Lecture I
October 10, 1914 Dornach
In the
lectures which it has been my lot to deliver, I have often
drawn attention to an observation which might be made in real
life, and which shows the necessity of seeking everywhere
below the surface of life's appearances, instead of
stopping at first impressions. It runs somewhat as follows.
— A man is walking along a river bank and, while still
some way off, is seen to pitch headlong into the water. We
approach and draw him out of the stream, only to find him
dead; we notice a boulder at the point where he fell and
conclude at first sight as a matter of course that he
stumbled over the stone, fell into the river and was drowned.
This conclusion might easily be accepted and handed down to
posterity — but all the same it could be very wide of
the mark. Closer inspection might reveal that the man had
been struck by a heart-attack at the very moment of his
coming up to the stone, and was already dead when he fell
into the water. If the first conclusion had prevailed and no
one had made it his business to find out what actually
occurred, a false judgment would have found its way into
history — the apparently logical conclusion that the
man had met his death through falling into the water.
Conclusions of this kind, implying to a greater or lesser
degree a reversal of the truth, are quite customary in the
world — customary even in scholarship and science, as I
have often remarked.
For those who
dedicate themselves heart and soul to our
spiritual-scientific movement, it is necessary not only to
learn from life, but incessantly to make the effort
to learn the truth from life, to find out how it is
that not only men but also the world of facts may quite
naturally transmit untruth and deception. To learn from life
must become the motto of all our efforts; otherwise the goals
we want to reach through our Building [ Note
1 ] as well as in many other ways will be hard of
attainment. Our aim is to play a vital part in the
genesis of a world-era; a growth which may well be
compared with the beginning of that era which sprang from a
still more ancient existence of mankind — let us say
the time to which Homer's epics refer. In fact, the entire
configuration, artistic nature and spiritual essence of our
Building attempts something similar to what was attempted
during the happenings of that transitional period from a
former age to a later one, as recounted by Homer. It is our
wish to learn from life, and, what is more, to learn the
truth from life.
There are so
very many opportunities to learn from life, if we wee
willing. Have we not had such an opportunity even in the last
day or two? Are we not justified in making a start with such
symptoms, particularly with one that has so deeply moved us?
Consider for a moment! [ Note 2 ] On
Wednesday evening last, many of our number either passed by
the crossroads or were in the neighbourhood, saw the wagon
overturned and lying there, came up to the lecture and were
quite naturally, quite as a matter of course, aware of
nothing more than that a cart had fallen over. For hours,
that was the sole impression — but what was the truth
of the matter? The truth was that an eloquent karma in the
life of a human being was enacted; that this life so full of
promise was in that moment karmically rounded off, having
been required back in the worlds by the Spiritual Powers. For
at certain times these Powers need uncompleted human lives,
whose unexpended forces might have been applied to the
physical plane, but have to be conserved for the spiritual
worlds for the good of evolution. I would like to put it this
way. For one who has saturated himself with spiritual
science, it is a plainly evident fact that this particular
human life may be regarded as one which the gods require for
themselves; that the cart was guided to the spot in order
that this karma might be worked out, and overturned in order
to consummate the karma of this human life. The way in which
this was brought home to us was heartrending, and rightly so.
But we must also be capable of submerging ourselves in the
ruling wisdom, even when it manifests, unnoticed at first, in
something miraculous. From such an event we should learn to
look more profoundly into the reality. And how indeed could
we raise our thoughts more fittingly to that human life with
which we are concerned, and how commemorate more solemnly its
departure from earth, than by forthwith allowing ourselves to
be instructed by the grave teaching of destiny which has come
to us in these days.
Yet it is a
human trait to forget only too promptly the lessons which
life insistently offers us! It is on this account that we
have to call to our aid the practice of meditation, the
exercise of concentrated thinking, in order to essay any
comprehension of the world at all adequate to spiritual
science; we must strive continually towards this. And I would
like to interpose this matter now, among the other
considerations relative to our Building, because it will
serve as an illustration for what is to follow concerning
art. For let us not hold the implications of our Building to
be less than a demand of history itself — down to its
very details.
In order to
recognise a fact of this kind in full earnest, it must be our
concern to acquire the possibility, through spiritual
science, of reforming our concepts and ideas, of winning
through to better, loftier, more serious, more penetrating
and profound concepts and ideas concerning life, than any we
could acquire without spiritual science.
