Brunetto Latini
RUDOLF STEINER
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Lecture given in Dornach, 30 January 1915. Translated by
George Adams from a shorthand report unrevised by the
lecturer. Published by permission of the Rudolf Steiner
Nachlassverwaltung, Dornach, Switzerland.
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The manifold studies which we have
recently pursued have shown that all true Art eventually
issues from the secrets of Initiation. We have frequently
spoken of this fact, and we have indicated many examples.
Great epochs of Art, when artistic deeds raying far and wide
over humanity have taken place, derive their sources again
and again from Initiation. This shows how Art brings
spiritual life into the physical. Initiation opens out to man
the possibility to advance from the physical plane into the
spiritual worlds. That which can then be experienced, more or
less consciously in spiritual worlds, true Art carries down
into the physical forms wherein it finds expression.
But the inner
connection of the facts to which we are here referring,
cannot be fully penetrated unless we also bear in mind that
the last few centuries of evolution have in reality eclipsed
— made imperceptible to the vast majority of men
— things that were not by any means a secret to the
same extent, five, six or seven centuries ago, as they are
today for those who call themselves civilised mankind.
To point to
one significant example, we may choose a work of art which
does indeed ray out over the ages — the
Divine Comedy
of Dante.
No one who lets the
Divine Comedy
work upon his soul will fail
to perceive the spiritual note that pervades what Dante has
here expressed. Nowadays, if it be a question of studying how
Dante arrived at the magnificent pictures of his poem, people
will readily be inclined to use the word fancy or
imagination. Dante, they say, was filled with
artistic imagination. They are content to leave it at that.
Needless to say, I shall not deny that artistic imagination
was at work in Dante. But even in the light of outer history
it would be wrong to suppose that he created the whole of his
magnificent poem, as it were out of the void, out of mere
fancy.
Dante had a
friend and teacher Brunetto Latini, who, as I think
you will recognise from what we shall presently say, may be
described as an Initiate in the true sense of the word. It is
this connection between Dante and a man who was initiated
according to the conditions of his time, which we, in the
light of our ideas, must fundamentally point out.
One thing at
any rate was known to that time. They knew that man, to reach
the secrets of existence, must take the path that leads
through his own re-birth. This above all was fully and
absolutely living in that time: the recognition that the path
to knowledge of the world must necessarily lead through
self-knowledge. Self-knowledge, however, must not be thought
of in the superficial sense in which people often speak of it
today. Who does not think himself able to know about himself?
By way of introduction, let me bring home to you with an
example, how difficult self-knowledge is even in the most
elementary matters. How little a man is inclined to set out
for what can truly be called self-knowledge!
I have here a
book by a famous philosopher of today — Dr. Ernst Mach,
who has written a number of works highly characteristic of
the present time. At the very beginning of his book on the
Analysis of Sensations,
dealing with the connections
of the physical and the psychical, the following remark
occurs: ‘As a young man,’ he writes, ‘I was
once going along the street when I saw a face which was
highly distasteful to me. How astonished I was when I
observed that it was my own face which I had seen by the
chance combination of two mirrors in a
shop-window!’
Thus, as he
went along the street, his karma led him past a shop where
two mirrors were so inclined that he could see himself. He
saw the face, highly distasteful to him, and then discovered
that it was his own. We see that even with respect to this
most outer aspect, it is not quite easy for us to acquire the
most elementary self-knowledge. But Mach makes another remark
as well. He becomes a University professor; so he has some
idea of the appearance of a scholar or a pedant.
‘Not
long ago,’ he writes, ‘tired after a long railway
journey, I got into an omnibus. Simultaneously another man
entered from the opposite side. What a wretched-looking
pedant, I said to myself, and presently discovered that I had
only seen myself, for a looking-glass was hanging opposite
the entrance.’ ‘Thus,’ he continues by way
of explanation, ‘the class-type was far more familiar
to me than my own special type.’ He had formed an idea
in his mind of the typical pedant. He knew that the man,
getting in opposite, looked rather like an out-of-work
schoolmaster. Not until afterwards did he discover that it
was himself. A pretty example of the often very deficient
self-knowledge of men, even as regards their outer form. As
to the knowledge of the soul, it is a great deal more
difficult. Nevertheless, personal and individual
self-knowledge is none other than the first elementary
beginning of the path which leads through man into the
universal secrets of existence.
