X
From our
last lecture you will at any rate have seen that the man of to-day,
constituted as he is in his bodily nature and by education, cannot
easily bring into his present incarnation such spiritual contents as are
seeking to enter in from former incarnations. He cannot even do so when
this present incarnation is so strange and unusual a one as that of
which I spoke last Sunday. For, in effect, we are living in the age of
evolution of the conscious, spiritual soul. This is an evolution of the
soul which evolves most especially the intellect, i.e., that faculty of
the soul which governs the whole of life to-day, no matter how often
people may be crying out for heart and sentiment and feeling. It is the
faculty of the soul which is most able to emancipate itself from the
elementarily human qualities, from that which man bears within him as
his deeper being of soul.
A certain
consciousness of this emancipation of the intellectual life does indeed
find its way through when people speak of the cold intellect in which
men express their egoism, their lack of sympathy and compassion with the
rest of mankind, nay even with those who are nearest to them in their
life. Speaking of the coldness of the intellect one has in mind the
following of all those paths which lead, not to the ideals of the soul,
but to the planning of one's life on utilitarian principles and the
like.
In all these
things people give expression to a feeling of how the element of
intellect and rationalism emancipates itself within the human being from
what is truly human. And indeed if one can fully see the extent to which
the souls of to-day are intellectualised, one will understand also in
every single case how karma must carry into the souls of to-day the high
spirituality which these souls have passed through in former epochs. For
I ask you to consider the following. — Let us take quite a general
case. I showed you a special example last time, but let us now take the
general case of a soul that lived in the centuries before the Mystery of
Golgotha or even after the Mystery of Golgotha in such a way as to take
the spiritual world absolutely as a matter of course. Let us think of a
human being who in such a life could speak of the spiritual world out of
his own experience as of a world that is no less real and present than
the many-coloured warm and cold world of the senses.
All these
things are there within the soul. And in the interval between death and
a new birth, or in repeated intervals of this kind, all these things
have entered into relationship with the spiritual worlds of higher
Hierarchies. Many and manifold things have been worked out in such a
soul.
But now, let
us say through other karmic circumstances, such a soul has to incarnate
in a body which is altogether attuned to intellectualism, a body which
can receive from the civilisation of to-day only the current conceptions
which relate, after all, only to external things. In such a case this
alone will be possible, for the present incarnation: the spirituality
that comes over from former times will withdraw into the subconscious.
And such a personality will reveal in the intellect which he evolves
perhaps a certain idealism, a tendency to all manner of good and
beautiful and true ideals. But he will not come to the point of lifting
up from the subconscious into the ordinary consciousness the things that
are there latent in his soul. There are many such souls to-day. And for
him who is truly able to observe with a trained eye for spiritual
things, many a countenance to-day will contradict what openly comes
forth in him who wears it. For the countenance says: in the foundations
of the soul there is much spirituality, but as soon as the human being
speaks, he speaks not of spirituality at all. In no age was it the case
in such a high degree as it is to-day, that the countenances of men
contradict what they themselves say and declare.
We must
understand that strength and energy, perseverance and a holy enthusiasm
are necessary in order to transform into spirituality the
intellectualism which after all belongs to the present age. These things
are necessary that the thoughts and ideas of men to-day may rise into
the spiritual world and that man may find the path of ideas upward to
the Spirit no less than downward into Nature. And if we would understand
this, then we must fully realise that intellectualism to begin with
offers the greatest imaginable hindrance to the revelation of any
spiritual content that is present within the soul. Only when we are
really aware of this, only then shall we, as Anthroposophists, find the
true inner enthusiasm. Then shall we receive on the one hand the ideas
of Anthroposophy which must indeed reckon with the intellectualism of
the age, which must remain, so to speak, the garment of contemporary
intellectualism. Then shall we also become permeated with the
consciousness that with the ideas of Anthroposophy, relating as they do,
not to the mere outer world of sense, we are destined really to take
hold of that to which they do relate, namely, the spiritual. To enter
deeply and perseveringly into the ideas of Anthroposophy — it is
this in the last resort which will most surely guide the man of to-day
upward into spirituality, if only he is willing.
