LECTURE THIRTEEN
Dornach,
26 February 1922
The two
previous lectures were devoted to considerations intended to show how
that tremendous change, which entered into the whole soul
constitution of civilized mankind with the fifteenth century —
that is, with the transition from the fourth to the fifth
post-Atlantean period — continued to have an effect on
outstanding personalities. Let me introduce today's lecture with a
brief summary of these preceding considerations. I showed how
intensely a personality such as Goethe sensed the continuing
vibrations of the great change, how he sensed that it was a concrete
experience to find intellectual reasoning entering into the human
soul. He sensed that it was necessary to come to terms with the
intellectual element of the soul and he also had an inkling of the
direct intercourse between human beings and the spiritual world which
had preceded this intellectual stage. Even though it was no longer as
it had been in the days of ancient atavistic clairvoyance, there was
nevertheless a kind of looking back to the time when human beings
knew that it was only possible for them to find real knowledge if
they stepped outside the world of the senses in order to see in some
way the spiritual beings who existed behind the sense-perceptible
world.
Goethe
invested the figure of his Faust with all these things sensed in his
soul. We saw how dissatisfied Faust is by stark intellectualism as
presented to him in the four academic faculties:
I've
studied now Philosophy
And Jurisprudence, Medicine,
And even, alas! Theology,
From end to end ...
He is
saying in different words: I have loaded my soul with the whole
complexity of intellectual science and here I now stand filled with
the utmost doubt; that is why I have devoted myself to magic.
Because
of dissatisfaction with the intellectual sciences, Goethe invests the
Faust figure with a desire to return to intercourse with the
spiritual world. This was quite clear in his soul when he was young,
and he wanted to express it in the figure of Faust. He chose the
Faust figure to represent his own soul struggles. I said that
although this is not the case with the historical Faust of the
legend, we could nevertheless find in Goethe's depiction of Faust
that professor who might have taught at Wittenberg in the sixteenth
or even in the seventeenth century, and who had, ‘Straight or
crosswise, wrong or right’, led his scholars by the nose
‘these ten years long’. This hypothesis allows us to see
how in this educational process there was a mixture of the new
intellectualism with something pointing back to ancient days when
intercourse with the spiritual world and with the spiritual powers of
creation was still possible for human beings.
I then
asked whether — apart from what is given us in the Faust drama
— we might also, in the wider environment, come up against the
effects of what someone like Faust could have taught in the
fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth centuries. And here we hit upon
Hamlet, about whom it could be said: The character which Shakespeare
created out of Hamlet — who in his turn he had taken from
Danish mythology and transformed — could have been a pupil of
Faust, one of those very students whom Faust had led by the nose
‘these ten years long’. We see Hamlet interacting with
the spiritual world. His task is given to him by the spiritual world,
but he is constantly prevented from fulfilling it by the qualities he
has acquired as a result of his intellectual education. In Hamlet,
too, we see the whole transition from the fourth to the fifth
post-Atlantean period.
Further,
I said that in the whole mood and artistic form of Shakespeare's
plays, that is, in the historical plays, we could find in the
creativity of the writer of Shakespeare's plays the twilit mood of
that time of transition. Then I drew your attention to the way in
which Goethe and Schiller in Central Europe had stood in their whole
life of soul within the dying vibrations of the transition, yet had
lacked, in a certain sense, the will to accept what the intellectual
view of the world had since then brought about in the life of human
beings. This led them back to Shakespeare, for in his work —
Hamlet,
Macbeth
and so on — they discovered the capacity
to approach the spiritual world; from his vantage point, they could
see into the world of spiritual powers which was now hidden from the
intellectual viewpoint.
Goethe
did this in his
Götz von Berlichingen
by taking the side
of the dying echoes of the old time of the fourth post-Atlantean
period and by rejecting what had come into being through
intellectualism. Schiller, in the dramas of his youth, especially in
Die Räuber (The Robbers),
goes back to that time — not by
pointing to the super-sensible world, but by endeavouring to be
entirely realistic, yet putting into the very words characterizing
Karl Moor something which echoes the luciferic element that is also
at work in Milton's
Paradise Lost.
[ Note 1 ]
In short, despite his realism, we detect a kind of return to a conception
of reality which allows the spiritual forces and powers to shine
through.
I
indicated further that, in the West, Shakespeare was in a position
— if I may put it like this — to work artistically in
full harmony with his social environment.
