Lecture III
Note: the slides accompanying this lecture are not
available.
January 25, 1920 Dornach
Passing on to-day to the
paintings in the smaller dome, it has not been possible to make lantern
slides from the photographs of the paintings of the larger dome — as
we pass on to the paintings in the smaller dome, I am indeed in a peculiar
position, and everyone will be in this position who wishes to present
an idea from these copies of what is meant by the paintings of the dome,
to the wider public who has not first seen them here. The attempt has
been made in accordance with that artistic point of view referred to,
in my Mystery Play The Portal of Initiation, to evolve form
in the painting entirely out of colour, so that, as regards the painting
of the smaller dome, as far as possible, the influence of this point
of view is actually felt — even then of course everything is only
at the initial stages. To allow form to appear as the creation of colour
is that which is aimed at here. If we follow the history of painting
we see that this fundamental principle to draw forth all that is pictorial
from colour, can really only be at the very beginning of its development.
Yen tried in the art of painting because it offers the special temptation
— this was even so in the most brilliant period — to express
some naturalistic theme in reproduction. Even though it must be admitted
— and who would not willingly admit, in reference to the production
of Raphael, Leonardo, Michael Angelo and others? — that the greatest
heights of pictorial art have been reached in striving for expression
in this way, and it must be admitted that the whole modern cosmic conception
which is unspiritual can scarcely do otherwise than somehow strive for
expression, yet the time has come when a spiritualization of our cosmic
conception must be sought; another principle, another way of artistic
thinking, especially in the art of painting must make itself felt. This
artistic feeling certainly will only be admitted by him who has a presentiment
that in this world each element represents a creative whole. If we have
a right sense for the world of colour we find something truly world-creative
in colour. Anyone able to sink himself into the world of colour is able
to soar up to the feeling, that from this mysterious world of colour
a world of beings spring up, that the colour itself through its own
inherent forces will develop into a world of beings. I might say: as
we see the growing man in embryo in the little child, so can we see
a world of beings in embryo if we have a right sense for the world of
colour.
Certainly it does not mean
that we should have merely a feeling for the single colour; the single
colour, as a rule, establishes only a relationship between man and colour
as such. To see blue means to feel an intense desire, longing, to go
out into the space in which the colour is manifesting, to follow the
colour; to look at red calls forth a feeling of being attacked, as if
one had to defend oneself against something, and so on with the other
colours. Colours have also a certain relation with that which can be
formed in colour, if we are able to draw the form out of the colour.
Blue, for instance will always help if we wish to express movement,
red will always help if we wish to express physiognomy. But what I mean
has to do much less with single colours at with what the colours have
to say to one another, whet red has to say to blue, green to blue, green
to red, orange to lilac, etc. In this exchange, I might say, of speech,
and exchange of activity between the colours, an entirely new world
would come to expression. And we do not fully perceive this interchange
of speech and interplay of: colours, if me are not. able to perceive
colours as ocean-waves rising and falling, and at the same to perceive,
playing upon the waves of colour, coming into life from the colour-waves,
the elemental beings which develop their forms of themselves out from
the colour-waves.
Thus the attempt has been
made to show in painting the secret of how to create out of the very
nature of colour. For a greater part of that which is living, which
we look out on, is born wholly out of the creative colour-world. As
our vegetation has sprung forth from the ocean, so that which is living
grows out of the colour-world.
I might say, it is always
pitiful to see how those who are possessed of artistic feeling truly
feel that the old forms of art are bankrupt, that they can go no further,
and how in spite of this the world is not willing to respond to the
impulse which can only be explained through the anthroposophical interpretation
of the world. Certainly this anthroposophical interpretation of the
world must be something more than a mere intellectual idealistic set
of ideas. It must be an intuitive perception. We must be able to think
in colours, in forms, just as we think in ideas and thoughts. We must
be able to live in colours, in forms. If our Building is to be what
it is intended to be, it must in a certain sense, bring to expression,
as in one living being, the spiritual, the psychic and the physical.
