II
EVIDENCES OF BYGONE AGES IN MODERN CIVILISATION
As an introduction, I should like to tell you two short stories. The
first (I shall omit certain details) is as follows:
Once upon a time there lived two boys who from earliest childhood had
been close friends. One of them was outstandingly gifted, learned with
extraordinary facility and as he grew older gave every promise of
attaining high academic honours. The other boy was much less talented.
His friend who was deeply attached to him, taught and helped him in
every way, but he was incapable of learning very much. This, however,
did not greatly affect his circumstances as a small inheritance
provided for his living. The more gifted boy grew to adolescence but
when he was on the point of getting a University Degree, he died. As
in the country where these young men lived, it was customary to marry
and start a family very early in life, it devolved upon the other,
less gifted youth to provide for the family of the friend who had
died. This he did, but before long his own means were exhausted. He
said to himself: As my friend's talents have proved so
transient, my mundane possessions too, will probably soon have
disappeared; I must set about making a livelihood. This he did
by becoming a travelling merchant. Once when he was sitting in front
of a house in a strange neighbourhood, a gigantic man came and sat
down beside him. He gave the impression of not having eaten anything
for days and seemed to be famished with hunger. The other took
compassion on him and ordered a meal to be brought. It was very
quickly consumed, to the astonishment of the merchant, but as the one
meal was not enough to appease the other's hunger, he ordered a
second. The big man ate this just as ravenously and then said that to
satisfy his hunger he must have a whole ham and a number of cakes. He
devoured all these and, after his enormous meal, seemed satisfied.
This incident led to friendship between the big man and the little
man, and they set out together on their travels. Very soon, however,
the little man found the big man something of a burden and told him
that he could well dispense with his company. The big man, however,
assured the little man of his friendship, saying that man now felt a
wish to question the big man about his life, and the latter replied:
I have no house on the earth, no boat on the sea; by day I live in
the village, by night in the town To begin with, the little man
had no notion of what this meant. Then it happened that they must
cross a wide river. Their boat capsised and sank, and both fell into
the water. The big man extricated himself very quickly, carried the
little man to a safe spot, brought up the boat and put the little man
into it then he dived again into the water and brought up all the
goods, even the tiniest articles, which the little man was intending
to trade. This naturally aroused in the little man the greatest
respect for the other, and as friends they had many talks together,
sometimes on profound subjects. Thus on one occasion the little man
said to the big man: Oh! if only one could rise consciously to heaven;
if only it were possible to know what is going on up there!
Thereupon the big man answered him: Maybe you would like
to soar into the air ... and when the little man had assented
he very soon became aware of fatigue and fell asleep. When he woke up
the stars were above him, like pollen in the cup of a lotus-flower in
heaven; he was even able to pluck one of these flowers, hiding it in
his sleeve. Then he saw a great ship approaching, drawn and steered by
dragons In it was a great vessel of water, and the big man who was
with the little man in the clouds, showed him how the water could be
poured out and allowed to trickle down to the earth. Then the little
man realised that he was able to act as do the Spirits of the Air,
when they let the rain pour down upon the earth. He begged the big man
to pour the water in the vessel on his native soil and to let him go
down again to the earth by a rope. The big man said to him: Now
you have rescued me; I am a son of the Thunder-God, and my duty has
been to bestow rain and other blessings upon the earth. Because for a
time I did not perform my duty properly, I was obliged to lead on
earth the life of which you know. Then he let the little man go
down again to the earth. The latter was now in his home once more,
having with him the star he had gathered in the meadow of heaven This
he placed upon the table and it filled the whole room with miraculous
light, strong enough even to read by. During the day it looked like a
simple meteor-stone, but at night it was radiant and luminous. This
continued until one night the little man's wife, rather a vain woman,
was combing her hair by its light. This displeased the star-stone and
it shrank to a tiny size. One day the wife had a strange impulse to
swallow the stone! Thereupon there came to the little man a vision of
the big man whom he knew so intimately, and the latter said to him:
Owing to what has happened now, I can reach a particular stage
of development Now I shall be able to come to the earth for a time as
a son of the Thunder-God. Your wife will bear me as your son.
And he was actually born as the son of the little man. A peculiarity
of this child was that in the dark he shone like a star, so that
people called him the Star Child. He lived on, and
although as he grew older his radiance waned, it still revealed itself
in the form of his great talents Very soon he became a man of high
importance in life....
