II
Our
real purpose in this lecture, as you already know from what has
been said, is to lead the way to an understanding of the karma
of the individual and, in a broader sense, the collective karma
of our time. But even when we consider human life as it
concerns single individuals, it is extraordinarily complicated,
and we must follow many threads that link a man to the past and
present worlds if we wish to answer questions regarding his
destiny. This fact will, perhaps, explain to you the detour I
am taking, although I really wish to discuss something that is
close to every person. Goethe's life was important in world
history, and I will associate reflections with it that are
intended to light up each individual existence. His life, to be
sure, is accessible to us in many details. Even though the
destiny of each human life is far removed from the destined
course of such an exemplary spirit in world history, it is
possible for each of us to gain viewpoints from the
contemplation of it. Therefore, let us not be annoyed if the
connections with our special questions, which we shall
gradually approach, are here somewhat expanded.
When people trace Goethe's life in the way many do who pretend
to be his biographers, they fail altogether to observe how rash
men are in their tendency to link cause and effect.
Scientists are constantly reminded nowadays that many blunders
are due to the adoption of the principle, “After a thing,
therefore because of that thing” (post hoc, ergo propter
hoc); that is, because one thing follows another, it must,
therefore, be an effect proceeding from its cause. This is
refuted in the scientific sphere, but in the field of the
observation of human life we have not yet come to reject this
principle altogether. Certain uncivilized people belonging to
the Kamchadales believe that the water wagtails or similar
birds bring on springtime because spring follows their arrival.
Such conclusions are frequently drawn when people say: A thing
that follows another in time must derive from it as the effect
from its cause. We learn from Goethe's own narrative, from the
description of this life shining above ordinary humanity, that
he had this father and that mother and that he experienced
certain things in his youth. We then derive what he did later
in life, which made him so important for humanity, from these
youthful impressions according to the principle that, because
one thing follows something else in time, it must proceed from
it. That is no more intelligent than when the coming of spring
is supposed to be brought on by the water wagtails.
In
the scientific sphere, this superstition has been sharply
reproved; in the sphere of spiritual science there is still
need to do so. It is explained quite nicely, for instance, that
at a rather youthful period while Goethe was still a boy and
French officers were quartered in his father's house during the
occupation of Frankfurt, he saw how the famous
Lieutenant du roi Thoranc
(Note 38)
directed theatrical
productions and employed painters there. Goethe thus came into
contact with painting and the art of the theater while scarcely
more than a child. His later inclination to art is thus glibly
traced to these youthful impressions. To be sure, in his case
we see his foreordained karma clearly at work from his earliest
youth. Is not an especially prominent trait in Goethe's life
the way in which he unites his views of art, the world, and
nature and has always behind his artistic fantasy the
aspiration to know the truth in natural phenomena? Do we not
see that a clearly prescribed karma leads the boy of six or
seven to assemble minerals and geological material that he
finds in his father's collections and place them on a music
stand to make of them an altar to the great God of Nature? He
then sets a candle on this altar made of natural objects and
instead of producing a light in an ordinary, mechanical way, he
lets the earliest rays of the morning sun pass through a
magnifying glass to light the candle, kindling a flame to offer
to the great God of Nature. How impressive and beautiful is
this orientation of the mind to what lives and weaves as spirit
in the phenomena of nature even in this boy of six or seven!
Most certainly, this trait must have come from an original
potentiality, if we choose to call it that, and not from the
environment, and we see how what he brought into this
incarnation worked with special force.
