Lecture 4
October 24th, 1914 Dornach
In the last two
lectures an endeavour was made to interpret the sequence of
columns in the Buildings to give one of the many possible
interpretations to which the Building naturally lends
itself.
It is possible
for one who enters the Building from the West to feel, as it
were, in the very heart of humanity, because the forces
working in the various cultural communities are given
expression in the forms of the capitals, and the mutual
relationships of the single European cultures in the
architraves.
It may have
occurred to some of you that mention has not been made of all
the European peoples. It is of course, impossible on every
occasion to present a subject in all its aspects, for it is a
matter of indicating the principles involved, not of making
dogmatic statements.
In the single
motifs of the capitals, artistic expression has been given to
the impulses at work in the souls belonging to European
civilisations — in the inhabitants of the Italian
peninsula, or rather the South-westerly peninsulas, of
Western Europe, Middle Europe and Eastern Europe.
The subject was
presented as it was because the character of these
civilisations enables them to be expressed by a single
design, a single motif. The design and the cultural community
concerned are therefore related.
From West to
East, the second pillar is an expression of the civilisation
of the peninsulas in the South-West of Europe; the third
pillar of that of France; the fourth of that of the British
people, and so on.
But there are
also other European peoples. I cannot deal with all of them
but will again speak of the underlying principles. It may be
said that the cultures already referred to are the simpler
cultures, however strange that may seem; they are simpler at
any rate as far as the occultist is concerned. For the
occultist, the Danish, Swedish and Norwegian cultures, for
example, are much more complicated than those already
mentioned, for many things which to the observer on the
physical plane may seem the simpler, are for the occultist
the more complicated. Thus if we are speaking of Danish
culture, the queation may arise: How should we approach the
designs in this case?
In entering
from the West we should have to look, first, at the capital
of the third column, and then also at that of the fifth,
seeing the third column, as it were, through the fifth.
Obviously there
is something more complicated here, for two capitals have to
be taken into consideration.
Now take
Sweden. There we should have to view the capital of the
second column from the West through the capital of the fifth
column.
And now,
Norway. We should have to take the capital of the fourth
column from the West and look at it through that of the
fifth.
It would be a
matter of superimposing these capitals, and then we should
have the same expression of feeling in connection with the
cultures of Denmark, Sweden and Norway as we have for the
Italian-Spanish, the French, the British and the
Middle-European cultures when we look at the corresponding
capitals.
Really,
everything is contained in these motifs of the capitals. Now
that the principle has been explained, it might be very
interesting to study for example, how it applies to the
civilisations of Holland, Switzerland, and so forth. But I
leave that to your own occult studies.
So you see,
when we speak of our Building we are truly not speaking of
anything arbitrary, of anything whose forms and other
artistic content have arisen in such a way that one can
remain stationary at these forms and think of them as one is
obliged to think of the forms of painting motifs produced at
the present time. As I have already said, everything we have
absorbed of Spiritual Science in the course of the years, and
a great deal more besides, is expressed in this Building
— but the appeal is to perceptive feeling, not to
theoretical, intellectual cogitation. It would therefore be
possible to speak about this Building without ever finishing.
But again I leave it to your own hearts to elaborate the
indications I have given you. For the aim of the Building is
to bring hearts and souls into movement when, in
contemplating the forms and their relationships, people do
not interpret them intellectually or symbolically but allow
the heart and mind and soul to speak when they are inside and
outside the Building.
What I now have
to say can be explained by taking a particular motif of four
columns embraced above by a cupola or dome. To regard any
such motif as completely self-contained would be to take too
constricted a view. Nothing in the world is completely
self-contained — not a blossom, not an animal, not a
human being. Neither, then, is a motif such as this, for part
of its very essence is that forces are present entirely apart
from the geometrical aspects. There are four columns embraced
shows by a dome. But this geometrical aspect is only part of
the whole. What belongs to the motif in addition is a set of
forces which inhere in the whole structure of the universe
and enable the columns to support the dome. The dome rests on
the columns, the columns stand on the earth; the force of
gravity comes into play.
If we really
feel this motif, we do not feel the geometrical
aspect only, but also the other, which I have often called
the dynamic element, or element of force — the
insertion into the configuration of forces of the whole
universe, more particularly of the earth.
This motif,
then, has the peculiarity 0f being symmetrical at every point
in its circumference. It is symmetrical in every direction of
space, as far at least as the dome is concerned. So we can
say: On the body of the earth there is a motif which
stretches heavenwards and at its periphery is
symmetrical.
