The Children of Lucifer
Berlin, 1st March 1906
A
week ago, I spoke before you about the idea of Lucifer. In
connection with the last talk, I would like to explain
something about the same idea and its significance for the
human evolution and I may connect with an excellent piece of
art, with The Children of Lucifer (1900) by Édouard
Schuré (1841-1929, French writer, theosophist).
Someone who regards theosophy only as a sum of teachings and
dogmas or the Theosophical Society only as a sect that deals
with particular religious-philosophical or other ideas and aims
at a corresponding lifestyle that is maybe somewhat surprised
about the subject of this talk. However, who regards theosophy
as something that one has to regard as deepening of our whole
spiritual life, even more, as deepening of our whole culture,
finds it comprehensible that theosophy is not only looked for
within the narrow borders,, but in all regions, in all branches
of life and, hence, also in art above all.
Many people have a point of view that leads them to believe
that theosophy is something unworldly, even somewhat
life-hostile. Those who believe in such a way have not yet
adopted the real basis of the theosophical world movement.
Just a piece of art like Édouard Schure's The Children
of Lucifer shows us that the living creating of the artist
not only is not impaired by the theosophical deepening, but
that the true theosophy and the true theosophical life is just
able to inspire art in the most eminent sense and give it
exceptionally strong impulses.
Indeed, I would like to link to this drama The Children of
Lucifer. However, if we just embark on the mode of
formation of this dramatic poetry in our time and on the
peculiar structure of the spirit out of which this piece of art
has arisen, we are able to look deeper at the theosophical life
at the same time.
Schuré has probably drawn the best forces of his work just
from the theosophical worldview, and he belongs certainly to
the most exquisite authors in the theosophical field. Who wants
to find access to the theosophical life from any other point of
view than that of the known compendia and smaller manuals can
do it with the help of Schuré's works. Already the
characteristic how Schuré came to that which should
inspire his mind to express artistically what we have in The
Children of Lucifer is theosophically extremely
interesting.
It
is told to us in the fine monument he erected in honour of
somebody who had influenced his soul life the conceivably
deepest. An extremely interesting fact of the modern cultural
life confronts us here. Édouard Schuré published a
book and provided it with an introduction that comes from a
personality who had deeply looked into the secrets of
existence. It is a book in which one recognises the artist. In
this book a spirit breathes, which differs from that which we
can find, otherwise, in similar writings, a spirit that has
immediately processed and taken up real theosophy in himself as
life. Schuré calls this personality — Marguerita
Albana Mignaty (1827-1887), who wrote about Corregio (Antonio
Allegri da C., 1489-1534. Italian painter) — his leader
during her life, he calls her the spirit of his soul after her
death. One cannot express that more appropriately than he did
if one looks into the psychology of Schuré's creating.
In
the last third of the 19th century it was granted to some
deeper inclined natures to look into true spiritual life once
again, after one had understood the word spirit hardly as
anything else than a sum of abstractions long time, after one
did not connect, actually, anything real with the word spirit
long time.
If
— on one side — we delve into Schuré's
creating and — on the other side — into the mind of
that personality which he calls his leader, we are immediately
recalled of that which was understood within the Greek mystery
view in the aurora of our western cultural life by the concepts
of god and of the divine life. The word theosophy originated
later. The first to use it was the apostle Paul. However, it
was a common property of all deeper recognising people. We need
to get involved only in that which existed within the
spiritualised Christianity as theosophy, as a divine concept,
as a concept of the divine life, and you are able to grasp the
fact of the spirit immediately in another way than it is
possible with the modern concepts, as they are still quite
usual. The Greek understood by god, by the divine being still
nothing else than such a being that surmounts the human being,
indeed, concerning his qualities, concerning his abilities, but
that is similar to the human being. He calls the human being a
becoming god, and he understands any god in such a way that he
has once gone through the school of humanity. If the Greek
looked up at his god, he said to himself, the gods once went
through the sufferings and joys, the experience of life, which
I have to go through now. They once went through this school of
life, which I have finished now, and I soar those spheres of
creating later, on which the gods are today. — The Greek
calls his gods older brothers in the entire cosmic evolution,
and regarded the human being himself as a draft that should
become the same once as the gods are today.