The spiritual is essentially brought to expression in the forms of the
pillars, the architrave and the capitals, etc. In these is reflected
the spirit, out of itself creating form. The psychic finds its manifestation,
for example, in the glass-windows. In this interplay of the external
light with the engraving on the coloured sheets of glass may be dimly
apprehended by the play of the psychic, and the physical, that shows
itself in its own configuration if one has the right-vision for what
is painted in the domes. The paintings in the domes express to a certain
extent the physical substantiality. It is, of course, the case that
in the arrangement of the Building, which strives to give an understanding
of the world to come extent, there is a reversed order, as compared
with the ordinary comprehension of the three world principles. This
follows naturally in contrast to what one generally imagines, i.e. the
spiritual above, the physical below. In that which should develop in
the human soul as force of inspiration through the whole artistic structure
of the Building there must be a reversed relationship.
But this very creation from
colours is of course just what I cannot show you in lantern slides,
and therefore with lantern slides we do not get what is really essentially
purposed in the painting in the domes. We get as it were inartistic
ideas, effects of what is intended to he artistic. But of course that
cannot be helped, and it is to be hoped that those who see these lantern
slides of colour-pictures will regard there pictures as it were as crying
out for something else, as not really giving expression to that which
is intended. If we take them in the right way we must say, as regards
these lantern slides of colour-pictures somewhat as follows: “What
is really in these pictures, really wishes to speak to us in a totally
different language”, and then we shall be led to see the Building
itself in the original conception of it. And out of the contemplation
of these lantern slides, this will be a longing that will then arise
in him who has artistic perception. Hence I do not think it quite superfluous
to produce even these lantern slides.
Picture 1: We start from
here in the small dome, where as a beginning there is, on the surface
of the walls, a kind of flying child, immediately at the junction of
the large and small domes. You see this flying child, which in its composition
belongs to what follows on here on your left. The composition is of
course entirely derived from the colour; yet it also forms an element
in the configuration of the small dome. You understand the whole figure
of this child here if you keep in mind the two adjacent forms.
Picture 2: We will now put
on the next picture. You see here as it were a figure of Faust. Here
we are in the riddle Ages, just at the time when our fifth post-Atlantean
age begins and here you find the only word written in letters, the Ich
or I or Ego. In the whole Building you find nothing anywhere expressed
in written letters. The intellectual method of representing a word,
of this foundation word I or Ego, has so far its justification here,
in that, with the commencement of the fifth post-Atlantean civilisation
that in which ourselves stand — in the 15th century, developing
further into the time of Faust, in the 16th century, that which was
invisible appeared, that which expressed by mere symbols, by what had
detached itself from Reality. That which lay at the bottom of the real
ego-being of man was not grasped. In the universal spiritual evolution
of humanity no image of the ego had been evolved. For, when man said
“I” he had only an abstract idea in his mind. This is therefore
the justification for introducing a wholly unreal representation of
the ego through letters. And it falls into place naturally by the side
of the Faust-figure. Do not, I beg you, attach any special value to
my expression Faust-figure. The main thing is that in the whole composition
this figure expresses what the spirit of .the age in that very epoch
produces in the seeking man. You see it brought to expression especially
in the eye, in the countenance, in the attitude of the hand, you see
it expressed in the whole gesture of the figure. That we are reminded
of Faust is what one might say — purely arbitrary. It is the man
who in the fifth our post-Atlantean age actually seeks, which is the
characteristic of our age. Of the real fundamental character of this
seeking few men as yet are conscious. Since the 15th century we have
evolved ever more a sort of philosophy of death, which is no longer
capable of grappling with life. This is the result of the whole training
which humanity had to pass through at the beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean
period. During this period humanity has to develop the inner force of
freedom. self-consciousness. Humanity can only do this by breaking adrift
from nature. But to break adrift from nature means to identify oneself
with the forces which in perceiving, alone understand death, recognise
what is dead. All our ideas, all concepts which are the actual concepts
of civilisation lead to death, are concerned with what is dead. And
he who to-day is not himself dead, as most learned men are in soul,
he who to-day is not himself dead as regards his seeking, finds in the
seeking of these principles an incentive to what makes man free but
is at the same time, I might say, the abyss or the dead. He has constantly
the feeling: Thou makest thyself indeed free, but in so doing thou comest
into proximity with death. Thus Death had to be brought into proximity
with the Faust-figure.
