Lecture VIII
Spiritual Science Considered
with the Classical Walpurgis-Night
28th September, 1916 Dornach
What yesterday
I particularly wanted to make clear in connection with
Goethe's is “Faust” was that more goes to the
making of man's being than can be known or fathomed either by
the understanding or by other forces of the human soul.
Goethe himself felt deeply that the spiritual forces,that can
be developed today in man's conscious life, cannot go so far
as man by nature reaches. Those who believe that what is
today called science needs only to be extended in order to
know, to a certain measure, the possible and the impossible,
simply say: It is true that, with what science offers today,
one gains only a very limited knowledge of man. But this
science will be widened, it will press on over further and
further, and then we shall come increasingly near to the
knowledge of man.
This is a very
short-sighted outlook and is untrue. Knowledge of man does
not depend upon whether the scientific outlook accepted today
extends more and more widely, but to our having recourse to
forces and faculties for knowledge different from any of
those applied by modern science. However far modern science
may advance on its own lines, what Goethe felt to be
unknowable within the being of man can, in no case, ever be
penetrated by it.
All science,
my dear friends, all officially accepted science that deals
with the spiritual, in reality relates only to earthly being
— what has being on the earth-planet. What is called
science today can never pronounce judgment on anything beyond
the processes of the earth-planet. But man is not earthly man
alone. As earth-man he has behind him the evolutions of
Saturn, Sun and Moon, and within him is the germinal basis of
the Jupiter, Venus and Vulcan evolutions. Science can know
nothing of the different planetary life-forms beyond the
earthly; for the laws of science apply only to what is
earthly. Man in his entirety, therefore, cannot be known by
these laws; he can only be know if knowledge, be extended
beyond what is earthly.
Now yesterday
I pointed out how man exists in states of consciousness
lying, as it were, both below and above the threshold of
ordinary consciousness. Below the threshold of ordinary
consciousness lies much from the regions of which dream
experiences spring. But beneath this threshold of
consciousness there also lies a very great deal of what a men
experiences in waking, life, between waking and falling
asleep. For even en little reflection will show you that men
would know far more about their dreams if they exerted
themselves to know a little more about waking. If they would
make an effort to know something about being awake, they
would find that, during this waking time, they do a great
more dreaming then they suppose. The fixed and solid boundary
between waking and sleeping is really only apparent. We might
say that not only do men dream during their waking hours,
they sleep too — sleep as regards a very great many
things. As we all know, we are in a genuinely waking
condition only as regards our ideas and part of our feelings,
while the greater part of our life of feeling, and above all
of our life of will, is wrapped in dreams and sleep.
Sleep-life projects itself into waking life. We could be far
clearer about dream-life, if we tried to perceive the
distinction between those ideas that surge to and fro,
evoking all kinds of images as they come and go, ideas that
might easily be mistake for dreams, and those other ideas, in
which man is active with his whole will. Only in a small part
of the whole world of human ideas does a man find that he
uses his will to connect one idea with another; whereas, in
his waking life, very often there are moments when he
abandons himself to the flow and the caprice of his ideas.
Consider hew, when you give yourself up in this way to the
flow of your ideas, one idea calls up see another, how you
recall things long forgotten. You begin with an idea which
has to do with the present, and this evokes long-forgotten
experiences. That is a process often not very distinct from
dreaming. Because men have so little inner, technical
thinking power, with which rightly to follow their daily
waking life, few are able to set the right value on
sleep-life and the dream-life arising from it. Nevertheless,
my dear friends, we know there are scientifically conceived
theories about dreams that maintain something like the
following. Freud's school and others, mostly, though not all
disciples of the psycho-analysts, say of dreams that they are
images evoked in man by certain wishes in his life not having
been fulfilled. A man goes throughout life wishing all kinds
of things, but — say these people — it is
undeniable that many of our wishes are not fulfilled. Then,
when consciousness is dimmed, these wishes appear before the
soul, and because they cannot be fulfilled in reality, they
are fulfilled in idea. So that in the opinion of many people
today dreams are wishes fulfilled in phantasy. I should like
the people who maintain this just to consider how they manage
to dream they have been beheaded. All such things, so often
today forming the content of theories, are terribly
one-sided. And men's heads are bound to be full of this
one-sidedness unless they turn to the investigations of
Spiritual Science — investigations into worlds unknown
both t0 the external world of the senses and to external
intellectual thinking, and yielding conclusions beyond the
grasp of human senses or human intellect.
From what was
said yesterday, however, you can gather one thing concerning
dreams with the utmost surety, namely, that in them something
is living and weaving which is connected with our human past,
with the past when we had an existence still associated with
earth-fire and water-air. While unconscious in sleep, to a
certain extent we call back our past. Today with our brain
consciousness and our ordinary free-will, we are not in the
position consciously to transport ourselves into that world.