This gives another relation to the divine than that which only
looks up at something divine, only foresees something in the
beyond. As well as here in the physical world for the Greek the
external physical realms establish, the sensory physical
realms, from the mineral, to the plant and animal realms up to
the human realm, the hierarchy, the sequence of the gods
outranked the human. He considered the realms beyond the human
one as the world of the gods. He did not call that which the
Greek should experience in those schools — which were
cult sites at the same time, which one called mysteries —
abstract, only scientific knowledge of some higher principles,
of some forces of nature. The Greek did not understood it
symbolically but as something real that the human being
associated with the gods in the schools. The mystery pupil did
not feel towards the gods, unlike the child feels if it looks
up at the adult who has already reached what it itself reaches
in a future life epoch. Something completely real was this
experience to the Greeks. Hence, theosophy was for those, who
coined the word first, not knowledge of the gods, but the
knowledge that was obtained in this peculiar way by the contact
with the higher spiritual beings. Anybody who was initiated
into the mysteries not only obtained knowledge, but he was
enabled to associate with the gods, with the spirits, as well
as he associates here on our earth with human beings. One
called natural knowledge that knowledge that the human being
acquires with the senses.
However, one called that knowledge, which one received from the
gods, divine knowledge: theosophy. I know very well that the
most people of those who think from the modern point of view
regard such a phrase, as I have just used it, as nothing but an
only poetic picture, as a symbol or something extremely
fantastic and superstitious. It is neither this nor that; it is
something that the human being can really experience. The human
being can bring himself to turn his look to the spiritual
beings outranking him as he directs his look to the sensuous
beings. These spiritual beings avoid the sensuous eye, like all
senses, because they have accomplished the stages of
spirituality and do no longer have any existence for the
senses. The mysteries of the Greeks aim at this: a development
of the human being to get contact with the higher beings.
In
the last third of the 19th century, it was granted, as I said,
again to some deeper natures to understand something of that
which is meant, actually, with such a thing. Above all, a
person was part of it like Marguerita Albana. However, I would
like to say that such a personality was not initiated by means
of that big spiritual art which somebody had to go through who
wanted to maintain the contact with the gods within the Greek
mysteries. Such a personality was an initiate by nature as
there are poets by nature. However, I cannot get involved
further in the fact that a soul, which is initiated by nature
in the former stages of existence, is already over some
experiences, so that that which it experiences now is only
recollections of former stages of existence. However, the
possibility to behold in the higher world, transforming
particular lower forces of our existence, forms the basis of
such a spiritual person like Marguerita Albana. What does that
mean?
Any
means of higher knowledge are transformations of subordinated
forces. What still the undeveloped human being had in far-away
prehistoric time as undeveloped vague senses can be transformed
into the eye which opens the splendour of the sunlight to us.
On the other hand, visualise once how imperfect the organ of
the ear is on the lower developmental stages! All higher organs
that open the marvellous nature round the human being are
transformations, metamorphoses of lower forces. Human forces
can also today be transformed into higher senses.
Thus, some human beings were equipped with higher senses just
in the last third of the 19th century. That is why they could
behold into the spiritual environment. What other human beings
have only in abstractions or notions, the reality of the divine
existence, was to them as certain as the sensuous things to the
other human beings. Such personalities could give information
of the higher worlds. Just such persons could inspire the
receptive nature of Édouard Schuré to the nicest and
biggest. Édouard Schuré combined soul, mind, and deep
esoteric knowledge with a real Schillerean diction and strength
of language in this drama, whose translation you can receive
from Marie von Sivers here. The drama The Children of
Lucifer is something that is created not only out of the
spirit of the present, as it is embodied in few people now, but
it is created almost out of the spirit of the next human
future. In this work, those who have the disposition and talent
may develop something according to the highest and most
significant theosophical ideas. Édouard Schuré just
realised what took place in the Greek mysteries and in those
acts of consecration.
You
all know that also within the German cultural life in the last
third of the 19th century a breath was to be felt that
originated from a kind of understanding of the Greek mysteries.
Richard Wagner (1813-1883, German composer) and his circle was
inspired by the spirit of the Greek mysteries in certain ways.