Picture 3:. This is below.
Hero you see the seeking man, who to-day is under the impress, under
the feeling of death, death which always accompanies the most important
ideals in the search for knowledge. It would be unbearable to a feeling
soul to have a sort of Faust-figure above and below to have death, and
no counterpart in the composition. Therefore, before we come to this
composition of Faust and Death, we have this flying child, which to
some extent represents the contrast to the feeling of Death. Thus a
Trinity is to be understood: Death, the Seeking Man and the young Child
full of life. With this is painted in the small dome what may be presented
as the Initiation of the fifth post-Atlantean time. The Initiation-wisdom
of the fifth-post Atlantean time is not to be won without one's having
as it were full consciousness of the significance of Death, not only
in human life, but in the life of the whole world as well. We possess
indeed our powers of thinking because we continually bear the forces
of death in our head. Were these forces which are active in our head
for the purpose of thinking to penetrate our whole organism we should
not be able to live, we should continually die. We only live because
the tendency in our head to death is continually balanced by the tendency
to life in the rest of our organism. That is, I may say briefly and
lightly expressed in the abstract, the law of our time. When I tell
you this, I can understand that it does not penetrate specially deeply
into your hearts, into your souls. To have experienced, signifies something
fearful; to have experienced that impulse which in every effort for
knowledge says: What thou canst acquire as knowledge at the present
time, thou owest to Death which penetrates more and more into the earth-life.
What really must enter into the earth-life of humanity will only enter
when this initiation-principle, now at the very beginning of its growth
— the power of Death! — extends further and further and
engenders the vital longing of the newer future humanity for the compensating
spirit, for a youth who is already Jupiter, which is no longer earth-youth,
which is already the youth of the next planetary embodiment of the earth.
Picture 4: We now go back
to what can-be pictorially represented of the fourth post-Atlantean
(the Graeco-Latin) period of civilisation. A sort of form is given here
in the paintings of the small dome, which in its whole configuration
- you will particularly feel this when you look at the colouring of
this figure in the small dome — which, in its whole configuration,
in its whole nature, portrays the shining-in of the spiritual world
into humanity during the fourth post-Atlantean period, as it was to
be at that time. Above this figure you find those who gave the inspiration,
of which I have not been able to obtain lantern slides from the photographs.
You always find those who inspire, over the corresponding figures, only
in the case of the fifth post-Atlantean period of civilisation, Death
itself, appears from below and approaching man above is the real Being
which inspires.
Here you see above a kind
of God, an Apollo-like form, as the inspirer. That which, through inspiration,
is able to enter a human form of the fourth post-Atlantean period of
civilisation comes into this figure. Thus you see the actual human history
of the inner soul-development is painted in the small dome. Of course
you must give up asking inartistic questions. When an artist paints
a form on the wall, there is nothing in his soul that,can meet such
a question as: What does this or that mean? The inartistic man will
stand before this figure and say: What do there two or three heads mean
on the left of the principal figure? That it not the question of an
artist; it is the question which he who paints it will least of all
be willing to answer, because for him visions have to form pictorially,
they simply appear in space as forms in a vision. He perceives nothing
whatever with which to meet the question: What does that mean? —
but he feels a necessity from the creative cosmic forces to place a
form, which is inspired just like this one, in the neighbourhood of
that which has already been-represented in human form.
