VI
To-day I wish to continue with the subject I
placed before you the day before yesterday. We were tracing the thread
of evolution which enters into the spiritual life of the present time,
and we left off with the individuality of Julian the Apostate. I told
you that this individuality was next incarnated in one who is only
known by legendary accounts, whose secret is contained in the Parsifal
legend, in the name of Herzeleide. In this life as Herzeleide, the soul
of Julian the Apostate entered into a far deeper inner life. The
soul-life of the individuality was deepened, as was indeed necessary
after the many storms and inner moods of opposition which he had
undergone in his life as Julian the Apostate.
But this later life of which I told
you — this life as Herzeleide — spread itself out
over the former life as Julian the Apostate like a warm embalming cloud.
Thus the soul grew more intense and deep and inward, and grew richer,
too, in manifold impulses of the inner life.
Now this soul was among those who had
carried over something of the ancient Mysteries. Julian had lived within
the substance of the ancient Mysteries at a time when their light was
still radiant in many ways. Thus he had received into himself much
spirituality of the cosmos. All this had been as it were pressed back
during the incarnation as Herzeleide; but it was none the less pressing
forth in the soul, and thus we find the same individuality again in the
16th century; we find arising in him once more, in a Christianised form,
what he had undergone as Julian the Apostate. For the same individuality
reappears in the 16th century as Tycho de Brahe, and stands face
to face with the Copernican world-conception which emerges within
Western civilisation at that time.
The Copernican world-conception pictures the
universe in a way, which if followed to its logical conclusions would
tend to drive all spirituality out of the cosmos in man's conception of
it. The Copernican world-picture leads at length to a mechanical,
machine-like conception of the universe in space. It was after all in
view of this Copernican picture of the world that the famous astronomer
said to Napoleon: he had searched through all the universe and he could
find no God. It is, indeed, an entire elimination of
spirituality.
The individuality of whom I am now
speaking, who had now returned as Tycho de Brahe, could not submit to
this. Thus we see Tycho de Brahe accepting in his world-conception what
is useful of Copernicanism, but rejecting the absolute movement of the
earth ascribed to it according to the Copernican world-picture. In Tycho
de Brahe we see these things united with true spirituality. When we
consider the course of his life, it is indeed evident how a karma from
ancient time is pressing its way forth with might and main into this
life as Tycho de Brahe, seeking to enter the substance of his
consciousness. Such is his spirituality. We remember how his Danish
relatives sought to hold him fast at all costs in the profession of a
lawyer, and we see how, living as a tutor, he steals the hours by night
in which to commune with the gods. And here an extraordinary thing
appears. All this is contained in his biography. We shall see presently
how deeply significant it is for a true estimate of this individuality
of Tycho de Brahe — Julian — Herzeleide. With the most
primitive instruments contrived and manufactured by himself, he
discovers considerable errors in calculation which had entered into the
determination of the orbits of Saturn and Jupiter. We have this
remarkable scene in the life of Tycho de Brahe. As a young man with the
most primitive instruments with which other people would not dream of
trying to accomplish anything, he feels impelled one day to seek the
exact places of Saturn and Jupiter in the heavens. In his case all these
things are strongly permeated with spiritual content. And this spiritual
content leads him to a conception of the universe such as we must have
if we are striving once again to the modern science of Initiation, when
at length we come to speak of spiritual beings as we speak of physical
men on earth. For in reality we can ever meet them, and there is in fact
only a difference in quality of being as between those individualities
who are now on the physical plane and those who are discarnate, living
between death and a new birth.
These things kindled in Tycho de Brahe an
extraordinarily deep and penetrating vision of spiritual connections. I
mean the connections which appear when we no longer regard everything on
earth as though it were caused by earthly impulses alone, and on the
other hand consider the stars only in mathematical calculations, but
when we perceive the interplay of impulses from the stars with the
historic impulses within mankind. In Tycho de Brahe's soul there lived
instinctively what he had brought with him from his life as Julian the
Apostate. In that former life it had not been permeated with rationalism
or intellectualism. It had been intuitive, imaginative —
for such was the inner life of Julian the Apostate. With all this he
succeeded in doing something that made a great sensation.
