THE
ANTHROPOSOPHIC MOVEMENT
I
Homeless Souls
MY
DEAR FRIENDS,
The
course of observations, upon which we are about to enter, has
in view a kind of self-recollection amongst those
persons who are met together for Anthroposophy. It will afford
opportunity for a self-recollection of this kind, — a
self-recollection to which they may be led by a description of
the anthroposophic movement and its relation to the
Anthroposophical Society. And so you must let me begin to-day
by referring to the people to whom this self-recollection
applies. And these people are you yourselves, — all those
who, through one occasion or another, have been led to find
their way to Anthroposophy.
One
person has found the way, as though, I might say, by an inner
compulsion of the soul, an inner compulsion of the heart;
another, maybe, for reasons based in the under-standing. But
there are many again, who have come into the anthroposophic
movement through some more or less exterior occasion, and have
then perhaps, inside the anthroposophic movement itself, been
led into profounder depths of the soul, and found more than at
first they looked for. One characteristic, however, is common
to all the people who find their way to the anthroposophic
movement. And if one looks back through all the various years,
and sums up what the characteristic feature is amongst all
those who come into the anthroposophic movement, one finally
can but say: They are people of a kind, who are forced by their
particular fate, — their inner fate, their karma,
in the first instance, — to turn aside from the ordinary
highroad of civilization, along which the bulk of mankind
to-day are marching, to abandon this highroad, and to seek out
paths of their own.
Let
us but clearly consider for a moment, what the way actually is,
in which most people in our day grow up into life from their
childhood on. — They are born of parents, who are
Frenchmen, or Germans, Catholics, or Protestants, or Jews, or
belong to some other of the creeds. They are born perhaps of
parents who hold peculiar opinions. But in any case, there is
always some kind of pre-recognized assumption, directly the
people are born at the present day, amongst the parents,
amongst the members of the family into which these people are
born out of their pre-earthly lives, there exists so to speak a
pre-recognized assumption, — not indeed uttered, but
which is felt, even though perhaps not thought, (and. thought
too, very often, when occasion gives rise to it!) ... looking
out generally upon life, they think as a matter of course: We
are French Catholics, or German Protestants, and our children
will naturally be so too.
And
the circumstance, that such a sentiment exists, naturally
creates a social atmosphere, — and not a social
atmosphere only, but a concatenation of social forces, which do
then, in actual reality, work more or less obviously or
non-obviously, so as to shove these children into the lines of
life already marked out for them in advance by these
sentiments, by these more or less definitely conceived
thoughts.
And
then all rolls on to begin with as though by matter of course
in the life of the child. As though by matter of course these
children are supplied with their education, their
school-training. And all the time again the parents are filled
with all sorts of thoughts about the children, — thoughts
which again are not uttered, but which give the presuppositions
for life, which are extraordinarily determinative for life;
— such thoughts, for instance, as, My son will of course
be a civil servant with a pension; or, My son is heir to the
family estates; or, My daughter is to marry the son of the man
who owns the neighbouring property. — Well, of course it
is not always so definitely materialized, but it gives a
certain prospective outlook, and this again always prescribes a
line of direction. And the lines of external life are as a
matter of fact so mapped out to-day, that, even down into our
present times of chaos (which are felt by people however, for
the most part, to be unusual), this life does go on externally
in obedience to impulses given to it in this way. And then
there is nothing for it, but that the man should, somehow or
other, grow up to be a French Catholic, or a German Protestant:
he cannot grow up to be anything else, for the forces of life
impel him that way. And though it may not come directly from
the parents' side with quite such definiteness, yet still, life
catches him fresh from school, lays its grip on the man whilst
he is still quite fresh, emerging from young life, from a state
of childhood, and plants him down in some post in life. The
State, the religious community, draw the man into their
vortex.
