Autumn Festival, Druid and Mythric Mysteries, Organization of the Heart
N the first of these lectures I endeavored to set forth how Michael's
Conflict with the Dragon persisted into the 18 th Century as
a determining idea, really a determining impulse in mankind; and in
the second lecture I tried to show how a productive revival of this
impulse may and really must be brought about. But now, before
discussing particulars for a Michael Festival at the beginning of
autumn, I should like today to speak about several prerequisites
involved in such an intention.
The core of the matter is this: all impulses such as the Michael
impulse depend upon man's attaining to super-sensible enlightenment
concerning his connection not only with earthly but with cosmic
conditions: he must learn to feel himself not only as an earth citizen
but as a citizen of the universe, as far as this is perceptible either
spiritually or, in image, physically. Nowadays, of course, our general
education offers only the most meager opportunities for sensing our
connection with the cosmos. True, by means of their materialistically
colored science men are aware of earth conditions to the point of
feeling connected with them, at least as regards their material life
in the wider sense. But the knowledge of this connection certainly
engenders no enthusiasm, hence all outer signs of such a connection
have become very dim. Human feeling for the traditional festivals has
grown dim and shadowy. While in former periods of human evolution
festivals like Christmas or Easter exerted a far-reaching influence on
the entire social life and its manifestations, they have become but a
faint echo of what they once meant, expressing themselves in all sorts
of customs that lack all deeper social significance.
Now, if we intend in some way to realize the Michael Festival with
its particularly far-reaching social significance, we must naturally
first create a feeling for what it might signify; for by no means must
it bear the character of our modern festivities, but should be brought
forth from the depths of the human being. These depths we can only
reach by once more penetrating and entering into our relationship with
the extra-terrestrial cosmos and with what this yields for the cycle
of the seasons.
To illustrate what I really mean by all that, I need only ask you to
consider how abstract, how dreadfully out of touch with the human
being, are all the feelings and conceptions of the extraterrestrial
universe that today enter human consciousness. Think of what
astronomy, astro-physics, and other related sciences accomplish today.
They compute the paths of the planets — the positions of the
fixed stars, if you like; and from the results of research in spectral
analysis they arrive at conclusions concerning the material
composition of these heavenly bodies. But what have all the results of
such methods to do with the intimate inner soul life of man? This man,
equipped with all such sky-wisdom, feels himself a hermit on what he
thinks of as the planet earth. And the present habits of thinking
connected with these matters are at bottom only a system of very
circumscribed concepts.
To get a better light on this, let us consider a condition of
consciousness certainly present in ordinary life, though an inferior
one: the condition of dream-pervaded sleep. In order to obtain points
of contact for today's discussion I will tell you in a few words what
relates to this condition. Dreaming may be associated with inner
conditions of the human organism and transform these into pictures
resembling symbols [See: Rudolf Steiner,
Supersensible Knowledge (Anthroposophy) as a Demand of the Age;
Anthroposophy and the Ethical-Religious Conduct of Life,
Anthroposophic Press, New York.]
— the movements of the heart, for example, can be symbolized by flames,
and so forth: we can determine concretely and in detail the connection
between dream symbols and our inner organic states and processes. Or
alternatively, outer events of our life may be symbolized, events that
have remained in us as memories or the like. In any case it is
misleading to take the conceptional content of a dream very
seriously. This can be interesting, it has a sensational aspect, it is
of great interest to many people; but for those who see deeper into
the nature of man the dream content as it pertains to the conception
proper is of extraordinarily little significance. The dramatic
development of a dream, on the other hand, is of the greatest import.
I will illustrate this:
Suppose a man dreams he is climbing a mountain. It is an excessively
difficult climb and becomes ever more so, the higher he goes. Finally
he reaches a point where his strength fails him and conditions have
become so unfavorable that he cannot proceed: he must come to a halt.
Something like fear, something of disappointment enters his dream.
Perhaps at this point he wakes up. — Now, something underlies
this dream that should really not be sought in the pictures themselves
as they appeal to the imagination, but rather in the emotional
experiencing of an intention, in the increasingly formidable
obstructions appearing in the path of this intention, and in the
circumstance of encountering even more insuperable obstacles. If we
think of all that as proceeding in an emotional-dramatic way we
discover a certain emotional content underlying the actual dream
pictures as dramatic content. — This same emotional content could
give rise to quite a different dream. The man might dream he is
entering a cave. It gets darker and darker as he gropes along until he
finally comes to a swamp. There he wades a bit farther, but finally
arrives at a quagmire that stops further progress. This picture
embraces the same emotional and sentient dramatic content as the
other; and the dramatic content in question could be dreamt in still
many other forms.