While passing through the earlier stages of our evolution we
were indeed unconscious or subconscious. Yet relatively it is
not particularly difficult to have this experience. If you
follow up your dram life, you will certainly find it
extraordinarily difficult to give a clear interpretation of
your dream pictures. The way they follow one after another is
generally completely chaotic. But this chaotic character is
only superficial; below the surface man is living in an
element that is by no means chaotic, it is merely different,
totally different, from the experiences of waking life. We
shall immediately see the profound difference if we are clear
in just one case as to how far dream-life differs from waking
life. It would be very unpleasant if our relations with other
people were the same in waking life as they are in dreams.
For in dreams we are aware of a bond uniting us with almost
all those karmically connected with us; -we experience a link
with all the human beings with whom we have any karmic
connection. From the moment you begin to fall asleep till you
wake, a force goes forth from you to innumerable people, and
from innumerable people forces come to you. I cannot say that
you speak, for speaking is only learnt in waking day life,
but if you will not misunderstand me, if you will apply what
I am going to say to the communications we have in sleep,
then you will know what I mean by saying: In sleep you speak
to innumerable people and they speak to you. And what you
experience in your soul during your sleep is imparted to you
by innumerable people; and what you do during your sleep is
to send thoughts to innumerable people. The union between men
in sleep is very intimate. It would be highly distressing if
this were continued into waking life. You see, it is the
beneficent act of the Guardian of the Threshold that he hides
from man what is beneath the level of human consciousness. In
sleep, as a rule, you know if anyone is lying, you know as a
rule if anyone has evil thoughts about you. On the whole, men
know one another in sleep comparatively well, but with dimmed
consciousness. That is all covered up in waking
consciousness, and it must be so, for the simple reason that
man would never attain the ego-conscious thinking he is to
learn during his earth-mission, nor be able to manage the
free will he is to acquire, if he were to continue to live as
he lived during the periods of Saturn, Sun, and especially
the Moon period. Then, in his external life, he lived as he
now lives from falling asleep to waking.
But now we
come to something else significant. Out of the unconscious
life between falling asleep and waking, dreams emerge. Why
then are they not a true picture of life below the threshold
of consciousness? Ah!, were these dreams direct and true
reflections, they would be every possible thing. In the first
place they would impart significant knowledge concerning our
relation to the world and to men; they would also be stern
monitors. They would speak dreadfully severely to our
conscience about the various things in life about which we
are so willing to give ourselves up to illusion. I might
almost say that we are protected from the effect these dreams
might have upon us if they were true reflections of life
below the threshold of consciousness — we are protected
by our waking life permeating us with forces so strongly that
a shadow is cast over the whole life of dreams. Thus, we
carry the ideas, the images, of waking life into our
dream-life, into the life of sleep, and through this dreams
arise. Suppose, for instance, you were to dream of some
personality who took it upon himself to impress upon you that
you had done something really tactless — unfitting.
That happens sometimes. Others, too, might admonish us during
sleep, and might speak to our conscience. The experiences and
customs of waking life have given you the wish — I
might even say the strong desire — not to listen to
this; during sleep you don't want to hear anything this
person says to you. Well then, the wish is transformed into a
darkening of experience. But if at the same time, there is
such intense activity of the soul that the picture surges up,
then something else from waking life is superimposed upon
what you were to have experienced as a picture, something
said by a kind friend to whom you would rather listen than to
the admonisher — What a splendid fellow you are, always
ready to will and do what is best and most pleasant! —
Sometimes, from waking life and its reminiscences, the very
opposite can be hung over what is being experienced.
Actually, waking life is the cause of all the illusions and
deceptions arising during the life of dreams.
Furthermore it
is possible for a man today, in the present cycle of
evolution, to come to a knowledge of Spiritual Science. There
are, I know, many who do so and say: I have been studying
Spiritual Science for many years, and yet am no whit
advanced. I am told that I can achieve this or that through
Spiritual Science, but it does not help me forward. — I
have often emphasized that this thought is not the right one.
Spiritual Science brings progress to everyone, even when it
does not develop an esoteric life. The thoughts of Spiritual
Science on themselves bring progress. But we must be careful
about subjective experiences that take place really in the
soul, for it is strange that what springs up as new, in the
path of anyone beginning to study Spiritual Science, in its
picture character is, at first, no different from the world
of dreams. What we experience, my dear friends, when we
become anthroposophists, appears to differ very little from
the world of dreams. But a more subtle differentiation shows
a most important distinction between ordinary dreams and
those perceptions that flow through spiritual life, when
consciously admitted into thought.
