Lecture given by Rudolf Steiner at Nurnberg,
16 December, 1908. Published by permission of the Rudolf Steiner
Nachlassverwaltung. Translated by D. S. Osmond.
Today we shall be concerned with a chapter
of Anthroposophy which links on to many things we were able
to study in the last Lecture-Course here but in a certain
respect is quite independent.
[ See
note 1 ]
Again today we shall be
considering matters for those who are more advanced — I
do not mean advanced in respect of intellect or knowledge,
but in respect of the attitude of soul, the feelings, that
are necessary for the assimilation of higher truths
which so often seem paradoxical, weird and fantastic to the
materialistic mind — truths which must be accepted, not
as if they were everyday matters, but as something that
is not only possible, but reality.
We shall turn
our attention to a certain chapter of occult history.
Everybody knows what external history means; everybody knows
that history presents the successive happenings and
facts of the outer physical world as far as they can be
followed with the help of documents, original manuscripts and
records, traditions, and so forth. But in Anthroposophy, by
means of those spiritual records that are accessible to us,
we go still farther back, even in this external history, to
the time of the great Atlantean Flood. We observe the
successive culture-epochs following it, but we go even
farther back into the distant past, to times preceding
this great Flood which has been preserved as tradition in the
legends of different peoples. All this is history,
investigated, it is true, by occult means, but in a certain
sense it is still an external, physical — more or less
physical — history of facts and events. But there is
also an occult history, and you will understand what this
means if you think of the following.
Before
entering into the bodies of our present civilisation, all
your souls lived in bodies of the old Indian, Persian,
Egypto-Chaldean, Greco-Roman epochs, and so forth —
leaving aside still earlier times. When, through birth, these
souls entered into existence on the physical plane they saw
and experienced what can be experienced on this plane. These
souls beheld the creations of the old Indian culture, the
great pyramids built by the Egyptians, the Greek temples, and
so on. From this we can picture the flow of events through
which man passes in the course of history on the outer
physical plane during life between birth and death. The
question may now be asked : What, then, is happening when,
through the Gate of Death, the soul passes into its life
between death and a new birth? The souls now incarnated
passed through death in ancient India, ancient Persia, and so
on. Have conditions in the life between death and rebirth
always been the same through the ages? Is there anything
comparable with ‘history’ in that life? Were the
experiences different when souls passed through the
Gate of Death in the times of ancient India or ancient
Persia, and are they again different in our present age? Is
there in that life anything like a successive course of
happenings? When we speak of the experiences of the periods
spent in Kama-Loca and in Devachan until the time of a new
incarnation, we describe them as they are today. Many people
may imagine that these experiences are similar in all epochs,
but this is not so. For just as when souls have passed
through the Gate of Birth they have different experiences in
the different epochs, so there is also a ‘history’ of what
happens between death and rebirth. These happenings in our
present age are rightly described as we describe them, but
they have not been the same in all the ages. Today we shall
consider, briefly, something of the history of that other
side of existence, particularly during Post-Atlantean
epochs.
For this
purpose we do well to think, to begin with, of the old
Atlantean epoch. In this Atlantean epoch, life was very
different from what it came to be later on. When in the night
the soul of the old Atlantean had gone out of the physical
and etheric bodies and was living in the spiritual worlds, it
was not enveloped in darkness as is the case today. During
the night-consciousness the soul was in divine-spiritual
worlds — divine-Spiritual Beings were its companions.
The alternation between day and night was quite different in
the old Atlantean epoch. When the Atlantean awoke in the
morning, that is to say, when his astral body and Ego came
down again into the physical and etheric bodies, then, in the
earlier periods of Atlantis, man did not see external objects
with sharp outlines as he does today, but the objects were
hazy — as when we go out at night in a thick November
fog the lamps seem to be surrounded by an aura instead of
emitting clear light. To the early Atlantean, every object on
the physical plane was indistinct and indefinite, and only
gradually assumed sharp contours in the
day-consciousness. When, at night, he rose in his astral body
and Ego out of the physical and etheric bodies, he was not in
a realm of unconsciousness, but he had definite, even
if hazy, experiences of the divine-spiritual worlds. And the
figures preserved as the Gods, the names and ideas of Gods
such as Wotan, Baldur, Zeus, Apollo, Thor — are not
figures of fantasy but Beings who were actually experienced
by man in the times of old Atlantis.