The pictorial content of a dream may vary continually; the essential
factor is what underlies the dream in the way of movements, tension
and relaxation, hope and disappointment. Nevertheless, the dream
presents itself in pictures, and we must ask, How do these arise? They
do so, for example, because at the moment of awaking something is
experienced by the ego and astral body outside the physical and
etheric bodies. The nature of such super-sensible experiences is of
course something that cannot possibly be expressed in pictures
borrowed from the sense world; but as the ego and the astral body
reunite with the physical and etheric bodies they have no choice but
to use pictures from the available supply. In this way the peculiar
dream drama is clothed in pictures.
Now we begin to take an interest in the content of these pictures.
Their conformation is entirely different from that of other
experiences. Why? Our dreams employ nothing but outer or inner
experiences, but they give these a different contiguity. Why is this?
It is because dreams are a protest against our mode of life in the
physical sense-world during our waking hours. There we live wholly
interwoven with the system of natural laws, and dreams break through
this. Dreams will not stand for it, so they rip events out of their
context and present them in another sequence. They protest against the
system of natural laws — in fact, men should learn that every
immersion into spirit is just such a protest.
In this connection, there are certain quaint people who keep trying to
penetrate the spiritual world by means of the ordinary
natural-scientific method. Extraordinarily interesting in this
connection is Dr. Ludwig Staudenmaier's book on Experimental Magic. A
man of that type starts with the assumption that everything which is
to be comprehended should be comprehended according to the
natural-scientific mode of thought. Now, Staudenmaier does not exactly
occupy himself with dreams as such but with so-called mediumistic
phenomena, which are really an extension of the dream world. In healthy
human beings the dream remains an experience that does not pass over
into the outer organization; whereas in the case of a medium
everything that is ordinarily experienced by the ego, and the astral
body, and that then takes shape in the pictures provided by the
physical and etheric bodies, passes over into the experiences of the
physical and etheric bodies. This is what gives rise to all the
phenomena associated with mediumistic conditions. — Staudenmaier
was quite right in refusing to be guided by what other mediums offered
him, so he set about making himself into a sort of medium. He dreamt
while writing, so to speak: he applied the pencil as he had seen
mediums do it, and sure enough, it worked! But he was greatly
astonished at what came to light: he was amazed at sequences he had
never thought of. He wrote all sorts of things wholly foreign to the
realm of his conscious life. What he had written was frequently so
remote from his conscious life that he asked, “Who is writing
this?” And the answer came, “Spirits.” He had to write
“spirits!” Imagine: the materialist, who of course
recognizes no spirits, had to write down “spirits.” But he
was convinced that whatever was writing through him was lying, so he
asked next why the spirits lied to him so; and they said, “Well,
we have to lie to you — that is our way.” Then he asked
about all sorts of things that concerned himself, and once they went
so far as to say “muttonhead.”
[Kohlkopf — literally
“cabbage-head.”]
Now, we cannot assume his frame
of mind to have been such as to make him label himself a muttonhead.
But in any case, all sorts of things came to light that were summed
upon the phrase, “we have to lie to you;” so he reflected
that since there are naturally no spirits, his subconscious mind must
be speaking. But now the case becomes still more alarming: the
subconscious calls the conscious mind a muttonhead, and it lies; hence
this personality would have to confess, “In my subconscious mind
I am an unqualified liar.”
But ultimately all this merely points to the fact that the world into
which the medium plunges down registers a protest against the
constraint of the laws of nature, exactly as does the world of dreams.
Everything we can think, will, or feel in the physical sense-world is
distorted the moment we enter this more or less subconscious world.
Why? Well, dreams are the bridge leading to the spiritual world, and
the spiritual world is wholly permeated by a set of laws that are not
the laws of nature, but laws that bear an entirely different inner
character. Dreams are the transition to this world. It is grave error
to imagine that the spiritual world can be comprehended by means of
natural laws; and dreams are the herald, as it were, warning us of the
impossibility of merely extending the laws of nature when we penetrate
into the spiritual world. The same methods can be carried over
if we prepare ourselves to accomplish this; but in penetrating into the
spiritual world we enter an entirely different system of laws.
