LECTURE TWELVE
Dornach,
25 February 1922
We have been
speaking about the tasks facing the leaders of spiritual and cultural
life, tasks arising out of the great change that took place in the
transition from the fourth to the fifth post-Atlantean period. I
endeavoured to describe the forces which emanated from this, such as
those which were made manifest in the figure of Faust and the figure
of Hamlet. When you consider the essential core of the matter, you
find that spiritual leaders such as the poets who created these
figures found themselves faced with the task of answering, in poetic
form, the question: What will become of the human being when he has
to find inner satisfaction of soul from intellectual life alone,
living exclusively in abstract thoughts? For obviously the soul's
mood as a whole must arise from the impression made on it because it
is forced to contemplate, with the help of abstract thoughts alone,
all that is most dear to it, and all that is most important for it.
All the evolutionary factors we considered yesterday were what Goethe
and Schiller had to draw on in their creative work.
We also
saw how Goethe and Schiller felt themselves to be ensnared in these
evolutionary factors. We saw how both express the feeling that truly
great poetic creation cannot be accomplished without some inclination
towards the real spiritual world. But the inclination towards the
spiritual world which was still characteristic for western cultural
development in the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth centuries was no
longer possible in ensuing times. It retreated, you might say, in the
face of the stark intellectual view. Yet on the other hand this
intellectual view, this living in thoughts, had not yet developed
sufficiently to allow access to real, genuine spiritual aspects in
the thought life.
What
typifies the position of Schiller and Goethe within the cultural
evolution of humanity is the fact that their most important creative
period falls in an age when the old spirituality has gone, but when
it is not yet possible for living spirituality to burgeon out of the
new intellectualism. I described a little while ago
[ Note 1 ]
how that which fills the soul in an intellectual way is actually the
corpse of the spiritual life lived by the soul in the world of spirit
and soul before birth, or before conception. This corpse must be
brought back to life. It must be placed once more within the whole
living context of the cosmos. But this point had not yet been reached
at that time, and what Goethe and Schiller were wrestling to achieve,
particularly in their most important period, was a mood of soul which
could somehow be satisfying during this period of transition, and out
of which poetic creation could be achieved.
This
shows most clearly and most intensively in the collaboration between
Goethe and Schiller. When they met, Goethe had completed a
considerable part of
Faust,
namely the Fragment which appeared
in 1790 and some additional parts as well. Goethe held back the
dungeon scene, even though it was by then already completed. The
Fragment has no Prologue in Heaven, but begins with the scene
‘I've studied now Philosophy ...’ If we examine this
Fragment, and also the parts which Goethe omitted, we find that here
Faust stands as a solitary figure wrestling inwardly to find a
satisfying mood of soul. He is dissatisfied with stark
intellectualism and endeavours to achieve a union with the spiritual
world. The Earth-Spirit appears, as in the version now familiar to
us. Goethe was certainly striving towards the world of spirit and
soul, but what is still entirely lacking, what was still quite
foreign to him at that time, was the question of placing Faust within
the whole wider cosmic context. There was no Prologue in Heaven.
Faust was not yet involved in the battle between God and Satan. This
aspect only came to the fore when Schiller encouraged Goethe to
continue working on the drama.
Schiller's encouragement inspired him to change Faust's solitary
position and place him within the total cosmic context. Encouraged
more or less by Schiller, the
Faust
which reappeared in the
world in 1808 had been transformed from a drama of personality, which
the 1790 version still was, into a drama of the universe. In the
Prologue — ‘The sun makes music as of old, amid the rival
spheres of heaven’ — in the angels, indeed in the whole
spiritual world, and in the opposition with Satan, we see a battle
for the figure of Faust which takes place in the spiritual world. In
1790, Faust was concerned only with himself. We see this personality
alone; he alone is the focus. But later a tableau of the universe
appears before us, in which Faust is included. The powers of good and
evil do battle to possess him. Goethe wrote this scene in 1797,
placing Faust in a tableau of the universe, after Schiller had
demanded of him that he continue work on
Faust.
As shown
in the ‘Dedication’, Goethe felt somehow estranged from
the manner in which he had approached his
Faust
when he was
young. We see also in Schiller what was actually going on in the
souls of the most outstanding human beings. He began as a realist. I
showed you yesterday how the luciferic and ahrimanic elements
confront one another in Karl Moor and Franz Moor. But there is no
suggestion of any appearance of the spiritual world in some
archetypal figure or other; we see the luciferic and the ahrimanic
element simply in the character traits of Karl Moor and Franz Moor.