Hamlet
is the play most characteristic of Shakespeare. Here the action is
everywhere quite close to the spiritual world, as it is also in
Macbeth.
In
King Lear,
for instance, we see how he brings the
super-sensible world more into the human personality, into an abnormal
form of the human personality, the element of madness. Then, in the
historical dramas about the kings, he goes over more into realism
but, at the same time, we see in these plays a unique depiction of a
long drawn-out dramatic evolution influenced everywhere by the forces
of destiny, but culminating and coming to an end in the age of Queen
Elizabeth.
The thing
that is at work in Shakespeare's plays is a retrospective view of
older ages leading up to the time in which he lives, a time which is
seen to be accepted by him. Everything belonging to older times is
depicted artistically in a way which leads to an understanding of the
time in which he lives. You could say that Shakespeare portrays the
past. But he portrays it in such a way that he places himself in his
contemporary western social environment, which he shows to be a time
in which things can take the course which they are prone to take. We
see a certain satisfaction with regard to what has come about in the
external world. The intellectualism of the social order is accepted
by the person belonging to the external, physical earthly world, by
the social human being, whereas the artistic human being in
Shakespeare goes back to earlier times and portrays that aspect of
the super-sensible world which has created pure intellectualism.
Then we
see that in Central Europe this becomes an impossibility. Goethe and
Schiller, and before them Lessing, cannot place themselves within the
social order in a way which enables them to accept it. They all look
back to Shakespeare, but to that Shakespeare who himself went back
into the past. They want the past to lead to something different from
the present time in which they find themselves. Shakespeare is in a
way satisfied with his environment; but they are dissatisfied with
theirs.
Out of
this mood of spiritual revolution Goethe creates the drama of
Götz von Berlichingen,
and Schiller the dramas of his
youth. We see how the external reality of the world is criticized,
and how in the artistic realm there is an ebbing and flowing of
something that can only be achieved in ideas, something that can only
be achieved in the spirit. Therefore we can say: In Goethe and
Schiller there is no acceptance of the present time. They have to
comfort themselves, so far as external sense-perceptible reality is
concerned, with what works down out of the spiritual world.
Shakespeare in a way brings the super-sensible world down into the
sense-perceptible world. Goethe and Schiller can only accept the
sense-perceptible world by constantly turning their attention to the
spiritual world. In the dramas of Goethe and Schiller we have a
working together of the spiritual with the physical —
basically, an unresolved disharmony. I then said that if we were to
go further eastwards we would find that there is nothing on the earth
that is spiritual. The East of Europe has not created anything into
which the spirit plays. The East flees from the external working of
the world and seeks salvation in the spirit above.
I was
able to clothe all this in an Imagination by saying to you: Let us
imagine Faust as Hamlet's teacher, a professor in Wittenberg. Hamlet
sits at his feet and listens to him, after which he returns to the
West and accustoms himself once again to the western way of life. But
if we were to seek a being who could have gone to the East, we should
have had to look for an angel who had listened to Faust from the
spiritual world before going eastwards. Whatever he then did there
would not have resembled the deeds and actions of Hamlet on the
physical plane but would have taken place above human beings, in the
spiritual world.
Yesterday, I then described how, out of this mood, at the time when
he was making the acquaintance of Schiller, Goethe felt impelled to
bring the being of man closer to the spiritual world. He could not do
this theoretically, in the way Schiller, the philosopher, was able to
do in his aesthetic letters, but instead he was urged to enter the
realm of Imagination and write the fairy-tale of the Green Snake and
the Beautiful Lily. Then Schiller felt the urge to bring the external
reality of human life closer to the spirit — I might say
experimentally — in
Wallenstein (Wallenstein's Camp),
by letting a belief in the stars hold sway like a force of destiny over
the personality of Wallenstein, and in
Die Braut von Messina (Bride of Messina)
by letting a destiny
run its course virtually entwined with a belief in the stars. These
personalities were impelled ever and again to turn back to the time
when human beings still had direct intercourse with the spiritual
world.