Then came the
great Flood. The less advanced Atlanteans went from West to
East, settling in the lands of Europe. The most advanced of
all went towards Asia and founded in Central Asia the great
colony of the Manu. The Manu was the lofty Being who was the
leader of this handful of the most advanced Atlanteans who
went with him to Central Asia and from there called the
different cultures to life. It must here be borne in mind
that in Asia and Africa, as the result of earlier and later
migrations, and through other peoples who were descendants of
still earlier epochs, the countries were inhabited, and these
pupils of the Manu went out in various directions in order to
spread new streams of culture. The first mission went from
Central Asia to India. The Manu sent his first pupils to
India; he himself, for certain reasons, withdrew into the
background. The first pupils of the Manu became the teachers
and leaders of the first Post-Atlantean culture — that
of the ancient Indian peoples. The first form of
Post-Atlantean culture therefore arose under the influence of
these Teachers — the holy Rishis. We already know the
basic character of this culture. The pupils of the Rishis had
a kind of memory of ancient times, of how in Atlantis they
themselves had been companions of the Gods. Their real
homeland then had been in the spiritual world. Now they were
in the physical world. And so in ancient India men had an
intense longing for their primeval, spiritual homeland. They
felt that they were strangers in the physical world. For them
this world was illusion, maya, merely an external expression
of the Spiritual. Hence their longing for the Spiritual and
their view that the physical world was illusion, deception,
maya. They had as yet no love for the physical world; they
still longed for the spiritual world. They saw the stars, the
rivers, the mountains, but felt no interest in any of these
things. What happened between birth and death was regarded as
illusion, as maya, for men knew that they lived in their real
homeland between death and rebirth. Such was the fundamental
mood of the old Indians. But ever and again they received
information and tidings of the spiritual worlds through the
holy Rishis, who were the pupils of the great Manu.
It is a good
thing to try to form definite ideas of the nature of these
great Indian Teachers. A feeling of reverent awe arises in
those who can envisage in some small measure what took place
spiritually between the Rishis and their pupils in Northern
India at this starting-point of Post-Atlantean humanity.
Without Spiritual Science it is hardly possible for anyone
today, when humanity has descended so deeply into the
physical plane and has adopted such a materialistic way of
thinking, to form a true idea of the kind of knowledge
that was brought by the Manu from the West to the East as a
heritage of the Atlantean age. For if the Book with the
Twelve Chapters, the Book in which the Manu had preserved the
ancient traditions of the earth, in which was written down
what could be made known of the laws and conditions
prevailing in ancient times when humanity lived in the bosom
of the Gods — if that Book could be laid before men
today it would be utterly incomprehensible to them.
Nevertheless it contained the instructions that were given by
the Manu to his most intimate pupils and through which the
seven holy Rishis prepared themselves for their mission. Some
idea of what the holy Rishis were like can be formed in the
following way. — Anyone who saw them in life would have
seen utterly simple men. And such indeed they were, for a
great part of their life. But there were times when the
Rishis were anything but ordinary men. They were not learned
in the modern sense, but at such times they were the
mouthpiece and instrument of higher spiritual Beings. Higher
spiritual Beings ensouled the Rishis and then, when they
spoke, they were not giving utterance to what they knew, but
to the speech of the Spirit who had entered into them, right
down into the physical body. Thus the Seven Planetary Regents
themselves were present during this first epoch of
Post-Atlantean civilisation. The Seven Planetary Spirits of
the universe spoke through the mouths of the holy Rishis, who
were merely their instruments. And the words spoken had
stupendous power; they were magical words, not merely
teachings but commands for what men were to do.
Revelations from the cosmos itself were spoken forth by the
seven holy Rishis. The later Vedic literature is no more than
a faint echo of the wisdom that streamed to humanity out of
the cosmos itself through the holy Rishis. This was the first
Post-Atlantean manifestation and revelation of the Divine. It
was only at certain times that the Rishis were inspired by
the Planetary Spirits and then they could impart great and
mighty things to men. Far greater things were spoken through
them to humanity between birth and death in this first
Post-Atlantean epoch than in the other world, for all the
secrets to which men could no longer look up from the
physical world could be made known to them by the Rishis.
