Lecture X
Faust's Knowledge and Understanding of Himself
and of the
Forces Actually Slumbering in Man
Dornach 17th January, 1919
The scene
from “Faust” just presented, which comes at the
end of the second act of Part II, forms the bridge for
Faust's entrance into ancient Greece. Those who have gone
most deeply into Goethe's world-conception will see how,
through it he has penetrated deeply into the spiritual, in
both universe and the mystery of man, in so far as the latter
is connected with what is spiritual in the universe. It
should first be emphasised, on the one hand, that what Goethe
meant by saying he had put a great deal in a veiled way into
Part II of “Faust”, applies especially to this
profound, most significant scene. In this second part of
“Faust” there is much wisdom. On the other hand,
when represented on the stage, this wisdom is able through
its imagery to make a great appeal to the senses.
If we are to
understand Goethe's Faust, particularly the second part, we
must always keep these two aspects in mind. As Goethe says,
the simple minded spectator of faust will experience pleasure
and aesthetic satisfaction in its series of pictures; the
Initiate, however, is meant to find there profound secrets of
life. If we start with what the pictures give us, this scene
represents a festival of the seas to which Homunculus has
been taken by Thales. This festival, however, contains a
great deal that is veiled, and is meant actually to introduce
the demonic powers dwelling in the sea, — that is, the
spiritual powers.
Why does
Goethe have recourse to the demonic powers of ancient Greece
when wishing to lead Faust to the highest point of
self-knowledge and self-understanding in human evolution? It
may be stated that Goethe was perfectly clear that it is
impossible for man ever to arrive at a true conception of his
own nature by merely acquiring knowledge received through the
senses and the understanding associated with them. True
knowledge of man can only be imparted through true spiritual
perception. So that all the knowledge and perception of man
sought simply through the external physical world, to which
the senses and the physical understanding are directed, is no
real knowledge of man at all. Goethe indicates this by
introducing Homunculus into his poem.
Now
Homunculus is the result of the knowledge of man to which
Wagner is capable of aspiring with ideally conceived physical
means, such ideally conceived means as would. naturally be
considered by ordinary science to be its goal, from which,
however, no result can be expected either today or in the
future. Goethe advances the hypothesis that it might be
possible to produce a Homunculus in a retort, that is, to
gain such complete knowledge of combining the forces of
nature that a human being could be intellectually put
together out of various ingredients. But it is no man who
arises thus, even when all that can be attained in the
physical world is thought out to the highest point of
perfection — no man arises, no homo, but only a
homunculus. Considered dramatically, this homunculus is
simply the image of himself that a man can form with the help
of his reason, of his ordinary earthly knowledge. How can
this man-made image that is a homunculus provide a true
conception of man? How can it be brought about that in this
conception man does not stop short at the simple homunculus
but pushes on to the homo? It is clear to Goethe that this
goal can only be reached through knowledge acquired by the
human soul and spirit when free of the body.
Now, by most
various ways Goethe endeavours to reach the realm to which a
human being must come if he wishes to acquire complete
knowledge of man, that is, the knowledge acquired when free
of the body. Goethe really wishes to show that it is possible
too out of the body to gain knowledge, decisive knowledge,
concerning the nature of man. He was by no means one of those
who plunges lightheartedly into such matters. His whole life
through he was striving to to make his soul more profound.
For it was clear to him that when a man grows old, he does
not live in vain, but that the forces of knowledge are always
increasing, so that in old age it is possible for us to know
more than in our youth. But he realised, also the problematic
nature of the sojourn of soul and spirit outside the body.
