II
T CAN BE SAID
that the original purpose of festivals was to induce men to look
up from their dependence upon earthly things to their dependence upon
extra-earthly things; and it is the Easter Festival in particular
that can evoke such thoughts. During the last three to five centuries
of civilization we have undergone a psycho-spiritual development that
has led man farther and farther away from a clear conception of his
connection with cosmic forces and powers. He has become ever more
reduced to contemplating only his relation to earthly forces and
powers, and it is quite true that with the means recognized today as
legitimate it could not be otherwise. If someone imbued with the old
Mysteries in the pre-Christian or early Christian centuries could
learn of our modern knowledge, and if he approached the matter in the
frame of mind prevalent in those days, he would not be able to
understand how man could live without an awareness of his
extra-earthly, cosmic connection.
I shall now merely
sketch various matters which you will find dealt with in detail in
this or that cycle. As these lectures are intended especially
to acquaint you with the Easter idea there is naturally no time to
elaborate all the points that I shall merely
indicate.
Harking back to
the various older systems of religion, we may take as an example the
one with which the closest contact still persists: the Hebrew-Jewish
system. In certain religious systems of Antiquity, provided they are
monotheistic, we find the veneration, the worship, of a single
divinity. It is the divinity we speak of in our Christian conception
as the First Person of all divinity, as the
Father-God.
Now, in all religions embodying the idea of this Father-God there
obtained to a greater or lesser degree the connection of this
Father-God with the cosmic Moon forces streaming down to Earth; and
the Mystery priests in particular were fully aware of it. Nowadays
little remains of this old awareness of the connection between the
human being and the Moon forces but the inspiration they impart to
the poetic soul; and in the realm of medicine, the counting of the
ten lunar months of man's embryonic life. But in the older
cosmogonies is to be found a clear consciousness of the
permeation, the empowering by impulses emanating from the Moon at the
time man descends to his physical existence from the spiritual world,
where he had lived his pre-earthly life as a being of soul and
spirit. When a man seeks that which gives him life, which lives in
him as forces of digestion, of breathing and so forth — in
short, all forces of growth — he must not look for these among
the Earth forces but among extra-terrestrial forces. By examining the
Earth forces — well, he can perceive how these act upon him;
but if our body were not held together by cosmic forces, if these did
not give our body its form, what could Earth forces contribute to its
cohesion? The moment the cosmic forces leave the body and the latter
is exposed to the terrestrial forces only, it breaks up,
disintegrates, becomes a corpse. The Earth forces can only make a man
into a corpse; they cannot create his form. It is to the mighty
influence of the Moon that we are indebted for the forces so active
in man as to lift him out of his physical limitations, to give him a
cohesive organization which during life does not succumb to those
forces that seize and destroy him at death; forces that combat this
destruction during his entire Earth life — and this they
must do.
If we know theoretically, on the one hand, that the Moon forces
contain the potential human body, we must observe, on the other hand,
how the old religions reverenced these forces that introduced man, so
to speak, into physical existence through his birth — revered
them as the Father forces, the forces of the divine Father. And the
ancient Hebrew initiates were clearly aware that from the Moon
emanated the forces which lead man into his Earth life, maintaining
him there, and from which he severs himself, as physical man,
when he passes through the portal of
death.
To look up with
loving soul to these divine Father forces and to relive them in the
ritual and in prayer, that was the substance of certain ancient
monotheistic religions. And these old monotheistic religions were
more consistent than you might think: such matters are utterly
misrepresented in history, because history is dependent upon material
documents and has no access to what can be observed in spiritual
vision.
The religions that focused on the Moon and the spiritual beings
abiding there are really later religions: the primordial ones
embraced in addition a clear idea of the Sun forces and even
— as we must add here — of the Saturn forces; but
particularly of the Sun forces.
You see, this leads to a study of history for which no material
documents exist, a period antedating the foundation of Christianity
by many millennia; it takes us back to the epoch which, in my
Occult Science,
I called the Ancient Indian
— in order to give it a name and because it evolved in the
locality that later became India. The civilization following this was
the Ancient Persian. During these civilizations the manner in which
man developed was very different from what it became later; and upon
this development depended his creed. We human beings have been
developing, during the last two thousand years or more, in such a way
that we really do not notice any break in the continuity of our
earthly development, and indeed, the break is scarcely
noticeable. Something that takes place in us around our thirtieth
year remains largely in the subconscious, unconscious mind of
present-day man. This was by no means the case among those who lived
eight or nine millennia before the beginning of our era. At that time
a man's development was continuous up to about the thirtieth year,
but then a mighty metamorphosis set in. I must express this rather
drastically, for thus the facts in the case will best be made
clear.