Much that is
chaotic may also appear in the dream-pictures experienced in
the soul of a spiritual scientist. But if these pictures are
analysed according to the guidance Spiritual Science can
give, they will be found to become, especially as they
progress ever truer reflections, of man's inner experience.
And we must pay heed to this layer of experience, hidden as
it is from ordinary understanding and from the ordinary life
of the senses. This experience runs its course like a
meditation, a meditative dream, yet is full of meaning and,
rightly regarded, throws much light on spiritual secrets. We
must mark how it gradually creeps into the life of ordinary
ideas — this layer of life that closely resembles
dreams, but that can lead us into the spiritual world. But we
must not merely look at its single pictures, we must look at
the meaningful course these pictures take. If we pay
attention to such things, we come to the differentiation of
the three layers of consciousness which I showed you
yesterday. Goethe divined it in a beautiful way. One of these
layers of consciousness appears,
without any
help of ours, when we dream in the ordinary way; if we are
not interpreters of dreams, if we are not superstitious but
try honestly to find what lies behind the dream-pictures,
then this dream-world will be able to reveal that, before
these earth-lives, as men we passed through earlier stages of
evolution.
And than we
have the ordinary waking day consciousness we know, or at
least think we know. We know the fact of its existence, we do
not always venture to explain it fully but we know it
exists.
The third
layer is where supersensible knowledge enters in. For the
reasons already mentioned, supersensible knowledge is of
course something for which man has to strive, both now and
into the future.
I pointed out
to you yesterday how, in the first half of the scene in the
scene in the second part of Faust, which we are now to
consider, Goethe embodies the characteristic features of
dream-life. And the moment the Oread begins to speak to
Mephistopheles, and the philosophers appear, we have to do
with the world of ordinary daytime reality. The moment the
Dryads point out the Phorkyads to Mephistopheles, we are
dealing with a reference to conscious supersensible
knowledge. Goethe is directing his thoughts and ideas to the
three layers of consciousness when he asks himself the
question: How will Homunculus, to whom human knowledge is
accessible, become a Homo? — Not through the ordinary
knowledge of the understanding of the senses, but only by
having recourse to other layers of consciousness. For man in
his being is wider than the earth, and intelligence and the
senses are adapted only to earthly things. But we explained
yesterday how the equilibrium of the Sphinx fails when man
plunges into the world of antiquity, how man really feels
insecure in it, how Homunculus feels himself insecure. For
man knows little more about himself — forgive me but
this is true — he knows little more about himself than
he does about a Homunculus; and about a Homo he knows
nothing. And Homunculus, as Goethe pictures him, does not
enter into all the whirl of the Sirens, the Seismos, and so
on, because he is afraid of the stormy, surging element into
which man dives when he forsakes the world of the senses to
enter the world from which dreams arise. Homunculus does not
dare to enter there, but wants to find an easier way to
become Homo. He is on the track of two philosophers,
Anaxagoras and Thales, from whom he hopes to learn how it is
possible to put more into his human nature that can't be
given him in a laboratory. This is what he wants. We already
know that Goethe had little hope of what could be experienced
through the new philosophers, and had no wish at all to test
people's patience by, perhaps, taking Homunculus to
Königsberg to get information from Kant on how to become
a complete human being, how to widen human nature. But Goethe
sought to live himself into the world of the Greeks,
believing that by so living in their more pliable and
flexible ideas, he could grasp human life out of another
layer of consciousness better than through what the more
recent philosophers could produce out of understanding and
the consciousness of the senses. Thus, he does not introduce
Homunculus into the society of Kant, or of Leibnitz, Hume or
Locke, but brings him into the company of those philosophers
who came nearer the older outlook, the outlook of the ancient
Mysteries, where something of man's nature could be known, if
not with such clearly experienced consciousness as today, yet
with a more all-embracing consciousness. But, at heart,
Anaxagoras and Thales our only imitators of the old Mystery
wisdom. Everything said by Anaxagoras in this scene, however,
goes to show that it is he who has the more knowledge of
ancient Mystery wisdom. Thales is really the inaugurator, the
initiator, the beginner, of the new tendency in science, and
knows but little of the old secrets. Naturally he knows more
than his later philistine followers because he lived nearer
the time of the ancient Mysteries, but he knows less than
Anaxagoras. From what he says we can gather that Thales can
only give information about what occurs in the world of the
senses around him, how mountain ranges and such physical
features were formed by slow and gradual processes. You might
think it was Lyell, the modern geologist, speaking.
