III
I should like
during these few days to say something rather especially for the
friends who have come here to attend the Easter Course,
[
Easter as a Chapter in the Mystery-Wisdom of Man.
(on-line as: The Easter Festival in Relation to the Mysteries)
Dornach, 19th–22nd April, 1924.]
and who have not heard much of what has connections. Those who were
present at the lectures before Easter may find some repetitions but
the circumstances make this inevitable.
I have been laying
particular emphasis on the fact that study of the historical
development of the life of mankind must lead on to study of the human
being himself. All our endeavours aim in the direction of placing man
at the centre of our study of the world. Two ends are attained
thereby. Firstly, it is only in this way that the world can be
studied as it truly is. For all that man sees spread around him in
nature is only a part — gives as it were one picture of the
world only: and to limit study of the world to this realm of nature
is like studying a plant without looking beyond root, green leaf and
stem, and ignoring flower and fruit. This kind of study can never
reveal the whole plant. Imagine a creature that is always born at a
particular time of the year, lives out its life during a period when
the plant grows as far as the green leaves and no further, dies
before the plant is in blossom and appears again only when roots and
green leaves are there. — Such a creature would never have
knowledge of the whole plant; it would regard the plant as something
that has roots and leaves only.
The materialistic
mind of to-day has got itself into a similar position as regards its
approach to the world. It considers only the broad foundations of
life, not what blossoms forth from the totality of earthly evolution
and earthly existence — namely, man himself. The real way of
approach must be to study nature in her full extent, but in such a
way as all the time to realise that she must needs create man out of
herself. We shall then see man as the microcosm he truly is, as the
concentration of all that is to be found outspread in the far spaces
of the cosmos.
As soon, however,
as we study history from this point of view, we are no longer able to
regard the human being as a resultant of the forces of history, as a
single, self-contained being. We must take account of the fact that
he passes through different earthly lives: one such life occurs at an
earlier time and another at a later. This very fact places man at the
centre of our studies, but now in his whole being, as an
individuality. This is the one end that is attained when we look in
this way at nature and at history.
The other is this.
— The very fact of placing man at the centre of study, makes
for humility. Lack of humility is due to nothing else than lack of
knowledge. A penetrating, comprehensive knowledge of man in his
connection with the events of the world and of history will certainly
not lead to excessive self-esteem; far rather it will lead the human
being to look at himself objectively. It is precisely when a man does
not know himself that there rise up in him those feelings which have
their source in the unknown regions of his being. Instinctive,
emotional impulses make themselves felt. And it is these instinctive,
emotional impulses, rooted as they are in the subconscious, that make
for arrogance and pride. On the other hand, when consciousness
penetrates farther and farther into those regions where man comes to
know himself and to recognise how in the sequence of historical
events he belongs to the whole wide universe — then, simply by
virtue of an inner law, humility will unfold in him. The recognition
of his place in universal existence invariably calls forth humility,
never arrogance. All genuine study pursued in Anthroposophy has its
ethical side, carries with it an ethical impulse.
Unlike modern
materialism, Anthroposophy will not lead to a conception of life in
which ethics and morality are a mere adjunct; ethics and morality
emerge, as if inwardly impelled, from all genuine anthroposophical
study.
I want now to show
you by concrete examples, how the fruits of earlier epochs of history
are carried over into later epochs through human beings themselves. A
certain very striking example now to be given, is associated with
Switzerland.
Our gaze falls
upon a man who lived about a hundred years before the founding of
Christianity. — I am relating to you what can be discovered
through spiritual scientific investigation. — At this period in
history we find a personality who is a kind of slave overseer in
southern Europe.
We must not
associate with a slave overseer of those times the feelings that the
word immediately calls up in us now. Slavery was the general custom
in days of antiquity, and at the time of which I am speaking it was
essentially mild in form; the overseers were usually educated men.
Indeed the teachers of important personages might well be slaves, who
were often versed in the literary and scientific culture of the time.
So you see, we must acquire sounder ideas about slavery —
needless to say, without defending it in the least degree —
when we are considering this aspect of the life of
antiquity.