From this
standpoint let us ask the downright question What then
is history, and what is it that men so often
understand by history? Is not what is so often regarded as
history nothing more at bottom than the tale of the man who
is walking along a river's bank, died from a heart attack,
falls into the water, and of whom it is told that he died
through drowning? Is not history very often derived from
reports of this kind? Certainly, many historical accounts
have no firmer foundation. Suppose someone had passed by the
cross-roads between 8 and 9 o'clock last Wednesday evening
and had had no opportunity of hearing anything about the
shattering event which had taken place there: he could have
known nothing, only that a cart had been overturned, and that
is how he would report it. Many historical accounts are of
this kind. The most important things lying beneath the
fragments of information remain entirely concealed; they
withdraw completely from what is customarily termed history.
Sometimes possibly one can go further and say that external
reports and documents actually hinder our
recognition of the true course of history. That is more
particularly so if — as happens in nearly every epoch
— the documents present the matter one-sidedly and if
there are no documents giving the other side, or if these are
lost. You may call this an hypothesis but it is no
hypothesis, for what is taught as history at the present time
rests for the most part upon such documents as conceal rather
than reveal the truth.
The question
might occur at this point: How is any approach to the genesis
of historical events to be won? In all sorts of ways
spiritual science has shown us how, for it does not look to
external documents but seeks to discern the impulses which
play in from the spiritual worlds. Hence it naturally cannot
describe the outward course of events as external history
does, It recognises inward impulses everywhere.
Moreover, the spiritual investigator must be bold enough,
when tracing these impulses on the surface, to hold fast to
them in the face of outer traditions. Courage with regard to
the truth is essential, if we would take up our stand on the
ground of spiritual science, The transition can be made by
attempting to approach the secrets of historical
“coming into being” otherwise than is usually
done.
Consider all
the extant 13th and 14th century documents about Italy, from
which history is so fondly composed. The tableau, the
picture, obtained by thus assembling history out of such
documents brings one far less close to the truth one can get
by studying Dante and Giotto, and allowing what they created
out of their souls to work upon one. Consider also what
remains of Scholasticism, of its thoughts, and try to reflect
upon, to reproduce in yourself, what Dante, Giotto and
Scholasticism severally created — you will get a truer
picture of that epoch than is to be had from a collection of
external documents. Or someone may set himself the task of
studying the rebellion of the Protestant spirit of the North
or of Mid-Europe against the Catholicism of the South. What
can you not find in documents! Yet it is not a question of
isolated facts, but of uniting one's whole soul with the
active, ruling, weaving impulses at work. You come to know
this rising up of the Protestant spirit against the Catholic
spirit through a study of Rembrandt and the peculiar nature
of his painting. Much could be brought forward in this
way.
And so it comes
about that historical documents are often more of a hindrance
than a help. Perhaps the type of history bookworm who
subsists upon documentary evidence would be elated by a pile
of material on Homer's life, or Shakespeare's. From a certain
point of view, however, one could say: Thank God there is no
such evidence! We must only be wary not to exaggerate a truth
of this kind, not to press it too far. We must indeed be
grateful to history for leaving us no documents about Homer
or Shakespeare. Yet something might here be maintained which
is one-sidedly true — one sided, but true, for a one
sided truth is nevertheless a truth. Someone might exclaim:
How we must long for the time when no external documents
about Goethe are available.
Indeed, with
Goethe it is often not merely disturbing, but an actual
hindrance, to know what he did, not only from day to day but
sometimes even from hour to hour. How wonderful it would be
to picture for oneself the experience undergone by the soul
of a man who at a particular time of life spoke the fateful
words:
“ I've studied now
Philosophy
And Jurisprudence, Medicine,
And even, alas! Theology,
From end to end, with labour keen;
And here, poor fool! with all my lore
I stand, no wiser than before.”
“Faust”, Part I,
(Tr. Bayard Taylor)
If one wished
to find the answer oneself in the case of such men, one might
well yearn for the time when all the Leweses, and so on,
whatever their names may be, no longer tell us what Goethe
did the livelong day in which this or that verse was set
down. And what a hindrance in following the flight of
Goethe's soul up to the time in which he inscribed these
words:
“The sun-orb singe, in
emulation
‘Mid brother spheres, his ancient round. .
.”
What a hindrance it is that we are able to
refer to the many volumes of his notebooks and
correspondence, and to read how Goethe spent this period.
This view is fully justified from one angle, but not from
every angle; for although it is fully justified in the case
of Homer, Shakespeare, and so on, it is one sided with regard
to Goethe, since Goethe's own works include his “Truth
and Poetry” (“Dichtung und Wahrheit”). An
inherent trait of this personality is that something about it
should be known, since Goethe felt constrained to make this
personal confession in “Truth and Poetry”. Hence
the time will never come when the poet of “Faust”
will appear to humanity in the same light as the poet of the
“Iliad” or the “Odyssey”. So we see
that a truth brought home to us from one side only can never
be given a general application; it bears solely on a
particular, quite individual case.
