LECTURE VI.
E
have now considered the changes in the physical body and etheric
body of the student, in so far as they are experienced by him
in the course of his endeavour towards development. If we
wished to express the fundamental character of these changes we
might say that in the course of his development he is more and
more conscious inwardly of his physical body and etheric body.
With regard to his physical body, we have emphasised that he
feels the several organs becoming more and more independent the
more he progresses — they become to a certain extent more
independent of each other. We might say that the physical body
as such feels as though it had more life within; and as to the
etheric body, we emphasised that not only does it feel more
alive, but grows altogether more sensitive, and permeated by a
sort of consciousness; for it begins to sympathise with the
course of outer events in a delicate manner. We pointed out
that in his esoteric development the student grows more
sensitive to the course of spring, summer, autumn and winter;
this becomes very pronounced, so that the successive facts of
time are more distinct from one another than is the case in the
ordinary course of life; they become separate and differentiate
themselves. Thus we may say that the student begins to
experience sympathetically the processes in the external ether.
This is the first beginning of his really becoming free from
his corporeality. He becomes more and more independent of his
own corporeality as he really begins to experience what goes on
around him. He will experience spring, summer, autumn and
winter within himself, as it were; but through this living in
the outer he ceases to live in his own corporeality.
Now, in the last lecture we laid stress on the close
association of all this with a gradual sensitiveness to one's
own corporeality. As we become more independent of it, we
gradually perceive it to be a sort of calamity; we notice that
all that relates merely to our own corporeality becomes a sort
of reproach. A very great deal is attained towards a higher
development when we begin, in conceptions and feelings such as
were described in the last lecture, to be no longer quite at
one with our own human personality; and when we experience this
to a greater and greater extent, a very great deal has been
gained towards the higher spiritual experience.
In
this lecture I will endeavour, by making a leap as it were, to
strengthen the further progress of our observations —
which we so far have followed more from within — by first
trying to describe the standpoint of the human being, when with
his astral body and his ego he has already become independent
of his physical body and etheric body. We will speak of the
intermediate conditions in the following lectures, but in order
to make this, to a certain extent, easier to understand, I will
put forward the hypothesis that ‘while in the middle of
sleep’ we experience the moment when we become
clairvoyant outside our body, and can look back at our physical
and etheric bodies.
So
far we have only taken a few steps towards this condition, we
have reached the point of coming forth from ourselves to a
certain extent, and have thus learned to experience such
matters as the seasons of the year and the times of the day; we
will now consider the conditions which would come about if, on
the one hand, we had the physical body and etheric body, and on
the other, we had lifted out the ego and astral body as occurs
in sleep; and we will suppose that we could look back at the
physical body and etheric body we had left behind. What we look
back at then would appear to us in a very different light from
that of conscious, ordinary life. For ordinary life, by means
of our everyday observation, or by means of external physical
science, we look at our material body, and see in it, with a
certain justice in a physical sense, the crown of the earthly
creation. We so divide this earthly creation that we speak of a
mineral kingdom, a vegetable kingdom, an animal kingdom, and
the human kingdom; and we see all the sundry qualities which
have been spread over the various groups of animals, united, as
it were, in this physical crown of creation, the human body. We
shall see that external physical observation is, in a way,
justified in this view, and the present lecture should not give
rise to the thought that what may be seen in looking back at
the physical and etheric body, if we suddenly became
clairvoyant during sleep, can enable us to come to any final
conclusion as to the physical body. It is only a moment of
clairvoyant looking back, as it were, firmly retained. Such a
moment may give rise to the following: We look back and first
of all we see, so to say, our etheric body, which appears
something like an articulated cloudy structure, a misty form
showing various currents which we will describe more clearly
later — a marvellously constructed form, which is in
continual motion, never at rest or still in any part; and then
we look at what is embedded in this etheric body, that is, our
physical body. Now, remember we have been told that our own
thinking must be laid aside. So we do not form our own thoughts
about what we see there. First and foremost it is a fundamental
requirement for this clairvoyant vision that we should let
ourselves be entirely inspired, as it were, by the cosmic
thoughts which flow into us. So we contemplate what we see
there; but this works above all upon our feeling; it affects
our feeling and will. As regards our thought, when we have
really attained the detachment referred to, we seem to have
lost our own thinking. Thus, with the feeling which we still
retain, we look back upon what is there embedded in the misty
structure, in the ever-moving misty structure of our etheric
body, that is: our physical instrument. We first have a general
impression. This general impression is such that what we thus
see imbues us with infinite sadness, with terrible sadness. And
it must be said, my dear friends, that this feeling of the
soul, this dreadful sadness, does not depend at all upon the
nature of the particular human being experiencing it, for it is
quite universal. There is no man when he looks back in the
manner described at his physical body, as it lies embedded in
his etheric body, who would not be filled through and through
with an immeasurable sadness.