Initiates are
able to work and teach not only in the physical world, but in
alternating states of consciousness they are able, while
still maintaining connection with the physical body, to pass
over into the spiritual world and to become the teachers of
the souls living between death and rebirth. The great
teachers give instruction here, in physical life, and also in
the life between death and rebirth. The Rishis too were
teachers of man in the world beyond death. There they could,
it is true, proclaim the same great spiritual truths of which
they spoke in the physical world, but they could say nothing
of particular value to the Dead about the other side of
existence, i.e. about the physical world. There was nothing
in this physical world that could be of value for the life
after death. The ancient Indian yearned for the life between
death and rebirth; he was happy there, and had no
inclination whatever for physical life. And so when the
ancient Indian passed into the other world, he was not merely
a knower in some degree, he was not only able to see, up to a
certain level, what was happen ing there, but he was
also able to act with skill — for man has to act in the
other world too. The souls of the ancient Indians were far
better fitted to work in that world than in the physical
world. The instruments available in the physical world at
that time were simple and primitive, and men were not skilled
on the physical plane. But as souls in that other world they
were able to work with skill that was a heritage from an
earlier epoch. Men's life between death and rebirth was more
intense, more active, than it was in the physical world. The
spiritual world afforded them deep happiness; everything was
light and clear after death.
World-history
continued its course and the epoch of ancient Persian culture
approached. Man had progressed, inasmuch as he now began to
love the physical plane; he wanted to work on the physical
plane and felt that his spiritual forces should be applied to
the cultivation of the earth. The culture inspired by the
Manu had grown dearer to the ancient Persians. Zarathustra
now became their great Teacher. The teachings that had flowed
from the inspirations of the Rishis were now, in the second
Post-Atlantean epoch, transmitted through Zarathustra. The
task of this great Teacher was to create a counterweight to
existing conditions. Man must come to love the physical
plane, the physical earth, to become more conscious of it, to
discover the means of promoting culture, to live more and
more intensely on the physical plane, not merely regarding it
as illusion, maya, but as a revelation of the Divine Powers.
Zarathustra said to the people : In the material world there
is something that is opposed to the Spiritual; the power of
Evil is mingled with matter. But if you unite yourselves with
the beings who are servants of the good Spirit, then, in
union with them, you will overcome the Evil that is mingled
with matter. — There was inevitably the danger, the
first glimmering of the danger, that connection with the
Spiritual might be lost. Hence as well as narrating the
truths of the spiritual world, it was the special task of the
teachers to emphasise to the people that the Spiritual
reveals itself in the material; and those who had fallen prey
to matter owing to an exaggerated belief in it, had to
be brought back again to belief in the Spiritual, to the
belief that God reveals himself in matter. — That was
what Zarathustra had to proclaim, and he spoke with mighty
power. In terms of modern language it is no longer possible
to convey any adequate idea of the words of fire with which
he proclaimed what he himself was still able to behold,
because he was the successor of the pupils of the Manu. For
example, he still saw in the Sun not merely the external,
physical phenomenon, but the spiritual: Beings whose
abode is the Sun, for whom the physical Sun is merely their
bodily vehicle, and he called these spiritual Beings in their
totality: Ahura Mazdao, the great Sun-, Aura-, Ahura Mazdao,
or Ormtizd. From this source came the inspiration for all the
teachings he was to inculcate into the second Post-Atlantean
culture-epoch which was already in danger of falling prey to
the attacks of Ahriman. In mighty words Zarathustra
spoke to humanity somewhat as follows. I will speak ‘Give
heed and hear me, ye who from near and far long for this.
Mark well my words! For no longer may the false teacher
corrupt the world, he, the Evil One, whose mouth has
proclaimed wrong beliefs. I speak of what is greatest
in the world, of what He, the Mighty One, has revealed to me.
Whoever does not follow my words, as I mean them, woe will
befall him at the end of days.’ In words of power such as
these, it was proclaimed that He, the all-pervading Spirit,
is revealed in what is external, and that the one who
believed he could mislead humanity by making men believe that
the material alone has reality, must not conquer. And
Zarathustra announced that when the time was fulfilled, One
would come in human form as the embodiment of all the Powers
working and weaving through the world, One Whose coming could
at that time be only a prophecy. — Zarathustra called
Him by the name of Saoschra. He, the Power Who resides in the
Sun, Who could be seen at that time only through external
veils — He would come one day in human form. Zarathustra
proclaimed the Christ Who was to come in the future.
