Lecture Five
As
our studies continue we shall, gradually come to
understand what karma may signify in the individual life
of man, although I shall constantly be drawing attention to
certain karmic connections of personalities known in history.
For if we observe the manifestations of karma across the wide
perspective of history, light will also be shed upon
details of our own karma which cannot fail to interest us. At
the very outset let it be said that clairvoyant insight
is not essential to the perception, the feeling, of the working
of karma. It is quite true that in order to survey the whole
range of karmic laws such insight is necessary; and much that I
have been telling you during the last few days can, of course,
be discovered only by means of clairvoyance. But the feeling,
the clear and distinct feeling for karma is a preparation for
clairvoyant insight. This feeling and perception can play a
part in the life of every individual provided that he is not
exclusively concerned with superficialities and outwardly
sensational happenings, but unfolds a sensitive understanding
of the more intimate experiences of existence and an inkling of
certain connections of destiny which by their very nature show
that they cannot possibly be rooted in the one earthly life
between birth and death.
Let
us think of how we meet and become acquainted with other human
beings. By far the greatest part of our destiny depends upon
these meetings. We meet one person or another and the
experiences we share with him have an effect upon our life. And
precisely the experiences we share with others in different
circumstances of life will make it evident to attentive
observation that karma is not irreconcilable with the
ingrained feeling of the extent to which our actions are the
outcome of free decision. After all, we are sent into existence
in an epoch of life when as far as earthly impulses are
concerned there can be no question of freedom. A very great
deal depends upon how we are placed in existence as
children. The faculties that are drawn out of us, the paths
along which we are directed — all this is of infinite
significance in the destiny of our whole life. Later on, as
independent human beings, we can of course take a hand in
directing our own existence but even then the place assigned to
us in childhood is determinative. And so if we observe closely
we shall certainly be able to perceive how destiny plays into
our free actions, our free deeds and activities.
Think of the following. — We meet other human beings and
there is clearly a difference between one kind of
acquaintanceship and another. We may meet someone for the
first time and feel at once that there is a bridge leading over
from our soul to his. We may well be strongly drawn to him but
not nearly as interested in the details of his outward
appearance, whether he is handsome or ugly, whether he
looks friendly or ill-disposed. What draws us to him is
something that wells up from within us; we feel sympathy
towards him. In the case of another person we may actually feel
antipathy simply when we are near him and conscious of his
presence. Our feeling for him does not depend upon the
impression he makes through his actions or what he actually
says to us. Such experiences stand in earthly existence like
question-marks, like far-reaching problems set us by reality.
With both these kinds of acquaintanceship we feel no urge at
all to ask: what is the individual really like? What
does he actually do? Everything that attracts us to him gathers
into an aggregate of feelings arising from experiences and
components of our soul-life, feelings which there is no
need to justify by what he actually does.
But
there are acquaintanceships of a different kind, where no such
experiences occur. Although there is no feeling of deep-seated
sympathy or antipathy, such individuals interest us. We
feel an urge to discover whether their attitude is friendly or
unfriendly, whether they are gifted or not gifted. Having made
such an acquaintanceship it may happen that we meet someone who
also knows the person in question and we feel we want to talk
about him, to ask about his position in life, who he is, and so
forth; we are interested in what he is outwardly. But in
connection with an acquaintance of the other category we may
find it extremely embarrassing to meet someone who knows him
and begins to speak about him. We simply do not want to talk
about this person. Now when Spiritual Science endeavours to get
to the root of an occurrence of this nature, it turns out that
if an inexplicable feeling of affection or dislike wells
up in us when we meet a particular person, then we have had
some karmic tie with him in the past and this has really guided
our whole path in such a way that at a certain moment in life
we come across him. Experiences shared in past ages shape and
determine the feelings we have about him. And it is these
feelings that count — not whether he is good-looking or
ugly, kindly or ill-disposed. When such feelings are emphatic
and distinct and it is possible for spiritual-scientific
investigation to shed light upon them, their explanation is
forthcoming from what such investigation has to say about karma
that was formed in the past. Moreover we shall find this
confirmed in many other ways.
