ROM
the indications already given [4th November 1916. See
Anthroposophical Movement, Vol. IV. No. 37] you will
have perceived that it is our intention in this lecture to lead
to an understanding of the karma of the individual human being
and (in a wider sense) of the whole karma of our time. But
human life, particularly when we wish to study it as it
concerns each individual one of us, is exceedingly complicated.
If we desire to answer the question concerning a man's destiny,
we have to follow many threads which connect him with the
world, and with the more or less distant past. That will
perhaps show you why, now that I wish to explain
something that really concerns every one very closely, I
am going a longer way round and connecting these studies,
which are intended to throw light upon the narrower life of
each individual, with the earthly life of one who was important
in the world's history: with Goethe. Very many details of
Goethe's earthly life have been made accessible to us, and
although, of course, the destiny of an ordinary individual is
very different from the path of destiny of such an exemplary,
world-historic spirit, it is nevertheless possible, precisely
from the study of such a life, to gain points of view
applicable to each of us. For this reason we will not hesitate
to extend these studies a little more, with respect to
the special questions which we are considering, and gradually
approaching.
If
one follows Goethe's life as many of his would-be biographers
have done hitherto, one does not notice how hastily man is
inclined to establish causes and effects.
The
scientists of to-day will point out again and again that man
makes many mistakes if he hastily adopts the principle, ‘After
a thing, — therefore because of it’ —
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc,
— the principle that because
one thing follows after another it must therefore proceed from
it as effect from cause. In the domain of natural science this
principle is condemned, and rightly so; but in the study of
human life we are not yet so far advanced. Certain savage
tribes belonging to the valleys of Kamchatka,
believe that the water-wagtails or similar birds bring
about the Spring, because Spring follows their arrival. Only
too frequently, we draw the same conclusion: What follows
something, must proceed from it. In Goethe's own descriptions
of his life — descriptions of a human life that
shines far and wide over humanity — we read that he had
such and such a father, such and such a mother, and that in
youth he underwent certain experiences which he himself
narrates. Thereupon the biographers trace back what he
did in later life, whereby he became so important for
humanity, to these his youthful impressions — quite in
accordance with the principle that because something follows on
something else it must therefore proceed from it. That is
no wiser than to believe that the Spring is brought by the
water-wagtails. In natural science the superstition has been
thoroughly condemned; but in the science of the mind, this
stage of advancement has yet to be attained. True, it is
explained quite plausibly how in his boyhood when the French
were quartered in his parents' house during the occupation of
Frankfort, Goethe was present when the celebrated Count
Thorane, lieutenant to the King of France, arranged
theatricals there. Goethe saw how he set the painters to work,
and thus, while he was still almost a child, he came into touch
with painting and with the art of the theatre. Thus lightly is
Goethe's inclination towards art in later years traced back to
these his youthful impressions! Nevertheless, in Goethe's
case especially we can see his preordained karma working
from earliest youth onward. Is it not a prominent feature in
Goethe's whole life, how he unites his view of art and of the
world with his view of Nature, how everywhere behind his
artistic fantasy he has the impulse to strive after the
knowledge of the truth in the phenomena of Nature? And do we
not see how a strictly preordained karma causes him, even
as a boy of six or seven years, to gather minerals and
geological substances which he finds in his father's
collection, and lay them on a music-stand and make an
altar to the great God of Nature? On this altar, composed of
many different objects of Nature, he fixes a fumigating candle
and kindles the light, not in the ordinary mechanical
way, but by catching with a lens the rays of the morning sun.
He lets fall the very first rays through the lens on to the
candle, thus kindling by the rays of the morning sun the fire
which he offers to the great God of Nature. How sublimely
beautiful is it to see the mind of this six or seven-year-old
boy directed to what lives and moves as Spirit in the phenomena
of Nature. Here we see how this trait, which must surely have
come from an inborn tendency, could not have originated
in his environment. In Goethe especially, what he brought with
him into this incarnation worked with peculiar intensity.
If
we study the time into which Goethe was born in that
incarnation, we shall find a remarkable harmony between his
nature and the events of his time. In accordance with the
present world-outlook, one is no doubt inclined to
say: What Goethe has created —
Faust
and other works that proceeded from him for the uplifting and
spiritual permeation of humanity — all this came into
being because Goethe created it out of his inner tendencies.