I spoke of the creative
forces themselves inherent in the colour-world. At the present time,
if one sees any painting, one always has the image in one's mind. This
is just what must be overcome. There are many more elementary impressions
which must possess the artistic soul. (I will explain more clearly in
detail what I have to say). Suppose I simply make a smudge of colour,
a yellow smudge, and add to it a blue smudge (see illustration). He
who perceives colour as something actually living cannot experience
other than, when he so perceives a colour in this way, a yellow smudge
with a blue border, to see a head in profile. This follows of itself
for him who carries the life of colour within him. Just two smudges
of colour are, to him who possesses the creative idea of colour, that
which at the came time leads to the experience of its essence. But anyone
cannot, let us say, paint a face according to colour in such a way that
he can say: I have seen a face, or indeed, have a model, and after this
model I have formed a face, and it resembles it. Not in this way will
painting be done in the future, but colour will be experienced, and
the artist will turn away from everything naturalistic, from all copying,
and from the colour itself that will be drawn out which already lies
in it and which must necessarily be drawn out, if one has a living feeling
with the life of colour itself.
Picture 4a: Here you find
a combination of what you have seen singly before: here above, the Flying
Child, this Figure of the 16th century, below Death, the remainder less
distinct. You see here above, the one inspiring, you can recognise him
the higher inspirer of the figure you have just seen on this sheet but
which is here very indistinct. It is, of course, difficult to reproduce
in this rough way of colourless pictures things which have really only
been lightly breathed into the colours on the walls. Such can only be
understood, I might say, as a description of what is actually intended.
Picture 5: Here you see
the inspiring figures of the third post-Atlantean (the Egyptians) period
of civilisation, those which inspire from the spiritual world that figure
which will now appear in the next picture.
Picture 6: We have here,
inspired by the previous figures, the Initiates of the third post-Atlantean
period of civilisation.
Thus in the small dome
the actual psychic evolution of humanity is painted, certainly not according
to historical time, that you will see at once, but in an inner way.
For now we are not going back simply to the earlier second post-Atlantean
period of civilisation, but we are going back indeed to the Persian
principle of Initiation, which also had developed out of the primeval
Persian principle of Initiation, and is the Germanic principle of Initiation.
Picture 7: So when we pass
on to the next picture we have the Germanic principle of Initiation.
This Germanic-Persian principle of Initiation is founded on a dualism,
and everything depends on the understanding of the fact that the initiation
of of the period of civilisation which took its rise in the primeval
Persian period, continued its development in the Goethean period of
civilisation. It spread geographically from Asia Minor, across the Black
Sea northwards into Europe, and this Initiation-stream reaches its fulfilment
in recognising the principle of man's effort to seek the balance between
Lucifer, whom you see on the right, and Ahriman on the left. The essential
point is that we understand that this current of civilisation crust
derive all force in the finding of the condition of equilibrium between
the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic. And an attempt has been made, in this
very figure, which is inspired by the Ahrimanic-Luciferic principle
itself, by that which you see here on the right as Luciferic, and here
on the left as Ahrimanic, to show in the attitude, in the whole physiognomy,
that spirituality that must result from the realisation of this dualism,
the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic, between which man has to find the balance.
The fact that you see here the child as it were held up by the Initiate,
for this there is no good foundation. For what flows into man through
the inspiration of the dual principle, could not be endured, it would
kill him inwardly, if he had not always the vision of youth, of the
child. When you see this in the dome, you will observe that an earnest
attempt has been made to draw out of the colours just what is meant
here. An attempt has been made to draw out of the colours even the contrast
between what is Luciferic and what is Ahrimanic. Only you must not analyse
minutely, but seek what is essential in the artistic perception.
Picture 8: Here you see
Ahriman presented. There are not two Ahrimans, but Ahriman and his shadow.
That is to say, Ahriman does not go about without his constant shadow
accompanying him. Ahriman himself would be a much too freezing, too
drying-up a principle of he appeared for instance in his full nature.
It is most necessary to have near him his shadow which qualifies his
freezing influence. If you study the colours in the small dome, you
will see that in this particular shade of colour, the brownish-green,
an attempt has been made to expi.ess the freezing effect of Ahriman;
an attempt has been made to bring everything out of the colour.
