Lecture V
THE CREATIVE WORLD OF COLOUR.
Dornach, 26th July, 1914.
To-day we will
continue our study of subjects connected with art. The
lectures are meant to help us in regard to the kind of
thoughts which should permeate the work before us. If we
would couple right thoughts with the task which we are here
beginning in a primitive fashion, the necessity arises to
bring before the soul many things that impress us when we
study man's achievements in art and their connection with
human civilisation.
Herman Grimm,
the very intuitive student of art in the nineteenth century,
made a certain apparently radical statement about Goethe. He
spoke of the date at which humanity would first have
developed a real understanding of Goethe, placing it about
the year 2000. According to Grimm's idea, therefore, a long
time will have to elapse before mankind will have developed
to the point of understanding the real significance of
Goethe. And, indeed, when one observes the present age, one
does not feel inclined to contradict such a statement. To
Grimm, Goethe's greatest significance does not lie in the
fact that he was a poet, that he had created this or that
particular work of art, but that he always created from a
full and complete manhood — the impulse of this full
manhood lies behind every detail of his creative activity.
Our age is very far from understanding this full manhood that
lived, for instance, in Goethe. In saying this I have
naturally no wish to speak derogatively of the specialisation
that has entered into the study of science, which is indeed
often deplored — for from one point of view this
specialisation is a necessity. Much more significant than the
specialisation in science is that which has crept into modern
life itself, for, as a result of this, the individual soul,
enclosed within some particular sphere of specialised
conceptions or ideas, grows less and less capable of
understanding other souls who specialise in a different sphere.
In a certain sense all human beings are
“specialists” to-day so far as their souls are
concerned. More particularly are we struck with this
specialised mode of perception when we study the development
of art in humanity. And for this very reason it is necessary
— although it can only be a primitive beginning —
that there shall again come into existence a comprehensive
understanding of spiritual life in its totality. True form in
art will arise from this comprehensive understanding of
spiritual life. We need not enter upon a very far-reaching
study in order to prove the truth of this. We shall come to a
better understanding if we start from something near at hand,
and I will therefore speak of one small point in the numerous
irrelevant and often ridiculous attacks made against our
spiritual movement at the present time.
It is so cheap
for people to try, by means of pure fabrications, to slander
us in the eyes of the world, saying, for instance, that we
are on the wrong track because here or there we have given to
our buildings a form that we consider suitable to our work.
We are reproached for having coloured walls in certain of our
meeting rooms and we are already tired of hearing about the
‘sensationalism’ in our building — which is
said to be quite unnecessary for true ‘Theosophy’
— that is how people express it. In certain circles
‘true Theosophy’ is thought to be a kind of psychic
hotch-potch, teeming with obscure sensations, glorying to
some extent in the fact that the soul can unfold a higher ego
within. This, however, is really nothing but egotism. From
the point of view of this obscure psychic hotch-potch people
think it superfluous for a spiritual current to be expressed
in any outer form, although this outer form, it is true, can
only be a primitive beginning. Such people think themselves
justified in chattering about these psychic matters no matter
where they may be. Why, then — so they think—is
it necessary to express anything in definite forms? We really
cannot expect to find any capacity of real thought in people
who hurl this kind of reproach at us — in fact we can
expect it from very few people at the present time —
but, nevertheless, we must be clear in our own minds on many
points if we are to be able at least to give the right
answers to questions that arise in our own souls.
