II
Dornach, August 10, 1919
IF WE WISH to understand the task of the
anthroposophical science of the spirit in the present and
immediate future we must consider the character of mankind's
evolution since the middle of the fifteenth century. Everything
that happens now depends on the fact that since that time there
lives in mankind the impulse for each single individuality to
attain the pinnacle of personality, to become a whole
personality. This was not possible, nor was it the task of
mankind in earlier epochs of our post-Atlantean evolution. If
we want to understand this great change in the middle of which
we find ourselves, we must focus our attention still more
precisely upon such matters as I characterized yesterday.
I
said that in our spiritual life we still have a Greek
constitution of soul. The way we form our thoughts, the manner
in which we are accustomed to think about the world, is an echo
of the Greek soul. And the way we are accustomed to look at
civic rights and everything connected with them is an echo of
the soul-constitution of the Roman. In the State we still see
the structure as it existed in the Roman Empire. Only if people
will realize that the impulse of the threefold social order
must enter our chaotic present will there be clarity in
thinking and willing.
The
soul-nature of the Greek was chiefly determined by the fact
that in Greece there existed in the highest degree what were
the leading characteristics of historical development right up
to the middle of the fifteenth century. Across the Greek
territory there were spread a subject population and their
conquerors. These latter claimed the land for themselves; but
also, through their blood inheritance, they determined the
spirituality of ancient Greece. We cannot grasp the soul-nature
of the ancient Greeks unless we keep in mind that it was
considered justified to think about human relationships in the
way that resulted from the blood characteristics of the Aryan
conqueror population. Naturally, modern man has outgrown what
thus lay at the basis of Greek culture. With the Greeks it was
self-evident that there were two kinds of people: those who had
to worship Mercury, and those who had to worship Zeus. These
two classes were strictly separated. But, people thought about
the world and the Gods in the way the conqueror population had
to think because of its blood characteristics. Everything
resulted from the clash of a conquered and conquering people.
One who looks more closely into what lives socially among men
of our time will recognize that in our feelings and our
subconscious soul-life we no longer have this aristocratic
attitude in viewing our world. Yet it still lives in our ideas
and concepts, especially if we are educated in the schools of
higher learning. These schools, especially the classical
schools, shape their instruction in a way that represents a
renaissance, and echo of Hellenism. And this is even more the
case with our universities, with the exception of the technical
and agricultural colleges which have sprung from modern life.
Even they imitate in their outer form the structure of
universities derived from Hellenism. Through the very fact that
we have a high esteem for Hellenism in its time, and for its
time, we must also be quite clear about the necessity for our
age of a renewal of spiritual life. It will become more and
more unbearable for humanity to be led by souls who have
acquired the form of their concepts in our classical schools.
And today, in almost all leading positions, you find people who
did receive the forming of their ideas in the classical
schools. It has become necessary today to realize that the time
of “settling accounts,” not minor but major
accounts, is at hand, and that we must think about such matters
factually and stop clinging to old habits of thought.
You
know that what was formed out of the blood in Hellenism became
abstract in Romanism. I have mentioned this here before. The
Greek social organism, which cannot be called a State organism,
shaped itself out of forces descending through the blood. But
this did not pass over to Romanism. What did pass over was the
urge to organize as the Greeks had organized, but the cause of
this organizing was no longer felt to be in the blood. While it
would never have occurred to an ancient Greek to doubt that
there are people of a “lower sort,” those in a
conquered people, and others being of a “higher
sort,” the Aryans, this was not the case with the Romans.
Within the Roman Empire there was the strong consciousness that
the order of the social organism had been arrived at through
power, through might. You need only remind yourselves that the
Romans trace their origin to that assembly of robbers in the
neighborhood of Rome that had been called together in order, as
a robber band, to found Rome; and that the founder of Rome was
not suckled with delicate mother's milk but, as you know, was
suckled in the forest by an animal, a wolf.