Anaxagoras would explain the present out of the past, explain
the earthly from what went before, when earth was not yet
earth. He wants to find his explanation in those times to
which, in their nature, the ants, the comets, and also the
Pigmies belonged. I referred to this yesterday. Anaxagoras
lives entirely in that world which today is a supersensible,
or if you like, subsensible world, without knowledge of
which, however, we cannot understand what has to do with the
senses. Anaxagoras here reflects one of Goethe's deep
convictions. For Goethe has put this point beautifully into
one of his aphorisms, where he says: “What no longer
arises, we cannot think of as arising. What has already
arisen, we cannot understand”. And in another place:
“Reason as applied to what is becoming, understanding
to what has become”.
What Thales
sees around him is what has become. Anaxagoras enters into
all that has gone before they becoming — the actual
arising. Hence Goethe distinguishes strictly between
understanding that is directed to what is nowadays regarded
as the object of science, and reason that extends beyond the
obvious and intellectual, to the supersensible, even the
supersensible that held sway before the existing conditions
of the earth. In Anaxagoras, Goethe sees the representative
of a knowledge, a science, that devotes itself to what is
still coming into being, and is at home and all that is done
by Pigmies, that is to say, at home in all that such beings
do that certainly today develop a physical existence, but
like the comets, for example, really belonged by nature to a
previous age.
So when
Anaxagoras meets with Homunculus' request, he would like to
give him the opportunity to enrich human nature through his
own (Anaxagoras') knowledge; he wants to take Homunculus into
the world of the Pigmies, the comets, and so forth, and even
wants to make him king there. It is already clear to
Anaxagoras that the world of which Thales speaks, the world
of present conditions, cannot be much help in changing
Homunculus into Homo. Could entrants be made into the world
of becoming, however, into the world preceding ours,
something might be achieved towards that end. But Homunculus
is undecided: “What says my Thales?” He still
thinks he will not venture into that world. When he
encountered it as a dream-world, he dared not enter it, and
now it confronts him as the thought of Anaxagoras he still
does not summon up sufficient courage, or at least he would
first have Thales' advice. And Thales deters him from
plunging into the world of Anaxagoras' thought. What kind of
world is this? Fundamentally, it is the world of the ancient
Mysteries, but flattened, levelled down, for human
understanding. It is the shadow form of the concepts of the
ancient Mysteries. That is why they cannot hold their own
against the world. If we have real, living concepts of
becoming, we can arrive at an understanding of this
world — grow into it. But Anaxagoras' shadow concepts are
no match for Thales' objections, for these come from the
present sense-world. And just as fleeting dreams, that are
reflections of higher spiritual worlds, fade away from man
when a cock crows or a door slams, so everything in the
thought-world of Anaxagoras fades when it meets other
thoughts drawn from the present world of the senses. Thales
has only to draw attention to the presence of the
sense-world, and he does this very forcibly. As the present
world kills the preceding world that arises before us in
dreams, so do the cranes strike dead the Pigmies and the
emmets. This is merely an image. Anaxagoras first turns to
the world that re-appears in the vague experience of dreams.
When he is obliged to realise that this world will be of no
advantage to Homunculus, he then turns to the higher world.
To begin with, in wonderful words, he invokes among heavenly
phenomena, all that has remained of a previous period of he
earth — he invokes the Moon. After he has widened his
thoughts and ideas concerning what is left over from the Moon
period — emmets, pigmies, creatures of a lower kind, and
all this has proved useless to Homunculus, he looks upward to
where the Moon has still remained from the old Moon
period.
Think how
clearly in this scene Goethe actually points to all these
secrets lying at the basis of earthly evolution. He even
makes Anaxagoras address an invocation to the Moon, out of
the ancient Mystery-wisdom. It is a wonderful passage in
which Anaxagoras turns toward the Moon. It shows most
distinctly how, in Anaxagoras, Goethe was wishing to portray
a personality standing within the spiritual world but only
with his understanding, the understanding that only studying
the present can never reach the spiritual at all, but, in
Anaxagoras, still preserves the spiritual out of the old
Mysteries. Anaxagoras says:
“The powers subterene erstwhile
adoring,
This crisis in, I turn above, imploring,
O Thou, that agest not eternally,
Three-named, three-formed, enthroned eternally,
Thee in my people's woe I call on Thee!
Diana, Luna, Hecate!
Thou bosom-lightener [or bosom-widener], deeply pensive
one!
Thou tranquil brightener, mighty intensive one!
Open thy shadows' awful gulf alone!
Thine ancient might without a spell make
known.”
But he has still only shadows; instead of
achieving anything for Homunculus, he perceives how from the
Moon desolation falls upon the earth, and how all the life
still left there is destroyed by a phenomenon of the
elements. As being characteristic of Anaxagoras it is
significant that he addresses the Moon, this remnant of a
previous period of the earth, as “Luna, Diana, Hecate
...”
