THE WORLDVIEW OF
HERMAN GRIMM
in Relation to Spiritual Science
Rudolf Steiner
January 16, 1913
t could easily appear as though what is set forth here as
spiritual science stood in isolation to what is otherwise
proclaimed and of a tone-setting nature in the cultural life of
the present. However, it can only appear so to one who
conceives of this spiritual science in a somewhat
narrow-hearted sense, seeing in it nothing more than a sum of
teachings and theories. On the other hand, whoever
recognizes it as a spiritual stream open to new sources will
become aware that parallels can be drawn to modern cultural
life in various ways. It will be seen that this manner of
viewing life called spiritual science can be applied to other,
in some degree related directions. A direction of this sort is
the subject of today's considerations — as
represented by a prominent personality of modern cultural life,
the art historian and researcher Herman Grimm.
Herman Grimm [the son of Wilhelm Grimm of the Brothers Grimm]
was born in 1828 and died in 1901. He appears indeed as a quite
characteristic figure of modern life, and yet he is, at the
same time, so distinctive and unique as to stand apart. Today's
considerations can connect especially well onto this
personality. To anyone having occupied himself with
Herman Grimm, he appears as a kind of mediator between all that
relates to Goethe, and to our own spiritual life.
By
reason of his marriage to the daughter of a personality, who
stood close to the circle of Goethe, namely the sister of the
romantic poet Clemons von] Brentano,[
Bettina Brentano [1785-1859], Herman Grimm was
connected in a quite special sense with everything associated
with the name of Goethe. Herman Grimm was related to her in
that she was his mother-in-law, the same Bettina Brentano who
had brought out Goethe's remarkable exchange of letters with a
child. Bettina Brentano's unique memorial shows us Goethe
enthroned like an Olympian, a musical instrument in his hands,
while she presents herself as a child grasping at the strings.
From the Frankfurt circle of La Roche, in her relation to
Goethe she was able (like few others) to enter into Goethe's
spirit. Even if some things as presented in the letters are
inexact, being colourfully mixed together in various ways
— a combination of poetry and truth — it still has
to be said: Everything in this remarkable book,
Goethes Brefwechsel mit einem Kinde
[Goethe's Exchange of Letters with a Child],
grew in a heartfelt manner
out of sensing Goethe's whole outlook. In a wonderful
way, it grants us an echo of his wisdom-imbued worldview.
Bettina Brentano was married to the poet Achim von Arnim
[l781-1831], who had contributed to bringing out the fine
collection of folk poems called
Des Knabens Wunderhorn [1806] [The Boy's Magic Horn].
By virtue of the connection with this circle — as mentioned,
Gisela Grimm, Herman Grimm's wife, was one of the
daughters of Bettina von Arnim — Herman Grimm grew up
from youth onwards, as it were, amid personalities who stood in
close proximity to Goethe. In all that he took up in his
education, Herman Grimm absorbed something of an immediate,
elemental spiritual breath of Goethe. Thus, he felt himself as
belonging to all those who had stood personally close to
Goethe, even though he was still a child the time of Goethe's
death [in 1832J, rather than one who had “studied”
Goethe and Goetheanism. Herman Grimm counted as having taken
into himself, in a direct and personal way, something of
Goethe's essential being, his magical power, his natural
humanity.
With inner participation, Herman Grimm experienced the
development of German cultural life during the decades of the
mid-nineteenth century. In doing so, he established, so to say,
his own “kingdom” within this German cultural
life. He can be called a spirit who, in an individual manner,
starts out from whatever stimulated him, that furthered the
development of his own powers. In this way, out of the whole
range of cultural life, a realm subdivided itself for Herman
Grimm that suited his aims, a realm in which he felt at home.
Within this domain in which Herman Grimm felt himself at home,
he understood himself to be, lo to say, the spiritual
“governor” with respect to Goethe. Goethe's spirit
appeared to him as though it lived on. And in seeking out what
derived from Goethe and what was compatible with him in
cultural life, entering into this, it was always the essence of
Goethe that he sought. This then became a yardstick for him in
evaluating everything in cultural life.
These were decades of struggle in German cultural life, decades
in which everything to do with Goethe receded, following his
death. So much else of immediate everyday concern stood in the
forefront, rather than what proceeded from Goethe. During that
period, numerous other things asserted themselves in the
cultural life of Germany, while little was heard of Goethe. On
account of his connection with Goethe, Herman Grimm regarded
himself as one whose task it was, quietly yet actively to
cultivate and carry over Goethe's ethos to a future time
that he certainly hoped would come, a time in which Goethe's
star would shine out once more in the European spiritual
firmament.
In
that he regarded himself as, so to say, the
“governor” of Goethe's spiritual domain, Herman
Grimm stood somewhat apart in his relation to cultural matters.
It seemed appropriate, if not self-evident to see him as having
the air of a “lord.” Even in his stature, his
physiognomy, his gestures, in his conduct, there was something
about him suggestive of an aristocrat. And, it can be said: For
anyone not accustomed to looking up to someone as to a lordly
personality, Herman Grimm's whole demeanour as though compelled
acknowledgement of the aforementioned status. I still fondly
recall being together with Herman Grimm in Weimar, which he
often liked to visit. On one occasion, he invited me as his
only guest to a midday meal. We spoke about various matters
that interested him. We also talked — and I was pleased
that he wanted to have this conversation with me — about
his comprehensive life-plans. And when a certain time had
passed after the meal, he said, in his inimitable, humorous and
quite natural manner, such that one accepted it from him as
something innate, “Now, my dear Doctor, I wish graciously
to dismiss you!” As though a matter of course, it
actually made a self-evident impression on me. And it accorded
with Herman Grimm's whole manner of conducting himself, so
that, one granted him a certain air of lordliness.