For these creations which were given to humanity by Goethe, it
is undoubtedly more difficult to prove that they do not belong
to his personality in this simple way. But now consider
something else for a moment. Think how futile, in face of
certain phenomena of life, is many a mode of study whose
authors believe that they are entering thoroughly into the
truth. In my latest book,
‘The Problem of Man’
(Vom Menschenrätsel),
you will find de la Mettrie's
statement quoted, to the effect that Erasmus of Rotterdam
or Fontenelle would have become quite different beings if even
only a tiny part of their brain had been different.
According to such a way of thinking, we must presume that all
that Erasmus and Fontenelle produced would not be in the world
if, as de la Mettrie thinks, through a slightly different
constitution of their brains, Erasmus and Fontenelle had become
fools instead of wise men. Now in a certain respect this may
perhaps apply to such works as Erasmus and Fontenelle produced;
but consider the same question in another case. For example,
can you imagine that the evolution of modern humanity would
have run the same course if America had not been discovered?
Just think of all that has flowed into the life of modern
humanity through the discovery of America! Can the
materialist assert that Columbus would have become a
different being if his brain had been a little different, so
that he would have become a fool instead of a
Columbus, and that he would not then have discovered America?
Certainly, this much could be said, just as one may say: Goethe
would not have become Goethe, Fontenelle not Fontenelle,
Erasmus not Erasmus if, for example, during their pre-natal
period their mothers had met with an accident and they had been
still-born. But we can never suppose that America would not
have been discovered even if Columbus had been unable to
discover it. You will admit, it is well-nigh
self-evident that America would still have been discovered even
if Columbus had had a defect in his brain! And so you cannot
doubt that the course of the World's events is one thing and
the share of the individual human being in these events
is quite another; nor can you doubt that the World-events
themselves summon those human individuals whose karma specially
adapts them to carry out what the World-events require. In the
case of America it can very easily be seen; but to one who
looks more deeply the case is just the same with the origin of
Faust.
We should really have to believe in the utter
lack of any sense in World-evolution if we were obliged to
think that there was no inherent necessity for such a poem as
Faust
to be produced, even if what the materialists are
so fond of reiterating had actually happened — if a
slate had fallen on Goethe's head when he was five years old
and he had become an imbecile. If you trace the
development of spiritual life during the last decades before
Goethe, you will see that
Faust
was an absolute requirement of the time. Lessing is a
characteristic spirit; he too wished to write a
Faust.
He even wrote one scene, which is very beautiful.
It was not Goethe's mere subjective needs which called for
Faust;
it was the Time itself. And one who looks more
deeply into things can truly say: As to the course of events in
the World's history, there is a similar connection between
Goethe's works and Goethe himself, to what there is between
Columbus and the discovery of America.
I
said that if we study the time into which Goethe was born we
notice a certain harmony between the individuality of
Goethe and his age. Moreover, this applies to his age in the
very widest sense. Remember that in spite of all their great
differences (we shall return to this in a moment) there is
nevertheless something very similar in the two spirits, Goethe
and Schiller, not to mention others around them who were less
great than they. You will remember, many things which shine out
in Goethe, we also find appearing in Herder. We can,
moreover, go much further. If we look at Goethe it does not
perhaps at once appear; we will go into that in a moment. But
if we look at Schiller, Herder, or Lessing we shall say: their
lives certainly became different; but in their
tendencies, in their impulses, there is in Goethe, in Schiller,
in Herder, and in Lessing undoubtedly a tendency of soul
through which, under other circumstances, any one of them
could just as well have become a Mirabeau, or a Danton! They
really harmonise with their age. In the case of Schiller it can
be shewn without much difficulty, for no one can say that
Schiller's frame of mind, as the author of
The Robbers,
or
Fiesco,
or
Intrigue and Love,
was very different from that of Mirabeau, Danton, or even Robespierre.
