LECTURE ONE
The Homeless Souls
Dornach, 10 June 1923
The reflections which we are beginning today are intended to
encourage all those who have found their way to anthroposophy to
think about their current position. They will present an opportunity
for contemplation, for self-reflection, through a characterization of
the anthroposophical movement and its relationship to the
Anthroposophical Society. And in this context may I begin by speaking
about the people who are central to such self-reflection: yourselves.
There are those who found this path through an inner necessity of the
soul, of the heart; others, perhaps, found it through the search for
knowledge. There are many, however, who entered the anthroposophical
movement for more or less mundane reasons; but through a deepening of
the soul they have subsequently perhaps encountered more within it
than they at first anticipated. But there is something which all
those who end up in the anthroposophical movement have in common. And
that is that they are initially driven by their inner destiny, their
karma, to leave the ordinary highway of civilization on which the
majority of mankind at present progresses, to search for their own
path.
Let us think for a moment about the conditions in which most
people now grow up. They are born to parents who are French or
German, Catholic or Protestant or Jewish, or who belong to some other
faith, and may hold a variety of beliefs. But among parents is the
almost unquestioned assumption, which remains unspoken and sometimes
unthought, that their children will, of course, grow up like
themselves. These kinds of feelings naturally engender a social
ambience, indeed social pressures, which more or less consciously
push children into the kind of life which has been mapped out by
these more or less clearly defined beliefs. The life of a child then
follows its natural course of education and schooling. And during
this time parents once again have all kinds of beliefs which exert a
decisive influence on their children's lives. The belief, for
instance, that my son will, of course, enter the secure employment of
the civil service, or that he will inherit the parental business, or
that my daughter will marry the man next door. It simply lies in the
nature of social circumstances that they are governed by impulses
which arise in this way. People have no choice in the matter because
that is the effect of the beliefs which govern life. It may not
always be obvious to parents, but schooling and all the other
circumstances of childhood and youth imprison the human being and
determine his position in life. The institutions of state and
religion make the adult.
If the majority of people were asked to explain how they got where
they are today, they would not be able to do so, because there would
be something unbearable about having to think deeply about such
matters. This unbearable element tends to be driven underground into
subconscious or unconscious areas of our soul life. At best, it will
be dredged up by a psychiatrist when it behaves in a particularly
recalcitrant manner down there in those unknown provinces of the
soul. But mostly one's own personality, the Self, is simply not
strong enough to assert itself against what one has grown into in
this way.
Occasionally people have the urge to rebel when their situation as
a trainee, or even following qualification, unexpectedly dawns on
them. You might clench your fist in your pocket, or, if you are a
woman, create a scene at home because of such disappointed life
expectations. These are reactions against what people are forced to
become. We also frequently seek to anaesthetize ourselves by
concentrating on the pleasant things in life. We go to dances and
follow this with a long lie-in, don't we? Time is then filled up in
one way or another. Or someone might join a thoroughly patriotic
party because his professional position demands that he belong to
something which will reflect his values. We have already been
enveloped by the state and our religion; now that must be
supplemented by surrounding what one has unconsciously grown into
with a sort of aura. Well, there is no need for me to go into further
detail. That is roughly the way in which the people who move in the
mainstream of life have grown into their existence.
But those who find it difficult to accept this end up on many
possible and impossible byways. And anthroposophy is precisely one of
these paths on which human beings are seeking to realize themselves;
on which they want to live with such an understanding of themselves
in a more conscious manner, to experience something which is under
their control to a certain extent at least. Anthroposophists are for
the most part people who do not walk along the highways of life. If
we investigate further why that should be, we find that this is
linked with the spiritual world.
Having relived the course of their lives in the spiritual world
after death human beings enter a region where they become
increasingly assimilated into the spiritual world, where their lives
consist of working together with the beings of the higher
hierarchies, where all their acts are related to this world of
substantive spirit. But a time arrives when they begin to turn their
attention to earth again. For a long time in advance of their birth,
human beings unite on a soul level with the generations at the end of
which stand the parents who give birth to them — not only as
far back as their great-great-grandparents, but much further down the
line of preceding generations. The majority of souls nowadays look
down, as it were, to earth from the spiritual world and display a
lively interest in what is happening to their ancestors. Such souls
move in the mainstream of contemporary life.