Herman Grimm's whole lifework bears something of the same
attribute. One cannot take up one of his major or minor
writings, with their harmonious and so succinctly constructed
sentences without feeling: all this affects one as though the
author's personality stood behind it, regarding one with
soulful participation. This contributes to the wonderful
quality in Herman Grimm's writings. In every respect they are
the product of his soul-imbued personality and have their
immediate effect as such. In this way, his style takes on a
certain justified, noble pathos. However, this noble
pathos is mitigated everywhere by the individual, human element
that breaks through. One accepts his style despite its
elegance. Everywhere, one senses his origins in having
sincerely absorbed Goethe's spirit. Yet this is not all; it
becomes apparent that with him the Goethean element has
undergone something of the development of German Romanticism.
We sense in Herman Grimm's style a liberation from all that can
broadly be termed “commonplace” or
“customary.” We have the impression of a singular
personality secluded within himself.
Herman Grimm's orientation could possibly have led to a certain
one-sidedness, had something else not played a part,
binding him closely to tradition; Herman Grimm was, after all,
the, son of Wilhelm Grimm and the nephew of Jakob
Grimm. Known for inaugurating modern linguistic research,
these two collected the German fairy tales that have in the
meantime profoundly permeated German life. They listened to the
sagas and fairy tales told them by simple folk, that were
almost forgotten and remembered by only a few remaining souls.
Brought to life again by the Brothers Grimm, they now live
on.
Despite a refined style in everything he produced, Herman Grimm
also had close ties to popular tradition, combining this with
what might otherwise have been a one-sided direction. We still
have to stress something further by which he appears harmonious
and complete. In taking up the works of Herman Grimm, we
encounter something of his adaptability — a capacity to
connect with the various spiritual phenomena in which he
immersed himself in the course of his life. A certain isolation
is required for someone to submerge themselves fully in the
phenomena and facts of past centuries. This adaptability, this
quality of “softness” with regard to Herman Grimm
acquires its “skeleton,” however, its necessary
“hardness,” by reason of something else that
intervened in his upbringing. Both his father and his
uncle belonged to the “Göttingen Seven,” who
in the year 1837 submitted their proclamation protesting the
abolition of their country's constitution. They were
consequently expelled from the University of Göttingen.
Thus, already as a child, Herman Grimm experienced a
significant event and its aftermath. For there were
consequences both for his father and his uncle, in that they
not only lost their positions, bur their daily bread as well,
at the time. Herman Grimm often referred to how he had
experienced historical change in this way, even already as a
nine-year old boy, and not merely via book-learning.
At
a time when little was said of Goethe in Germany, attention
having been diverted to other things, Herman Grimm viewed
himself as a representative of Goethe's ethos. But he did
experience a resurgence of interest in Goethe and was himself
able to contribute to it. At the beginning of the seventies of
the nineteenth century, he was able to hold his famous Goethe
lectures [“Goethe-Vorlesungen” 1874-75] at the
University of Berlin, also published in book form. Anyone
getting hold of it as a young person, and able to find the
right relation to it, will undoubtedly speak of it in later
years as being of special significance. And, as set forth in
this book, Herman Grimm clearly shows himself as someone who
knew the various ramifications of Goethe's soul life.
We
gain a clear sense of how Herman Grimm viewed a personality
such as Goethe. We find nothing of a small-minded biographical
compulsion — to flush out all manner of more or less
indifferent traits. Rather do we find an immersion in
everything that was important for Goethe's development —
the endeavour to pursue what Goethe experienced in life, what
lived in his soul, and how this re-constituted itself, taking
on form to become a creation, of Goethe's phantasy. How, he
asks, in forgetting everything of a particular life
experience, did this re-arise for Goethe to become the product
of creative phantasy — a new experience?
Thus, in Herman Grimm's interpretation, Goethe raises his
life-experiences a stage higher, to a sphere of pure
spiritual contemplation. We see Goethe ascend to spiritual
experiences. Herman Grimm demonstrates this with regard to each
of Goethe's works. And we gladly follow him in pursuing this
course, since with Herman Grimm nothing intrudes that can
otherwise so easily enter into such a portrayal — that a
single soul-force, e.g., reason or phantasy, becomes paramount,
as it were, and one no longer feels the connection to immediate
life. Herman Grimm goes no farther than he can go as an
individual in contemplating Goethe's work. In the end, we are
led by Herman Grimm to the point where the work takes its start
from Goethe's life experience. One feels oneself transported
everywhere into unmitigated spiritual life. Goethe becomes a
sum of spiritual impulses. This breath of the spiritual
extends throughout Herman Grimm's Goethe book.
What Herman Grimm ascribed to Goethe in this way has its roots
deep in Herman Grimm's spiritual configuration. Long before
commencing these considerations that led to his lectures on
Goethe, a grand, a colossal idea had stood before him —
the idea of viewing occidental cultural life as a whole in the
same way he had done, individually, with regard to Goethe. The
idea stood before his mind's eye of following three millennia
of western cultural life so as to reveal everywhere how human
sensibility transforms everyday events in the physical
world to what the human soul experiences upon ascending to the
realm of “creative phantasy,” as Herman Grimm
called it. Thus, he becomes a unique kind of historian. For
Herman Grimm, history was, so to say, something altogether
different from what it is for other modern historians.
History is, after all, customarily studied in that documents,
materials, are first collected, and from these the attempt is
made to present a picture of humanity's development. Although
materials, external facts, were of enormous importance for
Herman Grimm, they were nonetheless not at all the main thing.