It is quite typical of Schiller to make his point of departure a
perfectly realistic element. But when he has completed the plays of
his youthful phase, when he has met Goethe, and when he takes up
writing again in the nineties, we see that now he is compelled to let
the spiritual world play into his poetic creations. It is one of the
most interesting facts that Schiller now feels compelled to let the
spiritual world play into his poetic figures.
Consider
Wallenstein (Wallenstein's Camp).
Wallenstein makes his decisions in accordance
with his belief in the stars. He acts and forms resolves in
accordance with his belief in the stars. So the cosmos plays a role
in the figures Schiller creates. The
Wallenstein (Wallenstein's Camp)
drama is comprehensible only when we take into account that Wallenstein
feels himself to be filled with the forces which emanate from the starry
constellations. At the end of the eighteenth century Schiller felt
compelled to return to a contemplation of the stars which was
familiar in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to those
who thought about such things. He felt he could not depict
significant events in human life without placing this human life
within the cosmos.
Or take
Die Braut von Messina (Bride of Messina).
He is experimenting. He tries to shape the dramatic action in accordance
with the ancient idea of destiny in connection with the wisdom of the
stars. It is perfectly obvious that he is trying to do this, for we,
too, can experiment with this drama. Take out everything to do with
the wisdom of the stars and with destiny, and you will find that in
what remains you still have a magnificent drama. Schiller could have written
Die Braut von Messina (Bride of Messina)
without any wisdom of the stars
and without any idea of destiny. Yet he included these things. This
shows that in his mood of soul he felt the need to place the human
being within the cosmos. This quite definitely parallels the
situation which led Goethe, on once again taking up work on his
Faust
drama, to place Faust within the tableau of the
universe.
Goethe
does this pictorially. Angels appear as starry guides. The great
tableau of the Prologue in Heaven presents us with a picture of the
cosmos. Schiller, who was less pictorial and tended more towards
abstraction, felt obliged during the same period to bring into his
Wallenstein (Wallenstein's Camp)
and his
Braut von Messina (Bride of Messina)
something which
would hint at the position of the human being within the universe. He
even went so far as to include the destiny concept of ancient Greek
tragedy.
But look
at something else too. Just at the time when he was getting to know
Goethe, Schiller, in his own way, adopted the French Revolution's
ideas about freedom. I mentioned yesterday that in France the
revolution was political, whereas in Central Europe it was spiritual
and cultural. I would like to say that this spiritual revolution took
on its most intimate character in something Schiller wrote which I
have quoted here in all kinds of connections: his
Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man (Aesthetical Essays).
Schiller
asks: How can people achieve an existence which is truly worthy of
human beings? Something that might have been called a philosophy of
freedom was not yet possible at that time. Schiller answers the
question in his own way. He says: A person who follows the course of
a logical thought is unfree. Of course he is unfree, because what
logic says cannot be developed freely in any way, and so he is
subject to the dictates of reasoning. He is not free to say that two
times two is six, or perhaps five. On the other hand he is also
subject to the dictates of natural laws if his whole organism is
given over to the dictates of nature.
So
Schiller sees the human being occupying a position between the
dictates of reason and the dictates of nature, and he calls the
balance between these two conditions the aesthetic condition. The
human being shifts the dictates of reason downwards a little into
whatever likes and dislikes he may have, thus gaining freedom in a
certain sense. And if he can also moderate his urges and instincts
— the dictates of nature — raising them up to an extent
to which he can rely on them not to debase him to the level of an
animal, then they meet up in the middle with the dictates of reason.
The dictates of reason take a step down, the dictates of nature take
a step up, and they meet in the middle. By acting in accordance with
what pleases or displeases him, the human being is in a condition
which is subject to neither dictum; he is permitted to do what
pleases him, because what pleases him is good by virtue of the fact
that at the same time his sensual nature also desires what is
good.
This
exposition of Schiller's is naturally quite philosophical and
abstract. Goethe greatly approved of the thought, but at the same
time it was quite clear to him that it could not lead to a solution
of the riddle of man. He is sure to have felt deeply for the
exceptional spiritual stature of the exposition, for what Schiller
achieved in these
Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man (Aesthetical Essays)
is indeed one of the best treatises of recent times. Goethe sensed the
genius and power of these thoughts. But at the same time he felt that
out of such thoughts nothing can come which in any way approaches the
being of man. The being of man is too rich to be fathomed by thoughts
such as these.