This is the one story. You will wonder why I am telling you these
tales, but before answering I will tell you a second, very similar
one.
Once upon a time there lived a man who, in our country, might rank as
a Councillor or Governor. He and his family
lived in a spacious, very beautiful house. But after a time, strange
things began to happen there. By day, and especially by night, nobody
in it could get any rest; they were always being knocked, pinched and
dragged about in all directions; objects were hurled at them and the
house swarmed with ghosts. Because of this the family left the house
and went to another, leaving a servant behind as caretaker; but after
a few days he died. They sent a second and then a third, both of whom
also died They then decided to leave the house without any servant at
all. A young sceptic now turned up, a youth who was preparing for an
examination, and he wanted to take the house for his studies. The
Councillor warned him that he would probably never come out alive, and
that at any rate terrible things happened to everyone in the house.
But the young man replied: I have written a treatise on the very
subject of the Unreality of Spirits, proving that they do
not exist. I could write a great many more and nobody who has written
about such matters is in the least afraid of what may happen in such a
house! So the Councillor was prevailed upon to let him have the
house. The young man took with him masses of books to study and sat
down to begin his work. It was not long, however, before one of his
ears was pinched, then the other; then he was attacked somewhere else
and molested in all sorts of ways. When he went to bed the trouble
began in real earnest! He could get no rest the whole night long and,
sceptic though he was, he began to be dreadfully frightened.
Nevertheless, he refused to give way to terror and held out valiantly.
On account of his power of endurance, the spectral figures who were
wont to bend over his books and play pranks by closing his eyes when
he wanted to read, and so on, revealed themselves to him. This
heartened the brave young man considerably, but it was a really
ghastly state of affairs. Things went on like this until his
good-heartedness enabled him to set up a kind of friendship with two
spirit-beings who were always annoying and molesting him. After a time
he discovered that the spirit-beings could not read but would like to
be able to do so. And so it came about that he established a kind of
school for the spirits, teaching them how to copy out all sorts of
things from his books. Not only were the spirits extremely grateful
for this, but they had actually learnt something. Spirit-intercourse
was now quite a pastime to the young man and the spirits who lived in
the house had, moreover, profited greatly through him. The time came
for his examination; as well as having had a great deal of amusement,
he had imbibed so much knowledge that he was hopeful of passing, but
the intrigues of an enemy caused the rumour that he had cheated in his
written papers. As in that country the rules about such matters were
extremely strict and because to begin with the rumor was believed, he
was sent to prison and retained there for some time with nothing to
eat. Finally, however, one of his spirit-friends brought food to him.
She then began to bring the other spirits with her and they provided
for all his needs. Thus there grew up between the young man and one of
his spirit-friends a friendship much greater even than it had been
before. And after his innocence had been established and he had been
set free, although he had formerly proved the unreality of
spirits, his spirit-friend was now such a reality to him that he
resolved to marry her! She answered, however, that situated as she
was, she could not marry, for she belonged to the spiritual worlds, but
that if he would go to a certain priest-magician and ask his advice,
there would be a way out of the dilemma. So he went to the
priest-magician who gave him a charm, saying that if, when a funeral
was passing, his spirit-friend would go to the coffin and swallow this
charm, she could then become a human being and marry him. Not long
afterwards a funeral was actually taking place. The spirit-friend
approached the procession, swallowed the charm and then and there
disappeared into the coffin. People were astounded in the highest
degree when the figure they had seen disappeared into the coffin (for
when she had swallowed the charm she became visible). They therefore
put the coffin on the ground, opened it, and found that it contained
no body at all! The burial could not, therefore, take place. But after
a few days the spirit-friend came to the young man, told him that she
had now become a human being the one who had been in the coffin
and that they could now enter into wedlock. And so the two whose
acquaintance had begun in the haunted house, now lived on in the
companionship of marriage.