During sleep, when we are outside our physical and etheric
bodies, living a spiritual existence in the ‘I’ and astral
body, dreams occur. But with rigorous self-observation let us
ask ourselves whether it is not the case, when certain
acquaintanceships are accompanied by these uprising
feelings and experiences, that we at once begin to dream
about these people. We dream so readily about certain
acquaintances. This indicates that there is a connection
between the person in question and our own soul-and-spirit
which has shared experiences with him either in many lives or
maybe in one life only; our ‘I’ and astral body in which we
live during sleep, are connected in some way with this
individual. Others whom we may encounter in our profession,
business or the like, interest us in the different way I
described. It may well happen that we have a great deal to do
with them; life throws us together, but we simply cannot dream
about them. In such cases the connection belongs only to the
present earthly life and the link is made by what binds
the soul-and-spiritual part of man to the physical and the
etheric. Now it is paramountly the physical and etheric bodies
which are involved in interests connected with external
activities, outward appearances, and the reason why we cannot
dream about these particular people is that the physical and
etheric bodies lie there in the bed and the being of
soul-and-spirit is not within them. Spiritual Science reveals
that although karma is certainly at work here it is only now
beginning to form and that not until we look back from
spiritual existence upon this earthly life will it be possible
to say that karmic connections began in that life. In
this case, karma is in process of coming into being.
We
have heard how karma takes shape, how all that we experience in
communion with spiritual Beings between death and a new birth
works for long ages at the weaving of karma. But if you reflect
upon what has here been said about the laws of karma, you will
say to yourselves: earthly life brings human beings together
and a karmic link is formed between them; they pass together
through the life between death and rebirth and in cooperation
with higher Beings shape their karma for the next earthly life.
What, then, is the consequence in the earthly life of man?
Broadly speaking this: that individuals who have been together
in an earthly life where karma begins to form, will endeavour
in the next earthly life to find their way to one another
again. Once again they will establish karmic links, will again
pass through the life between death and rebirth where a still
stronger link is forged between them, and again seek for a
common earthly existence. And here the remarkable fact comes to
light that as Earth-evolution runs its course, human beings
live together in groups. Time flows on: a certain group of
human beings living as contemporaries in a particular
epoch and karmically connected with one another, appears again
on the Earth after the life spent between death and rebirth. A
different group of human beings linked together by karmic ties
appears on the Earth in a common existence; a third group
likewise. As the periods between death and rebirth are by far
the longer, it follows that the majority of human beings only
meet in the life after death and before birth and that those
specially connected with one another by karma pass through
evolution in groups, coming together again and again on the
Earth. That is the general rule. As a rule it is the
case that on Earth we do not encounter those who formerly
were not incarnated at the same time as ourselves.
We
learn that this is so when with spiritual insight we ponder
upon the facts and consequences of human relationships.
Provided we reflect without prejudices or preconceptions,
spiritual observation will certainly confirm what has here been
said. — As you know, for a considerable time in my early
life I was engrossed in the study of Goethe. I had this
spiritual preoccupation with Goethe so much at heart that I
often asked myself: What if I had been a contemporary of
Goethe? Outwardly, the prospect would have been
entrancing! For when one is strongly drawn to Goethe,
loves to steep oneself in his works and devotes part of one's
life to elucidating and interpreting him, how could one fail to
think of how delightful it would have been to have lived in
Weimar at the same time, to have seen him, perhaps even to have
been able to converse with him. But that, after all, is a
superficial point of view which deeper insight immediately
corrects. At all events I realised that the very thought of
living as a contemporary of Goethe would be quite
unbearable. For one treasured Goethe so highly just
because the creations he bequeathed had worked in one for a
time and it was then possible to draw it all forth again from
spiritual depths of world-existence. To have lived as a
contemporary of Goethe would have been unbearable! When
it is clear that the relationship was the result of having been
born at a later time, when the subtler connections of the life
of soul are taken into account in a case like this where one is
drawn to a personality with whom karma did not bring one into
direct contact, where the karmic relationships are more
complicated, it becomes clear to spiritual insight that had one
lived at the same time as this personality, he would have acted
like poison upon the soul. I know that this is a strong
statement, but it is a fact, nevertheless. To have been a
contemporary of Goethe would have made it impossible to
keep one's own disposition and configuration of soul firmly
knit.
From the wider point of view such circumstances sharpen our
perception of the inner truths, the inner relationships, of
human life. We no longer talk out of the blue nor shall we be
tempted to come out with the hackneyed exclamation: ‘Oh, if
only I had been alive then!’ When karma is interpreted rightly,
it becomes a source of strength in the circumstances of our
life, establishes us in earthly existence at the place where we
truly belong. That karma is in truth destiny becomes
plain when we begin to reflect upon why we were born at a
particular time. We come into earthly existence just when we
do, because together with other souls who are karmically
connected with us we have prepared our karma for the time when
we are to descend to physical existence on Earth.