It was only that Schiller allowed the same impulses to flow
into Literature and Art which Danton, Robespierre, Mirabeau
allowed to flow into their political tendencies. But with
respect to the blood of the soul which pulses through
World-history, there flows in
The Robbers
exactly the
same as in the deeds of Danton, Mirabeau and Robespierre;
and this same blood of the soul flowed also in Goethe. Although
one might be prone at first to think of Goethe as a man far,
far from being a revolutionary, he was not so — not by
any means. Only in Goethe's complex nature there was also a
special complication of karmic impulses, of impulses of
destiny, which placed him in quite a special way into the
world, even in his earliest youth.
When we follow Goethe's life with a vision sharpened by
spiritual science, we find that, apart from everything else, it
is divided into certain periods. The first period runs its
course in such a way that we may say: An impulse which exists
already in his childhood, flows on further. Then something
comes from outside which apparently diverts the stream of his
life, namely, his acquaintance with the Duke of Weimar in 1775.
Again we see how his sojourn in Rome brings him into a
different path of life. Through being able to take the Roman
life into himself he becomes quite different. And if we
wished to penetrate still more deeply we might say, that after
this Roman transformation, a third impulse, coming
apparently from without (though, as we shall see, this would
not be quite correct in the sense of spiritual science) was the
friendly intercourse with Schiller.
If
we study the first part of Goethe's life up to the year 1775,
we find — although to reach this result we must, of
course, observe the various events more attentively than is
usually done for such purposes — that in Goethe there
lives a very strong revolutionary feeling, an opposition to
what is around him. But Goethe's nature is spread over many
different things, and as the spirit of revolt, being more
spread out, does not manifest itself in him so strongly as it
does when concentrated in Schiller's
Robbers,
the matter is not so noticeable. One who, with the aid of spiritual
science, is able to enter into Goethe's boyhood and youth,
finds that he possesses a spiritual life-force which he brings
with him into his existence through the gate of birth, but
which would not have been able to accompany him
throughout his whole life if certain events had not taken
place. What lived in Goethe as his individuality, was far
greater than his organism could really receive and express.
In
Schiller's case this can be seen very clearly. The cause of
Schiller's early death was simply that his organism was
consumed by the mighty life-force of his soul. That is as
clear as day. It is well-known that when Schiller died it was
found that his heart was, as it were, dried up within him. Only
through his strong force of soul was he able to hold out as
long as he did; but this great soul-force also consumed the
life of his body.
In
Goethe this force of soul became still greater, and yet he
lived to a ripe old age. How was this possible? In the last
lecture I mentioned a fact which played a very important part
in Goethe's life. After he had lived a few years as a student
in Leipzig, he fell ill, seriously ill, and almost died. We may
say that he really looked death in the face. This illness was
of course a natural phenomenon connected with his body;
but we can never understand a man who works out of the
elemental forces of the world, nor indeed can we understand any
human being at all, unless we also take into consideration
events such as these, which take place in the course of their
Karma. What really happened to Goethe when he lay ill at
Leipzig. There took place what we may call a complete loosening
of the etheric body in which the life-force of the soul had
until then been active; this was so loosened that after his
illness Goethe no longer had the firm connection between
the etheric body and the physical body which he had before. Now
the etheric body is that part of our supersensible nature which
really makes it possible for us to form concepts, to think.
Abstract ideas such as we have in ordinary life, and which are
alone appreciated by most materialistically minded people
— these we have through the fact that the etheric body is
bound up with the physical body very closely, as it were
by a strong magnetic tie. This also gives us the strong impulse
to carry our will into the physical world. Notably we have this
impulse of the will when the astral body also is very strongly
developed. If we consider Robespierre, Mirabeau or
Danton, we find in them an etheric body firmly united with the
physical, but they also have a strongly-developed astral body
which in its turn acts strongly upon the etheric body and
places these human individualities strongly into the physical
world. Goethe was organised in this way too; but in him there
was another force at work, and this produced a
complication. It was this force which brought it about
that through the illness which took him almost to death's door,
his etheric body was loosened, and remained so. Now when
the etheric body is no longer so intimately bound up with the
physical body, it no longer thrusts its forces into the
physical, but preserves them within itself. Hence the change
which took place in Goethe when he then returned from Leipzig
to Frankfort, where he became acquainted with Fräulein von
Klettenberg the mystic, and with various medical friends
who were devoting themselves to alchemical studies, and where
he also studied the works of Swedenborg. At this time he really
constructed for himself a spiritual system of the world.