He often entertained the thought: Could it not be that for some
epoch or other precisely the most significant documents, the
decisive ones, have disappeared without a trace — lost,
so that one actually passes by the truth most of all in
focussing too conscientiously and exactly on the documents?
Hence, he was convinced that, in abiding most faithfully by
external documents, one is least of all capable of providing a
true picture of human development. Only a falsified picture
could arise in keeping strictly to external documents
alone.
However, something else has arisen in the cultural life of
humanity. What took place outwardly, what happened has, thanks
to leading individualities, undergone a spiritual
rebirth. This is evidenced by personalities who have
transformed it artistically, who have utilized it for cultural
purposes. Thus, in looking back for instance to the time of
ancient Greece, Herman Grimm said to himself: Some documents
exist concerning this Greek age, but these are insufficient to
enable one to understand the Greek world. Yet what the Greeks
experienced has found its rebirth in the works of Greek art,
has been re-enlivened by significant Greek personalities.
Immersing oneself in them, letting the Greek spirit affect one,
a truer picture of the Greek world is attained than in merely
assembling external facts. In this way, the facts themselves
disappeared, so to say, for Herman Grimm. One is inclined to
say, they melted away from his world-picture. What remained in
his world-picture was a continuous stream of what he called the
creations of “folk-phantasy.”
In
contemplating Julius Caesar, for example, he not only
took account of the historical documents, he considered what
Shakespeare had made of Caesar as of equal significance,
comparable to what is contained in the existing documents.
Through characteristic human beings he looked back at the age
in question. For Herman Grimm, the course of humanity's
development became something always handed on from one
personality to another, seeing it as a spiritual process
encompassed by what he termed creative phantasy. Proceeding
from this point of view, he sought to gain a picture of the
creative folk-phantasy at work in western culture — a
sense of the actual course of events in the development of
humanity, so as to be able to say: The epochs of western
culture follow one upon the other, supersede each other —
from the earliest epochs up to the present, i.e., from the
oldest times to which he wished to return, up to his own
period, the age of Goethe. They therefore represent an ongoing
stream, the influence of folk phantasy within western
cultures.
Starting out from this urge, he turned his attention early on
to that grandiose phenomenon of western cultural life, Homer's
“Iliad.” This occupied him for a period of time
during the 1890s, leading to his truly exemplary book,
Homer. One gladly takes up this volume again and again
in wanting, from a modern viewpoint, to immerse oneself in the
beginnings of the Greek world. Adopting his general standpoint,
it shows us Herman' Grimm from another side. His gaze is
directed to the world of the gods as depicted in Homer's
“Iliad” — to the battling Greek and Trojan
heroes, and the question arises for him: How do matters
actually stand with regard to this interplay of the world of
the gods with the normal human world of warring Greek and
Trojan heroes? This becomes a question for him. It is indeed
striking, what a tremendous difference there is in the Homeric
portrayal, between the humans walking around and the nature of
those beings described as immortal gods. And Herman Grimm
attempts to present the gods in Homer's sense as portraying, so
to say, an “older” class of beings wandering on the
earth. Even if Herman Grimm, in his more realistic way, sees
these beings as “human beings,” he does look back
into a culture that in Homer's time had long lost its
significance, a culture that had been superseded by another, to
which the Greek and Trojan heroes belong. Thus, Herman Grimm
has an older and a younger class of humanity play into one
another in Homer's “Iliad;” and what has remained
over of real effects of a class of beings that had lived
previously, enters for Herman Grimm (in Homer's sense) into
what takes place between Greece and Troy.
Herman Grimm saw the further progress of humanity in this way
— as a continual supplanting of older cultural cycles by
newer ones and an interplay of older cycles with newer
ones. Each new cultural cycle has its task, that of introducing
something new into the general development of humanity. The old
remains extant for a while and still interacts with the
new.
It
can be said that what Herman Grimm investigated, to the extent
possible in the last third of the nineteenth century, has now
to be set forth once more from the point of view of spiritual
science. He did not look further back than the Greek age. For
this reason, he was unable to arrive at what recent spiritual
research describes in looking to the lofty, purely spiritual
beings of primeval antiquity, exalted above the human being. He
did, however, frequently touch upon results of recent spiritual
research — as nearly as anyone can without conducting
such research themselves.
In
going back to earlier stages in the development of humanity, we
attempt, in spiritual research, to show that we do not arrive
at the animal species in the sense of the Darwinian theory that
is interpreted materialistically nowadays. Rather, we attempt
to show that we come to purely spiritual ancestors of the human
being. Prior to the cycle of humanity in which human souls live
in physical bodies, there is another cycle of humanity in which
human beings did not yet incorporate themselves in physical
bodies. Herman Grimm leaves the question undecided, so to say,
as to what was actually involved with the “gods,”
before human beings stepped onto the earth. However, he does
recognize the ordered sequence of such cycles of humanity. And
this results in an important point of contact with what
spiritual science presents. That he takes account of such
regular periodic stages taking place ~~ brings him especially
close to us.
He
attempts to extend his spiritual observations over three
millennia. The first millennium for him is the Greek
millennium. With Herman Grimm, one is inclined to say, there is
something like an undertone in his manner of characterizing the
Greeks, as though he were to say: In looking to the Greeks,
they do not appear constituted like human beings of today,
particularly in the oldest periods. Even someone like
Alcibiades [ca. 450-404 B.C.]
appears to us like a kind of fairy-tale prince, it is as
though one beheld what is superhuman. Still, out of this Greek
world that, as already mentioned, Herman Grimm presents as
being altogether unlike the later human world, there towers ell
that arose in the subsequent Greek world end in what follows,
becoming the most important constituent of our cultural
life. And finally, at the end of the first thousand years
contemplated by Herman Grimm, the most significant impulse in
humanity's development stands before his soul: the Christ
impulse.
