VI
You
have seen how involved the more profound questions of destiny
are in human life, something we recognize when we try to
approach them in ways made possible by spiritual science. For
this, however, many things today will be necessary if man is to
correctly put himself into the nature of those phenomena that
lead to a truly fruitful grasp of life. When we consider these
involved problems, we must frequently take roundabout paths in
order to see clearly the difficulties that hinder our
understanding. We have all grown up, in a sense, in the
thinking of the present, and even though many of us suppose we
have attained to unprejudiced thinking, it is always well to be
quite unsparing in testing ourselves and our self-knowledge,
especially the unprejudiced character of our thinking. Before
we proceed further, therefore, permit me to draw your attention
to some particulars.
It is
often difficult to discuss these things because language is
obstinate when we undertake to work out concepts in accord with
reality. It is easy to suppose that a concept that has been
worked out and is, as it were, obtained from the sum total of
occult science is directed toward an entirely different
objective than is really intended. In this way, various
misunderstandings arise. A certain observation may frequently
be made when we discuss the course of life of eminent
personalities. I will give you an example. A small brochure has
just been published in Switzerland. It deals with the person we
have mentioned in a different connection, Friedrich Theodor
Vischer, the author of Auch Einer and the great
Aesthetics, and describes with loving devotion the life
of this true-hearted and extraordinarily prolific Swabian.
Permit me to mention him here simply as an example of some
things that we desire to consider in connection with the
question of human destiny; we could just as well select another
example.
Vischer was as true a Swabian by nature as might be found in
the nineteenth century. The biographical sketch
(Note 73)
that has just been published shows how he grew up in poverty,
how this compelled him to take the theological training in the
Tubingen seminary, and so on. Now, the point that interested me
is that at the very beginning attention is called to the fact
that even his secondary schooling was rather narrow. To be
sure, the boys learned to get along in Latin and later in the
Greek writers, but they really did not know until a rather late
age into what main river the Neckar empties, nor had they even
seen a map until they were fairly well along in years. Many
such defects in the educational system are mentioned.
Now
let us look at the matter in the right light. Friedrich Theodor
Vischer became, in a sense, a great and famous man who
accomplished something important. We must understand how he
became the specific individual we find in history. The fact
that he had never seen a map before a particular age has
something to do with this; if he had seen a map earlier, a
certain trait in his character would not have been present.
Much else that is severely criticized had to be so. In short,
if we view the matter from a more comprehensive standpoint, we
shall say that the soul of Vischer descended from the spiritual
world and chose precisely his environment. It wanted to have
just the education that would keep it for a time from seeing a
map. Likewise, his soul wanted to be close to the Neckar river
but did not wish to know into which major river it emptied. If
we study Vischer, we shall see that precisely all his whims and
abundant peculiarities are truly integrating components of his
greatness. So it seems really out of order for someone to write
his biography and criticize the school that actually made him
the very man he was.
Let it
be clearly understood that I did not want to emphasize that
schools which do not show maps to children are of the right
kind. But for Vischer it was entirely right and had to be so.
We have often experienced this in the nineteenth century and up
to the present day. Certain famous scientists are a case in
point. They were quick to criticize the present system of
education, demanding that much more natural science be
introduced into the schools. However, when someone would ask
the scientists: “You yourselves experienced these conditions —
do you find them so terribly bad,” they generally did not know
what to say. We must understand clearly that everything has at
least two and, under some circumstances, many sides. What do we
have really when a biographer sits down and so forms his
concepts and ideas — in this case the biographer was a woman
— that such a thing is written as I have just told you about
Vischer? It really contributes nothing whatever to an
understanding of the personality concerned. When someone forms
such concepts, he actually slashes — spiritually, I mean —
into the person with whom he is dealing. If we do not wish to
slash into a personality with our concepts, we should simply
have to characterize in a loving way the nature of the school
in all its narrowness and how it brought forth this
individuality. But people slash — and criticize, which is
surely slashing in many respects. What is the cause of
this?
It
comes from cruelty, a quite definite characteristic that is
widespread in the thought system of the present and is rooted
in the subconscious. Since people lack the courage to practice
this cruelty outwardly, they are cruel in their concepts and
ideas. In many works of the present time we observe this
cruelty in descriptions and representations. We observe it in
much that is done and said, and it is far more common at the
bottom of the soul than is ordinarily supposed. I have told you
that in some schools of black magic the custom exists of
acquiring the means for performing black magic by having the
novitiate cut into the flesh of living animals. Certain
characteristics are thus developed in the soul. Not everyone
can do that at present, but many people gratify the same lust
through their system of concepts; this does not lead to black
magic, of course, but to our present civilization. Much today
is permeated by this characteristic; of this we must be
entirely clear. We arrive at an unprejudiced grasp of the world
only by paying attention to such things; it is achieved in no
other way.