But what I
have said in this last sentence, my dear friends, can truly only be said
since about the last two or three decades. Previously one could not have
said it. For although the dominion of Michael began already with the end
of the seventies, nevertheless it was formerly the case that the ideas
which the age provided were so strongly and exclusively directed to the
world of sense that even for the idealist to rise from intellectualism
to spirituality was possible only in rare, exceptional cases in the
seventies, eighties and nineties of the last century.
To-day I
will give you an example to reveal the outcome of this fact. I will show
you by an example how strong and inevitable a force is working in this
age to drive back and dam up the spiritual contents which are surging
forth from former times in human souls. Nay, at the end of last century
such spiritual contents had to withdraw and give way to intellectualism
if they were to be able to reveal themselves in any way at all.
Please
understand me rightly. Let us assume that some personality living in the
second half of the 19th century bore within him a strong spirituality
from former incarnations. Such a personality lives and finds his way
into the culture and education of this present time (or of that time)
which is intellectualistic, thoroughly intellectualistic. In the
personality whom I now mean, the after-working of former spirituality is
still so strong that it is really determined to come forth, but the
intellectualism will not suffer it. The man is educated intellectually.
In the social intercourse which he enters into, in his calling or
profession, everywhere he experiences intellectualism. Into this
intellectualism what he bears within his soul cannot enter. Such a human
being would be one of whom we might say that Anthroposophy would truly
have been his calling. But he cannot become an Anthroposophist, though
the very thing which he bears within him from a former incarnation, if
it could enter into the intellect, would have become Anthroposophy. It
cannot become Anthroposophy; it stops short; it recoils as it were from
intellectualism. What else can such a personality do? At most he will
treat intellectualism again and again as a thing into which he does not
really want to enter, so that in one incarnation or another what he
bears within his soul may be able to come forth. Of course it will not
come forth completely, for it is not according to the age. It will very
likely be a kind of stammering; but it will be visible in such a man how
he recoils and shrinks again and again from going too far, from being
touched too closely by the intellectualism of the age.
I want to
give you an example of this very thing to-day. To begin with I will
remind you of a personality of ancient time whom we have mentioned here
again and again in all manner of connections, I mean
Plato.
In Plato the philosopher of the 5th and 4th centuries
B.C.
there lives a soul who forestalls many of the things that
mankind ponders on for centuries to come. You will remember when I drew
your attention to the great spiritual contents of the School of
Chartres, how I referred to the Platonic spirit which had been living
for a long time in the development of Christianity. And in a certain
sense it was in the great teachers of Chartres that this Platonic spirit
found its true development according to the possibilities of that
time.
We must
realise that the spirit of Plato is devoted in the first place to the
world of Ideas. We must not, however, conceive that the
“Ideas” in Plato's works are the abstract monster which
ideas are for us to-day, if we are given up to the ordinary
consciousness. For Plato, the “Ideas” were to some extent
almost what the Persian Gods had been, the Amschaspands who as active
genii assisted Ahura Mazdao. Active genii attainable only in imaginative
vision — such in reality were the Ideas in Plato. They had a
quality of being, only he no longer described them with the vividness
with which such things had been described in former times. He described
them as it were like the shades of beings. Indeed this is how abstract
thoughts henceforth evolved: the Ideas were taken by human beings in an
ever more and more shadow-like way. But Plato, as he lived on,
nevertheless grew deeper in a certain way, so that one might say:
well-nigh all the wisdom of that time poured itself out into his world
of Ideas. We need only take his later Dialogues, and we shall find
matters astronomical, astrological, cosmological, psychological, the
last named expressed in a most wonderful way, and matters concerning the
history of nations. All these things were found in Plato in a kind of
spirituality which, if I may so describe it, refines and shadows down
the spiritual to the form of the Idea.
But in Plato
everything is alive, and in Plato above all this perception is alive:
that the Ideas are the foundations of all things present in the world of
sense. Wherever we turn our gaze in the world of sense, whatever we
behold, it is the outward expression and manifestation of Ideas.