Zarathustra
had two pupils whom he did not instruct for the purpose of
sending them out to teach the Persians. They were pupils such
as are always to be found with the great Initiates and who
prepare in quietude for their missions, refraining, to begin
with, from going out into the world to teach.
These two
pupils, in later incarnations, were : Hermes, the great
Teacher of the Egyptians, and Moses.
The wisdom
outpoured in the second Post-Atlantean epoch had
necessarily to take the form it did, because humanity had
advanced a stage and men had a greater love for the physical
plane. But because this was so, experiences between death and
rebirth were darkened. Men could still see in the spiritual
world, but no longer with the clarity of vision that
prevailed in the old Indian epoch. When the souls from
Persian bodies passed into Devachan, their experiences were
less vivid, less intense, and the more skilful they became in
their work on the physical plane, the less skilful were they
in their actions in the spiritual world. In the outer world
there is an ascending line of progress; in the world after
death, however, there is a decline. When the Initiates passed
into that other world — it was, of course, a spiritual
journey and the Initiates remained united with the physical
body — when they passed into that world to be with human
souls living between death and rebirth, they could say much
about the momentous things which men had formerly seen there
but which now were darkened. They could give teachings
concerning the higher spiritual realities that had gradually
faded from man's vision between death and rebirth, but they
could impart nothing as yet about happenings in the physical
world. Nor would this have been of any great significance for
the other world. If the Initiates had related the doings of
men (in the physical world) this would have had no inspiring
effect in the life between death and rebirth. To tell of any
happenings on the physical plane would have had no value for
that other world.
Then came the
Egyptian epoch. Men now had an even greater love for the
physical plane and had become still more skilful there. They
no longer regarded it as maya or illusion. They looked up to
the stars and saw in their constellations and movements
a script of the Gods. They saw revelations of
divine-spiritual Beings in physical manifestation. And they
worked upon the earth with knowledge acquired through their
human forces. — We need think only of how the Egyptians
cultivated the soil. — Man had now brought his spiritual
forces from the spiritual into the physical, and the link
between these spiritual forces and the physical world became
steadily firmer. The first great Teacher of the Egyptians was
Hermes, in his new incarnation. We will try to form some idea
of the kind of teachings he gave.
For this
purpose it will be especially helpful to think about that
aspect of the figure of Osiris which can be of interest to us
today. — Osiris was the central God of Egypt, the God who was
honoured above all other Gods. The Egyptian Gods were
worshipped under many names by the people, priests and
initiates. The legend of Osiris is known to you. Osiris ruled
over mankind. Then his brother Typhon laid him, by cunning,
in a casket which he threw into the sea. Isis, the
sorrowing spouse, sought for and found the corpse but
could not bring Osiris back again into this world. From the
other world a ray from Osiris fell upon Isis who then gave
birth to Horus, the successor of Osiris on the earth. Osiris
remained in the other world. The Egyptians were told: Osiris
is a Being who stands close to man. He is one of the last
Beings with whom men were in communion when they lived
consciously in the spiritual world. Men have descended into
the physical world in order that they may develop further
here, and then they ascend again, enriched by the experiences
gained in the physical world. Osiris is one of those Beings
who no longer needed to descend to the physical world,
because they had already reached such a height that this was
not necessary for them. They had moved to a higher level and
were not created to dwell in a physical body — the
casket. Such Beings can have only a fleeting contact with the
physical world. Osiris can be found only when man passes over
into the other life. He is the last Figure you can still
experience — so said the Initiates to the Egyptians
— if you make yourselves worthy, if you follow the
commandments. Then, after death, when you are judged, you
will be together with Osiris; you will feel yourselves to be
members of Osiris.
Those who
aspired to be united with Osiris had therefore to be referred
to the life after death. But as the experiences accessible
after death had now become still less intense, even when men
were united with Osiris they were only able to
experience faintly and weakly that which constituted
their highest bliss — the union with Osiris. But
through the belief implanted in them by the priests, they
knew and firmly hoped that they would indeed be united with
Osiris, and in solemn moments after death they felt
themselves as members of the Osiris-soul. This consciousness
of belonging to Osiris gradually faded away. While culture
was progressing to higher stages on the physical plane,
a decline was taking place in the spiritual world between
death and rebirth. Man's vision of the world of Devachan
became steadily fainter. And when the Initiates came over
into that world, they still could not tell of happenings in
the physical world that would have had any special
significance for that other world. What happened in the
spiritual world was entirely the result of its own prevailing
conditions. Happenings in the physical world could be of
little interest to the souls of the Dead. What man could do
in the physical world was a preparation for the
Osiris-experience, but it was a preparation for something
that could be experienced only in the deepest spiritual
depths of yonder world.