Herman Grimm is sparing in what he has to say about the figure
of Christ, just as he is restrained in various other matters.
But the occasional observations he makes show that he would as
little go along with those who would “dissolve”
Christ, as it were, to the point of a mere thought impulse, as
he would go along with those who want to see Christ Jesus only
in human terms. He emphasizes that two kinds of impulses
actually proceed from the figure of Christ — one of
colossal strength, that continues to work on throughout the
further development of humanity — and the other impulse
which consists in immense gentleness. Herman Grimm sees the
entire second millennium of western cultural development taking
shape in such a way that the Greek world is as though absorbed
by the Christ impulse and the resulting mixture of Christianity
and Greekness is incorporated into the Roman world, overcoming
it. Out of this something quite unique arises. That is his
second millennium, the first Christian millennium. The Roman
element is not the main thing for him, but rather the Christian
impulses. Everything of a political or external nature
disappears for Herman Grimm in this millennium. He looks
everywhere at how the manifold Christ impulse makes itself
felt. His conception of Christ is neither narrow. nor small,
but broad. When a book on the life of Jesus,
La Vie de Jesus [1863], by Ernest Renan was published, Herman
Grimm referred to it in the periodical he edited at the time,
“Künstler und Kunstwerke” [Artists and Works
of Art]; he attempted to show how pictorial representations of
the Christ figure had undergone changes over the
centuries both in the visual arts and in literature. He sought
to demonstrate how the Christ impulse undergoes changes. He
pointed out that people had always conceived of the Christ
impulse according to their own outlook. In Ernest Renan
he saw an instance of someone in the nineteenth century who
conceived of Christ once again in a narrow sense only.
In
Herman Grimm's view, Christianity needed about a thousand years
to send its impulses into the rivulets and streams of western
spiritual life. Then came the third millennium, the second
Christian one, in which we still find ourselves today. It is
the millennium at the dawn of which spirits such as
Dante and Giotto arose, as also
artists like Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci,
Raphael and so on, followed by the works of
Shakespeare and Goethe. These cycles in the
development of humanity, an ongoing stream, he spoke
of as an expression of the being of creative phantasy. Again
and again Herman Grimm sought to present in lectures give to
his students, this rhythmically subdivided, ongoing stream of
humanity's development. Herman Grimm aimed to show how single
creations had their place within the unbroken flow.
Thus, for him, Michelangelo, along with Raphael, Savonarola,
Shakespeare and others, such as Goethe, were in a manner
of speaking the spiritual constituents that become explicable
on seeing them against the background of the ongoing stream of
creative phantasy. For Herman Grimm this was especially
apparent at the source, in the ninth or the tenth century
before our era, with Homer. Thus, Herman Grimm addresses
himself in an immediate way to the human soul, in drawing our
attention to a specific work of art — be it Raphael's
“'Marriage of Mary and Joseph,” a painting, of the
Madonna, or one of the creations of Leonardo da Vinci, or.
later, of Goethe. He grants us the feeling of standing as
though directly within the unique qualities of the particular
work. In considering with him the arrangement of colours,
the figures and their gestures, while standing inwardly before
the work of art, there emerges for us something like a tableau
of the entire progress of humanity — now called forth by
a single entity in that onward-flowing, all-encompassing stream
of creative phantasy — over three millennia.
Thus, with Herman Grimm, one is first conducted into the
intimate aspects of the work of art in question and is then led
up to the summit from which the total stream can be surveyed.
However, that is not something he considered in a theoretical
manner. It seemed entirely natural for Herman Grimm to look at
the totality of the onward flowing spiritual stream of
humanity's development in this way. As he explained it to me,
as mentioned at a midday meal, with his whole soul. he actually
lived, as a matter of course, within this spiritual stream, and
he could not look at a single phenomenon in any other way than
as though it were excerpted from this mighty stream of
humanity's development.
The
whole of western cultural development, seen as folk phantasy,
stood before his soul, though not as a general abstract idea,
but filled with real content. He saw himself as inwardly
connected with this luminous content extending over millennia,
such that everything he wrote appears to one as individual
segments of an enormous work. Even in only reading a' book
review by Herman Grimm, one has the impression as though it
were cut out from a colossal work setting forth the whole
development of humanity. One feels oneself positively placed
before such a colossal work, having opened it, and as though
one were reading a few pages in it. It is the same with an
article or an essay by Herman Grimm. And one comprehends how
Herman Grimm could say of himself, in the evening of his life,
in writing the preface to his collection of Fragments,
that the idea had floated before him of a portrayal of the
ongoing stream of folk phantasy, and that therein the whole of
western culture had appeared to him, A particular subject he
had pursued appeared as if it had been taken out of a finished
work. However, he placed no more value on what had been printed
than on what he had only written down, and on what he had
written down, no more value than on what lived in his
thoughts.
In
referring to this, one would like to add a further impression,
without putting it into an abstract formula — having been
fond of Herman Grimm, remaining so, and in valuing his work and
the kind of person he was. Herman Grimm was never able to reach
the point of actually carrying out what stood before his mind's
eye as something so beautiful, so colossal, so magnificent that
even his works on Homer, on Raphael, on Michelangelo, on
Goethe, appear to us as fragments of this comprehensive,
unwritten work. We read the lines of the introduction to the
Fragments mentioned above with a certain feeling of
wistfulness. He states there that, though it would most likely
not come about, it would perhaps be feasible to rework into a
book what he had to say to his students year after year —
and newly revised every year — concerning the progression
of European cultural life in the last form these lectures took.