Chaotic as yet, it was nevertheless a spiritual system; for he
possessed a very deep inclination to occupy himself with
supersensible things. This, however, was essentially
connected with his illness. And his soul, while carrying into
this earth-life the foundations for this force which acts
downward like gravity, also brought with it the impulse,
through the above-mentioned illness, so to prepare the etheric
body that it not merely manifested in the physical, but
received the impulse — and not only the impulse but the
capacity — to fill itself with supersensible ideas. So
long as we consider merely the outer biographical facts in a
person's life in a materialistic fashion, we never
perceive the subtle connections which exist in the stream
of his destiny; but as soon as we go into the connection of the
natural events which occur in the body — such for
instance as Goethe's illness — with what is
manifested ethically, morally and spiritually, it
becomes possible for us to have a presentiment of
the profound working of karma.
In
Goethe the revolutionary force would certainly have manifested
in such a way as to have consumed him at an early age, for in
his environment it would not have been possible for the
revolutionary force to have expressed itself outwardly, and
Goethe could not have written dramas like Schiller; so that he
would simply have consumed himself. This was diverted through
the loosening of the connection — the magnetic link
— between his etheric and his physical body.
Here we see something that is apparently a natural event,
playing a significant part in the life of a human being.
Certainly, such a thing as this indicates a deeper connection
than what the biographers mostly bring to the surface. The
significance of an illness for the whole individual experience
of a human being cannot be explained from hereditary
tendencies, but it points to his connection with the
universe — a connection which must be conceived as
spiritual. You will also observe from this how complicated
Goethe's life became; for the way in which we receive an
experience makes us what we are.
Goethe now comes to Strassburg with an etheric body that is to
a certain extent filled with occult knowledge; and in this
condition he meets Herder. Herder's great ideas necessarily
took a very different form in Goethe from what they were in
Herder himself, who had not the same conditions in his finer
constitution.
In
Goethe's life, such an event had taken place as that
above-described in Leipzig at the end of the 1760's, when he
stood face to face with death. But the forces for this had
already been preparing for a long time before. Anyone
wishing to trace back such an illness to external or
merely physical events, has not yet reached in spiritual
spheres the point at which the scientists already stand,
who say, that if one thing follows on another it must not
therefore necessarily be looked upon as its direct result. In
Goethe, therefore, this isolating of himself from the world was
always there, owing to the peculiar connection between his
physical body and his etheric body, which only reached its
crisis through his illness.
When the outer world affects a man in whom there is a close
connection between the physical body and the etheric, the
impressions made upon the physical body pass on at once into
the etheric; they become one with it, and the etheric body
simply experiences the impressions of the outer world
simultaneously with the physical. In a nature such as
Goethe's, impressions are of course made on the physical body,
but the etheric body, being loosened, does not participate in
them at once. The consequence is that such a man can be more
isolated from his environment; a more complicated process
takes place when ail impression is made on his physical body.
Make a bridge for yourselves, from this peculiarity of
Goethe's organic structure, to what you know from his
biography, namely, that he allowed events — even
historical events — to affect him without ever
using force with them. Then you will understand the unique way
in which Goethe's nature works. As I said: he takes the
biography of Gottfried of Berlichingen. He allows himself to be
influenced by Shakespeare's dramatic impulses, but he
does not make very much alteration in the autobiography of
Gottfried, although it is not specially well written; indeed he
does not call his drama a
Drama,
but
The Story of Gottfried of Berlichingen with the Iron Hand,
dramatized. He only alters it a little. This shy and gentle touching of
things, not grasping them with force, comes about through
the peculiar connection between his etheric and his
physical body.
This connection did not exist in Schiller. He therefore
presents in Karl Moor thoughts which were truly not the
result of any external impression on him, but which he
formed quite forcefully — even with violence — out
of his own nature. Goethe requires the action of life upon him,
but he does not do violence to life; he only gently assists it,
and raises what is already living, to a work of art. This is
also the case when those conditions of life approach him which
he then fashions in his
Werther.