Then came the
Greco-Roman age, the fourth Post-Atlantean culture-epoch. The
marriage between the human spirit and external matter
became closer, more intimate still, and the splendour of
Greek culture stems from this marriage between the spiritual
capacities of men and external physical life. When we have
before us a Greek temple with its wonderful forms —
even in aftermath as at Paestum in Southern Italy
— we Can see what the human spirit has achieved in the
conquest of external matter. In the lines and
distribution of forces in the Greek temple,
architecture has reached its zenith. The reason why a Greek
temple is such a wonder-work of architecture and of art is
because everything in it is the expression of the Spiritual.
That is why it is so inspiring to contemplate the
harmony presented in a Greek temple.
One
peculiarity that is discovered by clairvoyant consciousness
in connection with a Greek temple must here be made known.
— Let us suppose that clairvoyant consciousness has
before it the last echoes of a Greek temple built in the
Doric style as are the temples at Paestum, and is able to
feel the aftermath of what the Greeks felt on the physical
plane; let us assume that clairvoyant consciousness, while
beholding the physical form of such a creation, experiences
all the rapture and enchantment that it is still
possible to experience at the sight. Then clairvoyant
consciousness will make a certain discovery. When it frees
itself from the body and, without using the physical organs,
sees in the spiritual world, then the Greek temple, with all
its splendour, has vanished. What was so perfect, so great
and glorious in the physical world, cannot be carried over
into the spiritual world — not even for modern
clairvoyant consciousness. At the place in space where the
glorious temple stood, there is nothing corresponding with it
in the spiritual world. It was so in the case of all the
great masterpieces of that wonderful Greco-Latin epoch,
and in another connection too.
This was the
same epoch when, in Rome, man's consciousness of personality
came to its strongest expression in the physical world. The
Roman felt himself first and foremost as a personal citizen
of the earth, firmly rooted on, this earth. To the same
degree to which man felt himself standing firmly on the
earth, he felt weak between death and rebirth, feeble
and ineffectual in that other world. Life between death and
rebirth had faded in intensity even more than before.
Above all, what was experienced in its splendour in the
physical world could not be carried into yonder world. It is
no mere legend passed on from the Greek epoch, that one of
the great Heroes, when visited in the nether world of the
Shades by an Initiate, said: ‘Better it is to be a beggar in
the upper world than a king in the realm of the Shades’
— because man felt shadowy and empty between death and
rebirth, and longed for the life between birth and death with
its beauty and its grandeur. Life had surrendered itself to
the most perfect and complete marriage between the human
spirit and external form, and at the cost of this marriage,
life between death and rebirth had fallen into decline.
In this epoch
fell the Event for which preparation had been made by
that other Initiate who had been Zarathustra's pupil —
namely, Moses. Moses was chosen to proclaim — to begin
with in the only form in which this was possible — a
God Who could also reveal Himself in the physical world, Who
would be actually present in the physical world. Naturally,
this revelation was to the effect that the one and only true
image of God Who weaves through the world could not, at the
time the revelation was given, be apprehended by the
senses. And when, at the starting-point of his mission, the
‘EJE ASCHER EJE’ (I am the I am) was proclaimed
through Moses, this was the first announcement of the God Who
henceforward would not be found only in the other world but
Who had passed into this world and was to be experienced
here. The Jahve-Being was proclaimed through this second
pupil of Zarathustra, and thereby preparation was made for
the coming of Christ, for the Mystery of Golgotha.