One reads these lines today the more wistfully, as it did
indeed not come to such a rewriting. We had to see Herman Grimm
pass away, knowing what lived in his soul intended for
present-day culture — having this sink with him into the
grave.
We
have characterized the sweeping cultural horizons underlying
Herman Grimm's written works. Spiritual science intends to show
what can be gained in widening one's spiritual horizons. It can
be said that for the purpose of gradually entering into the
whole outlook inherent in spiritual research, anyone immersing
himself in Herman Grimm's spirit has the finest precepts. Apart
from the breadth of his horizons, we see how he approached the
phenomena, how his thoughts and feelings led him to everything
he wrote in his comprehensive works on Homer, Raphael,
Michelangelo and Goethe. And, bearing in mind what is set
forth in his other writings, one sees that Herman Grimm
distinguishes himself in significant ways from other spirits,
in possessing attributes belonging to the kind of
soul-deepening we have spoken of in describing the path the
soul has to take in order to enter the spiritual worlds.
We
have stressed that for the spiritual path, the intensity of
soul-forces has to become greater. Deeper soul-forces are to be
called forth that otherwise slumber. Inner strength, inner
courage and boldness are required to a greater extent than in
ordinary life; concepts are to be grasped more sharply. The
soul needs to identify itself more fully with its own being,
with the forces of thinking, feeling and willing. Initial signs
of this are evident everywhere with Herman Grimm, by which he
was, for example, in a position to describe works of art in
such an intimate and personal way, as in the case of Raphael
and Michelangelo. This is a precursor, however, to further
illuminating the spiritual world. The basis of Herman Grimm's
historical research does not lie in what is nowadays called
“objectivity,” but in his allying himself with the
cultural phenomena he portrays, as accords with the spiritual
world. In this way, wholly forgetting itself and yet in a rare
sense conscious of itself, the soul immerses itself in the
corresponding cultural manifestation.
This becomes particularly evident when he directs his attention
to a single cultural phenomenon, such as Raphael, elevating
this to the overall stream of human spiritual life. His
impressions then become bold, powerful ideas — and what
others do not venture to say with the same shade of feeling, or
with the same subtlety of ideas, Herman Grimm does venture,
becoming in this way a representative of the spirit. And he
then stands before us with such boldness that we are sometimes
reminded of the Gospel writers. It is just that they wrote more
in keeping with mysticism, while Herman Grimm wrote in the
sense of a modern spiritual discourse. Just as the Gospels
reach upward to attain the horizon of mankind as a whole, so
Herman Grimm reaches upward with his Raphael book to the
horizon of mankind as a whole.
It
is miraculous when, in his audacious way — seemingly
tearing his soul out of himself and striding as though
alongside Raphael — as in an overall stream of evolution
— he erupts in words that can truly tell us more than any
mere presentation of world history: “Raphael is a citizen
of world-history; He is like one of the four rivers that
according to the belief of the ancient world flowed out of
Paradise.”
In
letting such a sentence duly affect one, Herman Grimm's
perception of Raphael takes on an altogether different
character, compared to what other authors have to say. Hence,
for Herman Grimm, the various personalities of history merge
into the overall stream of spiritual life. It could also be
said, he brings the highest spiritual spheres down to the
personal element. And in speaking the following heartfelt
words, Herman Grimm further expresses his relation to leading
cultural figures:
“If, by some miracle, Michelangelo were called from the
dead, to live among us again, and if I were to meet him, I
would humbly stand aside to let him pass; if Raphael came by, I
would follow him, to see whether or not I might have the
opportunity of hearing a few words from his lips. With Leonardo
and Michelangelo one can confine oneself to reporting what they
once were in their day; with Raphael one has to start from what
he is for us today. Concerning the two others, a slight veil
has passed over them, but not over Raphael. He belongs among
those whose growth is as yet far from being at an end. we may
imagine that Raphael will present ever new riddles to
future-generations of humanity.” [Fragments, Vol.
II, p.170]
This counts as a characteristic mood, rather than as something
normally objective in the sense of what is normally demanded
nowadays. But if does describe matters in such a way that we
feel ourselves transposed, in an immediate way to what had
lived in Herman Grimm's soul in writing- such sentences. It
becomes understandable that such a spirit had to struggle in
coming to terms with such a world-historical figure as Raphael.
Oddly, as he himself relates, it was quite different for him,
in describing the life of Michelangelo. The portrayal of the
life of Michelangelo by Herman Grimm is a marvellous
document, though in some respects perhaps, it counts
today as having been surpassed. Seen against the background of
the life of that time, the figure of Michelangelo stands out
significantly from other figures — as also from the
unique description of the city of Florence. Herman Grimm places
a tableau before us in contrasting two spiritual entities,
Athens and Florence. With that, the weaving together of three
millennia as characterized by Herman Grimm, appears as a mighty
background upon which Dante and Giotto appear, along with other
painters of that time — followed by figures such as
Savonarola, and finally Michelangelo himself, evident.
It
becomes evident that Herman Grimm responded differently to
Raphael and his surroundings than to Goethe, while presenting
everything with no less familiarity. In the case of Herman
Grimm's Goethe portrayal, we sense everywhere that he had grown
up as a spiritual descendant of Goethe. With his Michelangelo
portrayal, we feel how he enters into everything personally,
wandering the streets, visiting every palace in Florence. ...
other matters, as it were. Besides personally acquainting
himself with other matters, he succeeds in standing as it were,
before Michelangelo, and in depicting his actual manner of
working. All this is as though cast from the same mould.