What I have been telling you is the general rule — but in
the spiritual world everything is individual. Rules have
their significance but this must not be taken to imply that
they are to be regarded as principles. A man who is a stickler
for rules, who insists that they can have no exceptions, will
never find his way into the spiritual world. For in the
spiritual world nothing is the same as it is in the physical
world. What could be more obvious to a man living in the
physical world than the mathematical axiom: the whole is
greater than any of its parts — or the straight way is
the shortest distance between two points? Only a lunatic would
contend that the whole is not greater than any of its parts.
Such things are called ‘axioms’ because they are self-evident
truths and, as it is said, cannot and need not be proved. The
same applies to the formula: the straight way is the shortest
distance between any two points. But neither formula holds good
in the spiritual world. What actually holds good in the
spiritual world is the formula: the whole is always
smaller than any one of its parts. And we find
confirmation of this in the very being of man. Observed in the
spiritual world, the spiritual counterpart of your physical
being is about the size — a trifle larger but
approximately the same size as it is in the physical world.
When, however, you see your lungs or your liver in the
spiritual world, they are of gigantic magnitude, and yet
they are parts of something small. We have to learn to change
our thinking entirely. In the spiritual world the straight way
is by no means the shortest but on the contrary the very
longest, because in that world to move from one point to
another is a different matter altogether. In the physical world
it is pedantically correct to say: that way is long, this
longer, this — the straight — the shortest. But in
the spiritual world the straight way presents such enormous
difficulties that any of the winding ways is the shorter. Hence
there is no sense in saying: the straight way is the shortest
between any two points — because in actual fact it is the
longest of all.
We
have to recognise that in the spiritual world nothing is the
same as in the physical world. The reason why people find it so
difficult to reach the spiritual world with the exercises they
practise quite faithfully is that they cling to preconceptions
such as: the whole is greater than any of its parts, or, the
straight way is the shortest between two points. So much for
the axioms.
But
we must also give up clinging to all other truths which hold
good in the physical world if we are to penetrate into the
spiritual world. In the spiritual world there can be no
all-embracing principles, for everything there is individual.
Each fact must be approached as something entirely
individual. In the spiritual world there is none of this
dreadful, logical assembling of facts, this basing of
everything upon general rules. And so the truth of which I have
spoken, namely, that human beings pass through their earthly
evolution in groups — although it is indeed a truth and
holds good in the broad sense — is sometimes broken
through. And precisely from those cases where it is broken
through we can realise its significance. Let me give an
example.
You
must forgive these examples being taken from my own life. After
all, how can there be closer knowledge of examples of these
things than when they are drawn from one's own life? In
recounting the story of my life I have mentioned a geometry
teacher of mine. Not only had I great affection for this
teacher while I was actually his pupil, but afterwards too, and
it was interesting for me to investigate his karma and the
whole setting of his life. I myself had a personal weakness, as
the saying goes, for geometry. Even at the age of nine, a
geometry book that fell into my hands brought me sheer delight;
it was written by this teacher who thought me far too immature
for anything of the kind. To learn that the three angles of a
triangle total 180° was sheer joy to me when I was a boy
of nine. But later on, when I was about twelve, and for some
years after, this man was my geometry teacher. He was a most
remarkable and interesting personality, for he was, so to say,
the very embodiment of geometry — but of a particular
kind: descriptive, constructive geometry. In the higher classes
I was obliged to learn analytical geometry — as it is
called — from others, because my former teacher simply
did not understand it. He was a first-rate constructor and in
that branch he was wonderfully impressive. I myself made
remarkable progress in geometry just because I loved him so
deeply. It was always a happy hour for me when this teacher
came into the class and demonstrated geometry in his own
characteristic way. Later on — because my interest in him
never waned — I realised that it was only natural to
investigate the karmic setting of his life. Now when it is a
matter of investigating karma, one can get nowhere by focusing
attention upon what, at first sight, makes the most striking
impression. If I had paid attention only to his excellence as a
teacher of geometry, I should certainly never have discovered
the threads of his karma. But what made a deep impression upon
me in connection with his life was the fact that he had a
club-foot. One leg was shorter than the other. These are
details which in the ordinary way are thought to have no
bearing upon the actual life. The things of really deep
interest, however, are those which lead to the karmic
connections. They need not necessarily be very striking.
