Lecture II
April 20, 1924
We
can say that the original purpose of festivals is to make human
beings look up from their dependence upon earthly things to
their dependence upon extra-earthly things. The Easter festival
in particular can evoke such thoughts. During the last three to
five centuries we in the civilized world have undergone a
psycho-spiritual development that has made us focus less and
less upon our connection with cosmic forces and powers. We have
gradually been reduced to contemplating only our relation
to earthly forces and powers. Of course, given the means for
acquiring knowledge recognized as legitimate today this could
scarcely be otherwise. However, if in pre-Christian times or
even in the early centuries of Christianity someone who was
connected with a Mystery center could have experienced
what we moderns call knowledge, and if he were to approach the
matter with the state of mind characteristic of those earlier
times, he would not at all understand how human beings can live
without an awareness of their connection to extra-earthly,
cosmic things.
I
would now like to sketch various matters that you will find
dealt with more thoroughly in this or that lecture cycle.
As the present lectures are intended to acquaint us
specifically with the Easter idea, I naturally cannot elaborate
on every detail, but only touch upon the most important
points.
If
we go back to certain ancient monotheistic religious systems
— for example, to the Hebrew-Judaic system, with which we
are most familiar — we naturally find the veneration and
worship of one deity. That deity is the one of whom we speak in
our Christian conception as the First Person of the Godhead, as
God the Father.
Now
all the religions in which the concept of the Father-God played
a part had a greater or lesser awareness of his connection to
the cosmic moon forces, forces that stream down to the earth
from the moon; the Mystery priests were particularly aware of
this connection. In our time this consciousness of our
relationship to the moon has all but disappeared. Perhaps the
only place it lives on is in the inspiration of poetic
imagination by the forces of the moon, or in medicine in the
counting of human embryonic life in ten lunar months. But older
world views were clearly aware that the human being, who exists
in the spiritual world as a being of spirit and soul, is
permeated and strengthened by forces emanating from the moon as
he descends into earthly existence.
If
we want to know what shapes our living form, to know what lives
in us as nutritive and respiratory processes, as overall
forces of growth, we must look not to earth forces but rather
to cosmic forces. For a consideration of earth forces
readily reveals their relation to us. If we did not hold our
bodies together with extra-earthly forces, if our bodies did
not receive their form from cosmic forces, how could the
earth forces alone hold them together? The moment the human
body is forsaken by cosmic forces and exposed to merely
terrestrial forces, it falls apart, disintegrates, becomes a
corpse. Earth forces can only make us into corpses; they cannot
shape us. It is to the influence of the moon that we owe the
uplifting forces within us, the forces that give us a cohesive,
organized form, a form that during life does not succumb
to forces that seize and destroy us at our death. It is due to
this that throughout our earthly lives we can resist
destruction, as indeed it must be resisted.
Although in this way we may say theoretically how the form of
our body is dependent upon the forces of the moon, we must also
see that these forces, which guide us, so to speak, through
birth into a physical existence, were revered by ancient
religions as the forces of the divine Father. The ancient
Hebrew initiates knew that the moon radiates those forces that
lead us into our earthly life and maintain us there. Our
physical being is severed from these forces only when we pass
through the gate of death.
To
look up lovingly to these divine Father forces, to express
devotion to them in ritual and prayer, this was the substance
of certain ancient monotheistic religions. And these religions
were more consistent than you might think. For history
completely misrepresents them, basing itself, as it must,
merely upon external evidence, not upon what can be observed in
spiritual vision.
Religions that focused on the moon and the spiritual beings
living in it were really of relatively late origin. The truly
primordial religions had in addition to this a clear perception
of the sun forces and even, it must be added, of the forces of
Saturn. However, with this we are entering into a period
of history of which no physical documents survive, one
that antedates the foundation of Christianity by many thousands
of years. In my
Outline of Occult Science
I called this
period the ancient Indian — partly to have a name for it,
but also because it took place in the area we now call India.
The civilization following this was the ancient Persian. During
these civilizations human beings still developed very
differently than they did later, and this is reflected in their
religious beliefs.
During the last two thousand years or more, human beings have
been developing in such a way that they no longer notice a
certain discontinuity in their earthly development, and
indeed, the break is really hardly noticeable. Something
that takes place in human beings around the thirtieth year
today remains largely in the subconscious or the unconscious.