The idea that the world can and should be comprehended only by
means of the mental capacities developed in the course of the last
three or four hundred years has today become an axiom. This has come
about gradually. Today there are no longer such men as were still to
be found in the first half of the 19th Century, men for
example, of the type of Johannes Müller, Haeckel's teacher, who
confessed that many a bit of research he was carrying on purely as a
physiologist refused to be clarified as long as he thought about it in
his ordinary waking condition, but that subsequently a dream had
brought back to him the whole work of preparing the tissue when awake,
all the steps he had taken, and thus many such riddles were solved in
his dreams. And Johannes Müller was also one of those who were
still fully convinced that in sleep a man dwells in this peculiar
spiritual weaving, untouched by inexorable natural laws; where one can
even penetrate into the system of physical nature laws, because
underlying these there is again something spiritual, and because what
is spiritual is fundamentally not subject to natural necessity but
merely manifests this on the visible surface.
One really has to speak in paradoxes if thoughts that result quite
naturally from spiritual research are to be carried to their logical
conclusion. No one who thinks in line with modern natural science
believes that a light shining at a given point in space will appear
equally bright at a distance. The physicist computes the decrease in
the strength of light by the square of the distance, and he calculates
gravity in the same way. Regarding these physical entities, he knows
that the validity of what is true on the earth's surface diminishes as
we pass out into the surrounding cosmos. But he refuses to apply this
principle to his thinking. Yet in this respect thinking differs in no
way from anything we can learn about earth matters in the
laboratories, in the operating rooms — from anything on earth,
right down to twice two is four. If gravity diminishes by the square
of the distance, why should not the validity of the system of nature
laws diminish in a similar ratio and eventually, beyond a certain
distance, cease altogether?
That is where spiritual science penetrates. It points out that when
the Nebula of Orion or the Canes Nebula is to be the subject of
research, the same course is followed as though, with tellurian
concepts, Venus, for example, were to be illuminated by the flame of a
candle. When spiritual science reveals the truth by means of such
analogies people think it is paradoxical. Nevertheless, in the state
in which during sleep we penetrate into the spiritual world, greater
possibilities are offered us for investigating the Nebula of Orion or
the Canes Nebula than are provided by working in laboratories or in
observatories. Research would yield much more if we dreamt
about these matters instead of reflecting on them with our intellect.
As soon as we enter the cosmos it is useless to apply the results of
our earthly research. The nature of our present-day education is such
that we are prone to apply to the whole cosmos what we consider true
in our little earth cell; but it is obvious that truth cannot come to
light in this way.
If we proceed from considerations of this sort, a good deal of what
confronted men in former things through a primitive, but penetrating,
clairvoyant way of looking at things takes on greater value than it
has for present-day mankind in general. We will not even pass by the
knowledge that came into being in the pastoral life of primitive
times, which is nowadays so superficially ignored; for those old
shepherds dreamt many a solution to the mysteries of the stars better
than can be computed today by our clever scientists with their
observatories and spectroscopes. Strange as that may sound, it is
true. By studying in a spiritual-scientific way what has been
preserved from olden times we can find our way into this mysterious
connection we have with the cosmos. Let me tell you here of what can
be discovered if we seek through spiritual science the deeply
religious and ethical, but also social import of the old Druidic
Mysteries on the one hand, and those of the Mithras
Mysteries on the other; for this will give us points of contact
with the way in which we should conceive the shaping of a Michael
Festival.
Regarding the Druid Mysteries, the lecture cycle I gave a few weeks
ago in Penmaenmawr, [See: Rudolf Steiner,
Evolution of the World and Humanity,
Anthroposophic Press, New York
(actually, Anthroposophic Publishing Company, London, 1926. Also in
Evolution of Consciousness,
Rudolf Steiner Press, 1966. — e.Ed)]
Wales — the
spot in England that lies exactly behind the island of Anglesea —
is of quite special significance because in that place many reminders
of the old sacrificial sanctuaries and Mystery temples of the Druids
are to be found lying about in fragments. Today these relics, these
cromlechs and mounds, are not really very impressive. One climbs up to
the mountain tops and finds stones arranged in such a way as to form a
sort of chamber, with a larger stone on top; or one sees the cromlechs
arranged in circles — originally there were always twelve. In the
immediate vicinity of Penmaenmawr were to be found two such
sun-circles adjoining each other; and in this particular neighborhood,
where even in the spiritual life of nature there is so much that has a
different effect from that of nature elsewhere, what I have set forth
in various anthroposophical lectures concerning the Druid Mysteries
could be tested with the utmost clarity. There is indeed a quite
special spiritual atmosphere in this region where — on the island
of Anglesea — the Society of King Arthur had a settlement. I must
describe it as follows:
In speaking of super-sensible things we cannot form thoughts in the
same way as we usually do in life or in science, where abstract
thoughts are formed, conclusions drawn, and so forth. But to be
reduced, in addition, even to speaking more or less abstractly —
our language, which has become abstract, demands this — well, if
we want to describe something in a spiritual-scientific way we cannot
be as abstract as all that in the inner being of our soul: everything
must be presented pictorially. We must have pictures, imaginations,
before the mind's eye. And this means something different from having
thoughts. Thoughts in the soul are extraordinarily patient, according
to the degree of our inner indolence: we can hold them; but
imaginations always lead a life of their own: we feel quite clearly
that an imagination presents itself to us. It is different from
writing or drawing, yet similar. We write or draw with our soul; but
imaginations are not abstractly held fast like mere thoughts: we
write them. In most parts of Europe where civilization has
already taken on so abstract a character these imaginations flit past
comparatively very quickly: depicting the super-sensible always
involves an inner effort. It is as though we wrote something that
would then be immediately wiped away by some demonic power — gone
again at once. The same is true of imaginations by means of which we
bring the super-sensible to consciousness and experience it in our
soul.