Here is something that could happen in those ancient times:
before his thirtieth year, someone had become acquainted with another
who was three or four years younger, and who thus passed through the
metamorphosis at a later time. Now, if these two people had not seen
each other for a certain time and then met again — I am using
the language of today that shows the matter in a still more radical
way — it could happen that the one who had experienced the
metamorphosis would fail to recognize the other when addressed
by him. So great was the change that had come over his
memory.
In these very old times it was the custom in the small
communities such as then existed to register events in the
lives of young people, because they themselves forgot it all after
passing through the mighty revulsion in their thirtieth year, and had
to be informed of what they had experienced previously. And
then, when these people realized that in their thirtieth year they
had become different beings, that they had to go to the record office
— to use a modern expression — in order to learn of their
previous experiences — this was actually so — then,
through the instruction they received, they became aware at the same
time that before their thirtieth year it was exclusively the Moon
forces that had acted upon them, and that now the Sun forces entered
into the development of their earthly
life.
The influence of the Sun forces on man is entirely different from
that of the Moon forces; but what does present-day man know of the
Sun forces? Only their external physical effect. He knows that they
warm him, make him perspire; and he knows a bit about their
therapeutic value — sun-baths and the like — but only in
quite an external way. He cannot remotely conceive of the effect of
the forces that are spiritually connected with the
Sun.
Julian the Apostate, last of the pagan Caesars, still knew
something of these Sun forces from reminiscences of the
Mysteries; and because he tried to revive this knowledge he was
murdered on his expedition to Persia. That shows us how strong were
the powers that were out to exterminate the knowledge of such matters
in the early Christian centuries. It is therefore not surprising that
today it is impossible to learn about these things. — While the
Moon forces determine man, permeate him with an inner necessity so
that he must act according to his instincts, his temperament, his
emotions — in fact, according to his whole physico-etheric
body, the Sun forces liberate him from this necessity. They melt, so
to speak, these forces of necessity, and it is really through their
agency that he becomes a free being.
In ancient times these two influences were sharply divided. In
his thirtieth year a man simply became a Sun-man, a free man, whereas
up to that time he had been a Moon-man, un-free. Nowadays these
conditions overlap: even in childhood the Sun forces are active along
with the Moon forces, and the latter continue to influence later
life, with the result that today compulsion and freedom interact. But
as has been said, this was not always the case, and in the
prehistoric times with which we are dealing the effects of the Moon
and of the Sun were sharply separated in life's course. It was
considered pathological, abnormal, when someone failed to experience
the metamorphosis, the turning point in his life; therefore it was
said of normal people that they were born not once, but twice. And
when humanity began to develop in such a way that this second or
Sun-birth (the first was called the Moon-birth) became less
noticeable, certain exercises, certain cult rituals — in short,
certain methods were applied to those who were to be initiated in the
Mysteries. These experienced what no longer existed for mankind in
general, and they were then the
twice-born.
The term “twice-born” which we find nowadays in
oriental writings is one of mere tradition. I should really
like to ask every orientalist, every Sanscrit scholar, whether our
knowledge of the Orient discloses the substance of the term in a
clearly definable way. I believe our friend Professor Beckh is in our
midst: you can ask him whether or not his studies in this field
confirm my doubts. Quantities of formal explanations of the term are
available, but the meaning of the substance is not known. Only those
can understand it who know that it goes back to a reality such
as I have just set forth. In such matters spiritual research alone
can speak; and when it has spoken I should like to ask any
unprejudiced exponent of external science whether all available
documents do not bear out at every step the results of spiritual
research. This will prove to be the case, provided things are seen in
the right light. But certain matters antedating the science based on
documents must be pointed out, for the latter cannot unlock the
knowledge of human life.
So we look back to an epoch of Antiquity in which people spoke of
the Moon-birth of the human being as the creation of man by the
Father; and they understood that in the Sun-birth the rays of the Sun
were permeated with the Christ force, the force of the Son, the
liberating force. Consider: what does this Sun force effect? It
enables us human beings upon Earth to make something of
ourselves. Without the liberating Sun forces, without the impulses
that break down compulsion, we would be strictly predestined, at the
mercy of an inexorable natural necessity — not of the necessity
imposed by destiny but by Nature.