I want to draw
your attention to Carstens, an artist who made his mark in
the sphere of art at the end of the eighteenth century as a
designer and painter of decided talent. I do not propose in
any way to speak of the value of Carstens' art, nor to
describe his work — neither am I going to give you a
biographical sketch of his life. I only want to call your
attention to the fact that he certainly possessed great
talent for design, if not for painting. In the soul of
Carstens we find a certain artistic longing, but we can also
see what was lacking in him. He wanted to draw ideas, to
embody them in painting, but he was not in the position of
men like Raphael or Leonardo da Vinci — or to take an
example from poetry — of Dante. Raphael, Leonardo and
Dante lived within a culture that teemed with import —
a culture that penetrated into and at the same time
surrounded the soul of man. When Raphael painted his Madonnas
they were living in men's hearts and souls and in the very
highest sense something streamed from the soul of the public
in response to the creations of this great artist. When Dante
set out to transport the soul into spiritual realms he had
only to draw his material, his substance, from something that
was resounding, as it were, in every human soul. These
artists possessed in their own souls the substance of the
general culture of the age. In any work of the scientific
culture of that time — however much it may have fallen
into disuse — we shall find connecting links with an
element that was living in all human souls, even down to the
humblest circles. The learned men of the spheres of culture
where Raphael created his Madonnas were fully cognisant of
the idea at the back of the figures of the Madonna, nay more,
the idea was a living thing within their souls. Thus artistic
creations seem to be expressions of a general, uniform
spiritual life. This quality came to light again in Goethe as
a single individual, in the way that was possible at the turn
of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. So little is this
understood in our times, that, in Herman Grimm's opinion, as
I have already said, it will be necessary to wait until the
year 2000 before the world will again reveal such
understanding.
Let us turn
again to Carstens. He takes the Iliad of Homer, and he
impresses into his penciled forms the processes and events of
which he reads. What a different relationship there is to the
Homeric figures in the eighteenth and the beginning of the
nineteenth century from the relationship that existed between
the soul of Raphael and the figures of the Madonna and other
motifs of that age! In the greatest epochs the content of art
was immediately perceptible because it flowed from something
that moved the innermost being of man. In the nineteenth
century’ it began to be necessary for artists to seek
for the content of their creations by dint of effort and we
soon find that the artist becomes a kind of ‘cultural
hermit,’ one who is only concerned with himself and of
whom people ask, ‘What relationship is there between
himself and his own particular world of form?’ A study
of the history of art in the nineteenth century would reveal
the true state of affairs in this connection.
Thus there
gradually arose, not only the indifferent attitude to art,
but the cold one that exists nowadays. Think of someone in a
modern city walking through a picture gallery or exhibition
of pictures. The soul is not moved by what is seen, no inner
confidence is felt in it. The person is faced by what really
amounts to a multitude of riddles — to use a radical
expression — riddles which can only be solved if to
some extent penetration is made into the particular
relationship of this or that artist to nature, or to other
things. The soul is faced with purely individual problems or
riddles, and the significant thing is, that although people
believe they are solving the problems of art, they are, in
the vast majority of cases, trying to solve problems not
really connected with art itself — to wit,
psychological problems. Such problems as: How does this or
that artist look on nature — are problems of philosophy
or the like and are of no importance when we really penetrate
into the great epochs of art. On the contrary, when this
penetration is undertaken, the problems that emerge not only
for the artist but for the contemplator of the works of art,
are truly artistic, truly aesthetic ones. For it is the
manner that really concerns the creative artists, while the
mere matter, the mere substance, is only the element that
flows around him, in which he is immersed. We might even put
it thus: our artists are no longer artists. They are
contemplators of the world, each from a certain point of view
and what they see, what strikes them in the world, this they
contrive to shape. But these are theory, problems of history
and so forth, while on the other hand our age has almost
altogether lost the power — or indeed the heart —
to perceive art in its essence, to perceive the manner, not
the mere matter.
Our conception
of the world—theoretical from its very foundations
— is a good deal to blame for this. Practical as men
have become in technical, industrial and commercial affairs,
they have become eminently theoretical so far as their
thinking is concerned. The endeavour to build a bridge
between modern science and the conception of the world held
by the artist is not only fraught with difficulty, but with
the fact that so few people feel there is any need to build
it. Words like those of Goethe: “Art is the
manifestation of secret laws of nature without which they
could never find expression” are wholly unintelligible
to our age, although here and there people think they
understand them. Our age holds fast to the most external, the
most abstract natural laws — laws which are themselves
based on utterly abstract mathematical principles — and
it will not admit the validity of any penetration into
reality which transcends all abstract mathematics or systems
of that kind. No wonder our age has lost the living element
of soul which feels the working of the very substance of
world connections — the substance that must indeed well
up from these world connections before art can come into
being. The thoughts and ideas evolved by the modern age in
regard to the universe are inartistic in their very nature
— nay more, they even strive to be so. Colours —
what have they become according to modern scientific opinion?