Withal there
enters into Plato's world of conception yet another element which has
indeed become well known to all the world in a catchword much
misunderstood and much misused — I mean the catchword of Platonic
love. The love that is spiritual through and through, that has laid
aside as much as possible of that egoism which is so often mingled with
love — this spiritualised devotion to the world, to life, to man,
to God, to the Idea, is a thing that permeates the Platonic conception
of life through and through. It is a thing which afterwards recedes in
certain ages only to light up again repeatedly. For Platonism is
absorbed by human beings ever and again. Again and again at one place or
another it becomes the staff by which men draw themselves upward. And
Platonism, as we know, entered most significantly into all that was
taught in the School of Chartres.
Plato has
often been regarded as a kind of precursor of Christianity. But to
imagine Plato as a precursor of Christianity is to misunderstand the
latter, for Christianity is not a doctrine, it is a stream of life which
takes its start from the Mystery of Golgotha. It is only since the
Mystery of Golgotha that we can speak of a real Christianity. We can
however say that there were Christians before the Mystery of Golgotha in
this sense, that they revered as the Sun Being and recognised in the Sun
Being the sublime Figure who was subsequently recognised as the Christ
within the earthly life of mankind. If, however, we speak of precursors
of Christianity in this sense we must apply the term to many pupils of
the ancient Mysteries, among whom we may indeed include Plato. Only we
must then understand the thing aright.
Now I
already spoke at this place some time ago of a young artist who grew up
while Plato was still living, not exactly in Plato's School of the
Philosophers but under Plato's influence. Indeed I mentioned this matter
already many years ago. Having passed through other incarnations in the
meantime this individuality was reborn, not out of the Platonic
philosophy but out of the Platonic spirit. He was reborn as
Goethe,
having karmically transformed in the Jupiter region what
came to him from former incarnations, and notably from the one in which
he partook of the Platonic stream, so that it became that kind of wisdom
which does indeed permeate all the contents of Goethe's work. Thus we
can indeed turn our gaze to a noble and pure relationship between Plato
and this — I will not say “disciple” — but
follower of Plato. For as I said, he was not a philosopher but an artist
in that Grecian incarnation. Nevertheless Plato's eye did fall upon him
and perceived the infinite promise that lay within this youth.
Now it was
truly hard for Plato to carry through the following epochs, through the
super-sensible world, what he had borne within his soul in his Plato
incarnation. It was very hard for him. For although Platonism lit up
here and there, when Plato himself looked down upon the Platonism that
evolved here on the earth, it was for him only too frequently a dreadful
disturbance in his super-sensible life of soul and spirit.
I do not
mean that that which lived on as Platonism was therefore to be condemned
or harshly criticised. Needless to say the soul of Plato carried over
livingly into the following epochs piece by piece and ever more and
more, what lay within him. But Plato above all, Plato who was still
united with the Mysteries of antiquity, of whom I said that his Doctrine
of Ideas contained a certain ancient Persian impulse — Plato found
the greatest difficulty in entering a new incarnation. When he had
absolved the time between death and a new birth — and in his case
it was a fairly long time — he found real difficulty in entering
the Christian epoch into which, after all, he had to enter. Thus
although in the sense I just explained we may describe Plato as a
forerunner of Christianity, nevertheless the whole orientation of his
soul was such as to make it extraordinarily difficult for him, when
ready to descend to earth again, to find a bodily organism into which he
might carry his former impulses in a way that they might now come forth
again with a Christian colouring.
Moreover
Plato was a Greek. He was a Greek through and through, with all those
oriental impulses which the Greeks still had, which the Romans had not
at all. Plato was in a certain sense a soul who carried philosophy
upwards into the higher poetic realm. The Dialogues of Plato are works
of art. Everywhere is the living soul, everywhere the Platonic love
which we need only understand in the true sense and which also bears
witness to its oriental origin.
Plato was a
Greek, but the civilisation within which alone he could incarnate, now
that he was ripe for incarnation, now that he had grown old for the
super-sensible world — this civilisation was Roman and
Christian.
Nevertheless, if I may put it so, he must take the plunge. And to
repress the inner factors of opposition, he must gather together all his
forces. For it lay in Plato's being to reject the prosaic,
matter-of-fact and legalistic Roman element, nay indeed to reject all
that was Roman.