This differs from what he presents concerning Raphael. There we
sense a wrestling with the material, with the spiritual image
of Raphael. It is as though Herman Grimm were never able to
achieve satisfaction. He describes having taken up the material
again and again, while nothing appeared adequate to him of what
he had already published. That was true even of his last works
— of what he finally attempted as a portrayal of
Raphael's personality. This remained a fragment, appearing in
the collection of essays entitled
Raphael as a World Power,
from which the sentences derive that were just read out.
Why
did Herman Grimm struggle with the material, precisely in the
case of Raphael? It is because he could only present something
to his own satisfaction in uniting himself completely with the
material. In Raphael, however, he saw a spirit characterized in
the words quoted: “Raphael is a citizen of world-history.
He is like one of the four rivers that, according to the belief
of the ancient world, flowed out of paradise.” And thus,
with every statement applied to him, Raphael grew to giant
size. Herman Grimm could never be satisfied, since he could not
capture this “world-power” in a book. If the
comprehensive breadth and grace of his spirit is evident in the
portrayals of Homer, Michelangelo and Goethe with his Raphael
discourse we see the profound uprightness, the profound honesty
of Herman Grimm's personality.
Whoever takes up his book on Homer will possibly find it not
scholarly enough. But Herman Grimm states on the very first
page, that this book is not meant to be a contribution to Homer
research. As already set forth; here, Herman Grimm could
conduct himself in this and similar matters much like a
spiritual “lord.” Thus, it appears quite natural
that, in collecting his ideas on Goethe for publication, he
boldly started out from the view that every other book he had
come across concerning Goethe fell short. What seems like
brazenness to some, can be taken for granted in the context of
his literary and artistic abilities.
That is how he relates to everything in cultural life. Hence
for those who adhere to the standpoint of erudite scholars,
Herman Grimm's Homer book may seem intolerable. All the many
questions that have been raised concerning Homer —
whether or not he actually lived, whether the
“Iliad” was put together from so and so many
details, and so forth — all that did not concern him. He
took it as it was. In this way, however, it became clear to him
how wonderfully it is composed, how what comes later always
refers to what preceded it. Everything that shows this inherent
composition appears to us inwardly coherent. But apart from
that, what appears most salutary for a spiritual researcher, is
his immersion in the soul-life of the Homeric heroes.
Everywhere, we see Herman Grimm's soul-imbued style
extend to the soul-life of Homer's heroes. Everywhere we see
the Achilles-soul comprehended, the Agamemnon-soul, the
Odysseus-soul, and so on. As a description of souls, this book
is overpowering in its effect, in spite of the familiarity of
the stylistic presentation! We are led not only to the heights
of historical contemplation, but also deep into the souls of
the single Homeric figures, some scholars will inevitably say,
Herman Grimm has taken the “Iliad” at face value,
with disregard for the whole of Homer research and all
preliminary study, accepting it verse for verse! Indeed, he
does so — quite “amateurishly” — and
the dry conclusion could then be: There someone has written a
book without any preliminary study.
Did
Herman Grimm in fact write this book without any preliminary
study? Anyone concerning himself with the works of Herman Grimm
will find the preliminary studies, only they look different
from the preliminary studies of the usual experts. The
preliminary studies of Herman Grimm lay in soul studies, in
immersing himself in the secrets of the human soul. And one can
convince oneself that no one could have shed such light on the
Homeric heroes without those preliminary studies. Herman Grimm
looks for what held sway in Homer's Phantasy. But what he says
reveals him to be the finest knower of human souls. We may
expect remarkable things of him in considering the way viewed
Homer's heroes — from Achilles to Agamemnon to Odysseus.
How did he find the words to write, in his Homer book and other
works, what can seem to the researcher so uncommonly spiritual?
He was able to do so on account of quite definite preliminary
studies. And these are to be found among the works of Herman
Grimm's first period.
Above all, we have the wonderful collection of novellas [1862]
that is perhaps less read today than other modern products of
its kind. However, these should be read by those who
take an interest in spiritual things. As a collection of
novellas, it is an intensive attempt to get to know human
souls, to fathom human secrets and the soul's activity beyond
the physical plane. The first of these novellas, “The
Singer,” belongs to Herman Grimm's earliest phase as an
author. In this work it is shown how a man acquires a deep,
passionate yearning for a woman of a broad spiritual nature.
However, these two personalities are never able to come
together. The woman sends this ardent man away from her social
circle, while everything lives on in the man's soul in the way
of impulses that drew him to her. On the other hand, what
proceeds from his soul saps at his bodily strength. Set forth
as corresponds to spiritual research, we see him gradually
destabilized in his soul. He is taken in by a friend to live on
his estate, becoming, however, entangled again in the woman's
“net.” The friend recognizes that it is high time
to fetch this person his friend adheres to so completely. She
does come — but too late. Whereas she is in front of the
house, the individual concerned shoots himself.
And
now comes something, taken up unreservedly in spiritual
research, which Herman Grimm so often touches upon in artistic
expression, but allows to devolve into indefiniteness. Briefly
and succinctly he describes how, in the singer's imagination
the deceased lives on. The scene is unforgettable in which,
feeling her entire guilt in the death of this man, she sees him
approaching from the realm of the dead, night after night. This
now fills the content of her soul. It is not described as being
a mere figment of her imagination, but in the sense of someone
who knows there are secrets that reach beyond the grave. It is
a wonderful description, that tells how the friend plants
himself in front of the woman when she says the deceased comes
to her — continuing right up to her final letter to the
friend, in which she expresses that she herself now feels close
to death. For her, the deceased, to whom she was so closely
bound, had drawn her towards him from the realm of the dead.
Probably no modern author has found the right tone, in touching
on the spiritual world with such sincerity.