When we consider the time into which Goethe was born, we shall
observe a remarkable harmony between his nature and
contemporary events. In accordance with the present world
conception, people are often inclined to say that what Goethe
created — the Faust and other things that he did for
the elevation and spiritual permeation of humanity — have come
into existence simply because he produced them according to his
talents. It is more difficult with the things he has given to
humanity to prove that they cannot be bound up in this simple
sense with his person. But, in reference to certain phenomena
of existence, just consider how shortsighted many kinds of
reflections are even though they are supposed to be
fundamentally concerned with the truth. In my most recent book,
The Riddle of Man,
(Note 39)
you can find de la
Mettrie's statement that Erasmus of Rotterdam and Fontenelle
would have become entirely different human beings if only small
particles in their brains had been different. According to this
view, we must assume that nothing of all that they produced
would exist if, as de la Mettrie
(Note 40)
suggests, they
had been fools instead of wise men because of a slightly
different constitution of the brain.
Now, this does apply in a certain sense for the things Erasmus
and Fontenelle produced, but consider this question in relation
to another case. Can you imagine, for instance, the development
of modern humanity without the discovery of America? Think of
all that has entered into the life of modern humanity through
the discovery of America. Could a materialistic person assert
that if Columbus's brain had been a little different he would
have been a different sort of man, a fool, who then would not
have discovered America? Certainly, this could be asserted,
just as it can be said that Goethe would not have been Goethe,
nor Fontenelle have been Fontenelle, nor Erasmus have been
Erasmus if, for example, their mothers had suffered accidents
so that their children would have been stillborn. But we can by
no means suppose that America would never have been discovered
if it had not been discovered by Columbus. You will find it
rather self-evident that America would have been discovered
even if Columbus had suffered from a brain defect.
So
you will certainly have no doubt that the course of world
events is one thing and the participation of an individual in
these events another. You will have no doubt that these events
summon those individualities who are especially fitted through
their karma for whatever is demanded of them. With reference to
America we can easily think through to this conclusion. But,
for those whose vision penetrates more deeply, the same truth
applies to the genesis of Faust. We should have to
assume utter nonsense in the evolution of the world if we had
to suppose that there would have been no necessity for the
creation of such a poetical composition as the Faust
even if what the materialists like to emphasize so much had
actually occurred and a tile had fallen on Goethe's head when
he was five, making him an imbecile. Anyone who traces the
course of spiritual life through the decades preceding the time
of Goethe will see that the Faust was really a demand of
the age. Lessing, indeed, is the typical spirit who wished to
create a Faust — in fact, actually wrote a fine scene.
It was not merely Goethe's subjective needs that demanded the
Faust, it was demanded by the age. With respect to the
course of events in world history, the truth is that a
relationship similar to that between Columbus and the discovery
of America exists also between Goethe's creations and Goethe
himself.
I
have said that, if we observe the age into which Goethe was
born, we note at once a certain harmony between the
individuality of Goethe and his age when taken in the broadest
sense of the term. Bear in mind that, in spite of all the
dissimilarities between Goethe and Schiller, there is,
nevertheless, something quite similar in them — not to mention
other less important contemporaries. Consider, for example, how
much is resplendent in both Goethe and Herder. But we can go
much further. When we look at Goethe, it does not, perhaps,
appear at once — we shall come back to this later — but, when
we look at Schiller, at Herder and Lessing, we shall say that
their lives were different, of course, but that in their
tendencies and impulses a portion of the soul's potentialities
is present that, under other circumstances, might just as well
have made a Mirabeau
(Note 41)
or Danton
(Note 42)
of them. They truly harmonize with their age. In the case of
Schiller, this would by no means be so hard to prove; as the
poet who composed
The Robbers, Fiesko, Intrigue and Love,
he will not seem to anyone to be far removed in
disposition from a Mirabeau or Danton or even a Robespierre.
(Note 43)
This same soul's blood flowed
likewise in Goethe, even though we might at first consider him
far from being a revolutionist. But by no means is he so remote
from this. There comes about in Goethe's complex nature a
special complication of karmic impulses, of destiny, that
places him in the world in a most unusual way, even in earliest
youth.