His own experiences or
those of his friend, Jerusalem, he does not bend or mould very
much; he simply takes life as it is and helps it on a little,
and through the gentle way in which he does so —
precisely out of his etheric body — life itself becomes a
work of art. But on account of this same organisation of his,
he only comes into touch with life indirectly, I might say; and
in this incarnation he prepares his karma through this merely
indirect approach to life.
He
goes to Strassburg. In addition to all that he experiences
there, which brings him forward in his career as Goethe, he
also experiences in Strassburg, as you know, the love
affair with Frederica, the pastor's daughter at Sesenheim. His
heart is very, very much engaged in this affair. Various moral
objections can be raised, no doubt, to the course of this
affair between Goethe and Frederica of Sesenheim
— objections which may even be justified. That is not the
point at this moment; the point is that we should understand.
Goethe indeed goes through all that which in any other person
— not a Goethe — not only must have led, but would
as a matter of course have led to a lasting union. But Goethe
does not experience directly. Through what I have just
explained, a kind of cleft is created between his peculiar
inner being and the outer world. Just as he does not do
violence to what lives in the outer world, but only gently
remodels it, so too, his feelings and sensations,
inasmuch as he can experience them only in his etheric
body: — he does not bring them through the physical body
at once into a firm connection with the outer world so as to
lead to a very definite event in life, as it would have done
for others. Thus he withdraws again from Frederica of
Sesenheim. But we should take such a thing as this in its
relation to the soul. As he departs for the last time
— (you may read of it in his biography) — he meets
himself. Goethe actually encounters Goethe! Very much
later in his life he tells how he met himself at that time.
Goethe meets Goethe; he sees himself. He leaves Frederica;
towards him comes Goethe, not in the clothing he is wearing,
but in a different dress. And when years later he comes there
again and visits his old friend, he recognises that, without
premeditating it, he is wearing the suit in which he foresaw
himself years ago, when he encountered himself. That is
an event one must believe just as fully as one believes
anything else that Goethe relates. It would be unseemly
to criticise it, in face of the love of truth with which
Goethe has presented his whole life.
How, then, did it come about that Goethe, who was so near and
yet so far removed from the circumstances into which he had
entered — so near that if it had been anyone else it
would have led to something altogether different, and so far
that he could still withdraw — how did it come about that
on this occasion he actually met himself? In a human being who
experiences something in the etheric body, this
experience may very easily become objectified if the
etheric body is thus loosened. He sees it as an external
object, it is projected outward. This really took place with
Goethe. On a specially favourable occasion, he actually saw the
other Goethe — the etheric Goethe who lived within him,
and who through his karma remained united with Frederica of
Sesenheim. Hence he saw himself as a spectre coming
towards him. This event in the deepest sense confirms
what may already be seen from the very facts of Goethe's
nature.
Here you see how a man may stand in the midst of external
events and how we must nevertheless first understand the
particular way, the individual way in which he is related to
them. For the relation of man to the world is complicated
— I mean his relation to the past and the inner
connections of what he carries over from the past into the
present. But through the fact that Goethe had in a sense torn
his inner being from its connection with the body, it was
possible for him, even in youth, to cultivate in his soul the
profound truths which so surprise us in his
Faust.
I say ‘surprise’ intentionally, for the simple reason
that they really must cause surprise; for I know scarcely
anything more foolish than when biographers of Goethe
continually repeat the sentence: ‘Goethe is Faust and
Faust is Goethe.’ I have often read that remark in biographies
of Goethe. It is simply nonsense; for what we really have in
Faust,
if we let it work upon us properly, actually
affects us in such a way that sometimes we cannot suppose that
Goethe himself experienced it or even knew of it in the same
way; and yet, there it is in
Faust.
Faust
always grows beyond Goethe. This can however be fully understood
by one who knows the surprise which an author himself feels when he
sees his poem in front of him. We have no right to suppose that
the poet must always be as great as his work. This is no more
necessarily the case, than that a father must be as great in
soul-force and genius as his son. For true poetic creation is a
living process, and it can never be affirmed that a
spiritual creative genius cannot create something higher than
himself, any more than it can be said that a living being
cannot produce something greater than itself. Through the inner
isolation I have described, those deep perceptions arise in
Goethe's soul which we find in his
Faust.
For a work such as
Faust
is not merely a poem like other poems.