In
spiritual research we present how, in going through the portal
of death, what otherwise always remains united with the human
being — also in sleep — the so-called etheric body,
raises itself along with the higher soul-members, out of the
physical body, passing over into the spiritual world. In the
field of spiritual research, we draw a picture of how the
corpse-remains behind and how the human being with his ether
body loosens himself, step by step, one member after the other,
from the physical body. The etheric body is then for a time the
enclosure for the higher soul-members of the human being. That
is an idea with which those who approach closer to spiritual
research can become more and more conversant. In what follows
we shall be able to consider in what an admirable way the
artistic soul of Herman Grimm touches upon these facts of the
spiritual world. This will lead us again to the question as to
why, for deeper reasons, Herman Grimm did not develop his
cultural discourse into a comprehensive work.
Apart from his novella, Herman Grimm wrote a further work, a
novel,
Unüberwindliche Mächte [1867],
[Insurmountable Powers], in which, as with his work in general,
his refined style leads us to a contemplation of the world and
of life. Particularly remarkable is what might be called the
clash of two cultures in miniature. The one world adheres to
title, status and rank. Deriving from an old lineage, an
impoverished count lives in the afterglow of his hierarchical
status. Wonderfully contrasted in this novel is the way in
which the world of old prejudices and rankings encounters the
New World. The quite different views and notions of America
play into this. The individual identifying himself with
hierarchical prejudices, whom Herman Grimm calls Arthur,
encounters Americans. He meets Emmy, the daughter of
Mrs. Forster, who has grown up with American values. We see
this count passionately enraptured by Emmy.
It
would be impossible even to outline the rich content of this
novel adequately. We encounter the whole contrast of Europe and
America. In addition, there is the contrast of the old Prussian
milieu and the newly constituted Prussian milieu arising as the
outcome of wars. It is a tremendous cultural
“painting” in which the characters are featured,
and from which they emerge. Only this much can be indicated:
that, as a result of the confluence of these streams, Arthur,
the count, dies a tragic death right before he was to marry
Emmy. A deluded relative considers himself the rightful heir to
the count's lineage, seeing the count as a bastard. Stung with
envy and jealousy, he opposes the count, and on the eve of his
marriage, the count is shot down by this individual.
Someone wanting to contemplate this novel merely
rationalistically might consider it as concerned with the
unbridgeable prejudice outstanding, However, the expression
“insurmountable powers” can perhaps hardly seem
more justified than when Herman Grimm, unintentionally
indicates the idea of karma, the idea of the causal connection
of destinies in human life — as though knotted together
one after another. We see him depict forces at work in destiny
that can only come into play in working over from earlier
embodiments — from previous earth-lives. He does not
describe this in speaking theoretically of “forces”
or of “karma,” but in simply letting the facts
speak for themselves, giving expression to these powers that,
then appear in a certain way corresponding to the ideas of
spiritual research. We see a karmic destiny unfold; we see
insurmountable karmic powers come to expression. And we see
something further:
Emmy remains behind. The final glance that fell into Arthur's
eyes as he lay there, his heart shot through, was when she bent
over him and their eyes met in a certain expression. An
utterance of Herman Grimm remains unforgettable, in saying, the
spirit gave way at the moment his eyes assumed the peculiarity
of appearing as no more than physical instruments. But now we
encounter once more Herman Grimm's penetration of worlds that
lie beyond death — what one would like to call his chaste
penetration of worlds out of which souls work on, in remaining
real once they have gone through the portal of death.
In
a brief concluding chapter, Herman Grimm shows us Emmy
gradually becoming infirm. It is entirely characteristic of his
close connection to matters of soul and spirit, that he
describes Emmy's approaching death. She is brought to Montreux.
Montreux and its surroundings are uniquely described. However,
Herman Grimm does not describe Emmy's passing like authors who
have no relation to spiritual matters, but rather as someone
taking account of how the secrets of death, of the realm
beyond, speak to the soul. I would render something incomplete
if I did not add in conclusion Herman Grimm's own words on the
death of Emmy:
“This was Emmy's dream.
“Between midnight and morning, she believed she woke
up.
“Her initial glance at the window, through which a pale
light streamed in, was free and clear and she knew where she
was. She also heard her mother, who slept next to her,
breathing, However, a moment later, with a sense of pressure
she had never felt before, overwhelming anxiety overcame
her. It was no longer the thoughts that had tormented her
during the last few days, but as though a giant hand were
holding all the world's mountains over her by a thin thread,
and that at any moment the fingers holding them could loosen,
and the whole mass would fall down on her, to remain lying on
her eternally. Her eyes wandered hither and thither looking for
a glimmer of light, but there was none; the light of the window
extinguished, her mother's breathing no longer audible, and
stifling loneliness all around, as though she would never come
alive again. She wanted to call out, but could not; she wanted
to touch herself, but not a limb obeyed her. All was completely
silent, completely dark; no thoughts could be grasped in this
frightful, monotonous anxiety: even memory was taken from het
— and then, at last a thought returned:
Arthur!
“And wondrously now, it was as if this one thought had
transformed itself into a point of light that became visible to
the eyes. And to the extent the thought grew to become
boundless longing, this light grew, spreading out, and
suddenly, as though it sprang apart and unfolded itself,
it took on form — Arthur stood before her! She saw him,
she recognized him at last. It was surely he himself. He
smiled and was close beside her. She did not see whether he was
naked, nor whether he was clothed: but it was him, she knew him
too well; it was he himself, no mere phantom that had taken on
his form.”
Thus, Herman Grimm has the one who has long since gone through
the portal of death approach her, now a seeress; at the moment
of her death she approaches the deceased, addressing his soul:
“She did not see whether he was naked, nor whether he was
clothed: but it was him, she knew him too well; it was he
himself, no mere phantom that had taken on his form.”