When a man imbued with the old cosmogonies looked up to the Sun
he knew that this world-eye, from which the power of the Christ
streamed forth, released him from bondage in that inexorable
necessity into which he had been born through the Moon forces, and
subject to which he would otherwise have had to develop
throughout life. He knew that these Sun forces, these Christ forces
raying down upon him through the cosmic eye of the Sun, enabled him
to make something of himself through his inner freedom,
something he had not been through the agency of the Moon forces when
he entered life. — What the Sun forces gave to man was this
consciousness of his ability to transform himself, to make something
of himself.
For completeness'
sake and parenthetically I should add that the third source to which
men looked were the Saturn forces. In these they saw all that
sustained the human being after passing through the portal of death;
that is, when he experienced the third earthly
metamorphosis.
Physical birth — Moon-birth
Second birth — Sun-birth
Third birth (physical death) — Saturn-birth
After death the
human being was sustained by the forces of Saturn, which at that time
was considered to lie at the extreme periphery of the Earth's
planetary system. These were the forces that bore him up and out into
the spiritual world, that maintained the cohesion of his being when
the third metamorphosis occurred. There is no doubt that this was
part of the ancient cosmogonies.
But humanity changed as a result of evolution, and the time came
when only the effects of the Sun forces were known in the Mysteries.
The knowledge of these survived longest in the therapeutic
sections of the Mysteries, because the same forces that give man his
freedom, the ability to make something of himself — namely, the
Sun forces, the Christ forces — are also found in certain
plants and other beings and things of the Earth, and in this form
contain healing properties.
For the most part, however, mankind lost just this contact with
the Sun. For a long time people were still aware of their dependence
upon the Moon forces, the Father forces; but the consciousness of
being dependent upon the Sun forces for their liberation
disappeared much earlier. And what we today call forces of
Nature — about the only ones mentioned in our philosophies
— are really nothing but the Moon forces reduced to
complete abstractions. But One Who still knew the Sun forces and was
able to be guided by them was the Christ Bearer, Jesus of Nazareth.
He had to know them because it was His mission to receive them in His
own body as they streamed down to Earth, whereas in the old Mysteries
they could be reached only by ascending in vision to the
Sun.
I explained that
yesterday; but the essential point is that in the thirtieth year of
His life a transmutation occurred in the body of Jesus of Nazareth;
the same transformation that took place in everyone in primeval
times, except that then the rays, so to speak, of the spiritual Sun
entered into all men, whereas here it was the primal Being of the
Sun, the Christ Himself, Who descended to enter human evolution and
took up His abode in the body of Jesus of Nazareth. That is what
underlies the Mystery of Golgotha as the primal fruit of the whole
life of the Earth.
You will now be able to understand the whole context of these
matters by considering the manner in which Easter was celebrated in
the older Mysteries. Easter, as I might put it, existed as a quite
human institution in those days, for it meant initiation. Primarily
this comprised three stages; but the first requirement for attaining
to true enlightenment, to initiation, was that everything offered the
candidate by the Mysteries should engender in him a degree of inner
humility such as nowadays hardly anybody can even dimly imagine.
Today people consider themselves enormously modest in respect of
their achievements, even in cases where one who can see through them
knows that they are veritably possessed by vanity. At the inception
of an initiation, the most important realization that had to come to
the neophyte was that he could not think of himself as a human being
at all: that it still remained for him to become one. Today it would
be asking too much of anyone to admit that at any given period of his
life he was not a human being. But that was the very first
requirement, and the neophyte had to meditate as follows:
Before descending into an earthly body I was indeed a human being; in
pre-earthly existence I was a human being of soul and spirit. In this
form I then descended into the physical body, received from my
mother, from my parents. I was then — not clothed in a physical
body — that would be a wrong term: I was permeated by this
physical body.
Of the manner in which, over a long period of time, the spirit
and the soul pervade the physical body — the nervous-sensory
system, the rhythmic system, the metabolic-limb system —
of all this men are completely unaware. They know nothing of it. They
are conscious of perceiving with their senses, of seeing their
physical surroundings with their eyes. But when soul and spirit have
so far permeated a man's physical body that he considers himself a
fully developed adult, where has he actually arrived? He can only see
out of his eyes, listen out of his ears, perceive warmth and cold,
roughness and smoothness, through his skin: he can only
perceive outward, not inward. He cannot look into himself with
his eyes: the most he can do is to dissect the human corpse and then
imagine he is looking into himself. But in reality he is not.