When we trace the life of Goethe with spiritual scientific
vision and disregard all other things, we find that it falls
into certain periods. The first proceeds in such a way that we
can say that an impulse which we have already observed in his
childhood continues to progress. Then something comes from
without that changes the direction of his life; that is, his
becoming acquainted with the Duke of Weimar in 1775. Then,
again, we see how his soujourn in Rome
(Note 44)
changes the
course of his life, how he becomes an utterly different person
through having been able to absorb this Roman life. If we
should wish to view the matter more accurately, we might say
that a third impulse, which comes as if from without — but
this, as we shall see, would not be entirely accurate in a spiritual
scientific sense — would be Goethe's friendship with Schiller
(Note 45)
after he had experienced his Roman transformation.
If
we study the first part of Goethe's life up to the year 1775,
observing the events more intently than we usually do, we shall
discover that there lives in him a powerful revolutionary mood,
a rebellion against what was in his environment. His nature,
however, is spread over many things. For this reason, because
the impulse toward rebellion does not appear so strongly as
when concentrated in Schiller's
The Robbers
but is more diffuse, it does not appear so strikingly. Anyone, however,
who is able to enter in a spiritual scientific way into Goethe's boyhood
and youth finds in him a spiritual force of life, brought with him
through birth, that could not have been present throughout his life if
certain events had not occurred. What was living within him as the
Goethe individuality was far greater than what could be taken up and
expressed in life by his organism.
This is obvious in Schiller. His early death was due primarily
to the fact that his organism was consumed by his mighty,
spiritual vitality.
(Note 46)
This is obvious. Indeed, it is
known that after his death his heart was found to be dried up,
as it were. He sustained himself as long as possible only by
his powerful spiritual vitality, but this also devoured his
bodily life.
With Goethe, this force of soul became even stronger, and yet
he lived to an advanced age. What enabled him to live so long?
You will recall that I reminded you yesterday of a fact that
intervened significantly in Goethe's life. After he had spent
some years in Leipzig as a student,
(Note 47)
he became seriously ill and stood face to face with death. He
virtually looked death in the face. This illness is, to be sure,
a natural phenomenon in the organism. However, we never learn to
understand a man who creates out of the elemental forces of the
world — indeed, we never learn really to understand any man —
unless we take into consideration such events in the course of
his karma. What really happened to Goethe when he became ill in
Leipzig? We may describe it as a complete loosening of the
etheric body in which the life forces of the soul had been
active until then. It was loosened to such an extent that,
after this illness, he no longer had that closely knit
connection between the etheric and the physical bodies that he
had formerly possessed.
The
etheric body, however, is the super-sensible member in us that
really makes it possible to form concepts, to think. Abstract
concepts such as we have in ordinary life, the only concepts
that are approved by most persons who are materialistically
disposed, come about through the fact that the etheric body is,
as it were, closely united with the physical by a strong
magnetic union. It is also through this fact that we possess a
strong impulse to project our will into the physical world,
that is, provided the astral body is strongly developed. In the
case of Robespierre, Mirabeau and Danton, we have an etheric
body strongly united with the physical but also a powerfully
developed astral body. This works, in turn, upon the etheric
body, which establishes these human individualities strongly in
the physical world.
Goethe was also organized like this, but another force now
worked in him and brought about a complication. The result was
that the etheric body was loosened and remained so through the
illness that had brought him to the point of death. When the
etheric body is no longer so intimately united with the
physical body, however, it no longer thrusts its forces into
the physical but retains them. This explains the transformation
Goethe passed through when he returned to Frankfurt. There,
during his acquaintance with Fräulein von Klettenberg,
(Note 48)
the mystic, and with various medical
friends who were devoted to studies in alchemy, and through the
writings of Swedenborg, he really developed a systematic
spiritual world conception. It was still somewhat chaotic, but
nevertheless a systematic spiritual world conception, and he
was profoundly inclined to occupy himself with super-sensible things.
These things are, however, connected with Goethe's illness. The
soul that had brought this predisposition for this illness into
his earthly life also brought the impulse so to prepare his
etheric body through his illness that it should not be
expressed merely in the physical. It maintained the urge and
the capacity to become permeated with super-sensible concepts.