For
Anaxagoras, therefore, the Moon is not truly a unity but a
trinity. In so far as it fulfils its course above in the
heavens, it is Luna. In so far as it is active in the earth
itself, it is Diana. The forces working cosmically through
the Moon as it circles the heavens, have — one might
say — for brothers and sisters the earthly forces; the
Moon is not only present cosmically, it exists also in an
earthly way. The same forces that are cosmically associated
with the circling Moon in the heavens, also live and weave
through what is earthly, and belong to significant
subconscious forces in man. They work in man's nature and
belong to forces in him that are subconscious but important.
What works within the earth through man having a certain
relation to Nature out of his subconscious, that never comes
to complete consciousness, was called by the Greeks Diana.
Diana is generally said to be the goddess of the chase.
Certainly she is that too, because this subconscious holds
sway in the pleasures of the chase; it does so, however, in
countless other human feelings and will-impulses. Diana is
not only goddess of the chase, she is the working, creating
goddess of al half unconscious, half subconscious striving,
such as is gratified in hunting. Man does much of this kind
in life, and this is one of the ways.
Then there
dwells in man, but also especially in the earth, a third
figure, the figure of Hecate, the sub-earthly state of the
Moon. It is from within the earth, from what is sub-earthly
in it, that those forces work upwards, which — so far as
the Moon is a heavenly body, work in her from above
downwards. All that the man of today knows of this Moon is
the abstract mineral ball he believes to revolve out there,
round the earth in four weeks. The Greeks knew a threefold
Moon — Luna, Diana, Hecate. And being a microcosm is an
image of every trinity, and image of Luna, Diana, Hecate, as
the threefold Moon. And we have learnt to know the threefold
man. We know the man of the head; this man of the head, since
he is the product of the periods of Saturn, Sun, and Moon,
the product of all previous ages, can be brought into
relation with the heavenly survival, with Luna. So that the
head in man would, as a microcosm, correspond to the
macrocosm Luna. The man of the centre, the breast, would
correspond to Diana; it is in the heart that those
subconscious impulses arise of which Diana is the goddess.
And all that plays out of the extremity-man and is continued
into the sex-man, all the dark, purely organic, bodily
feelings and impulses, prevailing in the human being, come
from the sub-earthly power of Hecate. And Goethe lets all
this sound forth, making it all quite clear for those who
wish to hear. To the realm of Hecate belongs, for instance,
Empusa who appears in this scene among the Lamiae around
Mephistopheles. The Lamiae express rather what belongs to
Diana, whereas, in Empusa, all that belongs to the
sub-earthly is working, all that dwells microcosmically in
the lower nature of man, and is to be awakened in
Mephistopheles. This is what Goethe makes ring out for
us.
Anaxagoras
wishes to show his science to better advantage than he did
when alluding to the earthly, to earthly survivals, to the
emmets, his myrmidons as he calls them. He turns to the
threefold Moon that as macrocosm is the same as man as
microcosm. And we ask: Had Goethe a presentiment that, in the
threefold Moon, the head-man, chest-man, and limb-man were
microcosmically present? Well, my dear friends, read the
following lines:
“Thou bosom-widener, (Diana)
Profoundly pensive one, (Luna)
Thou tranquil brightener, mighty, intensive one!”
(Hecate)
Here you have, fully expressed by Goethe
and made obvious by his description of the middle one as
“breast-widener”, the three qualities of Luna,
Diana, and Hecate, in so far as these three also apply to
threefold man.
You see, my
dear friends, there are good grounds for maintaining that
Goethe's foreseeing knowledge penetrated deeply in the truths
on Spiritual Science. What, however, is written in a work
like Goethe's Faust has to be taken in its true
character. It when you consider Goethe's characteristic
attitude with its foreseeing perception of the truths of
Spiritual Science, that you can understand how in a certain
sense he repeatedly felt the spiritual, the
supersensible — but never the less as something uncanny.