And
if the majority of people to-day were to try and account to
themselves for how they came to be there, they would find it
hard to do so. For too keen reflection on the subject would
mean something intolerable. And so this intolerable something
is driven as far down as possible into the sub-depths of
consciousness, — driven under into the sub-conscious, or
unconscious, regions of the soul's life. And there it remains;
unless the psychoanalyst happens to fish it up again, if it
behave with more than usual pertinacity in these unknown
soul-regions down below. But, for the most part, the strength
is wanting, to take any sort of stand in proper person, as an
individual, in the midst of all this, that one has simply
‘grown into’ in this fashion.
One
has moments of revolt perhaps, when of a sudden one finds
oneself quite unexpectedly realizing in life that one is, say,
a clerk, — perhaps even a town-clerk! But then, most
likely, one clenches one's fists in one's trouser-pockets; or,
— if it happens to be a woman, — one makes one's
husband a scene about a disappointed life, and so forth. ...
Well, — there are these reactions against the things
which a man simply grows into.
And
then very often too, you know, it happens, that there are the
little pleasures attached to the various things, which deaden
one's sense of the things themselves. One goes to public balls;
and then the next day of course is occupied with sleeping them
off; and so the time is filled up in one way or another. Or
else one joins a strictly patriotic association. Because, being
a town-clerk, you know, one must belong to something or other
which absorbs one into its ranks. One has been absorbed into
the ranks of the State, into the ranks of a religious
community; and now one must needs shed a sort of halo in this
way over the thing which one has inconsciently grown into.
— Well, I need not pursue the description further.
This is, in fact, the way, more or less, in which those people,
who follow along the beaten highroad of life to-day, grow into
their external lives.
And
the others, who are unable to go along with them, — they
find themselves on side-tracks; — and this kind of
people, who are unable to follow along most of the prescribed
routes to-day, are to be found scattered about on any number of
paths, possible and impossible. But, amongst these other paths,
there is the anthroposophic path too, where the man is bent
upon what lies within himself, — where he is bent on
living through it in a more conscient fashion, — where he
wants to live out his part consciently in something that lies
to some extent at least in his own choice.
They are people such as these for the most part, whose path
does not lie along the beaten highroad of life, who are
Anthroposophists. Whether they find their way to Anthroposophy
in youth, or in older years, one form or other, they are people
of this kind. And if one examines further what the origin of it
is, then again one comes to circumstances connected with the
spiritual world: —
The
souls, as they come to-day out of their pre-earthly state of
life into their earthly one, have, for the most part, spent a
long while in that condition preceding their birth, which I
have often described in my lectures. — Man, after he has
finished travelling over his life's road in the spiritual world
between death and new birth, comes next into the region where
he enters more and more into the life of the spiritual world,
where his own life consists in working in company with the
beings of the higher hierarchies, and where everything that he
does is a work amidst this world of substantive spirit.
But
in the course of this passage from death to a new birth there
comes a particular point of time, when the man, as it were,
turns his eyes down again towards earth. There, in soul, the
man begins, for a long time in advance, to unite himself with
the successive generations, at the end of which stand finally
the parent pair that give him birth. — So that a man
looks down beforehand, not only upon his fathers' fathers, but
to his ancestors of faraway back generations, and unites
himself with the line of direction, with the current, that runs
through the generations of his fore-bears.
And
so it happens with the majority of souls at the present day,
that during the time when they are making ready to come down to
earth again, they have a burning interest already in what is
going on upon earth. They gaze as it were from the spiritual
world upon the earth below, and are keenly interested in all
that goes on with their forefathers on the earth.
Souls of this kind become, in fact, what I have described as
being the case with those who follow the stream along the broad
highway of modern life.
In
contrast to these, there are, especially at the present day, a
number of souls, whose interest, when their pre-earthly life
begins to tend downwards again towards earth-life, lies less
with what is going on upon earth, but for whom the subject of
principal interest is: How are we maturing in the spirit-world?
They continue to interest themselves down to the very last
moment, so to speak, when they take their way back to earth, in
the spiritual world.