Faust
springs forth as it were out of the whole spirit
of the fifth post-Atlantean age of civilisation; it grows far
beyond Goethe himself. And much that we experience regarding
the world and its development, rings out to us from
Faust
in a remarkable manner. Think of the words you
have just heard:
‘My friend, the times gone by are but in sum
A book with seven seals protected;
What ‘Spirit of the Times' you call,
Good sirs, is but your spirit after all’
Latham's translation.
People pass too lightly over such a work. One who feels it in
all its depths is reminded of many things which can only prove
such words true in the very deepest sense. Think of what
modern humanity possesses through the knowledge of the
Greeks and of Greek culture, through Aeschylus,
Sophocles, Euripides. People study this Greek life of culture.
Take Sophocles: Is Sophocles a book with seven seals? It may
not be easy for some to conceive that even Sophocles may be a
book with seven seals. Yet Sophocles, who reached the age of
91, wrote over 80 dramas, — seven of which have been
preserved. Do we know a man who wrote 81 dramas or more,
when only seven have been handed down to us? Is it not
literally true to say: a book with seven seals? How can anyone
maintain, from what has been handed down, that he is
acquainted with the whole culture of the Greeks, when he must
simply admit that 74 dramas by Sophocles, which enraptured and
uplifted the Greeks, no longer exist? A great number of
the works of Aeschylus, too, have disappeared. Poets lived in
Grecian times, whose names are even now unknown. Are not the
times gone by ‘a book with seven seals?’ When we consider such
an outward fact as this, we are obliged to answer ‘Yes.’ Or
again:
‘The joy may well be courted,
Into the spirit of the times transported,
To see what thoughts of old the wise have entertained,
And then, how we at last such glorious heights have gained.’
Latham's translation.
‘Wagner’-natures think that they can easily transpose
themselves into the spirit of a wise man — namely, when
it is presented to them! It is a pity we cannot make trial of
what the valiant critics would write about
Hamlet
if this play were to appear for the first time now and be put
before them on some city stage, — or if a drama by
Sophocles were to be performed before them. Perhaps in their
case, even that would be of no avail, which Sophocles himself
had to do in order to convince at least his relatives of his
greatness when he was very old. For he reached the age of 91;
and his relatives had to wait so long for their inheritance
that they tried to get witnesses to prove that he had grown
senile and could no longer control his own property. He could
only save himself by writing
Oedipus on Colonus.
Thereby
he could at least prove that he had not yet become
senile. Whether that would help with present-day reviewers I do
not know, but it helped with them. One who deeply studies such
a fact as the tragedy of the 90-year-old Sophocles, will at the
same time be able to measure how hard it is to find the way to
a human individuality, and in what a complicated way the human
individuality is connected with the events in the world.
We might bring forward a very great deal to show into what deep
layers one has to delve in order to understand the world. And
yet, how much of the wisdom required to understand the
world is contained in even the very first parts of Goethe's
Faust!
This is to be traced back to this destiny,
which took such a remarkable form, showing in all reality how
Nature and the activity of the Spirit are one in human
evolution, and how an illness may have not only an outer
physical significance but also a spiritual one.
Thus we see how the original karmic impulse which lived in
Goethe was strictly continued. Then again, in 1775, there came,
as it were from outside, his acquaintance with the Duke
of Weimar. Goethe was called from Frankfort to Weimar. What did
that signify in his life? We must first understand what an
event like this signifies in the life of a human being.
Otherwise we can get no further in the understanding of his
life. I know how little the people of the present day are
inclined really to awaken the soul-forces which are necessary,
fully to feel what is contained even in the first parts of
Goethe's
Faust.
In order to write the scenes represented
here to-day
(Faust,
Part I., the Monologue in Faust's study, and the Easter Scene)
a wealth of soul is required
which, when one realises it, is apt to cause one to remain
before it for a long, long time in an attitude of fervent
adoration; and it often gives one the deepest pain
to see how very dense the world really is; how little able to
feel what is truly great. But if once one feels this fully, one
will also realise what the human being who is thoroughly imbued
with Spiritual Science arrives at in his feeling; for he comes
to say: Something tremendous was living in this Goethe;
... it could not possibly go on in the same way.