Picture 9: Here you see
the Lucifer-theme. You will only understand the Luciferic and Ahrimanic
principles fully if you see them in connection. If you simply look at
Ahriman alone and Lucifer alone you will really understand neither;
only when you have them side by side, because really Ahriman and Lucifer
create and work in such a way in the universe that always whatever the
one accomplishes is taken and made use of by the other, and vice versa.
Thus their figures can only be rightly understood if one sees them in
their living relationship to each other. The inspiration that come from
these will be shown in the next picture.
Picture 10: I had hoped
to express in this countenance with its adequate colour what is possible
to express in a figure standing under the influence of this dual principle.
It is the need,of inner stability, and at the same time self-possession
in temperament, in character and the joyous inclination towards that
which is young and childlike, in order to bear all that which one experiences
under the actual inspiring influence of the dual principle.
Picture 11: Here we have
the same again in another aspect.
Picture 12: Here you see
that into which our Period of civilisation will resolve itself. This
picture is to be found nearer to the central Group, that of the representative
of Humanity with Ahriman and Lucifer We have attempted to represent
what had to be shown here as an Initiate, i.e. such a man who could
embody the spiritual revelation of the coming 6th post-Atlantean period
of civilisation, even now in advance, and we have attempted to represent
such an Initiate through the medium of form and colour. For this reason
we had to picture not a Russian of to-day: but that which is to be seen
to a certain extent in every Russian to-day. every such Russian has
his own shadow continually as his companion. He has always his second
self who accompanies him, and that is what is here expressed.
But you must realise that
that which is here inspiring him is more spiritual compared with the
earlier source of inspiration. Hence this angel-like form which here
appears in its whole outline growing out of the blue. You will see more
clearly in the next picture the kind of centaur-figure which is essentially
necessary to the inspiring Being. You see, this inspiration leads at
the same time out into the starry world. We recognise again man in his
connection with that in the Cosmos which is external to the earth. But
the Being which inspires is no longer to be conceived of in human likeness.
In our attempt to show form we come to figures which are no longer human-like
which have certain qualities of form which recall the qualities and
temperament of man but are no longer human as such.
Picture 13: (Centaur)
Picture 14: Here is this
inspiring figure which is a figure of the Cosmos and at the same time
in connection with that which still tends towards the human, but is
an angel-like Being born wholly out of the colour of the clouds. This
is what we see as the colour Inspirer.
Picture 15: The came Being;
only there is more to see; the Initiates are here to be seen. Of course
the whole effect lies in the colour composition, which, naturally, is
here wholly lacking.
Picture 16: Here we see
the upper portion of the Central Group. The middle figure shows the
Representative of Humanity, above it, Lucifer.
The middle figure is represented
in the painting — under it the Group which is the Chief Group
stands — is here represented in painting where the space is small,
so as to represent the Luciferic and Ahrimanic principles in one figure
only; while, in the plastic Group, on account of the weight, on account
of the proportions of the space they are given in double form.
This figure is only to be
understood through the colours, through the Red colour out of which
it is chiefly composed together with some other shades of colour. And
here we are shown how man is seeking the state of equilibrium between
that which is Luciferic and that which is Ahrimanic. This search for
the state of balance is to certain extent to be found in man as much
physically and physiologically as also in his soul and spirit.
From a physiological, from
a physical point of view, man is not that simple growing being that
he is often represented to be in superficial science. an inclines continually
on the one hand towards ossification, and on the other hand towards
.a softening gelatinous condition.
The tendency in a man towards
softening, which arises when the blood gains the upper hand, comes from
Luciferic influences. Where the Luciferic influence tends to gain the
upper hand physiologically in the human being, where feverish phenomena
appears physiologically in man as actual formative principles, the Luciferic
influence is predominant. As a result, the human form approximates more
and more to this form. Man had this form during the ancient-moon period.