You know, to
some extent, what the Mystery of Golgotha signifies for the
physical plane: it is actual proof that life in the spirit is
victorious over death. This victory was achieved through the
fact that the One Who had been proclaimed by the prophets,
the One Who was there at the creation of all the kingdoms of
Nature, walked upon the earth. This Archetypal Being of the
world, Who is the Spirit of the Sun, is rightly given a Greek
name, for He could, and indeed had to, appear in the Greek
age, when mankind needed the impulse for re-ascent. And in
eternal memory of this, the Being Who incarnated in the
sheaths of Jesus of Nazareth was called by the name of
CHRIST. This name derives from the epoch when it was
necessary that Christ should appear. At the moment when the
Jesus of Nazareth-sheath died on Golgotha, something
happened that is not a mere legend but can still be confirmed
today on the path of spiritual science by one who is
adequately prepared. At the moment of the Death on the Cross,
at that same moment Christ appeared in the other world among
the Dead, among those who were living between death and
rebirth. And this appearance of Christ was like a
lightning-flash in that other world. It was as though the
life in that world which had faded into shadow, was lit up by
lightning. Now, for the first time, something could be made
known in the world after death that was different from
anything of which the earlier Initiates had been able to tell
when they passed into that world. Even an Initiate of the
Eleusinian Mysteries would at most have been able to tell of
the beauties of the physical world which the Dead could no
longer behold; at most he could have awakened a longing for
the physical, but nothing of real importance would have been
brought to the Dead by making known to them what was taking
place in the world of flesh. The first tidings brought by
Christ to the Dead were that in the world between birth and
death something had come to pass that has meaning not for
this physical world only, but also for the life in the other
world. This Event in the physical world was one that works on
into the spiritual world itself. Actual examples of this can
be found.
When in the
physical world we contemplate the most beautiful temple or
any one of the loveliest creations of the age of ancient
Greece and are enchanted by the sight of it, in that other
world it has faded away, is not to be found. If, however, we
steep ourselves in the Gospel of St. John or in the
Apocalypse, where the happenings connected with the Mystery
of Golgotha are made known, we can have wonderful experiences
if, with clairvoyant consciousness, we then pass over
into the spiritual world. These feelings and experiences do
not fade, but they live on, becoming still more glorious,
still more comprehensible, in the spiritual world. Everything
that is connected with the Event of Golgotha becomes even
more sublime in the spiritual world. This is by no means the
case with everything. However deep your wonder may be at the
sight of the Pyramids, only a faint echo of them can be
experienced in yonder world. A Greek temple or a Greek
tragedy may enthrall one but nothing goes over into the other
world, either for an Initiate or for those who are not
initiated. But if you contemplate a picture by Raphael in
which the Christian truths are expressed, you carry much of
the picture with you into the spiritual world, and things
which in the physical world you cannot even glimpse, will
dawn upon you there. In yonder world they become a light
which lightens the spiritual world anew. And so it was when
Christ appeared in the world of the Shades. For the first
time, that world was flooded with light. And more and more,
through everything that Christianity has brought into the
world, the spiritual world will be illuminated.
So culture
descends, as it were, from the heights of the Atlantean world
to the Greco-Latin world, when in the spiritual world it was
in decadence and had sunk most deeply into the material
world. That was when the greatest desolation prevailed in the
spiritual world. And now, with the appearance of Christ in
the underworld, comes the great impulse of Light. Existence
between death and rebirth becomes ever brighter, ever
clearer. The ascent begins in the history of life in that
other world. Christianity is only at its beginning today.
More and more it will become evident that man grows in
spirituality through what he can experience in this world;
and he takes with him into the other world what he
experiences here in connection with the Event of Golgotha.
Thus in the spiritual world, too, there is an ascent.
And so we may
also speak of history in the life between death and rebirth,
and when we study this history of the hidden side of the
world, we realise the infinite significance of the Mystery of
Golgotha, not for the physical world alone but also for all
three worlds in which man lives. The Being Who is united with
our evolution, Who has created everything that is around us,
Who dwelt in Jesus of Nazareth, once said: ‘Had ye believed
Moses, ye would have believed me, for he wrote of me. But if
ye believe not his writings, how shall you believe my words?’
(St. John, V, 46–7.)
— clearly indicating thereby that
it was He of whom Moses was speaking when he proclaimed the
Divine Being Who was announcing Himself as the ‘I am the I
am.’ The Being Who was in Jesus of Nazareth accomplished
something in our world that has significance not only
for the physical plane but, as the most momentous of all
events, spread through the three worlds, from the physical
right up into the spiritual world. Such is the mighty vista
of the Event of Golgotha brought before our souls by occult
history.
Notes:
Note 1.
The Apocalypse of St. John. 12 lectures. 17–30 June, 1908.
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