Hence he sought in the most varied ways to bring man, to his
Faust, knowledge in the form of pictures, that we call
Imagination. And he does this first in the Romantic
Walpurgis-Night of Part I, and then again in the Classical
Walpurgis-Night where he takes the Imaginations from ancient
Greece, whither he would transport Faust. We might perhaps
say that Goethe thinks that, when a man leaves the body in
order to change Homunculus into Homo, into man, he has
Imaginations appearing to different people in different
forms. And, in the perception of the ancient Greeks, these
Imaginations in some degree still approached spiritual
reality. Setting before the soul the demonic world of ancient
Greece, we can see how, in this traditional realm of myths,
when outside the body with his soul and spirit, in highly
developed atavistic clairvoyance, man contemplated nature
from whose womb he sprang. I might therefore say that Goethe,
not wanting to invent an imaginative world himself, calls in
the Greek world in order to tell us that, whatever a man may
contrive out of his ordinary knowledge, he still remains a
Homunculus; if, however, he wishes to become a real man, he
must first advance to the world of Imagination, Inspiration,
and so on. That is how the nature of man should first be
conceived.
Why does
Goethe choose a sea-festival, or rather the dream of a
sea-festival? To understand his feelings, we must take
ourselves back into the conceptions of the old Greeks, to
which Goethe himself went back in his representation of this
gay feast. We must realise that, to the Greeks, there was a
special significance in foresaking the land and sailing out
to the open sea. The Greeks, like all ancient peoples, still
lived in the outside world. Just as a change took place in
these people when they forsook the level ground, the plain,
and went up into the mountains — a change experienced
by modern man in an abstract prosaic way — so the was
some tremendous change in their soul on leaving dry land for
the open sea. This feeling that the open sea has special
power to release the soul and spirit from the body was
universally experienced in olden times, and much is connected
with the feeling.
I must ask
you, my dear friends, to remember what an important part in
the various symbols, on the path of knowledge, was played by
the Pillars of Hercules in ancient myths. It was
constantly said that when a man has gone through various
stages of knowledge he sails, through the Pillars of
Hercules. This meant that he sails out into the limitless,
open sea, where he no longer feels himself within reach of
any coast. For man today that has ceased to mean very much,
but for the Greek it meant entering a completely different
world. Once past the Pillars of Hercules, he became free of
all that bound him to earth, above all through his bodily
forces. In olden days, when everyday matters were still
experienced by soul and spirit, sailing over the open sea wan
felt as freeing one from the body.
Goethe's
poetical works were not like those of lesser poets; he wrote
out of his feeling for the cosmos, and when he speaks of all
that he transposed into the Greek world, he transposes
himself there with his whole soul. It is of this that we must
constantly remind those who read Goethe as if he were any
other poet — those who, whey they are reading Goethe,
have no consciousness of having been carried into another
world.
Now as the
scene begins, we see the ‘alluring
Sirens.’ Goethe presents a scene that, though
externally in picture-form, might equally be one of everyday
life. For the Sirens are collecting wreckage for the
Nereids and Tritons. Considered from the other
side, however, these alluring creatures, these voices, are
not only within man but also outside him. They are the voices
of different stages in the world, and on these stages, as I
have often shown, inner and outer flow together. The
Siren-sounds are those that entice the souls of men out of
their bodies, and set them in the spiritual cosmos.
Let us sum up
all this. First, Goethe shows a festival of the sea, or
rather, dreams evoked during this festival. Secondly, this
festival took place during the night, under the influence of
the Moon. Goethe arranges everything to show that here it is
a question of having to gain a conception independently of
the body, a conception of the kind that would be attained
consciously, outside the body, is then experienced in
pictures. And now we see that, while on the one hand, Goethe
wishes to satisfy those who keep to the superficial —
this is not said in any belittling sense — by making
the Sirens collect wreckage for the Nereids and Tritons who
covet it, yet these Nereids and Tritons are on the way to
Samothrace to seek the Kabiri and bring them to the festival
of the sea. By introducing the Gods of the primeval
Samothracian sanctuary into this scene, Goethe shows that he
is touching upon the highest human and cosmic secrets. What,
then, must take place when Homunculus is to become Homo, when
the outlook of Homunculus is to become the outlook of Homo?
What must then actually happen?