So long as we merely consider the external biographical facts
of a person in a materialistic way, we never discover what
subtle interrelationships exist in his stream of destiny. But,
as soon as we obtain an insight into the harmony between the
natural occurrences affecting his organism, such as the illness
of Goethe, and what manifests itself ethically, morally,
spiritually, it becomes possible for us to sense the profound
effect of karma.
The
revolutionary force would certainly have been manifest in
Goethe in a way that would have consumed him at an early age.
Since an external expression of the life of these revolutionary
forces would certainly not have been possible in his
environment, and since he could not have written dramas as
Schiller did, this force would necessarily have consumed him.
It was turned aside through the loosening of the connection of
the magnetic union between his etheric and physical bodies.
Here we see how a natural event seems to enter with immense
significance into the life of a human being. Undoubtedly, it
points to a deeper interrelationship than the one the
biographers generally wish to reveal. The significance of an
illness to a man cannot be explained on the basis of hereditary
tendencies but rather points to the connection between a man
and the world in such a way that this relationship must be
conceived spiritually. You will note also how Goethe's life was
thus complicated; such experiences determine how we take things
in and what we are ourselves.
Goethe now comes to Strassburg
(Note 49)
with an etheric
body that is in a sense filled with occult knowledge, and in
this condition he meets Herder, whose vast conceptions had to
become something quite different in Goethe because the same
conditions did not exist in Herder's more subtle constitution.
This event of near death appeared in Goethe at the end of the
sixties in Leipzig, but its force had been prepared long before
that. Anyone who undertakes to trace such an illness to
external or merely physical events has not yet attained the
same standpoint in the spiritual sphere as that occupied by the
natural scientist who knows that what follows must not be
viewed necessarily as the result of what it follows. This
tendency to isolate himself from the world to some degree was a
manifestation of the connection between physical and etheric
bodies. It was always present in Goethe, and it really only
became a crisis through his illness.
In
anyone possessing a compact connection between the physical and
etheric bodies, the external world exerts its influence and, as
it makes impressions on the physical body, they pass over
immediately into the etheric body; this is one and the same
thing. Such a person simply lives in direct contact with the
impressions of the external world. In Goethe's case, the
impressions are, of course, made upon the physical body, but
the etheric body does not immediately respond because it is
loosened. As a result, such a person can be more isolated, in a
sense, from his environment, and a more complicated process
takes place when an impression is made on his physical body. If
you establish a connection between this organic structure of
Goethe and the fact that, as we learn from his biography, he
lays himself open even to historic events without forcing them,
you have then arrived at an understanding of the peculiar
functioning of his nature. I told you that he took the
autobiography of Gottfried of Berlichingen and, influenced only
by the dramatic impulses received from Shakespeare, did not
really alter much in it. So he did not call it a drama but
The History of the Iron-handed Gottfried of Berlichingen,
Dramatized.
You see, this soft and almost timid handling of
things, as I might call it, without taking hold of them
forcefully is due to his quite unusual connection between the
etheric and physical bodies.
This relationship between the etheric and physical bodies was
not present in Schiller. For this reason, he creates characters
that he has certainly not derived from external impressions but
has formed forcefully out of his own nature; Karl Moor is an
example. Goethe, however, needs the influence of life, but he
does not force it; he only helps with a light touch to elevate
the living into a work of art.
It
was the same when he was confronted with the experiences that
he later reduced to artistic form in Werther. His own
life situations as well as those of his friend Jerusalem
(Note 50)
are not twisted; he does not alter the
form greatly but takes life and retouches it a little. Through
the delicate manner in which he renders assistance by means of
his etheric body, life is transformed into a work of art. But
because of this organization he gains, I might say, only an
indirect contact with life, and thereby he prepares his karma
in this incarnation.
Goethe goes to Strassburg. In addition to the experience that
advanced him on his way, he experienced also, as you know, the
romantic involvement with Friederike, the daughter of the
pastor in Sesenheim.