The important
thing is to have an artistic feeling for such a motif. If we
try to feel this motif in the right way — it is of
course a matter of really sinking oneself in the character of
the forms themselves — we shall come to realise: This
motif, which rises upwards from the earth and in its upper
part at least is symmetrical in every direction, seems to
impel us to go down into ourselves, to experience our feeling
inwardly.
If you want to
make progress in occultism it is essential to abandon the
one-sidedness of an abstract, intellectual approach, and to
adopt an approach which originates in actual experience. For
this reason many things must be expressed, not in terms of
the intellect, but in terms of experience.
It is
particularly difficult for the man of the present day to
accept forms of experience in the same way that he accepts
forms of the intellect. I will tell you what I mean by a form
of experience. I can do no more than indicate, but everyone
can understand it who makes the effort to go through it as an
actual experience of his own. How can one develop a feeling
for such a motif and what it expresses? This can be done in
the following way. — In the morning, on getting out of
bed to set about the day's work, you can say to yourself
consciously: “I have now passed from the lying position
into the position of standing or walking.”
That is an
actual experience — one of which few people make
themselves conscious, but it is an experience to pass from
the lying position into that of standing and walking. When
one is lying down, the force of gravity works upon one as it
does upon a sack, let us say a sack of flour. The force of
gravity also works in a deeper sense, for when you are lying
down you always lie on some area of the body and this area
presses upon what is underneath. So pressure is always being
exercised upon the area of the body on which you are lying.
True, you are not aware of this pressure in the ordinary way,
but for all that, it is there; it is connected with your
sentient experience of the force of gravity and it works into
your astral body.
When a man
begins to be conscious of this pressure-experience, he
becomes aware at the same time of the elemental spirits of
the earth. It is here that he is very well able to be aware
of them, for when he is standing or walking the only area of
pressure is that of the soles of the feet.
When you stand
up after having been lying down, you leave the sphere of the
pressure; you assert yourself against the force of gravity;
you insert the axis of your own body into the field of
gravity, no longer resigning yourself to it like a sack of
flour; you enter actively into the sphere of gravity. That is
an actual experience different in character from some
thought-experience of the brain which thinks in
abstractions.
In the lectures
I gave on “Occult Reading and Hearing” I spoke of
three brains. As soon as a man begins to experience things
with his middle brain, he experiences them in a living way;
feeling begins to be a middle brain experience.
Very well,
then, when we have made ourselves conscious of the experience
of standing up, we have the experience of Feeling the World,
and we know for the first time what feeling really is. This
can be achieved in many other ways too, but we do really begin
to realise what feeling is when we make the act of standing
up a conscious experience.
If it is
brought to consciousness in the real sense this experience
will lead us to understand the form here (see diagram). We
say to ourselves: This form differs from what I myself am, in
that it cannot stand up but must remain always in the lying
position. To achieve my experience it would have to turn
through 90° into the vertical plane. This dome stretches
heavenwards. When man standing upright, has a feeling of the
world, this upward stretching impulse works especially
through his hands. And if he were to lie down and were able
to feel what is above him, he would feel with his hands
something of the nature of a cupola arching over him. What
comes to expression in this architectural motif is contained
in the sphere of feeling.
If man were
able to lie bound to the earth, reaching out spiritually into
the universe with his hands, he would feel the spiritual
world above him as though he were inside a great dome,
symmetrical in every direction.
In a certain
respect the Greeks had a similar experience. Greek culture,
which sprang primarily from the Intellectual Soul, was, in
one of it aspects, a, culture born from a peaceful union
between man and the earth; while peacefully united with the
earth, man felt the heavens above him. — There may
appear to be a contradiction here, but when we are, finding
our way into occultism such apparent contradictions must be
faced and understood.
We in our age
have not the impulses that were at work in the inner life of
the Greeks, nor have we within us what is now for the first
time beginning in the evolution of humanity and is to come to
expression in our Building.
A man who rises
out of repose must not merely make the transition
into the standing position, but he must also begin to move,
to go forward. As well as the sphere of feeling he
must come to know the sphere of will. This can be
expressed in art only by transforming what was symmetrical on
all sides (the dome) into something that is symmetrical about
a single axis only. We can therefore say that when the
dome-motif is transformed into a motif that has only one axis
of symmetry, we have expressed in the Building not only what
is experienced by the man who passes from repose into the
sphere of feeling, but also by the man who pasees from
feeling into willing, into progression, going
forwards. The motif of will is a motif that leads
onward. Hence the experience of one who is looking at the
architraves and capitals must also lead him onwards; it must
be an experience of progression. This was indicated in the
two foregoing lectures.