We still have to speak something about this chapter in the next
talks. You know also that one of those spirits who were
close-knit with Richard Wagner, Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900,
philosopher), wrote his first work about the Greek tragedy and
that he wanted to show how this Greek tragedy came into being
from an ancient spiritual life. He did not go as far as
Édouard Schuré, not into the mysteries, however, to
the gates of the mysteries when he wrote the work The Birth
of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music (1869).
Two
words faced his mind: the Apollonian, on the one side, and the
Dionysian, on the other side. What did Nietzsche mean with
these words? He understood two spiritual currents by them.
The
Dionysian, he says, is that which completely lives in that
element of the human cultural life, which is at one with the
cosmic spirit all around. The Dionysian is to Friedrich
Nietzsche a rapture that the human being experiences if he
completely penetrates his being with that core of the highest
spiritual life, which flows through the whole universe.
Nietzsche anticipated such a thing that the Pythagoreans called
music of the spheres, something of that old choir of which also
Goethe speaks while he lets his Faust begin with the
words:
In ancient rivalry with fellow spheres
the sun still sings its glorious song,
and it completes with tread of thunder
the journey it has been assigned.
Nietzsche anticipated something of that mysterious hearing and
listening to that which flows through the universe, which makes
the planets dance around the sun, which animates the spheres.
He anticipated that in this dance something divine enjoys life
and that the human beings can penetrate themselves with the
breath of the divine, and that the human being then feels at
one with the whole universe. Then, Nietzsche thinks, the human
being lives in a kind of rapture, then he experiences what
flows through the whole universe, then an echo of that god whom
the Greek calls Dionysus lives in him.
As
to Nietzsche, this god is that who poured out into the material
world round us who is buried in the material world and who
celebrates his resurrection then in the human mind, in the
human soul. So that the disciple of Dionysus accomplishes his
songs, his inspirations under the influence of this god and
allows to flow out what one calls the immediate Dionysian art
arisen from the divine. Thus, the Dionysus dancer and Dionysus
singer was the representative of the divine Dionysian principle
in the world. Nietzsche regards this Dionysus drama as the
original drama, the later drama originated only from the fact
that an image was created, a quiet, dreamlike image of the
original Dionysian rapture. The Dionysus disciple receives what
arises before his senses, and he can mirror this in serene
Apollonian kind. Thus, the Apollonian art is something that was
created afterward as an image of the Dionysian art. It is the
image, the notion of something that lived in old Greece.
Nietzsche pointed already to the primeval times, in which the
Dionysus disciples did not only speak of the god, but lived the
divine in their movements, in their voices and works as the
original artists. Any later art appeared to Nietzsche only as a
late echo of this old art. Any science appeared to him only as
a shadowy image of the forces represented once by the human
beings.
In
Richard Wagner's art, Nietzsche saw a renewal of that great art
which connects the human beings again with the divine.
Therefore, it was clear to Nietzsche that Richard Wagner could
not bring human figures on the stage, but that he needed
supernatural figures which did not show only what happens in
this world, but also what works behind this world in spirit. As
well as in the Dionysus drama the Greek artist was able to do
it, Richard Wagner's figures, put down on the stage, had also
to have outgrown the usual human in the sense of Nietzsche, so
that they can embody something about which the human being can
say, they are there to that which comes once. In his book Le
drame musical. Richard Wagner, son œuvre et son
idée (1875), Schuré also created out of this
spirit which was round Wagner, and he represented the idea of
the musical drama greatly; for Marguerita Albana had introduced
him in the true spiritual world, in the spiritual reality.
Inkling became reality to him, and with it, he could find the
key to the inside of the Greek mysteries. Better than someone
else, he was capable to illumine what took place within the
holy mysteries of Greece. In his work Sanctuaires
d'Orient (1898), he was able to rebuild the so-called Greek
original drama with great ingenuity. What was now the
Eleusinian original drama?
It
is a reproduction of an experience which cannot be experienced
at all within the sensuous world which can be experienced only
if the human being himself develops to that level where higher
senses awake in him where he realises that all physical
principle, which he get to know, are real thoughts of the
beings whom the Greeks called gods. As well as the human being
creates with his thoughts today, and as he puts his thoughts
into his works, his older brothers, the gods, put their
thoughts into the world of existence.
