross and
closed above by the cupola, we have the spatial thoughts derived from
the tomb. You cannot think of the Romanesque building as you think of
the temple. The Greek temple is the abode of the God. The Romanesque
building can only be thought of as representing a burial place. The
crypt requires men in the midst of life to stand within it, yet it is
a place that draws together all feelings relating to the preservation
and sheltering of the dead. In the Gothic building you have again a
difference. Just as it is true that the Grecian temple can be thought
of with no human soul anywhere near — though it is inhabited,
being the abode of the God — so is it true that the Gothic cathedral
closed above by its pointed arches is not to be imagined without the
congregation of the faithful within. It is not complete in itself. If
it stands solitary, it is not the whole. The people within belong to
it with their folded hands, folded just as the pointed arches. The whole
is only there where the space is filled by the feelings of the pious
faithful.
These are the forces becoming
active in us and felt in the physical body as a feeling of oneself-in-space.
The true artist feels space thus and molds it architecturally.
If we now pass upwards
to the etheric body, we again have what the inmost soul assimilates
at night in the spiritual world and brings with it when it slips again
into the etheric body. What is thus expressed in the etheric body is
perceived by the true sculptor and he impresses it into the living figure.
That is not the space-thought but rather the tendency to show by the
living form what nature has offered him. The greater understanding possessed
by the Greek artist, in his Zeus, for example, has been brought with
him out of the spiritual world and made alive to him when it comes in
contact with the etheric body.
Further, a similar interaction
takes place with what we call the soul body. When the inner soul nature
meets with the soul body there arises in the same way the feeling for
the first elements of painting, as the feeling for the guidance of the
line. And through the fact that in the morning the sentient soul unites
with the soul body and permeates it, there arises the feeling for the
harmony of color.
Thus to begin with we
have the three forms of art which work with external means, taking their
material from the outer world.
Now since the intellectual
or mind soul takes flight into the astral world every night, something
else again comes about. When we use the expression “intellectual
soul” in the sense of spiritual science, we must not think of
the dry commonplace intellect of which we speak in ordinary life. For
spiritual science “intellect” is the sense for harmony which
cannot be embodied in external matter, the sense for harmony experienced
inwardly. That is why we say “intellectual or mind soul.”
Now when this intellectual or mind soul dips every night into the harmonies
of the astral world and becomes conscious of them in the astral body
— though this same astral body in modern man has no consciousness
of its inner nature — then the following occurs. In the night
the soul has lived in what has always been called the “Harmony
of the Spheres,” the inner laws of the spiritual world, those
Sphere Harmonies to which the ancient Pythagorean School pointed and
which one who can perceive in the spiritual world understands as the
relationships of the great spiritual universe. Goethe too pointed to
this when he lets Faust at the beginning of the poem be transported
into heaven, and says:
“The sun, with many a sister-sphere,
Still sings the rival psalm of wonder,
And still his fore-ordained career
Accomplishes, with tread of thunder.”[1]
And he remains in imagery when in Part II, where Faust is again lifted
into the spiritual world, he uses the words:
“And, to spirit ears loud ringing,
Now the new-born day is springing.
Rocky portals clang asunder,
Phoebus' wheels roll forth in thunder.
What a tumult brings the light!
Loud the trump of dawn hath sounded,
Eye is dazzled, ear astounded,
The Unheard no ear may smite.”[1]
That is to say, the soul
lives during the night in these sounds of the spheres and they are enkindled
when the astral body becomes aware of itself. In the creative musician
the perceptions of the night consciousness struggle through during the
day consciousness and become memories — memories of astral experiences,
or in particular, of the intellectual or mind soul. All that men know
as the art of music is the expressions, imprints, of what is experienced
unconsciously in the sphere harmonies, and to be musically gifted means
nothing else than to have an astral body which is sensitive during the
day condition to what whirs through it the whole night. To be unmusical
means that the condition of the astral body does not allow of such memory
arising. It is the instreaming of tones from a spiritual world which
man experiences in the musical art. And since music creates in our physical
world what can only be kindled in the astral, I therefore said that
it brings man in connection with those beings who have the astral body
as their lowest member. With these beings man lives in the night; he
experiences their deeds in the sphere harmonies and in the life of day
expresses them through his earthly music, so that in earthly music the
sphere harmonies appear like a shadow image. And in as much as the element
of these spiritual beings breaks into this earthly sphere, weaves and
lives through our earthly sphere, they have the opportunity of plunging
their astral bodies again into the ocean waves of music, and so a bridge
is built between these beings and man through art. Here we see how
at such a stage what we call the art of music arises.