One may actually be led to a man's karmic connection by some
repeated habit. A trifling habit may form itself into a picture
and lead one to the karmic connections in earlier lives of the
person concerned. And so in the case of another teacher for
whom I had great affection, I was guided to certain karmic
connections — of which I do not now propose to speak
— through the fact that whenever this teacher came to his
class, the first thing he did was to take out his handkerchief
and blow his nose! He never by any chance began a lesson
without doing this, and the picture into which this habit
shaped itself led me back to his earlier earthly lives. And it
was the same with the other teacher, the one with the
clubfoot. In point of fact it was this club-foot which
gave me the first clue to his particular talent. It is usually
thought that the ability to construct figures from geometrical
lines comes from the head. But that is simply not the case. Man
does not experience geometry through his head. You would never
be able to think of an angle if you did not walk. It is
because you experience the angle in your legs that you know
something about it. The head merely looks on, perceives how the
arms or the legs form angles. In geometry we actually
experience our own will weaving through our limbs. Our
limbs teach us geometry. It is only because we have become
such creatures of abstraction that we are unaware of this and
firmly believe that all geometrising goes on in the head. The
head looks on. perceives how we walk, or dance, or whatever it
may be. and then evolves the geometrical figures. And now the
whole connection, the reason for this characteristic way of
presenting geometry, was clear to me as I studied the
inner constitution of this man who was obliged to walk about
with a club-foot and who because of the deep effect it had upon
him became such an excellent geometrician — but in one
direction only. Such things belong to the more intimate
concatenations of life.
But
what led me to further insight? Coupled with this teacher there
arose before me the picture of another man, also with a
club-foot, namely, the English poet, Lord Byron. The two
men with this physical similarity came in a picture before me,
side by side, and many things that had played over from earlier
karma into the moral and ethical connections of Byron's
life but had also come to expression in his club-foot, became
clear to me. When perception of karma has reached this point,
its range widens and I was now able to discover that these two
men had lived as companions in Eastern Europe at a certain time
during the Middle Ages; they had shared a similar destiny and
the content of their lives at that time was revealed to me.
Neither the earlier life of Byron nor that of my teacher
resembled their lives in the nineteenth century. But the two
had been associated in destiny of a very intimate kind. During
their lives in Eastern Europe they came to know of the
significant legend concerning the palladium — the
treasure endowed with magical power upon which the might of
Troy depended. The palladium had been buried in Troy and was an
object of veneration there. Then it was taken across Africa to
Rome where it remained for long ages. When he founded
Constantinople, the Emperor Constantine caused this palladium
— upon which the power, first of Troy and then of Rome
was said to depend — to be removed at the cost of great
hardships and with tremendous pomp, to Constantinople,
where it was sunk in the ground, in order that the power of
Constantinople should replace that of Rome. It is said —
and with considerable truth — that the Emperor's
arrogance had caused him to transfer the palladium from Rome to
Constantinople where he erected a massive column over the spot
at which it had been sunk and had a statue of Apollo placed
upon this column. The task of bringing the column to
Constantinople was one of enormous difficulty, entailing the
construction of a special road. The column had originally been
brought from Egypt to Rome and its weight was so enormous that
every road to Constantinople subsided and became dangerous. The
column was erected and the palladium safely protected. The
Emperor ordered the statue of Apollo to be set in place but let
it be known that this statue was a representation of himself.
Then, having caused wood and nails from the Cross of Christ to
be brought from the East, he had the wood inserted into the
statue and the nails moulded into rays around the head of
Apollo. Constantine pictured himself standing there aloft,
surrounded by rays of glory fashioned from the wood and the
nails of the Cross of Christ. Later on, another legend came to
be associated with the palladium, a legend which still played a
part in the Testament of Peter the Great, to the effect that
the palladium would be carried off by men of the East to their
capital, that in time to come the power of the Slavs would be
founded on its magical power; through the palladium, so it was
said, power would pass to the Slavs just as it had passed to
Troy, to Rome, to Constantinople. Such things contain deep
truths, even though they are presented in the form of
legend.