(Note 51)
His affections were deeply
involved in this relationship, and many moral doubts may be
raised against the course of it — doubts that may also be
fully justified. We are not now concerned with that aspect of
the matter, but rather with an understanding of it. Goethe
really passed through everything that, in another, not only
must, but obviously would, have led to a permanent life union.
But he does not experience directly. Through what I have
explained, a sort of chasm had been created between his unusual
inner nature and the external world. Just as he does not alter
by force what is living in the external world but only
delicately modifies its form, he also does not carry his
feelings and sensations, which he can experience only in his
etheric body, through the physical body to such a firm contact
with the external world — something that, in others, would
have led to quite definite events in life. So he withdraws from
Friederike Brion, but one must accept this from the viewpoint
of the soul.
The
last time he went to Sesenheim, he met himself; you can read of
this in his autobiography.
(Note 52)
Goethe meets Goethe!
Long afterward he related how he then encountered himself,
Goethe meeting Goethe. He sees himself; he drives out to
Sesenheim and Goethe comes to meet him, not in the same
clothing he was wearing, however, but in another outfit. When
he went there again many years later to visit his old
acquaintances, he realized that he was unintentionally actually
wearing the clothes in which he had seen himself many years
before. We must believe this even took place in the same way we
believe anything else he relates. Considering the love of truth
with which he described his life to us, to find fault with it
is not appropriate.
How
does it happen, then, that Goethe, so remote that he could
actually withdraw, and yet in such loose contact with the
circumstances that for anyone else it would have led to
something quite different — how does it come about that he
meets himself? Now a man who has an experience in his etheric
body finds that it easily takes objective form when the etheric
body is loosened. He sees the experience as something external;
it is projected outside him. This actually happened to Goethe.
In a moment peculiarly appropriate, he saw the other Goethe,
the etheric Goethe who lived in him, who remained united in
karma with Friederike of Sesenheim, and he met himself as a
ghost. But this is just the kind of event that so profoundly
confirms what is to be perceived from the facts regarding his
nature.
We
see here how a man may stand within external events and how it
is also necessary to grasp the special, individual way in which
he stands among them. It is a complicated relationship that
exists between the human being and the world; it is complicated
also by the interrelationship between what he brings from the
past into the present. Through the fact, however, that Goethe
had wrenched his inner nature out of the corporeal connection,
it was possible for him even in his early youth to cherish in
his soul the profound truths that so astonish us in his
Faust. I say astonish purposely for the simple
reason that they really must astonish us. I scarcely know
anything more simple-minded than when biographers of Goethe
repeat over and over the statement, “Goethe is Faust and Faust
is Goethe.” I have often read this in biographies of Goethe. It
is, of course, an ordinary bit of nonsense. What we really have
in Faust, when we permit it to work on us in the right
way, so impresses us that we must sometimes say that we cannot
imagine that Goethe had a direct experience of a similar kind
or could even know of it. Yet there it is expressed in
Faust.
Faust constantly grows beyond Goethe. This can be
understood completely by one who knows the surprise experienced
by a poet when he has this composition before him. That is, we
do not have to suppose that the poet must always be as great as
his work, anymore than a father must be as great in forces of
soul and genius as his son; the truly poetic creative process
is something living; just as one cannot say it is also
impossible to assert that one who is spiritually creative never
creates above his own level. But through the inner state of
isolation that I have described in reference to Goethe, those
profound insights in his soul appear that we find in reading
his Faust. Such works are not poetic compositions like
others. The Faust poem flows from the entire spirit of
the fifth post-Atlantean culture period; it grows far beyond
Goethe. Much that we experience in connection with the world
and its process of becoming sounds forth to us from
Faust in a strange manner. Call to mind the passage you
have just heard:
(Note 53)
To
us, my friend, the ages that are passed
A book with seven seals, close fastened, are
And what the spirit of the times men call
Is merely their own spirit after all. ...