As I said yesterday, he lived within his northern world, and
felt in sympathy with what this environment offered him in
the way on ideas and concepts. However great a genius a man
may be, he con only have the same concepts as his fellows; he
can combine them differently but he cannot have different
concepts. The two layers of consciousness, the subconscious
and the superconscious, cannot be approached in this way. The
ordinary philistine, my dear friends, can make nothing of all
this, and is glad if he is not obliged to deal with the other
layers of consciousness. But Goethe, who strove with every
fibre of his soul, to penetrate the being of man, often felt
it a grievous human limitation that he should have no ideas,
no concepts, with which he could see into the would whence
man arises, into which, however, no one can look with his
understanding or his ordinary knowledge. And then, from all
he had felt through his natural ability, or that he had
experienced in other ways, and through what he had
particularly noticed in Grecian art in Italy, there arose in
Goethe the thought that, were man to steep himself in the
ideas and life of Greece, he would come nearer to the
supersensible than with modern ideas. This was so deeply
rooted in Goethe that, from the year 1780 onwards he
continually strove to make his ideas as supple as were those
of the Greeks. He hoped in this way to reach the
supersensible world. But what arose out of this? There arose
his strenuous endeavour to come to knowledge of the
supersensible world not from the outlook of Greek life, but
by gaining ideas through which he would be able to grasp the
supersensible world in the life of soul. It is interesting
how, while he was writing this scene, Goethe was steeping
himself in everything possible to bring Greek life vividly
before his soul. Today we are no nearer to Greek life than
men were in Goethe's days. And yet such a work as Schlosser's
Universal Survey of the History of the Ancient World and
its Culture,
published in 1826, and immediately read by
Goethe among many other works transplanting him into the life
of Greece, enabled him, by his sympathetic attitude towards
Greek life, to bring it vividly before his soul. But what
idea had he in all this? Just think! he writes: We are called
upon to look back on what is most universal, but utterly
past, in ancient history — what cannot be brought back;
and from there to let the different peoples gradually surge
up beneath out gaze.
In the last
twenty years of the eighteenth century during which these
scenes of Faust were being created, Goethe occupied
himself intensively with studies that should bring vividly
before his spirit the far distant past and show him how it
flows into the present. Goethe is not one of those who make
poems by a turn of the hand; he plunges deeply into the world
leading to the supersensible, so that as a poet he can give
tidings of it. And his belief in the Greek world changed to a
certain extent his way of representation. Because in his very
soul he sought Greek life, the concept of truth, the concept
of good, drew near the concept of beauty. And the concept of
evil approached the concept of ugliness. That is difficult
for present-day man to understand. In Greek thought it was
different. Cosmos is a word meaning beautiful world-order, as
well as true world-order. Today men no longer think, as did
the Greeks, that beauty is so closely allied to truth, and
ugliness to evil. For the Greeks, beauty melted into truth,
ugliness into error and evil. Through his attitude to the
Greek world Goethe acquired the feeling that anyone organised
like the Greeks, who stood in such close relation to the
supersensible world, would experience the untrue and evil as
ugly, and would turn away from this because of his experience
of beauty, while he would feel truth to be beautiful. This
feeling was developed by Goethe. And he believed he might
perhaps draw nearer the supersensible by saturating himself
with feeling for the beauty of the world. But just as one can
only know light by its shadow, one must also be saturated
with feeling for the ugliness of the world. And that too
Goethe sought.
For this
reason he sets Mephistopheles, who is of course only another
side of Faust's life, among the prototypes of what is
hideous. And in so doing, my dear friends, Goethe touches on
a great mystery of existence. You will have realised, from
the lectures I have given here from time to time, that even
today there are people in possession of certain secrets.
Particularly the leaders of Roman Catholicism, for example,
the leaders, are in possession of certain secrets. What
matters is how these secrets are used. But certain initiates
of the English-speaking peoples are also acquainted with
mysteries. Out of a profound misunderstanding, does not only
the Roman Church — that is, its leaders — keep these
secrets from its adherents, but certain esoteric initiates of
the English-speaking peoples do the same. They have various
reasons for this, and of one of these I will now speak.
You see, my
dear friends, the earth has a past, the periods of Saturn,
Sun and Moon; it has a present, the earth-period; it has a
future, the periods of Jupiter, Venus, Vulcan. In evolution
there is both good and evil. Out of the cosmos, out of cosmic
evolution, good can only be recognised from the past, from
the periods of Saturn, sun and Moon, and half the
earth-period. Wisdom and goodness are associated, in this
looking back into the past. Wisdom and goodness were
implanted into human nature by those members of the higher
hierarchies who belong to man, at a time when this human
nature was not yet awakened to full consciousness, as it is
on the earth. For the coming time, the Jupiter, Venus and
Vulcan periods, and at present on the earth, for the coming
half of the earth-period — it is already beginning —
man must preserve goodness if he wishes to attain it; he must
develop the impulse for goodness out of his own nature. For
in his environment,in what is new that approaches him, the
forces of evil are revealed. Were these forces for evil not
revealed, man could not arrive at free-will. And those
initiates to whom I refer know this important secret, my dear
friends, and will not impart it because they do not wish to
help mankind to maturity. They know this secret. If what
arose as human nature on ancient Saturn, Sun and Moon, and
still continues further — if what was evolved for us men
on Saturn, and possesses a past, were to arise now out of
earth-conditions, it would be fundamentally evil, it would
only be able to absorb evil. It is only possible to receive
evil from external conditions. That man can acquire freedom
of will is due to this exposure to evil and his being able to
choose between the evil that approaches him, and the good he
can develop out of his own nature. This is if he has
confidence in what was planted there in previous ages. Hence
these initiates say to those wishing to be initiated: There
are three layers of consciousness, (that is the formula
always used in these English-speaking schools os initiation)
three layers of consciousness. When a man plunges into the
subconscious, from which dreams spring up, he experiences an
intimate relation with other beings (I have described this to
you before) also with other men; these beings do not appear
in the present world. When, as is the case today, man is
living in his day-consciousness in the perceptible, rational
world, he is in the world where he goes through birth and
death. And when he raises himself to the world — that he
will enter as physical man in the future — to which he
attains through supersensible knowledge, then that is the
world where he first experiences evil. For it is then that a
man must find strength to be a match for evil, to hold his
own against it. He must learn to know evil.