One
must indeed have some such thoughts. Just imagine: Goethe was
born in 1749, in 1775 he was, therefore, only 26 years of
age, when he carried with him to Weimar in his box the Scene we
have seen performed today. A man who lived through such
material to such a degree that he can write it, has something
in his soul to bear; it weighs heavily upon his soul, for it is
a force that wills to lead upward and would almost burst
the soul to pieces.
We
must be clear about two things, if we would appreciate in the
right sense and in the true light the value of these first
parts of
Faust.
One might think that if Goethe had
gradually written these scenes from the age of 25 to 50, they
would in that case not have strained his soul so much nor been
such a heavy burden. Certainly, that would be so; but that is
not possible, would not have been possible; for from 30 or 35
years of age the youthful force would have been lacking which
was necessary to fashion these things so. He had to write them
during those years, in accordance with his individual nature;
but he could not go on living in that way. He needed something
which was like a quenching, a kind of partial sleep of the
soul, to weaken the fire that had burned in his soul when he
wrote the first parts of
Faust.
The Duke of Weimar
brought him to Weimar in order to make him Minister there; and
he was a good Minister, as I said yesterday. When he was
Minister and did a great deal of laborious work that
which had burned in his soul could sleep partially and take a
rest. There was really a very great difference in his mood
before 1775 and after that year; it was like a kind of mighty
awakeness followed by a life more dim and toned down. The word
‘torpor’ —
Dumpfheit — even comes into
Goethe's mind when he describes his Weimar life, where he took
part in the various events and entered into them far more than
he had done before, when he had rather revolted against them.
Then it is remarkable that after this duller state, which
lasted for ten years, there followed a time in which events
approached him more gently. And just as the ordinary life of
sleep is not a direct result of the life of the previous day,
so too, this sleeping life of Goethe was not an effect of what
had gone before. Such connections are much deeper than is
usually supposed. I have often pointed out that when the
question is asked: Why does a person go to sleep? it is very
superficial to answer: Because he is tired. It is an idle,
nay, even a sleeping truth, for it is nonsense. Otherwise we
should not have the fact that persons who cannot possibly be
tired — ladies or gentlemen of private means, for example
— doze off to sleep after a heavy meal when they are to
listen to something in which they are not particularly
interested. They are certainly not tired. It is not the case
that we sleep because we are tired, for waking and sleeping are
a rhythmic life-process. When the period of sleep, the
necessity for sleep approaches, we then grow tired. We are
tired because we ought to sleep, we do not sleep because we are
tired. I will not go into this any further at the moment.
Think to what a great Order the rhythm of waking and sleeping
belongs! It is the reflection in human nature of day and
night in the Cosmos. It is, no doubt, more natural to material
science to wish to explain sleep as resulting from the fatigue
of the day; but the rhythm of sleeping and waking must be
explained from the Cosmos, from great cosmic connections.
And from great connections it must also be explained why in
Goethe's case, after the period during which
Faust
stormed in the veins of his soul, there followed the ten years
of his inwardly-dulled life at Weimar. This directs you at once
to his Karma, regarding which, however, we cannot say any more
at present.
The
ordinary man wakes in the morning, as a rule, just in the same
condition in which he goes to sleep at night; but that is only
with respect to his own consciousness, in reality it is never
so. We never waken exactly as we went to sleep; we are really a
little richer; only we are not aware of this enrichment. But
when a ‘wave-hollow’ has followed upon a
‘wave-mountain’ as
in Goethe during his years at Weimar, there comes the awakening
at a higher stage; it must come at a higher stage. The inmost
forces strive towards this. And in Goethe also the inmost
forces strove to awaken again — out of the Weimar stupor
to full life, — in surroundings which could really bring
him what he lacked. It was in Italy that he awakened. He could
not, in accordance with his particular constitution, have
awakened in Weimar itself. In just such a matter as this we can
see the deep connection between the creative work of a true
artist and his special experiences. One who is no artist can
gradually write a drama, page after page, straight off the
reel; he can do it quite well. A great poet cannot do this, for
he needs to be deeply rooted in life. For this reason Goethe
was able to express the very deepest truths in his
Faust
in comparatively early youth — truths which grew
out far beyond his soul-capacities. But he had to express
a rejuvenation in Faust. Think of it: Faust had to be
brought to an entirely different frame of mind; notwithstanding
the fact that he was moulded so deeply. For after all, in spite
of all his depth, what he had hitherto taken into his soul had
brought him to the verge of suicide. He had to be rejuvenated.