Today,
beginnings tending toward attaining a particular view of the
relationships of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch do exist
everywhere. We do not come to understand this period when we
simply criticize it or surrender to an abstract idealism,
without taking into consideration that what appears in the form
of mechanism, as a mechanistic culture, belongs absolutely and
necessarily to it. Merely to condemn the mechanical element has
no meaning whatever. Now, beginnings toward some understanding
of what gives continuing life to our fifth post-Atlantean epoch
have actually appeared, but few concepts that correspond with
reality have yet been found for it and there is little
inclination to pay attention to those who have tried to grasp
it. It will be necessary for us to deal with these people whose
endeavors will be a point of departure for true energetic,
spiritual scientific activities.
There
is a significant poet of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch through
whose poetic works the life of the age pulses. This is Max Eyth,
(Note 74)
who ought to be better known because he is
truly a poet of our epoch. He is also a Swabian, the son of a
schoolmaster who wanted his son also to be a schoolmaster but
karma willed otherwise. Relatively early in his life he chose a
technical vocation, became a true technician, and then went
abroad to England. There he devoted himself especially to the
production of steam-ploughs and became their poet. The way he
has sung with warm, loving heart of these amazing mechanical
beasts is today's true poetry. There is a peculiar interplay of
sentiment in this heart. On the one hand, he is a man fully
devoted to technology; on the other, he is receptive to
everything that can be grasped without preconceptions by an
intellect schooled in the mechanistic-materialistic concepts of
the fifth post-Atlantean epoch.
Max
Eyth wrote a novel which deals with the modern life of Egypt,
where the English company that employed him frequently sent him
to introduce and test the steam-ploughs. This novel contains an
explanation of how the pyramids were built according to a
specific system. Now, if you calculate certain ratios that Eyth
discovered and included in a supplement to one of his novels,
you will find, up to the thirtieth decimal point at least, the
so-called number,
(Note 75)
π, by which the
diameter of a circle must be multiplied in order to arrive at
the circumference. You understand: 3.14159 ... carrying many
decimals and extending to infinity. It might easily be supposed
that this symbol π represents the result of later
scientific progress. However, it occurred to Max Eyth that the
ancient Egyptian temple priests must have known it up to the
thirtieth or fortieth decimal point in primeval times because
they used it to determine the ratios according to which they
built the pyramids. In other words, because Eyth was a
technician, something was disclosed to him that is deeply
hidden in the ancient structure of the pyramids. Thus he was
able to point out that our culture really has two origins: the
one that we know from historical records and that of ancient
times in which people depended on a kind of knowledge that
relied more on atavistic clairvoyance; this later disappeared
and today must be found again.
But
still other things are to be found in Max Eyth. However
insignificant it seems, this is extraordinarily important. One
of his stories, a collection of which is entitled
Behind the Plow and Vice,
brings you face to face with a riddle of
life, a riddle of destiny. It contains a splendid description
of an engineer's capacities and ability to build bridges. But
he is a little too brilliant; one might say, a bit careless.
After he has built a bridge, which is again described in a
splendid way, he is in a train passing over the bridge. There
he sits in the train, but he has overlooked something in
building the bridge. As he passes over it, it collapses and he
is killed. This is an impressive karmic question — not
answered, naturally, but posed. We see here how modern man
approaches the profound question of destiny. Here we have a man
who is brilliant in his profession and who dies at a relatively
early age through his connection with a work that he created. I
should like to say that this poetic fiction raises an important
question of a sort that spiritual science seeks to answer. Such
things do, of course, happen in the numerous variations of
life. Now we have described a case that shows us how karma is
fulfilled swiftly and precipitously. To be sure, such an event
makes karma inevitable, but let us suppose hypothetically that
in another case the person was not on the train as it passed
over the bridge, but was sitting at home by the fire. Then he
would probably have been imprisoned for a couple of years
because of his mistake, but not much more than that would have
happened to him in this life. What then?
You
see, the important point is that what had brought death to this
man, the death he suffered in connection with his work, must
enter his karma either here in this life or in the life between
death and a new birth. The experience must be gone through, but
it may be accelerated as in the case described by Eyth, or it
may be extended over a longer period of time. Indeed, life
itself in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch will raise profound
questions of destiny and the very conditions of life in this
epoch will make people realize how life reveals riddles in a
new way that is different from that of earlier epochs.