Whereas the others have a profound desire for an earthly state
of existence, these souls have to the last a lively interest in
the things that are going on in the spiritual world, and come
upon earth accordingly, when they do embody, with a mind that
draws its consciousness from spiritual impulses, and affords
less inclination to the kind of impulses which I described as
existing in the case of the broad highroaders. They outgrow the
impulses of their surroundings; in particular, they outgrow
their surroundings in their spiritual aspirations. And they are
thus pre-destined, — ready prepared, — for going
simply their own way.
And
so one might divide the souls into two kinds, which come down
to-day out of their pre-earthly existence into earthly
existence. The first kind, which still at the present day
includes the majority of people, are remarkably ‘home-gifted’
souls, who feel so thoroughly at home as souls in their warm
nest, — even though at times they may think it
uncomfortable; but that is only in appearance, is only maya;
— they feel comfortable in this warm nest, in which they
have already taken an interest for so long, before coming down
to earth.
Others perhaps, — the external maya, is not always
a good guide, — others, who may go through their
child-life quite acquiescently as souls, are not so
home-gifted, are homeless souls, grow out of the snug nest
rather than into it.
And
to those of this latter species belong undoubtedly those souls
too, who afterwards find their way into the anthroposophic
movement.
It
is therefore certainly a matter, in one way or other, of
predetermination, whether one is impelled by one's fate into
Anthroposophy.
It
may truly be said, however, that the impulse manifests itself
in all manner of ways, which leads these souls to search along
side-paths, off the track of life's great highroad. And anyone,
who has gone through life with a certain conscientness during
the last twenty or thirty years of the nineteenth century and
the first twenty to thirty of the twentieth, will have
observed, that everywhere, amongst the others, there were to be
seen these homeless souls — soul-homeless souls, that is,
— in numbers, — numbers relatively speaking, of
course. A great many souls, in fact, to-day, have what I might
call a certain streak of this homelessness.
If
the others did not find it so comfortable to keep along the
beaten tracks, and did not put such difficulties in the way of
the homeless souls, these homeless souls would be much more
striking in their numbers to the eyes of their contemporaries.
But even so, one can perceive everywhere, I might say, to-day a
certain streak of this homelessness in a great number of
souls.
Only quite a short while ago, there was a report of an
incident, which shows how even such things as this may happen.
A professor at a certain university gave a set of lectures, a
course of collegiate addresses, announced for schoolmen, with
the title, ‘The evolution of mystic-occult philosophy from
Pythagoras to Steiner’. And the report says, that when the
course was announced, so many people came to the very first
lecture, that he was not able to give it in one of the ordinary
lecture-rooms, but had to hold it in the Great Auditorium,
which as a rule is used only for the addresses on big
University occasions.
From facts such as this, one can see how things stand at the
present day, and how in fact this tendency to homelessness has
spread extremely deep into men's souls. And one could watch
this thing, so to speak, which to-day grows week by week to an
ever more intense longing in the souls of those who bear about
this homelessness within them, — the longing for
something which is not a ready planned, ready mapped-out post
in life, — this longing for something spiritual, —
which shows itself in this corner of life from week to week,
one might say, with greater insistence and ever increasing
force amid the chaotic spiritual life of the day one could
watch all this growing up. And if to-day I succeed in sketching
the gradual growth of it for you in a few brief touches, you
may be able to find in this sketch, through a sort of
self-recollection, just a little perhaps of what I might term
the common anthroposophic origin of you all.
To-day I will do no more than pick out some characteristic
features by way of introduction. — Look back to the last
twenty or thirty years of the nineteenth century. We might
quite well take any other field; but let us take a very
characteristic field; and here we find coming into prominence
at a particular time what one may call ‘Wagnerianism’: the cult
of Richard Wagner.
There was, no doubt, mixed up with this Richard Wagner cult, a
great deal of fashionable affectation, desire for sensation,
and so forth. But amongst the people who showed themselves at
Bayreuth, after Bayreuth was started, there were not only
gentlemen in the latest cut of frock-coat, and ladies in the
newest and smartest frocks; but at Bayreuth there was
everything conceivable, side by side. Even then, one might see
there gentlemen with their hair very long and ladies with their
hair cropped short. People might be seen, who felt it like a
sort of modern pilgrimage to travel from long distances to
Bayreuth. I even knew one man, who, when he set out for
Bayreuth, drew off his boots at a place on the road a very long
way off, and pilgrimaged to Bayreuth barefoot.