Further,
I said that Goethe and Schiller lived at a time when it was not yet
possible to find a new entry into the spiritual world from out of a
modern soul constitution. Schiller in particular, with his
philosophical bent, had he lived longer and finished the drama about
the Knights of Malta, would have come to an understanding of how, in
an order like this, or like that of the Templars, the spiritual
worlds worked together with the deeds of human beings. But it was not
granted to Schiller to give the world the finished drama about the
Knights of Malta, for he died too soon. Goethe, on the other hand,
was unable to advance to a real grasp of the spiritual world, so he
turned back. We have to say that Goethe went back to Catholic
symbolism, the Catholic cultus, the cultus of the image, though he
did so in an essentially metamorphosed form. We cannot help but be
reminded of the good nun Hrosvitha's legend of Theophilus
[ Note 2 ]
from the ninth century, when Goethe in his turn allows
Faust to be redeemed in the midst of a Christianizing tableau.
Although his genius lets him present it in a magnificently grand and
artistic manner, we cannot but be reminded, in ‘The Eternal
Feminine bears us aloft’, of the Virgin Mary elevating the
ninth-century Theophilus.
An
understanding of these things gives us deep insight into the struggle
within intellectualism, the struggle in intellectualism which causes
human beings to experience inwardly the thought-corpse of what man is
before descending through birth — or, rather, through
conception — into his physical life on earth. The thoughts
which live in us are nothing but corpses of the spirit unless we make
them fruitful through the knowledge given by spiritual science.
Whatever we are, spiritually, up to the moment when earthly life
begins, dies as it enters our body, and we bear its corpse within us.
It is our earthly power of thought, the power of thought of our
ordinary consciousness.
How can
something that is dead in the spiritual sense be brought back to
life? This was the great question which lived in the souls of Goethe
and Schiller. They do not bring it to expression philosophically but
they sense it within their feeling life. And they compose their works
accordingly. They have the feeling: Something is dead if we remain
within the realm of the intellect alone; we must bring it to life. It
is this feeling which makes them struggle to return to a belief in
the stars and to all sorts of other things, in order to bring a
spiritual element into what they are trying to depict. It is
necessary for us to be aware of how the course of world evolution is
made manifest in such outstanding personalities, how it streams into
their souls and becomes the stuff of their struggles. We cannot
comprehend our present time unless we see that what this present time
must strive for — a new achievement of the spiritual world
— is the very problem which was of such concern for Goethe and
Schiller.
What
happened as a result of the great transition which took place in the
fifteenth century was something of which absolutely no account is
taken in ordinary history. It was, that the human being acquired an
entirely different attitude towards himself. But we must not
endeavour to capture this in theoretical concepts. We must endeavour
to trace it in what human beings sensed; we must find out how it went
through a preparation and how it later ran its course after the great
change had been fulfilled in its essential spiritual force.
There are
pointers to these things at crucial points in cultural evolution. See
how this comes towards us in Wolfram von Eschenbach's
Parzival.
[ Note 3 ]
You all know the story. You know how
crucial it was for the whole of Parzival's development that he first
of all received instruction from a kind of teacher as to how he was
to go through the world without asking too many questions. As a
representative of that older world order which still saw human beings
as having direct intercourse with the spiritual world, Gurnemanz says
to Parzival: Do not ask questions, for questioning comes from the
intellect, and the spiritual world flees from the intellect; if you
want to approach the spiritual world you must not ask questions.
But times
have changed and the transition begins to take place. It is announced
in advance: Even though Parzival goes back several more centuries,
into the seventh or eighth century, all this was nevertheless
experienced in advance in the Grail temple. Here, in a way, the
institutions of the future are already installed, and one of them is
that questions must be asked. The essential point is that with the
transition from the fourth to the fifth post-Atlantean period the
situation of the human being changes. Previously it was inappropriate
to ask questions because conditions held sway about which Goethe
speaks so paradoxically:
The
lofty might
Of Science, still
From all men deeply hidden!
Who takes no thought,
To him 'tis brought,
'Tis given unsought, unbidden!
In those
times it was right not to ask questions, for that would have driven
away the spirits! But in the age of the intellect the spiritual world
has to be rediscovered through the intellect and not by damping down
the processes of thought. The opposite must now come into play;
questions must be asked. As early as Parzival we find a portrayal of
the great change which brings it about in the fifth post-Atlantean
period that the longing for the spiritual world now has to be born
out of the human being in the form of questions to be formulated.
But there
is also something else, something very remarkable, which comes to
meet us in Parzival. I should like to describe it as follows. The
languages which exist today are far removed from their origins, for
they have developed as time has gone on. When we speak today —
as I have so often shown — the various combinations of sounds
no longer remind us of whatever these combinations of sounds denote.
We now have to acquire a more delicate sense for language in order to
experience in it all the things that it signifies. This was not the
case where the original languages of the human race were concerned.