Now the idea
of Homunculus, as understood within the world of the senses,
must be taken out of that world and transposed into the world
of soul and spirit where, between falling asleep and waking,
man has his being. Homunculus must be taken into the world
man experiences when, free of his body, he is united with the
existence of soul and spirit. It is in this picture-world
that we must now find Homunculus, he must then transfer this
picture of Homunculus, he must then transfer this picture
into that other world, the world of Imagination, Inspiration,
and so forth. There alone can the abstract idea of Homunculus
be grasped by the real forces of being, those forces that
never enter human knowledge when we stop short at the
understanding through the senses. When Homunculus, the idea
of Homunculus, is separated from the body and transferred to
the world of so and spirit, then in all earnestness
everything becomes real. Then we have to come upon those
forces that are the real ones behind the origin and evolution
of man.
In all this
Goethe is showing that he had a profound and significant
comprehension of the Samothracian Kabiri, that he had
a feeling how, in primeval times, these Kabiri were
worshipped as guardians of the forces connected with the
origin and evolution of mankind. Thus, by evoking from the
age if atavistic clairvoyance, pictures of the divine forces
associated with human evolution, Goethe was touching upon
what is highest.
When dealing
with the Samothracian Mysteries, the conception of the Greeks
referred back to what was very ancient. And it may be said
that the ideas about these Samothracian Mysteries about the
Kabiri divinities, permeated all the various ideas the Greeks
held about the Gods, all their ideas concerning the
connection between these Gods and mankind. And the old Greek
was convinced that his idea of human immortality was a legacy
bequeathed to the Greek consciousness by the Samothracian
Mysteries. It was to the influence of these Mysteries he felt
he owed the idea of man's immortality, the idea of man's
membership of the world of soul and spirit.
Goethe
therefore wishes at the same time to suggest that, were the
impulses of the Greeks, that are associated with the Kabiri
of Samothrace, grasped in a state free of the body, perhaps
the abstract human idea of Homunculus might be united
with the true evolutionary forces of man. In the Greek
consciousness there was definitely something that could live
again, vividly, in Goethe when he touched on this profound
mystery. To take an example, this may be seen in what the
Greeks used to say of Philip of Macedonia how, by watching the
Mysteries of Samothrace, he found Olympia. And the Greeks had
in their consciousness how, at that time, the great Alexander
decided to descend to these parents when coming to earth,
when soul to soul before the divinities of Kabiri Philip of
Macedon and Olympia found each other. Those things must be
touched upon for the awe to be felt which the Greeks actually
experienced when the Kabiri were in question, an awe shared
later by Goethe.
From an
external point of view they are simply ocean-deities. The
Greeks knew that, in an age relatively not very ancient,
Samothrace had been inundated, rent asunder, and reduced to
confusion by most fearful volcanic storms. The nature-demons
had shown their power here in such a terrific way that it
still remained in historic memory among the Greeks. And in
the woods, in the forests of Samothrace, at that time very
dense, the Kabiren Mysteries were concealed. Among the
many different names they bore is one Axieros; a second,
Axiokersos; a third, Axiokersa; the fourth was Kadmyllos. And
a vague feeling existed that there were also a fifth, sixth
and seventh. But man's spiritual gaze was mainly fixed on the
first three. The old ideas of the Kabiri centered round the
secret of men's becoming; and the initiate it in to the holy
Mysteries of Samothrace was supposed to come to the
perception that what is seen spiritually in the spiritual
world corresponds to what happens on earth when, for an
incarnating soul a man arises, a man comes to birth. In the
spiritual world the spiritual correlate of the human birth
was supposed to be watched.
Through such
vision, Goethe believed he could change the idea of a
homunculus to that of homo. And it was to this vision the
Samothracian Initiates were led. We cannot see a man in his
true nature when we regard him as a being enclosed within his
skin and when we are under the delusion that all we are
concerned with in man stands before us in external, physical
human form, visible to the external eye. Whoever wishes
really to know man must go beyond what is enclosed within the
skin and look upon the human being as extending over the
entire universe. He must have in mind, what extends
spiritually outside the skin.
Now many of
the ideas about the Gods depend on this impulse of the Greeks
to see the human being outside his skin. And connected with
these ideas there was an exoteric and an esoteric side. The
exoteric side of man's becoming related, however, to the
whole of nature's becoming; the connection of man's becoming
with the becoming of nature was involved when, later, the
Greeks spoke of Demeter, of Ceres. The esoteric
side of Ceres, of Demeter, of the world in its becoming, was
the Kabiri. We must know how to look at him, if in any way we
are to be able to penetrate the secret of man.