Amongst the people who turned up like this, — the
gentlemen with the long, and the ladies with the short hair,
there were undoubtedly many who belonged in some form or other
to the homeless-soul class. But amongst those, too, who were
dressed, if not in the very latest, yet at any rate in a fairly
respectable fashion, there were also such as were homeless
souls.
Now, what made such an effect upon the people in this
Wagnerianism, — what there actually was in it, (I am not
talking now of the musical element only, but of Wagnerianism as
a social phenomenon) — what made itself felt in
Wagnerianism as a force, was something that in this
Wagnerianism stood out quite distinct from anything else that
the materialist age had to offer. It was something that went
out quite peculiarly, and almost suggestively I might say, from
this Wagnerianism, and acted upon people in such a way as to
give them the feeling: It is like a door into another and more
spiritual world, quite different from the one we usually have
round about us.
And
round Bayreuth and all that went on there, there sprung up a
whole crop of longing aspirations after pro-founder depths of
spiritual life. — To understand Richard Wagner's
personages and dramatic compositions was at first certainly
difficult. But that they were the creations of quite another
element than merely the crass materialism of the age, —
this at any rate was felt by numbers of people. And if these
happened to be persons, who as homeless souls were more
particularly impelled in this direction, they were stirred up
by what I might call a sort of suggestive force in the Wagner
dramas, particularly in the life that the Wagner dramas brought
with them into our civilization, and began to have all sorts of
hazy, emotional intuitions.
There were also, for instance, amongst the many people who came
into this Wagnerian life, the readers of the Bayreuth
Papers. It is interesting, historically, — to-day it
has already all come to be history, — historically it is
interesting to take up one of the annual sets of the
Bayreuth Papers, and to look through it and see, how
they start out with an interpretation of Tristan and Isolde, of
the Nibelung Ring, of the Flying Dutchman even, how they start
out from the dramatic composition, take the individual figures
in the Wagner dramas, the incidents in them, and thence, in an
extremely subjective and unreal way, it is true, — unreal
even in the spiritual sense, — but nevertheless with a
great yearning of spirit, how they attempt to arrive at a more
spiritual aspect of the things and of human life in general.
And one can truly say, that in the multifarious interpretations
of Hamlet and other interpretations of works of art that have
since been brought out by theosophists, there is much that
reminds one of certain articles, written in the Bayreuth
Papers, not by a theosophist, but by an expert Wagnerian,
Hans von Wolzogen. And if you woke up one morning, let us say,
and if, instead of a theosophist paper that you read perhaps
fifteen years ago, some mischievous fairy had laid beside your
bed a batch of the Bayreuth Papers, you might really
mistake the tone and style of them for something you had come
across in the theosophist paper, — if it happened to be
an article of Wolzogen's, or one of the kind.
So
that this Wagnerianism, one might say, was for many persons, in
whom there dwelt homeless souls, an opening, through which to
come to some aspect of the world that led away from the crassly
material that led them into a spiritual region.
And
of all these people who, not externally out of fashion-able
affectation, but from an inner impulse of the soul, had grown
into a stream of this kind, it may truly be said of them all,
that whatever else they might be in life, whether they were
lawyers, or lords, or artists, or M.P.s, or whatever else they
might be, who had grown into this stream, — even the
scientists, for there were some of these too, — they
pursued the direction into the spiritual world from an inner
longing of their souls, and troubled themselves no further
about hard and fast proofs, of which there were plenty to be
found everywhere for the world-conception of materialistic
construction.
As
said before, I might have mentioned other fields as well, where
homeless souls of this kind were to be found; one did find
plenty of such homeless souls. But this Wagner field was
especially characteristic; there these homeless souls might be
found in numbers.