In other words: if that principle which is specially the principle of
growth in heart and lungs were alone to rule the human being, man would
preserve such a form. Only through the fact that the Ahrimanic principle
is found at the opposite pole to the Luciferic, the physiological state
of equilibrium is maintained between that which the blood brings about
and that which is produced by the ossifying tendency. This is the case
viewed physiologically, from the point of view of the physical body.
From the point of view of
the soul one may say: man is continually on the search for the state
of balance between excessive enthusiasm, which is Luciferic, and that
which is prosaic, materialistic, abstract, which is Ahrimanic. From
the point of view of the spirit: man is continually seeking the balance
between theca conditions of consciousness which are specially permeated
with Light where the consciousness is awakened through the irradiation,
through the illumination of the soul; through the Luciferic. And the
opposite pole is that through which weight, gravity, electricity, magnetism,
in short, all that which holds one down, bring about the consciousness
of self, the attainment of consciousness: all this is Ahrimanic. Man
is always seeking the balance between these two conditions, and we may
observe how that all that man can make man more conscious, that can
bring him away, from the middle.path always inclines either to the one
side or the other, the Luciferic or Ahrimanic. It would be of immense
importance even for the study of human physical organism, if we discarded
the merely theoretical principle of growth, that of the One principle,
and took into consideration that polarically-opposed impulses of growth
are present in man as if interwoven, intermingled with each other. The
other impulse of growth is Ahrimanic.
Picture 17: Here is the
exact opposite. In every shape, in every line you will see the exact
opposite of Lucifer, in this Ahriman, who as it were grows out of the
masses of rock, i.e. out of the solid conditions of the earth. His aim
is to approach man and so lay hold of him with his force of gravity,
(his solidity) that at the same time he slays him with ossification
or presses him to death in barren materialism. This is what is expressed
in this figure of Ahriman. He appears as if slain by light, hence the
rays of which bind him wit) cords so that he is fettered by them. In
between we have man - man himself.
Picture 18: The real man,
who represents the condition of equilibrium, under him Ahriman, above
him Lucifer.
I expressly draw your attention
to this, that here again it is not essential to aim at the visionary
conception of the Christ. The essential is that we feel what is here
presented in this figure. Then we shall arrive ourselves, through the
art representation, to the Christ. That is, we shall discover the central
being of all earth's existence, the Christ, when we experience that
which is to be felt in this form. The Christ may to-day discovered purely
spiritually. But we must rightly understand man and rightly perceive
him.
On the other hand it may
be said: he who to-day understands and smypathises with that which man
can suffer, with that which he can enjoy, he who fully realises how
man can go astray or raise himself towards one side or the other, he
who is striving after a real self-knowledge, if he only goes far enough
along the road of feeling, perception and will, he will discover the
Christ. And he will then be able to find again in the Gospels, in all
historical documents, the Christ he has discovered. We cannot to-day
really attain to true knowledge of man without attaining to the knowledge
of the Christ.
Even along physiological,
biological lines if we rightly conceive of man in his physical form
we shall come to the understanding of the Christ. It is just the task
of the fifth post-Atlantean time to attain more and more to this understanding
of the Christ. Hence there could not be a visionary Christ-figure, concerning
which one merely enquired its significance, in the central point of
our Building, but the Representative of Humanity, in which the Christ
to a certain extent appears in his essence. This is what I would beg
you always to consider concerning these things; not to start out from
the prosaic intellectual, riot from the symbolic, not from the visionary
to set out from that which is really there on the wall, not from that
which may be imagined about it. That which should fill our thought should
come forth from that which is on the wall itself.
Of course that which is
on the wall is only imperfectly executed, but every beginning must be
imperfect; even the gothic architecture, when it first appeared was
imperfect. The perfect will undoubtedly follow out of that which has
here been attempted. This is not to say that earnest effort has not
been made to find the true Representative of, Humanity by every means
of the art of occult investigation. You see, that figure of Christ which
is the traditional one arose only in the 6th century after Christ. For
myself, I only give this out as a fact, but do not require from anyone
that he accept it as a dogma of belief, for myself I am quite clear
on the point, it is for me a fact, that the Christ Jesus who walked
in Palestine had this countenance, which you may see on the carved figure.