And there
was also a certain difficulty for his nature to receive Christianity,
for he himself represented in a certain sense the highest point of the
pre-Christian conception of the world. Moreover even the external facts
revealed that the real Plato-being could not easily dive down into the
Christian element. For what was it that dived down into Christianity
here in the world of sense? It was Neo-Platonism, but this was something
altogether different from true Platonism. We remember how there evolved
a kind of Platonising Gnosis and the like but there was no real
possibility of taking over into Christianity the immediate essence of
Plato. Thus it was difficult for Plato himself, out of all the activity
which he bore within him as the Plato-being and the results of which he
must now bring with him into the world — it was difficult for him
to dive down in any way. He had as it were to reduce all this
activity.
And so it
was that he reincarnated in the 10th century in the Middle Ages as the
nun
Hroswith
— Hroswitha, that forgotten but great personality of the 10th
century, who did indeed receive Christianity in a truly Platonic sense
and who carried into the Mid-European nature very, very much of
Plato.
She belonged
to the Convent of Gandersheim in Brunswick and carried infinitely much
of Platonism into the Mid-European nature. This in truth it was only
possible at that time for a woman to do. Had not Plato's being appeared
with a feminine character and colouring it could not have received
Christianity into itself in that age. But the Roman element too was
strong in all the culture of that time which had to be received.
Perforce, if I may put it so, it had to be received. And so we see the
nun Hroswitha evolving into the remarkable personality she was, writing
Latin dramas in the style of the Roman poet Terence, dramas which are of
extraordinary significance.
You see, it
is appallingly easy to misrepresent Plato wherever he approaches one. I
often described how Friedrich Hebbel made notes of a play — it
never got beyond the plan — Friedrich Hebbel made notes of a play
in which he would give a humorous treatment of the following theme.
— Plato reincarnated sits on the benches of a grammar school.
— A mere poetic fancy, needless to say, but this was Hebbel's
idea. — Plato is reincarnated as a schoolboy while the
schoolmaster puts him through the Platonic Dialogues and Plato himself,
reincarnated, receives the very worst criticism with respect to the
interpretation of the Platonic Dialogues. These things Hebbel noted down
as the subject for a play which he never elaborated. Nevertheless it
shows, it is like a divination of how easy it is to misunderstand Plato.
Now this is a feature which interested me most especially in tracing the
stream of Plato. For this very misunderstanding is extraordinarily
instructive in finding the right paths of the further life and progress
of the Platonic individuality.
It is indeed
highly interesting. There was a German philosopher (I do not remember
his name, it was some Schmidt, or Müller), who with all his
scholarship “proved” up to the hilt that the nun Hroswitha
wrote not a single play, that nothing was due to her, that it was all a
forgery by some Counsellor of the Emperor Maximilian. All of which proof
is of course nonsense, but there you have it. Plato cannot escape
misunderstanding.
And so we
see arising in the individuality of the nun Hroswitha of the 10th
century, a truly intensive Christian and Platonic spiritual
substantiality united with the Mid-European-Germanic spirit. And in this
woman there was living so to speak the whole culture of that time. She
was indeed an astonishing personality. And she among others partook in
those super-sensible developments of which I told you. I mean the passage
of the teachers of Chartres into the spiritual world, the descent of
those who were then the Aristotelians, and the discipleship of Michael.
But she took part in all these things in a most peculiar way. One may
say: here was the masculine spirit of Plato and the feminine spirit of
the nun Hroswitha wrestling with one another, inasmuch as they both of
them had their results for the spiritual individuality. If the one
incarnation had been of no significance, as is generally the case, such
an inward wrestling could not afterwards have taken place. But in this
individuality it did take place and indeed it went on for the whole
succeeding time.
And at
length we see the individuality ripe to return to earth once more in the
19th century. He became an individuality of the very kind I described
above as a hypothetical case. For the whole spirituality of Plato is
held back, recoils and shrinks back in the face of the intellectuality
of the 19th century which it will not come near.