Let
us get into the mind of such a Greek mystery pupil who has been
initiated. He said to himself if he could have spoken with our
words: look at a piece of art, at a machine, what are they?
They are works of human beings, formed according to human
thoughts. If you stand before the piece of art, before the
machine, you see also the artist, the mechanic through their
work, and I understand the work if the principles are
disclosed. What are these principles? They are what lived first
in the head, in the spirit of a human being.
The
thoughts of the mechanic, of the artist are crystallised as it
were in the material tool, in the marble piece of art. As I
look from the piece of art and from the machine at the artist
and at the mechanic, the Greek artist looked from the earth at
the higher beings. If he wanted to understand the principles
that build up an animal, he said to himself, thoughts of beings
of divine nature are therein. As well as the thought of the
mechanic is in the machine, the thoughts of a creator, of a god
are in the animal, in the crystal, in the starry heaven.
— This god is to him a being to whom he feels related,
who is on a level that the human being himself reaches once.
The Greek regarded the god as a being, which has arisen from a
human level, and the human being is a being that once attains a
divine level. Thus, he associated with the gods in the
mysteries. He associated with the gods like with older
brothers, and the feeling, which expresses itself in it, is
something quite natural. One has only to settle in such a kind
of thinking. From such a kind of thinking, the mystery pupil
looks up at those beings that are slumbering, as it were, or
are embodied in their thought in the whole nature surrounding
us.
The
mystery pupils saw the slumbering divine thoughts in the whole
nature. The being of the divinity poured out into it, and the
human being is there only, so that in him these divine thoughts
can recover their very own existence. All thoughts in the soul
of the human being are the resurrection of the god in the
world. Placed in the universe in such a way, the own human life
appears as an after-image of the descent, the suffering and
death of the godhead and the grave of the godhead in the
matter. The human being is called to redeem the gods again from
the matter. This is the way of Dionysus, the way that all gods
have taken. Thus, the gods live in their thoughts.
Theosophy calls Dionysus the last-born of the gods. You know
that in the legend he is a son of Zeus and a mortal mother,
Semele. One says that his divine father snatched him from his
mother when Zeus struck her with a streak of lightning. Then,
however, the mother of the gods, Hera, became inflamed with
jealousy against this child not stemming from her. She set the
titans against the child who tore it and scattered the pieces
all over the world. Pallas Athena saved its heart only and
brought it to Zeus who formed Dionysus anew.
We
realise that this god was there already before, and we realise
that this divinity has a special relation to the world. What is
it? It was shown in the mysteries as the creator of that in the
human being, which humanity attained last. The human being
appears partially as originating from the hands of the gods. In
the first years of his life he also faces us in such a way,
because he has not yet formed own existence. Bit by bit he
matures and becomes independent. Then he works and forms on his
own existence. More and more the strength awakes in him that
makes him the creator of his innermost being, the creator of
his soul strength and mental power. Now one says within the
mystery schools that as it were the last step in the life that
the human being receives from nature or from God is connected
with the god Dionysus.
There we touch one of the deepest secrets of the Greek
mysteries, namely the sexual maturity of the human being. The
time, when he comes out of the undifferentiated sexual life to
the differentiated one of man and woman, is still the last step
which nature accomplishes with the human being leading him to
this maturity, where in him the desire awakes for the other
sex. What he then makes of this desire, how he refines it, how
he penetrates it with soul, and what he makes of love in
spiritual respect, this is the own work of the human being. The
last step that the gods accomplish with the human being is that
they develop him to the young man and woman during puberty. The
force that expresses itself everywhere in nature, in any
knowledge, in any sensuousness and in all mental forces on the
different levels, the mystery pupil also recognises it now in
the proclivity of one sex for the other.
How
does the human being perceive any way, the Greek mystery pupil
asked himself, how does any being perceive anyway? If we
imagine an animal eating the plants instinctively, which are
useful and necessary for its prosperity, it is a kind of
perception. Nevertheless, it is a higher level of percipience
if our eye turns to the light and soaks it up as it were.