We find, then, a
personality whose calling it is to be in charge of a number of slaves
and to apportion their tasks. He is an extraordinarily lovable man,
gentle and kind-hearted and when he is able to have his own way he
does everything to make life easier for the slaves. In authority over
him, however, is a rough, somewhat brutal personality. This man is,
as we should say nowadays, his superior officer. And this superior
officer is responsible for many things that arouse resentment and
animosity in the slaves. When the personality of whom I am speaking
— the slave overseer — passes through the gate of death,
he is surrounded in the time between death and a new birth by all the
souls who were thus united with him on earth, the souls of the slaves
who had been in his charge. But as an individuality he is very
strongly connected with the one who was his superior officer. The
fact that he, as the slave overseer, was obliged to obey this
superior officer — for in accordance with the prevailing
customs of the time he always did obey him, though often very
unwillingly — this fact established a strong karmic tie between
them. But a deep karmic tie was also established by the relationship
that had existed in the physical world between the overseer and the
slaves, for in many respects he had been their teacher as
well.
We must thus
picture a further life unfolding between death and rebirth among all
these individualities of whom I have spoken.
Afterwards,
somewhere about the 9th century A.D.,
the individuality of the slave
overseer is born again, in Central Europe, but now as a woman, and
moreover, because of the prevailing karmic connection, as the wife of
the former superior officer who reincarnated as a man. The two of
them live together in a marital relationship that makes karmic
compensation for the tie that had been established away back in the
first century before the founding of Christianity, when they had
lived as subordinate and superior officers respectively. The superior
officer is now, in the 9th century A.D.,
in a commune in Central Europe where
the inhabitants live on very intimate terms with one another; he
holds some kind of official position in the commune, but he is
everyone's servant and comes in for plenty of knocks and
abuse.
Investigating the
whole matter further, we find that the members of this rather
extensive commune are the slaves who once had their tasks allotted to
them in the way I told you. The superior officer has now become as it
were the servant of them all, and has to experience the karmic
fulfilment of many things which, through the instrumentality of the
overseer, his brutality inflicted upon these
people.
The wife of this
man (she is the reincarnated overseer), suffers with a kind of silent
resignation under all the impressions made by the ever-discontented
superior officer in his new incarnation, and one can follow in detail
how karmic destiny is here being fulfilled.
But we see, too,
that this karma is by no means completely adjusted. A part only is
adjusted, namely the karmic relationship between the slave overseer
and his superior officer. This has been lived out and is essentially
finished in the medieval incarnation in the 9th century; for the wife
has paid off what her soul had experienced owing to the brutality of
the man who had once been the superior officer and is now her
husband.
This woman, the
reincarnation of the former slave overseer, is born again, and what
happens now is that the greater number of the souls who had once been
slaves and had then come together again in the large commune —
souls in whose destiny this individuality had twice played a part
— came again as the children whose education this same
individuality in his new incarnation has deeply at heart. For in this
incarnation he comes as Pestalozzi. And we see how
Pestalozzi's infinite humanitarianism, his enthusiasm for
education in the 18th century, is the karmic fulfilment in relation
to human beings with whom he had already twice been connected —
the karmic fulfilment of the experiences and the sufferings of
earlier incarnations.
What comes to view
in single personalities can be clear and objectively intelligible to
us only when we are able to see the present earthly life against the
background of earlier earthly lives.
Traits that go
back not merely to the previous incarnation, but often to the one
before that, and even earlier, sometimes show themselves in a man. We
see how what has been planted, as it were, in the single
incarnations, works its way through with a certain inner, spiritual
necessity, inasmuch as the human being lives not only through earthly
lives but also through lives between death and a new
birth.
In this
connection, the study of a life of which I spoke to those of you who
were in Dornach before Easter, is particularly striking and
interesting — the life of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer.
Conrad Ferdinand
Meyer presents a very special enigma to those who study the inner
aspect of his life and at the same time greatly admire him as a poet.