When we regard
the world externally, here in the physical world we have
before us only that which belongs to the outermost nature of
man — to the system of his physical body. Look out over
the widespread environment which we can see on the physical
horizon of this world; there we have everything that is
related to our own outer body — the physical human
body. We know that this is only a portion of our total being.
Behind it is the etheric body; but man in the first place is
unaware of all that in his environment which resembles his
etheric body. Still less does he surmise that which resembles
his astral body and his Ego.
Man, to begin
with, on the Earth, is for himself the only example —
the only document he has brought over from the spiritual
world. Therefore he must pass through this, the document of
his own being. He must go through himself. This was always
known to those who experienced anything of Initiation. Thus
it was known to Brunetto Latini, teacher and friend of Dante.
Moreover, it is characteristic how Brunetto Latini's
Initiation, as we may call it, was eventually brought about.
It happened by a particular event. That is what frequently
occurs. Fundamentally speaking, every one who sets his foot
on the path of spiritual science is waiting for the portal of
the spiritual world to be opened to him sooner or later, as
indeed it will be. It may be — indeed it often is so
— that the entry to the spiritual world takes place by
degrees. Then we grow slowly into the spiritual world.
Nevertheless, very, very frequently it happens that the world
is opened to us as by a kind of shock which breaks in upon
our life — by a sudden and unexpected event.
Thus, as
Brunetto Latini himself relates, he had been sent as
ambassador to the ruler of Castile. On his way back he
learned that his party, the Guelphs, had been expelled from
Florence. Florence had utterly changed during his absence.
This message brought him into confusion. Such confusion of
our state of soul which is suited to the outer physical
world, often goes hand-in-hand with what becomes the
starting-point for an entry into the spiritual world.
Brunetto
Latini goes on to relate how as a result of his confusion,
instead of riding home, he rode into a neighbouring forest,
quite unaware of what he was doing (or so at any rate he
afterwards believed when he looked back on it). Then, when he
came to himself, he had a strange and unwanted impression. He
saw no longer the ordinary world of the physical plane around
him, but something that looked like an immense mountain. He
did not come to himself again in that consciousness which
normally confronts the physical world. He came to
consciousness over against quite another world than that
which was physically there around him. There was an immense
mountain; but these things were such that they came and went
— came into being and passed away again. There at the
side of the mountain stood a woman, according to whose
commands that which arose, arose, and that which passed away,
passed away again.
Brunetto
Latini now beheld the laws and principles of Nature's working
in the forms of Imagination. All Nature's laws — the
living and creative essence of Nature herself — came
before him in an Imagination, in the figure of a woman who
gave her orders for all these things to arise and pass away
again.
We must
imagine ourselves living in the time of the thirteenth,
fourteenth century, when the natural scientific way of
thought was slowly entering. In later times, men spoke
abstractly of the Laws of Nature; they would on no account
imagine that there was any reality of being behind the
totality of Nature's laws. Brunetto Latini, however, saw it
in the form of Imagination, as a woman, out of whose spirit
proceeded all that was subsequently felt as abstract Laws of
Nature, like a Word that held sway throughout this Nature,
which stood before him in living Imagination.
This woman, he
relates, then bade him deepen the forces of his soul; so
would he enter more and more deeply into himself. Here it is
interesting. Raying out over him her forces, as it were, she
gives him the possibility to enter more and more deeply into
himself. He dives down into his own being, and the sequence
he now indicates is indeed, under certain conditions, the
true sequence of Initiation.
The first
thing, he tells us, which he now learned to know were the
forces of the soul. Diving down into himself, man does indeed
learn to know what otherwise remains unconscious in him
— the forces of his soul. This recognition of his own
soul-forces is a thing from which man will often flee, when
he draws near to it. For when we perceive the forces of the
soul, it often seems to us that we say to ourselves:
‘What an unsympathetic soul that is!’ We do not
like this feeling, any more than the worthy professor did
when he saw his own form, which was distasteful to him. We do
not want to see. For with the chorus of the soul's forces we
often see many a thing we have within us, which we by no
means attribute to ourselves in ordinary life. We see it as
something that is at work in the totality of our own being
— enhancing our being, or making it smaller; making us
of greater or lesser value for the Universe.