He could make little impression on his
contemporaries with his astronomic opinions, differing as they did from
Copernicus, or with his other astronomical achievements. He observed
countless stars and made a map of the heavens which alone made it
possible for Kepler afterwards to reach his great results. For it was on
the basis of Tycho de Brahe's mapping of the stars that Kepler
discovered his famous laws. But none of these things could have made so
great an impression on his contemporaries as a discovery relatively
unimportant in itself, but very striking. He foretold almost to the day
the death of the Sultan Soliman, which afterwards occurred as he had
foretold it. Here we see ancient perceptions working into a later
time in a spiritual intellectuality. Perceptions which Julian the
Apostate had received light up again in modern time in Tycho de Brahe.
Tycho de Brahe is indeed one of the most interesting of human souls. In
the 17th century he passed on through the gate of death and entered the
spiritual world. Now in the spiritual currents which I have described as
those of Michael, this being, Tycho de Brahe — Julian the Apostate
— Herzeleide, constantly emerges. In one or another of the
super-sensible functions he is in fact always there. Hence too we find
him in those great events in the super-sensible world at the end of the
18th and beginning of the 19th century which are connected with this
stream of Michael.
I told you already of the great
super-sensible School of instruction in the 15th, 16th centuries which
stood under the aegis of Michael himself. Then there began for those who
had been within this School a life which took its course in such a way
that activities and forces unfolded in the spiritual world worked down
into the physical, worked in connection with the physical world. For
example, in the time that immediately followed the period of the
super-sensible School of Michael, an important task was allotted to an
individuality of whose continued life I have often spoken —
I mean the individuality of Alexander the Great.
I have already spoken, here at Dornach too,
of Lord Bacon of Verulam as the reincarnated Haroun al Raschid. We know
how intense and determining an influence Bacon's conceptions had on the
whole succeeding evolution of the spiritual life, notably in its finer
impulses and movements. Now the remarkable thing is this, that in Lord
Bacon himself something took place which we may describe as a morbid
elimination of old spirituality. For such spirituality he had after all
possessed when he was Haroun al Raschid.
And thus we see, proceeding from the impulse
of Lord Bacon, a whole world of daemonic beings. The world was literally
filled supersensibly and sensibly with daemonic beings. (When I
say “sensibly” I meant not, of course, visibly, but
within the world of sense.)
Now it chiefly fell to the individuality of
Alexander to wage war against these daemonic idols of Lord Bacon,
Francis Bacon of Verulam. And similar activities, exceedingly important
ones, were taking place on earth below. For otherwise the materialism of
the 19th century would have broken in upon the world in a far more
devastating way even than it did. Similar activities, taking place in
the spiritual and in the physical world together, were allotted to the
stream of Michael, until at length at the end of the 18th and the
beginning of the 19th century there took place in super-sensible regions
what I have already described as the enactment of a great and sublime
super-sensible ritual and ceremony.
In the super-sensible world at that time a
cult was instituted and enacted in real imaginations of a spiritual
kind. Thus we may say: At the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th
century there hovers in the immediate neighbourhood of the physical
world of sense a great super-sensible event, consisting in super-sensible
acts of ritual, an unfolding of mighty pictures of the spiritual life of
beings of the universe, the Beings of the Hierarchies in connection with
the great ether-workings of the universe and the human workings upon
earth. I say“in the immediate neighbourhood,” meaning
of course, adjoining this physical world in a qualitative, not in
a spatial sense. It is interesting to see how at a most favourable
moment a little miniature picture of this super-sensible cult and action
flowed into Goethe's spirit. Transformed and changed and in miniature we
have this picture set down by Goethe in his fairy story of the Green
Snake and the Beautiful Lily ...
There was, then, a great super-sensible
action in which those above all took part who had partaken in the stream
of Michael, in all the revelations super-sensible and sensible, of which
I told you. Now here again and again the individuality who was last
present upon earth in Tycho de Brahe, plays a very great part. And it
was his constant striving to preserve the great and lasting impulses of
what we call paganism, of the old life of the Mysteries. It was his
striving to preserve it in effect towards a better understanding of
Christianity. He had entered Christianity when he lived as the soul of
Herzeleide. Now it was his striving to introduce into the Christian
conception all that he had received through his Initiation as Julian the
Apostate. For it was this especially which seemed so important to the
souls of whom I have spoken. The many souls who are now to be found in
the Anthroposophical Movement or strive towards this Movement with
sincerity are united with all these spiritual streams. By its very
essence and nature they feel themselves attracted by the School of
Michael, and Tycho de Brahe had a great influence in this. At the end of
the 19th and beginning of the 20th century, especially at the end of the
19th century, these souls have descended to the earth, prepared not only
to feel the Christ as He is felt in the various Confessions, but to feel
Him and behold Him as the Cosmic Christ in His universal majesty and
glory. The souls were prepared for this even supersensibly,
between death and the new birth. They were prepared by such influences
as that of Tycho de Brahe, of the soul who was last incarnated in Tycho
de Brahe.