There is such wonderful harmony of form and style in his poems that
we cannot help saying: what lives in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer always
hovers a little above the earthly — in respect of the style and
also in respect of the whole way of thinking and feeling. And if we
steep ourselves in his writings we shall perceive how he is immersed
in an element of spirit-and-soul that is always on the point of
breaking away from the physical body. Study the nobler poems, also
the prose-poems, of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer and you will say to
yourselves: There is evidence of a perpetual urge to get right away
from connection with the physical body. As you know, in his
incarnation as Conrad Ferdinand Meyer, it was his lot to fall into
pathological states, when the soul-and-spirit separated from the
physical body to a high degree, so much so that insanity ensued, or
at any rate conditions resembling insanity. And the strange thing is
that his most beautiful works were produced during periods when the
soul-and-spirit had loosened from the physical
body.
Now when we try to
investigate the karmic connections running through the life of Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer, we are driven into a kind of confusion. We cannot
immediately find our bearings. We are led, first, to the 6th
century A.D., and then
again we are thrown back into the 19th, into the Conrad Ferdinand
Meyer incarnation. The very circumstances we are observing, mislead
us. I want you to realise the extraordinary difficulty of a genuine
search for knowledge in this domain. If you are satisfied with
phantasy, then it is naturally easy, for you can make things fit in
as you like. For one who is not satisfied with phantasy but carries
his investigation to the point where he can rely upon the faculties
of his own soul not to play him false — for him it is no easy
matter, especially when he is investigating these things in
connection with an individuality as complex as that of Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer. In investigating karmic connections through a number
of earthly lives it is no great help to look at the particularly
outstanding characteristics. What strikes you most forcibly in a man,
what you see at once when you meet him or learn of him in history
— these characteristics are, for the most part, the outcome of
his earthly environment. A man as he confronts us is a product of his
earthly environment to a far greater extent than is generally
believed. He takes in through education what is present in his
earthly environment. It is the more intangible, more intimate traits
of a man which taken quite concretely, lead back through the life
between death and a new birth into former earthly
lives.
In these
investigations it may be more important to observe a man's
gestures or some habitual mannerism than to consider what he has
achieved perhaps as a figure of renown. The mannerisms of a person,
or the way he will invariably answer you — not so much
what he answers but how he answers —
whether, for example, his first tendency is always to be negative and
only when he has no other alternative, to agree, or whether again in
quite a good-humoured way he is rather boastful ... these are the
kind of traits that are important and if we pay special attention to
them they become the centre of our observations and disclose a great
deal. One observes, for instance, how a man stretches out his hand to
take hold of things; one makes an objective picture of it and then
works upon it in the manner of an artist; and at length one finds
that it is no longer the mere gesture that one is contemplating, but
around the gesture the figure of another human being takes
shape.
The following may
happen. — There are men who have a habit, let us say, of making
a certain movement of the arms. I have known men who simply could not
begin to do anything without first folding their arms. If one
visualises such a gesture quite objectively, but with inner, artistic
feeling, so that it stands before one as a plastic, pliable form,
then one's attention is directed away from the man who is
actually making the gesture. But the gesture does not remain as it
is; it grows into another figure which is an indication, at least, of
something in the previous incarnation or in the one before that. It
may well be that the gesture is now used in connection with something
that was not present at all in the previous incarnation — let
us say it is a gesture used in picking up a book, or some similar
action. Nevertheless, it is for gestures and habits of this kind that
we must have an eye if we are to keep on the right
track.
Now in the case of
an individuality like Conrad Ferdinand Meyer, the point of
significance is that while he is creating his poems there is always a
tendency to a loosening of the soul-and-spirit from the physical
body. There we have a starting-point but at the same time a point
where we may easily go astray.
We are led, as I
told you, to the 6th century A.D.
We have the feeling: that is where he
belongs. And moreover we find a personality who lived in Italy, who
experienced a very varied destiny in that incarnation in Italy, who
indeed lived a kind of double existence. On the one side he was
devoted with the greatest enthusiasm to an art that has almost
disappeared in this later age, but was then in its prime; it is only
in the remaining examples of mosaics that we are still able to
glimpse this highly developed art. And the individuality to whom we
are first impelled, lived in this milieu of art in Italy at the end
of the 5th and the beginning of the 6th century
A.D. — That is what presents itself,
to begin with.
But now this whole
picture is obscured, and again we are thrown back to Conrad Ferdinand
Meyer. The darkness that obscures vision of the man of the 6th
century now overshadows the picture of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer in the
19th; and we are compelled to look very closely into what Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer does in the 19th century.