If you give some thought to these two stories, you will have to admit
that however close a search you may make in the literature accessible
to Europeans, right back to the time when there was universal belief
in ghosts, no such stories will be found. You will find indications of
how the spirit-world plays into the world of men but stories of this
kind, giving the feeling that there could be no more natural and
spontaneous way of depicting the interplay between the spirit-world
and the human world, simply do not exist in European literature. They
are quite unique. A curious feature strikes us when we study their
composition. In the first story we are told, for instance, that a star
is born as the son of a human being and goes on living as a man upon
the earth. To the kind of consciousness underlying the first story, it
is a natural matter of course that beings exist in the stars, beings
who are the primordial kith and kin of men, and that those who walk
the earth as men may, in reality, be embodied Star-beings. This
underlies the first story as a natural and accepted fact. In the
second, a human being who enters into actual wedlock with another,
first came to know her in the spiritual world; she then descends into
the physical world and her life continues there. The trend of the two
stories is identical. This sense of togetherness with the
spiritual world not in the form in which it is expressed in European
sagas and legends, but on the totally different ground of which we
shall presently speak will nowhere be found, in the same peculiar
form, in the literature of Europe except it were to be imitated by
some modern writer.
And now remind yourselves of something I said in one of the last
public lectures.
(Note 1)
In the way that is possible in such a lecture, I
spoke about the beginnings of Earth-evolution and of the genesis of man
in connection with Earth-evolution. I said that the process of the
evolution of humanity began at a comparatively late stage. We
ourselves speak of the evolution of man and of mankind in the
following way. When a human being is to enter physical existence on
the earth, the innermost kernel or core of his being works within a
certain field of activity, moulding the finer organs, the brain, and
the more delicate bodily tissues. Thus there is in man a kernel of
spirit-and-soul which passes over from earlier incarnations, envelops
itself in what comes from the forefathers and is carried through the
generations by the process of physical heredity. In a human being who
appears on the Earth, a union takes place between what comes from
earlier incarnations and what is carried through the generations,
enveloping the kernel of spirit-and-soul which passes from incarnation
to incarnation. I said that this form of the evolutionary process
began only during the Atlantean epoch, when conditions rendering such
a development possible arose for the first time on the Earth. I
indicated that this particular process of evolution had been preceded
by another, in which the human being did not pass into earthly
existence by way of union between man and woman and then the descent
of the soul which passes through the several incarnations. In very
early periods of Earth-evolution, the human being originated in an
altogether different way. The reason for this is that not until the
Post-Atlantean period did the Earth actually resemble its present
configuration. In the latest Atlantean period the Earth did not really
differ, in essentials, from what it is at present; but the early
Atlantean epoch was fundamentally different from the later, and anyone
who ignores the fact that at that time entirely other conditions
prevailed, has a totally false conception of the configuration of the
Earth. After having passed through the periods of Old Saturn, Old Sun
and Old Moon, the Earth was not only a living organism, but also a
spiritual being, a great organism permeated by spirit-and-soul. We do
not get back to an inanimate ball of gas as intimated by the
Kant-Laplace theory, but to the Earth as a huge, living being. In that
ancient time the evolutionary process of humanity was such that
fecundation did not take place between man and woman, but between the
above and the below in this sense, that
the Earth with its forces of life, provided the element of substance,
the more material element whereas the spiritual principle came
from above like rain which fertilises the soil of meadows, and united
with the more material principle. It was by this method of fecundation
that the first human beings came into existence. This was indicated in
the public lecture and can be established on logical grounds, in
accordance with the principles of natural existence. Then the Earth
separated out from itself a solid mass, like a kind of bony system,
and it was impossible thereafter for it to provide, as before, the
substance for fertilisation. The process had now to take place within
the human organism. Instead of the fertilisation from
above, fertilisation now came about by way of the two sexes, and
the process which had formerly been set in train by interaction
between the above and the below, now passed
over into the operations of heredity and into those of reincarnation
which are bound up with heredity. Thus what had taken place on the
surface of the Earth in earlier times, had now passed into the being
of man. Human beings came into existence and were able to inherit or
carry over from one incarnation to the next, those qualities which had
formerly been received directly from the spiritual world but were now
transmitted by heredity. As was said in the public lecture, the very
first human beings were bi-sexual, then there was differentiation into
the male and the female, and then a gradual development into the
conditions prevailing at present; what in earlier times had operated
more from above the female element passed into the
woman, and what had operated more in the earthly element, passed over
in the stream of heredity into the male.