Now what does the consciousness
soul perceive when it is immersed in the spiritual world at night —
though in the present human cycle man is unconscious of it? It perceives
the words of the spiritual world. It receives whispered tidings which
can be received from the spiritual world alone. Words are whispered
to it and when they are brought through into the day consciousness they
appear as the fundamental forces of the poetic art. Thus poetry is the
shadow image of what the consciousness soul experiences in the night
in the spiritual world. And here let us realize in our thoughts how
through man's connection with the higher worlds — and only
so — in the five arts of architecture, sculpture, painting, music,
poetry, he brings into existence on our earthly globe adumbrations,
manifestations of spiritual reality. This is only the case, however,
when art is actually lifted above mere outer sense perception. In what
one today speaking broadly calls naturalism, where man merely imitates
what he sees in the outer world, there is nothing of what he brings
with him. The fact that we have such a purely external art in many fields
today, copying only what is outside, is a proof that men in our time
have lost connection with the divine spiritual world. The man whose
whole interest is merged in the external physical world, in what his
external senses hold alone to be of value, works so strongly on his
astral bodily nature through this exclusive interest in the physical
world, that this becomes blind and deaf when it is in the spiritual
worlds at night. The sublimest sphere sounds may resound, the loftiest
spiritual tones may whisper something to the soul, it brings nothing
back with it into the life of day. And then men scoff at idealistic,
at spiritual art, and maintain that art's sole purpose is to photograph
outer reality, for there alone it has solid ground under its feet.
That is the way the materialist
talks since he knows nothing of the realities of the spiritual world.
The true artist talks differently. He perhaps will say: When the tones
of the orchestra sound to me, it is as if I heard the speech of archetypal
music whose tones sounded before there were yet human ears to hear them.
— He can say too: In the tones of a symphony there lies a knowledge
of higher worlds which is loftier and more significant than anything
which can be proved by logic, analyzed in conclusions.
Richard Wagner has brought
to expression both these utterances. He wanted to bring humanity to
an intense feeling that where there is true art there must at the same
time be elevation above the external sense element. If spiritual science
says that something lives in man which goes beyond man, something superhuman
that is to appear in ever greater perfection in future incarnations,
so does Richard Wagner feel when he says: I want no figures striding
over the stage like commonplace men in the earthly sphere. — He
wants men exalted above ordinary life and so he takes mythological figures
who are formed on a grander scale than normal man. He seeks the superhuman
in the human. He wants to represent in art the whole human being with
all the spiritual worlds as they shine upon the man of the physical
earth. At a relatively early time of life two pictures stood before
him — Shakespeare and Beethoven. In his artistically brilliant
visions he saw Shakespeare in such a way that he said: If I gather together
all that Shakespeare has given to humanity, I see there in Shakespeare
figures who move over the stage and perform deeds. Deeds — and
words too are deeds in this connection — happen when the soul
has felt what cannot be shown externally in space, what lies al-ready
behind it. The soul has felt the whole scale from pain and suffering
to joy and happiness and has experienced how from this or that nuance
this or that deed is performed. In the Shakespearean drama, thinks Richard
Wagner, every-thing appears merely in its consequences, where it acquires
spatial form, where it becomes deed. That is a dramatic art which alone
can display the inner nature externalized; and man can at most guess
what lives in the soul, what goes on while the deed is performed.
Beside this there appeared
to him the picture of the symphonist, and he saw in the symphony the
reproduction of what lives in the soul in the whole emotional scale
of sorrow and pain, joy and happiness in all their shades. In the symphony
it comes to life — so he said to himself — but it does not
become action, it does not step out into space. And he brought before
his soul a picture that led him towards the feeling that once upon a
time this inner nature had, as it were, broken asunder in artistic creation
in order to stream out-wards into the Ninth Symphony.
From these two artist-visions
the idea arose in his soul of uniting Beethoven and Shakespeare. We
should have to travel a long road if we would show how through his unique
handling of the orchestra Richard Wagner sought to create that great
harmony between Shakespeare and Beethoven so that the internal expresses
itself in tone and at the same time flows into the action. Secular speech
was not enough for him, since it is the means of expression for the
events of the physical plane. The language that alone can be given in
the tones of song became his expression of what surpasses the physically
human as superhuman.
Spiritual Science does
not need merely to be expressed by words, to be felt by thoughts; Spiritual
Science is life. It lives in the world process, and when one says that
it is to lead together the various divided currents of man's soul
into one great stream, we see this feeling live in the artist who sought
to combine the different means of expression so that what lives in the
whole may come to expression in the one. Richard Wagner has no wish
to be merely musician, merely dramatist, merely poet. All that we have
seen flow down from the spiritual worlds becomes for him a means of
uniting in the physical world with something still higher. He has a
presentiment of what men will experience when they grow more and more
familiar with that evolutionary epoch into which mankind must indeed
enter, when spirit-self or Manas unites with what man has brought with
him from past ages. And a divining of that great human impulse of uniting
what has appeared for ages to be separated lies in Richard Wagner in
the streaming together of the individual modes of artistic expression.