In contrast, there are a number of souls, particularly at present,
whose interest is concentrated less on worldly happenings as they
approach a new life on earth than on the question of how they can
develop maturity in the spiritual world. Their interest lies in the
spiritual world right up to the moment before they find their way to
earth. As a consequence, when they incarnate they arrive with a
consciousness which has its origins in spiritual impulses. With their
spiritual ambitions they outgrow their environment, and are thus
predestined and prepared to go their own way.
Thus the souls who descend from pre-earthly to earthly existence
can be divided into two groups. One group, to which the majority of
people today still belong, comprises those souls who can make
themselves remarkably at home on earth; who feel thoroughly
comfortable in their warm nest, which so fascinated them long before
they came down to earth, even if it does occasionally appear
unpleasant — but that is only appearance, maya.
Other souls, who may pass patiently through childhood —
appearance is not always the decisive thing — are less able to
make themselves at home, are homeless souls, and grow beyond the
warmth of the nest much more than they grow into it. This latter
group includes those who are subsequently attracted to the
anthroposophical movement. It is therefore clearly predetermined in a
certain sense whether or not one is led to anthroposophy.
The things which are being sought by these souls on the byways of
life, away from the major highways, manifest themselves in many ways.
If the others did not find it so agreeable to take the well-trodden
paths and did not put such obstacles in the way of homeless souls,
the numbers of the latter would be much more obvious to their
contemporaries. But it is widely apparent today how many souls have a
hint of such homelessness about them.
The tendency to such homelessness could be anticipated: the
rapidly growing evidence of a longing in homeless souls for an
attitude to life which was not laid out in advance; a longing for the
spirit in the chaos of contemporary spiritual life. In sketching an
outline of this gradual development, you can find in it, if you
reflect, a little something of what I would like to describe as the
anthroposophical origins of each one of you.
By way of introduction today I will do no more than pick out in
outline some characteristic features. If you look back at the last
decades of the nineteenth century — we could take any number of
fields, but let us take a very characteristic one the cult of Richard
Wagner began to take a hold. It is certainly true that much of this
cult consisted of a cultural flirtation with new ideas,
sensationalism and so on. But all kinds of people gathered in
Bayreuth. One could see people who thought of the long journey to
Bayreuth as a kind of modern pilgrimage. But even among the less
fashionable there were those who were also homeless souls.
Now the essential effect of Wagnerianism on people — I speak
not only about the musical element but about the movement as a
cultural phenomenon — was to offer them something which went
beyond all the usual offerings of a materialistic age. This gave
people a feeling that here there was a gateway to a more spiritual
world, a world differing from their normal environment. What went on
in Bayreuth led to a great longing for more profound spiritual
aspirations.
It was, of course, difficult at first to understand Richard
Wagner's characters and dramatic compositions. But many people felt
that they were created from a source very different from the crude
materialism of the time. And the homeless souls who were driven in
this particular direction were prompted into all kinds of dark,
instinctive intuitions through what I might call the suggestive power
of Wagnerian drama and specifically through the way of life that it
introduced into our culture. Indeed, it is true to say that
subsequent interpretations by theosophists of
Hamlet
or other works of art are very
strongly reminiscent of certain essays which were written by Hans von
Wolzogen, who was not a theosophist but a trained Wagnerian, in the
Bayreuther Blätter.
[ Note 1 ]
Thus one can say that Wagnerianism was the reason why many people,
possessed of a homeless soul, became acquainted with a way of looking
at the world which led away from crude materialism towards something
spiritual; and all those who became part of such a current, not
because of a superficial flirtation with the idea but because of an
inner compulsion of the soul, wanted to develop their experience of a
spiritual world because they felt this kind of inner longing. They
were no longer concerned with the certain evidence which underpinned
the materialistic world view. That was true irrespective of their
position in life, whether they were lawyers or artists, cabinet
ministers, officials, parliamentarians or whatever — even
scientists.
As I said, such homeless souls can be found everywhere. But
Wagnerianism provides a particularly characteristic example of the
presence of very many such souls.
I then encountered several of those people, whose first spiritual
taste had been the Wagnerian experience, in Vienna
[ Note 2 ]
in the late 1880s, in a group which consisted entirely of such homeless
souls. People no longer really appreciate the way in which that
homelessness was visible for anyone to see even then, because many of
the things which at that time required a great deal of inner courage
have today become commonplace.