Now the will is
the sphere in man's being that is connected with subconscious
experiences. It is that element which, in the case of man as
he is at present, is for the most part directed by the gods.
Naturally, then, by Lucifer and Ahriman as well. Hence there
can also be evil will. Nevertheless, the will is borne
onwards by the gods, and only in the rarest of cases is man
able to know what goes on in his will. What a man expresses
quite involuntarily when he is speaking belongs to what is
conditioned in his will- nature and to which his will gives
rise. One may even say that this is as it should be. It is
not at all necessary, to begin with, for man to be fully
conscious when he gives himself up to the primal, fundamental
nature of his will, when he allows the impulses of the gods
to be active in his will. The impulses of the will are the
most fundamental of all. Hence the human being is able in his
successive incarnations to progress from nation to nation.
This is expressed in our Building through the progression in
the series of columns.
Man is able to
progress from nation to nation, from people to people with
every incarnation he is born into a different people. He
experiences what proceeds from the sphere of his will as
coming in a certain sense from the gods. Neither, to begin
with, can he change very much that belongs to this sphere of
the will. A man who is born in some particular place on the
earth cannot alter the fact that he is born at some place
represented in one or another of the forms of the columns.
For he stands at this particular place in the evolutionary
process through the subconscious foundations of his life of
will.
The way in
which the members of the different nations think about each
other, the way in which they mutually — let us say
— esteem each other, is basically connected with what
rises up like smoke out of the substrata of the sphere of
will; it springs from nothing else than the impulses of the
will.
From what has
been said we shall realise that it is possible for us to
raise ourselves above these impulses of the will. But then we
must naturally take a different direction. The direction of
the will-impulses is it < — : it is the direction of
progression. The direction of the impulses of feelings,
however, is from below upwards. Man can raise himself out of
what proceeds entirely from the impulses of will. He can do
this through contemplating what is expressed in the motifs of
the columns and architraves.
Is not our
whole mental horizon widened by these thoughts? And is not
Spiritual Science a means of attaining this wider mental
horizon? Only think of all that could be done to enable men
of every cultural community to acquire mutual understanding
of one another if what was presented in the two last lectures
were to become living feeling, living knowledge. How could a
member of one cultural community hate and abuse a member of
another if he understood the things that were spoken of in
those lectures? The limitations of what springs from the
sphere of will in a single cultural community expand into the
harmony formed by all such communities together when we know
what mission each one has to fulfil.
We begin to
feel the single communities as we feel our own soul-members.
This too had to be given artistic expression in the structure
of our Building, in the direction from below upwards. And
what is indicated as a theoretical, ethical principle in the
first declared Object of our Movement (the universal
brotherhood of peoples) has been given concrete expression in
the forms of the Building, when these forms are contemplated
in their flow from below upwards, inside and, as well,
outside the Building.
Now the whole
is always contained in the part, so we have not only the
direction of the will impulses < — , and the direction
of the feeling-impulses (up), but something else as well. We
have something else as well through the fact that there is a
closure, an endings, overhead.
In referring to
this motif I have so far spoken of the supporting force, with
its upward direction. But I can also speak of the closure
above, the covering, the roofing in. The motifs may thus be
described as motifs which progress, ascend, and enclose.
You can also
picture the Staff of Mercury. If you carry it, forward, it
progresses; if you lift it up, it ascends; if you press the
spirals together at the top, allow them to become rigid in
themselves you have the closure above. This closure
represents the thought-sphere, just as the progression
represents the will sphere, and the ascent the feeling
nature.
A true feeling
of the whole evolution of humanity will develop in one who
absorbs what is contained in the form-motifs of our columns
and architraves in their flow from below upwards. They are
motifs which express the principles of mutual understanding
between the members of the different cultures and
civilisations on the earth.
To pass from
the sphere of the will into the sphere of feeling one must
rise above the state of isolation, of separateness; one must
actually participate in what is expressed in this movement
from below upwards. A certain element which will become more
and more essential in the modern age will then be laid into
the life of feeling, into the sympathies and antipathies of
the members of the different spheres of culture.
The Unconscious
is an even stronger factor than what man has in his actual
consciousness. The will impulses belong to the Unconscious;
the feeling-impulses are more conscious, but still partly
unconscious. The thought-impulses belong to the sphere of
Consciousness, for a man is conscious of what he is thinking
about. He is conscious of it, but only when he is really
thinking, when he lives in the thoughts. But he does not
always do this; when he is speaking he more often brings the
impulses of the spheres of feeling and of will to
expression.