A lesser poet may describe quite well, in verses which may,
perhaps, be very beautiful, how a man can be rejuvenated.
Goethe could not do this until something had taken place; he
himself had first to be rejuvenated at Rome. The rejuvenation
scene in the ‘Witch's Kitchen’ was therefore written at Rome,
in the Villa Borghese. Goethe would not have ventured to
write this scene before.
Now, connected with a rejuvenation such as that experienced by
Goethe, there is also a dull, dim consciousness (for in
Goethe's time spiritual science did not yet exist); it could
not be a clear consciousness but only a dim one. ... Special
forces, too, are connected with such a rejuvenation —
forces which play over into the next incarnation.
Experiences belonging to this incarnation intermingle
with many things that play over into the next incarnation. When
we reflect upon this we are led to a specially deep and
significant tendency in Goethe. Allow me at this point to make
a personal remark: I have continually occupied myself
for decades past — I may say since 1879 or 1880 —
with Goethe's conception of Nature, and intensely so since
1885-1886; during this time I have come to see that in
the impulse given by Goethe to the conception of Nature —
regarding which the present natural philosophers, scientists
and thinkers really know nothing at all — there is
contained something that can be developed further, but only in
the course of centuries; so that Goethe, when he comes
again, will probably be able in another incarnation to work
upon what in this incarnation he could actually have completed,
from his own views of Nature. People have as yet no notion of
many things contained in Goethe's view of Nature. I have
expressed my views on this point in my book
Goethe's Weltanschauung
(Goethe's Conception of the World)
and in my introduction to Goethe's Works on Natural Science in
Kürschner's Nationalliteratur.
So that I can really say: In his conception of Nature, Goethe
has within him something which points to very wide horizons —
something inwardly connected with his rebirth,
which indeed, in this connection, was not exactly connected
with Rome, but with the period of his life which he lived
through while he was at Rome. Read once more what I have said
in connection with these things: how during his Italian journey
he developed his Metamorphosis of plants and animals, the
primal plant, the primal animal; and how, when he returned, he
took in hand the
Theory of Colour
which people cannot yet understand to-day; and how he took still
other things in hand. Then you will see that this development of
his all-embracing conception of Nature is also connected with his
rebirth. He did indeed bring all that had arisen within him in
the course of his life into connection with
Faust,
not however in the way an insignificant poet would have done, but
as a great one alone can do. Faust experiences the
Gretchen tragedy. In the middle of this tragedy we suddenly
meet with Faust's conception of Nature, which has many points
of similarity with Goethe's great conception of Nature,
and is expressed in Faust's words: —
‘Spirit sublime, didst freely give me all,
All that I prayed for. Truly not for nought
Thy countenance in fire didst turn upon me.
This glorious Nature thou didst for my kingdom give,
And power to feel it, to enjoy it. Not
A cold astonished visit didst alone
Permit, but deep within her breast to read
As in the bosom of a friend, didst grant me.
Thou leadest past mine eyes the long array
Of living things, mak'st known to me my brethren
Within the silent copse, the air, the water.‘ ...
Latham's translation.
A
mighty conception of the world! Goethe ascribes it to Faust.
Goethe only reached this permeation of the soul during his stay
in Italy. The scene ‘Spirit sublime, didst freely give me all’
was also written in Rome; Goethe could not have written it
earlier. Just these two scenes were written in Rome: the
Rejuvenation Scene in the ‘Witch's Kitchen’ and the scene
‘Woodland and Cave:’ ‘Spirit sublime, didst freely give me
all.’
You
see from this an actual rhythm in Goethe's life — a
rhythm which betrays an inner impulse, just as the rhythm of
waking and sleeping in man betrays an inner impulse. In a life
such as Goethe's we can study many laws with special clarity;
moreover, we shall see how the laws we find in great men
can also become of importance to the life of each
individual. For, after all, the same laws which obtain in
the case of a very great man, rule also in each single human
being.
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