For example, I do not believe that many people today could imagine
the following. I was sitting in a circle of such homeless souls and
all kinds of things had already been discussed. One person started to
speak about Dostoevsky's Raskolnikov,
[ Note 3 ]
and spoke in such a
manner that the group felt as if struck by lightning. A new world
opened up: it was like suddenly finding oneself on a new planet. That
is how these souls felt.
In all these observations of life which I am recounting by way of
an introduction to the history of the anthroposophical movement, I
never lost my connection with the spiritual world. It was always
there. I mention this because it is the background against which I
speak: the spiritual world accepted as self-evident, and human beings
on earth perceived as images of their real existence as spiritual
beings within the spiritual world. I was involved and came to know
these people, not in order to observe them, but because that is how
things naturally developed.
Having passed through their Wagnerian metamorphosis, they were
involved in a second process of change. For example, there were among
them three good acquaintances, intimate friends even, of H. P. Blavatsky,
[ Note 4 ]
who were keen theosophists in the way that
theosophists were when Blavatsky was still alive. But a peculiar
quality adhered to theosophists at that time, the period following
the appearance of Blavatsky's
Isis Unveiled
and
The Secret Doctrine.
They all had a desire to be extremely esoteric. They
had nothing but contempt for their normal life, including, of course,
their work. The exoteric life, however, was not something which could
be avoided. That was accepted. But everything else was esoteric. In
that setting you spoke only to fellow initiates, only within a small
group. And those who were not considered worthy of talking to about
such things were seen as people with whom one spoke about the
ordinary things in life. It was with the former that you discussed
esoteric matters. They were people who, although they might be
engineers from the moment they stepped into practical life, would
avidly read a book like Sinnett's
Esoteric Buddhism.
[ Note 5 ]
These people possessed a certain urge — partly still as a result
of their Wagnerian past — to explain from an esoteric perspective
everything which existed as legend and myth.
But as more and more of these homeless souls began to appear at
the end of the nineteenth century, it was possible to see how the
most interesting among them were not those who studied the writings
of Sinnett and Blavatsky — with at most a nine-tenths honest
mind — but those who did not wish to read for themselves
because there were still great inhibitions about such things at that
time, and who listened with gaping mouths when those who had been
reading expounded on these things. And it was most interesting to
observe how the listeners, who were sometimes more honest than the
narrators, grasped these ideas with their homeless souls as essential
spiritual nourishment; spiritual nourishment which they were able to
transform into something more honest through the greater honesty of
their souls, despite the relative dishonesty with which it was being
presented to them. One could see in them the yearning to hear
something completely different from what was offered in the ordinary
mainstream of civilization. How they devoured what they heard! It was
most interesting to observe how on the one hand the tentacles of
mainstream life kept drawing people in, and how on the other they
would appear at one of the meeting places — often a coffee
house — and would listen with great yearning. The point is that
the honest souls, the ones who had been subject to the vagaries of
life, were there too.
The way in which souls unwilling to admit to their homelessness
were unable to find their bearings was particularly evident towards
the latter part of the nineteenth century. A person might, for
instance, listen with profound interest to an explanation of the
physical, etheric and astral bodies, kama manas, manas, buddhi and so
on. At the same time he was obliged to write the article his
newspaper expected, including all the usual goodies. It really became
clear how difficult it was for some people to leave the mainstream of
life. For there were several among them who behaved as if they wanted
to slink away, and would prefer that no one knew where they had gone
when they wished to attend what was most important and interesting to
them in life. It was indeed interesting how spiritual life, spiritual
activity, the yearning for a spiritual world began particularly to
establish itself in European civilization.
Now you have to remember that circumstances in the late 1880s were
really much more difficult than today. Even if it was less harmful,
it was nevertheless more difficult then to admit to the existence of
a spiritual world, because the physical world of the senses with all
its magnificent laws was proven of course! There was no way of
getting round that! All the proofs were there in the physics
laboratories and the hospitals; all the evidence declared in favour
of a world for which there was proof. But the world which could be
proven was so unsatisfactory for many homeless souls, was useless to
the inner soul, to such an extent that many crept away from it. And
at the same time as this great contemporary culture was on offer to
them by the sackful — no, by the ton, in giant quantities
— they took what nips they could from what has to be seen as
the flow of the spiritual world into modern civilization. It was not
at all easy to speak about the spiritual world; a suitable point of
entry had to be found.