Thus,
when we consider people who are really somewhat gifted with
brilliant intellects, we can observe that they seek today for
different complexities of life in their artistic creation than
those of earlier periods. How frequently it happents that the
individuals who do discover significant complexities of life
are those who are engaged in practical vocations. From this
point of view the books of Max Eyth are extraordinarily
instructive: first, because he is really a great and gifted
writer, and second, because, as an entirely modern human being,
he creates wholly from the requirements of modern life. It is
especially interesting — permit me to make this remark
parenthetically — that those who read Eyth learn through this
mere outward exposure much that it would be important for
theosophists to know — for example, many things connected with
the life of Olcott,
(Note 76)
the first president of the
Theosophical Society. We find this hidden away in the writings
of Eyth, who was in America at a time when Olcott was doing all
kinds of strange things there. In short, even social karma may
thrust itself upon us when we do not disdain acquainting
ourselves with what this modern spirit has written. In general,
however, the peculiar fact is that often not the individuals
gifted with genius — Max Eyth was a genius — but those formed
by the life-mechanisms of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch, see
the intricacies of modern life with special clearness because
their minds are formed in a special way.
I am
acquainted with a man who was a jurist in his younger years
(Note 77)
— a time when one could be a legal mind
without necessarily realizing his financial gains from the
practice of law. He was a clear-headed person who viewed
everything without preconceptions, who by reason of his gifts
attracted the attention of his superiors, as one calls them,
not so much on account of his brilliance, but because he was a
good and diligent worker whom they could use. Now, since he had
established his reputation as an actuary or assessor, he
entered a government ministry where he was also a remarkable
worker who viewed everything with open eyes. There he was once
assigned an important, significant task. He was to prepare a
report on matters pertaining to the schools and to education
and he was instructed to prepare it in such a way that it would
indicate a transition to a sort of liberal system. That pleased
him and, since he was a clearheaded individual who saw through
the present state of affairs, an excellent report resulted,
really an excellent plan of reform that looked to liberalizing
and modernizing some of the conditions in the schools. But
while he was working on his report, the market changed, as
people say, and a reactionary report was required. His superior
then said to him, “This report is so good that you certainly
will be able to prepare a comparable reactionary report also;
now, can you do this?” The man replied, “No, that I cannot do!”
“Indeed, why not?” “Because this report presents my
conviction!” “What? This is your conviction?” Well, the
superior was most indignant and saw quite clearly that he no
longer had any use for this man, a person not only diligent but
also possessed of a conviction of his own. Clearly, such a
person could not be used.
Yet,
the man was an excellent jurist and worker. What could be done?
He had proven himself everywhere, and it was well known that he
was a competent jurist. Well, the effort was made to give him a
promotion. People who have proven themselves in this way must,
if possible, be kept contented. Things were arranged a little
behind the scenes, as the expression goes, and one day — I
think it was at a game of skittles — the secretary of a
theater met this person as if by chance and said to him, “Do
you know that the position of director of an important theater
is vacant?” Now, the jurist, who had been attached to a
government ministry, could not take it amiss when he was given
this news. So when the game was over, the secretary said to
him, “Won't you join me at the coffee house so I can explain
the matter in detail? Would you like to be a theater director?
We need one, but we cannot know, of course, when we select
someone whether he would want the position under present
conditions.” Then the jurist, who was quite intelligent and
well versed in juristic matters and things pertaining to
administration, replied, “Of course, that simply has to be
accepted. One must be willing and, if one is not, he will
simply be arrested.” Now, the end of the affair was that the
position of director of the theater was offered him. There was
one difficulty, however. There was a famous actress connected
with the theater and whoever was to become the director had to
be acceptable to her. “Well now,” said the secretary, “can you
also get along with this actress?” “Oh, if that's all that's
required! I have been in a theater no more than seven times in
my life but, if I take this job, I shall certainly be able to
get along with her. Can you tell me what she likes to eat?”
Now, the other knew that her favorite food was poppyseed cake.
That was lucky. He said, “We will go at once to the bakery and
order a large cake for her.” This was delivered early the next
morning. In the afternoon the secretary called on the actress
in order — well, I suppose to sound her out, as the expression
goes. He knew that she had a good deal of influence so he said
to her. “We should like very much to have this gentleman as
director. What do you think of him?” “Well,” she answered, “I
don't know him at all, but so far he has only been good to me.”
So the jurist became the director of the theater.