However, this was not the case among people who lived eight or
nine thousand years before Christ. At that time a person's
development was continuous up until about the thirtieth year,
when a profound metamorphosis set in, which I shall be quite
direct in describing. Although what I have to say might sound
somewhat strange, it nevertheless fits the relevant
facts.
In
those ancient times the following could happen. Let us say that
before turning thirty, a man had made the acquaintance of
someone much younger, say three or four years younger, who
would therefore experience the thirtieth-year metamorphosis
much later than the former. Suppose now that the two men
had not seen each other for some time and were then reunited.
It could happen, and in today's words this sounds indeed
strange, that if the younger person were to address the older
one, the latter might not recognize him. The
metamorphosis would have completely transformed his
memory.
Because in these very ancient times people around the age of
thirty tended to forget all they had experienced previously, it
was the custom in the small communities of the time to record
events in young peoples' lives in order to inform them of their
earlier experiences after they had passed through the profound
transformation. And then, when such people realized they had
become different persons in their thirtieth year, that they had
to go to the record office — to use a modern expression
— in order to learn of their earlier experiences —
yes, it really happened this way — then at the same time
they were also taught that before their thirtieth year only
moon forces had acted upon them, whereas now sun forces were
entering into their development.
The
sun forces' influence on the human being is entirely
different from that of the moon forces. Of course, people today
know little of sun forces, for they know only their external,
physical effects. They know, for example, that because of
sun forces — pardon my bluntness — they sweat, feel
hot; they are also no doubt aware of sunbathing and its
therapeutic uses, but this is all superficial. The
average person nowadays cannot even begin to conceive of
the effect that the forces spiritually connected with the sun
have upon him.
Julian the Apostate, the last of the pagan Caesars,
acquired some knowledge of the sun forces in the
dwindling Mysteries, and was murdered on his expedition
to Persia because he wanted to make it official
again.
[Julian the Apostate (Flavius Claudius Julianus),
A.D. 331–363. Roman emperor 361–363.
]
That is how strong the powers that wanted to
exterminate such knowledge in the early Christian centuries
were. It is therefore not surprising that no knowledge of such
matters has survived.
While the moon forces determine the human being, permeate us
with an inner necessity so that we must act according to our
instincts, our temperament, our emotions, in a word, our
whole physical and etheric nature, the spiritual sun forces
free us from this. They dissolve, so to speak, the forces of
compulsion, and it is really through their agency that we
become free.
In
ancient times the influence of the moon and that of the sun
were sharply divided. Around the age of thirty people simply
became sun people, that is, free, whereas up until then they
had been moon people, or unfree. Nowadays these two overlap;
even in childhood the sun forces act along with the moon
forces, and the moon forces continue to work on us in later
years. Thus in our time necessity and freedom intermingle.
As
has been said, however, this was not always the case. In the
prehistoric times of which we have been speaking, the effects
of the moon and the sun upon human life were sharply
separated, it was considered pathological when someone failed
to experience the metamorphosis, the new beginning in his
thirtieth year. By the same token, people spoke of having been
born not once, but twice. As humanity began to develop in such
a way that the second or solar birth (the first was called the
lunar birth) became less noticeable, certain facts,
including exercises and cult rituals, began to be applied
to initiates in the Mysteries. In this way the initiates
experienced something that the rest of mankind no longer
did. They were now the twice-born.
The
term twice-born that may be found in ancient oriental
writings even today no longer carries its original meaning. It
would be interesting to ask every orientalist and Sanskrit
scholar — I believe our friend Professor Beckh is in our
midst, you can ask him how things stand according to his
professional studies — whether they think modern
scholarship can explain the meaning of this expression clearly
and in no uncertain terms.
[Professor Hermann Beckh, 1875–1937,
orientalist. From 1922 on priest in the Christian Community.
]
In fact, any number of
formal analyses are available, but the essential meaning
remains a mystery. Only those who know it derives from such a
reality as I have just described can grasp its true
meaning. About such things spiritual observation does, after
all, have something to say; and once it has spoken, I would
challenge any unprejudiced researcher in a conventional
academic discipline to prove that existing documents do
not at every step bear it out. Ordinary science will confirm
spiritual research, provided things are seen in the right
light. But certain things transcending ordinary science must be
brought to light since the study of documents cannot lead to a
true understanding of human life.