If I may once again introduce a personal note. I had to find a
suitable opportunity on which to build. One could not simply crash in
on our civilization with the spiritual world. Especially in the late
1880s, I linked the points I had to make about the spiritual world,
about its more intimate aspects, in many places with Goethe's
Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily.
[ Note 6 ]
If one used something which had
been created by no less a person than Goethe, and when it was as
obvious as it is in the
Fairy Tale
that spiritual impulses had flowed into it, that was a
suitable basis. I certainly could not use what was then being peddled
as theosophy, what had been garnered from Blavatsky, from Sinnett's
Esoteric Buddhism
and similar books by a group of people who were undeniably hard-working.
For someone who wanted to preserve his scientifically schooled
thinking in the spiritual world this was simply impossible.
Neither was it easy in another respect. Why? Well, Sinnett's
Esoteric Buddhism
was soon recognized as the work of a spiritual dilettante, a compendium
of old, badly understood esoteric bits and pieces. But it was less easy
to find access to a phenomenon of the period such as Blavatsky's
The Secret Doctrine.
For this work did at least reveal in many places that much of its content
had its origins in real, powerful impulses from the spiritual world.
The book expressed a large number of ancient truths which had been
gained through atavistic clairvoyance in distant ages of mankind.
People thus encountered in the outside world, not from within
themselves, something which could be described as an uncovering of a
tremendous wealth of wisdom which mankind had once possessed as
something exceptionally illuminating. This was interspersed with
unbelievable passages which never ceased to amaze, because the book
is a sloppy and dilettantish piece of work as regards any sort of
methodology, and includes superstitious nonsense and much more. In
short, Blavatsky's
Secret Doctrine
is a peculiar book: great truths side by side with
terrible rubbish. One might almost say that it sums up very well the
spiritual phenomena to which those who developed into the homeless
souls of the modern age were subjected.
In the following period in Weimar
[ Note 7 ]
I was, of course,
occupied intensively with other things, although even then there were
numerous opportunities to observe such searching souls. For
particularly during this time all kinds of people came to the town to
visit the Goethe and Schiller archive. It was possible to become
acquainted with the good and bad sides of their souls in a remarkable
way. I got to know some strange people, as well as those who were
highly cultivated, refined and distinguished. My description of
meeting Herman Grimm,
[ Note 8 ]
for instance, appeared recently in
Das Goetheanum.
[ Note 9 ]
One had a better understanding of Weimar when Herman Grimm was there.
We need only think of his novel
Unütberwindliche Mächte
[ Note 10 ]
to see how Grimm also exhibited a strong drive for spiritual
matters. If you read the end of his novel you can see how the
spiritual world intermingles with the physical through the soul of a
dying person. It is very moving, very magnificent. I have spoken
about this in previous lectures.
[ Note 11 ]
Of course some strange people also passed through Weimar. There
was a Russian state councillor, for example. No one could discover
quite what he was looking for: it was something or other in the
second part of Goethe's
Faust.
Exactly how he hoped to achieve
that through the Goethe archive was impossible to elicit. It was also
hard to know what to do to help him. In the end he was simply left to
continue his search. Next to him was a very intelligent American, who
loved to sit on the floor with his legs crossed — a very
peculiar sight. It was possible to see such cameos of contemporary
life in their most real form.
When subsequently I went to Berlin, destiny once again introduced
me to a group of homeless souls, and I became involved to such an
extent that this group asked me to hold the lectures which have now
been published in my
Eleven European Mystics.
[ Note 12 ]
They were people who found their
way into the Theosophical Society at a somewhat later date than my
Viennese acquaintances. Only a few of them studied Blavatsky's Secret
Doctrine. But these people were well-versed in what Blavatsky's
successor, Annie Besant,
[ Note 13 ]
proclaimed as the theosophical ideas of the time.
So I found myself once again in a similar situation to the one in
Vienna in the late 1880s, in which it was possible to observe such
homeless souls. And anthroposophy at first grew up, one might say,
together with — not in, but together with — homeless
souls who had initially sought a new home in theosophy.
Tomorrow I will try to lead you further in this process of
self-reflection which we have hardly begun today.
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