And the attempt has only been made to represent in the expressive gesture
that which one sees more when the etheric body is observed than when
one observes the physical body. Hence also, the strongly-marked asymmetry
which we have dared to portray. This asymmetry is present in every human
countenance, naturally not in this strength, but the human countenance
is thus indeed, especially as at present man wears in many respects
an untrue mask. When humanity will have reached a certain spiritualisation
in the 6th and specially the 7th post-Atlantean period where physical
man will no longer live on the earth, then man will wear his true countenance,
i.e. will express in his countenance what he is really worth within.
But all this — I should
like to point out — is very difficult for the paint-brush or chisel
to represent in the painting and sculpture and that which we have attempted
to express as the Representative of Humanity. As imperfect as these
things may be, he who studies them will find that the secrets, the mysteries
of human evolution are actually sainted in this little cupola. He will
certainly find that which is meant to be expressed., may be experienced
from out of the colour, and that these pictures can only indicate to
you what you are capable of feeling, when, on receiving the information
which I have given you to-day, you expect nothing symbolic, nothing
about which man can enquire the meaning, but when you — rather,
with the information I have given you to-day, seek to feel that which
is painted into this little cupola.
Picture 19: Now I want to
show the other view of the heating-house. Yesterday I showed the front
view, and you see that this heating-house is thought out as a whole,
so that its side-view to a certain extent stands full in harmony with
the whole, as I yesterday, through the comparison with the nutshell,
explained to you.
I have tried to give you
to-day what we have up to the present in pictures. I should like to
say that the actual attempt has been made with this Building to make
the conception of the Building as far as possible a unity. For example,
you see the Building covered over with Norwegian slate. Once when I
was travelling on a lecture tour from Christiania to Bergen, I saw on
the mountain slopes the wonderful slate-quarries of the neighbourhood
of Voss, and the thought came to me that our Building must be covered
with this slate. You will find, if you strike a favourable day, and
desire to see the thing, that the particular blue-grey glistening of
the dome — the covering of this slate — in the sun, makes
an impression which is suited to the Building in its dignity.
This is what I am able to
say concerning the Building, in reference to these pictures. I wanted.to
make this Building comprehensible to our friends who are willing to
undertake the,risk of making it known to and understood by those to
whom the Goetheanum in Dornach is perhaps nothing but a name they have
heard, and to whom the place is only a geographical idea. I wanted to
give this exhibition for those friends who are willing to bring before
the understanding of those who are thus placed what will proceed from
the Geotheanum for , the future of the evolution of humanity. It is
of great importance that this visible token of Spiritual Science from
the point of view of Anthroposophy should be accurately brought to the
knowledge of the world, and that it is made to a certain extent the
centre-point of our considerations and of our feeling within our anthroposophical
world-conception.
He who truly feels at what
a turning-point the evolution of humanity has arrived in the present
day, he will really indeed find within himself the necessary stimulus
to make known what is here being carried out in Dornach. There are not
many to-day who see how strongly the forces of human historical forms,
coming from the past, act as destructive forces. We have indeed submitted
to the destructive forces in Europe during the last 4 or 5 years; only
the very few have wished actually to think over and appreciate what
really happened. Those who do appreciate it will surely feel that nothing
is to be gained for the further development of humanity from that which
has been brought over from old times, that literally the new revelation
which presses in upon us since the last third of the Nth century must
be received by this world of ours.