But
this much is certain: anyone who understands the history of the
palladium will understand very much of the course taken by
European history. This legend came to the knowledge of the two
men of whom I have spoken — Byron and his contemporary in
the early Middle Ages — and they resolved to seize the
palladium and take it to the North, to Russia. They did not
succeed; the project failed, as indeed it was bound to do. But
something of it remained in the two men; in karmic connections,
something remained in them in a strange and remarkable way. At
a later time, Byron sought for the palladium in a different
fashion; he allied himself with the movement for liberty in
Greece — it was the search for a spiritual palladium.
This was the urge that had remained in him from the time of
which I spoke. And it was clear to anyone who observed my
teacher closely, that in spite of his relatively unimportant
position, in whatever situation he might be, he evinced an
inflexible sense for freedom which was deeply connected in his
inmost being with the bodily defect — just as in the case
of the one who was his earlier contemporary.
What, then, had happened to these two men? Their paths had
separated and they did not find one another again. One of them
was Lord Byron, the famous poet; the other, who lived at a
slightly later time, was the unknown geometry teacher. In that
case the rule of which I have spoken was broken through. But in
a curious way, life itself brought me confirmation of this. The
teacher I loved so deeply, eagerly awaiting him whenever he
came to give his geometry lesson, never once gave me an
opportunity of a private conversation with him during the whole
of the time he was my teacher. He was like a personality of
whom I had only read in history. He did not really fit into the
times; one got the impression that he was misplaced in his
epoch. Later on, when for the purpose of an anthroposophical
lecture I visited the town where he was living in retirement, I
looked for his name in the directory. I felt that he must be
there and now, after such a lapse of time — thirty years
or so — I had a desire to talk to him personally, as a
friend. By this time he was quite elderly and lived in Graz,
the Austrian home of many University pensioners. I went to Graz
for the lecture, found his name in the directory and made up my
mind to call on him. But visits from others prevented me, even
then, from any private talk with him. Although I loved him so
dearly, he remained a shadow-personality in my life. When I
went to Graz a second time, I again wanted to visit him, but he
had since died. And so here I was confronted with a personality
who although I felt so near to him, seemed to be like
someone I had merely read about, someone who belonged to
a quite different epoch. The circumstances were something like
this: I was a contemporary of his but had no karmic connection
with him. In none of his earlier incarnations had he been a
contemporary of mine. This last life was plainly outside the
sequence of the karmic groups to which he really belonged. This
was also confirmed by the other case. There had been a
departure from the sequence of incarnations to which my
teacher belonged because in this earthly life he was not
connected with the individual with whom he had formerly been
associated. Byron and he did not meet. I am telling you these
things in order to show you how karma works and how, by deeper
observation, precisely through experiences which, to begin
with, are bound to be riddles — and life, after all, is
full of riddles — one can really perceive the mysterious
weaving of karma. But just as certain contemporaries seem to be
only pictures because they have moved out of their own karmic
sequence, on the other hand one is fully aware that by far the
greater majority of human beings are placed in their epoch by
strong, inner necessity. This is often very clear in the case
of historical personalities.
Here again, let me give an example. Garibaldi, the champion of
liberty in Italy, is a well-known figure. His was in truth a
remarkable life. As a personality, Garibaldi attracted me as
little as the one I mentioned yesterday, whose karma I
investigated. It was in the course of research, and not until
then, that I began to be more drawn to Garibaldi. Before I had
investigated his karmic connections a great deal about him had
seemed to me to be unnatural, hollow — which he most
certainly was not. This personality, in spite of being
intensely active in politics and practical affairs, seems, when
one observes him closely, to stand in a strange way outside
life — as if he were living in a purely imagined world,
as if he were hovering a little above the Earth. Practical as
he was, Garibaldi was also an idealist, as is clear even from
his external life. We need only think of a few characteristic
episodes in Garibaldi's life and this is at once obvious.
— I will speak briefly because time is getting on.
— It was by no means an everyday occurrence for a young
man to sail around the Adriatic Sea in the first half of the
nineteenth century — Garibaldi was born in 1807
— at a time when its waters were so fraught with danger.
He fell more than once into the hands of pirates and freed
himself again after perilous adventures. Occasionally, of
course, something of the kind may also happen to others, but it
certainly does not occur often, as it did to Garibaldi, that
when a man has been for a time beyond the reach of newspapers
and finally gets hold of one, he reads in it the announcement
of his own death sentence! That was what happened to Garibaldi.