These are the influences that were taken up into the Roman
nature and led to the formation of the social order in Rome
largely out of abstract concepts. What has remained as our
heritage in regard to the concepts of rights and the State has
thus come from the Roman constitution of soul.
In
this connection I am always reminded of an old friend of mine.
I met him when he was already quite advanced in years. In his
youth, at the age of eighteen, he had fallen in love with a
girl and they had secretly become engaged. But they were too
poor to marry, so they waited and remained faithful to each
other. When he finally could consider marriage, he was
sixty-four years old, for only then had he acquired enough
means to risk taking such a step. So, he went to his home town
near Salzburg ready to marry his chosen one of so long ago. But
alas, the church and the rectory had burned down, and he could
not get his baptismal certificate. There was no record of his
baptism anywhere, so there was no proof that he had been born.
I remember vividly the day his letter arrived. It stated,
“Well, I believe it is quite evident that I was born, for
after all I exist. But these people do not believe I was born
because there is no baptismal certificate to prove
it.”
I
once had a conversation with a lawyer who said, “In a
lawsuit it is not so important whether or not a man is present;
all we need is his birth certificate.”
Continually one meets such grotesque incidents. The mood living
in them shows that our entire public life has been built to a
greater or lesser degree on Romanism. We are citizens of the
world not through the fact we have become and exist as human
beings but because we are recorded and recognized in a certain
office. These things all lead back to Romanism. The descent by
blood has passed over into registration.
Today the situation is such that many men no longer consider
their value determined by what they are as human beings but by
the rank they have reached in the hierarchy of officialdom. One
prefers to be something impersonal, out of Roman
rights-concepts, rather than a personality. Since the fifteenth
century, however, there exists in mankind the subconscious
striving to base everything on the pinnacle of personality.
This shows us that in regard to spiritual life and the life of
rights the times have changed, and we need a renewal of both, a
real renewal. This is connected with many deeper impulses of
mankind's evolution.
Just consider the fact that since the middle of the fifteenth
century the evolution of modern man has been filled with the
natural-scientific mode of thought which is based on abstract
laws of nature, upon sense perception and the thoughts
developed around it. Only what is derived from sense perception
is considered valid. Yesterday I drew your attention to the
fact that today there are quite a number of people who are
convinced, justifiably so, that a view of nature acquired in
this way can only lead to a ghost-like image of nature. A
picture of the world formed by a student of nature is a specter
of the world, not the real world. So, we have to say that
humanity finds itself in the position of developing a
specter-image of the world in regard to one half of it. For the
science of initiation something profound is concealed behind
this, and what this is we must now consider.
Sense perception as such cannot be altered; whether we consider
it to be maya or something else is of no concern to a
deeper world view. A red flower is a red flower whether or not
we think it maya or reality. It is what it is.
Likewise, all sense perception is what it is. Discussion starts
only when we begin to form thoughts about it, when we consider
it to be this or that, when we interpret it. Only then the
difficulty begins. It begins because the concepts we as men
have to form since the fifteenth century are different from
those of earlier mankind. No attention is paid to this in
modern history, which is a fable convenue, as I have
often stated. Whoever is able to understand the concepts of
mankind prior to the middle of the fifteenth century knows that
they were full of imagery, that they actually were
imaginations. The present abstraction of concepts exists only
since that time.
Now
why has our human nature so developed that we have these
abstract concepts we are so proud of today and that we
constantly employ? They have the peculiar character that,
although we make use of them in the sense world they are not
suited to this sense world. They are worthless there. In my
book,
Riddles of Philosophy,
I have expressed this
by saying that the way man forms his concepts regarding the
external world constitutes a side-stream of his soul
development. Think of a seed in the earth; it is destined by
nature to become a plant. But we take many seeds and grind them
into flour and eat them as bread. This, however, is not what
the seed is meant for; it is a lateral development. If we ask,
doesn't the seed contain those chemical elements we need for
building up our body? we must say that it does not lie in the
nature of the grain of wheat or rye to nourish us but to bring
forth new grain. Likewise, it does not lie in our nature to
grasp the outer world through the concepts we have acquired
since the fifteenth century. We shall reap something different
from those concepts if we enter into their nature properly.