Vibrations of the most abstract substance in the ether,
etheric vibrations of so many wave lengths. These waves of
vibrating ether sought by modern science, how remote they are
from the direct, living essence of colour! What else is
possible than that man is led wholly to ignore the living
essence of colour? I have already told you that this element
of colour is, in its very being, fluidic and alive — an
element moreover in which our soul lives. And a time will
come — as I have also indicated — when man will
again perceive the living connection of the flowing sea of
colour with the colours of creatures and objects manifested
in the external world.
This is
difficult for man because, since he has to develop his ego
during earthly evolution, he has risen out of this flowing
sea of colour to a mode of contemplation that proceeds purely
from the ego. With his ego, man rises out of the sea of
colour; the animal lives wholly within it and the fact that
certain animals have feathers or skins of particular colours
is connected with the whole relationship existing between the
souls of these animals and the flowing sea of colour. The
animal perceives objects with its astral body (as we perceive
them with the ego) and into the astral body flow the forces
living in the group-soul of the animal. It is nonsense to
imagine that animals, even higher animals, behold the world
as man beholds it. At the present time there is no
understanding of these things. Man imagines that if he is
standing near a horse, the horse sees him in exactly the same
way as he sees the horse. What is more natural than to think
that since the horse has eyes it sees him just as he sees it?
This, however, is absolute nonsense. Without a certain
clairvoyance a horse would no more see a human being than a
human being, being without problems of psychological
clairvoyance, would see an angel, for the man simply does not
exist for the horse as a physical being, but only as a
spiritual being. The horse is possessed of a certain order of
clairvoyance and what the horse sees in man is quite
different from what man sees in the horse: as we go about we
are spectral beings to the horse. If animals could speak in
their own language — not in the way they are sometimes
made to ‘speak’ nowadays, but in their own
language — man would realise that it never by any
chance occurs to the animals to contemplate him as a being of
similar order but as one who stands higher than themselves
— a spectral, ghostlike being. Even if the animals
assume their own body to consist of flesh and blood, they
certainly have a different conception of the body of man. To
the modern mind this of course sounds the purest nonsense
— so far is the present age removed from truth!
As a result of
the relation between astral body and group-soul, a
receptivity to the living, creative power of colour flows
into the animal. Just as we may see an object that rouses
desire in us and we stretch out towards it by movement of the
hand, an impression is made in the whole animal organism by
the direct creative power in the colour; this impression
flows into the feathers or skin and gives the animal its
colour. I have already said that our age cannot understand
why it is that the polar bear is white; the white colour is
the effect produced by the environment and when the polar
bear ‘whitens’ itself, this, at a different
level, is practically the same thing as when man stretches
out with a movement of his hand to pick a rose in response to
a desire. The living creative effects of the environment work
upon the polar bear in such a way that an impulse is released
within it and it ‘whitens’ itself.
In man, this
living weaving and moving in the element of colour has passed
into the substrata of his being because he would never have
been able to develop his ego if he had remained wholly
immersed within the sea of colour and were, for instance, in
response to an impression of a rosy hue of dawn to feel the
impulse to impress these tints through creative imagination
into certain parts of his skin. During the ancient moon
period these conditions still obtained. The contemplation of
scenes in nature like that of a rosy dawn worked upon man as
he then was; this impression was reflected back, as it were,
into his own colouring; it penetrated into the being of man
in those times and was then outwardly expressed in certain
areas of his body. During the earth period, this living
bodily existence in the flowing sea of colour had to cease in
order that man might be able to evolve his own conception of
the world in his ego. So far as his form was concerned he had
to become neutral to this sea of colour. The tint of the
human skin as it appears in the temperate zones is
essentially the expression of the ego, of absolute neutrality
in face of the outer waves of colour; it denotes man's ascent
above the flowing sea of colour. But even the most elementary
facts of Spiritual Science remind us that it is man's task to
find the path of return.