Schiller,
if I may say so, felt: Here I am in the intellectual age, but
intellectualism makes the human being unfree, for it imposes the
dictates of reason. So he sought a way out by means of aesthetic
creativity and aesthetic enjoyment. Goethe, though, had a feeling for
the infinitely abundant, rich content of human nature. He could not
be satisfied with Schiller's view, profound and spiritually powerful
though it was. He therefore felt the need to give his own expression
to the forces working together in the human being. Goethe, not only
by nature, but also because of his whole attitude, was incapable of
expressing these things in the form of abstract concepts. Instead,
under the influence of the kind of thoughts developed by Schiller, he
wrote his fairy-tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily. Here,
about twenty figures appear, all of which have something to do with
the forces of the human soul. They work together, not only as the
dictates of reason and the dictates of nature but as twenty different
impulses which, in the end, depict in the most manifold way something
signifying the rich nature of the being of man. We must take note of
the fact that Goethe gave up speaking about the being of man in
abstract concepts altogether. He felt bound to move away from
concepts.
In order
to characterize the relationship of Schiller to Goethe in connection
with the
Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man (Aesthetical Essays)
and the
fairy-tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily,
we have to say
the following: Goethe wrote the fairy-tale under the immediate
influence of Schiller's letters. He wanted to answer the same questions
from his point of view and out of his feelings. This can be proved.
Indeed I proved it historically long ago and it was seen to make sense.
[ Note 2 ]
So in order fully to characterize what took
place between these two personalities we should have to say: In olden
times when, in seeking knowledge, human beings caused beings from the
spiritual world to visit them; when they still worked in their
laboratories of knowledge in order to penetrate to the mysteries of
the universe, and when spiritual beings came into their laboratories
— just as the Earth Spirit and many another spirit visit Faust
— this was very different from how things are today. In those
days people felt themselves to be relatives of those spiritual beings
who visited them. They knew, although they were living on the earth
and had perforce to make use of the instrument of a physical body,
that before birth and after death they were nevertheless beings just
like those who visited them. They knew that for earthly life they had
sought out an abode which separated them from the spiritual world,
but that this spiritual world nevertheless visited them. They knew
that they were related to this spiritual world and this gave them an
awareness of their own being.
Suppose
Schiller had visited Goethe in 1794 or 1795 and had said: Here are my
letters on the aesthetic education of man, in which I have
endeavoured, out of modern intellectualism, to give people once more
the possibility of feeling themselves to be human beings; I have
sought the ideas which are necessary in order to speak about the true
being of man; these ideas are contained in these letters about
aesthetic education. Goethe would have read the letters and on next
meeting Schiller he would have been able to say: Well, my friend,
this is not bad at all; you have provided human beings once more with
a concept of their worth, but this is not really the way to do it;
man is a spiritual being, but just as spirits retreat from light, so
do they also retreat from concepts, which are nothing other than
another form of ordinary daylight; you will have to go about this in
a different manner; we shall have to go away from concepts and find
something else.
You can
find everything I have expressed here, in the form of direct speech,
in the correspondence between Goethe and Schiller. It is all there,
in hints and intimations. In the process, Goethe wrote his fairytale
of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, which was to depict how
the soul forces work in man. It is Goethe's admission that to speak
about man and the being of man it is necessary to rise up to the
level of pictures, images. This is the way to Imagination. Goethe was
simply pointing out the path to the world of Imaginations. This
fairy-tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily is so very
important because it shows that out of his own struggles, and also in his
Faust,
Goethe felt impelled, at a most important moment,
to the path towards Imaginations.
To
Goethe, the statement that thinking, feeling and will work together
in man would have seemed philosophical. He did not say this, but
instead he depicted a place where there were three kings, one of
gold, one of silver and one of iron. These images signify for him
something which cannot be expressed in concepts. We see that Goethe
is on the way to a life of Imagination. This brings us to one of the
most profound questions with which Goethe is concerned. He himself
did not care to discuss the true profundity of this question with
anyone. But we can see how this question concerned him, for it
appears in all sorts of places: What is the point of fathoming the
being of man by using the kind of thinking to which intellectualism
has led? What use would it be? This is a riddle of earthly evolution,
a riddle belonging to this epoch, for in this strong form it could
only have come into question in this epoch. Sometimes, in all its
profundity, it makes its appearance in paradoxical words. For
instance in
Faust
we read
The
lofty might
Of Science, still
From all men deeply hidden!