Thus, to begin
with, we rise into the soul-forces. At the next stage, we
experience the four temperaments. There it becomes clear to
us how we are woven together, of the choleric, melancholic,
sanguine, and phlegmatic, and how this weaving together lies
deeper down than the soul-forces.
Then, when we
have gone through the temperaments, we come to what may be
called the five senses — in the occult sense. For in
the way man ordinarily speaks of the five senses, he only
knows them from outside. You cannot learn to know the senses
inwardly till you have descended through the temperaments
into the deeper regions of your own self. Then you behold the
eyes, the ears, the other senses from within. You experience
your own eyes, for instance, or your ears — filling
them from within. You must imagine it thus. Just as you came
into this hall through this door, and perceived the objects
and persons that were already here, so when you undergo this
descent into yourself you come into the region of your eyes
or your ears. There you perceive how the forces are working
from within outward, to bring about your seeing and your
hearing. You perceive an altogether complicated world, of
which a man who only knows the outer physical plane has no
idea at all.
Some, no
doubt, will say: ‘Maybe, but this world of the eyes and
the ears will not impress me greatly. The world of the
physical plane which I have around me here is great, and the
world of the eyes and ears is very small. I should be gazing
into a minute world.’
That, however,
is maya. What you envisage when you are within your ears or
within your eyes is far greater, fuller in content, than the
outer physical world. You have a far more abundant world
around you there.
Then and then
only, when you have gone through this region, you come into
the realm of the four elements. We have already spoken of all
the properties of the several elements; but it is only at
this stage that you feel really within them — within
the earthy, the watery, the airy, and the element of
warmth.
Man ordinarily
knows his senses from without. Here now he learns to know
them from within. Consciously entering into the eye from
within, he then breaks through the eye, and breaking through
the eye comes into the four elements. But he can likewise
break through the ear, or the sense of taste.
By these four
elements he is perpetually surrounded, only he does not know
what they are inwardly. He cannot see it with outer organs of
sense. He must first get out of the sense-organs —
albeit, get out of them from within. He must leave
them again, as though by a gateway. He must get out, through
his eye or his ear. So he slips through — through the
eye, through the ear — and comes into the region of the
elements. And in the region of the elements he learns to know
all the spiritual beings who are living there — the
manifold Nature-spirits, and Beings who belong to the
Hierarchies nearest to man.
Then, going on
and on, he comes into the region of the seven Planets. He is
already farther outside, and learns to know what is
creatively connected with man, in the great Universe. And
then at last he has to cross Oceanos — the
great Ocean, as it has always been called.
The Soul-forces
the four Temperaments
the five Senses
the four Elements
the seven Planets
the Ocean.
What does this
passing through the ocean signify? Man can approach the
planets while with the last portion of his soul's being he
still remains within the physical. But when he thus
goes inward through the gates of the senses, eventually he
must take with him the very last relics of his soul, so that
he may consciously enter the condition in which he is
normally only in sleep. Ordinarily, when he is with the
planets, he still remains in the body with a portion, as it
were, with a fragment of his soul. But when he draws even
this last out of the body, it seems to him as though he were
floating through the universal ocean of spiritual being.
All this,
Brunetto Latini undergoes. He tells how he undertook one
after another of these steps, at the behest of the woman who
appeared to him in his Imaginative cognition. Then she
instructed him that he must go still farther. This, however,
was at a particular moment, which again is highly
characteristic.
Think of the
situation. Perplexed, at a loss on account of what has
happened in his paternal city, he rides into a forest. He
comes to himself again, but this awakening leads him not into
the physical world. It leads him through all the regions
which we have here described. Then, however, the moment
arises when, not by accident, not by mere chance, but by the
definite summons of this woman he sees himself in the forest
once more. Having undergone all these things, having passed
through the soul-forces and the temperaments and through the
senses outward into the elemental world, where he already
perceived abundant spiritual life; having perceived the seven
planets, and through them the higher Hierarchies, circle on
circle; having felt himself at length not on the solid ground
but swimming as it were, swimming through the great ocean;
now he awakens again in the physical world.