Yet the matter
must he grasped still more profoundly. Spiritual science
tries to do this. By pointing out certain symptoms, I have
repeatedly endeavoured to show that modern culture aspires
towards spiritual science. In my “Rätsel der
Philosophie”[ Note 3 ]I have tried
to show how this is particularly true of philosophy. In the
second volume you will notice that the development of
philosophy presses on towards what I have sketched in the
concluding chapter as “Prospect of an
Anthroposophy”. That is the direction taken by the
whole book. Of course this could not have been done without
some support from our Anthroposophical Society, for the outer
world will probably make little of the inner structure of the
book as yet.
I said that
Goethe must be regarded differently from Homer. On the same
grounds I would like to add: Do we then not come to know
Homer? Could we get to know him by any better means than
through his poems, although he lived not only hundreds but
even thousands of years ago? Do we not get to know him far
better in that way than we ever could from any documents?
Yes, Homer's age was able to bring forth such works, through
which the soul of Homer is laid bare. Countless examples
could be given. I will mention one only one, however, which
is connected with the deepest impulses of that turning-point
during the Homeric age, much as we ourselves hope and long
for in the change from the materialistic to the
anthroposophical culture.
We know that in
the first book of the Iliad we are told of the contrast
between Agamemnon and Achilles: the voices of these two in
front of Troy are vividly portrayed. We know further that the
second book begins by telling us that the Greeks feel they
have stood before Troy quite long enough, and are yearning to
return to their homeland. We know, too, that Homer describes
the events as if the Gods were constantly intervening as
guiding divine-spiritual powers. The intervention of Zeus is
described at the beginning of this second book. The Gods,
like the Greeks below, are sleeping peacefully; so
peacefully, indeed, that Herman. Grimm, in his witty way,
suggests that the very snoring of the heroes, of the Gods and
of the Greeks below, is plainly audible. Then the story
continues:
“Now
all other gods and chariot-driving men slept all night
long, only Zeus was not holden of sweet sleep; rather was
he pondering in his heart how he should do honour to
Achilles and destroy many beside the Achaians' ships And
this design seemed to his mind the best, to wit, to send
a baneful dream upon Agamemnon son of Atreus. So he
spake, and uttered to him winged words: ‘Come now,
thou baneful Dream, go to the Achaians' fleet ships,
enter into the hut of Agamemnon son of Atreus, and tell
him every word plainly as A charge thee Bid him call to
arms the flowing-haired Achaians with al' speed, for that
now he may take the wide-wayed city of the Trojans. For
the immortals that dwell in the halls of Olympus are no
longer divided in counsel, since Hera hath turned the
minds of all by her beseeching, and over the Trojans
sorrows hang.’
So spake
he, and the Dream went his way when he had heard the
charge. With speed he came to the Achaeans' fleet ships,
and went to Agamemnon son of Atreus, and found him
sleeping in his hut, and ambrosial slumber poured over
him. So he stood over his head in seeming like unto the
son of Neleus, even Nestor, whom most of all the elders
Agamemnon honoured.”[ Note 4
]
Zeus, then,
sends the Dream down from Olympus to Agamemnon. He gives the
Dream a commission, The Dream descends to Agamemnon,
approaching him in the guise of Nestor, who we have just
learned, is one of the heroes in the camp of the allies.
“In
his likeness spake to him the heavenly Dream:
‘Sleepest thou, son of wise Atreus tamer of horses?
To sleep all night through beseemth not one that is a
counsellor, to whom peoples are entrusted and so many
cares belong. But now hearken straightway to me, for I am
a messenger to thee from Zeus, who though he be afar yet
hath great care for thee and pity. He biddeth thee call
to arms the flowing-haired Achaians with all speed, for
that now thou mayest take the wide-wayed city of the
Trojans. For the immortals that dwell in the halls of
Olympus are no longer divided in counsel, since Hera hath
turned the minds of all by her beseeching, and over the
Trojans sorrows hang by the will of Zeus. But do thou
keep this in thy heart, nor let forgetfulness come upon
thee when honeyed sleep shall leave thee.’