Supposing here is a house. It has windows, but I do not look in
through them. Instead, I procure some tools, and if I am strong
enough I demolish the house. Then I have all the separate bricks
before me; but is it not childish to imagine I am looking into the
house when I am only looking at this pile of rubbish? Yet that is the
way people go to work nowadays. They dissect the human being and cut
him up in order to learn to know him; but in that way they do not
learn to know him, for that is not at all the human being. If we
would learn to know the human being we must be able to look back
inward through the eyes, to listen back inward through the ears, just
as today we perceive outward through the
senses.
All that taken together — eyes, ears, the whole skin as an
organ of touch and temperature — was called in the Mysteries
the Door to Man, the Gate to Man. The point of departure in the
initiations was the candidate's realization that he could know
nothing of the human being; and having no human self-consciousness,
he could not even be a human being. He must first learn to look
inward through his senses as previously he had only looked outward.
That was the first stage of initiation in the old Mysteries. And the
moment the neophyte learned this looking inward he experienced
himself also in his pre-earthly existence, for then he knew that he
was in his spirit-soul element.
So the neophyte
learned to look inward instead of outward, and in so doing he became
aware of what had entered him through eyes, ears, skin, and so forth,
as prenatal existence. At this point he was told that only now could
he come to understand what today we would call natural science. How
do we of today go about studying natural science? We are taught to
observe the phenomena of Nature, to describe them, and so on. But
this is the same as though I had known someone very well, and I were
told to forget, when
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
I meet him again,
everything we had ever had in common. Fancy, if you can, a married
couple meeting again after a separation and being obliged to forget
everything in the way of their common experiences! Well, I can
imagine that occasionally it might be pleasant to do so; but life
could not be maintained under such conditions.
Yet those are exactly the conditions imposed upon men of our time
by our system of civilization, for they did learn to know the
kingdoms of Nature from their spiritual aspect before descending to
Earth. And while today men are encouraged to forget all they had
learned about the minerals, plants and animals before
descending to Earth, the old initiate, in the so-called first
Mystery stage, was instructed somewhat as follows: he was shown, for
example, a block of quartz; and then everything possible was done to
recall to his memory what he had known, before descending to Earth,
about quartz — or about the lily, or the rose, as the case may
have been. Recognizing was the factor taught as natural science; and
when the candidate had learned to study Nature in the light of what
he had seen in his prenatal life, he was admitted to the second
stage.
In the second
stage he learned music and what was then architecture,
geometry, surveying, etc.; for this second stage comprised everything
the neophyte could perceive when he not only looked inward through
his eyes and listened inward through his ears, but actually entered
into himself. Then he was told that he was about to enter the human
Temple Grotto, and this he came to know. It meant that which was
physically permeated by the psycho-spiritual forces that constitute
man before he descends to life on Earth. There he penetrated into
himself. This Temple Grotto, he was told, was made up of three
chambers. The first was the chamber of thought, where one learned
everything connected with thinking. Seen from without, the head is
small; but if one enters into it and looks at it from within, it is
as comprehensive as the world, and there one's spiritual activity
becomes manifest. That was the first chamber. In the second chamber
one learned to know feeling; and in the third,
willing.
In this way the initiate learned how man is organized in respect
of his organs of thinking, feeling and willing; he learned about the
factors concerned in the Earth life. Knowledge of Nature has
significance not only in connection with the Earth: it is
acquired before one descends to Earth. Here we must remember that
yonder in the spiritual world houses are not built with tellurian
architecture. There is music there, but it is
spiritual melos. What we know as music is
projected down into our air; it is a projection of heavenly music,
but as we experience it, it is of this Earth It is the same when we
survey: we measure the Earth; and surveying, geometry and the like
are earthly sciences. It was important for the candidate for the
second stage to have his attention drawn to the fact that all thought
of gaining enlightenment or knowledge by earthly means alone is
delusive, except in the case of geometry, architecture or surveying;
that a genuine science of Nature must consist in recalling prenatal
knowledge. That is what he was taught; and he came to understand that
geometry, architecture, music and surveying were the sciences that
can be learned here on Earth.