That is the
very significant thing we recognise in all these Initiations.
The disciple passes through a complete cycle and returns
again into the physical world.
Having lived
through all this, Brunetto Latini feels himself once more in
his forest. Now he is really surrounded by all that is
physically about him. And anon the woman is there again at
his side, albeit he now has the physical forest around him.
She tells him to ride on towards the right, and she gives him
instruction, how he shall come to Philosophy and to
the four Virtues of man, and to the knowledge of
the God of Love.
Mark what a
significant truth lies behind these things! A man of today
will be quick enough with his reply: Philosophy — with
that I am familiar! I have studied the whole history of
philosophy. I know what philosophy is, and what it teaches.
As to the four Virtues — Plato already named them:
Wisdom, Courage, Balance or Moderation, and Justice. And the
God of Love, who does not know of Him! You need only read the
four Gospels. The man of today is familiar with all these
things. But it is precisely the characteristic of spiritual
knowledge: we begin to see that we do not really know all
these things. We must first go through the understanding of
the spiritual world and then return to what the physical
provides. Then only do we understand the physical
world.
If Brunetto
Latini were to arise again today and a very learned man of
our time were to approach him — a learned professor of
philosophy, a famous man, let us assume — and were to
say: ‘I am familiar with the whole range of
philosophy,’ Brunetto Latini would answer: ‘Yes,
yes, no doubt you are, but in reality you know nothing of it.
You must first learn to know the aspect of the super-sensible
worlds, you must know what things are like in the
super-sensible. Then you can come back again to philosophy,
and it will be something quite new to you. Then only will you
begin to divine what you now imagine that you know quite
well.’
The same thing
may be put in another way. After all, who would not think it
absurd! ... A famous thinker of our time writes a
philosophic book. Surely then he must understand it. How
should he not understand what he himself has written? ...
And yet, it is literally true: he may have written the book
and may yet understand nothing of what he has written. It is
not at all difficult nowadays to write a book. Books almost
write themselves. One pieces together the things one has
learned to repeat. One need not penetrate into the deeper
meaning to do so.
That is the
greatness that meets us in Brunetto Latini. What others learn
to know by external study — he only will claim to know
it after having penetrated through the spiritual world. Then
he meets it again. He meets again what others imagine that
they know of the physical world — the knowledge of
Philosophy, of the four Virtues, and of the God of Love.
I should like
my meaning at this point to be quite fully understood. No
doubt a certain kind of knowledge is also attainable
without spiritual cognition. But these things appear in a new
light when one has first made oneself familiar with that
which lies behind the physical. So do we see it in this
example of Brunetto Latini, whom I have only cited to show
how outer artistic creation is concerned with Initiation. We
see it in this example, in the relation of Brunetto Latini to
Dante, revealing how Dante's great work of art is connected
with Initiation.
Dante could
never have reached his peculiar relation to the spiritual
world if he had not had Brunetto Latini for his friend and
teacher, to educate him into the spiritual world.
Every age has
its own way of seeking the spiritual world. Already in the
centuries preceding Dante's age, we find again and again with
the most varied Initiates the woman of whom Brunetto Latini
speaks — the guidance of man into the spiritual world
by this woman. This line of evolution reaches back to the
seventh and eighth centuries. Some of them actually refer to
her as Natura — the living, creative Being of
Nature. Initiates of old describe her living and creative
Nature — as the counsellor of nous, of the
Intelligence that works creatively throughout the world,
Intelligence or Reason that permeates the world. Moreover,
they call her a kinswoman of Urania. Out in the
Cosmos, nous is counselled by Urania; here
in this earthly realm, by Natura.
When we see
clearly through this, we are led into still more ancient
times, when the Initiates tried in another way to come near
to certain secrets of existence. We find the same woman again
in Proserpine — Persephone who weaves the garment for
her mother Demeter. Thus do the Imaginations change in the
course of centuries, showing, however, that the secrets of
Initiation are always working in the progressive stream of
human evolution.