Our attention is
then drawn to the fact that his tale Der Heilige (The
Saint), deals with Thomas à Becket, the Chancellor of Henry II
of England. We feel that here is something of peculiar importance.
And we also have the feeling that the impression received from the
earlier incarnation has driven us up against this particular deed of
Conrad Ferdinand Meyer. But now again we are driven back into the 6th
century, and can find there no explanation of this. And so we are
thrown to and fro between the two incarnations, the problematic one
in the 6th century and the Conrad Ferdinand Meyer incarnation —
until it dawns upon us that the story of Thomas à Becket as told
in history, came up in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer's mind owing to a
certain similarity with an experience he had himself undergone in the
6th century, when he went to England from Italy as a member of a
Catholic mission sent by Pope Gregory. There we have the second
aspect of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer in his previous incarnation. On the
one side he was an enthusiastic devotee of the art that subsequently
took the form of mosaic. — Hence his talent for form, in all
its aspects. On the other side, however, he was an impassioned
advocate of Catholicism, and for this reason accompanied the mission.
The members of this mission founded Canterbury, where the bishopric
was then established.
The individuality
who afterwards lived in the 19th century as Conrad Ferdinand Meyer
was murdered by an Anglo-Saxon courtier, in circumstances that are
extraordinarily interesting. There was something of legal subtlety
and craftiness, albeit still in the rough, about the events connected
at that time with the murder.
You know very
well, my dear friends, how even in ordinary life the sound of
something remains with you. You may once have heard a name without
paying any particular attention to it ... but later on a whole
association of ideas is called up in your mind when this name is
mentioned. In a similar way, through the peculiar circumstances of
this man's connection with what later became the archbishopric
of Canterbury — the town of Canterbury, as I said, was founded
by the mission of which he was a member — these experiences
lived on, lived on, actually, in the sound of the name Canterbury. In
the Conrad Ferdinand Meyer incarnation the sound of this name —
Canterbury — came to life again, and by association of ideas
his attention was called to Thomas à Becket, (the Lord
Chancellor of Canterbury under Henry Plantagenet) who was
treacherously murdered. At first, Thomas à Becket was a
favourite of Henry II, but was afterwards murdered, virtually through
the instigation of the King, because he would not agree to certain
measures.
These two
destinies, alike in some respects and unlike in others, brought it
about that Conrad Ferdinand Meyer transposed, as it were, into quite
different figures taken from history, what he had himself experienced
in an earlier incarnation in the 6th century — experienced in
his own body, far from what was at that time his native land. Just
think how interesting this is! Once we have grasped it, we are no
longer driven hither and thither between the two incarnations. And
then, because again in the 19th century, Conrad Ferdinand Meyer has a
kind of double nature, we see how his soul-and-spirit easily
separates from the physical. Because he has this double nature, the
place of his own, actual experiences is taken by another experience
in some respects similar to it ... just as pictures often change in
the play of human imagination. In a man's ordinary imagination
during an earthly life, the picture changes in such a way that
imagination weaves in freedom; in the course of many earthly lives it
may be that some historical event which is connected with the person
in question as a picture only, takes the place of the actual
event.
Now this
individuality whose experience in an earlier life worked on through
two lives between death and rebirth and then came to expression in
the story Thomas à Becket, the Saint, —
this individuality had had
another intermediate earthly life as a woman at the time of the
Thirty Years' War. We have only to envisage the chaos
prevailing all over Central Europe during the Thirty Years' War
and it will not be difficult to understand the feelings and emotions
of an impressionable, sensitive woman living in the midst of the
chaos as the wife of a pedantic, narrow-minded man. Wearying of life
in the country that was afterwards Germany, he emigrated to
Graubünden in Switzerland, where he left the care of house and
home to his wife, while he spent his time sullenly loafing about. His
wife, however, had opportunity to observe many, many things. The
wider historical perspective, no less than the curious local
conditions at Graubünden, worked upon her; the experiences she
underwent, experiences that were always coloured by her life with the
bourgeois, commonplace husband, again sank down into the foundations
of the individuality, and lived on through the life between death and
a new birth. And the experiences of the wife at the time of the
Thirty Years' War are imaginatively transformed in Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer's tale, Jürg Jenatsch.