Well, it was my lot, I might say, personally, to make
acquaintance with a number of souls of this kind (but in
company also with others), who had gone, so to speak, through
their spiritual novitiate as Wagnerians, and were as I knew
them, again in a different metamorphosis. These were souls whom
I learnt to know towards the end of the eighteen eighties in
Vienna, amongst a group of people, collected together entirely
one might say out of homeless souls.
How
this homelessness displayed itself in those days, even on the
surface, is something of which people no longer form any true
conception at all to-day; for many things, which then required
a good courage, — courage of soul, — have to-day
become quite commonplace.
This, for instance, is something, which I think not many people
at the present day will be able to conceive. — I was
sitting in a group of such homeless souls, and we had been
talking of all sorts of things, when one of them came in, who
either had been kept longer than the others by his work, or
else maybe he had stayed sitting at home, busied with
his own thoughts. At any rate, he came later, and began talking
about Dostoevsky's Raskolnikov [Known in English under
the title ‘Crime and Punishment’], and spoke of
Raskolnivok in such a way that it struck like lightning
into the company, — just like a flash of lightning. A new
world opened up, a world which ... well, it was very much as
though one were transported all of a sudden into another
planet: — that was how these souls felt.
Perhaps I may be allowed to say something: — In all these
observations of life, which I am telling you by way of
introduction to the history of the anthroposophic movement,
during all the time that I was impelled by my fate to make
these observations in life, there was for myself never any sort
of interruption of the contact with the spiritual world. The
direct association with the spiritual world was never in any
way broken; it was always there. I am obliged to mention this,
because this must form the background of these contemplations:
namely, the spiritual world as a self-obvious reality, and the
human beings on earth seen accordingly as the images of what
they really are as spiritual individualities within the
spiritual world. I want just to indicate this frame of mind, so
that you may take it as spiritual background all through.
Of
course, ‘making observations’ did not mean sniffing about like
a dog with a cold nose, but taking a warm, whole-hearted
interest in everything, and not with the intention of
being an observer, but simply because one is in the midst of
it, in all good-fellowship and friendliness and courtesy, as a
matter of course. So one really was in it all, and became
acquainted with the people, not in order to observe them, but
because it naturally came about in the course of actual life.
And so I made acquaintance at the end of the 'eighties with a
group of this kind, composed in other respects of people of
every variety of calling, with every different shade of
colouring in life, but who were all homeless souls of this
kind; and of whom a number, as I said, had come over from the
Wagner region, and were people whose spiritual novitiate, so to
speak, had been made in the Wagner region. The man of whom I
told you, who took off his boots in Vienna and walked barefoot
to Bayreuth, he was one of them, and was, in matter of fact, a
very clever man. For a while I used to come together with these
people quite frequently, often indeed every day. They were now
living, as I might say, in a second metamorphosis. Having gone
through their Wagner metamorphosis, they were now in their
second one.
There were three of them, for instance; people who knew H. P.
Blavatsky well, who had been indeed intimate acquaintances of
H. P. Blavatsky, and who were zealous theosophists, as
theosophists were at that time, when Blavatsky was still
living. About the theosophists of that time, — the time
just after Blavatsky's Isis Unveiled and Secret
Doctrine had appeared, — there was something quite
peculiar. They all had a marked tendency to be extremely
esoteric. They had a contempt for the external life in which
they were placed, and a contempt of course for their own
profession in life; but were nevertheless under the obligation
of mingling in external existence: — that lay in
the order of nature. But, as for everything else, —
that is ‘esoteric’; there one converses only with
Initiates, and only within a small circle. And one looks upon
all the people, who, in one's opinion, are not worthy of
conversing on such matters, as the sort of people, to whom one
talks about the common things of life; — the others, are
the people to whom one talks esoterics. They were readers, and
good readers too, of Sinnett's newly-published book,
Esoteric Buddhism, but all of them people eminently
belonging to the class of homeless souls I have just described:
people, namely, who, the moment they stepped into practical
life, were engineers, electricians, and so forth, and yet again
studied with deep interest, with the keenest eagerness, a book
like Sinnett's Esoteric Buddhism. And with these
people too, there was a sort of tendency, — inherited
partly from their Wagner phase, — to seize on everything
available in the way of myths and legends, and explain, or
interpret, them in ‘an esoteric sense’, as they called it.