”
This, then, is
what takes place. Zeus, the presiding genius in the events,
sends a Dream to Agamemnon in order that he should bestir
himself to fresh action. The Dream appears in the likeness of
Nestor, a man who is one of the band of heroes among whom
Agamemnon is numbered. The figure of Nestor, whose physical
appearance is well-known to Agamemnon, confronts him and
tells him in the Dream what he should do. We are further told
that Agamemnon convenes the elders before he calls an
assembly of the people. And to the elders he recounts the
Dream just as it had appeared to him:
“Hearken, my friends. A dream from heaven came to
me in my sleep through the ambrosial night, and chiefly
to goodly Nestor was very like in shape and bulk and
stature. And it stood over my head and charged me saying:
‘Sleepest thou, son of wise Atreus tamer of
horses?’ ”
(Atreus' son
then tells the elders what the Dream had said. None of the
elders stands up excepting Nestor alone, the real Nestor, who
utters the words:)
“My
friends, captains and rulers of the Argives, had any
other of the Achaians told us this dream we might deem it
a false thing, and rather turn away there from; but now
he hath seen it who of all Achaians avoweth himself far
greatest. So come, let us call to arms as we may the sons
of the Achaians ...”
Do we not gaze
unfathomably deep into Homer's soul, when we know — are
able to know, to perceive, by means of spiritual science
— that he can recount an episode of this kind?
Have we not described how what we experience in the spiritual
world clothes itself in pictures, and how we have first to
interpret the pictures, how we should not permit
ourselves to be misled by them? Homer spoke at a time when
the present clairvoyance did not yet exist; at a time,
rather, when the old form of clairvoyance had just been lost.
And in Agamemnon he wanted to portray a man who is still able
to experience the old atavistic clairvoyance in certain
episodes of life. As a military commander he is still led to
his decisions through the old clairvoyance, through dreams.
We know what Homer knows and believes and how he regards the
men he writes about; and suddenly, in pondering on what is
described in this passage, we see that the human soul stands
here at the turning-point of an era.
Yet that is not
all. We do not only behold in Agamemnon, through Homer, a
human soul into which clairvoyance still plays atavistically,
nor do we only recognise the pertinent description of this
clairvoyance; but the whole situation lies before us in a
wonderfully magical light. Homer is humorous enough to show
us expressly that it is Nestor who appeared to Agamemnon; the
same Nestor who is subsequently present and himself holds
forth, Now Nestor has spoken in favour of carrying out the
Dream's instructions. The people assemble; but Agamemnon
addresses them quite differently from what is implied in the
Dream, saying that it is a woeful business, this lingering
before Troy: “Let us flee with our ships to our dear
native land”, he exclaims. So that the people, seized
by the utmost eagerness, hasten to the ships for the journey
home. Thus it rests finally with the persuasive arts of
Odysseus to effect their about-turn and the beginning of the
siege of Troy in real earnest. Here, in fact, we gaze into
Homer's soul and discern in Agamemnon a lifelike portrayal of
the transition from a man who is still led by the ancient
clairvoyance to a man who decides everything out of his own
conclusions. And so with an overwhelming sense of humour he
shows us how Agamemnon speaks to the elders while under the
influence of the Dream, and later how he speaks to the crowd,
having bade farewell to the spiritual world and being subject
now, to external impressions alone. Homer's way of depicting
how Agamemnon outgrows the bygone age and is placed on his
own feet, on the spearhead of his own ego, is wonderful
indeed. And he further implies that from henceforward
everything must undergo a like transition, so that men will
act in accordance with what the reason brings to pass, with
what we term the Intellectual or Mind Soul, which must be
ascribed pre-eminently to the ancient Greeks. Because
Agamemnon is only just entering the new era and behaves in a
quite erratic and contradictory way, first in accordance with
his clairvoyant dream and then out of his own ego, Homer has
to call in Odysseus, a man who reaches his decisions solely
under the influence of the Intellectual Soul. Wonderful is
the way in which two epochs come up against each Other here,
and wonderfully apposite is Homers picture of it!
Now I would ask
you: Do we know Homer from a certain aspect when we know such
a trait? Certainly we know him. And that is how we must come
to know him if we want rightly to understand world-history
— an impossible task if nothing but external documents
were available. Many other traits could be brought forward,
out of which the figure of Homer would emerge and stand truly
before us. We can come close to him in this way, as we never
could with a personality built up only from historical
documents. Just think what is really known of ancient Greek
history! Yet through traits of this kind we can approach
Homer so closely that we get to know him to the very tip of
his nose, one might say! At one time there were men who
approached Homer in this way, until a crude type of philology
came in and spoilt the picture. Thus does one know Socrates,
as Plato and Xenophon depict him; so also Plato himself,
Aristotle, Phidias. Their personalities can be rounded off in
a spiritual sense. And if we thus hold these figures before
our mind, a picture arises of Hellenism on the physical
plane. To be sure, one must call in the aid of spiritual
science. As the sun sheds its light over the landscape, so
does spiritual science illumine for us the figure of Homer as
he lived, and equally of Aeschylus, Socrates, Plato,
Phidias.