Thus the mystic entered into himself and came to know the human
being as consisting of three chambers, as opposed to the human being
of one particular incarnation, which is all one encounters by
knowing him only from the outside. — And in the third stage the
neophyte learned the nature of man as it was when he not only entered
into himself, comprehending his spiritual self, but when his
spiritual self learned about the body as well. In all the old
Mysteries this was therefore the stage inevitably called the Portal
of Death. There the initiate learned what he was like after laying
aside the earthly body. But there was a difference between this
actual death and the death of initiation. Why this had to be so I
shall explain in the following lectures; at the moment I am merely
emphasizing the facts.
When we actually
die we discard the physical body and are no longer bound to it. It
ceases to respond to Earth forces, and we are free of these. But one
who is still bound to the physical body, as was the case in the
initiations of old, must obtain by his own strength and efforts what
comes to him automatically through death, namely, this freedom from
the body; and he must sustain this condition for a certain length of
time. Initiation demanded the attainment of these strong inner forces
of the soul by which the latter could remain independent of the
physical body; and these forces at the same time provided higher
cognition of matters not to be perceived by the senses or thought by
the intellect. They transported the initiate as a human being into
the spiritual world, just as man is placed by his physical body into
the physical world.
But at that point the candidate was far enough advanced to
recognize himself as a psycho-spiritual human being, as an initiate,
while still in his Earth existence. From that time onward he saw the
Earth as a star existing detached from man; and in the older
Mysteries it was with the Sun in particular that he had to live,
instead of with the Earth. He knew what came to him from the Sun and
how the Sun forces worked in him.
The stage that followed the one I have just described, the
fourth, may be explained in this way: When a man eats on this Earth
he knows, this is cabbage, that is game — he drinks various
things, and he knows that now these things are outside him, now
inside. He breathes the air which is alternately outside and inside.
He is connected with the Earth forces in such a way as to carry
within him the forces and substances of the Earth that are otherwise
outside him. It was made clear to the candidate that before
being initiated he was an Earth-carrier, a carrier of cabbage, game,
pork, and so forth. But if you have completed the third stage of
initiation, so he was told, and if you receive what you are now able
to receive by having freed yourself from the body, you will no longer
be a carrier of cabbage, pork and veal, but you will be a bearer of
what the Sun forces give you. — And this spiritual gift of the
Sun forces was called in all the Mysteries christos.
Hence the neophyte who had
passed beyond the third stage and could now feel himself as a bearer
of the Sun forces — just as on Earth he could feel himself to
be a cabbage carrier — was called a christophor,
a Christ bearer. In the majority of the old Mysteries that was the
appellation of a neophyte of the fourth stage.
In the third stage
certain things had to be thoroughly understood, in particular,
that the craving for the physical body must cease if enlightenment
was to enter; and the neophyte had clearly to realize that while he
belonged to the Earth as far as his physical body was concerned, yet
the function of the Earth was really to destroy that physical body,
not to build it up. Now he came to know the constructive forces that
derive from the cosmos.
And he learned something else when he became a
christophor, namely, that even in the
Earth's matter there are spiritual forces at work, only they are not
perceptible to earthly senses. Another language was current in
those times, but in modern words — and I can use only these
— the sense of what was made clear to the candidate was this:
if you would know the science of matter, know how different
elements combine or separate, you must look to the spiritual forces
that permeate matter out of the cosmos. That is impossible if you are
not initiated: it is necessary to have passed through the fourth
stage. You must be able to see by means of the forces of the Sun
existence — then you can study
chemistry.
Imagine nowadays confronting a candidate for the doctor's degree
in pharmacology or chemistry with the requirement that he must first
be able to feel himself in the same relation to the forces of the Sun
as he does to the cabbage of the Earth! It would seem quite mad.
— But in the old days realities were dealt with, and people
came to understand that by means of all the forces active in the body
— forces employed for ordinary learning — only geometry,
surveying, music and architecture can be studied. Not chemistry.
Today chemistry is studied from the outside, and so it has been since
the old initiation wisdom was lost. In fact, anyone who seeks genuine
enlightenment must despair at the official chemistry of today,
for it is based wholly upon data, not upon inner penetration of the
subject. And if people were open-minded they would realize that
something more is necessary, that other things must be understood
if chemistry is to be studied. What stifles such impulses in man is
the cowardice of modern cognition in which he has been reared.
