DECLINE
AND
RE-EDIFICATION:
A Speech-Study by
Marie Steiner
When at the present time a Madonna,
when a goddess addresses us from the stage one can hardly believe
one’s ears. Not the faintest attempt is made to set the
language apart from the ephemera of common life, and not the
slightest effort to attain with the aid of speech to a higher
sphere. The spirit is barred every way from admittance to the
stage, and not an opening, not even the least pretentious of
openings into its alien, inaccessible worlds can be found.
Absolutely no one undertakes to allow any light to infiltrate from
that hinterland of speech whence celestial forms may shine through.
The reality of spirit is a concept cast by the wayside. A
washerwoman at her sink is quite up to any one of these Madonnas
perched on a pedestal in some miracle-play – and quite devoid
of anything divine and spiritual in her language. The speaking is
so uncultivated, so rough, so painfully prosaic. It is positively
offensive. I do not mean this as a snub to washerwomen and the way
they speak, which in their case is quite justifiable. Hard work
makes the voice hard and rugged, and her struggling with material
tasks must have a coarsening effect unless there happens to be
religion or anthroposophy to restore the balance. But a Madonna is
hardly likely to be subjected to such physical labours in the
heavenly heights: A certain aura should always hedge her about
– even on the pedestal. There should be a certain
translucence, a luminosity, a spirituality that sounds in her
voice. The speaker should be able to produce the effect of a voice
sounding from afar, free and floating. The figure thus presented is
an image of something that reaches for the heavens and brings us
down her gifts, catching us in the effulgence of her beams and the
music of the spheres.
And what about the heavenly hosts: Have you ever
heard them speak, either on stage or behind the scenes? What about
Goethe’s archangels, for instance, or the Lord in the same
scene? They sound like a real lot of stay-at-homes, or a chorus of
sales executives: dry, dun, getting-down-to-business, quite
down-to-earth. As for the spiritual background, the circling tread
of the dance, the course of the aeons – all
absent.
The sun makes music as of old
Amid the rival spheres of heaven
Of the poetry there is hardly a
trace.
Yet this is what we ought to pursue, to capture,
today.
We have to feel our way towards it,
step by step, listening, responding, continually wrestling, never
relenting, until we burst out of our intellectual constraints, the
barriers directed by material life across our path; until we
transcend our restrictions and emerge into the open on the other
side, liberated, saved. Anyone who is “happy discovering
earthworms” will never succeed in getting beyond himself,
will not make the discovery that he is also a being of air who can
master the physical man, and make use of him without being chained
to him. For him there will be no encounter with the word’s
healing power, its life-giving power, or the power of illumination
which enables him to grasp the core of his being and carries him
over into the realm from whence he came. Borne on the wings of the
word, he can endeavour to seek out his way along these paths. He
has a presentiment of them whenever he gives himself over to the
primordial powers of the word. The “I” – the
vital breath – the divine centre: along such a path may the
word lead one back to the beginning.
And let us explore the realms of that less
expansive spirituality that opens up for us in poetry. Let us take
the elemental world. Does modern art, like a child of the gods,
hand us the key to unlock these kingdoms? Not at all! Cleverness,
and a dash of temperament, are enough to be going on –
absolutely rattling along, with no feeling at all for a wise
disposition of aesthetic resources,
such as comes from knowledge of our human organization. No
knowledge of the laws that are manifestations of divine-creative
forces in art, of which for us both man and the world are
representations. Should not our ultimate aim be to trace the routes
that the gods have taken in creating works of art after their own
image, and into which they have breathed the breath of life? Let us
embark with our tentative consciousness on those paths, beginning
quietly and reverentially by experiencing the breath of life that
furnishes the ground of our existence – here, in speech, as
there, in creation. It is when we immerse ourselves in the word,
when we fathom its being, that we enter upon those paths. What more
marvellous prospect could there be?
Only we must begin by learning to spell. We must
concern ourselves with the fundamentals, the speech-sounds
themselves, and not with projecting our own one-sided
personality.