Sensuousness is percipience, vision is percipience, and it is
percipience if one sex inclines towards the other. Then the
transformation of the lower forces to higher and higher ones
takes place. The last step which nature, or God, spoken in the
freer sense, has undertaken with the human being can also be
transformed. Sensuousness changes into love. It spiritualises
itself; it ensouls itself. Dionysus was the god who represented
this strength of sexual maturity to the Greek of the mystery.
Dionysus did not only have this function with it, because the
sexual maturity is still connected with something quite
different. Dionysus is understood as the last-born of the gods
only with it.
If
we look at the human being as he faces us today, we have a
being before us in which the more astute human being —
and someone who embarks on the theosophical worldview is led to
this deeper look bit by bit — sees something that has
become man and woman gradually. You need only to read Plato and
to take him seriously in order to understand the Greek kind of
view and you find how he points to a time when there was not
yet man and woman, while the human being was still man and
woman at the same time. The biblical legend points also to such
an undifferentiated human race, and the Fall of Man is nothing
else than the symbolic representation of the sexual
differentiation. If we understand that the human being, as he
faces us, originated from a bisexual being, we say to
ourselves, in the course of evolution, the human being acquired
his one-sided sexuality. He developed from the double sexuality
to uni-sexuality. He lost half of his productive power. This
half has awoken on the other side as the strength of our soul,
as the strength of our mind. So that the human being became
unisexual — a deeper look into nature shows this —,
the human being became productive spiritual-mentally because he
has given away half of his physical productive power.
Thereby the human being became capable of self-consciousness
and could say to himself “I”, he is an independent
being that — if we may express ourselves figuratively
— was dismissed from the hands of the gods and became his
own creator. Thus, it is connected in the development that the
human being feels that strength which forms, indeed, the basis
of his egoism that makes him, however, a free, self-conscious
being. Hence, on every stage the emancipation of the human
being recurs where sexuality finds its further development in
any way.
The
god Dionysus is the last-born of the gods. That means that the
Greeks imagined that he developed the human being up to his
present independence. Zeus, Cronus, the older gods, created the
human being up to the point when he was a double-sexual being
that lived in a vague consciousness, when he was not able to
say “I” to himself, when he was without
self-consciousness and without freedom. The creator of
independence is Dionysus. With it, the divine principle poured
out uniformly into the whole nature up to the point when the
human being became independent. Then the human being faces us
in countless individuals.
Let
me illustrate this. If we put back ourselves in the time when
the human being was not yet independent when he was still a
double-sexual being with dim consciousness. There one could
say, as well as my hand is a limb of my own organism, the human
being was a limb of the whole divinity in those days. His
consciousness still rested in the bosom of the divine
consciousness. One could still see through the human being to
the divine soul. Now, after the human being became independent,
was separated from the divine consciousness, this soul is
divided in as many individuals as there are human beings. This
was greatly symbolised in the divided god Dionysus, who was
dismembered by the Titans. Pallas Athena was the symbol of the
human wisdom. We felt her with our hearts, with our higher
minds as the common consciousness of the whole humanity. While
we feel at one again, a mind of the same kind develops in the
whole humanity, the heart of the god Dionysus is saved and
again carried upwards to the dwelling of the gods. Thus, the
Greek imagined that the god Dionysus led the human beings up to
the separation of the sexes and, finally, to sexual maturity.
One regarded the proclivity of one sex to the other as one of
many forces, which come from the god Dionysus. Then two
spiritual currents work on the human being, who stands in the
world as a creature of the god Dionysus. These spiritual
currents are the starting point of our own culture.
One
current is that where the spirit works in the external, serene
form and in wisdom to develop the beauty of the external form
and the order in the sensuous urge. It should not work fiercely
and irregularly, by which Dionysus brought the human being up
to the present level, but it should comply in harmony and
order. One sees this principle of the external formal creation
of Dionysus best of all in the Greek and Roman art, in the
Greek beauty and in the Roman statecraft. They introduced order
and beauty in the social life of the human beings created by
Dionysus as independent beings. The soul which animates and
ensouls this urge was refined and deified by Christianity;
everything that regulates the human community in such a way
that not blind urge, but spiritualised, deified urge prevails
is caused by the understood Christianity. Spirit and love are
two currents in the human development.