Thus we look back to an ancient time when people spoke of their
lunar birth as of a creation by the Father. Regarding their
solar birth people understood that in the sun's spiritual rays
Christ's power, the power of the Son, is active, and that it
sets human beings free. Consider what it does for us. Only
through its action can we make something of ourselves in
earthly life. Without the liberating forces and impulses
of the sun, we would be strictly predestined, at the mercy of
an inexorable determinism, and not even the determinism of
fate, but merely that of nature.
People in ancient times knew this. To them, the sun was a
celestial eye from which the power of Christ streamed forth.
They knew that this power released them from the bondage of
iron necessity into which the moon forces had placed them at
birth and which would otherwise govern their entire lives. The
sun forces, the Christ forces looking down upon them through
the cosmic eye of the sun, enabled them to make something
of themselves in inner freedom, something they could not have
become merely by virtue of the moon forces. Thus in the sun
forces people saw the possibility of transforming or
making something of themselves here on earth.
For
completeness' sake I should briefly mention that ancient people
also looked to the forces of Saturn, in which they saw all that
sustains us when we pass through the portal of death, that is,
when we experience the third earthly metamorphosis.
Physical
birth — Moon
Second birth — Sun
Third birth — physical death — Saturn
After death the human being is maintained by the Saturn
forces that reign at what was in ancient times considered
to be the outer limit of our planetary system. These forces
support us and carry us out into the spiritual world; they
maintain our being's integrity when the third metamorphosis
occurs. This was unquestionably the world view of ancient
times.
But
humanity changes, and the time came when the sun forces'
effects were known only in the Mysteries. This knowledge
survived longest in the Mysteries' therapeutic sections,
because the same forces that give us our freedom, our ability
to make something of ourselves — namely, the sun forces,
the Christ forces — are also found in certain plants and
in other earthly beings and substances, which as a result
possess healing properties.
For
the most part, however, human beings lost this knowledge of the
sun. Although knowledge of our dependence on the moon or
Father forces remained with people for a long time,
consciousness of our dependence on the sun forces, or we must
really say, of our emancipation through those forces,
disappeared much earlier. And what we today call forces of
nature, which seem to be the sole topic in modern philosophy,
are really nothing but a completely abstract version of
the moon forces.
One
person who still knew the sun forces and was able to let
himself be guided by them was the Christ-bearer, Jesus of
Nazareth. He had to know them. For, whereas in the old
Mysteries the sun forces could be reached only by looking up
spiritually to the sun, it was the mission of Jesus of Nazareth
to receive these forces in his own body as they streamed down
to earth. This I explained yesterday. The essential
point, however, is that in his thirtieth year a transformation
occurred in Jesus of Nazareth's body. It was the same
transformation everyone experienced in primeval times,
except that in those times only the rays, so to speak, of the
spiritual sun entered into people, whereas here the primordial
sun being himself, the Christ, descended into human evolution
and dwelled in the body of Jesus of Nazareth. This event
central to all earthly life is at the root of the Mystery
of Golgotha.
You
will be able to understand these things in their full
significance if you consider the way Easter was
celebrated in the older Mysteries. Easter, one might say,
was as yet a human affair, for it was initiation.
Basic initiation consisted of three stages. The very first
requirement for initiation was to develop, through
exposure to what the Mysteries had to offer, a degree of
inner humility we cannot fathom today. Although today
people do indeed consider themselves enormously modest
with respect to knowledge, anyone who can see through them
knows they are truly possessed by arrogance.
Above all, at the outset of initiation the candidate had to
believe that he was not yet really human, that this was a goal
yet to be achieved. Today it would be asking too much of people
at any stage of life that they should not consider themselves
human beings. But for initiation this was the very first
requirement. The candidate had to know that it was only before
descending into an earthly body that he had been a human being,
that in pre-earthly existence he had been a human being of soul
and spirit, which then entered a physical body provided by a
natural mother, by the natural parents. It did not
“clothe itself” with the body — for
that is an inaccurate expression — rather it
permeated itself with a physical body.