From intimations given through the course of years concerning the
evolution of humanity, you will have realised that these conditions
prevailed right on into the Atlantean epoch; it was not until the
second half of the Atlantean epoch that the evolutionary process
assumed, more or less, its present form. The Atlantean peoples on the
Earth were really living in the aftermath of still earlier conditions,
when the substantiality of the Earth was fertilised by the
spirituality of the Heavens. The Atlantean peoples saw the birth of a
human being as a direct embodiment of the Spiritual, a descent of the
Spiritual into the Material. As we today see the rain falling from
heaven and moistening the Earth, so did the people of Atlantis see
human beings coming down from heavenly heights, uniting with substance
provided by the Earth and then wandering over its surface. Conditions
changed only by slow degrees; in certain regions the preparatory
stages of conditions as they are at present, had long since been in
existence, whereas in other regions where the old conditions had
persisted, the Atlantean peoples knew that the human being exists, to
begin with, in the spiritual world and then seeks bodily substance in
order to become part of Earth-humanity. Thus when a man in Atlantean
times saw his fellow-men moving about the Earth, he said to himself:
The form I see there derives from the Earth, but what is within
it derives from the same world to which the stars belong: the human
being has descended from the worlds of the Stars! ... It
sounds like a fairy-tale echoing from olden time ... Man comes down
from heavenly heights, surrounds and clothes himself with earthly
substance. The Atlantean peoples knew of the interaction between the
Heavens and the Earth. They knew: To begin with, man is a Spirit; then
he descends, clothes himself in matter and moves about the Earth. Man
was seen as a heavenly being, a being from the spiritual world. For it
was known that as he moved about, he differed from the Spirits only in
that he was clothed in matter. The transition from the spiritual world
to the physical world was a much gentler, more delicate process. Not
that the Atlantean would in any sense have denied the existence of the
spiritual world ... on the contrary, he saw clearly that there was
no very essential difference between physical men and the spirit
beings who belong to that other world. He knew: One can communicate
with a human being through signs, by employing the early rudiments of
human speech ... and with the Spirits, too, for the way in which man
communicates with the Spirits does not differ from the way he
communicates with other men.
Naturally, only very little of this direct knowledge of man's
connection with the spiritual world survived the Atlantean
catastrophe. The mission of the Post-Atlantean epoch was to develop in
man an understanding of Earth-existence proper, of all that can be
acquired by the development of the body as a physical instrument. And
so the perfectly natural communion with the spiritual world very soon
ceased in the course of the Post-Atlantean epoch. But what disappeared
from the normal consciousness was preserved in those periods or
moments of atavistic clairvoyance when the soul withdrew more into
itself. What in earlier times had been actual experience when the soul
turned its gaze into the spiritual world around, was born again later
on ... in the form of Imagination, Phantasy. Let us assume that in
some particular people belonging to the Post-Atlantean age, the
characteristics and faculties of the Atlantean epoch still survived,
more strongly than in all the others. It would not, of course, be
possible for such a people, in the Post-Atlantean epoch, to have
experiences in the form they had taken in Atlantis. But there would
certainly be something in their phantasy distinguishing it from that
of new races races which cannot really be said to be survivals
of Atlantean peoples. In the leading races of the Post-Atlantean epoch
there will, obviously, be less evidence of this natural communion with
the spiritual world.
In a people characterised by having carried over into the
Post-Atlantean epoch a constitution of soul reminiscent of the
Atlantean period, the after-effects of this communion will be quite
different from those working in the typical Post-Atlantean races. In
the case of a people who would be regarded from the point of view of
occultism as belonging, not to the progressive races, but to the
laggard races of ancient Atlantis, it is to be expected
that their phantasy, when it speaks of the connection between the
world of men and the world of spirits, will express itself in a form
differing altogether from the phantasy of other peoples. We can
understand that the imagination of such a people might well take the
form of narrating how a Star-being suddenly resolves to incarnate as
the son of a human being who had rendered service to the Star. Think
of the first story, where a Star-being a son of the Thunder-God
was born as the son of the friend with whom he had for a time wandered
about the Earth. The second story suggests the gentler transition . . .
a human being falls in love with a spirit-being from above; such a
being does not descend to human existence in the ordinary way but
chooses a dead body. It is as though an Atlantean soul, accustomed to
seeing human beings descend and take on earthly substance, had gone
astray by choosing a body which was suitable, not for the
Post-Atlantean epoch, but for that of Atlantis, when human beings were
not born as they now are, but merely assumed a mantle of earthly
substance. In the light of this interpretation we can perceive in such
stories the aftermath of earlier conditions. As the products of a race
surviving from ancient Atlantis, their trend and content do not
surprise us. It is interesting that a number of similar stories has
been collected by Martin Huber and published by Rütten and Loening in
Frankfurt-am-Main under the title of Chinese Ghost and Love Stories.