Who takes no thought,
To him 'tis brought,
'Tis given unsought, unbidden!
[ Note 3 ]
This is
extraordinarily profound, even if it is only the witch who says it:
‘The lofty might of Science, still from all men deeply hidden!
Who takes no thought’ — in other words to one who does
not think — 'tis given unsought, unbidden!’ However
much we think, the lofty might of science remains hidden from us. But
if we succeed in not thinking, then it is given unsought, unbidden.
So we should develop the might to not think, the skill to not think,
in order to achieve not science or knowledge — for this cannot
of course be achieved without thinking — but in order to
achieve the might of science or knowledge.
Goethe
knows that this might of science works in the human being. He knows
that it is at work, even in the little child who as yet does not
think. What I said in my book
The Spiritual Guidance of Man
[ Note 4 ]
was taken very much amiss. On the very first pages I
pointed out that if the human being had to fashion all the
wisdom-filled things found in the form of the human body by means of
his thoughts — consciously using the might which also holds
sway in science — then he would reach a ripe old age without
ever discovering those delicate formative forces which work with the
skill of a sculptor! The might of science is indeed needed in the
early years of childhood to transform this brain from a rather
formless lump into the sublime structure it has to achieve.
This is a
question with which Goethe is profoundly concerned. He of course does
not mean merely a dull absence of thinking. But he is quite sure that
the might of science can be discovered if we do not destroy our links
with it by means of our intellectual thinking. This is even the
reason why he makes Mephisto take Faust to the witches’
kitchen. Commentaries on these things always distort matters. We fail
to know Goethe if we do not link his purpose — in creating a
scene like that in the witches’ kitchen — with what we
sense to be the essence of his own being. Faust is presented with the
draught of youth. In one sense he is given a perfectly realistic
draught to drink. But the witch says:
See,
thus it's done!
Make ten of one,
And two let be,
Make even three,
And rich thou'lt be.
Cast o'er the four!
From five and six
(The witch's tricks)
Make seven and eight,
'Tis finished straight!
And nine is one,
And ten is none.
Now
imagine Goethe standing there. If you have a sense for his essential
being you cannot but ask: Why is the witch made to declaim this
witches’ multiplication table? Goethe did not like speaking
about these things, but if he were in the right frame of mind he
might reply: Well, the lofty might of science, still from all men
deeply hidden! Who takes no thought, to him 'tis brought. You
see, the power of thought fades when you are told, make ten of one,
and two let be, make even three, and rich thou'lt be, and so on.
Thinking comes to a standstill! So then you enter into a state of
mind in which the lofty might of science can be given to you without
any thinking. — Such things are always an aspect of Goethe's
Faust
and indeed of all Goethe's poetic work.
So Goethe
was faced with this question, which was for him something
exceptionally profound. What was it that Faust lacked, but gained
through his sojourn in the witches’ kitchen? What did he not
have before? If you think of Faust and how he could have been
Hamlet's teacher, disgusted by philosophy and jurisprudence, medicine
and theology, and turning instead to magic — if you imagine
what he is like even in the Easter scene, you will have to admit that
he lacks something which Goethe possessed. Goethe never got to the
bottom of this. He felt he was like Faust, but he had to say to
himself: Yes, all the things with which I have invested Faust are
also in me, but there is something else in me as well. Is it
something I am permitted to possess? What Faust does not have is
imagination, but Goethe did have imagination. Faust gains imagination
through the draught of youth which he receives in the witches’
kitchen. In a way Goethe answered his own question: What happens when
one wants to penetrate to the universal secrets with the help of the
imagination? For this was the most outstanding power possessed by
Goethe himself.
In his
youth he was not at all sure whether looking into the universal
secrets with the help of the imagination was anything more than a
step into nothingness. This is indeed the Faustian question. For
stark intellectuality lives only in mirror images. But once you come
to the imagination you are a step nearer to the human being's forces
of growth, to the forces which fill the human being. You approach,
even though only from a distance, the formative forces which, for
instance, shape the brain in childhood. There is then only one more
step from the ordinary imagination to the faculty of Imagination! But
for Goethe this was the all-important question.
Thus
Goethe takes Faust to the witches’ kitchen so that he can
extricate himself from that confounded capacity of thinking —
which may lead to science but does not lead to the might of science
— in order that he may be allowed to live in the realm of the
imagination. Thenceforward Faust develops his imagination. By means
of the draught in the witches’ kitchen, Goethe wins for Faust
the right to have an imagination. The rejuvenation he experiences is
simply a departure from the arid forces he had as, say, a thirty-five
year old professor, and a return to his youth where he takes into his
soul the youthful formative forces, the forces of growth. Where the
imagination flourishes, the youthful formative forces remain alive in
the soul.