And to make
this process the easier the feminine capacity of the nun Hroswitha has
been instilled into the same soul. Thus as the soul appears on the
scene, all that it had received from its incarnation as a woman, great
and radiant as she was, makes it the more easy to repel the modern
intellectualism wherever it is not liked.
Thus the
individuality stands upon earth anew in the 19th century. He grows up
into the intellectuality of the 19th century but lets it come near him
only to a certain extent, externally, while inwardly he is perpetually
shrinking back from it. Platonism comes forward in his consciousness not
in an intellectualistic way, for again and again, wherever he can, he
speaks of how Ideas are living in all things.
The life in
Ideas became an absolute matter of course to this personality. Yet his
body was such that one continually had the following impression: the
head simply cannot give expression to all the Platonism that is seeking
to come forth in him. But on the other hand there could spring forth in
him in a beautiful way, nay in a glorious way, that which is hidden
behind the word “Platonic Love.”
Nay more, in
his youth this personality had something like a dream-intuition of how
Mid-Europe cannot and may not after all be truly Roman. For indeed he
himself had lived as the nun Hroswitha. Thus in his youth he represented
Mid-Europe as a modern Greece. Here we see his Platonism striking
through. And he represented the rougher region that had stood over
against ancient Greece, namely Macedonia, as the present East of Europe.
There were strange dreams living in this personality, dreams from which
one could see, and this was very interesting, how he wanted to conceive
the modern world in which he himself was living, like Greece and
Macedonia. Again and again, especially in his youth, there arose the
impulse to conceive the modern world — Europe on a large scale
— as Greece and Macedonia magnified.
The
personality of whom I am speaking is none other than
Karl Julius Schröer.
With the help of all that I have now brought together
you need only take Karl Julius Schröer's writings. From the very
beginning he speaks in a thoroughly Platonic way. But this is so
strange: with a kind of feminine coyness, I might say, he takes good
care not to enter into intellectualism wherever he has no use for
it.
When he
spoke of Novalis, Schröer was often fond of saying: Novalis —
he is a spirit whom one cannot understand with this modern
intellectualism which knows only that twice two is four.
Karl Julius
Schröer wrote a history of German poetry in the 19th century. In
this history, wherever one can approach a thing with Platonic feeling,
it is very good, but wherever one requires intellectualism it is
suddenly as though the lines were to sink away into nothingness. He is
not a bit like a professor. He writes many pages about some who are
passed over in silence by the ordinary histories of literature, while
about the famous ones he sometimes writes only a few lines.
When this
history of literature was first published, how the literary pundits did
wring their hands! One of the most eminent among them at that time was
Emil Kuh, who declared: this history of literature is not written by a
head at all; it simply flowed out of a wrist.
Karl Julius
Schröer also published an edition of
Faust.
A professor — in Graz
— for the rest a very good fellow — wrote such a dreadful
review of it that I believe no less than ten duels were fought out among
the students at Graz pro and contra Schröer.
There was
indeed much grievous misunderstanding, failure of recognition. This poor
estimate of Schröer went so far that on one occasion at a social
gathering in Weimar where I was present, the following thing happened.
In that circle Erik Schmidt was a highly respected personality and
dominated everything when he was present. Conversation turned on the
question, which of the princesses and princes at the Weimar Court were
wise and which were stupid. This was being seriously discussed and Erik
Schmidt declared: the Princess Reuss (she was one of the daughters of
the Grand Duchess Reuss) — the Princess Reuss is not a clever
woman for she considers Schröer a great man. — This was his
reason!
But you must
go through all his works, down to that most beautiful little book
Goethe und die Liebe,
for there you will really find
what one can say without intellectualism about Platonic Love in
immediate and real life. Something extraordinary is given to us in the
style and tone of this little book
Goethe und die Liebe.
It came to me beautifully on one
occasion when I was discussing the book with Schröer's sister. She
called the style
“völlig süss vor Reife”,
fully sweet unto ripeness — a pretty
expression. And such indeed it is. It is all — I cannot say in
this sense so concentrated — but it is all so fine, so delicate in
its form. Refinement indeed was a peculiar quality of
Schröer's.