Thus in the soul
of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer we have something that has gathered
together out of the details of former incarnations. As a man of
letters, Conrad Ferdinand Meyer seems to be an individuality complete
in itself, for he is an artist with very definite and fixed
characteristics. But in point of fact it is this that actually causes
confusion, because one's attention is immediately directed away
from these very definite characteristics to the elusive, double
nature of the man.
Those who have
eyes only for Conrad Ferdinand Meyer the poet, the famous author of
all these works, will never come to know anything of his earlier
lives. We have to look through the poet to the man; and then, in the
background of the picture, there appear the figures of the earlier
incarnations.
Paradoxical as it
will seem to the modern mind, the only way in which human life can be
understood in its deeper aspect is to centre our study of the course
of world-events around observation of man himself in history. And man
cannot be taken as belonging to one age of time only, as living in
one earthly life only. In considering man, we must realise how the
individuality passes from one earthly life to another, and how in the
interval between death and a new birth he works upon and transforms
that which has taken its course more in the subconscious realm of
earthly life but for all that is connected with the actual shaping of
the destiny. For the shaping of destiny takes place, not in the clear
consciousness of the intellect, but in what weaves in the
subconscious.
Let me now give
you another example of how things work over in history through human
individualities themselves.
In the first
century A.D., about a
hundred years after the founding of Christianity, we have an
exceedingly significant Roman writer in the person of
Tacitus. In all his work,
and very particularly in his ‘Germania’, Tacitus proves
himself a master of a concise, clear-cut style; he arrays the facts
of history and geographical details in wonderfully rounded sentences
with a genuinely epigrammatic ring. We may also remember how he, a
man of wide culture, who knew everything considered worth knowing at
that time — a hundred years after the founding of Christianity
— makes no more than a passing allusion to Christ, mentioning
Him as someone whom the Jews crucified but saying that this was of no
great importance. Yet in point of fact, Tacitus is one of the
greatest Romans.
Tacitus had a
friend, the personality known in history as Pliny the Younger,
himself the author of a number of letters and an ardent admirer of
Tacitus.
To begin with, let
us consider Pliny the Younger. He passes through the gate of death,
through the life between death and a new birth, and is born again in
the 11th century as a Countess of Tuscany in Italy, who is married to
a Prince of Central Europe. The Prince has been robbed of his lands
by Henry the Black of the Frankish-Salic dynasty and wants to secure
for himself an estate in Italy. This Countess Beatrix owns the Castle
of Canossa where, later on, Henry IV, the successor of Henry III the
Black, was forced to make his famous penance to Pope
Gregory.
Now this Countess
Beatrix is an extraordinarily alert and active personality, taking
keen interest in all the conditions and circumstances of the time.
Indeed she cannot help being interested, for Henry III who had driven
her husband, Gottfried, out of Alsace into Italy before his marriage
to her, continued his persecution. Henry is a man of ruthless energy,
who overthrows the Princes and Chieftains in his neighbourhood one
after the other, does whatever he has a mind to do, and is not
content when he has persecuted someone once, but does it a second
time, when the victim has established himself somewhere else. —
As I said, he was a man of ruthless vigour, a ‘great’ man
in the medieval style of greatness. And when Gottfried had
established himself in Tuscany, Henry was not content with having
driven him out but proceeded to take the Countess back with him to
Germany.
All these
happenings gave the Countess an opportunity of forming a penetrating
view of conditions in Italy, as well as of those in Germany. In her
we have a person who is strongly representative of the time in which
she lives, a woman of keen observation, vitality and energy, combined
with largeness of heart and breadth of vision.
When, later on,
Henry IV was forced to go on his journey of penance to Canossa,
Beatrix's daughter Mathilde had become the owner of the Castle.
Mathilde was on excellent terms with her mother whose qualities she
had inherited, and was, in fact, the more gifted of the two. They
were splendid women who because of all that had happened under Henry
III and Henry IV, took a profound interest in the history of the
times.