Now
just how, over a long period of time, the spirit and soul
pervade the physical body — the nervous-sensory
system, the rhythmic system, the metabolic-limb system —
is something most people are not aware of. What everyone is
aware of, what everyone perceives through the senses, is the
physical world around us. When spirit and soul have completed
their permeation of our physical bodies at adulthood, we can
only look to the outside with our eyes, listen with our ears to
what is outside us, perceive warmth and cold, roughness and
smoothness outside us through our skin; in other words, we
perceive only what is outside not what is inside us. We cannot
look into ourselves with our eyes: the most we can do is to
dissect a human corpse and imagine we are looking into
ourselves. But in reality we are not.
Suppose I have a house here before me. It has windows,
but I do not look in through them. Instead, I take some tools
and, if I am strong enough, I can demolish the house. The
individual bricks then lie before me in a heap; they are all
that is left of the house. This is the way things are done
today; people dissect the human being, cut him up, in order to
get to know him. But in this way they do not get to know him;
what they get to know this way is not at all a human being. To
really know ourselves we must be able, just as today we look
out of our eyes, to look in through them, to listen in with our
ears, and so on.
All
this taken together — eyes, ears, the whole skin as an
organ of touch and temperature — was called in the
Mysteries the door to the human being. Initiation started from
the candidate's realization that he knew nothing about the
human being, and that, having no consciousness of himself
as human, he could not really claim to be one. He would first
have to learn to look in through his senses, in the same way he
otherwise looks out.
That was the first stage of initiation in the old
Mysteries. And the moment a person learned in this way to
look inside himself, he experienced how he had been in
pre-earthly existence, for then he knew himself to be a being
of spirit and soul.
The
initiate thus learned to look in (red) instead of out
(yellow), and in so doing became aware of what had
entered him as pre-earthly existence through his eyes,
ears, skin, and so forth (green — see diagram). Aware now
that he had had such an existence, he was told that now he
could begin to acquaint himself with what today we would call
natural science.
When we learn about natural science today, we are taught to
observe the phenomena of nature, to describe them, and so on.
But this is analogous to being told upon meeting someone we
have known for a long time to forget everything we have
ever had in common with that person. Fancy, if you will, a
married couple being told upon seeing one another after a long
separation to forget everything they had ever been through
together. Well, yes, I can imagine that once in a while such a
thing might actually be preferable, but life could not be
carried on in that way.
Such, however, are exactly the circumstances imposed upon us by
our modern system of civilization. We all become acquainted
with the kingdoms of nature from their spiritual aspect before
we descend to earth. And while today people are encouraged to
forget all they learned then about minerals, plants, and
animals, the old initiate, in the so-called first Mystery
stage, attempted to remember it. He was shown, for
example, a quartz crystal, and then everything possible was
done to remind him of what he had known about quartz — or
about lilies, or roses — before he descended to earth.
The knowledge of nature taught in the Mysteries was
essentially recognition.
After a candidate had mastered the method of recollecting
things viewed in pre-earthly existence, he was admitted to the
second stage, which consisted of learning the music,
architecture, geometry, surveying, etc., of the time. This was
because the second stage comprised everything a person
could learn not only by looking inside with his eyes and
listening to what is inside him with his ears, but by actually
entering into himself. Here the candidate for initiation was
told he was entering the Temple Grotto of Man, which was
the part of himself physically permeated by the soul-spiritual
forces of which he had consisted before descending to life on
earth. Into this he penetrated.
The
Temple Grotto, he was told, consisted of three chambers. The
first was the chamber of thought. There he became acquainted
with everything — well, yes, when looked at externally,
it is the human head, which is small, but when entered into and
viewed from within, it is as big as the world. The candidate
came to know himself there as spirit. That was the first
chamber. In the second he acquainted himself with feeling; and
in the third with willing.
In
this way initiates learned how the human being is organized
with respect to the organs of thinking, feeling, and willing;
they acquainted themselves, that is, with what matters on
earth. Knowledge of nature, on the other hand, transcends such
merely earthly matters. One acquires it before one even
descends to earth. After that, it is simply a question of
recalling it. By contrast, no houses are built in the spiritual
world with earthly architecture. Similarly, the music
that exists in the spiritual world is entirely spiritual;
earthly music is merely its projection into the
terrestrial air. Surveying is concerned with the dimensions of
the earth; both it and geometry are earthly sciences.