All
that I am now describing is expressed primarily in the
feelings, not in thought. Immeasurable sadness, a feeling of
great melancholy, overcomes when we look up to the cosmic
thoughts which flow into us. These thoughts, which are not our
own, but creative thoughts, weaving and working through the
world, throwing light on this structure of our physical body,
by the way in which they illuminate it, tell us what it really
is that we see there. They convey to us that all we see is the
last decadent product of an absolute splendour long passed by.
Through what these thoughts say to us we receive the impression
that what we see there as our physical body is something which
was once mighty and glorious, now dried and shrivelled; a
former glory once widely displayed, appears to us as a tiny
shrivelled structure. That which is embedded in our etheric
body appears as a last remembrance of long-past glory hardened
into the physical. We look at the various physical organs which
now belong to our digestive system, to the circulation of our
blood and our breathing apparatus; we look at them from
outside, seeing them spiritually — and behold, they so
appear to us that we say: All we have before us in the physical
body is the shrivelled, dried-up product of once-existing
living beings, living beings with a glorious environment, now
shrivelled, and withered. And the life possessed by the lungs,
the heart, the liver and other organs to-day is only the last
decadent life of a primevally powerful inner life. In this
clairvoyant vision the organs gradually assume the form they
once possessed. Just as a thought which we can only distantly
remember in quite a hazy manner, grows into what it once was,
if we take the trouble to draw it forth from memory, so does
that which we bear within us, as the lungs, for example, and it
appears as the lost remembrance of a primeval splendour and
glory. We feel that it goes back again like a present thought
to a distant memory, which then develops into what it formerly
was. In our vision the lungs develop into the imaginative
picture of that which was once known to the occultist as a
recognised symbol, which he still knows to-day, as a symbol of
the human form — into the imaginative picture of the
Eagle. And we have the feeling that these lungs were at one
time a being, not to be compared with the Eagle of the
present-day animal world; for this, too, represents, though
from another side, the decadent products of a formerly mighty
being, which occultism designates as the Eagle. The occultist
comes, as though in cosmic remembrance, to the Eagle which was
at one time there. If we look back upon the heart, we feel in a
similar manner that this, too, appears as a dried-up and
shrivelled product, something reminding us of a long-past
glory; and we feel as though that led back into primeval times,
a far-distant past, to a being which the occultist designates
the Lion. Then the organs of the lower part of the body appear
as a memory of what in occultism is called the Bull, an ancient
primeval being once alive in glorious surroundings, now dried
up and shrivelled in the course of evolution, and appearing
to-day as the organs of the lower part of the body.
|
|
Thus might I sketch what once existed, and what we still see
when we observe these bodily organs, clairvoyantly, from
outside. They are only roughly sketched; the Bull below, the
Lion in the middle, and the Eagle above. Thus do we look upon
something which once lived as three glorious, living beings in
a primeval past. I will now draw these somewhat smaller, and
only sketch them in diagram. (Diagram 2.)
Round these principal organs we can also see the others as they
formerly were in a primeval past; and what appears in this way
to clairvoyant vision may be compared to almost all the forms
in the earthly animal kingdom.