“He stretched out his hand to her and said, ‘Cornel’
Never had his voice sounded as sweet and enticing as now. With
all the strength she was capable of, she tried to raise her
arms towards him, but she was unable to do so. He came still
closer and stretched out his hand closer to her, ‘Come!’ he
said again.
“For Emmy it was as though the power with which she
attempted to bring at least a word over her lips, would have
been capable of moving mountains, but she was not able to say
even this one word.
“Arthur looked at her, and she at him. With only the
possibility of moving a finger, she would have touched him. And
now, most terrible of all: he appeared to shrink back again!
‘Come!’ he said for the third time. Sensing he had spoken for
the last time, that the terrible darkness would break in again
upon his heavenly gaze, filled now with a fear that tore at.
Her as frost splits trees, she made a final attempt to raise
her arms to him. It was impossible to overcome the weight and
the cold that held her captive — but then, as a bud
bursts open, from which a blossom grows before our eyes, there
grew out of her arms, other shining arms, out of her shoulders,
gleaming new shoulders. And lifting these arms toward Arthur's
arms, his hands grasping her hands, and floating slowly
backwards, drawing her after him, the whole magnificent figure
with him, rose out of Emmy's.”
The
emergence of the etheric body out of the physical body cannot
be described more wonderfully, in having been undertaken by a
pure artist-soul. That was a spirit, that was a soul that lived
in Herman Grimm, of which we may say that it came close to what
we seek so eagerly in spiritual research. Herman Grimm provides
evidence that, in approaching the -twentieth century, the
modern human being sought paths to spiritual life.
So
we turn gladly to Herman Grimm, wanting only to continue
further on the same path. We see him elevate the creations of
Raphael, the creations of Michelangelo, the experiences of
Goethe, the Greek-soul of Homer, to the stream that he sees
flowing onward as “creative phantasy” through
millennia. We then know how close Herman Grimm was, in his
entire feeling and perception, to what lives and weaves as the
soul-spiritual behind all physical reality. For when Herman
Grimm refers to his “creative phantasy” we are not
dealing with total abstraction. In so far as it is still
perhaps a matter of residual abstraction, to that extent it can
seem necessary to break through the thin wall separating Herman
Grimm from the living spirit, effective not only as creative
phantasy, but living as immediate spirits effective
behind the entire sense world. It could appear a form of
unwarranted restraint, to say no.- more than Herman Grimm in
speaking of the continual onward working of the phantasy of
humanity. After all, as an artist, he touched so intimately on
the still living soul that has gone through the portal of
death. Hence, it will not be difficult for us, where Herman
Grimm speaks of creative phantasy, to see the living spirit
that, as spiritual researchers, we seek behind the sense
world.
Perhaps it will not seem unjustified if it is even asserted
that-, for a spirit that struggled so honestly and uprightly
for truth — wanting to approach this creative phantasy
ever and again — it was, after all, too much of an
abstraction for him. It urged him to grasp the living spiritual
element, and for that reason the great work he intended could
not come about — since if it had been written, it would
have had to become a work that portrayed the spiritual world
not merely as creative phantasy, but as a world of creative
beings and individualities.
Spiritual research has not been placed into the modern age
arbitrarily. It is demanded by seeking souls of our time
— seeking souls to whom, as we have seen, Herman
Grimm.so-clearly and. characteristically belongs. In this way
we can become aware that with spiritual research we do not
stand as alien and isolated in modern cultural life. We have
been able to look to Herman Grimm as to a related spirit. Even
if he does not share the same standpoint completely, we do
nonetheless stand — or can at least stand, immeasurably
near to him. It is better to contemplate such a figure as a
whole, rather than scrutinizing every detail — to look at
the harmony of soul with which Herman Grimm can affect us, its
mildness and then again keenness and strength of soul, with
which he can likewise affect us. We may treat this or that
question differently from Herman Grimm, but I know that it is
not altogether out of keeping with his style, if I summarize
what I actually wanted to say in the following words; One could
arrive at the thought — let us call it for that matter a
delusory thought, one that could be entertained as a beautiful
illusion: If higher spirits, other-worldly spirits wanted to
acquaint themselves prefer with what happens on the earth by
means of reading, they would prefer most of all to read such
writings as those in which Herman Grimm depicts the earthly
destinies of human beings.
This feeling can reverberate as though from almost every line
of Herman Grimm's writings, lifting one upwards to a sphere
beyond the earth. One then feels so akin to this personality
that, if one were to characterize what has been said today
concerning Herman Grimm, a beautiful saying could come to
mind that he himself employed in eulogizing his friend
Treitschke [Heinrich von Treitschke, German
historian, 1834-56] whom he valued so much.
“With what existential joy did this human being stand in
life. What courage he showed in battle. What a gift lie had for
language. How new his latest book. How little could those take
exception to his ‘elbows’ in the general exchange of ideas.
They too will join in declaring: ‘Yes, he was one of
ours!’”
These words are at the same time the last words that Herman
Grimm wrote and had printed, as we know from the publisher of
his works, Reinhold Steig. And I should like also, in
conclusion, to summarize this evening's considerations with the
words: With what existential joy did Herman Grimm stand in
life; how mild — and yet how individual! How little can
even those distance themselves from him, if they but understand
themselves aright, who differ from him in their ideas and in
other ways! And, proceeding from whatever field of
investigation, how closely allied to him must those feel who
seek paths to the spirit! What kinship to him must they feel,
when his mild figure appears before them — prompting them
to break out in the words: Yes, he was one of ours!
Translated by Peter Stebbing,
Easter, 2019
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