Now, the spiritual atmosphere in the region of Wales that I mentioned
has this peculiarity: while imaginations stamp themselves less readily
into the astral element, they persist longer, being more deeply
imprinted. That is what appears so conspicuous in that locality; and
indeed, everything there points to a more spiritual way of retracing
the path to what those old Druid priests really strove for — not
during the decadence of the Druid cults, when they contained much that
was rather distasteful and even nefarious, but in the time of their
flowering.
Examining one of these cromlechs we find it to close off, in a
primitive way, a certain space for a chamber that was covered for
reasons having to do with the priest's purposes. When you observe
sunlight you have first the physical sunlight. But this physical
sunlight is wholly permeated by the spiritual activities of the sun;
and to speak of the physical sunlight merely as does the modern
physicist would be exactly the same as talking about a man's muscles,
bones, blood, and so on, omitting all reference to the soul and spirit
holding sway within him. Light is by no means mere phos: it is
phosphoros, light-bearing — is endowed with something
active and psychic. But this psychic element of light is lost to man
in the mere sense-world. — Now, when the Druid priest entered
this burying place — like other old cult sanctuaries, the
cromlechs were mostly erected over graves — he set up this
arrangement which in a certain way was impervious to the physical
sun-rays; but the spiritual activities of the sun penetrated it, and
the Druid priests were specially trained to perceive these. So he
looked through these stones — they were always specially selected
— into the chamber where the spiritual activity of the sun
penetrated, but from which the physical effect was excluded. His
vision had been finely schooled, for what can be seen in a primitive
darkroom of that sort varies according to the date, whether February,
July, August, or December. In July it is lightly tinged with yellow;
in December it radiates a faintly bluish shade from within. And one
capable of observing this beholds — in the qualitative changes
undergone in the course of the year by this shadow-phenomenon enclosed
in such a darkroom — the whole cycle of the seasons in the
psycho-spiritual activity of the sun's radiance.
And further: these sun-circles are arranged in the number twelve, like
the twelve signs of the zodiac; and on the mountain we had climbed we
found a large sun-circle and nearby a smaller one. If one had
ascended, perhaps in a balloon, and looked down upon these two Druid
circles, ignoring the insignificant distance between them, the same
ground plan would have presented itself — there is something
profoundly moving about this — as that of the Goetheanum in
Dornach which was destroyed by fire.
The old Druid priests had schooled themselves to read from what thus
met their soul's eye how, at every time of day and at every season of
the year as well, the sun's shadow varied. They could trace these
shadow formations and by means of them determine accurately, this is
the time of March, this is the time of October. Through the perception
this brought them they were conscious of cosmic events, but also of
cosmic conditions having significance for life on this earth. And now,
think how people go about it today when they want to determine the
influence of cosmic life on earthly life — even the peasants!
They have a calendar telling what should be done on this or that day,
and they do it, too, approximately; for the fundamental knowledge once
available concerning these matters has vanished. But calendars there
were none at the time of the old Druids, nor even writing: what the
Druid priest was able to tell from his observations of the sun
constituted men's knowledge of the connection between the heavens and
the earth. And when the priest said: The position of the sun now calls
for the sowing of wheat, or, it is the time to lead the bull through
the herd, it was done. The cult of that epoch was anything but an
abstract prayer: it regulated life in its obvious, practical demands
in accord with the enlightenment obtained by communicating with the
spirit of the universe. The great language of the heavens was
deciphered, and then applied to earthly things.
All this penetrated even the most intimate details of the social life.