These modern concepts are the shadow images of what we have
experienced in the spiritual world before birth — more
exactly, before conception. Our concepts, the forces in them,
are the echoes of what we have experienced before birth. We
misuse our system of concepts in applying it to the outer sense
world.
This is the basis of Goethe's concept of nature. He does not
want to express the laws of nature by means of concepts; he
strives for the primal phenomena. That is to say, he strives
for the assembled outer perceptions, because he feels that our
conceptual ability cannot be applied to external nature. We
have to develop our conceptual ability as pure thinking.
If we do so, it points us toward our spiritual existence prior
to birth. Our modern thinking has been bestowed upon us so that
we may reach with this pure thinking our spiritual nature as it
existed before we were clothed with a physical body. If mankind
does not comprehend the fact that it possesses thinking in
order to apprehend itself as spirit, it does not take hold of
the task of the fifth post-Atlantean period. Our natural
science was inserted, so to say, into mankind's destiny so that
we might remain with pure nature and not speculate about it. We
were to employ our concepts to perceive it in the right way,
and then develop our concepts in order to behold ourselves as
we existed in spirit before we descended into the physical
body. Men still believe today that they should only employ
their conceptual ability for classifying external sense
perceptions, and so on. However, they will only act correctly
if they employ the thoughts they have had since the middle of
the fifteenth century for perceiving the spiritual world in
which they existed before they acquired a physical body.
In
this way man of the fifth post-Atlantean era is forced toward
the spiritual, toward the existence before birth. And still
another factor places him in a peculiar situation which he must
develop. Parallel to the specter-concepts of natural science
runs industrialism, as I mentioned yesterday. Its chief
characteristic is the fact that the machine, the bearer of
industrialism, is spiritually transparent. Nothing of it
remains incomprehensible. As a consequence, the human will
directed toward the machine is, in truth, not directed toward a
reality. In terms of comprehensive world-reality the machine is
a chimera. Industrialism introduces something into our lives
which in a higher sense makes man's will meaningless. There
will be a significant impact on social life when modern men
become convinced that the machine and everything resulting from
it, such as industrialism, makes the human will meaningless. We
have already reached the pinnacle of machine activity. Today a
quarter of all production on earth is not being produced by
human will but by machine power.* This signifies something
extraordinary. Human will is no longer meaningful on earth.
If
you read, for instance, the speeches of Rabindranath Tagore,
you ought to sense something in them that remains
incomprehensible to the European who employs his ordinary
intellect. There is a different tone in what an educated
Asiatic has to say today, because in him this adaptation of the
European spirit to the machine is completely incomprehensible.
To the Oriental the activity of working by means of machines,
by means of industrialism, has no meaning. The European may
believe it or not, but European politics born in the machine
age is also just as senseless to the Oriental. In the educated
Oriental's statements there is clearly expressed that this
one-fourth of human labor in the present age is felt by him as
senseless work — this quarter which is not carried out by
the educated Orientals but only by Occidentals and their
imitators, the Japanese. The Oriental feels so because, as he
still possesses much clairvoyant vision, he knows that labor
performed by machines has a definite peculiarity. When a man
plows his field with his horse — man and beast straining
themselves in labor — this work in which natural forces
are involved has a meaning beyond the immediate present; it has
cosmic meaning. When a man kindles fire by using a flint,
making the sparks ignite the tinder, he is connected with
nature. When the wasp builds its house this natural activity
too has cosmic meaning. Through modern industrialism we have
abandoned cosmic value. In our kindling of electric flames
there no longer lives any cosmic significance. It has been
driven out. A completely mechanized factory is a hole in the
cosmos, it has no meaning for cosmic evolution. If you go into
the woods and collect firewood this has cosmic meaning beyond
earth evolution; but a modern factory and everything it
contains has no significance beyond earth development. The
human will is inserted in it without its having any cosmic
value. Just consider what this means. It means that since the
middle of the fifteenth century we have developed a knowledge
that is specter-like and does not touch reality. More and more
we employ machines and carry out an industrial activity, and
the will inserted into this activity is senseless for world
evolution.