You see, to
look at man simply as a figure standing on the physical earth
is, really, to deceive yourself about him. For the human
being has been united from a threefold stream, a trinity. And
as three lights cast their beams on a point — a circle
— and we see the fusion of the lights and then refuse
to recognise how one, perhaps yellow, another blue, and the
third of reddish colour flow together into one, refuse to see
this harmony, preferring to believe that what has arisen from
a mingling of lights is a unity and so deceive ourselves in
believing this mixed product we see before us as man in his
skin to be a unity. He is not a unity and if we take him for
one we shall never read the secret of mankind. At the present
time man is unconscious of not being a unity. But he was
conscious of it while atavistic clairvoyance glowed warmly
through human knowledge. Thus, the Initiates of Samothrace
put men together out of Axieros standing in the middle, and
the two extremes, Axiokersos and Axiokersa, whose forces were
united with those of Axieros. We might say than that there
are three — Axieros, Axiokersos, and Axiokersa. These
three forces flowed together to form a unity. The higher
reality is the trinity; the unity springs from the trinity.
This is what comes before the eye of man.
It might also
be said that the Samothracian Initiate learned to know man
who stood, physically perceptible, before him. He was told:
You must take away from this man the two extremes, Axiokersos
and Axiokersa, that only ray into him. Then you can retain
Axieros. So the matter stands thus: Of the three, Axieros
represents the centre condition of the human being, and the
others the two invisible ones, merely shine upon him.
Thus, in the
Mysteries of Samothrace, man is shown to be a trinity. Goethe
asks himself: Can the idea of the abstract Homunculus perhaps
be changed into that of the complete Homo by turning to what,
in the Samothracian Mysteries, was regarded as the secret of
man — the human trinity? And he said: This trinity can
only be arrived at as a conception when man, with his soul
and spirit, leaves the body. This is what he told
himself.
We must,
however, always emphasise that, as regards spiritual
perception, Goethe was only a beginner. What is so wonderful
about all that Goethe stands for will, as I said recently,
only be rightly understood when we think of it as being
continually developed, being necessarily developed in order
to lend to ever greater heights. In Goethe himself we have
the theory of metamorphosis, from leaf to leaf, from the
green leaf of the foliage to the coloured petal of the
flower, or from the spinal vertebrae, perhaps, to the bones
of the head — this secret, if rightly understood, leading
from one incarnation to another, from one earth-life to
another, as I have often shown you. Hence, from the
standpoint of Goethe's own conception of the world, we may
ask: How then should the Mystery of Samothrace be pictured
today? The Samothracian Mystery, as such, with its
Kabiri-symbolism of the secret of humanity, corresponds
entirely with the atavistic clairvoyant world-conception; but
the living content of knowledge at any one human period,
cannot be continued on in the right way, and must be
re-moulded. It is not suitable for a return to old
conceptions adapted to a quite different state of human
evolution; the conceptions must be transformed. The
Samothracian Mystery has naturally only historical value.
Today we should say: We represent how in the centre of the
Representative of Man there stands Axieros, how he is
encircled by Axiokersa, and how Axiokersos must be placed in
connection with all that is earthly — thus giving us the
Representative of Man, Lucifer and Ahriman. And here we have
the re-moulding suited to the present age, and on into the
future, of the holy Mystery of Samothrace.
It might be
said: Were Goethe to appear among us today, wishing, in
conformity with all that man has since won for himself, to
tell us what is able to change Homunculus to Homo, he would
point to the Representative of Man, surrounded by, and in
combat with, Lucifer and Ahriman. I beg of you, however, not
to make an abstraction of these things, not to apply the
favorite modern method of settling these matters by a few
abstract concepts, and taking them for symbols. the more you
feel that a whole world, containing the secret of man, lies
hidden in the figure of the Representative of Man in
connection with Lucifer and Ahriman; the more you repudiate
the pride, the unjustified, childish pride, of modern man in
his abstract scientific concepts; the more you open your soul
to a world giving you a view of this image of the mystery of
man — then the nearer you come to this secret.