The priest indicated, according to his readings in the universe, what
should be done on such and such a day of the year in order to achieve
a favorable contact with the whole universe. That was a cult that
actually made of the whole of life a sort of divine worship. By
comparison, the most mystical mysticism of our time is a kind of
abstraction, for it lets outer nature go its way, so to speak, without
bothering about it: it lives and has its being in tradition and seeks
inner exaltation, shutting itself off and concentrating within itself
as far as possible in order to arrive at an abstract connection with
some chimerical world of divine spirit. All this was very different in
those olden times. Within the cult — and it was a cult that had a
real, true connection with the universe — men united with what
the Gods were perpetually creating and bringing about in the world:
and as earth-men they carried out the will of the gods as read in the
stellar script by means of the methods known to the Druid priests. But
they had to know how to read the writing in the stars. — It is
profoundly affecting to be able, at the very spot, to transport
oneself back to conditions such as I have described as prevailing
during the height of the Druid culture. Elsewhere in that region as
well — even over as far as Norway — are to be found many
such relics of the Druid culture.
Similarly, all through Central Europe, in parts of Germany, in the
Rhineland, even in western France, relics and reminders of the ancient
Mithras Cult are to be found. Here again I will only indicate
the most important features. The outer symbol of the Mithras Cult is
always a bull ridden by a man thrusting a sword into the bull's neck;
below, a scorpion biting the bull, or, a serpent; but whenever the
representation is complete you will see this picture of bull and man
surrounded by the firmament, and particularly the signs of the zodiac.
Again we ask, What does this picture express? The answer will never be
found by an external, antiquated science of history, because the
latter has no means of establishing the interrelationships that can
provide clues to the meaning of this man on the bull. In order to
arrive at the solution one must know the nature of the training
undergone by those who served the Mithras Cult. The whole ceremony
could, of course, be run off in such a way as to be beautiful —
or ugly, if you like — without anything intelligent transpiring.
Only one who had passed through a certain training could make sense of
it. That is why all the descriptions of the Mithras Mysteries are
really twaddle, although the pictures give promise of yielding so
much. The service of the Mithras Cult demanded in the neophyte a very
fine and sensitive development of the capacity for receptive
sentience. Everything depended upon the development of this faculty in
him.
I said yesterday in the public lecture
[See: Rudolf Steiner,
Supersensible Knowledge (Anthroposophy) as a Demand of the Age;
Anthroposophy and the Ethical-Religious Conduct of Life,
Anthroposophic Press, New York.]
that the human heart is really a
subconscious sense organ: subconsciously the head perceives through
the heart what goes on in the physical functions of the lower body and
the chest. Just as we perceive outer events in the sense-world through
the eye, so the human heart is in reality a sense organ in its
relation to the functions mentioned. Subconsciously by means of the
heart, the head, and particularly the cerebellum, perceives the blood
being nourished by the transformed foodstuffs, perceives the
functioning of the kidneys, the liver, and other processes of the
organism. The heart is the sense organ for perceiving all this in the
upper portion of the human being.
Now, to raise this heart as a sense organ to a certain degree of
consciousness was the object in the schooling of those who were to be
engaged in the Mithras Cult. They had to develop a sensitive,
conscious feeling for the processes in the liver, kidneys, spleen,
etc., in the human organism. The upper man, the headman, had to sense
very delicately what went on in the chest-man and the limb-man. In
older epochs that sort of schooling was not the mental training to
which we are accustomed today, but a schooling of the whole human
being, appealing in the main to the capacity for feeling. And just as
we say, on the basis of outer optical perception, There are rain
clouds or, the sky is blue, so the sufficiently matured disciple could
say, Now the metabolism in my organism is of this nature, now it is of
that. Actually, the processes within the human organism seem the same
the year round only to the abstractionist. When science will once more
have advanced to real truths concerning these things, men will be
amazed to learn how they can establish, by means very different from
the crude methods of our modern precision instruments, how the
condition of our blood varies and the digestion functions differently
in January from September, and in what way the heart as a sense organ
is a marvelous barometer for the course of the seasons within the
human limb-metabolic organism. The Mithras disciple was taught to
perceive the course of the seasons within himself by means of his
heart organization, his heart-science, which transmitted to him the
passage of food transformed by digestion and taken into the blood. And
what was there perceived really showed in man — in the motion of
the inner man — the whole course of outer nature.
Oh, what does our abstract science amount to, no matter how accurately
we describe plants and plant cells, animals and animal tissues,
compared with what once was present instinctively by reason of man's
ability to make his entire being into an organ of perception, to
develop his capacity for feeling into an organ capable of gleaning
knowledge! Man bears within him the animal nature, and truly he does
so more intensively than is usually imagined; and what the ancient
Mithras followers perceived by means of their heart-science could not
be represented otherwise than by the bull. The forces working through
the metabolic-limb man, and tamed only by the upper man, are indicated
by all that figures as the scorpion and the serpent winding around the
bull. And the human being proper, in all his frailty, is mounted above
in his primitive might, thrusting the sword of Michael into the neck
of the bull. But what it was that must thus be conquered, and how it
manifests itself in the course of the seasons, was known only to those
who had been schooled in these matters.