One
might observe, however, as these homeless souls really began
more and more to make their appearance with the close of the
nineteenth century, that the most interesting of all were not
those, who after all, if I may say so, with only nine-tenths
honest minds — nine-tenths honest, at most
— used to study the writings of Blavatsky and
Sinnett, but the others, — those who would listen, but
were not willing to read for themselves. (In those days people
were still exceedingly shy of such things.) They were not
willing to read the things personally, but would listen with
open mouths, when the people, who had read, expounded them. And
it was very interesting to watch how the listeners, who were
often more honest-minded than the narrators, would drink in
these things, in the homelessness of their souls, like a
spiritual nourishment of which they were in need, — and
who indeed, out of the comparative lack of sincerity with which
this spiritual nourishment was presented to them, converted it
into something absolutely sincere, through the superior honesty
of their own souls. And the way they drank it in! One could see
the longing there was in them, to hear for once something quite
different from what is to be found on the ordinary highroad of
civilization. How these people gulped down what they heard! And
it was extra-ordinarily interesting to see, on the one side the
long arms of the highroad life snatching up the people ever and
again in their clutches ... and then again, you know, how these
people would turn up afresh in some drawing-room where they
used to meet, — often it was a coffee-house, — and
there would listen with hungry eagerness to what somebody or
other had just been reading in some book of this kind that had
newly appeared, — and who often laid it on pretty thick
with what he had read. But there were these honest souls there
too, most unquestionably, who were tossed in this way
to-and-fro by life.
In
the early days, especially, towards the close of the nineteenth
century, one saw these souls regularly tossed to-and-fro, and
unwilling really to admit to themselves their own homelessness.
For there would be one of them, you know, listening with every
sign of the deepest interest to what was being said about
physical body, ether body, astral body, kama-manas, manas,
budhi, and so on. And then, afterwards, he must go off and
write the article the news-paper expected from him, into which
of course he must stick the usual plums, — These people,
truly, were the kind of souls that quite peculiarly showed, how
difficult it really was, particularly at the commencement of
the new spiritual period of evolution (which we must reckon
really from the end of the nineteenth century), how difficult
it was for many a one to abandon the broad highway of life. For
indeed, from the way many of them behaved, it looked as though,
when they wanted to go to the really important thing, to the
thing which interested them above all else in life, they crept
away on the sly as it were, and wanted if possible to avoid any
one's knowing where they had crept to. — It really was
most interesting, the manner in which, amid this European
civilization, the spiritual life, — the spiritual
volition, — the seeking for a spiritual world, —
made its way in.
Now
you must consider: it was the end of the 'eighties, in the
nineteenth century, and so much more difficult really even than
to-day, — less detrimental perhaps than to-day, but more
difficult, — to come out straight away with a confession
of the spiritual world. For the physical, sensible world, with
all its magnificent laws ... why, that was all demonstrated
fact; how could one hope to be any match for it! It had on its
side any number of demonstrable proofs. The laboratories
testified to it, the physical test-room, the medical clinics,
— all testified to this demonstrated world! — But
the demonstrated world was, for many homeless souls, one so
unsatisfying, one which, for the soul's inner life, was so
altogether impossible, that they simply, as I said, crept
aside. And whilst in huge masses, — not in buckets, but
in barrels, — the great civilization of the age was laid
before them, they turned aside, to sip such drops as they might
catch from the stream which trickled in as it were out of the
spiritual world into modern civilization. — It was, in
fact, by no means easy to begin straight away to speak of the
spiritual world. It was necessary to find something on to which
to connect.