In those days it was known that the combination of sounds itself
contained whatever was experienced in connection with the thing
depicted by those sounds. Nowadays poets seek to imitate this. Think,
for instance, of ‘Und es wallet und siedet und brauset und
zischt’.
[ Note 4 ]
Poetic language has here imitated
something of what the poet wants us to see externally. But this is
mere derived imitation. In olden times every single sound in language
was felt to have the most intimate connection with what was happening
all around. Today only some local dialects can lay claim to giving us
some sense for the connection between external reality and the words
spoken in dialect. However, language is still very close to our soul
— it is a special element in our soul.
It is
another consequence of the transition from the fourth to the fifth
post-Atlantean period that this has become deposited as something
very deeply sensed within the human soul, again a fact which is left
out of account by both philology and history. The fact that in the
fourth post-Atlantean period human beings lived more within their
language and that in the fifth post-Atlantean period this is no
longer the case, brings about a different attitude by human beings
towards the world. You can understand that human beings with their
ego are linked quite differently to what is going on around them if,
in using language, they go along with all the rushing of waves, the
thundering and lightning, and whatever else is happening out there.
This becomes ever more detached as the transition from the fourth to
the fifth post-Atlantean period progresses. The ego becomes more
inward, and language together with the ego also becomes more inward,
but at the same time less meaningful as regards external matters.
Such things are most certainly not perceived by the knowledge of
today, which has become so intellectual. There is hardly any concern
to describe such things. But if what is taking place in mankind is to
be correctly understood, they will have to be described.
Imagine what can come
into being. Imagine vividly to yourselves, here the fourth
post-Atlantean period, and here the fifth. The transition is of
course gradual, but for the sake of explanation I shall have to talk
in extremes. In the fourth post-Atlantean period you have here the
things of the world (green). The human being with his words, depicted
within him, here in red, is still connected with the things. You
could say he 'lives over' into the things through the medium of his
words. In the fifth post-Atlantean period the human being possesses
his words within his soul, separated off from the world.
Imagine
this clearly, even almost in grotesque detail. Looking at the human
being here in the fourth post-Atlantean period, you might say of him
that he still lives with the things. The things he does in the
outside world will proceed to take place in accordance with his
words. If you see one of these human beings performing a deed, and if
at the same time you hear how he describes the deed, there is a
harmony between the two. Just as his words are in harmony with
external things, so are his deeds in harmony with the words he
speaks. But if a human being in the fifth post-Atlantean period
speaks, you can no longer detect that his words resound in what he
does. What connection with the deed can you find today in the words:
I have chopped wood! In what is taking place out there in the
activity of chopping we can no longer sense in any way a connection
with the movement of the chopper. As a result, the connection with
the sounds of the words gradually disappears; they cease to be in
harmony with what is going on outside. We no longer find any
connection between the two. So then, if someone listens pedantically
to the words and actually does
what lies in the
words, the situation is quite different. Someone might say: I bake
mice. But if someone were actually to bake mice, this would seem
grotesque and would not be understood.
This was
sensed, and so it was said: People ought to consider what they
actually have in their soul in conjunction with what they do
externally; the relationship between the two would be like an owl
looking in a mirror! If someone were to do exactly what the words
say, it would be like holding up a mirror to an owl. Out of this, in
the second half of the fourteenth century,
Till Eulenspiegel
arose.
[ Note 5 ]
The owl's mirror is held up in front of mankind. It is not
Till Eulenspiegel
who has to look in the mirror. But because
Till Eulenspiegel
takes literally what people say with
their dry, abstract words, they suddenly see themselves, whereas
normally they do not see themselves at all. It is a mirror for the
owls because they can really see themselves in it.
Night has
fallen. In past times, human beings could see into the spiritual
world. And the activity of their words was in harmony with the world.
Human beings were eagles. But now they have become owls. The world of
the soul has become a bird of the night. In the strange world
depicted by
Till Eulenspiegel,
a mirror is held up before the
owl.
This is
quite a feasible way of regarding what appears in the spiritual
world. Things do have their hidden reasons. If we fail to take note
of the spiritual background, we also fail to understand history, and
with it the chief factor in humanity today. It is especially
important to depart from the usual external characterization of
everything. Look in any dictionary and see what absurd explanations
are given for Eulenspiegel! He cannot be understood without entering
into the whole process of cultural and spiritual life. The important
thing in spiritual science is to actually discover the spirit in
things, not in a way that entails a conceptual knowledge of a few
spiritual beings who exist outside the sense-perceptible world, but
in a way which leads us to an ability to see reality with spiritual
eyes.