I once saw in Germany a large-scale production
of Shakespeare’s Tempest. But of the elemental world
and its spiritual nature, there was nothing to be perceived. There
was certainly a lot of noise, temperamental outbursts and
screaming. The Caliban scenes were exorbitantly overdone, and
protracted in the realist manner far beyond anything Shakespeare
apportioned them. And Ariel? There was nothing in him of aerial
lightness and strength: a heavy, booming voice, hard as bone; the
figure thick-set. There was much bouncing up and down and
shrieking. But the bouncing did nothing to dispel the heaviness of
that little, earth-bound, dumpy figure with its anti-halo of
tousled, dishevelled hair. An Ariel! Is not the word itself pure
lightness and radiance – a soaring, sounding, hovering
delight in the air? Shortly afterwards, I saw the same actress as
Salome in Hebbel’s Herodes
and Mariamne. It struck me then that she was
talented. Her constitution lent support to her in that role: the
dark, heavy voice, the hard, watchful, furtive glance; rooted to
the earth and stocky in stature, she was the most interesting
figure in Hebbel’s darkly-coloured piece, brooding on
disaster as Salome-Herodias. Mariamne, on the other hand, seemed
too cool and self-conscious, too keenly intelligent and concerned
with women’s rights. A Maccabee? – no, a north-German
down to the ground.
When will the
actors find the escape route from this one-sidedness of the
intellect, and reach the sources that will open up for them the
culture-epochs, the races, the elements and the spirit-world?
Desiccation is the only alternative to finding this way. In
extremity, nerves fray. The breathless, consumptive approach soon
loses its fascination – and is anyway not productive. If once
the practice spreads, it becomes frankly objectionable. It is
increasingly being rumoured that the theatre will be ousted by the
film.
I once saw an
Iphigeneia performance that acquired for me the status of an
event. It was something of a turning-point, for things just could
not continue like this. They had already been taken to
breaking-point. And perhaps it was exactly here, where lay the
driving powers behind such excesses as these, that the
counter-forces could be evoked. I refrain from saying much about
Iphigeneia herself. She was terribly tedious and common-place,
expressing the boring and blasé inanities of a salon-lady
– the kind who has nothing to do but parade up and down in
her park and be pestered by her (solitary) insufferable admirer.
Nor will I dwell upon the prize-fighter’s figure of King
Thoas, the admirer in this case – though, with a neck like a
bull and swinging his bare, muscular arms, he seemed to be saying:
Just take my measurements, you won’t find anyone who can size
up to me! I do not recall that anything else was conveyed in what
he did say; certainly nothing faintly regal.
But then Orestes – Orestes: He was
obviously sustained by one idea alone: that of being different from
any Orestes that ever was. He was out to excel in triviality. Now
if one is supposed to be a tramp, one must
have the proper attributes: a skin as red as copper, an unkempt,
tangled head of hair (of an indeterminate mousy colour), and a
voice that is hoarse and flat, with a tinny ring. Orestes is
supposed to be possessed. And so the intellect is set in motion to
work out what a possessed person should look like: his thoughts
will be incoherent, his nerves sensitive, making him nervous and
wary of being touched; he finds everything repellent. Inwardly,
such a concocted product of the head’s “realism”
possesses about as much truth as a billiard ball that is made to
speak. And outwardly it looks like a sort of uncared-for vagabond
one might encounter on the highways of Russia ... but wait, that
might actually be an inspiration: Tauris – the Crimea –
Russia – a possessed vagabond it yields analogies: Modern
interpretations are scarcely drawn from farther afield than this.
As for Orestes, the accursed descendent of Tantalus, the Greek
hero, on the other hand – such ideas are long out of date,
far too hackneyed. And the same goes for iambics, for the metres
and noble harmony of speech: we got beyond such things years
ago.
It is said that Maximilian Harden’s
journalistic career began in the following way. The editor of the
Monday edition of the Berliner Tagblatt instructed a number
of his young employees to “do nothing for the whole week
except sit in coffee-houses, read all the papers you can lay hands
on, and for next Monday write me an article that is different from
everything else you have read on the subject.” Maximilian
Harden is said to have done the best job.
If the motive-power behind the player of Orestes
was something on the same lines, this might explain his grotesque
whim and bad taste – otherwise
quite inexplicable. His novelty consisted, in effect, only in
pushing the tendencies of intellectualism and naturalism to an
extreme, obsessively debasing this culminating achievement of the
German spirit by his nervous brand of realism. The noblest,
flawless, perfect product of German poetry, the Roman version of
Goethe’s Iphigeneia, was quite ruthlessly and brutally
trampled upon, and anyone who felt in sympathy with the play felt
himself trampled upon too. We came away from the performance with a
burden of responsibility: to rescue the most exalted values of the
spirit.