(Note 54)
These words by Faust himself are passed over too lightly. One
who experiences the statement in its fullest depths is reminded
of much that confirms its truth. Consider the knowledge
possessed by modern man of the Greeks and the spiritual life of
Greece, through Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides! Suppose men
steep themselves in this Greek spiritual life — let us say, in
Sophocles. Is Sophocles a book with seven seals? That will not
easily be admitted! More than eighty dramas were written by
Sophocles,
(Note 55)
who lived to be ninety-one; only seven
of these dramas now survive. Do we really know a man if he has
written eighty-one or more dramas and only seven of them
survive? Is this not truly a book with seven seals? How can
anyone assert that he knows the Greek world from what has been
handed down to us, when he must simply recognize the fact that
seventy-four of Sophocles' dramas, by which the Greeks were
fascinated and inspired, are nonexistent? Many of the dramas of
Aeschylus no longer exist. Poets lived in Greek times whose
names are not even known any longer. Are not the times past
truly a book with seven seals? We must admit this when we
consider such external facts, and
...
'tis delightful to transport
Oneself into the spirit of the past,
To see in times before us how a wise man thought,
And what a glorious height we have achieved at last.
(Note 56)
Wagner types believe they are able to transplant themselves
quite easily into the spirit of a wise man; that is, when
somebody before them has already done the exercise! It is a
pity that we cannot put to the proof what the critics would
have to write about Hamlet if it had been written today
and were to be performed for them by some large municipal
theater, or if a drama of Sophocles should be presented for
them at this very moment. Perhaps no impression would be made
on these gentlemen even by what Sophocles had to do to convince
his relatives of his greatness in his advanced old age of
ninety-one. His relatives had had to wait so long for their
inheritance that they tried to prove he had become
feeble-minded and could no longer manage his property. He had
no other way to protect himself than by writing the
Oedipus in Colonna,
thus proving that he was not yet in his dotage.
Whether this would work with present-day critics I do not know,
but at that time it did help. Anyone who enters deeply into the
tragedy of the ninety-one year old Sophocles, however, will be
able to estimate how difficult it is to find the way to a human
individuality and how such an individuality is bound up in the
most complicated fashion with world events! Many things could
be adduced to show under what deep layers we must penetrate in
order to understand the world. But how much is alive, even in
the earliest parts of Faust, of that wisdom that is
necessary for an understanding of the world! This wisdom must
be attributed to the peculiar course of Goethe's destiny which
reveals to us in a real sense that nature and the work of the
spirit are a unity in human development and that an illness not
only has an external significance but may also possess
spiritual meaning.
Thus we see a decided continuation of the karmic impulses that
existed in Goethe. Then in 1775, however, his connection with
the Duke of Weimar appeared as if from without. Goethe is
called from Frankfurt to Weimar. What does this signify in his
life? To further understand the life of a man, we must first
understand what such an event means to his life. I know how
little inclined the present world is really to arouse those
forces of the soul that are necessary to fully sense and feel
such a phenomenon — to completely feel what is already alive
in the first scenes of Faust. In order to write the
Monologue in the Study, Spirit of the Earth
that has just been presented, a richness of soul is needed, and
it will cause one who beholds it to linger long in an attitude of
fervent reverence. One is often pained to the depths of one's
soul to realize that the world is really still decidedly dull
and cannot feel what is truly great. But, if we feel
such a thing completely, we shall then also see where one who
is deeply permeated with spiritual science arrives in his
feeling. Such a person comes to the point of saying to himself
that something lived in Goethe that consumed him; he couldn't
go on in such a way.