The
change which took place, between the time when human beings felt
themselves to be close to the spiritual world and the later time when
they felt as though they had been expelled from that world, can be
seen in other areas too. Try to develop a sense for the profound
impulse which runs through something like the Parzival epic. See how
Parzival's mother dresses him in a simpleton's clothes because she
does not want him to grow up into the world which represents the new
world. She wants him to remain in the old world. But then he grows up
from the sense-perceptible world into the world of the spirit.
The
seventeenth century also possesses a kind of Parzival, a comical
Parzival, in which everything is steeped in comedy. In the
intellectualistic age, if one is honest, one cannot immediately
muster the serious attitude of soul which prevails in Parzival. But
the seventeenth century too, after the great change had taken place,
had its own depiction of a character who has to set out into the
world, lose himself in it, finally ending-up in solitude and finding
the salvation of his soul. This is Christoffel von Grimmelshausen's
Simplicissimus.
[ Note 6 ]
Look at the whole process of the
story. Of course you must take the whole tone into account, on the
one hand the pure, perhaps holy mood of Parzival, and on the other
the picaresque, comical mood. Consider Simplicissimus, the son of
well-to-do peasants in the Spessart region. In the Thirty
Years’ War their house is burnt down. The son has to flee, and
finds his way to a hermit in the forest who teaches him all kinds of
things, but who then dies. So here he is, abandoned in the world and
having to set off on his travels. He becomes immersed in all the
events and blows of fate offered by the Thirty Years’ War. He
arrives at the court of the governor of Hanau. Externally he has
learnt nothing, externally he is a pure simpleton; yet he is an
inwardly mature person for all that. But because externally he is a
pure simpleton the governor of Hanau says to himself: This is a
simpleton, he knows nothing; he is Simplicissimus, as naive as can
be. What shall I train him to be? I shall train him to be my court
fool.
But now
the external and the internal human being are drawn apart. The ego
has become independent in respect of the external human being. It is
just this that is shown in
Simplicissimus.
The external human
being in the external world, trained to be the court fool, is the one
who is considered by all and sundry to be a fool. But in his inner
being Simplicissimus in his turn considers all those who take him for
a fool to be fools themselves. For although he has not learnt a
thing, he is nevertheless far cleverer than all those who have made
him into a fool. He brings out of himself the other intellectuality,
the intellectuality that comes from the spirit, whereas what comes to
meet him from outside is the intellectuality that comes from
reasoning alone. So the intellectualists take him for a fool, and the
fool brings his intellectualism from the spiritual world and holds
those who take him for a fool to be fools themselves. Then he is
taken prisoner by some Croats, after which he roams about the world
undergoing many adventures, until finally he ends up once more at the
hermitage where he settles down to live for the salvation of his
soul.
The
similarity between Simplicissimus and Parzival has been recognized,
but the crucial thing is the difference in mood. What in Parzival's
case was still steeped in the mind-soul has now risen up into the
consciousness soul. Now caustic wit is at work, for the comical can
only have its origin in caustic wit. If you have a feel for this
change of mood, you will be able to discover — especially in
works which have a broader base than that of a single individuality
— what was going on in human evolution. And Christoffel von
Grimmelshausen did indeed secrete in
Simplicissimus
the whole mood, the whole habit of thought of his time. Similarly you can
in a way find the people as a whole composing stories, and gathering
together all the things which the soul, in the guise of an owl, can
see in the mirror, and which become all the tall tales found in
Till Eulenspiegel.
It would
be a good thing, once in a while, to go in more detail into all these
things, not only in order to characterize the various
interconnections. I can only give you isolated examples. To say
everything that could be said I should have to speak for years. But
this is not really what matters. What is crucial is to come closer to
a more spiritual conception of these things. We have to learn to know
how things which are presented to us purely externally are also
connected with the spirit. So we may say: That tremendous change
which took place in the transition from the fourth to the fifth
post-Atlantean period can be seen everywhere, vibrating through the
cultural and spiritual evolution of mankind. As soon as you step back
a bit from this turning- point of time, you come to see how all the
different phenomena point to the magnititude of the change.