No one can think socially
to-day without taking up the impulses which come to us from this knowledge
which has been described. We must painfully, really painfully, realise,
when we hear that there are to-day men who say: Oh Spiritual Science
according to Anthroposophy was very pleasant, as long as it was Spiritual
Science ,as long as it did not bother itself with outride things, as
for example, “The Threefold State” does. There have arisen
individual men among the earlier followers of Anthroposophical Spiritual
Science who say: Spiritual Science was very acceptable to us by itself;
with the social aspect we cannot and will not identify ourselves. Such
an attitude of mind is sectarian, and that is what our movement truly
never wished to be; this sectarianism only strives after a certain spiritual
voluptuousness. I should like to know how anyone can be so without heart,
so terribly heartless in the presence of such impulses as are appearing
in the evolution of humanity as to say: I want something that comforts
my soul, that assures me of immortality, but I won't touch it if this
spiritual striving is to have a practical social result. Is it not heartless
in such a time as this, not to wish for a practical result from that
for which we are striving spiritually?
Is it not the most confused
mysticism to as it were fold the hands and say to oneself: For my soul
I will have Spiritual Science but this Spiritual Science must have no
social result. It is heartlessness. For how terrible it is to think
that to anyone this Spiritual Science should be the most important thing
in life, and that it should have no counsel to give in the present-day
burdened social condition of humanity. That is the good of this Spiritual
Science if it contains no help towards which humanity to-day may turn!
Shall it be quite unfruitful, this Spiritual Science, for life? Does
it only exist to pour into men a spiritual bliss? No, only thus can
it preserve itself, by creating out of itself actual practical results.
And it means that true Spiritual Science is not understood if men will
not advance to practical results. And Spiritual Science must not be
mere visionary knowledge, Spiritual Science must be actual life. Therefore
it is always such a great pain that not very many more human souls are
able to rouse themselves out of the impulses of Spiritual Science to
the great interests of humanity to-day. To-day that which affects the
individual is of such infinitesimal importance as compared with that
which is fermenting and working in humanity, and the moment one occupies
oneself with anything personal, the thought is immediately directed
the great interests of humanity. But how many people think like this?
For I must remember, how necessary it really is to communicate certain
esoteric truths to humanity, and yet how impossible this is because
there is really no set of people in whom really the impersonal objective
principles have the value that they should have. It is a pressing necessity
to communicate certain truths of Initiation to humanity. Only it cannot
be done, when one has to do with men who the whole day long are only
occupied with their own personal interests, as if they were of the highest
importance. To turn our eyes to the human interests, that is what is
of such immense importance. He who does this will see very very much
to-day.
I have to draw your attention
again and again to the beginning of this battle-storm which will arise
with all sorts of slander and lies against Anthroposophical Spiritual
Science. Men do not want to believe this, but it is true; Spiritual
Science will not be fought primarily on account of its faults; these
would be forgiven it; Spiritual Science will be attacked just when it
succeeds in accomplishing something good. And the hottest and most infamous
attack will be directed against that which Spiritual Science can do
of good.
Each one must examine himself,
whilst continually observing with true inner force that which can only
be criticised as relentless opposition to Spiritual Science, whether
he does not perhaps carry in himself too much of that attitude which
does not attack the failings but rather the good sides of Spiritual
Science. Much of this sort might be pondered over to-day: And this sort
of thing must continually be pointed out. And the time must certainly
come firstly, in which it will be possible not to have to approach closed
doors with the communication of certain esoteric truths, because men
are only occupied with their own personal interests, and secondly in
which it will also be possible to bring the most important things when
they are spoken, actually home to the hearts of men. As a rule one may
proclaim things of the greatest significance — men take them only
as a kind of theoretical knowledge, and hence they do not penetrate
into, their hearts and affect them deeply; whilst everyday things, humdrum
things even perhaps relatively big things, penetrate easily into the
hearts of men.
This is what we must before
all else strive for; that that which is drawn from the Spirit shall
truly penetrate right into the heart, into the soul, that it does not
remain merely in our understanding. Much of the most important of that
which has been spoken to-day, which may already be found in the teachings
of Spiritual Science or Anthroposophy, bears no fruit on this account,
that men let it get no further than their understanding, and then they
say perhaps: This is something which should only be grasped by the
understanding: But that is their own desire — to leave it only to
the understanding, because they only take it as a wisdom for the head,
and do not let it reach their hearts. This observation I wish to link
on to the Introduction I have given you of the Building.
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