If
I may here introduce something which is again a personal
remark, it is this: For myself ... one couldn't break so to
speak into people's houses with the spiritual world; above all,
one couldn't break into the whole civilized edifice with it! I
had to take something to connect onto; not for an external
reason; something that could be quite honestly internal. At
this time, the end of the 'eighties, I took in many places, as
connections for the remarks I had to make about more intimate
aspects of the spiritual world, Goethe's Story of the Green
Serpent and the Lovely Lily. That was something onto which
one could connect; because, well, Goethe had, at any rate, a
recognized standing; Goethe was, after all, Goethe, you know!
It was possible, if one took something which had, after all,
been written by Goethe, and where the spiritual influences
running through it are so patent as in the Story of the
Green Serpent and the Lovely Lily, it was possible then to
connect onto these things. For me, indeed, it was the obvious
course at that time to connect on-to Goethe's Story of the
Green Serpent and the Lovely Lily; for I certainly could
not connect onto the thing which was then being carried on as
‘Theosophy’, such as a group of at least very enterprising
people towards the end of the 'eighties had extracted at that
time out of Blavatsky and out of Sinnet's Esoteric
Buddhism and similar books. For someone who proposed to
carry over a scientifically trained mode of thought into the
spiritual world, it was simply impossible to come in any way
into association with the kind of mental and spiritual
atmosphere which grew up in immediate connection with Blavatsky
and the Esoteric Buddhism of Sinnet.
And
again on the other side the matter was not easy; and for this
reason: — Sinnett's Esoteric Buddhism no doubt is
a book which one very soon found to be a spiritually dilettante
work, pieced together out of old, misunderstood esotericisms.
But to a work like Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine as a
phenomenon of the times, it was not so very easy to arrive at a
definite relation. For it is a work, which betrays after all in
numerous passages, that what is said in them proceeds from
direct and forceful impulses of the spiritual world; so that in
numerous passages of this Secret Doctrine of Blavatsky's
one finds the spiritual world revealing itself in fact through
a particular personality, — which was the personality of
Blavatsky.
And
here there was one thing above all, which could not but
especially strike one, which struck one particularly in the
course of the search so intently pursued by the people who had
come in this way either to Blavatsky personally, or to
Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine.
Through this book, The Secret Doctrine, a great mass of
ancient truths had been voiced to the world, — old-world
truths, obtained by atavistic clairvoyance in the pre-historic
ages of mankind. It was like a re-awakening, as I might say, of
old-world civilizations. One had there before one, coming to
one from the world outside, not merely out of one's own self,
— one had there, before one, a thing, of which one could
but say to oneself: Here lies unearthed a vast treasure of
ancient wisdom, which men once possessed, and which was a
wondrous source of light to them. And, patched between it all,
pieces of the most incredible kind, which continually amaze
one; for the book is a slovenly piece of work, quite dilettante
as regards any sort of scientific thinking, and nonsensical
with respect to a lot of superstitions and similar stuff.
Altogether a most extraordinary book, this Secret
Doctrine of Blavatsky; grand truths, along with terrible
rubbish. It was, one might say ... the sort of thing, which ...
very well characterized the kind of soul-phenomena to which
those were exposed, who were beginning little by little to grow
up into homeless souls in the new age. And I really learnt in
those days to know a great number of such souls, one could see
these homeless souls gradually growing up on earth.
After this, during the time that immediately followed, I was
intensely busy with other things, in my time at Weimar.
Although, there too, there was plenty of opportunity for
observing such souls on the search. For during my Weimar time
especially, every sort of person, if I may say so, came through
Weimar to visit the Goethe and Schiller archives, and from all
the leading countries of the world. One learnt to know the
people quite remarkably, on the good and on the bad sides of
their souls, as they came through Weimar. Queer-fish, as well
as highly educated men of fine breeding and distinction: one
learnt to know them all. My meeting with Herman Grimm, for
instance, in Weimar is described by me in the last number but
one of the “Goetheanum.” [‘A personal recollection
etc.’ ‘Goetheanum’ Year 2. (1923), No. 43.]
With Herman Grimm it was really so, — to my feeling at
least, — that when he was in Weimar ... he came very
often; for when he was on his way from Berlin to Italy or back,
and at other times as well, he frequently came to Weimar; and I
had grown to have the feeling: Weimar is somehow different,
when Herman Grimm is in the place, and when he has left it.