He had a premonition of what human cultural life will be when all that
the soul experiences is immersed in the principle of spirit-self or
Manas, when the full nature of the soul will be immersed in the spiritual
worlds. It is of profound importance when viewed as spiritual history
that in art the first dawn has appeared for mankind for the approach
towards the future — a future that beckons humanity, when all
that man has won in various realms will flow together into an All-culture,
a comprehensive culture. The arts in a certain way are the actual fore-runners
of a spirituality which reveals itself in the sense world. Far more
important than Richard Wagner's separate statements in his prose
writings is the main feature that lives in them, the religious wisdom,
the sacred fire which streams through all and which comes to finest
expression in his brilliant essay on Beethoven, where you must read
between the lines, but where you can feel the breath of air of the approaching
dawn.
Thus we see how spiritual
science can give a deeper view of what men bring about in their deeds.
We have seen today in the field of the arts that there man accomplishes
something whereby, if we may say so, the Gods may dwell with him, whereby
he secures to the Gods an abode in the earthly sphere. If it is brought
to man's consciousness through Spiritual Science that spirituality
stands in mutual relationship with physical life — this has been
done in physical life by art. And spiritual art will always permeate
our culture if men will but turn their minds to true spirituality. Through
such reflections the mere teaching, mere world conception of spiritual
science is expanded to impulses which can penetrate our life and tell
us what it ought to become and must become. For the musical-poetic art
it was in Richard Wagner that the new star has first arisen which sends
to earth the light of spiritual life. Such a life impulse must increasingly
expand until the whole outer life becomes again a mirror of the soul.
All that meets us from
without can become a mirror of the soul. Do not take that as a mere
superficiality, but as something that one can acquire from spiritual
science. It will be as it was centuries ago, where in every lock, in
every key, we met with something that reflected what the craftsman had
felt and experienced. In the same way when there is again true spiritual
life in humanity, the whole of life, all that meets us outside, will
appear to us again as an image of the soul. Secular buildings are only
secular as long as man is incapable of imprinting the spirit into them.
Spirit can be imprinted everywhere. The picture of the railway station
can flash up, artistically conceived. Today we have not got it. But
when it is realized again what forms ought to be, one will feel that
the locomotive can be formed architecturally and that the station can
be related to it as the outer envelopment of what the locomotive expresses
in its architectural forms. Only when they are architecturally conceived
will they be mutually related as two things belonging to each other.
But then too it is not a matter of indifference how left and right are
used in the forms. When man learns how the inner expresses itself in
the outer, then there will be a culture again. There have indeed been
ages when as yet no Romanesque, no Gothic architecture existed, when
those who bore in their souls the dawn of a new culture were gathered
together in the catacombs below the old Roman city. But that which lived
within them and could only be engraved in meagre forms in the ancient
earth-caves, that which you find on the tombs of the dead, this lit
up dimly there and is what then appears to us in the Romanesque arches,
the Romanesque pillars, the apse. Thought has been carried forth into
the world. Had the first Christians not borne the thought in the soul
it would not meet us in what has become world culture. The theosophist
only feels him-self as such when he is conscious that in his soul he
carries a future culture. Others may ask what he has already accomplished.
Then he says to himself: What did the Christians of the catacombs accomplish,
and what has grown from it?
The feeble emotional impulse
that lives in our souls when we sit together, let us seek to expand
it in the spirit, somewhat as the thoughts of the Christians were able
to expand to the vaulted wonders of the later cathedral. What we have
in the hours when we are together, let us imagine expanded outwardly,
carried forth into the world. Then we have the impulses which we should
have when we are conscious that spiritual science is no hobby for individuals
sitting together, but something that should be carried out into the
world. The souls who sit here in your bodies will find, when they appear
in a new incarnation, many things already realized. which live in them
today. Let us bring such thoughts with us when we are together for the
last time in a season and review the spiritual-scientific thoughts of
the winter. Let us so transform them that they shall work as culture
impulses. Let us seek in this way to steep our souls in feelings and
sensations and let that live into the summer sunshine which shows us
outwardly in the physical world the active cosmic forces. Then our soul
will be able to maintain the mood and carry into the outer world what
it has experienced in the worlds of spirit. That is part of the development
of the theosophist. Thus we shall again come a step forward if we take
such feelings with us and absorb with them the strengthening forces
of the summer.
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