All this indicates that what may be surmised from a study of occult
science, is actual fact although, of course, these things are now no
more than tradition.
Light can be shed upon a great deal that comes our way in life, if
only we have patience to study the more intimate connections of
world-evolution. Men of the present day will often stand amazed at
such things and will only begin to understand them when they realise
that anyone who is cognisant of the more intimate connections of human
evolution, accepts them as self-evident. Understanding of Spiritual
Science is not furthered by pedantic demands for logical
proof; proof, after all, is useful only to those who are willing
to believe what is asserted; it is useful only to those who can
believe that it is proof. Nobody need believe in it at all and
then they are spared from believing anything! Spiritual Science will
be received into the souls of men because of increasing evidence that
those laws of which knowledge can be acquired only along the occult
path, can be applied even in the most hidden recesses of spiritual and
material culture. The treasures of wisdom will come into their own
when more and more people have patience enough to observe the harmony
between all the facts of existence to which a spiritual conception of
the world is applied, and to realise that only in this way can there
be a true explanation of things which must otherwise remain
incomprehensible.
Thinking of all these matters, we shall be able to say: Post-Atlantean
civilisation has its particular mission. Human beings who rightly
understand their times will unfold the knowledge, will-activity and
qualities of heart to be acquired through the instrumentality of the
body. In these domains there will be greater and greater
progress progress which, fundamentally, is connected with the phase of
evolution stretching from the time of the Holy Rishis of India to the
descent of the Christ-Impulse into humanity. But side by side with
this there has existed much that is like imprisoned
spiritual treasure. The people of Europe were astonished in the
highest degree at the vistas of spiritual life opened up by the
discoveries concerning the wisdom of India, of ancient Persia,
concerning the Krishna- or Brahman-culture, or the ancient
Zoroastrian culture. In the older civilisations there was, naturally,
a deeper spirituality than in the products of later forms of
knowledge. People in the West were dumbfounded by what German
scholarship in the first half of the nineteenth century disclosed
concerning these ancient civilisations, were astonished at the light
shed upon the wisdom of India by Friedrich Schlegel, and, later on,
upon the wisdom of Persia. These disclosures were so dumb-founding
that the deep influence exercised by Oriental Philosophy upon the
minds of thinkers like Schopenhauer or Eduard von Hartmann is readily
understandable. There we have the first expressions of the wonder and
astonishment of the West at what is contained in these ancient
civilisations as a kind of imprisoned spirituality.
We are now confronting another epoch, in which imprisoned spirituality
in a different form will be capable of throwing the West into
amazement, namely, the spirituality that does not belong to the
mission of Post-Atlantean humanity, but has remained as an heirloom
from earlier times, concealed until our own time in the Chinese wisdom
of which the West hitherto has known practically nothing. Very little
will be sufficient to enable what will happen over there, to overwhelm
the spiritual culture of the West to such an extent indeed, that it
might well forget its own mission, its own specific significance and
task. As men live on into the future they will have to realise that
from the Atlantean epoch there has survived upon our Earth, an
imprisoned spiritual wisdom and knowledge greater than anything
revealed by the disclosures concerning the old Brahman and Zoroastrian
civilisations; this wisdom will be unleashed when the spiritual life
of China emerges from its concealment. Two things will have to be
realised by those who turn their eyes towards the future. From over
yonder there will flow a mighty stream of spiritual life, containing,
even in external details, most wonderful teachings ... although such
teachings would in any case be available to those willing to penetrate
into the spiritual life along the path revealed by Spiritual Science.
If, however (to quote words used in a different connection by our
friend M.B... . at our General Meeting) the great majority of human
beings pull nightcaps over their eyes in regard to what Spiritual
Science has to offer, then one day, in a form unsuited to Western
mentality, spiritual treasures will pour from Chinese culture, and
this portion of humanity, in their amazement, will realise that the
products of such culture cannot be grasped by the pedantic thought
common in the West, but only by deeper insight into the ancient Taoist
culture which arose on the soil of the ancient Chinese civilisation.