Herman Grimm was something that made one understand Weimar
particularly well. One knew, what Weimar is, better when Herman
Grimm was staying there, than when he was not there.
One
need only recall Herman Grimm's novel, Powers
Unconquerable, to remark at once, that in Herman Grimm
there is at any rate an unmistakably strong impulse towards
spiritual things. Read the conclusion of this novel, Powers
Unconquerable, and you will see how the spiritual world
there plays into the physical one through the soul of a dying
woman. There is something grand — tremendous —
about it, that lays hold of one. I have spoken of it in
previous lectures.
And
then, of course, there were queer fish too, that came through
Weimar. For instance, there was a Russian State Councillor who
was looking for something. One couldn't make out what it
was he was looking for, — something or other in the
second part of Goethe's Faust. In what way he exactly
proposed to find it in the Goethe Archives, that one couldn't
make out. Nor did anyone exactly know how to help him. They
would have been very glad in the Goethe Archives to help him.
But he always went on looking. He was looking for the Point in
the second part of Faust; and no one could succeed in
discovering what kind of a point he wanted. All one could ever
learn was that he was looking for the Point, the Point. And so
one could only let him look. But he was so talkative with this
Point of his, that in the evening, when we used to be sitting
at supper, and he drew near, the whisper would go round: ‘Don't
look round you! The Councillor's prowling about!’ Nobody wanted
to be caught by him.
Well, next to him again, there sat a very curious visitor, who
was a very clever fellow, an American, but who had the
peculiarity that his favourite position was sitting on the
floor, with his legs cocked one over the other; and he used to
sit in this fashion with his books before him on the ground. It
was a weird sight. But, as I said, one met with these things
too there, and had, in fact, opportunities of seeing a sort of
sample slice out of the life of modern civilization, and in an
unusually striking way.
Later on, however, when I went to Berlin, my destiny again led
me more especially into a circle, made up of the kind of souls
whom I spoke of as being ‘homeless souls’. Destiny led me
indeed so deep into it that from this particular circle there
came the request that I would give them some lectures, the same
which have since been published in my book, Mysticism at the
Dawn of the New Age of Thought. (In the preface to the book
I have also given an account of how these things came
about.)
This particular circle happened now to be people who had found
their way into the Theosophical Society at a somewhat later
period, as I may say, than my Vienna acquaintances. And they
occupied a different position towards all that had been
Blavatsky. Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine was a work to
which but few of them gave any study; but they were well-versed
in all that Blavatsky's successor, Mrs. Annie Besant, was
giving forth in her lectures as the Theosophy of the day. In
this they were well-versed, these people, to whom I was saying
something quite different in my lectures on ‘Mysticism’. They
were very well-versed in it indeed; and I remember still, for
instance, hearing a lecture by a member of this same group,
which was based upon a little book of Mrs. Annie Besant's, in
which Mrs. Annie Besant, on her part, had divided up Man into
physical body, ether body, astral body, and so on. I
can't help often recalling how awful, how appalling, this
description seemed to me at the time, of the human being as
drawn from Mrs. Annie Besant. I had not read anything of Mrs.
Besant's. The first which I heard of her things was this
lecture, given by a lady on the strength of Mrs. Annie Besant's
newest pamphlet of the day. — It was quite awful, how in
those days the different parts of the human being used to be
told off in a string, one after the other, with, at bottom,
very little understanding, — instead of letting them
proceed out of the whole totality of man's being.
And
so once more, as in Vienna at the end of the 'eighties, I was
in the midst of such homeless souls, and with every opportunity
of observing them. And, as you well know, what since has come
to be Anthroposophy first grew up in all essentials
then, with as many as were there of these homeless souls,
— grew up, not in, I would say, but with
these homeless souls, who had begun by seeking a new home for
their souls in Theosophy.
I
wished to carry our observations to this point to-day, my dear
friends, and to-morrow will then continue, and try to lead you
further in this study in self-recollection, upon which
we have only just embarked to-day.
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