Well,
the most famous critic of that city still had to be won over.
He was always writing the most terrible stuff until one day he
also was brought around — at least, to such an extent that
even if he did not write approvingly of the director, he did
not disapprove either. This came about in the following way. I
am not telling you a fairy story but something that actually
happened; I only wish to describe it to you. So, the most
highly placed person connected with the theater, even above the
director, did not know what to do because of the critic. The
new director was simply there, and he gave a good account of
himself, being just as competent as the director of the theater
as he had previously been as a jurist. But their top executive
simply did not know what to do. He could not discharge the
director, but the critic kept up his clamor. What did he
finally do? He invited both of them in and served them some
good wine. The director could drink and drink and drink. So
could the critic, but not to equal the director. So it happened
that early the following morning — about five o'clock, I think
— the director rang the critic's doorbell and said he had to
speak to his wife because he had left something quite heavy
down below on the steps that he had to deliver to her. Well,
she put on her dressing gown and he delivered her husband to
her, a veritable bundle of misery. From that very hour the
criticism decreased. Later, after this man had gone too far as
a theater director in the view of his superiors, he was once
more helped to a promotion in the legal profession.
Now,
this man described in a remarkable way what he had observed in
his occupation, and I wish only to show by this example that
those people who are involved in the actual life of the present
can make quite significant comments on it.
Still
more interesting is a similar man, but one of nobler attitude
than the one I have just mentioned, who wrote various things
during his life. Shortly before his death — everyone of whom I
am speaking is no longer alive — he produced a very
interesting novella, really a contemporary work of art. Just
think how anyone can write such a short story today according
to the taste of the age. There must be nothing spiritual in it
and, if there is, it must be pointed out quite clearly that the
reader may believe the story or not; or better, he may consider
it to be merely a fable. Now, I will present the material for
the story, which this writer found in contemporary life. A
person lived in the same environment as the man whom I have
previously described. For a number of years he belonged to the
legal profession and was relatively successful. The novelist
can describe this. He can show how this character passed
through the stages of his career as a jurist, how he had this
or that experience and underwent complications of one kind or
another. Then he can weave a love story into this material; of
course, that also is the modern way. That is, the writer can
tell how an exotic young lady comes to the jurist accompanied
by her mother, how this eminent jurist falls in love with her
and how, because a theme of espionage is introduced and he has
to deal with this as a judge, he is again brought into
relationship with the young lady. This brings him into a
conflict, and so on. The story may then relate quite
realistically how he is finally led to commit suicide.
The
writer to whom I refer, however, did not do this; he wove the
following significant material into his story. He narrated a
course of events that is outwardly almost the same as I have
told you, but he also lets the jurist read Schopenhauer and
other philosophers in such a way that their thoughts, I might
say, become totally enmeshed with his individual being, if not
his nervous system. Now, he is a competent jurist. What does it
mean when one, as a judge, is a competent jurist? It means such
a person must be able to discover all possible hair-splitting
subtleties in order to bring about a defendant's undoing, and
he must likewise discover all possible legal casuistries of the
defense. In short, this jurist is extraordinarily competent,
and he convicts a certain person in a set of circumstances
similar to those I have just described. But the defendent in
the story behaved in a most astonishing way during the trial —
that is, as if demonic — and especially the look in his eyes
remained unforgettable in the minds of the people who were
present during the trial. Well, the person concerned was, of
course, imprisoned. The whole affair was then associated with
that young lady with whom the judge had fallen in love. The
convicted man, who was in ill health, was sentenced to twenty
years the penitentiary.
The
judge is exceedingly well described in this story. He had not
thought of the convict since the trial, which people thought he
had conducted brilliantly, when one night he awoke at about
twelve o'clock. He lay only half asleep. At about two o'clock
there was a knock at the door of the room and the convict
entered. You can imagine the situation, but he nevertheless
fell again into a half-sleep and when he awoke, it was already
day. He was now seized with a terrible fear. He went to the
court; once, on the way to his chambers he heard the name of
the convict called out. This terrified terrified him
tremendously. He decided to study the documents again and had
them brought to him. But he left them lying there for three
weeks. Finally, in a conversation one day it was revealed that
about two o'clock on a certain night the convict had died in
the penitentiary. It was precisely the time, as the judge could
establish, when the prisoner had visited him in his
bedroom!
This
is the plot of the story, which is called
Hofrat Eysenhardt
and in which the judge finally commits suicide.