And yet this
Platonic spirituality, repelling intellectualism, this Platonic
spirituality that did not want to enter into this body made at the same
time a quite peculiar and strong impression, for in seeing Schröer
one had the distinct perception: this soul is not quite fully there
within the body. And then when he grew older one could see how the soul,
not being really willing to enter into the body of that time, withdrew
little by little out of that body. To begin with the fingers grew
swollen and thick. Then the soul withdrew ever more and more, and as we
know, Schröer ended in the feeblemindedness of old age. Certain
features of Schröer, not the whole individuality, but certain
features, were taken over into my character Capesius, Professor
Capesius, in the Mystery Plays.
Here indeed
we have a remarkable example of the fact that the spiritual currents of
antiquity can only be carried over into the present time under certain
conditions. And one may well say that in Schröer the recoiling from
intellectuality showed itself characteristically. Had he attained
intellectuality, had he been able to unite it with the spirituality of
Plato, Anthroposophy itself would have been there.
And so we
see in his karma how his paternal love for his follower Goethe, if so I
may describe it, becomes transformed. It had arisen in the way I told
you, for in that ancient time Plato had indeed loved him in a paternal
way. We see this love karmically transmuted; Schröer becomes a warm
admirer of Goethe. Thus it emerges once again.
There was
something extraordinarily personal in Schröer's reverence for
Goethe. In his old age he wanted to write a biography of Goethe. Before
I left Vienna at the end of the eighties he told me about it and
afterwards he wrote me about it. But of this biography of Goethe which
he would have liked to write he never wrote in any different vein than
this. — He said: Goethe is continually visiting my soul. It always
had this personal character which was indeed karmically predestined as I
have now indicated.
The
biography of Goethe was never written, for Schröer fell into the
feeble-mindedness of old age. But we can indeed find a luminous
interpretation of the whole character of his writings if we know the
antecedent which I have now explained.
Thus in the
well-nigh forgotten character of Schröer, we see how Goetheanism
came to a standstill before the threshold of intellectualism transformed
into spirituality. And if I may put it so, one could really do no other,
having once been stimulated by Schröer, than carry Goetheanism
forward into Anthroposophy. There was no other course to take. And again
and again this deeply moving picture (for so it was for me) stood before
the eye of my soul: Schröer carrying the ancient spirituality of
Goethe, pressing forward in it up to the point of intellectuality. And I
understood how Goethe must be grasped again with modern intellectualism,
lifted up into the spiritual domain. For only so shall we fully
understand him. Nor did this picture by any means make things easy for
me. For owing to the fact that that which Schröer was could not
directly and fully be received, again and again there was mingled in the
striving of my soul, a certain element of opposition against
Schröer.
Thus, for
example, when at the Technical University in Vienna Schröer
conducted practice classes in lecturing and essay writing, I once gave a
pretty distorted interpretation of Mephisto merely to refute my
instructor Schröer with whom at that time I was not yet on such
intimate and friendly terms. There was indeed a certain opposition
stirring within me.
But as I
said, what else could one do than loose the congestion that had taken
place and carry Goetheanism really onward into Anthroposophy!
Thus you see
how world-history really takes its course. For it takes its course in
such a way that we may recognise: whatever we possess in the present day
emerges with great hindrances and difficulties. Yet on the other hand it
is well prepared.
Read the
wonderful hymn-like descriptions of womanhood in Karl Julius
Schröer's writings. Read the beautiful essay which he wrote as an
appendix to his
History of Literature,
his
History of German Poetry in the 19th Century.
Read his essay on Goethe and his relation to women. If you
take all these things together you will say to yourselves: truly here is
living something of a feeling of the worth and character of womanhood
which is an echo of what the nun Hroswitha had lived as her own being.
These two preceding incarnations harmonise and vibrate together
wonderfully in Schröer's life, so much so that the breaking of the
thread became indeed a deeply moving tragedy. And yet in Schröer of
all people there enters into the end of the 19th century a world of
spiritual facts, immensely illuminating towards an answer to this
question:
How shall we bring spirituality into the life of the present time.
Herewith I
wished to round off this cycle of lectures.
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