Physical body,
etheric body, astral body — these were developed during
the periods of Saturn, Sun and Moon; the ego has to develop
during the earth period. Man must find the ways and means to
spiritualise his astral body once again, to permeate it with
all that the ego has won for itself. And as he spiritualises
his astral body and so discovers the path of return, he must
again find the flowing, surging waves of colour out of which
he arose in order that his ego might develop — just as
a man who rises from the sea only sees what is over the sea.
We are indeed already living in an age when this penetration
into the spiritual flow of the powers of of nature —
that is to say of the spiritual powers behind nature —
must begin. It must again be possible for us not merely to
look at colours, to reproduce them outwardly here or 'there,
but to live with colour, to experience the inner life-force
of colour. This cannot be done by merely studying in
painting, for instance, the effects of the colours and their
interplay as we look at them. It can only be done if once
again we sink our soul in the flow of red or blue, for
instance, if the flow of the colour really lives — if
we are able to ensoul the essence of colour that instead of
evolving any kind of colour symbolism (which would of course
be the very opposite way of going to work) we really discover
what is already living in colour just as the power of
laughter exists in a man who laughs. Hence we must seek out
the paths of return to the flowing world of colour, for as I
have already said, man has risen above it with his ego. If he
has no other perception save ‘here is red, here is
blue’ — which is often the case to-day — he
can never press onwards to living experience of the real
essence of colour. Still less is this possible when he gives
an intellectualistic garb to this inner essence and perceives
red as a symbol, blue as another, and so forth. This will
never lead to real experience of colour. We must know how to
surrender the whole soul to what speaks to us from out of
colour. Then, when we are confronted with red we have a sense
of attack, aggression — this comes to us from the red.
If ladies were all to go about dressed in red, a man
possessed of a delicate sense for colour would silently
imagine, simply on account of their clothing, that they might
at any moment set about him vigourously! In red, then, there
is a quality of aggression, something that comes towards us.
Blue has an element that seems to pass away from us, to leave
us, something after which we gaze with a certain wistfulness,
with yearning.
How far the
present age is removed from any such living understanding of
colour may be realised from what I have already said about
Hildebrand, an excellent artist, who expressly states that a
colour on a surface is simply that and nothing more; the
surface is there, overlaid with colour — that is all
— though to be sure it is not quite the same in the
case of form which expresses distance, for example. Colour
expresses more than mere distance and we cannot help finding
it deeply symptomatic of the whole nature of the present age
that this is not perceived, even by an artist like
Hildebrand. It is impossible to live into the essence of
colour if one cannot immediately pass over from repose into
movement, realising that a red disc approaches us, and that a
blue disc, on the other hand, withdraws. These colours move
in opposite directions. When we penetrate deeply into this
living essence of colour we are led further and further. We
begin to realise — if we really believe in colour
— that we simply could not picture two coloured discs
of this kind remaining there at rest. To picture such a thing
would be to deaden all living feeling, for living feeling
immediately changes into the realisation that the red and the
blue discs are revolving round each other, the one towards
the spectator, the other away from him. The relation between
the red that is painted on a figure, in contrast to the blue,
is such that the figure takes on life and movement through
the very colour itself. The figure is caught up into the
universe of life because this is shining in the colours. Form
is of course the element that is at rest, stationary; but the
moment the form has colour, the inner movement in the colour
rises out of the form, and the whirl of the cosmos, the whirl
of spirituality passes through the form. If you colour a form
you endow it with the soul element of the universe, with
cosmic soul, because colour is not only a part of form; the
colour you give to a particular form places this form into
the whole concatenation of its environment and indeed into
the whole universe. In colouring a form we should feel:
‘Now we are endowing form with soul.’ We breathe
soul into dead form when, through colour, we make it
living.