The natural
consequence of this is the necessity for men of the present
to shed light on the past, so that they may be prepared for
the inevitable encounter with evil; and this can be done only
through Spiritual Science. To these three layers of
consciousness, the initiates of the English-speaking peoples
continually draw attention. This will be the basis of that
conflict that is of the utmost importance, though the present
age has little external knowledge of it. This conflict will
be between those who want what is a necessity to take place,
and secrets of this kind to be imparted, and those who wish
to keep mankind in immaturity. So far the latter have had the
upper hand. It is most important that these things should be
known. You can see from this, my dear friends, what mischief
will be set on foot if the truths of Spiritual Science are
withheld. For man will be exposed to the forces of evil, and
he will only be protected from it by giving himself up to the
spiritual life of the good. To withhold the spiritual life of
goodness from men is to be no friend to humanity. Whoever
does this, be he Freemason or Jesuit, is no friend to
humanity. For it means handing men over to the forces of
evil. And there may be a purpose in doing so. This purpose
may be to confine goodness to a small circle, in order by the
help of this goodness to dominate the helpless humanity who
are thus led by evil into the follies of life.
You can
imagine, my dear friends, that anyone like Goethe, who has a
presentiment of all these things, will have some hesitation
in approaching them. From many things I have said in your
presence about Goethe's particular kind of spirituality, you
will be able to form a concept of how he would approach these
subtle, but world-shattering matters with only really
relevant ideas. Hence, in conceiving his Faust, he did not
wish to be thought that man, wanting to make progress in
culture, must fearlessly expose himself to the forces of
evil; instead, he clothes this too, in Greek ideas, by
confronting Mephistopheles with primeval ugliness, with the
trinity of Phorkyads, the three prototypes of ugliness.
Instead of pointing men unreservedly to the reality of evil,
as Spiritual Science must do. Goethe points to the reality of
ugliness as contrasted with beauty. Hence the characteristic
behaviour of Mephistopheles towards the Phorkyads. Had
Mephistopheles remained in his northern home, that is to say
in a world that has certainly advanced beyond that of the
Greeks in the world-order, he would have been obliged to meet
with the bitter, but essential world, from which future evil
flows. Instead of this, Goethe makes him meet in the world of
antiquity the prototypes of ugliness, the Phorkyads. So that
he places him, as it were, in prehistoric times before the
history of evil. By employing Greek concepts, he places most
solemn truth before men in a way that could still arouse
their sympathy. And here too Goethe shows his deep knowledge
of the matter. We know — you may read this in
Occult Science
— that the future is in a sense the
reproduction of the past on a higher level. Jupiter is a kind
of repetition of the Moon; Venus of the Sun; and Vulcan of
Saturn. On a higher level, the earlier appears in the later.
It is the same as regards evil. Evil appears in order that
man may develop goodness out of his own nature with all
possible strength. But this evil will show distorted
pictures, caricatures, of the forms of the primeval age.
You see, what
we now are is largely because we are constructed
symmetrically, the left-man and the right-man working
together. Physicists and physiologists wonder why it is we
have two eyes, what use we have for two eyes. If they knew
why we have two hands, and of what use they are to us, they
would also know why we have two eyes and of what use these
are. If, for instance, we could not touch the left hand with
the right, we could never arrive at ego-consciousness. By
being able to grasp the right-man with the left, by gaining
knowledge of the right-man by means of the left, we arrive at
consciousness of ourselves, at consciousness of the presence
of the ego. To look at an object a man must have more than
one eye. If, by birth or accident, he has only one eye, that
does not matter: it is not the external apparatus but the
faculty, the forces, that are of importance. When we look at
a man the axes of the eyes are crossed. In this way the ego
is associated with sight; through the crossing the left
direction is associated with the right. And the farther we go
back the closer is the relation, in common with the
consciousness. This is why Goethe gives the three Phorkyads
one eye and one tooth between them, a representation that
shows his deep knowledge. Thus the three have but one eye and
one tooth. This implies that the senses are not meant to be
working together, they are still isolated from one another.