Spiritual
Science meets with all kinds of opposition today. But one of
its strongest opponents is man's desire for abstraction, his
desire to label everything with a few concepts. Goethe's
teaching is, in feeling, the exact opposite of this
mischievous modern habit of pasting concepts everywhere. One
has peculiar experiences in this regard. Men come to a
movement like Spiritual Science from very different motives.
There are many who wish to reduce everything to abstractions.
For instance, man consists of seven principles — I once
had the experience, a horrible experience, of someone
explaining Hamlet by attributing to him the principle of
Buddhi on one place, in another, Manes, and so on. That, my
dear friends, is something much worse than all materialism.
These quite abstract explanations, all this symbolising of an
abstract nature is, regarded inwardly, much worse than any
external materialism. Anyhow, we see that, in showing his
Nereids and Tritons on the way to Samothrace to fetch the
holy Kabiri, Goethe wished, above all, to raise the idea of
Homunculus to a very high human plane.
And so, with
regard to the Kabiri, we must experience what the ancient
peoples did with regard to their deities. These deities of
primeval peoples appear primitive to man today — mere
idols. This is so because modern man has no understanding for
idols. This is so because modern man has no understanding for
all that flows out of elemental forces. Not even in art does
man rise today to anything really creative. He keeps to a
model, or judges what is represented for him in art by the
question: Is it like?—Often indeed one hears the
objection that it is not natural, because, among men today,
there is very little real artistic feeling. In any case,
whoever wishes to understand the sometimes grotesque looking
figures of the ancient Gods, must try to form an idea of the
beings belonging to the third elemental world, from which our
world springs, on the one hand in its mineral, on the other,
in its organic products.
You know how
the scene begins. The Nereids and Tritons are on their way to
Samothrace to fetch the Kabiri, amongst whom Homunculus is to
be transformed into Home. In the meantime, while they are on
their journey, Thales, who is to be the guide of Homunculus
in becoming man, betakes himself to the old sea God, Nereus.
It was Thales, the old philosopher of nature, whom
first Homunculus had sought out. Now, Goethe is neither a
mystic in the bad sense of the word, not a mere natural
philosopher, when it is a question of finding reality. Hence
Thales himself cannot be made to help Homunculus to become
Home. Goethe had a deep respect for Thales conception of the
world, but did not attribute to him the ability, the force,
to advise Homunculus how to become man, complete man. For
this, one should betake oneself outside the body to a demonic
power — to old Nereus. Goethe brings the most
various demonic powers to Homunculus. What kind of power is
this Nereus? Now we can see this by the way the old sea-God
speaks in Goethe's poem. It might be said that Nereus is the
wise, prophetic, but somewhat philistine inhabitant of the
spiritual world nearest man, the world man first enters on
leaving the body. And, we ask, does he know at all how
Homunculus is to become man? Nereus has indeed understanding,
even to the point of prophetic clairvoyance; and he makes
noble use of this understanding, but even so does not really
succeed in reaching what is innermost in the human being.
Because of this he feels men do not listen to him, do not
heed his counsel. He has, as it were, no access to the human
soul. On many occasions he has advised men, warned men; once
he warned Paris against bringing so much misery on Troy, but
to no effect. Now Nereus, since he is not hampered by a
physical body, has developed on the physical plane to a very
high degree human understanding that is possessed in a much
less degree by man. But even with this understanding he
cannot help Homunculus very far on the road to becoming Homo.
What Nereus is able to say does not entirely meet the case.
So by that nothing is actually gained for Homunculus'
task.
Nereus says,
however, that although he will not concern himself in giving
Homunculus advice about becoming Homo, he is expecting his
daughters, the Dorides (or Nereides). In particular, he
expects Galatea, the most outstanding of them; for they are
to attend the ocean-festival. Galatea! and Imagination of a
mighty kind.
What the
question is here, is to see how things are connected in the
world. It is not very easy to speak on this point, because of
the soul's desire today to reduce everything to abstractions.