It is a
peculiarity of man that he can speak but by no means always
gives expression to thoughts; what seems to be
thought in what he says is often maya — nothing more
than an unburdening of the spheres of his will or feeling. To
think in the real sense is something different, something
more. Despite the fact that it is man's privilege to have
thought-impulses, it is nevertheless one of the most
difficult things to fill these impulses with real thoughts.
Although it suffices for daily intercourse, if one desires to
have adequate thoughts about the great impulses at work in
the evolution of humanity, it will certainly not do to remain
content with what originates from feeling, still less with
what originates from the will. Thinking must be irradiated by
something still higher; it is not enough merely to let the
successive spheres of culture work upon the soul; there is
something that works still more deeply in these spheres of
culture. This can be brought to expression only in the effect
made by the dome, the cupola.
So one who
passes through the Building from West to East will have in
the progression of the columns the expression of will; and as
he becomes aware of what flows from below upwards, he will
feel the nature of the several European cultures, and a great
deal else as well.
What will come
to him from the dome? The secrets of the evolution of all
earthly humanity. Therefore, as he looks up into the
dome or cupola he will see on the one side the portrayal of
the primeval Indian inspiration: how through the Rishis there
flowed into mankind what was to come from spiritual spheres
into ancient Indian civilisation. What had to come to mankind
in those days in conformity with the character of the ancient
Indian epoch will be painted in one part of the dome. How
Zarathustra gave the ancient Persian culture its stamp
— the sunlight battling as it were with the darkness
— this will be seen at a second place in the dome. Then
how the Egypto-Chaldean culture gradually comes right out to
the physical plane but is still permeated with astrological,
spiritual realities — this will be found in a third
area of the dome. At a fourth place will be portrayed the
Greek, as if standing by an abyss. This is the culture born
of the Intellectual Soul or Mind Soul. What man is, comes to
the fore, how he is faced with the necessity of having to
solve the riddle of the Sphinx, how, through solving it, he
thrusts the Sphinx down into the abyss — that is to
say, down into his own being — this will be portrayed
in a fourth area of the dome. How the eternal, divine forces
and powers work into this evolution of man will come to
expression inasmuch as what lies still deeper in the
evolution of humanity than the Post-Atlantean impulses,
namely the impulses of the Atlantean and Lemurian epochs,
will be portrayed at the points of the compass: Atlantean
evolution in the South, Lemurian evolution in the North of
the dome.
And finally,
the outcome of the Lemurian and Atlantean evolution will be
portrayed: namely, our own era. Implicit within it is that
impulse in world-evolution which expresses itself in the
“J A O”. This will meet the gaze of one who looks
from West to East towards the smaller cupola., Not that
“J A O” is represented symbolically, but it is
expressed in the motif. One who looks from East to West will
see that which speaks out of the depths of the Cosmos into
the development of culture, just as the “J A O”
speaks from within into the development of the soul.
But all that I
have described is perceptible to a man only if he
overcomes the dome which arches over his brain; if
he frees the etheric body of his head and looks from within
outwards, then what I have described comes to him as a mighty
Imagination.
These things
are realities, are actually seen. when the etheric body is
liberated from its physical foundation. Then one sees what
presents itself inwardly to the etheric brain which has
expanded to the Cosmos. The whole earthly evolution of man is
represented here. (See sketches for paintings in the large
cupola.)
To have
thoughts about the realities of the evolution of humanity is
possible only when we penetrate the secrets that are to be
portrayed in paintings in the interior of our dome. In the
same way that we can reach the sphere of feeling — that
is to say, unprejudiced feeling devoid of sympathies and
antipathies — when we experience what comes to
expression from below upwards in the motifs of the columns
and architraves, so through these motifs (of the paintings)
we can penetrate to what is living reality in human evolution
at every hour, every moment. Only when we know what is
actively at work in the human soul at every moment, can we
know what has been evolved in the course of millions of
years. For everything that was contained in the Atlantean and
Lemurian cultures lives in every soul — otherwise no
soul would be as it now is. A human soul in all its depths
can be understood in thought only if it is understood as the
product of the whole process of world-evolution.
And so our
Building expresses — if I may use the word
“expresses” — Willing, Feeling, Thinking,
but in their evolution, what they should become in the human
being who is striving to achieve a measure of
self-development.