He had returned from some maritime adventure and without
knowing it had been accused of participating in certain
political conspiracies. Sentence of death had been passed upon
him in his absence and he read this in the newspaper. He seemed
through his destiny to stand a little above actual life.
But
other events in his life are even more unusual. Thus, for
example, it happened that as the ship in which he had sailed to
a foreign country in order to share in certain struggles for
freedom, was nearing the coast, he looked through a telescope
at the land. There he saw a young, attractive girl and
forthwith fell in love with her — through the telescope!
It is certainly not the normal way of falling in love. People
who are firmly grounded in life do not fall in love through a
telescope! But Garibaldi fell head over heels in love and
brought his ship with all speed to the spot where he had caught
sight of the girl. When he arrived she had vanished, but a man
standing there took such a liking to him that he invited him to
a meal — it turned out that he was the father of the very
girl with whom Garibaldi had fallen in love through the
telescope! Thus Garibaldi was able to partake of the meal in
the girl's company. He could speak only Italian, she only
Portuguese, but both of them understood the language of the
heart and they became betrothed. Their life together demanded
great valiance on the part of the woman. She accompanied him on
his campaigns, acting throughout with great heroism. The
circumstances are by no means usual! The first child is born
while the husband is many leagues distant and while the wife
searches for him on the battlefield she has to strap the child
round her neck with a rope in order to keep it warm. She hears
that her husband has been killed, faces every imaginable danger
in search of him, but finally finds him alive. In spite of
everything it was a marriage altogether to be admired. Those
familiar with Garibaldi's biography will be aware that the wife
predeceased him by a long time and a year after her
death, as not infrequently happens, he again became betrothed
and married another woman, just like any conventional citizen.
This marriage, which was an accomplished fact, lasted only one
day and the two separated. Quite obviously, Garibaldi's
connection with earthly existence was different from that of
other men, and it interested me to investigate a life such as
this.
The
research led me once again to the Irish Mysteries. Garibaldi
too was an individuality who had passed through the Mysteries
of Hibernia. Having reached a certain degree of Initiation, he
journeyed eastwards, actually working together with others, in
the Rhineland. But in respect of karma, what interested me
particularly in the life of Garibaldi was that here was a
personality whose activities are really difficult to explain.
For in a certain sense Garibaldi was the very personification
of sincerity. In the deepest fibres of his being, in his whole
attitude of soul, he was a Republican — yet in spite of
this it was actually through him that Victor Emanuel came to
sit on the Throne of Italy. Garibaldi championed the Monarchy
in the person of Victor Emanuel. To begin with it all seems
incredible. What induced this Republican to make Victor Emanuel
King of Italy? Look it up in history and you will find that
without Garibaldi there would have been no Italian Monarchy.
And then again, Garibaldi is associated with other
personalities — Cavour, Mazzini — whose outlooks
and leanings are poles apart from his own inner attitude.
Cavour and Mazzini are men of utterly different mentality.
Mazzini, the idealist who takes no part in practical affairs;
Garibaldi, invariably the practical, militaristic statesman but
for all that seeming to hover a little above the earthly;
Cavour, the shrewd, astute politician — how do these men
fit together? That was the problem. And precisely here
something comes to light that I will put before you as a
characteristic feature in karma. It turns out that these other
three men had been followers of Garibaldi when he had been an
Initiate in Hibernia; they were his pupils. Now it was an
essential principle of the old Irish Mysteries that a vital
link should be formed between pupil and teacher. They cannot
separate from one another, at all events not in certain
incarnations. A karmic tie is forged and there can be no
separating. In this particular case we find very singular
circumstances: about the year 1807, these four men are born
again, one in Genoa, two in Turin, the fourth in Nice —
that is to say in the same corner of the globe and also
approximately at the same time. They are born together —
in the same epoch and in the same region. This is a case where
men who belong together are brought together again, in spite of
their personal leanings. A fervent Republican such as Garibaldi
is tied to Victor Emmanuel — a man with such different
persuasions and convictions — and the human relationship
counts for far more than all the rest. I give this example to
show you what human relationships that are based on karma,
really signify. The one may believe this, the other that
— but the karmic connection is by far the stronger bond.
It is these human relationships that take effect in life, not
so much the abstract things mediated by the intellect. But it
is only by examining karma in characteristic cases that we
discover how human beings are connected with one another, and
how, if they have shifted away from the stream to which their
own karma really belongs, they may pass through life like
shadows.
So
much for to-day. We shall continue these studies to-morrow.
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