Investigation of
these personalities leads to this remarkable result: the Countess
Beatrix is the reincarnated Pliny the Younger, and her daughter
Mathilde is the reincarnated Tacitus. Thus Tacitus, a writer
of history in olden times, is now an observer of history on a
wide scale — (when a woman has greatness in her she is often wonderfully
gifted as an observer) — and not only an observer but a direct
participant in historical events. For Mathilde is actually the owner
of Canossa, the scene of issues that were immensely decisive in the
Middle Ages. We find the former Tacitus now as an observer of
history.
A deep intimacy
develops between these two — mother and daughter — and
their former work in the field of authorship enables them to grasp
historical events with great perspicacity; subconsciously and
instinctively they become closely linked with the world-process, as
it takes its course in nature as well as in
history.
And now, still
later on, the following takes place. — Pliny the Younger, who
in the Middle Ages was the Countess Beatrix, is born again in the
19th century, in a milieu of romanticism. He absorbs this romanticism
— one cannot exactly say with enthusiasm, but with aesthetic
pleasure. He has on the one hand this love for the romantic, and on
the other — due to his family connections — a rather
academic style; he finds his way into an academic style of writing.
It is not, however, in line with his character. He is always wanting
to get out of it, always wanting to discard this
style.
This personality
(the reincarnated Pliny the Younger and the Countess Beatrix) happens
on one occasion brought about by destiny, to be visiting a friend,
and takes up a book lying on the table, an English book. He is
fascinated by its style and at once feels: The style I have had up
till now and that I owe to my family relationships, does not really
belong to me. This is my style, this is the style I need.
It is wonderful; I must acquire it at all costs.
As a writer he
becomes an imitator of this style — I mean, of course, an
artistic imitator in the best sense, not a pedantic one — an
imitator of this style in the artistic, aesthetic sense of the word.
And do you know, the book he opened at that moment, reading it right
through as quickly as he possibly could and then afterwards reading
everything he could find of the author's writings — this
book was Emerson's Representative Men.
And the person in question adopted its
style, immediately translated two essays from it, conceived a deep
veneration for the author, and was never content until he was able to
meet him in real life.
This man, who
really only now found himself, who for the first time found the style
that belonged to him in his admiration for the other — this
reincarnation of Pliny the Younger and of the Countess Beatrix, is
none other than Herman Grimm. And in Emerson
we have to do with the reincarnated Tacitus, the reincarnated Countess
Mathilde.
When we observe
Herman Grimm's admiration for Emerson, when we remember the way
in which Herman Grimm encounters Emerson, we can find again the
relationship of Pliny the Younger to Tacitus. In every sentence that
Herman Grimm writes after this time, we can see the old relationship
between Pliny the Younger and Tacitus emerging. And we see the
admiration that Pliny the Younger had for Tacitus, nay more, the
complete accord and understanding between them, coming out again in
the admiration with which Herman Grimm looks up to
Emerson.
And now for the
first time we shall grasp wherein the essential greatness of
Emerson's style consists, we shall perceive that what Tacitus
displayed in his own way, Emerson again displays in his own special
way. How does Emerson work? Those who visited Emerson discovered his
way of working. There he was in a room; around him were several
chairs, several tables. Books lay open everywhere and Emerson walked
about among them. He would often read a sentence, imbibe it
thoroughly and from it form his own magnificent, free-moving,
epigrammatic sentences. That was how he worked. There you have an
exact picture of Tacitus in life! Tacitus travels, takes hold of life
everywhere; Emerson observes life in books. It all lives again!
And then there is
this unconquerable desire in Herman Grimm to meet Emerson. Destiny
leads him to Representative Men and he sees at once:
this is how I must write, this is my
true style. As I said, he had already acquired an academic style of
writing from his uncle Jacob Grimm and his father Wilhelm Grimm, and
he then abandons it. He is impelled by destiny to adopt a completely
different style.
In Herman
Grimm's writings we see how wide were his historical interests.
He has an inner relationship of soul with Germany, combined with a
deep interest in Italy. All this comes out in his
writings.