Only by
taking the interconnections into account is it possible to understand
what lies hidden in the figures brought by spiritual and cultural
life out of the past and into the present. Take Lohengrin, the son of
Parzival. What does it mean that Elsa is forbidden to ask after his
name and origin? People simply accept this. Not enough deep thought
is given to the question as to why she is forbidden to ask, for
usually there are two sides to everything. Certainly this could also
be described differently, but one important aspect may be stated as
follows: Lohengrin is an ambassador of the Grail; he is Parzival's
son. Now what actually is the Grail community? Those who knew the
mystery of the Grail did not look on the Grail temple as a place
solely for the chosen knights of the Grail. They saw that all those
who were pure in heart and Christian in the true sense went to the
Grail while they slept — while they were between sleeping and
waking. The Grail was seen as the place where all truly Christian
souls gathered while they slept at night. There was a desire to be
apart from the earth. So those who were the rulers of the Grail also
had to be apart from earthly life. Lohengrin, the son of Parzival,
was one of these. Those who desired to work in accordance with the
Grail impulse had to feel themselves entirely within the spiritual
world. They had to feel that they belonged entirely to the spiritual
world and certainly not at all to the earthly world. In a certain
sense you could say that they had to drink the draught of
forgetfulness.
Lohengrin
is sent down from the Grail castle. He unites with Elsa of Brabant,
that is with the people of Brabant. In the train of Heinrich I he
sets out to fight the Hungarians. In other words, at the instigation
of the Grail he carries out important impulses of world history. The
strength he has from the Grail temple enables him to do this. When we
go back to the fourth post-Atlantean period we find that all these
things are different. In those days spiritual impulses played their
part together with external impulses that could be comprehended by
the intellect. This is hardly noticeable in the way history is told
today.
We speak
quite rightly today of meditative formulae, simple sentences which
work in the human being's consciousness through their very
simplicity. How many people today understand what is meant when
history tells us that those required to take part in the Crusades
— they took place in the fourth post-Atlantean period —
were provided with the meditative formula ‘God wills it’
and that this formula worked on them with spiritual force. ‘God
wills it’ was a kind of social meditation. Keep a look out for
such things in history; you will find many! You will find the origins
of the old mottos. You will discover how the ancient titled families
set out on conquering expeditions under such mottos, thus working
with spiritual means, with spiritual weapons. The most significant
spiritual weapons of all were used by knights of the Grail, such as
Lohengrin. But he was only able to use them if he was not met with
recollections of his external origins, his external name, his
external family. He had to transport himself into a realm in which he
could be entirely devoted to the spiritual world and in which his
intercourse with the external world was limited to what he perceived
with his senses, devoid of any memories. He had to accomplish his
deeds under the influence of the draught of forgetfulness. He was not
allowed to be reminded. His soul was not permitted to remember: This
is my name and I am a scion of this or that family. So this is why
Elsa of Brabant is not allowed to question him. When she does, he is
forced to remember. The effect on his deeds is the same as if his
sword had been smashed.
If we go
back beyond the time when everything became intellectual, so that
people also clothed what had gone before in intellectual concepts,
imagining that everything had always been as they knew it — if
we go back beyond what belongs to the age of the intellect, we find
the spiritual realm working everywhere in the social realm. People
took the spiritual element into account, for instance, in that they
took moral matters just as much into account as physical
medicines.
In the
age of the intellect, in which all people belong only to the
intellect, whatever would they think if they found that moral
elements, too, were available at the chemist's! Yet we need only go
back a few centuries prior to the great change. Read
Der arme Heinrich
by Hartmann von Aue,
[ Note 7 ]
who was a contemporary
of Wolfram von Eschenbach. Before you stands a knight, a rich knight,
who has turned away from God, who in his soul has lost his links with
the spiritual world, and who thus experiences this moment of atheism
which has come over him as a physical illness, a kind of leprosy.
Everyone avoids him. No physician can cure him. Then he meets a
clever doctor in Salerno who tells him that no physical medicine can
do him any good. His only hope of a cure lies in finding a pure
virgin who is prepared to be slain for his sake. The blood of a pure
virgin can cure him of his illness. He sells all his possessions and
lives alone on a smallholding cared for by the tenant farmer. The
farmer has a daughter. She falls in love with the leprous knight,
discovers what it is that alone can cure him, and decides to die for
him. He goes with her to the doctor in Salerno. But then he starts to
pity her, preferring to keep his illness rather than accept her
sacrifice. But even her willingness to make the sacrifice is enough.
Gradually he is healed.