But anyone who looks into these matters may experience a
great deal. There are, no doubt, well-intentioned people who
say they believe in the spirit. Certainly, it is not a bad
thing at least to believe in the spirit; but how do they
answer the weighty question: What do you mean exactly by the
‘spirit’ in which you believe? What is the
spirit? Spiritualists generally renounce all claim to
learning anything of the spirit by doing much that is quite
unspiritual. Spiritualism is the most materialistic doctrine
that can exist. Certain souls more finely tuned speak indeed
of the spirit, but what is it exactly that they have i mind
when so speaking? That is why very modern and sceptical minds
prefer to forgo the spirit — I mean, of course, only in
thought — prefer to give up the spirit as against what
can be known today through the senses. Read the article
called “Spirit” in Fritz Mauthner's Dictionary
of Philosophy; there you will probably be able to get
bodily conditions but not those of the head.
Now, you see,
in Spiritual Science one should rise above all this abstract
talking, even if it is about the spirit. Follow what is said
in Spiritual Science, and you will see how it rises
progressively as we work. Everything is drawn upon that, step
by step, can lead into the actual spiritual world. What is
said is not merely the spoken word but derives its force from
a method of comparison. Only think how, by the very way
Spiritual Science is presented here, it becomes
comprehensible that man is pursuing a certain path in life,
in the physical body. Read, for instance, what is given
comprehensively in the October number of Das Reich
(1918). It is shown there how, and by means of what forces, a
human being while quite a child has the closest affinity to
the material world; how in middle life his soul gains in
importance; how in later life he becomes spiritual. This,
however, he often does not recognise because he is not
prepared for it. He becomes spiritual as the body falls into
decay, as the body becomes dry and sclerotic the spirit
becomes free, even during the waking condition. Only, a man
is very seldom conscious of what he is able to experience if
he grows old with a certain gift. I mean here with a gift of
the spiritual; that is to say if, not simply growing decrepit
in body, he experiences the soul becoming young, becoming
spirit.
This makes us
realise, my dear friends, that the spirit cannot be seen in
an old man or old woman; naturally it is invisible. The
decrepit body can be seen but not the spirit growing young
and fresh. Wrinkles may be perceived in the flesh of the
cheeks, but not the growing fullness of the spirit; that is
supersensible. We can, however, indicate where the spirit may
be found here in the world where we are leading our everyday
existence. And if we then say: The whole of nature is
permeated by spirit, we reach the point when we realise that
outside in nature where the minerals and plants make manifest
the external world, there dwells something of the same force
into which we men and women grow as we become old. There you
have the visible expression of it. To say, in a pantheistic
way, that outside lives the spirit, means nothing at all,
because spirit then remains a mere word. But if we say, not
in a direct abstract way, but with the necessary and various
details: To find the force that as you grow old is always
becoming stronger in you, look to the innermost and most
active of the forces of nature — then we are speaking of
a reality. The essential thing is to set the one force by the
side of the other, and to notice the place of each. These
things can be livingly realised by turning one's gaze to the
force-impulses in the whole connection of a physical human
being's descent to earth — from conception, throughout
the embryonic life till birth. The dull, dry-as-dust
scientist stops short at this force; it is true, he examines
it punctiliously but only in his own way, and then comes to a
standstill. When a man is able to survey the world from the
standpoint of Spiritual Science, he knows, however, that this
force is also present in other places. Acting more quickly,
the very same force makes itself felt when you wake in the
morning, when you wake out of sleep. Exactly the same force,
though in a more tenuous form, is present, as the one leading
from conception through the embryonic life to birth; it is
the identical force. This force is not only in you, in your
innermost being; it is diffused outside, throughout
everything and every process in the whole wide cosmos.
This force is
the daughter of cosmic intelligence. You see, if we wish to
describe these things, we must touch on many matters that,
today, are quite out of the ordinary. What then does the
modern scientist do, when wishing to come upon the secret of
physical germination? He uses the microscope; he examines the
germ-cell under the microscope, before it is fertilised,
after it is fertilised, and so on. He has no feeling that
what he thus examines in the smallest object under the
microscope is constantly before his eyes in the macrocosm.