If
we once more turn our gaze back to the physical body embedded
in the etheric body, looking at what anatomy calls the
nervous-system, this also appears as a shrivelled, dried-up
product. The nervous system, which at the present time is
embedded in the physical body, appears to the retrospective
clairvoyant vision as a number of wonderful plant-like beings,
embedded in the etheric body, beings intertwined in various
ways in and through the other beings known by animal names, so
that we see plant-like entities passing through them in every
direction. The whole of the nervous system resolves itself into
a number of primeval plant-like entities, so that we actually
see something like a mighty, outspreading plant, within which
dwell the animal beings of which we have just spoken.
As
already said, I am relating what is seen by the clairvoyant
vision, which has been described as being exercised in a
condition similar to sleep; that is, when we look from outside
at the physical body embedded in the etheric body. When the
student sees all this before him, he then says (that is, he is
able to say this because, to a certain extent, the cosmic
thoughts give this information, and interpret what he has
before him), he says to himself: ‘All that I, as a human
being, have within me is the withered and shrivelled remnant of
what now appears before me clairvoyantly as though in cosmic
remembrance.’ Now, it is important that the pupil should
exercise continual self-control, and continual self-knowledge,
while developing to this point. Self-knowledge enables him at
this point to become aware of and to feel the following:
‘I am outside my physical body. That which appeared to me
as my physical body embedded in the etheric body has
transformed itself in my vision into what has just been
described. What I behold does not now exist; it had to exist in
a primeval past in order that my physical body which is there
below might be able to come into being. In order that this
shrivelled product might be formed, what I now see before me
with clairvoyant vision had to exist at one time.’ The
physical body makes this sad impression because we recognise in
it the last withered product of the former glory, now appearing
to the clairvoyant vision. I pray you, do not misunderstand
what I am about to say; I am describing facts, and you will
soon see how these facts, unravelled, constantly honour the
wise guides of the world; we have only to learn the facts, and
in the following lectures I will make clear what is in
question. If introspection has been carried to this degree of
development, the student then becomes aware that in the astral
body in which he now is, outside the physical body and etheric
body, he cannot do otherwise than recognise himself as an
absolute egotist, as a being who knows nothing but himself, and
he learns to recognise that there is reason enough to be sad.
For the impulse now arises to know why this has come about, why
all this has shrivelled up. And, now the question comes: who is
to blame for this shrivelling together? Who has made the form
which I see clairvoyantly before me, this wonderful plant-being
with the animal-like, perfect structure within it — who
has made this into the present shrivelled product, the physical
body? There now sounds forth from oneself as an inner
inspiration: ‘You yourself have brought it to this, you
yourself! And the fact that you have become what you now are,
you owe to the circumstance that you have possessed the power
to impregnate all this glory with your own being. Your being
has trickled like poison into this ancient glory, and it has
reduced this ancient glory to what it now is!’ Thus it is
we ourselves who brought this about, and the possibility of
being a self such as we are, we owe to the circumstance that we
ourselves sowed the seed of death in all this glory, and so
impregnated it that it shrivelled up. Just as you may have a
mighty tree growing in its glory and nourishing the various
animals living upon it, and you pierce it so that from a
certain spot it dries up, withers and shrivels to
insignificance and with it die all the beings nourished by it,
so the shrivelling of the human physical body is clairvoyantly
unfolded before you. This is the awful impression produced by
this moment of clairvoyant vision.
More and more the student is impelled in his astral body to
understand how this came about. At this moment there actually
appears to him among the archetypal animal beings, which he
here perceives ... Lucifer at the back of the garden, as it
were, twisting in and out. I have drawn it in diagram —
Lucifer in a wondrously beautiful form, actually —
Lucifer! Here, for the first time, through clairvoyant
observation, he makes the acquaintance of Lucifer, and now he
knows that this is what happened to the forces, now shrivelled
in the physical human body, at the time when Lucifer appeared
within this whole being which is now presented to him
clairvoyantly.
And
the student now knows that he was present in that far-distant
past when all this, that appears to his clairvoyant vision, was
a reality; he knows that he then vividly felt himself to belong
to all this; he was within it, this was his kingdom, and within
this kingdom Lucifer drew him to himself. Man united himself
with Lucifer, with the result that the beings of the higher
Hierarchies pressed from the back in currents of force which
might be sketched in these lines, and pressed out the human
being who united himself with Lucifer in these parts towards
the front, as is visible to clairvoyant observation. In this
part openings were formed; and, in the shrinking up, these
openings have developed into our present sense organs. Through
these openings the human being who previously lived in this
part was pressed out, because he united himself with Lucifer.