This individuality therefore played an
extraordinarily important part continuously within the stream of
Michael.
You see, the souls were constantly looking
towards the approaching dominion of Michael. They were looking
towards it in the old super-sensible School of the 15th and 16th
centuries, and they were looking towards it again during the enactment
of that super-sensible ceremony which was to introduce and, as it were,
to consecrate from the spiritual worlds the subsequent Michael dominion
upon earth. Now as I have already indicated, a large number of
Platonically gifted souls have remained in the spiritual worlds since
the time they worked in Chartres. (I have placed here for your
inspection to-day other pictures of the series from Chartres which I
received. They are pictures of the Prophets and also of the wonderful
architecture of Chartres.) The individualities of the teachers of
Chartres, who were of a Platonic tendency, remained in the spiritual
world. It was more the Aristotelians who descended to the earth, finding
their way largely into the Dominican Order. Then, after a certain time,
they united again with the Platonists in the spiritual world and went on
working together with them supersensibly, from the spiritual world. Thus
we may say: the souls of Platonic character have remained behind. They
have not appeared again on earth, not at any rate the more important
individualities among them. They are waiting till the end of this
century. But on the other hand, many who felt themselves drawn to what I
have described as the Michael deeds in the super-sensible, have come down
and entered the stream of the Anthroposophical Movement inasmuch as they
have felt sincerely drawn on earth to such a spiritual Movement.
We may say in truth: what lives in
Anthroposophy was kindled first by the Michael School of instruction in
the 15th, 16th centuries, and by the great religious act that took place
in the super-sensible at the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th
century. It was in vision of that super-sensible action that my Mystery
Plays came into being, and for this reason the first Mystery Play,
different as it is from Goethe's fairy story of the Green Snake and the
Beautiful Lily, nevertheless reveals distinctly similar features. For a
thing that would contain real impulses of a spiritual kind cannot be
arbitrarily conceived. It must be seen and worked out in harmony with
the spiritual world.
Thus we stand here within the
Anthroposophical Movement to-day, having entered into the dominion of
Michael which has now begun. We stand here in this Movement, called to
understand the essence of this reign of Michael, called to work in the
spirit of his working through the centuries and the thousands of years.
At this moment of great significance he has begun his earthly rulership
once more and we are called to work in his direction. Such is the inner
esoteric impulse of this stream of Michael, whose working to begin with
for this century, is very clearly foreshadowed.
But you must see that if we take
Anthroposophy in its present content and trace it backward, we find
little preparation for it upon earth. Go back just a little way from
what appears as Anthroposophy and try to find its sources in the course
of the 19th century, for instance. If you do so open-mindedly, if
your vision is not clouded by all manner of philological contrivances,
you will not find the sources. You will find isolated traces of a
spiritual conception which it was always possible to use like little
germinating seeds, though very sparingly, within the great texture of
Anthroposophy. But you will find no real preparation for it within the
earthly sphere.
All the greater was the preparation in the
super-sensible. You are well aware how Goethe's working (even after his
death, though in my books it may not seem so) contributed to the forming
and shaping of Anthroposophy. It is indeed true that the most important
things in this respect took place within the super-sensible. Nevertheless
we can trace the spiritual life of the 19th century backward in a living
way till we come to Goethe, Herder, and others, nay even to Lessing. And
we find after all that what was working in isolated spirits of the end
of the 18th and first half of the 19th century was, to say the least of
it, imbued with a strong spiritual atmosphere, even if it appeared in
great abstractions as in Hegel, or in abstract pictures as in the case
of Schelling.
You may read in my
Riddles of Philosophy
how I described Schelling and Hegel. I think you will
recognise that I was seeking to point to something of the soul and
spirit in this evolution of world-conceptions which could then enter
into the Anthroposophical stream. In the book
Riddles of Philosophy,
I tried indeed to take hold of those abstractions of the philosophers with
full heart and mind. Perhaps I may specially draw your attention to the
chapter on Hegel, and to the things I said of Schelling.
But we must go still deeper to perceive the
origin of certain remarkable phenomena that appeared in the spiritual
life of the first half of the 19th century. They were lost sight of,
they were obliterated in what then came forth as the materialistic
spiritual life of the second half of the century. Nevertheless, in
however abstract conceptions, there did appear something that contained
a hidden spiritual life and being.