Spiritual Science often goes against the grain because, by its very
nature, study of it will induce belief. Those who deliberately pull
nightcaps over their eyes will be amazed, but on the other hand also
rather relieved when, in Spiritual Science, they come across many
things that have passed over into Chinese culture from Atlantean
times. They will comfort themselves by saying: There is no need
to believe in that, for what history has preserved is studied simply
because it is of interest! This is the attitude of the
philologists and archaeologists ... there is no need to believe in
it; one can get hold of it by study and be exempt from having to
believe. But when the wisdom casts off its fetters over
yonder, it will have another effect as well: its obvious and intrinsic
greatness will shock and amaze. It will pour over what mankind has
acquired in Christian culture in such a way that it will have to be
seen in its true perspective, studied from the right point of view.
The proper approach will be to say: This spirituality existed; in
bygone ages it constituted the spiritual culture of our Earth. But
every epoch has its own mission, and that of Western culture is to
drink at the well-springs of the spiritual reality behind
world-existence, so that this spiritual reality is perceived behind
the material world, behind what eyes can see and hands can grasp
as a revelation from the spiritual world. Men will have to
understand that their mission now belongs to a different age and that
they must stand firm on the ground prepared by Christianity!
That is the other picture. Men will joyfully receive what derives from
olden times but will illumine it, vivify it with what the more recent,
Post-Atlantean, Christian culture has imparted to the soul. Weaklings,
however, will say: We will accept spirituality from whatever
source it may come, for all that interests us is a sensational vista
of the spiritual worlds. There may actually be neo-theosophists
who will say: The truth is not to be found through deep
comprehension of the Christ-Principle; it lies in what has been
preserved by the Chinese, coming to light again when they bring forth
the Atlantean wisdom hidden in the deepest strata of their
souls. Europe might well be offered a new Secret
Doctrine compiled from the truths of Chinese wisdom. This would
imply that, after all, the proper model for modern theosophists is a
much more ancient Theosophy which did not feel called upon to derive
the founts of spiritual life from Christian Mysticism and Christian
Love nor, for the matter of that, to plagiarise and even
that very imperfectly the wisdom of ancient India somewhat
embellished by the wisdom of ancient Egypt! As for the weaklings, they
will be just as eager for Chinese wisdom as for the spirituality which
they think is opened up for them by the ancient or also by the
newly revealed Indian wisdom. After all, to Europeans,
India is almost as remote as China; and if people are told of
revelations made possible in China owing to certain forces having been
set free, this may well seem more credible to them than that anything
of the kind should have transpired in Berlin.
If we ponder over these things, we shall find the true balance between
joyful acceptance of what has been preserved from ancient epochs of
culture and a firm footing on the soil resulting from evolution
through the ages. That heed shall be paid to the importance of
maintaining this balance, is and will remain the constant care of the
Movement with which we identify ourselves. It is simply an untruth
when here or there it is said that we are out to reject or ignore what
is offered in the way of Indian spirituality, for example. It is an
untruth, as every one who has taken part in our work well knows; and
it would be grievous if such untruths were to take root in the world
in connection with our Movement. Opinions that are at variance are
easy to deal with; they soon balance themselves out. But inaccurate
statements give rise to one misunderstanding after another ... for
it is the peculiarity of misunderstanding that it constantly gives
birth to fresh misunderstandings! With this in mind it must be our
primary task to realise how far our own standpoint on the soil of
Western spiritual life is justified in face of the other phases of
human evolution. On the other hand, we must take care that everything
we say about those other phases of evolution, about other forms of
spirituality, is presented honestly and truthfully. Again and
again it must be repeated and realised by Theosophists that even if much of the
spiritual insight we have been able to gain, goes under, its influence
will remain! No matter what transpires, our work must be full of
sincerity, integrity and truthfulness. And if, in future
times, all that people will be able to say of our particular work is that many
a thing was improved, many another has not survived nevertheless
it was an example of the fact that occultism and earnest spiritual
research can be entirely free from charlatanism or humbug, that the
striving for occult knowledge can be true, genuine and sincere ...
if that can be said of us, we shall really have done something to
further the development of the occult life! And the fact that we would
not admit anything of which in the future these things could not be
said, may be accounted among our finest achievements.
- Note 1:
- 4th Jan. 1912. The Origin of Man in the Light of Spiritual
Science. Not yet published in English.
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