The very same process that goes on, for example, in the womb
of the mother, before and during conception, and during the
whole embryonic life, this same process, this very same
process, goes on macrocosmically when, after the seed has
sunk down into the earth, the earth sends forth the little
plant. The warmth of the womb, the warmth of the pregnant
mother, is exactly the same as is the sun outside for the
whole vegetation of the world. It is important to be able to
realise that what can be seen in the smallest object under
the microscope, can be looked upon macrocosmically all around
in the external world. When we wander about among the growing
plants, we are actually in the womb of the world. In short,
the force underlying the becoming of man is outside in the
whole macrocosmic world, seething and weaving there. Imagine
this force personified, imagine this same force of human
becoming grasped spiritually in its spiritual counterpart
outside the human body, and you have Galatea, with those akin
to her, her sisters, the germ-cell under the microscope,
before it is fertilised, after it is fertilised, and so on.
He has no feeling that what he thus examines in the smallest
object under the microscope is constantly before his eyes in
the macrocosm. The very same process that goes on, for
example, in the womb of the mother, before and during
conception, and during the whole embryonic life, this same
process, this very same process, goes on macrocosmically
when, after the seed has sunk down into the earth, the earth
sends forth the little plant. The warmth of the womb, the
warmth of the pregnant mother, is exactly the same as is the
sun outside for the whole vegetation of the world. It is
important to be able to realise that what can be seen in the
smallest object under the microscope, can be looked upon
macrocosmically all around in the external world. When we
wander about among he growing plants, we are actually in the
womb of the world. In short, the force underlying the
becoming of man is outside in the whole macrocosmic world,
seething and weaving there. Imagine this force personified,
imagine this same force of human becoming grasped spiritually
in its spiritual counterpart outside the human body, and you
have Galatea, with those akin to her, her sisters, the
Dorides. In these Imaginations we are led into a mysterious
but quite real world. This is one of the most profound scenes
written by Goethe, who was conscious that, at the most
advanced age, man may have a premonition of these secrets of
nature.
There is
something overwhelmingly significant in Goethe beginning
Faust in his youth and then, shortly before the end of his
life, writing such scenes as are now being shown. For sixty
years he was striving to find the way of putting into outward
form what, at the beginning of that time, he had conceived.
He draws upon everything he considers relevant to raise the
idea of Homunculus to the idea of Homo, and to present man's
becoming outside the body, in all its mystery. He draws upon
the Kabiri Mystery, and the mystery of becoming man as it
appeared in the figure of Galatea. And he knows that
reality is so all-embracing, so profound, that the
Imaginations awakened by the Kabiri impulses, by the
Galatea-impulse, can do no more than hover on its surface.
The mystery is far greater than what can be contained even in
such impulses.
Goethe
himself tried every means of approaching the secret of life
in a true and living way. Thus he evolved his theory of
metamorphosis, in which he follows up the different forms in
nature — how one form develops out of another. Now
Goethe's theory of metamorphosis must not be regarded in and
abstract way. He shows us this himself. It is perhaps because
it can only be conceived and brought to man's soul in a
world-outlook free of the body that, with his theory of
metamorphosis Goethe approaches what was atavistically
experienced in the old Proteus-myth. Perhaps Proteus, who in
his own becoming takes on such different forms, perhaps
through his experiences it would be possible to find how
Homunculus can become Homo. (You know how, in this scene,
Goethe introduces him, and we present him, as tortoise, man,
dolphin, three forms appearing one after another.)