Two
things must be clear if we are to appreciate, in the proper
sense and in the right light, these first scenes of
Faust. We might imagine that Goethe had written them
gradually between his twenty-fifth and fiftieth years, in which
case they would not have strained his soul so intensely, nor
been such a burden. Certainly! But this is impossible because,
after his thirtieth or thirty-fifth year, the youthful force
necessary to give such form to these scenes would have been
lacking. In accordance with his individuality, he had to write
them in those early years, but to continue to live thus was no
longer possible. He needed something like a damper, a partial
soul-sleep, to reduce the intensity of the fire that burned in
his soul as he wrote these first scenes. Then, the Duke of
Weimar called him to make him a minister in Weimar. As I have
already said, Goethe was a good minister, and while he labored
assiduously, he could refresh himself by partially sleeping off
what burned in his soul.
There is really a tremendous difference between Goethe's mood
up to 1775 and that after 1775, a difference that may be
compared with a mighty wakefulness followed by a subdued life.
The word “Dumpfheit,” an inner feeling of numbness, comes into
his mind when he describes his life in Weimar, where he engages
himself so much in events but responds to them more than at an
earlier age, when he had rebelled against them. It is peculiar
that after this dampening down for ten years there followed a
period when events confronted him in a more gentle way. Just as
the life of sleep is by no means a direct effect of the
preceding daytime life, so also this sleep life of Goethe was
not at all the result of what had gone before. The
interrelationships are far greater than is generally supposed.
I have already frequently pointed out that it is indicative of
a superficial view when, to the question — Why does a man
sleep? — the answer is given: Because he is tired. This is a
lazy truth and one that is itself asleep since it is nonsense.
Otherwise, it would not be true that individuals such as
non-working persons living on their private incomes who are
certainly not tired, fall comfortably asleep after a full meal
when they are expected to listen to something that does not
particularly interest them. Tired they certainly are not. The
fact is not that we sleep because we are tired, but waking and
sleeping are a rhythmic life process, and when it is time or
necessary for us to sleep, we become weary. We are tired
because we ought to sleep; we do not sleep because we are
tired. But I will not discuss this further just now.
Just consider in what a tremendous interrelationship the rhythm
of sleeping and waking stands. It is a reproduction within the
nature of man of day and night in the cosmos. It is natural, of
course, that a materialistic science should undertake to
explain sleep as resulting from weariness caused by the day's
activities, but the reverse is true. The explanation of the
rhythm of sleeping and waking must be drawn from the cosmos,
from vast interrelationships. They also explain that the period
when Faust was fermenting in the soul of Goethe was
followed by the ten-year period of dampening in Weimar. Here
your attention is called directly to his karma, about which we
cannot speak further at present.
The
consciousness of the ordinary human generally lets him wake in
the morning thinking he is unchanged from what he was when he
fell asleep. In reality, such is never the case. We are never
the same upon waking as we were when we fell asleep but, as a
matter of fact, we are somewhat richer, though unconscious of
it. However, just as the trough of a wave has followed after a
crest, as it was in Goethe's Weimar years, the awakening that
follows is at a higher stage; it must follow at a higher stage
because the innermost forces strive toward this. In Goethe also
the innermost forces strive to awaken again from the inner
state of numbness in Weimar to a fullness of life in an
environment that could now really bring him what he lacked. He
awakened in Italy. With his special constitution he could not
have awakened in Weimar. In this fact, however, we can see the
profound relationship between the creative work of a real
artist and his special experience.
You
see, a writer who is not an artist can produce a drama
gradually without difficulty, one page at a time; he can do
this perfectly well. The great poet cannot; he needs to be
deeply rooted in life. For this reason, Goethe could bring the
most profound truths to expression in his Faust in
relatively early youth, truths that ranged far above the
capacities of his soul, but he had to set forth a rejuvenation
of Faust. Just bear in mind that Faust had to come into an
entirely different mood in spite of the fact that his nature
was so deeply formed. In the end, in spite of all his depth,
what he had taken into his soul up to that time had brought him
near to suicide. He had to be rejuvenated. A lesser individual
can describe perfectly well, and even in pretty verses, how a
man is rejuvenated. Goethe could not do this so simply; he
first had to experience his own rejuvenation in Rome. It is for
this reason that the rejuvenation scene,
The Witch's Kitchen,
was written in Rome in the Villa Borghese.