Most interesting, and increasingly so the
more one enters into him, is the philosopher Schelling. He begins almost
like Fichte, with pure, clear-cut ideas, saturated through and through
with will. For such was Fichte. Johann Gottlieb Fichte was one of the
few figures of world-history — indeed in a certain respect
he is perhaps unique — who combined the greatest conceptual
abstractions with enthusiasm and energy of will. He is an
extraordinarily interesting figure. Short and thick-set, under-grown a
little owing to the privations of his youth, one would see him marching
along the street with extraordinary firmness of step. He was all will,
and will and will again, and his will lived itself out in the
description of the most abstract concepts. And yet with these most
abstract concepts he could achieve such a thing, for instance, as his
Addresses to the German Nation,
with which he inspired countless people most wonderfully.
Schelling appears in an almost Fichte-like
way, not with the same power, but with a similar way of thought. But we
very soon see Schelling's spirit expand. In his youth he speaks like
Fichte of the“I” and the “Not I” and
other such abstractions and inspires the people of Jena with these
things. But he soon departs from them. His spirit grows and widens and
we see entering into him conceptions, albeit fanciful, which
nevertheless tend almost to spiritual imaginations. Thus he goes on for
a while. Then he enters deeply into such spirits as Jacob Boehme, and
writes something altogether different in style and tone from his former
works. He writes
The Foundations of Human Freedom
— which is a kind of resurrection of the ideas of Jacob Boehme.
Then we see almost a kind of Platonism
springing up in Schelling's soul. He writes a philosophic dialogue
entitled Bruno which is truly reminiscent of Plato's
Dialogues, and deeply penetrating. Interesting too is another short
work Klara, wherein the super-sensible world plays a great part.
Then for a very long time Schelling is silent. His fellow philosophers
begin to look on him, if I may put it so, almost as a living dead man.
He published only his extraordinarily deep and significant work on the
Samothracian Mysteries, once again an expansion of his spirit; but he
lives on in simple retirement at Munich, until at length the King of
Prussia summons him to lecture on philosophy at the University of
Berlin. And of the philosophy he now proclaimed Schelling said that he
had gained it in the silence of his retirement through the course of
decades.
Now, therefore, Schelling appeared in
Berlin, proclaiming that philosophy which was afterwards included in his
posthumous works as the
Philosophy of Mythology,
and the
Philosophy of Revelation.
He made no great impression on the Berlin
public, for the whole tenor of his lectures in Berlin was really this:
Man, however much he thinks and ponders, can attain nothing in the
sphere of world-conceptions; something must enter his soul, inspiring
and imbuing his thought with life as a real, spiritual world.
Suddenly, in place of the old rationalistic
philosophy there appears in Schelling a real awakening of the ancient
philosophy of the gods of mythology, a reawakening of the old gods in a
very modern way, and yet with old spirituality quite evidently working
in it. All this is very strange. And in his
Philosophy of Revelation
he evolves ideas of Christianity which do contain, in
however abstract a form, important inspirations and suggestions for what
must afterwards be said by Anthroposophy, directly out of spiritual
vision, on many points of Christianity.
Schelling is most certainly not to be passed
over in the easygoing way of the Berlin people. Indeed he cannot be
passed over at all, but the Berlin folk passed him over quite easily.
When one of his descendants got engaged to the daughter of a Prussian
minister (an external, but at any rate a karmically connected event) a
Prussian functionary who heard of it remarked:“I never knew
before why Schelling ever came to Berlin. Now I know.”
Nevertheless one can well come into inner
difficulties and conflicts in following Schelling thus through his
career. Moreover the last period in his life, dreadfully as it is
generally treated in the histories of philosophy, is always dealt with
in a chapter by itself, under the title:
Schelling's Theosophy.
I myself again and again returned to
Schelling. For me a certain warmth always proceeded from what lives in
him, in spite of the abstract form. Thus at a comparatively early age I
entered deeply into the above-mentioned philosophic dialogue,
Bruno, or On the Divine and Natural Principle of Things.
Since the year
1854, Schelling was in the spiritual world again. And he came especially
near to one through this dialogue, Bruno, if one entered into it,
and lived through it, also through his Klara, and notably through his
essay on the Samothracian Mysteries. One could easily come really near
to him in spirit.
And at length, as early as the beginning of
the eighteen nineties, it became fully clear to me: However it may have
been with the other personalities who worked in the sphere of philosophy
during the first half of the 19th century, in Schelling's case it is
absolutely clear that a spiritual inspiration did really enter in.