Here the symbol begins to take on significance. By means of ordinary
human knowledge no amount of observation or picturesque presentation
will make anything of it. It can only be understood if one knows
something about the heart-science of the old Mithras pupils; for what
they really studied when they looked at themselves through their heart
was the spirit of the sun's annual passage through the zodiac. In this
way the human being experienced himself as a higher being,
riding on his lower nature; and therefore it was fitting that
the cosmos should be arranged in a circle around him; in this manner
cosmic spirituality was experienced.
The more a renascent spiritual science makes it possible for us to
examine what was brought to light by an ancient semi-conscious,
dreamlike clairvoyance — but clairvoyance, nevertheless —
the greater becomes our respect for it. A spirit of reverence for the
ancient cultures pervades us when we see deeper into them and
rediscover, for example, that the purpose of the Mithras Cult was to
enable the priest, by penetrating the secrets of the seasons' cycle,
to tell the members of his community what should be done on each day
of the year. The Mithras Cult served to elicit from the heavens the
knowledge of what should take place on earth. How infinitely greater
is the enthusiasm, the incentive, for what must be done on earth if a
man feels himself to be active in such a way that into his activity
there flow the impulses deciphered from the great cosmic script he had
read in the universe; that he made such knowledge his starting point
and employed the resulting impulses in the ordinary affairs of daily
life! However little this may accord with our modern concepts —
naturally it does not — it was good and right according to the
old ones. But in making this reservation we must clearly understand
what it means to read in the universe what should be done in the lives
of men on earth, thereby knowing ourself to be one with the divine in
us — as over against debating the needs of the social life in
the vein of Adam Smith or Karl Marx. Only one who can visualize this
contrast is able to see clearly into the nature of the new impulses
demanded by the social life of our time.
This foundation alone can induce the right frame of mind for letting
our cognition pass from the earth out into cosmic space: instead of
abstractly calculating and computing and using a spectroscope, which
is the common method when looking up to Mercury, Venus, Saturn, and so
on, we thereby employ the means comprised in imagination,
inspiration, and intuition. In that way, even when only imagination
enters in, the heavenly bodies become something very different from
the picture they present to modern astronomy — a picture derived
partly from sense observation, partly from deductions. The moon, for
example, appears to present-day astronomers as some sort of a
superannuated heavenly body of mineral which, like a kind of mirror,
reflects the sunlight that then, under certain conditions, falls on
the earth. They do not bother very much about any of the effects of
this sunlight. For a time these observations were applied to the
weather, but the excessively clever people of the 19th
Century naturally refused to believe in any relation between the
various phases of the moon and the weather. Yet those who, like Gustav
Theodor Fechner, harbored something of a mystic tendency in their
soul, did believe in it. I have repeatedly told the story in our
circles about the great 19th Century botanists Schleiden
and Gustav Theodor Fechner, both active at the same university.
Schleiden naturally considered it a mere superstition that Fechner
should keep careful statistics on the rainfall during the full moon
and the new moon periods. What Fechner had to say about the moon's
influence on the weather amounted to pure superstition for Schleiden.
But then the following episode occurred. The two professors had wives;
and in those days it was still customary in Leipzig to collect
rainwater for the laundry. Barrels were set up for this purpose; and
Frau Professor Fechner and likewise Frau Professor Schleiden caught
rainwater in such barrels, like everybody else. Now, the natural thing
would have been for Frau Professor Schleiden to say, It is stupid to
bother about what sort of an influence the moon phases have on the
rainfall. But although Herr Professor Schleiden considered it stupid
to take the matter seriously, Frau Professor Schleiden got into a
violent dispute with Frau Professor Fechner because both ladies wanted
to set up their barrels in the same place at the same time. — the
women knew all about rain from practical experience, though the men on
their professorial platforms took quite a different standpoint in the
matter.
The external aspects of the moon are as I have described them; but
especially after rising from imagination to inspiration are we
confronted with its spiritual content. This content of the moon is not
just something to be understood in an abstract sense: it is a real
moon population; and looked at in a spiritual-scientific way the moon
presents itself as a sort of fortress in the cosmos. From the outside,
not only the light-rays of the sun but all the external effects of the
universe are reflected by the moon down to the earth; but in the
interior of the moon there is a complete world that nowadays can be
reached only by ascending, in a certain sense, to the spirit world. In
older writings on the relation of the moon to other cosmic beings you
can find many a hint of this, and compare it with what can now be said
by anthroposophy about the nature of the moon.