These are things
that go to show how the affairs of destiny work themselves out. And
how is one led to perceive such things? One must first have an
impression and then everything crystallizes around it. Thus we had
first to envisage the picture of Herman Grimm opening
Emerson's Representative Men. Now Herman Grimm used to read in a
peculiar manner. He read a passage and then immediately drew back
from what he had read: it was a gesture as though he were swallowing
what he had read, sentence by sentence. And it was this inner gesture
of swallowing sentence by sentence that made it possible to trace
Herman Grimm to his earlier incarnation. In the case of Emerson it
was the walking to and fro in front of the open books, as well as the
rather stiff, half-Roman carriage of the man, as Herman Grimm saw him
when they first met in Italy — it was these impressions that
led one back from Emerson to Tacitus. Plasticity of vision is needed
to follow up things of this kind.
My dear friends, I
have given you here another example which should indicate how our
study of history needs to be deepened. This deepening must really be
evident among us as one of the fruits of the new impulse that should
take effect in the Anthroposophical Society through the Christmas
Foundation Meeting. We must in future go bravely and boldly forward
to the study of far-reaching spiritual connections; we must have
courage to reach a vantage-point for observation of these great
spiritual connections. For this we shall need, above all, deep
earnestness. Our life in Anthroposophy must be filled with
earnestness.
And this
earnestness will grow in the Anthroposophical Society if those who
really want to do something in the Society give more and more thought
to the contents of the News Sheet that is sent out every week into
all circles of Anthroposophists as a supplement to the weekly
periodical, Das Goetheanum. A picture is given there of how
one may shape the life in the Groups in the sense and meaning of the
Christmas Meeting, of what should be done in the members'
meetings, how the teaching should be given and studied. The News
Sheet is also intended to give a picture of what is happening among
us. Its title is: ‘What is going on in the Anthroposophical
Society’, and its aim is to bring into the whole Society a
unity of thought, to spread a common atmosphere of thought over the
thousands of Anthroposophists everywhere. When we live in such an
atmosphere, when we understand what it means for all our thinking to
be stimulated and directed by the ‘Leading Thoughts’, and
when we understand how the Goetheanum will thus be placed in the
centre as a concrete reality through the initiative of the esoteric
Vorstand — I have emphasised again and again that we now have
to do with a Vorstand which conceives its task to be the inauguration
of an esoteric impulse — when we understand this truly, then
that which has now to flow through the Anthroposophical Movement will
be carried forward in the right way. For Anthroposophical Movement
and Anthroposophical Society must become one. The Anthroposophical
Society must make the whole cause of Anthroposophy its
own.
And it is true to
say that if once this ‘thinking in common’ is an active
reality, then it can also become the bearer of comprehensive,
far-reaching spiritual knowledge. A power will come to life in the
Anthroposophical Society that really ought to be in it, for the
recent developments of civilisation need to be given a tremendous
turn if they are not to lead to a complete decline.
What is said
concerning successive earthly lives of this or that individual may at
first seem paradoxical, but if you look more closely, if you look
into the progress made by the human beings of whom we have spoken in
this connection, you will see that what is said is founded on
reality; you will see that we are able to look into the weaving life
of gods and men when with the eye of spirit we try in this way to
apprehend the spiritual forces.
This, my dear
friends, is what I would lay upon your hearts and souls. If you take
with you this feeling, then this Easter Meeting will be like a
revitalising of the Christmas Meeting; for if the Christmas Meeting
is to work as it should, then all that has developed out of it must
be the means of revitalising it, of bringing it to new life just as
if it were present with us.
May many things
grow out of the Christmas Meeting, in constant renewal! May many
things grow out of it through the activity of courageous souls, souls
who are fearless representatives of Anthroposophy. If our meetings
result in strengthening courage in the souls of Anthroposophists,
then there will grow what is needed in the Society as the body for
the Anthroposophical soul: a courageous presentation to the world of
the revelations of the Spirit vouchsafed in the age of Light that has
now dawned after the end of Kali-Yuga; for these revelations are
necessary for the further evolution of man. If we live in the
consciousness of this we shall be inspired to work courageously. May
this courage be strengthened by every meeting we hold. It can be so
if we are able to take in all earnestness things that seem
paradoxical and foolish to those who set the tone of thought in our
day. But after all, it has often happened that the dominant tone of
thought in one period was soon afterwards replaced by the very thing
that was formerly suppressed. May a recognition of the true nature of
history, and of how it is bound up with the onward flow of the lives
of men, give courage for anthroposophical activity — the
courage that is essential for the further progress of human
civilisation.
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