On the one hand relationship is expressed, on the other we
are told that the elements are not yet working in
collaboration, that what arises through the right-man and the
left-man cannot yet appear. Thus accurately does Goethe
express what he wishes to say, and he suggests infinitely
much.
Now, if you
think over what you know from Occult Science namely, that the
present be-sexual human being has sprung from the uni-sexual
being, and that male and female have only been developed in
the course of evolution, you will see that a retrograde
evolution takes place when Mephistopheles meets with evil in
the form of ugliness, joins with it in going with the
Phorkyads: “Done! here stand I” (after he has
thrown in his lot with the Phorkyads) ...
“Here stand I, Chaos'
well-beloved son!”
Phorkyads: “And Chaos' true-born daughters, we,
undoubted.”
To which Mephistopheles replies:
“O fie! Hermaphrodite must I be
flouted?”
He becomes ‘hermaphrodite’ when it is
intended to show the condition preceding the bi-sexual, the
condition to which I have just referred. Truly Goethe gives
his descriptions from inside knowledge! In this scene we may
recognise how deeply he had divined and entered into the
truths of Spiritual Science.
Now, remember
now not long ago I said that no one can ever arrive at a
satisfying conception of the world who, misled by what man is
now, what he has of necessity, to be, comes on the one hand
to abstract ideals, ideals having no forces. (Forces such as
those in nature that cannot fit into the physical
world-order, but have to disperse like mist when the earth
reaches her goal, that is, her grave). No one can find a
satisfying world-outlook who is either an abstract idealist
of this kind, or a materialist. As I said, man must be both.
He must be able to rise to ideas in conformity with the age
in which he lives, and also look at material things in a
material way and form materialistic ideas about them. Thus,
he must be able to form both a materialistic and an
idealistic conception of the world, and not set up a unity
with abstract concepts. Having on the one hand scientific
concepts, on the other idealistic concepts, we must then let
them interpenetrate each other just as spirit and matter do.
As I have told you, in processes of cognition the ideal must
permeate and illumine the material, the material must
permeate and illumine the ideal.
And Goethe
found this out. It occurred to him how one-sided it is when,
in abstract concepts, men seek a world-outlook inclining more
to matter or more to spirit. Hence he was drawn to seek his
world-conception not in abstract ideas but in a different
way. And this he describes as follows:
“Since so much of our experience
does not admit of being openly expressed and directly
imparted, long ago I chose this method, namely, to reveal
the hidden meaning to the observant by dint of contrasted
images playing into one another.”
Now, can
anyone express more clearly that he is neither idealist not
realist, but both idealist and realist, letting the two
world-outlooks play into one another. Goethe seeks to
approach the world from the most diverse directions, and to
come to truth by means of mutually reflected concepts. Thus,
in Goethe's impulses there is already concealed the way that
must be taken by Spiritual Science in order to lead mankind
towards the future — the health-giving future.
One would
like, my dear friends, what Goethe began to be continued; but
then it would be essential for such works as Faust to
be really read. Man has, however, more or less lost the habit
of reading. At best, men would say when they read:
“Diana, Luna, Hecate!
Thou bosom widener, profoundly pensive one!”
Oh! poetry.
Then there is no need to go deeper into it, no need to
meditate over every word! Thus men console themselves today
when offered anything they are not actually bound to believe;
for they like to take things superficially. But the universe
does not permit that. When you consider the deep truth I have
just shown in connection with the meeting of Mephistopheles
with the Phorkyads — a truth that has been preserved in
many occult schools of the present day — then you have
the opportunity of understanding, together with much else
that enables you to realise it, the intense seriousness of
our striving after Spiritual Science, the seriousness that
must underlie our endeavours. It may be said that there
sometimes escapes, half consciously, from those who have come
into contact with what is essential for man in the future, an
pious ejaculation, like Nietzsche's, in his
Midnight Song:
“The world is deep, Yea, deeper than the day
e'er dreamed”.
We must indeed
say that the day gives man day-consciousness; but, so long as
he clings only to what the day brings, man of himself becomes
simply Homunculus, not Homo. For “the world is deep,
yea, deeper than the day e'er dreamed”. And since
Goethe does not wish to lead Faust into merely what the day
brings, but into all that conceals the eternal, he has to let
him take his way in the company of Homunculus, and of
Mephistopheles who confronts the supersensible. Goethe
thought he could do this by steeping himself in Greek ideas,
and by bringing them to life within himself.
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