Spiritual inspiration worked and entered into his work
continually.
Thus one might attain the following
picture. — To begin with, down in the physical world, one
could see Schelling, as he passed through the manifold vicissitudes of
life, through a long period, as I said above, of loneliness and
isolation, treated in the most varying way by his fellow men, now with
immense enthusiasm, and now again with scorn and derision; Schelling,
who really always made a significant impression whenever he appeared
again in public — the short, thick-set man, with the immensely
impressive head, and eyes which even in extreme old age were sparkling
with fire, for from his eyes there spoke the fire of Truth, the fire of
Knowledge. And this Schelling whom one can distinctly see — the
more so, the more one enters into him — had certain moments when
inspiration poured into him from above.
Most clear and visible it became to me when
I read Robert Zimmermann's review of Schelling's book on the
Ages of the World.
From Zimmermann, as you know, is derived the word
Anthroposophy, though his Anthroposophy is a tangled undergrowth of
abstract concepts. I had the very greatest regard for him, and yet, when
I read this review, I could not help breaking out into the sigh —
“Pedant that you are!”
Then I returned
to the book itself, Schelling's
Ages of the World,
which is indeed somewhat
abstractly written, but in which one may clearly recognise something
like a description of ancient Atlantis — quite a spiritual
description, containing spiritual realities, however much distorted by
abstractions.
Thus you see in Schelling's case again and
again there is something working in from higher worlds, so that we must
say: Down there is Schelling, but in the higher worlds something is
taking place which influences him from above. In Schelling's case what
is a general truth becomes most visible, namely that in spiritual
evolution there is a perpetual interplay of the spiritual world above
with the earthly world below. And once in the eighteen nineties I was
most intensely concerned in finding the spiritual foundations of the age
of Michael and of other things.
At that time I myself was entering a phase
of life in which I could not but experience intensely the world
immediately adjoining our physical world of sense. I could only hint at
these things in my autobiography, but I have hinted at them
there. That adjoining world is separated, if I may so describe it, only
by a thin wall from the physical, and in it the most gigantic facts are
happening, nor are they at all powerfully separated from our world. It
was at the time when I was in Weimar. On the one hand I entered most
intensively into the social life of Weimar in all directions; but at the
same time I felt the inner necessity to withdraw into myself. These two
sides of my life went parallel with one another. And at that time, in
the very highest degree, it happened that my experience of the spiritual
world was always more intense and strong than my experience of the
physical. Already as a young man I had no great difficulty in quickly
comprehending any philosophy or world-conception that came into my
sphere. But a plant or a stone, if I had to recognise it again, I had to
look at, not three or four times, but fifty or sixty times. I could not
easily unite my soul with that which in the physical world is named by
physical means. And this had reached its highest point during my Weimar
period.
It was long, long before the Republican
Constituent Assembly took place in Weimar, and at that time Weimar was
really like a spiritual oasis, quite different from any other place in
Germany. In that Weimar, as I said in my autobiography, I did indeed
experience intense moments of loneliness. And once again —
it was in 1897 — wishing to investigate certain matters, I put my
hand on Schelling's
Divinities of Samothrace,
and his
Philosophy of Mythology,
simply to receive a stimulation, not in
order to study in the books. (Just as one who researches in the spiritual
world, if for instance, he wishes to make researches on the periods of the
first Christian centres, in order to facilitate matters may lay the writings
of St. Augustine or of Clement of Alexandria under his head for a few
minutes in succession. You must not laugh about these things. They are
simply external methods to assist one, external technicalities that are
not directly connected with the real thing itself. They are an external
stimulation, like any technical mnemonic.) Thus at that time I took into
my hand Schelling's
Divinities of Samothrace,
and his
Philosophy of Mythology.
But the real subject of my study at that moment was that
which was taking place spiritually in the course of the 19th century,
and which afterwards poured down so as to become Anthroposophy.
And at that moment, when I was really able
to trace Schelling's life, his biography, his evolution through his
life, it was revealed to me — not yet quite clearly, for
these things only became clear at a far later date, when I wrote my
Riddles of Philosophy
— it was revealed to me, I could
already perceive, although not quite clearly, how much of Schelling's
writing was written down by him under inspiration, and that that
inspiring figure was Julian the Apostate — Herzeleide —
Tycho Brahe. He has not appeared again himself on the physical plane,
but he worked with tremendous strength through the soul of Schelling.