The
present development and that of the last millennia face the
poet of The Children of Lucifer. He considers what Greek
spirit and Roman statecraft created as a living and uplifting
principle of the Dionysian human being and on the other side
the deepening of the principle of love by Christianity. Now we
also understand how Édouard Schuré got around to
processing these ideas in a piece of art that he called
The Children of Lucifer.
In
Dionysia, a city of Asia Minor, the following happened. This
city had a cult that was dedicated to the god Dionysus. These
Dionysian mysteries were celebrated in Dionysia and had there a
mystery site. Then this Dionysian current was intermingled with
the second current. It was in the fourth century of the
Christian calendar. It was the Roman world domination and made
those who were worshippers of Dionysus, who knew that a spark
of a divine soul lives in them, members of the Roman
statecraft. Now the Greek spirit and the Roman statecraft
conflicted with each other. The original spirit must revolt.
Why must it revolt? It must revolt because the external form
wants to integrate the independent. This can easily become an
external order. That which should make order, harmony, and
unity easily becomes that which suppresses and subjugates the
human freedom and independence. This also applies to the Roman
spirit — which was born out of the Dionysian spirit
— in the fourth century. These two currents of the human
spirit face us in Dionysia: on one side the spirit, on the
other side the stiffened state formalism. These are two
currents that extend via the Dionysian mysteries to
Christianity, which should spiritualise the drive of the human
being to the other human being, which should refine the actions
of Dionysus and put them in a higher light purifying the mere
desire.
However, it degenerated in that time, in the fourth century, to
an external formalism that subjugated and suppressed what it
should refine. Thus, we look at the subjugating Caesar on the
one side and on the other side at the subjugating Christian
priest who does not get love out to refine it, but to deaden
it. We see how in Édouard Schuré's drama two persons
as representatives of the Greco-Roman spirit meet, on one side
a young man, who is called Theokles first and then Phosphorus,
and on the other side a virgin who was consecrated to the
service of Christianity as chaste sacrificial virgin. We see
Phosphorus revolting who wants to originate the Dionysian human
being in the highest refinement against the solidifying, the
Caesar principle, and on the other side the Christian virgin
who is not so spiritualised that she is world-enraptured but so
spiritualised that she herself is called to work and create in
this immediate world. These two persons deepen each other. How
nicely, greatly and tremendously the development of these
persons is shown. Phosphorus sees the Caesar principle
subjugating his hometown on the one side, the Christian
principle subjugating it on the other side. On one side, he
sees the divine Caesar, on the other side the merely good,
world-enraptured shepherd and those who should adore him. He is
led to an old person, whom one calls the old man of the unknown
god in Greek.
It
is a big transformation that our Phosphorus experiences. In a
distant canyon, he looks for a landmark, and he encounters one
of the temples, which were considered as initiation temples. He
meets an old priest there, one of the sages of the unknown god.
Which god? That god whom one does not confess whom one does not
revere in this or that figure. That god who does not answer if
one asks him because everybody must answer to himself what is
not to be put into words what lives, however, as a spark in
every human being. As true as it is that the human being
becomes aware of the divine spark, he can also realise that he
is on the way to the big god all his life through. This god
forms the basis of that which lives in the stars which is in
the human breast, and what still forms the basis of everything
that the human being performs on his higher level. For he is
not a god of the past, but a god of the future, not a god of
the thought of the past or the present, but a god of the
thoughts, which the human being once is able to think as the
highest on the current developmental level.
That is why he is called the unknown god because the human
being cannot serve a god who gives him a completed existence,
but because he wants to serve a god who can stand there in
perfect figure only in the future. Therefore, the free human
being adheres to the divine spark in his breast; therefore, he
adheres to that which exists as the dismembered Dionysus at
first in the world outdoors. Then he cannot find strength from
anything else than from this separated divine spark, the
strength of the upward development, then, however, he also
knows that this upward development is connected with the
passage through knowledge and suffering, with the passage
through the bad because the human being is detached, according
to his inner spirituality, from the divine. Hence, free forces
must emerge in him to lead back this spark to divinity. If we
had remained in the bosom of the gods without splitting in the
sense of the Dionysus legend, the divinity itself would lead us
to godliness. Thus, we appear like apostatised sons of god.