We see
how the spirit works into cultural life, we see how moral impulses
heal and were regarded as healing influences. Today the only
interpretation is: Ah, well, perhaps it was a coincidence, or maybe
it is just a tale. Whatever we think of individual incidents, we
cannot but point out that, during the time which preceded the
fifteenth century, soul could work on soul much more strongly than
was the case later; what a soul thought and felt and willed worked on
other souls. The social separation between one human being and
another is a phenomenon of intellectualism. The more intellectualism
flourishes and the less an effort is made to find what can work
against it — namely the spiritual element — the more will
this intellectualism divide one individuality from another.
This had
to come about; individualism is necessary. But social life must be
found out of individualism. Otherwise, in the ‘social
age’ all people will do is be unsociable and cry out for
Socialism. The main reason for the cry for Socialism is that people
are unsocial in the depths of their soul. We must take note of the
social element as it comes towards us in works such as Hartmann von Aue's
Der arme Heinrich.
It makes its appearance in cultural
works in which it can be sensed quite clearly through the mood. See
how different is the mood in
Der arme Heinrich.
You cannot
call it sentimental, for sentimentality only arose later when people
found an unnatural escape from intellectualism. The mood is in a way
pious; it is a mood of spirituality. To be honest about the same
matters in a later age you have to fall back on the element of
comedy. You have to tell your story as Christoffel von Grimmelshausen
did in
Simplicissimus,
or as the people as a whole did in
Till Eulenspiegel.
This
sense of having been thrown out of the world is found everywhere, not
only in poetic works arising out of the folk element. Wherever it
appears, you find that what is being depicted is a new attitude of
the human being towards himself. From an entirely new standpoint he
asks: What am I, if I am a human being? This vibrates through
everything. So from the new intellectual standpoint the question is
asked over and over again: What is the human being? In earlier times
people turned to the spiritual world. They truly sought what Faust
later seeks in vain. They turned to the spiritual world when they
wanted to know: What actually is the human being? They knew that
outside this physical life on earth the human being is a spirit. So
if he wants to discover his true being, which lives in him also in
physical, earthly life, then he will have to turn to the spiritual
world. Yet more and more human beings are failing to do this very
thing.
In
Faust
Goethe still hints: If I want to know the spirit, I must
turn to the spiritual world. But it does not work. The Earth Spirit
appears, but Faust cannot recognize it with his ordinary knowledge.
The Earth Spirit says to him: ‘Thou'rt like the Spirit which
thou comprehendest, not me!’
[ Note 8 ]
Faust has to turn
away and speak to Wagner. In Wagner he then sees the spirit which he
comprehends. Faust, ‘image of the Godhead’, cannot
comprehend the Earth Spirit. So Goethe still lived in an age which
strove to find the being of man out of the spiritual world. You see
what came once Goethe had died. Once again people wanted to know what
the human being is, this time on the basis of intellectualism. Follow
the thread: People cannot turn to the spiritual world in order to
discover what the human being is. In themselves, equally, they fail
to find the answer, for language has meanwhile become an owl in the
soul. So they turned to those who depicted olden times at least in an
external fashion. What do we find in the nineteenth century?
[ Note 9 ]
In 1836 Jeremias Gotthelf:
Bauernspiegel;
in 1839 Immermann:
Oberhof, Die drei Mahlen, Schwarzwalder Bauern
geschichten;
George Sand:
La Petite Fadette;
in 1847 Grigorovich:
Unhappy Anthony;
in 1847-51 Turgeniev:
Sportsman's Sketches.
We have
here the longing to find in simple people the answer to the question:
What is the human being? In olden times you turned to the spiritual
world. Now you turned to the peasant. During the course of two
decades the whole world develops a longing to write village stories
in order to study the human being. Because people cannot recognize
themselves, at best looking in the mirror as if they are owls, they
turn to simple folk instead. What they can prove in every detail,
from Jeremias Gotthelf to Turgeniev, is that everything is striving
to get to know the human being. In all these village stories,
in all these simple tales, the unconscious endeavour is to achieve a
knowledge of man. From this kind of viewpoint spiritual and cultural
life can become comprehensible.
This is
what I wanted to show you in these three lectures, in order to
illustrate the transition from the fourth to the fifth post-Atlantean
period. It is not enough to describe this transition with a few
abstract concepts — which is what was naturally done at first.
Our task is to illumine the whole of reality with the light of the
spirit through Anthroposophy. These lectures have beenan example of
this.
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