We need only
draw a little nearer to this inner living weaving of colours
and we shall feel as if we are not confronting them on a
level but as if we were standing either above or below them
— again it is as if the colour becomes inwardly alive.
To a lover of abstractions, to one who merely gazes at the
colours and does not livingly penetrate into them, a red
sphere may indeed seem to move around a blue, but he does not
feel the need to vary the movement in any sense. He may be a
great mathematician, or a great metaphysician, but he does
not know how to live with colour because it seems to pass
like a dead thing from one place to another. This is not so
in reality; colour radiates, changes within itself, and if
red moves it will send on before it a kind of orange aura, a
yellow aura, a green aura. If blue moves it will send
something different on before it.
We have, then,
a play of colours as it were. Something actually happens when
we experience in colour; thus red seems to attack, blue to
pass away. We feel red as something which we want to ward
off, blue as something we would pursue as if with longing.
And if we could feel in colour in such a way that red and
blue really live and move, we should indeed inwardly flow
with the surging sea of colour, our souls would feel the
eddying vortex of attacks and longings, the sense of flight
and the prayer of surrender that intermingle with one
another. And if we were to express this in some form,
artistically of course, this form, which in itself is at
rest, we should tear away from rest and repose. The moment we
have a form which we paint, we have, instead of the form
which is at rest, living movement that does not only belong
to the form but to the forces and weaving being round about
the form. Thus through a life of soul we wrest the material
form away from its mere repose, from its mere quality of
rigid form. Something like this must surely once be painted
into this world by the creative elemental powers of the
universe.
[Note 1]
For all that man is
destined to receive by way of powers of longing — all
this is something that could find expression in the blue.
This on the one hand man must bear as a forming, shaping
principle in his head, while all that finds expression in the
red he must bear within him in a form that rushes upward from
the rest of the body to the brain. Two such currents are
indeed active in the structure of the human brain. Around man
externally is the world — all that for which he longs
— and this is perpetually being flooded over by that
which surges upward from his own body. By day it happens that
all which the blue half contains flows more intensely than
the red and yellow: by night, so far as the physical human
organism is concerned it is the opposite. And what we are
wont to called the two-petalled lotus flower
[Note 2]
is indeed a true image of what I have here
portrayed, for this two-petalled lotus flower does indeed
reveal to the seer just such colours and movements. Nobody
will really be able to fathom what lives in the world of form
as the creative element, as the upper part of the human head,
if he is not able to follow this flow of colour that in man
is indeed a “hidden” flow of colour.
It must be the
endeavour of art again to dive down into the life of the
elements. Art has observed and studied nature long enough,
has tried long enough to solve all the riddles of nature and
to express in another form all that can be observed by this
penetration into nature. What lives in the elements is,
however, dead so far as modern art is concerned. Air, water,
light — all are dead as they are painted to-day; form
is dead as is expressed in modern sculpture. A new art will
arise when the human soul learns to penetrate to the depths
of the elemental world, for this world is living.
People may rail against this; they may think that it ought
not to be, but such raillery is only the outcome of human
inertia. Unless man enters with his whole being into the
world of the elements, and absorbs into himself the spirit
and soul of the external world art will more and more become
a work of the human soul in isolation. This of course may
bring many interesting things to light in regard to the
psychology of certain souls, but it will never achieve that
which art alone can achieve. These things belong to the far,
far future but we must go forward to meet this future with
eyes that have been opened by Spiritual Science —
otherwise we can see in that future nothing but death and
paralysis.
This is why we
must seek for inner connection between all our forms and
colours here and the spiritual knowledge that moves innermost
depths of the soul; we must seek that which lives in the
Spirit in the same way as the Madonnas lived in Raphael, so
lived in him that he was able to paint them as he did. The
Madonnas were living in Raphael's very being, just as they
were living in the learned men, the labourers in the fields
and the craftsmen of his time. That is why he was the true
artist of the Madonna. Only when we succeed in bringing into
our forms in a purely artistic sense, without symbolism or
allegory, all that lives in our idea of the world — not
as abstract thought, dead knowledge or science, but as living
substance of the soul — only then do we divine
something of what the future holds in store.