It
was important for the novice of the second stage to realize
that all talk of gaining knowledge by purely earthly means,
except as it applies to geometry, architecture, and
surveying, is nonsense. He realized that a genuine science of
nature must consist of recalling pre-earthly knowledge;
however, geometry, architecture, music, and surveying are
sciences that can be learned here on earth.
The
candidate thus entered into himself and came to know the cosmic
human being. This consisted of three chambers, unlike the
single earthly organization we encounter by approaching
the human being only from the outside.
In
the third stage the candidate not only delved down into
himself, coming to know himself spiritually, but as spirit he
came to know the body as well. Initiates in all the old
Mysteries called this level of knowledge “the
Portal of Death.” Here one learned what it is like
to lay aside the earthly body. There was, however, a difference
between actual death and the death experienced in
initiation. I will explain in the following lectures why
this had to be so; at the moment I only want to point out the
facts.
When we die, we discard our physical bodies and are no longer
bound to them. We cease to respond to, and are henceforth free
from, earth forces. But while we are still connected to our
physical bodies, as was the case in the initiations of old, we
must achieve by inner exertion something that in death happens
of itself, namely, freedom from the body; we must hold
ourselves outside the body for a time. Initiation required that
one attain strong inner forces of soul, by virtue of which one
could remain free from the physical body.
These same forces also provided higher knowledge of matters
that could neither be perceived with the senses nor thought
with the intellect. They brought human beings into
relation with the spiritual world, just as our physical bodies
bring us into relation with the physical world. At this point a
candidate was far enough advanced to recognize himself as
a human being of spirit and soul, as an initiate, while still
living on earth. From that time on he experienced the earth as
outside himself and could live with the sun rather than with
the earth, particularly in the older Mysteries. He knew what he
had from the sun, how the sun forces were active in him.
After this third stage followed then the fourth. The fourth
stage had an effect that may be explained as follows:
When a human being on earth eats, he recognizes, for example,
that he is eating cabbage or venison. He can drink various
things, and know that first these things are outside, then
inside him. He breathes the air; first it is outside, then
inside, then outside again. In short, he carries within
him earthly forces and substances that also exist outside him.
What the Mysteries made clear to the student was that before
initiation he had been an earth-bearer, a bearer of cabbage,
venison, pork, and so on, but that upon completing the third
stage of initiation and experiencing what it is possible to
experience when one frees oneself from the body he would no
longer be a bearer of cabbage, pork, and veal, but rather of
what the sun forces gave him.
In
all the Mysteries this spiritual gift of the sun forces was
called Christos. Hence the candidate who had gone
through the three stages and now felt himself to be a bearer of
the sun forces, just as he had been a cabbage-bearer on earth,
was called a christophor, a Christ-bearer. This was the
term applied to a neophyte of the fourth stage in most of the
ancient Mysteries.
In
the third stage the candidate had to understand certain
things thoroughly, most importantly that his craving for the
physical body had to cease during moments of knowledge. He had
to understand that the human being, as far as the
physical body is concerned, belongs to the earth, but that the
earth actually only destroys the physical body and does not
build it up. It was at this point that the initiate came to
know the upbuilding forces that originate in the cosmos.
He
also learned something else. Precisely when he became a
christophor, the initiate realized that spiritual forces
are at work even in the substances of the earth, albeit in a
way imperceptible to earthly senses. Had our modern way of
speaking, which is the only one I can use, been comprehensible
to people of ancient times, the sense of what the neophyte was
told might be expressed as follows: “If you wish to know
and understand substance, to see how the different
elements combine and separate, you must look to the spiritual
forces that permeate matter from the cosmos. You can only
do this, however, once you have been initiated into the fourth
stage. For only when you are able to perceive by means of
forces of the sun-existence will you be able to study
chemistry.”
Now
in our time it would be thought quite absurd, wouldn't it, to
require of candidates for the doctor's degree in
pharmacology or chemistry that they experience sun forces in
the same way that they do earthly cabbage. In the old days,
however, such demands were made. Furthermore, initiates
realized that all the forces of ordinary cognition alive
in the body can be used only to study geometry, surveying,
music, and architecture. They are useless for the study of
chemistry.