And because he was pushed out, he now lives in the world
outside this structure, and this structure shrank together and
is now his physical body.
Now
imagine — in order to have a diagrammatical idea —
the physical body of to-day growing larger and larger, all the
organs becoming larger, all the organs of digestion,
circulation and breathing developing as though into mighty,
animal-like, living beings in growing larger, and the nervous
system becoming plant-like beings, and the human being ruling
in this mighty structure. On the one hand now appears Lucifer,
and because the human being is attracted by Lucifer, beings
belonging to the higher Hierarchies press from the back and
press the human being out. By reason of the pushing out of the
human being, the whole structure gradually shrinks into the
small compass of the human body of to-day, and the human being,
with his consciousness, with his whole day consciousness, is
outside his body. The result is that man no longer knows, as he
did before, what is within his body, only that which is
outside. He has been chased out through the openings which are
now the senses; to-day he is in the sense-world, and that in
which he lived in the primeval past has shrivelled up and forms
his inward parts.
I
have now given you an idea of how, through clairvoyant
observation, the student arrives at what is called Paradise. In
fact, this was the conception of Paradise to which the students
in the mystery-schools were led. ‘Where was
Paradise?’ people ask. Paradise formed part of a world
which is no longer present in the sense-world to-day. Paradise
has shrunk together, yet multiplied; for Paradise has left
behind the physical inward parts of the human body as its last
relics; the human being himself has, however, been driven out
of it, he no longer lives in these inward parts. He can only
learn to know them by means of clairvoyance, as we have seen. A
man knows of the objects outside him, he knows of what is
before his eyes and about his ears. Previously he knew of what
was within; but this within was grandiose, it was Paradise. Try
now to form an idea of how man, through having become a being
who spreads his consciousness over the external sense-world,
actually compressed the world in which he dwelt before he
entered the sense-world, into the withered or shrivelled-up
product of the interior parts of his body.
Then the beings who first drove man out and then continued to
work, made use of Ahriman and other spirits, whose activity
they turned into good, forming the limbs, hands, feet, and
countenance; these they formed, and thus made it possible for
man to use this shrivelled-up Paradise by means of his hands
and feet and that which passes through his sense organs into
the inner parts of his body.
Thus before our spiritual vision we have seen, enlarged to
gigantic proportions, the physical human body, which in its
present condition represents the shrivelled-up product of the
former Paradise. When we consider this, we may obtain some
slight idea of how clairvoyance really progresses. We have seen
how the student at first becomes more and more sensitive with
respect to his physical body and etheric body. And now, by
making a sort of leap forward over an abyss, we have seen what
sort of impressions come when from outside the pupil looks back
at his physical body embedded in the etheric body. I have said
that the etheric body is itself in continual motion; when we
look back into it from outside we see nothing really stationary
in it, nothing is at rest, everything is in continual motion.
Something is continually taking place; and the more we learn
through spiritual training to observe what happens, the more
does the tableau of these events enlarge, as it were, and
everything becomes full of meaning. Just as, in a certain way,
the physical body becomes the true Garden of Paradise, so also
what goes on in the etheric body becomes significant
processes.
We
might now make the attempt to describe in a general way what
facts and processes are to be observed when we look at the
etheric body, and turn our attention away from the physical
body. Now, we could really only see the physical body
clairvoyantly in the way I have described, if we were suddenly
awakened clairvoyantly from the very deepest sleep. Then would
the physical body expand into the structure described. But the
etheric body can, in a certain sense, be more easily seen; it
may indeed be seen if we try in a certain way to seize the
moment of going to sleep, so that we do not pass over at once
into unconsciousness, but remain conscious for a time after
having, with the astral body and the ego, left the physical
body and etheric body. We then look principally at the etheric
body, and see the moving realities in the etheric body in the
form of very vivid dreams. We then see ourselves divided, as by
a deep abyss, from what goes on in the etheric body; but we now
see everything not as happening in space, but as events in
time. When we are outside our etheric body we have to perceive
these experiences of movement in the etheric body, as though we
had slipped back into it again with our consciousness.