To come
thoroughly near to these things, it is also necessary for us
to permeate ourselves with the living feeling, that in all
that happens in the world, not only those forces and beings
are at work which outer senses and intellect can perceive,
but that the spiritual is working everywhere. We must take
this into our reckoning. What man today describes — and
for some time past has described as spiritual or
intellectual development, is the development of forces that
are bound to the physical body. This condition has developed
gradually. We know that there was in ancient times the normal
condition of clairvoyance. This gradually ebbed away and died
down, and what we call spiritual today is altogether bound to
the physical man. It is true that with the Mystery of
Golgotha something great and mighty entered the evolution of
humanity — so great that it will only be able to be
understood in its fullness in the course of time. What man
had hitherto was a kind of tradition. With the last relics of
atavistic clairvoyant power, the writers of the Gospels wrote
down what had happened. That, as I say, was a last exertion
of the old powers. Now we are once more beginning, with a
newly awakened, newly discovered power of clairvoyance, to
understand the first truths of the Mystery of Golgotha. We
must realise that coming ages will penetrate more and more
deeply into these secrets of the Mystery of Golgotha. We are
only at the beginning, but we are indeed beginning.
The impulse,
however, of the Mystery of Golgotha has been working ever
since the moment when the life of Christ passed through the
Earth. Had the Christ-Impulse only been able to work through
that which men were capable of understanding, they would only
have had very little of Christ in the past centuries.
I have often
given two examples — and I might give many more —
to show how the Christ works in the human soul, in that which
passes through mankind's historic evolution, but of which
men know nothing. Truly, what the Emperor Constantine knew of
the Christ-Impulse when he himself, being converted, made
Christianity the State religion, was very little. But the
whole arrangement which came about by his victory — the
victory of Constantine, son of Constantius Chlorus, over
Maxentius — was such that we see the Mystery of
Golgotha at work on every hand. The Sibylline Books were
consulted by Maxentius. I mentioned it in the Leipzig
Lecture-Cycle a year ago. They told him how he should act,
over against the advancing army of Constantine. Moreover, he
had a dream. In obedience to his dream and to the Sibylline
Books, he, with an army many times stronger, went forth from
the city to meet Constantine — a grave error, according
to all the rules of war.
Constantine
also dreamed. He dreamed that he would be victorious if he
let the symbol of the Cross of Christ be carried before his
army, and he did so.
Not through
all human wisdom of which one could partake at that time, but
by dreams, all these things were decided. Something was
working through these dreams which could not be understood or
received into consciousness. None the less, it was the living
impulse of Christ. Truly, these men could not understand what
was working in them — livingly, actively carrying
forward the evolution of the world, determining for that time
the face of the European Continent.
Again we find
an epoch when we observe men — not only with reason and
intellect but with their faculty of feeling — wrangling
with one another about all manner of dogmatic questions.
These dogmas seem very strange to the ‘enlightened’ people of
today. The question, for instance, whether it is right to
receive the Holy Communion in one or in two forms, and the
like ... Yet we know what an important part these conflicts
played, for they subsequently worked themselves out in the
Hussite movement, in Wycliffe and in others. There were all
these conflicts, showing how little the intellect of man
could reach to what the Christ-Impulse was in its reality.
Where, then, did the Christ-Impulse really appear, in an
important historic moment? This, too, I have often indicated.
In a peculiar kind of vision, the Christ-Impulse manifested
itself in a shepherd maid — the Maid of Orleans. We
must know what this signifies. It represents a kind of
helping hand, held out by the super-sensible, the spiritual
forces that worked into the feeling of man at a time when
they could not yet work into human concepts. In Joan of Arc
it is particularly interesting to see how this happened. Her
inner being was opened, as it were. But it was not that part
of her inner life which was bound to the physical body. It
was the perception of her ethereal and astral being that was
spiritually opened, so much so that we find in her case a
true analogy to the events of Initiation.