It was about this time, as well, that our Shaper
of Destinies was taken from us, he who had done so much for art,
too, and pointed out the path of recuperation. He spanned the
“shimmering arch” which bridges over the
spirit-abandoned abyss of modern times to the other side. He was
the builder, he did the moulding, he kindled and scattered the
sparks, bequeathing us in his work myriads of precious
stones. It is with a profound sense of responsibility that we now
put together these precious stones from his spiritual
wealth.
They will ennoble
human beings, and fill them with bliss for thousands of years to
come; and they will serve today as a magic key to open closed
doors, to revive what is dead and heal what is sick, to atone for
what is evil. We must only have good will. All these far-flung gems
can become a magic key – even though, as in the case of these
transcripts, they lie before our eyes in fragments. The notes of
these three splendid lectures are very inadequate, and for all of
seven years they lay hidden from the public at large because these
deficiencies seemed too obvious. But so much of their richness
remains that, on the foundation they lay, a rebirth of the theatre
can come about.
Every word that
was uttered must indeed be given its full value, and taken in all
its interconnections. A foundation must be
furnished for an understanding based on the will to an all-round
knowledge of man and the world in their cosmic dimensions. Rudolf
Steiner refers to what is adumbrated here as being “guiding
principles”. With them he has opened new worlds for
us.
These lectures can be our signposts to those
more subtle reaches of art to which access has presently been lost,
barred by materialism. The intimacies of the soul-life, the
mysteries of man’s organization in conjunction with the
mysteries of the cosmos form the basis of our considerations. They
are intended only as points of departure for further advances,
which will be achieved through steady work and inner experience.
Limitations of time meant that they could be carried out only
cursorily; but they may serve as prompters and awakeners to rouse
the artist’s powers to independent life. They were given as
part of a whole complex of lectures, which were aimed in a single
direction: away from the nihilistic forces at work in our age,
towards new light and recuperation. This was the deed which Rudolf
Steiner performed. And if, to some hostile powers, his life’s
work seems to have been checked or even annulled through the
crippling of his public activities, the burning of the Goetheanum,
his physical death – they are mistaken. The seeds, sheltering
the future within them, are there. They are sprouting everywhere,
even though external forms may be disrupted.
The task of preparation and re-edification for
the future demanded unflagging effort, superhuman strength; and
their affirmation could only be achieved through sacrifice. In a
lifetime of indefatigable labour, one of the high points of Rudolf
Steiner’s work was the opening of the Goetheanum as a
Spiritual Scientific University
(Hochschule). It was a time of subversive
acts, of social dissension and economic collapse. Even though the
art work was not entirely finished, the building could be committed
to its proper function, the work for which it was intended. For
three years the building served this purpose: the spiritual renewal
of mankind. Then, on Sylvester Night, it was destroyed by fire. The
solemnity of the festival gave way to the act of destruction; the
vast framework of the completed year passed over into history. And
thus, when it was rent away from earthly effectiveness, the
building was impressed like a seal into the cosmos and the course
of the ages.
The lectures formed part of the course for this
university, and were not to be omitted from their context in the
whole opening ceremony, of which they formed an integral part. For
Rudolf Steiner the word stood at the foundation of everything that
took place. The word was his point of departure, the central and
directing force behind every development that unfolded and every
seal that was opened. It was not
Rudolf Steiner’s way to shroud great words in the secrecy of
the occult: he paved the way for them through genuine understanding
and inner apprehension. What he laid open to us became a matter of
perception, something consciously grasped, an activity consciously
undertaken. We were able, under his guidance, to scale the first
rungs of the ladder. Then he gave us our freedom. In us his word
was to become a courageous venture and
accomplishment.
Art was never lacking in any of the projects
inaugurated by Rudolf Steiner. We were to approach art with
understanding, and practise it with reverence, being mindful of its
origin. In the celebration of the cosmic
rite, art played a vital role. It sprang from the threefold Logos;
it officiated and performed the sacrifice at the altars of truth,
beauty and power. In the course of the age of rationalism, it has
for the longest time preserved its links with the divine. In the
age of triviality, this heaven-born child was sunk in physical
nature: the triumph of mechanics tore her away from her spiritual
origins and fettered her to the machine. She must be redeemed
again!
The House of Speech (as Rudolf Steiner called
the Goetheanum) was intended to lead art, science and religion,
which had grown apart from their original unity into threefold
isolation, back together. Rudolf Steiner saw in a spiritual
deepening of art, science and religion and in their mutual
fructification an effective remedy for the social ills of mankind.
Barbarity might be avoided and, in place of the twilight of
European culture that has already been confirmed by science, there
might rise out of affliction, misery and delusion the light
of a new dawn.