This strength in us, which should lead us as sons of Dionysus
to this godliness, is Lucifer's strength, the luciferic
principle, that light, which the human being freely kindles in
himself, in order to find the whole god as a part of the divine
being once.
The
strength that works in him is the light. Lucifer, the bearer of
light, is the teacher and leader who bears the light in the
human being and in the whole humanity. All those who develop
such an attitude like Phosphorus are the children of Lucifer.
Thus, they are not anti-Christian. They are so minded that they
say: in Christ, the god appeared who became a human being who
descended and enjoyed life in the human body. However, the
human being has to develop so that he unfolds the god in
himself in such a way that the deified human being meets the
incarnate god that the human being who ascends from below finds
a similar being. As Christ is now that who descended the
deepest from above as the revealing god, Lucifer is the god
whom the deified human being meets. Christ and Lucifer belong
together, understood in the right sense. Thus, we find
Phosphorus, while any Caesarism cannot keep him by any
suppression of the free Dionysian principle in the world from
rushing to the temple of the unknown god to receive the light
that carries him upwards to become a son of Lucifer that
way.
As
well as Phosphorus pursues this way and raises his mind up to
that view which recognises Lucifer as the developmental
principle, Kleonis develops from a Christian virgin to a
universal principle. She should solely direct her love to the
incarnate god. She develops to such a degree that she
anticipates that love can be refined in the human being in such
a way that the divine love of the incarnate god combines with
the human love in the human nature itself. Thus, the Christian
virgin soars the point where she can meet the unknown god.
Christ has come to life in the Christian virgin because she
joins not only in the view and in admiration with the divine,
but achieves that she rises to the Christian love. Phosphorus
has ascended to the point where the spirit shines to him in the
light. With it, the mind of the man and the soul of the woman
are on the same level. They now work together on the same
level, namely in such a way that always instead of Dionysus the
free human couple stands at first which embodies the inkling of
a future which should still arise once. Christianity and
Caesarism developed to that which unfolded in Dionysia: it
subjugated and enslaved the human beings. However, they both
stand there upright and freely.
They are expelled. They cannot save the old Dionysia. The old
Dionysus, who perishes in Romanism and in the external
Christian formalism at first, cannot host both who have got
free; they are expelled. While they show the life of the future
in the present, they must live in the present. They find the
way to the unknown temple again. Where Phosphorus was
consecrated, where the star of Lucifer appeared to him, the
clear star of Lucifer appears to them in the hour of death,
both ways uniting. Lucifer leads the human beings in freedom to
the highest development, and we attain the cross of Christ, the
symbol of redemption, if the incarnate god touches the deified
human being.
Thus, both who got free have to save at death what they have
achieved. They cannot save Dionysia. That is the course of
human development. This was something that one already
experienced in the Greek mysteries in a higher life: that life
forever overcomes death, that death is only something apparent
with the single human being and something apparent in the
entire human culture. Thus, we anticipate at the end of
Schuré's drama that that which they both gained in
themselves has an everlasting significance beyond the grave.
The whole drama ends magnificently, in the sure certainty that
the spirit must overcome matter.
As
well as death is the winner over life here, one can represent
it only if one knows anything about the true and real life of
the spirit and knows that death is only something apparent.
Someone who does not know that everything dead is something
apparent must say to himself, if death were anything real to
the noble pair that gained freedom because it was expelled and
driven out by the enslaved Dionysia that would perish which
they both have taken along. For all those who remained in
Dionysia are slaves of a dying human epoch. Apparently, nothing
is left. If this semblance were reality, we could no longer
believe anyhow in the fact that it has a significance if
anybody has purchased a higher life with death. For then this
drama would close with nothing. Solely the belief and knowledge
that the spirit is real carries this drama, and that from the
death of the freed couple a real spiritual blossom sprouts
which later works and lives in humanity which has remained,
which is planted in the whole spiritual human development. From
the death of Kleonis and Phosphorus, a spiritual human flower
grows which is there then.