(Note 57)
Goethe would not have ventured to write this scene earlier.
Now, a certain condition of consciousness, even though dulled,
is associated with such a rejuvenation as Goethe experienced.
In his time there was not as yet a spiritual science, so
this state of consciousness could not be heightened but only
subdued. Furthermore, special forces are associated with such a
rejuvenation as Goethe experienced. In his time there was
not as yet a spiritual science, so this state of consciousness
could not be heightened but only subdued. Furthermore, special
forces are associated with such a rejuvenation that are
projected over into the next incarnation. Here experiences are
woven together that belong to the present incarnation and also
much that projects its influence into the next. When we bear
this in mind, we are led to consider an especially profound and
significant tendency in Goethe.
You
see, if I may be permitted to interject this personal comment,
I have occupied myself for a number of decades with Goethe's
view of nature — I may say since 1879-80, and intensively
since 1885-86. During this time, I have arrived at the view
that there is something in the impulse that Goethe gave to the
conception of nature, which contemporary scientists and
philosophers really do not understand, that can be developed,
but it will take centuries to do so. It may well be, therefore,
that when Goethe returns in another incarnation it will still
be possible for him to work formatively on what he could not
perfect in his views of nature in this incarnation. Many things
that are implicit in his view of nature have not yet even been
surmised. In regard to this, I have expressed myself in my book,
Goethes World Conception,
and in the introduction to
Goethe's Natural Scientific Writings
in Kürschner's Nationalliteratur.
We may really say, therefore, that Goethe bears within him in his view
of nature something that points toward remote horizons. It is, however,
intimately related with his rebirth as this was connected with the
period of life through which he was passing when he was in Rome.
You
may read for yourselves how I have presented these matters, how
the metamorphosis of plants and animals, the archetypal plant
and animal, took form during his journey in Italy; how upon his
return he tackled the problem of the theory of colors,
something that is scarcely understood at all at present; how he
took hold of still other things. You will then see that his
living penetration into a comprehensive view of nature is
intimately bound up with his rebirth. To be sure, he did relate
to Faust what he had arrived at in the course of his own
life, not, however, as a minor, but as a major poet would do
this. Faust experiences the Gretchen tragedy. In the midst of
it, we are suddenly faced with Faust's view of nature, which
admittedly is closely related with Goethe's. It is expressed in
the following words of Faust:
Exalted
spirit, all you gave me, all
That I have asked. And it was not in vain
That amid flames you turned your face toward me.
You gave me royal nature as my own dominion,
Strength to experience her, enjoy her. Not
The cold amazement of a visit only
You granted me, but let me penetrate
Into her heart as into a close friend's.
You lead the hosts of all that is alive
Before my eyes, teach me to know my brothers
In quiet bushes and in air and water.
And when the storm roars in the wood and creaks,
The giant fir tree, falling, hits and smashes
The neighbor branches and the neighbor trunks,
And from its hollow thud the mountain thunders,
Then you lead me to this safe cave and show
Me to myself, and all the most profound
And secret wonders of my breast are opened.
(Note 58)
A
great world conception, ascribed by Goethe to Faust! Only
during the journey to Italy had Goethe acquired it with such
penetration of soul. The scene beginning, “Spirit sublime, thou
gavest me, gavest me all,” was also written in Rome, not
earlier. These two scenes — the rejuvenation scene in
The Witch's Kitchen,
and the scene,
Forest and Cave,
were the portions that were written in Rome.
Here you see a real rhythm in Goethe's life that reveals an
inner impulse just as the rhythm of waking and sleeping reveals
an inner impulse in the human being. In a life such as Goethe's
we can study certain laws in an especially clear light, but we
shall also learn that the laws we discover in great
personalities may become important for the life of every
individual human being. In the last analysis, the laws working
in an eminent human being apply to all individuals. Tomorrow we
will continue to speak of the relationships of life as they may
be grasped from this point of view.
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