Then I became aware how greatly Tycho Brahe had progressed in his life
as Tycho Brahe. Through Schelling's bodily nature little could
penetrate; but once we know how the individuality of Tycho Brahe hovered
over him as an inspirer, we read the lightning-flashes of genius in the
Divinities of Samothrace
quite differently. We read the flashes of genius above all in the
Philosophy of Revelation,
and in Schelling's interpretation of the ancient Mysteries, which is, after
all, magnificent of its kind. And especially if we enter deeply enough
into the curious language he uses in these passages, then presently we
hear, no longer the voice of Schelling but the voice of Tycho
Brahe! Then indeed we become aware how,
among other spirits, this Tycho Brahe, especially the individuality who
was in Julian the Apostate, played a great part, and contributed
many things. For by his genius many a thing arose in the spiritual life
of modern time which worked in turn as a stimulus, and whence we were to
borrow at least the external form and expression for the spirit and
teachings of Anthroposophy.
Another of the writings of German
philosophers which made a great impression on me was
Jakob Froschhammer's
book,
Die Phantasie als Welt-Prinzip,
a brilliant book at the end of the
19th century, brilliant because this courageous man, having been driven
from the Church, and his writings placed in the Index, was no less
courageous in the face of science, for he revealed the kinship of the
creative principle of fancy working purely in the soul when man creates
artistically, with the force that works within as the force of life and
growth. In that time it was indeed an achievement.
Froschhammer's
book on fancy or imagination as a world-principle, as a world-creative
power, is indeed a work of great importance.
Thus I was
greatly interested in this man,
Jakob Froschhammer.
Once more I tried to
get at him in a real sense, not only through his writings, and once
again I found that the inspiring spirit was the same who had lived in
Tycho Brahe and in Julian the Apostate. And so it was in a whole number
of personalities in whose working we can see a certain preparation for
what then came forth as Anthroposophy.
But in each case we need the spiritual light
behind, the light which works within the super-sensible. For what came to
earth before remained, after all, in a world of abstraction. It is only
now and then, in a spirit such as Schelling, or in a man of courage like
Jakob Froschhammer,
that the abstractions suddenly grow concrete.
And to-day, my dear friends, we may look up
to what is working there in spiritual realms, and we may know how
Anthroposophy stands in relation to it. And well we know how we are
being helped by that which we perceive when we extend our spiritual
research into the detailed realities of spiritual life in the course of
history. Well may we know it. Here upon earth, striving honestly towards
Anthroposophy, there are numbers of souls who have always stood near to
the stream of Michael. Added to these, in the super-sensible world, are
numbers of souls who have remained behind, among them the teachers of
Chartres. And between those who are here in the world of sense, and
those who are above in the spiritual world, there is a decided tendency
to unite their work with one another.
And now if we would find a great helper for
those things which we must investigate for the future of the 20th
century, if we would find one who can advise us in relation to the
super-sensible world, if we need impulses that are there within that
world, it is the individuality of Julian the Apostate —
Tycho Brahe who can help us. He is not on the physical plane to-day; but
in reality he is always there, always ready to give information on those
matters especially which concern the prophetic future of the 20th
century.
Taking all these things together it does
indeed emerge that those who receive Anthroposophy in a sincere way at
the present time are preparing their souls to shorten as far as possible
the life between death and a new birth, and to appear again at the end
of the 20th century, united with the teachers of Chartres who have
remained behind.
We should receive into our souls this
consciousness: That the Anthroposophical Movement is called to work on
and on, and to appear again not only in its most important, but in
nearly all its souls, at the end of the 20th century. For then the great
impulse will be given for a spiritual life on earth, without which
earthly civilisation would finally be drawn into that decadence, the
character of which is only too apparent.
Out of such foundations, I would fain kindle
in your hearts something of the flames that we require, so that already
now within the Anthroposophical Movement we may absorb the spiritual
life strongly enough to appear again properly prepared. For in that
great epoch after shortened life in spiritual worlds we shall work
again on earth — in the epoch when for the salvation of the earth
the spiritual Powers are reckoning in their most important members, in
their most important features, on what Anthroposophists can do.
I think the vision of this perspective of
the future may stir the hearts of Anthroposophists to call forth within
themselves the feelings which will carry them in a right way, with
energy and strength of action and with the beauty of enthusiasm, through
the present earthly life; for then this earthly life will be a
preparation for the work at the end of the century when Anthroposophy
will be called upon to play its part.
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