All this
was present as a seed within Goethe, for he wrote the scene in the
witches’ kitchen as early as about 1788. It was there as a
seed, beginning to sprout and demanding a solution. But from Schiller
he received a new impulse, for now he was urged on to the path
towards the faculty of Imagination. Schiller was at first nowhere
near to seekingfor the faculty of Imagination. But in
Wallenstein (Wallenstein's Camp)
and in
Die Braut von Messina (Bride of Messina)
he sought the cosmic element.
[ Note 5 ]
And in
Die Jungfrau von Orleans (The Maid of Orleans)
he endeavoured to fathom the subconscious forces of the being of man.
The
immense profundity of the struggle going on may be seen in the
fragment
Demetrius
which Schiller left behind when he died.
The dramatic power of this fragment surpasses that of everything else
he wrote. In his desk there was also the draft of a play about the
Knights of Malta. This, too, if he had succeeded in writing it, would
probably have been truly magnificent. The whole principle of the
Order of the Knights of Malta — a spiritual order of knighthood
resembling that of the Templars — unfolds in their battle
against Sultan Suleiman. If Schiller had succeeded in depicting this,
he would have been forced to face the question: How will it be
possible to bring the vision of the spiritual world down into human
creative activity? For this question was indeed alive for him
already.
But
Schiller dies. Goethe no longer benefits from the stimulus he gave.
Later, stimulated by Eckermann — who was less of a spiritual
giant than Schiller, if I may put it this way — he finishes
Faust,
working on the second part from about 1824 until his
death. Shortly before his death he has the package containing the
work sealed. It is a posthumous work. We have considered this second
part of
Faust
from many different angles, and have discovered,
on the one hand, deeply significant, sublime insights into the
manifold mysteries of the spiritual world. Of course we can never
understand it entirely if we approach it from this one angle, and we
must seek ever higher viewpoints.
But there
is another angle too.
[ Note 6 ]
Goethe felt compelled to complete
this poetic work of
Faust.
Let us examine the development of
the philosophy of Faust and go back a stage further than we have done
so far. One of the stages was the figure of Cyprianus, about whom we
have already spoken. Before that, in the ninth century, the legend of
Theophilus was written down.
[ Note 7 ]
Theophilus is once again a
kind of Faust of the eighth, or ninth century. He makes a pact with
Satan and his fate very much resembles that of Faust.
Consider
Theophilus, this Faust of the ninth century, and consider the
legendary Faust of the sixteenth century, to whom Goethe refers. The
ninth century profoundly condemns the pact with the devil. Eventually
Theophilus turns to the Virgin Mary and is saved from all that would
have befallen him, had his pact with Satan been fulfilled. The
sixteenth century gives the Faust legend a Protestant slant. In the
Theophilus legend, incipient damnation redeemed by the Virgin Mary is
described. The sixteenth century protests against this. There is no
positive end; the story is told in a manner suitable for
Protestantism: Faust makes a pact with the devil and duly falls into
his clutches.
First
Lessing and then Goethe now protest in their turn. They cannot accept
that a character — acting with worldly powers and in the manner
of worldly powers — who gives himself over to the power of
Satan, entering into a pact with him, must of necessity perish as a
consequence of acting out of a thirst for knowledge. Goethe protests
against this Protestant conception of the Faust legend. He wants
Faust's redemption. He cannot abide by the conclusion of Part One, in
which he made concessions and let Faust perish. Faust must be saved.
So now Goethe leads us in sublime fashion through the experiences
depicted in Part Two. We see how the strong inner being of man
asserts itself: ‘In this, thy Nothing, may I find my All!’
[ Note 8 ]
We need only think of words such as these
with which a strong and healthy human nature confronts the one who
corrupts.
We see
Faust experiencing the whole of history up to the time of ancient
Greece. He must not be allowed to perish. Goethe makes every effort
to arrive at pictures — pictures which, though different in
form, are nevertheless taken from the Catholic cultus and Catholic
symbolism. If you subtract everything that is achieved out of
Goethe's own imaginative life, fuelled as it is by the great riches
of the tremendously rich lifetime's experience that was his —
if you subtract all this, you find yourself back with the legend of
Theophilus in the ninth century. For in the end it is the Queen of Heaven
[ Note 9 ]
who approaches in all her glory. If you subtract
all that specifically belongs to Goethe, you come back to the
Theophilus described by the saintly nun Hrosvitha — not
identical, of course, but nevertheless something which has not
succeeded in an independent approach to the poetic problem but still
has to borrow from what has gone before.