Thus we must feel as though we were separated from our etheric
body by an abyss filled, as it were, with ether, with universal
cosmic ether; as if we stood on the further shore of the
etheric body, and there various processes took place. And as,
in this case, all these processes take place in time, we feel
like a wanderer returning to our own etheric body. In reality,
we are going further and further from it, but in our
clairvoyant consciousness we approach it. And in approaching
this etheric body of ours we feel ourselves approaching
something which thrusts us back. We come, as it were, to a
spiritual rock. Then it is as if we were allowed to pass into
something. At first we are outside, and then it is as though we
were let into something, it seems as though we had first been
outside and now were inside, but not in the manner in which we
had been within it during the day. Everything depends upon
being outside with the astral body and ego, and only looking
in; that is to say, we are only inside the etheric body with
our consciousness. And now we can see what is going on within
it.
In
a certain way, everything changes just as the physical body is
transferred into Paradise; but that which goes on within the
etheric body is in a still more interior connection with the
everyday processes in man. Let us consider what sleep really
signifies, what this ‘being outside the physical body and
etheric body’ means. For we have assumed that the
clairvoyant power is exercised at this moment through the
person's suddenly becoming clairvoyant during sleep, or
remaining consciously clairvoyant on falling asleep. Let us
consider what sleep is! That which permeates the physical and
etheric body with consciousness is now outside; within the body
only vegetative processes take place — everything is done
to restore the forces used up during the day. And we perceive
all this, we perceive how the forces of the physical,
particularly those of the brain, are renewed; but we do not see
the brain as the anatomist does — we see how the man of
the physical world, of whom we make use for our consciousness
during our waking condition, we see how this man, who has
indeed been forsaken by us, but who clearly shows that he is
our instrument, lies enchanted in a castle, as it were.
Symbolised by the brain lying within the skull, our human
nature on the earth appears as a being under enchantment living
in a castle. We see this humanity of ours as a being imprisoned
and enclosed by stone walls. The symbol of this, the shrunken
symbol, as it were, is our skull. We see it externally as a
little skull. But when we look at the etheric forces which lie
at its foundation, the earthly man actually appears to us as if
he were within the skull, and imprisoned in this castle. And
then from the other parts of the organism there stream up the
forces which support this human being who is really within the
skull as if in a mighty castle; the forces stream upwards;
first the force which comes from that in the organism which is
the outspread instrument of the human astral body; there
streams up all that makes the human being ardent and mighty
through his nerve fibres. All this streams together in the
earthly brain-man; this appears as a mighty sword which the
human being has forged on the earth.
Then stream up the forces of the blood. These, as we gradually
learn to feel and recognise, appear as that which really wounds
the brain-man lying in the enchanted castle of the skull. The
forces which in the etheric body stream up to the earthly human
being lying in the enchanted castle of the brain are like the
bloody lance. And then we arrive at a unique perception. This
is, that we are able to observe all that may stream up to the
noblest parts of the brain. Before this we have not the
slightest idea of it.
Thus you see that from a different standpoint I have come back
again to what I have already touched upon in these lectures. No
matter how much animal food a human being may eat, it is all
useless for a certain part of his brain, it is merely ballast.