That which the human being experiences by the light and what he
recognises lives on. Schuré owes this certainty to the
fact that the former Greek world had arisen in him due to
Marguerita Albana. He owes to Christianity that he was not only
an external artist, but also that he can have a deep look into
the spiritual development of humanity. He has shown this sight
in his book The Great Initiates. There he has spread out
the historical tableau of humanity from Rama (seventh
incarnation of Vishnu), Krishna, Hermes, Plato and other
initiates up to Christ Jesus. He has shown this human tableau,
this spiritual development.
With it, he has delivered a historical consideration which is
theosophical in the most eminent sense and which has led
countless people in Europe to the theosophical worldview. Out
of the spirit of his consideration he created The Children
of Lucifer, this little marvellous dramatic work in which
in every line and in every scene theosophical spirit lives.
Thus, the theosophical worldview becomes life; art becomes the
expression of the theosophical spirit if the truth of the
spirit is mirrored to us as beauty.
The
human beings can create three things at first, Édouard
Schuré says. At first, we are concerned with ontology. It
leads us to the big principles of the world, but now we look at
them — if we are deepened theosophically — not as
anything dead, but as abstract divine thoughts. Then we are
concerned with mysticism that leads us to the gods and higher
beings whom we recognise as our older brothers. Then we are
concerned with symbolism that shows us the god in the external
sensuous picture and as a shadowy reflection in art. Thus,
Édouard Schuré is a real theosophist and a real
artist and shows more than all theosophical dogmatics what a
theosophical world task consists in.
It
is typical that under the title Lucifer the first
theosophical journal appeared which we have renewed in our
German magazine Lucifer-Gnosis where the whole way of
thinking, the future task of the theosophical worldview has
been expressed clearly, as it lives artistically in the drama
with the title The Children of Lucifer. Only those who
regard art as something external misjudge that in this piece of
art something lives in the highest degree that has not missed
the creative power because of its deepness. If this drama
satisfies the artist completely, something of that impetus
flows from this drama to the unknown god who works in us all
and whose name theosophy just bears. Thus, this drama is the
expression of that theosophical attitude which takes the true
deepening and the human freedom seriously.
No
one can be free in the highest sense of the word who does not
find the divine in himself, who is not an associate, not a
brother of the divine being. If the human being becomes this,
he himself becomes a part of that force which is a bearer of
the light that is Lucifer. Then he becomes a child of Lucifer.
Those who understand something of the mysterious force working
in the universe that one cannot see only with the eyes and
perceived with instruments, of the forces that flow through the
moral and religious life and work in our whole universe. Those
who know a little bit about it speak of the forces that one
calls the astral light.
The
experts describe it in such a way that it flows through the
space like other forces, like gravity, and works on the beings.
The astral light flows through all beings; it lives in the
higher animals and in the human being generally. If the human
being does something and says, I act, or I am driven
instinctively — it is in truth the astral light which
works and lives in him. He can dedicate himself to this astral
light, unconsciously, with dim consciousness. This always
happens if passions and instincts press the human being.
However, this does not happen if he becomes the bearer of own
light if he connects himself with the force of Lucifer. Then he
changes this astral light, this creative force in the world
into a conscious, creative force in himself. Then he becomes a
citizen in the higher spiritual worlds. If he leaves himself to
the astral light with dim consciousness, he can say, indeed,
the gods live, and they flow through me, but I am destined to
emerge from unconsciousness, to let the light appear as
something free, to illumine my actions independently with
divine forces.
Everything that originates from the twilight of the
consciousness, what the bearer of the light does not cause
hampers our development. What leads to the aim and to the true
human ideal is that which comes from the light, from the real
knowledge. Therefore, the human being is only allowed to throw
himself really into the stream of life if he has grasped the
god in himself if the god is his leader. Theosophical attitude
means waking the divine consciousness in oneself and becoming
mortal with the aid of the forces which are in the own breast.
Marguerita Albana whom Édouard Schuré calls his
leader expresses that in a short saying which could be regarded
as a motto of the theosophical attitude and which should also
close our considerations today:
Trust in the god in your breast, and then leave everything that
is in you to the stream of life (Crois au
Divin qui est en toi, et puis prête l'oreille au fleuve de
la vie).
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