We have often heard that in olden times men had not only that
instinctive wisdom of which I have spoken: they had beings as teachers
who never descended into physical bodies — higher beings who
occupied etheric bodies only, and whose instruction was imparted to
men not by speaking, as we speak today, but by transmitting the wisdom
in an inner way, as though inoculating the etheric body with it.
People knew of the existence of these higher beings, just as we know
that some physical teacher is present; but they also knew that these
beings surrounded them in a strictly spiritual state. Everything
connected with that “primordial wisdom,” recognized even by
the Catholic Church — the primordial wisdom that once was
available, and of which even the Vedas and the sublime Vedanta
philosophy are but faint reverberations — all this can be traced
back to the teaching of these higher spiritual beings. That wisdom,
which was never written down, was not thought out by man: it grew in
him. We must not think of the influence exerted by those primordial
teachers as any sort of demonstrating instruction. Just as today, we
learn to speak when we are children by imitating the older people,
without any particular instruction — as indeed we develop a great
deal as though through inner growth — so the primordial teachers
exerted a mysterious influence on people of that ancient time, without
any abstract instruction; with the result that at a certain age a man
simply knew himself to be knowledgeable. Just as today a child gets
his second teeth or reaches puberty at a certain age, so men of old
became enlightened in the same way. — Doubtless many a modern college
student would be delighted if this sort of thing still happened —
if the light of wisdom simply flared up in him without his having to
exert himself particularly!
What a very different wisdom that was from anything we have today! It
was an organic force in man, related to growth, and other forces. It
was simply wisdom of an entirely different nature, and what took place
in connection with it I can best explain by a comparison. Suppose I
pour some sort of liquid into a glass and then add salt. When the salt
is dissolved it leaves the liquid cloudy. Then I add an ingredient
that will precipitate the salt, leaving the liquid purer, clearer,
while the sediment is denser. Very well: if I want to describe what
permeated men during the period of primordial wisdom, I must say it is
a mixture of what is spiritually wholly pure and of a physical
animalistic element. What nowadays we think, we imagine our abstract
thoughts simply as functioning and holding sway without having any
being in us: or again, breathing and the circulation seem like
something by themselves, apart. But for primeval man in earlier earth
epochs, that was all one: it was simply a case of his having to
breathe and of his blood circulating in him; and it was in his
circulation that he willed. — Then came the time when human
thinking moved higher up toward the head and became purer, like the
liquid in the glass, while the sediment, as we may call it, formed
below.
This occurred when the primordial teachers withdrew more and more from
the earth, when this primal wisdom was no longer imparted in the old
way. And whither did these primordial teachers withdraw? We find them
again in the moon fortress I spoke of. That is where they are and
where they continue to have their being. And what remained on earth
was the sediment — meaning the present nature of the forces of
propagation. These forces did not exist in their present form at the
time when primordial wisdom held sway on earth: they gradually became
that way — a sort of sediment. I am not implying that they are
anything reprehensible, merely that in this connection they are the
sediment. And our present abstract wisdom is what corresponds up above
to the solvent liquid. This shows us that the development of humanity
has brought about on the one hand the more spiritual features in the
abstract sense, and on the other, the coarser animalistic qualities as
a sediment. — Reflections of this sort will gradually evoke a
conception of the spiritual content of the moon; but it must be
remembered that this kind of science, which formerly was rather of a
prophetic nature, was inherent in men's instinctive clairvoyance.