Other organs may be nourished thereby, but in the brain there
is something from which the etheric body at once thrusts back
all that comes from the animal kingdom. Indeed, the etheric
body even thrusts back from one part of the brain, from one
small, vital part of the brain, all that comes from the plant
kingdom, and allows only the mineral extract to be of value;
there this mineral extract is brought into contact with the
purest of what comes through the sense organs. The purest of
light, the purest sound, the purest heat, here come in touch
with the purest products of the mineral kingdom; for the most
vital part of the human brain is nourished by the union of the
purest sense impressions with the purest mineral products. The
etheric body separates from this noblest part of the human
brain all that comes from the plant or animal kingdoms. But all
the things that the human being takes in as his food pass up
also; for the brain also has less noble parts. These are
nourished by all that streams up, by which the whole organism
is nourished. Only the noblest part of the brain must be
nourished by the most beautiful union of the sense perceptions
and the highest part of the purified mineral extract. We now
learn to recognise a wonderful cosmic connection between man
and the whole of the rest of the cosmos. We can now see, as it
were, a part of man wherein we perceive how human thought, by
means of the instrument of the nervous system which serves the
astral body, prepares the sword for human strength on earth;
therein we become acquainted with all that is mingled with the
blood, and to a certain extent contributes to the killing of
the most precious thing in the brain. And this noblest thing in
the brain is ever sustained by the union of the most delicate
sense perceptions with the purest products of the mineral
kingdom. And then, during sleep, when thought is not making use
of the brain, there stream to the brain the products which have
been formed lower down in the inner parts from the plant and
animal kingdoms.
Thus, when we penetrate into our own etheric body, it is as
though we had reached an abyss, and across it we could see what
goes on in the etheric body; and all this appears in mighty
pictures representing the processes of the spiritual man during
sleep. The ego and astral body — the spiritual man
— descends into the castle, which is formed of that which
is only seen symbolically in the skull. Here the human being
lies sleeping, wounded by the blood, the man of whom we see
that thoughts are his strength — that which must be
capable of nourishment by all that comes from the kingdom of
nature, that which in its purest parts must be served by the
finest, this we have described. All this symbolically
represented resulted in the Legend of the Holy Grail. And the
Legend of the Holy Grail tells us of that miraculous food which
is prepared from the finest activities of the sense impressions
and the finest activities of the mineral extracts, whose
purpose it is to nourish the noblest part of man all through
the life he spends on earth; for it would be killed by anything
else. This heavenly food is what is contained in the Holy
Grail. And that which otherwise takes place, that which presses
up from the other kingdoms, we find clearly represented if we
go back to the original Grail legend, where a meal is described
at which a hind is first set on the table. The penetrating up
into the brain where for ever floats the Grail, that is, the
vessel for the purest food of the human hero who lies in the
castle of the brain, and who is killed by everything else
— all this is represented. The best presentation of this
is not that by Wolfram, but it is best represented in an
external exoteric way (because almost everyone can recognise,
when his attention has been drawn to it, that this legend of
the Grail is an occult experience which every human being can
experience anew every night), it is best represented, in spite
of the profanation which has even crept in there, by Chrestien
de Troyes. He put what he wished to say in an exoteric form,
but this exoteric form hinted at what he wished to convey, for
he refers to his teacher and friend who lived in Alsace, who
gave him the esoteric knowledge which he put into exoteric
form. This took place in an age when it was necessary to do
this, on account of the transition indicated in my book,
‘The Spiritual Guidance of Humanity.’ The Grail
legend was made exoteric in 1180, shortly before the
transition.
In
the outer world these things still appear fantastic ideas,
because the only reality recognised by the man of the present
day is that which is outside him. Man recognises himself as the
crown of creation in a much higher sense, when he sees his
physical body in its original, sublime grandeur; and when he
sees his etheric body working inwardly upon his physical body
to reawaken into life that which has been injured and killed by
the sting which I have spoken of as coming from the blood. The
etheric body works upon that in order at once, so far as is
possible to reawaken it to life; it maintains it throughout its
period of human life, although, when born, it is already doomed
to death. This the etheric body does by casting out of a small
portion of the human organisation all that comes from the
animal and vegetable kingdoms, keeping only the purest mineral
extract, and bringing that in contact with the purest
impressions from the external world of the senses. If this is
really felt deeply enough, it enables us to see this noblest
part in the human organism as the multiplied Holy Grail. I
wished to-day to show by these two indications how typical
imaginations appear, and how, to the true clairvoyance, the
vision of the physical body gradually passes over into
imaginations. And these two, the Paradise-Imagination and the
Grail-Imagination, belong to the most sublime imaginations it
is possible to experience — at least in this
Earth-period.
|