But Goethe
felt that there were still limitations to his theory of
metamorphosis. Surely, you may say, a man with such profound,
such fundamental knowledge, as Goethe could see what follows
from this theory; with it one can watch one leaf of a plant
changing into another, up to the petal of the flower, the
spinal vertebrae transforming themselves into the bones of
the head, the skull-bones? But Goethe — anyone who has
worked on Goethe's world-conception knows how he wrestled in
this sphere — Goethe knew he could go no farther. Yet
he felt: There is something beyond all this. — We know
what that something is — the head of the present man is
the metamorphosis of the body of the previous man, the man of
an earlier life on earth; the rest of his body in this
earth-life will, in the next life, become the head. There,
for man's life, we have metamorphosis — the crown of
metamorphosis. He draws on what he feels about Proteus, but
that can lead only to raising the idea of Homunculus to that
of Homo. Goethe felt he had made a great beginning with the
Protean idea of metamorphosis, but that this had to be
developed were Homunculus to become Homo. Goethe in all
honesty represents poetically both what he can and what he
cannot do, and we see deep into his soul. It is no doubt,
easier to picture an abstract, perfect Goethe and to assure
ourselves he knew everything. But No! Goethe becomes all the
greater by our recognising the limitations he himself so
honestly admits, as may be seen, for instance, in his not
allowing Proteus — that is, the way he conceives his
theory of metamorphosis — to give counsel regarding
Homunculus becoming Homo.
Goethe
strove, indeed, form the most varied directions to approach
this becoming — this growing to true man. For him,
artistic conception was not, as it is for so many,
fundamentally abstract. He considered that everything
expressed in works of art was part of all that is creative in
the world. Into this scene he puts all that was to have led
him to his heart's desire — to fathoming the mystery of
becoming man. As he stood before the Greek works of art, or
rather, the Italian work which made Greek art real for him,
he said to himself: I am an the track of what the Greeks were
doing in the creation of their works of art; they acted in
accordance with the same forces as does nature, in her
creations. And he had the experience that, if the artist is a
true artist, he unites himself in marriage, as it were, with
the forces creating in nature; he creates his forms, and all
that can be created artistically, out of what is working in
the arising, the growing, of plants of animals, of man. But
in all this there is still no inner knowledge. That is what
Goethe had to admit to himself. The creative forces present
themselves to our vision, allow us to feel them, but in
metamorphosis we do not go right within them.
There next
appear the Telchines of Rhodes. They are such great
artists that, naturally. all external human art seems small
in comparison. They forged Neptune's trident. They were the
first who tried to represent Gods in human form, that is, to
create man out of the actual cosmic forces. This art of the
Telchines comes nearer reproducing man's becoming, but does
not quite reach it. This is what Goethe is wishing to tell
us. He expresses it through Proteus who says finally: Even
this does not lead to the real mystery of man.
Thus does
Goethe wish to evoke a true feeling that there are two worlds
— the waking world of day, and the world that is
entered when man is free of the body, the world he would see
if, during sleep he became awake to this body-free condition.
Everything of the kind that he would say, is indicated by
Goethe in this scene most delicately and sublimely. Take, for
example, the passage where the Dorides bring in the
sailor-lads; read the works in which the world is described,
how the physical world is set beside the world entered when
man is free of the body — how this is pictured in the
Dorides set beside the physical sailor boys. They have found
each other and yet not found each other. Human beings and
spirits meet one another, yet do not meet; they approach each
other and remain strangers. In this passage, the relation of
the two worlds is wonderfully indicated. Everywhere Goethe
endeavours to show how essential it is to place oneself into
the spiritual world to find what makes Homunculus into Homo.
At the same time he delicately indicates how physical world
and spiritual world are together yet apart.
One might say
that in his artistic representation, Goethe sees — or
rather, makes us see — how Homunculus can become Homo
if the soul approaches the intimate mystery of the Kabiri, if
it approach what Nereus evoked in his daughter Galatea. All
that is active in the true art that works out of the cosmos.
But, alas, it is as if one were grasping after reality in a
dream, and the dream immediately fades away. It is as though
one wished to hold fast what welds together the physical and
the spiritual worlds. The Gods will not suffer it; the worlds
fall apart.
This
difficulty of knowing the spirit is the fundamental
experience, the fundamental impulse in the soul of one who
watches this scene with true understanding. It is this that
leads Goethe to his mighty finale — the shattering of
Homunculus against the shell-chariot of Galatea, the
shattering that is at the same time an arising, a coming into
being, the ascent into the elements, which is a finding of
the self in reality.
We will speak
again tomorrow of this conclusion of the scene, in connection
with its representation.
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