Recently, you
will remember, at an appropriate season we spoke of the story
of Olaf Asteson, who slept through the days after
Christmas and did not reawaken until the day of the Three
Kings, the 6th of January. In this connection we remarked,
that in the season when the outer physical rays of the Sun
have the least power, the spiritual power enveloping the
Earth is greatest. Therefore the Christmas Festival is
rightly placed in the season when the darkness is physically
greatest. Then it is that illumination comes over the soul
that is capable of illumination. Therefore, the legend tells,
it was just in this season that Olaf Asteson attuned his
inner life of soul, so that it was taken hold of by those
forces which as spiritual light pass from the Sun into the
aura of the Earth, at the time when the outer forces of the
Sun are weakest. Until the 6th of January he really underwent
an entry into the spiritual world.
The soul of
the Maid of Orleans had to be kindled for a great historic
mission. There had to be present in her soul the impulses
that surge and weave their way throughout the world with the
Christ-Impulse. They had to be there in her soul. How should
they enter her? They could indeed have entered her, if at
some time in her life she had undergone an experience similar
to that of Olaf Asteson; if she had slept for the thirteen
days after Christmas and had awakened on the 6th of January.
And so indeed it was. Though she did not do so in the way of
Olaf Asteson, still in a certain sense she underwent in sleep
this time which is so favourable to Initiation. She underwent
it in the last thirteen days of her embryonal life. She was
borne by her mother, so as to pass through the Christmas
season in the body of her mother in the last thirteen days of
her embryo life. For she was born on the 6th January. That is
the birthday of Joan of Arc. Thus she passed through the very
time in which the spiritual forces weave and work most
strongly in the Earth's aura.
Therefore we
need not wonder, if even outer documents relate that on that
6 January 1412, the villagers ran hither and thither, feeling
that something momentous had happened, — though
what it was that happened on that 6th of January they did not
know until a later time, when the Maid of Orleans fulfilled
her mission. For one who penetrates into the spiritual facts,
it is of great significance to find it recorded in our
calendar of births that Joan of Arc was born on the 6th
January.
Thus, even in
such facts as shine out far and wide in history, we see how
necessary it is to pass through an understanding of the
spiritual and thence to return to earthly affairs, for it is
only then that we can fully understand the latter.
I have put
this before you once more in order to show how old and dry
and arid has become what is commonly known as the spiritual
and intellectual culture of our time. He who can understand
anything of the deeper impulses flowing through the evolution
of the world and humanity, will realise that we must now be
approaching a renewal, wherein we ourselves must play an
active part through our understanding of and longing for the
spiritual world. The more intensely we realise that a renewal
is necessary, the better shall we find the possibility to
co-operate.
With pale and
petty changes and reforms of the old, we cannot serve this
future. Radically we must renew the spiritual life of
humanity. Great as is the difference between ‘spiritual
science’ in our sense of the word, and that which is taught
about the spiritual life in wide circles in the outer world
— equally great will be the difference between the
civilisation of the future and that of today. And if the
people of today find it so easy to judge the pursuits of
spiritual science fantastic, foolish and absurd, it only
means that they describe as foolishness and as absurdity all
that will dominate the spiritual culture of the future.
Yet, in
precisely such a time, a rebirth of the life of the human
soul must take place. All branches of human life must find
their way into the impulses of this renewal, this rebirth.
And among other things, all the artistic life must come near
again to Initiation. These are the real reasons why we with
our Goetheanum had to make the attempt to create a beginning
— I have often emphasised that it is only a beginning
— which, with all its imperfections, is nevertheless
related in all detail to what the science of Initiation has
to say for our time.
The results of
spiritual science must come to life in our souls. As a living
and vital result they must find expression in the outer form.
By this alone can that which is arising in our Goetheanum
have its corresponding value. Then it will indeed have its
value — not as anything complete, but as a new
beginning. Would that there were an intensive consciousness
in our circle of the intimate relation that exists between
the spiritual science which we have been seeking to acquire
for all these years, and that which our Building contains in
every line, in every feature. If we ourselves are once
filled with this recognition, then we shall be able to say to
the world through our Goetheanum what must needs be said.
Then we shall look with satisfaction into that future which
will be destined to create, out of the primitive beginnings
of this Building, something increasingly complete and
perfect, it is true, yet in the same style and character.
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