Hofrat Eysenhardt
by Berger
(Note 78)
is an entirely modern story and shows even through other descriptions
that the author was quite familiar with various recent endeavors to
penetrate the secrets of occult existence. From this point of
view alone the story is brilliantly written.
Now,
there is something extraordinary here. Berger is not the same
writer I previously described; I introduced him only as an
example of a man whose perception was incisive and who
described well the very nerve of the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch. I brought in this Berger as an official colleague, so to
speak. Alfred Baron von Berger wrote that remarkable story,
Hofrat Eysenhardt; it is written in such a way that we
see he understands the various endeavors today to enter the
spiritual world. Berger wrote much during the course of his
life, but he published this story only after he had attained a
position beyond which he could make no further progress. We may
say this occurred “by chance” shortly before his death. This is
most significant since it shows us that today whose who wish to
get somewhere, as the expression goes, believe they make a
mistake when they become involved in such things. But it also
shows us how the striving of men tends in the direction of
penetrating the mysterious aspects of existence. These aspects
will increasingly come to the fore because they set important
riddles before man.
If we
wish to consider the question of destiny without
presuppositions, we must first acquire a clear perception and
try not to sleep through life — excuse the bald expression —
but rather look around ourselves. Let me express figuratively
the important point to bear in mind. Let us say that we have
here one stream of life, there a second, there a third, since
life consists of many streams crossing one another in the most
manifold ways — for example, the life of the individual and
that of groups of people, as well as the life of all humanity.
The sort of concepts that dominate today are entirely too
simplistic to disentangle the intertwining threads of life.
Frequently, what needs to be done is to direct one's gaze first
toward one point, then another, and then to relate these two
points through one's perception. When we thus hit upon the
right facts, the situation is then illumined.
Now,
you will say, “Yes, but how can such things be accomplished?”
Well, that is just the point. When you pursue spiritual science
in the right way, your imagination will reveal to you those
points in life that you must consider together, so that life
may unveil itself to you. By contrast, if you simply trace the
consecutive events of life, you will understand nothing
whatever of its totality. This is the way the historians do, in
a sense; they draw threads from one event to another but do not
understand life at all because what is needed is to view the
world symptomatically. This will become increasingly necessary;
that is, to view the world in such a way that we direct our
perception to the right places and then draw the lines of
connection from them to other things. A clear, symptomatic view
of things is especially important in the concrete study of
karma — with which so much is associated that is confusing
because so much is seductive in it.
I have
already pointed out
(Note 79)
that some contemporary occult
societies have endeavored to keep this symptomatic study as far
as possible from human beings. I have called your attention to
the societies that are derived from ancient institutions and
still continue to call themselves “occult,” especially in
Western Europe. Within these occult societies special study has
been devoted to human character in order to be able to use and
grasp these characteristics in the right way. All sorts of ways
have been used to keep this knowledge, which is fostered within
their walls, from the rest of humanity. When the connection
between the occult endeavors of these modern societies and
public events are some day laid bare, when the threads are
exposed that lead from them to modern events and their methods
are exposed, it will be exceedingly interesting. These occult
societies had a way of dealing with human characters by taking
in hand the threads of their karma, guiding and directing them
without their being conscious of this. Simple attempts have
often been made in the Theosophical Society, but they have
remained for the most part dilettantish because the
theosophists lacked the skills of other occult societies. It
is, of course, difficult to speak about these things,
especially today when an objective characterization is not only
suppressed by prejudice but is even forbidden by law. It is
difficult to speak of these things; indeed, in a certain sense,
it is quite impossible. But intimations must be given in one
way or another since it is impossible for people simply to live
and share in all that flows from the karma of the age into the
unconscious region of their souls and then, in spite of living
in this nebulousness, also to cultivate spiritual science,
which demands clear and unprejudiced minds. There must be truth
in certain things, but it is not possible to gain the truth in
an abstract way by hypocrisy when we have to do with things
that pertain to the real occult world. What is essential is
that we must have a real will to truth. Now, this will to truth
meets with many obstacles, especially today because men have
gradually lost their sense for it. Just think how often in
public life people are not concerned with discovering the
truth, but rather with saying whatever suits one person or
another and offers certain advantages to them.
Nowadays one comes upon particular fields everywhere of which
it is not possible to speak, even though it is so necessary to
do so. But I ask you to give the most earnest attention to this
very fact because we must understand quite clearly that what
has been said is the truth. You may ask, “What have these
things to do with the question of karma we are now discussing?”
Indeed, they have much to do with this, and we shall undertake
to go into some of them in order finally to reach the goal
toward which we are really striving.
|