Thus there must
be unity between what is created externally and all that
permeates the soul in the innermost depths of her being
— a unity that was present in Goethe as the result of a
special karma. Bridges must be built between what is still to
many people so much abstract conception in Spiritual Science
and what arises from hand, chisel and paint brush. To-day the
building of these bridges is hindered by a cultural life that
is in many respects superficial and abstract, and will not
allow life to flow into action. This explains the appearance
of the wholly groundless idea that spiritual knowledge might
cause the death of art. In many instances of course a
paralysing effect has been evident, for instance in all the
allegorising and symbolising that goes on, in the perpetual
questioning, ‘what does this mean?’ ‘what
does that mean?’ I have already said that we should not
always be asking what things ‘mean.’ We should
not think of asking about the ‘meaning’ of the
larynx, for instance. The larynx does not ‘mean’
anything, for it is the living organ of human speech and this
is the sense in which we must look at all that lives in forms
and colours when they are living organs of the spiritual
world. So long as we have not ceased asking about allegorical
or symbolical meanings, so long as we interpret myths and
sagas allegorically and symbolically instead of feeling the
living breath of the Spirit pervading the cosmos, realising
how the cosmos lives in the figures of the world of myths and
fairy stories — so long have we not attained to real
spiritual knowledge.
A beginning,
however, must be made, imperfect though it will be. No one
should imagine that we take this beginning to be the perfect
thing; but like many other objections to our spiritual
movement made by the modern age, it is nonsense to say that
our building is not an essential part of this spiritual
movement. We ourselves are already aware of the facts which
people may bring forward. We realise also that all the
foolish chatter about the ‘higher self,’ all the
rhapsodies in regard to the ‘divinity of the soul of
man’ can also be expressed in outer forms of the
present age; and of course we know that it is everywhere
possible for man to promote Spiritual Science in its mental
and intellectual aspects. But over and above this merely
intellectual aspect we feel that if Spiritual Science is to
pour life into the souls of men it demands a vesture of a
different kind from any that may be a product of the dying
culture of our day. It is not at all necessary for the outer
world to remind us of the cheap truth that Spiritual Science
can also be studied in its mental aspect in surroundings of a
different kind from those which are made living by our forms.
The ideal which Spiritual Science must pour into our souls
must be earnest and grow ever more earnest. A great many
things are still necessary before this earnestness, this
inner driving force of the soul can become part of our very
being. It is quite easy to speak of Spiritual Science and its
expression in the outer world in such way that its core and
nerve are wholly lacking. The form taken by the most vigorous
attacks levelled against our spiritual movement creates a
strange impression. Those who read some of these attacks
will, if they are in their right minds, wonder what on earth
they are driving at. They describe all manner of fantastic
nonsense which has not the remotest connection with us, and
then the opposition is levelled against these absurdities!
The world is so little capable of absorbing new spiritual
leaven that it invents a wholly grotesque caricature and then
sets to work to fight against that. There are even people who
think that the whole movement should be done away with.
Attack of course is always possible but it is a reductio ab
absurdum to do away with an invention that has no resemblance
of any kind to what it sets out to depict. It behooves us,
however, to realise what kind of sense for truth underlies
these things, for this will make us strong to receive all
that must flow to us from Spiritual Science, and, made living
by this Spiritual Science, shine into material existence.
That the world has not grown in tolerance or understanding is
shown by the attitude adopted towards Spiritual Science. The
world has not grown in either of these qualities.
We can
celebrate the inner confluence of the soul with Spiritual
Science in no better way than by deepening ourselves in
problems like that of the nature and being of colour, for in
experience of the living flow of colour we transcend the
measure of our own stature and live in cosmic life. Colour is
the soul of nature and of the whole cosmos and we partake of
this soul as we experience colour.
This was what I
wanted to indicate to-day, in order next time to penetrate
still more deeply into the nature of the world of colour and
the essence of painting.