Now the neophyte had attained to the still higher stage
of astronomus. The external study of the
stars, by computation and the like, was considered wholly futile:
spiritual beings inhabit the stars, and these can be known only after
physical observation has been surmounted — after even geometry
has been overcome — so that one can live in the universe and
get to know the spiritual nature of the stars. Then the neophyte
became a resurrected one; then he could really see the
Moon and Sun forces at work upon earthly man.
Today I have described to you from two aspects how Easter was
inwardly experienced in the old Mysteries — not at a given
season but at a certain degree of human maturity: Easter was the
arising of the psycho-spiritual man out of the physical body in the
spiritual universe; and those who still knew something of Mystery
wisdom saw the Mystery of Golgotha in this light when it took place.
They asked themselves: What would have happened to humanity if the
Mystery of Golgotha had not intervened? In olden times it was
possible to be initiated into the secrets of the cosmos, for in still
older times it was a matter of course for a man to experience
his second birth in his thirtieth year or thereabouts. And later on
there were at least memories, as well as the science of the Mystery
schools, that kept alive in tradition what in earlier epochs had been
actually experienced. At the time of the Mystery of Golgotha,
however, all that had been lost or forgotten; and humanity
would have fallen into complete decadence had not that power, to
which the initiate attained in becoming a christophor,
descended into a Jesus of Nazareth and henceforth remained on Earth,
so that man could be united with this power through Christ Jesus.
Undoubtedly, then, the Easter Festival as we know it is linked
with a phase of the Mysteries, and we can really become conscious of
the substance of our Easter only by reviving this aspect of them. You
will readily understand that in this way we can at least
approximate a realization of what the ancient neophyte
experienced at his initiation. This will be the subject of further
consideration. The neophyte could say to himself: Initiation has
disclosed to me how Sun and Moon act within me in their mutual
celestial relationship. For now I know that as a physical being
I am constituted in a certain way. The circumstance that my eyes, my
nose — my whole bodily form within and without — are
shaped thus and so, that this bodily form could grow and is still
growing through being nourished, all this depends upon the Moon
forces, as does everything in the way of necessity. But that I can be
active within my bodily nature as a free inner being, can transmute
and master myself, this is due to the Sun forces, the Christ forces.
These I must activate if I would, by conscious effort, build within
me what otherwise they would have to bring about by
compulsion.
From all this we can understand why even today we look to Sun and
Moon and their relative position to determine the date of Easter.
Nothing remains of all this but our calculation, When is the first
Sunday after the first full Moon after the spring equinox? We place
Easter on the Sunday following this first full Moon, thus indicating
that in the nature and form of Easter we see something that must be
determined from above, from the cosmos. I shall elaborate that
tomorrow. But what must be grasped anew is the idea of Easter. This
can only be done by contemplating the old Mysteries, which first of
all drew attention to what was experienced by introspection —
the portal of man; by the achievement of freedom — the
portal of death; by moving freely in the spiritual world —
becoming a christophor.
The Mysteries
themselves, of course, began to disappear when the time came for the
development of human freedom to assert itself; but now the time has
come to rediscover them. We must find and make them our own again;
and we must fully realize that today efforts are necessary to
this end.
With this in mind
the Christmas Conference was held, for there is urgent need of a
sanctuary on Earth where Mysteries can once more be established. The
Anthroposophical Society must lead the way in its further development
to the modern Mysteries. It will be one of your tasks, my dear
friends, to collaborate in this way with the right understanding. But
in order to succeed you will have to reflect on human life in its
three stages: that of introspection, that of self-penetration, and
that of a consciousness such as results in outer reality only through
death.
And to remind us
of what has been said in this hour, let us carry away with us and
meditate upon these words:
Stand at the portal of man's existence,
Read above its arch stones cosmic scripture.
Dwell in the deep of man's inner soul-life,
Feel within its orbit the world's beginning.
Ponder the end of man's earth-chapters,
Find thou there the turning-point of spirit.*
Steh' vor des Menschen Lebenspforte;
Schau an ihrer Stirne Weltenworte.
Leb' in des Menschen Seeleninnern;
Fühl' in seinem Kreise Weltbeginnen.
Denk an des Menschen Erdenende;
Find' bei ihm die Geisteswende.
* Translation by Barbara Betteridge.
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