Just as we can speak about the moon in this way — that is, about
what I may call its population, its spiritual aspect — so we can
adopt the same course in the case of Saturn. When by
spiritual-scientific effort, we learn to know Saturn — a little
is disclosed through imagination, but far more through inspiration and
intuition — we delve ever deeper into the universe, and we find
that we are tracing the process of sense perception. We experience
this physical process; we see something, and then feel the red
of it. That is something very different from withdrawing from the
physical body, according to the methods you will find described in my
books, and then being able to observe the effects of an outer object
on the human physical organism; to observe how the ether forces,
rising from within, seize on the physico-chemical process that takes
place, for example, in the eye during optical perception. In reality,
the act of exposing ourself in the ordinary way to the world in
perception, even in scientific observation, does not affect us very
deeply. But when a man steps out of himself in this way and confronts
himself in the etheric body and possibly in the astral as well, and
then sees ex postfacto how such a sense-process of perception
or cognition came about — even though his spiritual nature had
left his physical sense-nature — then he indeed feels a mighty,
intensive process taking place in his spirituality. What he then
experiences is real ecstasy. The world becomes immense; and what he is
accustomed to seeing only in his outer circle of vision, namely, the
zodiac and its external display of constellations, becomes something
that arises from within him. If someone were to object that what thus
arises might be mere recollections, this would only prove that he does
not know the event in question; for what arises there are truly not
recollections but mighty imaginations transfused by intuitions: here
we begin to behold from within what we had previously seen only from
without. As human beings we become interwoven with all the mysteries
of the zodiac; and if we seize the favorable moment there may flash
before us, out of the inner universe, the secret of Saturn, for
example, in its passage across the zodiac. Reading in the cosmos, you
see, consists in finding the methods for reading out of the inwardly
seen heavenly bodies as they pass through the zodiac. What the
individual planet tells us provides the vowels of the world-script;
and all that forms around the vowels when the planets pass the
zodiacal constellations gives us the consonants, if I may use this
comparison. By obtaining an inner view of what we ordinarily observe
only from the outside we really learn to know the essence of what
pertains to the planets.
That is the way to become acquainted with Saturn, for example, in its
true inner being. We see its population, which is the guardian of our
planetary system's memory; everything that has ever occurred in our
planetary system since the beginning of time is preserved by the
spirits of Saturn as in a mighty cosmic memory. So if anyone wants to
study the great cosmic-historical course of our planetary system,
surely he should not speculate about it, as did Kant and Laplace who
concluded that once there was a primordial mist that condensed and got
into a spiral motion from which the planets split off and circled
around the sun, which remained in the middle. I have spoken of this
repeatedly and remarked how nice it is to perform this experiment for
children: you have a drop of oil floating on some liquid; above the
liquid you have a piece of cardboard through which you stick a pin,
and you now rotate the drop of oil by twirling the pin, with the
result that smaller drops of oil split off. Now, it may be a good
thing in life to forget oneself; but in a case like this we should not
forget what we ourselves are doing in the experiment, namely, setting
the drop of oil in motion. And by the same token, we should not forget
the twirler in the Kant-Laplace theory: we would have to station him
out in the universe and think of him as some great and mighty school
teacher twirling the pin. Then the picture would have been true and
honest; but modern science is simply not honest when dealing with such
things.
I am describing to you how one really arrives at seeing what lives in
the planets and in the heavenly bodies in general. By means of Saturn
we must study the constitution of the planetary system in its
cosmic-historical evolution. Only a science that is spiritual can
offer the human soul anything that can seem like a cosmic experience.
Nowadays we really think only of earthly experiences. Cosmic
experience leads us out to participation in the cosmos; and only by
co-experiencing the cosmos in this way will we once more achieve a
spiritualized instinct for the meaning of the seasons with which our
organic life as well as our social life is interwoven — an
instinct for the very different relation in which the earth stands to
the cosmos while on its way from spring to summer, and again from
summer through autumn into winter. We will learn to sense how
differently life on earth flows along in the burgeoning spring than
when the autumn brings the death of nature; we will feel the contrast
between the awakening life in nature during spring and its sleeping
state in the fall. In this way man will again be able to conform with
the course of nature, celebrating festivals that have social
significance, in the same way that the forces of nature, through his
physical organization, make him one with his breathing and
circulation. If we consider what is inside our skin we find that we
live there in our breathing and in our circulation. What we are there
we are as physical men; in respect of what goes on in us we belong to
cosmic life. Outwardly we live as closely interwoven with outer nature
as we do inwardly with our breathing and circulation.
And what is man really in respect of his consciousness? Well, he is
really an earthworm — and worse: an earthworm for whom it never
rains! In certain localities where there is a great deal of rain, it
is so pleasant to see the worms coming out of the ground — we
must careful not to tread on them, as will everyone be who loves
animals. And then we reflect: Those poor little chaps are down there
underground all the time and only come out when it rains; but if it
does not rain, they have to stay below. Now, the materialist of today
is just such an earthworm — but one for whom it never rains; for
if we continue with the simile, the rain would consist of the radiant
shining into him of spiritual enlightenment, otherwise he would always
be crawling about down there where there is no light. Today humanity
must overcome this earthworm nature; it must emerge, must get into the
light, into the spiritual light of day. And the call for a Michael
Festival is the call for the spiritual light of day.
That is what I wanted to point out to you before I can speak of the
things that can inaugurate a Michael Festival as a festival of
especial significance — significant socially as well.
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