I could not
help interspersing these remarks with references to the
attacks that are being made upon us from all sides —
attacks emanating from a world incapable of understanding the
aims of our Anthroposophical Movement. One can only hope that
those within our Movement will be able, by a deepening of
their being, to understand something truly symptomatic of our
times, the falsehood and untruth that is creeping into man's
conception of what is striving to find its place within the
spiritual world. We of course have no wish to seclude our
spiritual stream, to shut it off from the world; as much as
the world is willing to receive, that it can have. But one
thing the world must accept if it is to understand us, and
that is the unity of the whole nature of man — the
unity which makes every human achievement the outcome of this
full and complete ‘manhood.’
These words are
not meant to be an attack on the present age. I speak them
with a certain sense of pain, because the more our will and
our efforts increase in this Movement of ours, the more
malicious — perhaps not consciously, but more or less
unconsciously malicious — do the opposing forces
become. I have, moreover, spoken thus because the way in
which these things must be looked at is not yet fully
understood even among ourselves. The unshakable standpoint
must be that something new, a new beginning, is at least
intended in our Movement. What lies beyond this
‘intention’ has of course yet to come. We with
our building can still do no more than ‘intend.’
Those who can do more than intend — they will come,
even though it be not before the time Herman Grimm thinks
must elapse before there will be a complete understanding of
Goethe. A certain humility is bound up with the understanding
of this and there is little humility in modern spiritual
life. Spiritual Science is well suited to give this humility
and at the same time to bring the soul to a realisation of
the gravity of these things.
A painful
impression is caused by the opposition arising on all sides
against our spiritual Movement, now that the world is now
beginning to see real results. So long as the Movement was
merely there in a spiritual sense the world could see
nothing. Now that it does, and it cannot understand what it
sees, dissonant voices are beginning to sound from every
side. This opposition will grow stronger and stronger. When
we realise its existence we shall naturally at first be
filled with a certain sorrow, but an inner power will make us
able to intercede on behalf of what is to us not merely
conviction, but life itself. The soul will be pervaded by an
ethereal, living activity, filled with something more than
the theoretical convictions of which modern man is so proud.
This earnest mood of soul will bring in its train the sure
confidence that the foundations of our world and our
existence as human beings are able to sustain us, if we seek
for them in the spiritual world. Sometimes we need this
confidence more, sometimes less. If we speak of sorrow caused
by the echo which our spiritual Movement finds in the world
— this mood of sorrow must give birth to the mood of
power derived from the knowledge that the roots of man's life
are in the Spirit and that the Spirit of man will lead him
out beyond all the disharmony that can only cause him pain.
Strength will flow into man from this mood of power.
If in these
very days one cannot help speaking of things spiritual with a
sorrow even greater than that caused by the discrepancy
between what we desire in our spiritual Movement and the echo
it finds in the world—yet it must be said that the
world's disharmonies will take a different course when men
realise how human hearts can be kindled by the spiritual
light for which we strive in anthroposophy. The sorrow
connected with our Movement seems only slight when we look at
all the sadness lying in the destiny of Europe. The words I
have spoken to you are pervaded with sorrow, but they are
spoken with the living conviction that whatever pain may
await European humanity in a sear or distant future there
may, none the less, live within us a confidence born from the
knowledge that the Spirit will lead man victoriously through
every wilderness. Even in these days of sorrow, in hours
fraught with such gravity, we may in very truth, indeed we
must, speak of the holy things of Spiritual Science, for we
may believe that however dimly the sun of Spiritual Science
is shining to-day, its radiance will ever increase until it
is a sun of peace, of love and of harmony among men.
Grave though
these words may be, they justify us in thinking of the
narrower affairs of Spiritual Science with all the powers of
heart and soul, when hours of ordeal are being made manifest
through the windows of the world.
Notes:
Note 1.
Translator's Note. Presumably Dr. Steiner was here
drawing on the blackboard while he was speaking. The
expressions used in the German seem to indicate this.
Note 2. See
‘Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment,’
by Rudolf Steiner. Anthrosophical Publishing Co.
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