Try for a
moment to visualise Lycurgus, Solon or Alcibiades as a part
of Greek history. How do they present themselves? As nothing
but spectres. Whoever has any understanding of an
Individuality in the true sense must recognise that in the
framework of history they are just like spectres, for the
features that history sets itself to portray are so abstract
as to have a wholly spectral quality. Nor are the figures of
later ages which have been deduced from external documents
any less spectral in character.
I am saying all
this in the hope that gradually — yes, even in things
that people treat as so fixed and stable that the shocks of
the present time are treated as mere foolishness —
spiritual science in the hearts of our friends may acquire
the strength and courage to bring home an understanding that
a new impulse is trying to find its way into human evolution.
But for this we shall need all our resources; one might say
that we shall need the will to penetrate into the true
connections that go to make up the world, and the power of
judgment to perceive that the true connections do not lie
merely on the surface. In this regard it is of surpassing
importance that we should learn from life itself. For very
often — to a far greater extent than one might at first
suppose — error finds its way into the world through a
superficial reliance on the external pattern of facts, which
really can do nothing but conceal the truth, as we saw in the
cases described. In the field of philosophy particularly, it
is my hope that precisely through the mode of presentation in
the second volume of the “Rätsel der
Philosophie” many will find it possible to recognise
the connection between the philosophic foundations of a
world-conception, as presented in the “Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity” and the “Outline of Occult
Science”. If on the one hand we are looking for a
presentation of the spiritual worlds as this offers itself to
clairvoyant knowledge, then on the other hand there must be
added to the reception of this knowledge a penetration of the
soul with the impulses which arise from the conviction, that
man does not confront the truth directly in the world, but
must first wrest the truth from it. The truth is accessible
only to the man who strives, works, penetrates into things
with his own powers; not to the man who is ready to accept
the first appearances of things, which are only half real.
Such a fact is easily uttered in this abstract form, but the
soul is inclined over and over again to back away from
accepting the deeper implications of what is said.
I believe many
of those who have tried to enter into spiritual science with
all the means now at their disposal will understand how in
our Building, for example, the attempt has been made through
the concord of the columns with their motifs and, with
everything expressed in the forms, to enable the soul to grow
beyond what is immediately before it. For a receptive person,
beginning to experience what lies in the forms of the
Building, the form itself would immediately disappear, and,
through the language of the form, a way would open
out into the spiritual, into the wide realms of space. Then
the Building would have achieved its end. But in order to
find this way, much has still to be learnt from life.
Is it not a
remarkable Karma for all of us, gathered here for the purpose
of our Building, to experience through a shattering event the
relationship between Karma and apparently external accident?
If we call to our aid all the anthroposophical endeavours now
at our disposal, we can readily understand that human lives
which are prematurely torn away — which have not
undergone the cares and manifold coarsenings of life and pass
on still undisturbed — are forces within the spiritual
world which have a relationship to the whole of human life;
which are there in order to work upon human life. I have
often said that the earth is not merely a vale of woe to
which man is banished from the higher worlds by way of
punishment. The earth is here as a training-ground for human
souls. If, however, a life lasts but a short while, if it has
but a short time of training, then forces are left over which
would otherwise have been used up in flowing down from the
spiritual world and maintaining the physical body. Through
spiritual science we do not become convinced only of the
eternality of the soul and of its journey through the
spiritual world, but we learn also to recognise what is
permanent in the effect of a spiritual force by means of
which a man is torn from the physical body like the boy who
was torn from our midst on the physical plane. And we honour,
we celebrate, his physical departure in a worthy manner if,
in the manner indicated and in many other ways, we really
learn, learn very much, from our recent experience, Through
Anthroposophy, one learns to feel and to perceive from life
itself.
Notes:
1. The First
Goetheanum, later destroyed by fire.
2. Note by
translator: A seven-year old boy was smothered by an
overturned horse-drawn removal van, quite unnoticed since
darkness had already set in. The boy, who was in the
habit of running an errand for his mother at this hour,
normally went another way.
3. Riddles of
Philosophy
4. The Iliad, Book II.
(Macmillan, 1949)
|