He expressed the object of his strivings in
profoundly penetrating words, which allow us to realize the
significance he attributed to a spiritualized form of art in the
rebuilding of a higher culture for humanity.
The house which served this end, freely and
openly bidding welcome to every guest, is no longer standing. But
in its place there rises a building made, like a stronghold, in the
hard material of our time – concrete. Life from its departed
creator was still breathed into it, ennobling it and giving it its
special significance. It is there that the Mystery Plays are
to be performed. These dramatic
creations of Rudolf Steiner, which put man in connection again with
the spiritual cosmos and make him once more a “citizen of the
universe”, explaining his present personality in terms of his
earlier lives an earth – these productions will enable
mankind to attain to self-knowledge, self-realization and
self-renewal. And there above all, eurythmy must be cultivated:
Rudolf Steiner added this new art, where speech-movement takes an
externally visible form, to the series of already existing arts;
and this leads to the compelling, the imperative demand for a
renewal of the art of speech – the word artistically spoken.
Concerted interaction between spoken word and eurythmic gesture was
what Rudolf Steiner called for and this had to be attained in
practice. When the performance corresponded with his demands, he
gave us a conscious insight into our actions and shed
light on the mysteries of the art of speech and poetry, thereby
redeeming us from the insufferable state into which they had
degenerated.
We are under no illusion that the
world will bring any but a meagre understanding to bear on our
endeavours. We shall be understanding, even if some honest student
at first casts this book impatiently and despairingly aside. A
metamorphosis of consciousness is necessary to pass this way, and
art has been held back from any permeation by consciousness. A
perceiving, a hearing, a willing consciousness: today these alone
can bring us genuine aesthetic experience and wrest the
language of poetry away from the abstractive
intelligence and mechanization to which it has now fallen
prey.
We have grown accustomed to what
the modern stage puts before us and thus have little notion of the
suffering that can be inflicted when the noblest works of poetic
drama are brought before the soul mutilated, maltreated and
desecrated, as is only too often the case today.
It is as if the gods have turned
away in anger from what we have made of their gifts. They gave us
everything, held nothing back. Works of unbelievable stature,
purity and perfection of form have come into being. The German
language has been moulded into an instrument of
subtlest strength and pliancy, to grasp the breadth and profundity
of existence, to unfold the inner essences of things. It is still
capable of transformation, of pliancy; it still has the ability to
grow beyond itself, bearing mankind onward and upward in its
progress. But whoever leads it on to its destination resolutely and
imperturbably will be stoned – while those who make it banal,
who reduce it to the level of the feuilleton will be
venerated.
The German language’s
potentialities for concrete delineation and for the transcending of
conceptual formulations are also to be found in another way: in
the plasticity and translucence of its speech-sounds. It is not in
the usual sense musical – not superficially. One has to have
an ear for it. But it does have so many lights and shades, such
capacities for veiling the sound or for brightening, flashing, that
with its help we can break through the bounds of the senses. The
world beyond sounds through in its modified vowels and its
diphthongs, whispers through its clusters of consonants and rings
out in the freely-suspended vaulting of its syntax. We do not
realise what an artistic experience language can be until we have
learnt to listen inwardly, until
psychic-spiritual sound has been transposed into tone-formation and
soaring movement.
The world of today is sheer intellect rendered
actual. It does not go beyond the mechanical and mathematical; it
cannot find the way into imagination and the creating of myths. We
are unable to produce images any more, because we have grown
abstract and hollow. It is much easier to be clever in one’s
thinking than it is to form imagery, since the intellectual stems
from our personality, while aesthetic creation makes much greater
demands an our selflessness. It immerses itself in the object rather than reflecting upon
it, lets itself be drawn along rather than seizing hold of it.
Through living in intellectualism we lose our real connection with
the world. We deprive human beings of their immortal part. The
forming of images affects not only the intellect, but the whole
man, entering into much deeper strata of the soul-life than does
conceptual thinking. In attempting to speak in imagery, we bind the
atoms sundered in the course of study, and divided amongst the
conventional categories of learning, into a new synthesis. It must
all be raised into the sphere of Imagination, where the plasticity
of the language is released into movement and its musicality
becomes ensouled. In this it draws near to the eternal in the soul
which stands behind everything intellectual. Through imaginative,
ensouled speech we can lead man to the substantial content of the
word, to the super-sensible, to the creative word that flows from
the super-sensible. The immortal life of the soul is roused to
awakening when we speak artistically, out of the image; immortal
life is smothered when we work out of
intellectualism.