Chemistry as we know it today deals only with superficial
realities, and has done so ever since the old initiation wisdom
was lost. In fact, anyone who seeks genuine knowledge must
despair at having to learn the official chemistry of today, for
it is based wholly upon descriptions, not upon an inner
penetration of the subject. If people were open-minded, they
would realize that something more is necessary, that a
different method of cognition is required, for a true study of
chemistry. That this is not realized is simply the result of
the cowardice so prevalent today.
When a candidate had passed the fourth stage, he was ready to
become an adept in astronomy, which was an even higher stage of
initiation. The merely external study of the stars, based on
calculations and the like, ancient people considered thoroughly
trivial. For the stars are inhabited by spiritual beings, and
these beings can be known only after physical observation and
even geometry have been left behind, when one can
literally live in the universe and know the spiritual nature of
the stars. At this stage the candidate became one of the
resurrected and could observe the forces of the moon and sun at
work, particularly in their effects upon earthly humanity.
Today I have described for you from two sides how Easter was
inwardly experienced in the old Mysteries, not in a particular
season but at a certain stage of human development. Easter, we
have seen, was the inner human being's resurrection out
of the physical body into the spiritual universe. Those still
cognizant of ancient Mystery wisdom at the time of the Mystery
of Golgotha saw that Mystery in this light. They asked
themselves: What would have happened to humanity if the Mystery
of Golgotha had not taken place?
In
ancient times it had been possible to be initiated into the
secrets of the cosmos, for even earlier than that it had been a
matter of course for people to experience a second birth around
their thirtieth year. Memories of this had been preserved, as
had the knowledge of the Mystery schools, and thus what had
been experienced directly in earlier epochs was kept alive as
tradition. At the time of the Mystery of Golgotha, however,
this had all been lost or forgotten. Humanity would have fallen
into complete decadence had not the power to whom the initiates
had raised themselves in becoming christophors descended
into Jesus of Nazareth and remained on earth since then,
enabling people to unite themselves with it through Christ
Jesus.
Easter as we know it today is thus a link in the
evolution of the Mysteries, and we can become aware of
its true content only by reviving that evolution. In the
lectures to come you will be able to get at least an idea
of what the ancients experienced in initiation. A new
initiate could say to himself: “Initiation has
revealed to me how sun and moon, as celestial opposites, work
within me. I know now that my physical form — the
particular shape of my eyes, nose, indeed of my entire body,
inside and out — as well as the fact that this form could
grow, and continues to grow through nourishment, is a result of
the moon forces. Upon them all necessity depends. But that I
can come to life within my physical body as a free human being,
that I can alter my character and master myself, this is
due to the sun forces, to the Christ forces. These I must
awaken within me if I am to achieve through my own efforts a
conscious freedom over and above that given me by the sun
forces through another kind of necessity.”
From all this one can understand why even today human
beings calculate the date of Easter from a particular
constellation of sun and moon. All that remains of the old
consciousness is an interest in finding the first Sunday
following the first full moon after the spring equinox.
That Easter is set on that Sunday indicates, as I shall
elaborate tomorrow, that people see in Easter's nature and form
something that must be determined from above, that is, from the
cosmos.
More than this, however, is necessary. The very content
of Easter must be grasped anew, and this can happen only
if we examine the old Mysteries. These showed first of all what
people could experience if they looked inside themselves, the
portal of Man, then when they descended into themselves and
came to know the remotest inner recesses of their being,
the three-chambered, cosmic human being; when they liberated
themselves from the body — the portal of Death; and when
they moved freely in the spiritual world, they became
christophors.
The
Mysteries themselves, of course, began to disappear at
the time human freedom started to assert itself, but the time
to rediscover them has arrived. The Mysteries must be
found anew, and we should be fully conscious that
preparations to that end must now be made.
It
was with this in mind that the Christmas Conference was held.
An earthly sanctuary for the re-founding of the Mysteries is
urgently needed. The Anthroposophical Society, as it
continues in its development, must lead the way to that
re-founding. It will be partly your task, my dear friends, to
help this along in the right spirit. But for that you will need
to examine the three stages of human life: introspection,
self-penetration, and a consciousness one has in outer reality
only in death.
As
a reminder of what has been said in this hour, I would like us
now to carry away and meditate upon the following words:
Stand
at the gate of living man;
View in its arch-stones cosmic thoughts.
Live deep within the human soul;
Feel at its center the birth of worlds.
Think upon man's earthly ending;
Find there renewal of the 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.
|