Thus neither
the forms as they are, nor the things that are done here, are
the result of arbitrariness, but everything comes out of the
very core of what we also try to grasp in Spiritual
Science.
How often, when
we are trying to describe the secrets of manes nature, do we
not have to consider Willing, Feeling and Thinking? We have
portrayed them in our Building and there, just as in man's
own nature, willing, feeling and thinking are mysteriously
linked with one another. If we go from West to East in this
Building, we are moving as the Will-sphere of man moves; if
we direct our gaze from below upwards in contemplating the
forms of the columns and architraves, we sink down into the
Feeling-sphere of human nature; if in what arches over the
Building in the painting of the domes we study what we
experience inside the Building, then we are studying the
secrets of the sphere of human Thinking.
In a production
such as this Building, everything corresponds to a certain
inner necessity, everything comes into being as it inevitably
must. And that is part of the significance of a Building of
this kind.
What makes us
realise that some Imagination, Inspiration or Intuition
contains objective reality? We realise it through the fact
that when we have the Imagination, the Inspiration or the
Intuition, we have the actual experience that it is not
something that has arisen out of ourselves but has its place
within the harmony of the whole Cosmos. From now onwards into
the future, humanity must have a concept of art which has as
its essential characteristic what is felt to be inner
necessity. We must feel that a truly artistic creation
is not due to ourselves but that the gods create it through
us, because it is their will that it shall be in the world.
We may well be
convinced that the real progress of 0f human nature will
depend upon such feelings and ideas gaining wider and wider
recognition and taking the place of those that are current
today.
What I mean by
saying this, is that everyone who is working on this Building
or is in any way connected with it, should feel above all
that it is his business to compare what is aimed at here,
what is expressed by and in this Building, with what is
dominant in the world today.
Such a
comparison can give rise to the fervent question; What was it
that enabled Christianity in its earliest form to come into
being? I have often spoken of this, for all such impulses in
cultural life have arisen in the same way: namely, through
the fact that in the case of a genuine, initial impulse of
culture, those who were the first to ally themselves with
it, were sufficiently strong in their souls to let this impulse
completely dominate them.
What would have
become of Christianity if in the souls of the first
Christians the Christian impulses had not been all-powerful?
In the Roman world above them, in the physical light of day,
a different culture prevailed; we know that Christianity
developed in the darkness, down below in the little cells in
the catacombs, and then rose above the surface. Nothing of
this Roman culture has remained — what developed down
below in the catacombs rose up and conquered the world.
This came to
pass because Christianity became part of the hearts and souls
of those down there in the catacombs. Today the position is
not quite the same — if it were, we should have to
hollow out this Dornach hill into catacombs so that nobody
should see anything of what we are doing. We need not hollow
out the hill, we need not keep anything in concealment, we
need not prepare the new culture underneath the earth while
what is now taking place on the surface runs its course.
Spiritually, however, the situation is the same. How much of
what we want to inscribe in our hearts and souls is to be
found in the culture of the present day? As much as there was
of early Christianity in Rome!
Even though we
do not worship physically in the catacombs, spiritually we
are in the catacombs, and our feeling is true if we realise
that this is indeed our situation. Our feeling for the
Building is true only if we say to ourselves: There, in the
sunshine, the dome of our Building with its glistening grey
slate roof gleams. over the countryside. We are under this
arching vault, above all, spiritually under it.
By these words
I wanted again to indicate what must be the attitude of those
who understand the inmost impulse of Spiritual Science
towards what is to be found in the outside world. Oh, those
early Christians — they heard the Word that resounded
through their souls, their hearts, the Word that came from
the Mystery of Golgotha, and they did not succumb to the
temptation of what was taking place above the catacombs!
May it be the
same today — spiritually — within our Movement! A
certain difficulty lies in the word
“spiritually”. The difficulty is expressed in the
fact that if one considers the actual situation, one might
sometimes be tempted — I say, might be, not
is tempted — to wish that there were still
present today the dire compulsion for inner deepening that
would be there if we were forbidden by all the means of
present-day culture to build on the Dornach hill, so that we
should literally have to go into caves and there, in
concealment, take up our abode. Confronted with such a
prospect we should realise more strongly how our own
impulses, which should be those of Spiritual Science, must
differ from the blustering racket overhead.
These are
things which can be expressed only by analogies such as I
have now put into words. You can feel something of what is
meant — and more is meant than seems, to be contained,
in these analogies — if you penetrate a little into the
gist of these words.
May you feel
all that I have meant to convey in today's lecture and in
these concluding words.
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