We see
how a personality as great as Goethe strives to find an entry to the
spiritual world. In the fairy-tale of the Green Snake and the
Beautiful Lily he is seeking for an Imagination which will make the
human being comprehensible. In
Faust
he is also seeking
for an Imagination, but he cannot achieve an independent Imagination
and has to draw on help from Catholic symbolism. Thus his final
tableau resembles the clumsy depiction by Hrosvitha in the ninth
century — though of course in Goethe's case it is obviously
executed by one of the greatest poets.
It is
necessary to indicate the intricate paths followed by the spiritual
and cultural history of humanity in order to arrive at an
understanding of all that is at work in this spiritual history. Only
then can we come to realize how the working of karma goes through
human history. You need only consider hypothetically that certain
things happened which did not actually happen — not in order to
correct history in retrospect, but in order to come to an
understanding of what is actually there. Imagine that Schiller, who
died young, had remained alive. The drama about the Knights of Malta
was in his desk and he was in the process of working on
Demetrius.
In collaboration with Goethe the highest
spirituality developed in him, living in them both at once. But the
thread broke. Look at the second part of
Wilhelm Meister,
look at
Elective Affinities,
and you will see what Goethe was
striving for but failed to achieve. Everywhere he was striving to
place the human being within a great spiritual context. He was unable
to do so, for Schiller had been taken from him.
All this
is an expression of the way in which the recent spiritual and
cultural evolution of mankind is striving for a certain goal, the
goal of seeking the human being in his relationship with the
spiritual world. But there are hindrances on every side. Perhaps
something like Goethe's
Faust
can be comprehended in all its
greatness only when we see what it does not contain, when we see the
course on which the whole spiritual evolution of mankind was set. We
cannot arrive at an understanding of the spiritual grandeur present
in human evolution by merely giving all sorts of explanations, and
exclaiming: What an incomparably great masterpiece! We can only reach
such an understanding by contemplating the striving of the whole
human spirit towards a particular goal of evolution. We are
forcefully confronted with this when we consider these things. And
then, in the nineteenth century, the thread breaks entirely! The
nineteenth century, so splendid in the realm of natural science,
sleeps as far as the realm of the spirit is concerned. The most that
can be achieved is that the highest wisdom of natural science leads
to fault-finding with a creation such as
Faust.
Goethe
needs Schiller, in order to place Faust — whom he first
depicted as a personality — within the context of an
all-embracing universal tableau. We can sense what Goethe might have
made out of the philosophy of Faust if he had not lost Schiller so
soon. Yet those who think about these things come along and say that
Faust
is an unfortunate work in which Goethe missed the point
entirely. Had he done the thing properly, Faust would have married
Gretchen and made an honest woman of her, and then gone on to invent
the electro-static machine and the air-pump. Then mankind would have
been presented with the proper Faust!
A great
aesthete, Friedrich Theodor Vischer,
[ Note 10 ]
said:
Faust
Part Two is rubbish. So he drafted a plan of what it ought to
have been. The result was a kind of improved Eugen Richter out of the
nineteenth century, a man of party politics, only a bit more crude
than were party men in the nineteenth century. It was not an
unimportant person but a very important person — for Friedrich
Theodor Vischer was such a one — who stated: The second part of
Faust is a piecemeal, fragmented construction of Goethe's old age!
Any
connection with a striving for the spirit was lost. The world slept
where spirituality was concerned. But out of this very situation the
people of today must find their tasks with regard to a new path to
the spiritual world. It is of course not possible for us to refer
back to:
The
lofty might
Of Science, still
From all men deeply hidden! Who takes no thought,
To him 'tis brought,
'Tis given unsought, unbidden!
We cannot
simply decide to stop thinking, for thinking is a power which came
with the fifth post-Atlantean period, and it is a power which must be
practised. But it must be developed in a direction which was actually
begun by Goethe in his fairy-tale of the Green Snake and the
Beautiful Lily. It must be practised in such a way that it leads to
Imagination. We must understand that the power of the intellect
chases away the spirit, but if the power of the intellect itself can
be developed to become the faculty of Imagination, then we can
approach the spirit once more. This is what we can learn by
considering in a living way what has taken place in the field we have
been discussing.
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