The
great question now confronts us: Is there nevertheless a
meaning for mankind's evolution as a whole in the fact that our
knowledge is ghost-like, and our will to a great extent
senseless? Indeed, there is meaning in it, significant meaning.
Mankind thereby is to be urged to penetrate beyond ghost-like
thinking to a knowledge of reality that does not stop with the
perception of nature but enters into the spiritual behind
nature. So long as men received the spirit simultaneously with
their concepts they did not need to make efforts to gain the
spirit. Since in the modern age men have only retained concepts
devoid of spirit, but that also contain the possibility of
working one's way up to the spirit as I have stated, there is
present in man the impulse to proceed from abstract knowledge
and to penetrate into genuine spiritual knowledge. Therefore,
since we have industrialism with its senselessness we must seek
another meaning for human will. This we can only do if we
arouse ourselves to a world view that brings sense into what is
senseless — let us call it industrialism — by
deriving meaning from the spiritual, saying: We seek tasks that
stem from the spirit. Formerly, when willing could derive its
impulses from the spirit instinctively, we did not need to
arouse ourselves especially in order to will from out the
spirit. Today it is necessary that we make a special effort to
do this. The senseless industrial willing has to be confronted
with a meaningful willing-out-of-the-spirit.
Yesterday I gave you an example of the way we ought to educate.
We should recognize that up to the seventh year man is an
imitator since he develops chiefly his physical body during
this period. Imitation, therefore, ought to become the basis
for that period of education. We should know that from the
seventh to the fourteenth year we have to develop man by the
principle of authority. This spiritual knowledge, which we gain
by knowing how the etheric body develops during that time, must
be made the impulse of education then. We should know also how
the astral body develops from the fourteenth to the
twenty-first year, and that this knowledge must lie behind
education for that, period. Then, only then, do we will out of
the spirit.
Up
to the middle of the fifteenth century man willed instinctively
out of the spirit. In external life we tend to immerse
ourselves in machines, in mechanism; this is so even in
politics, which gradually has turned governments into machines.
We must strive for a spirit-ensouled willing. To that end we
must accept the idea of a science of the spirit. We must, for
instance, base education on what we know out of spiritual
facts, out of what we learn from anthroposophical spiritual
science. Through the stronger, more conscious emphasizing of
willing out of the spirit we establish a counter-image to the
senseless willing of industrialism.
Thus, industrialism with all its devastation of the human soul,
is given us in order that in this devastation we may rouse
ourselves to will out of the spirit. Our thinking has to be
changed in many ways in our modern age. This requires a
careful, intimately developed feeling for truth. We must become
conscious that the feeling for truth has to be gradually
applied in places where we are not yet accustomed to apply it.
I believe many a person will be astonished today if he is told:
You are right if you venerate Raphael highly because of his
pictures, but if you demand that people paint the way Raphael
painted then, you are mistaken. Only he has a right to admire
Raphael who knows that whoever paints today the way he painted
is a bad painter, because he does not paint as the impulses of
our time demand. One does not feel with the times if one does
not deeply sense the tasks of a given age. It is necessary that
we acquire in our time an intimate feeling for truth in this
regard. But here also modern humanity is caught up in what is
the very opposite. One gets the impression that the feeling for
truth has everywhere sprung a leak and does not function.
People are shying away from calling right what is right, and
wrong what is wrong; they recoil from designating a lie a lie.
We experience today the most abominable things, and people are
indifferent to them. The point is that we should have such a
feeling for truth that we know, for example, that Raphael's
painting no longer fits our present age; that it must be
considered as something of the past and admired as such. It is
particularly necessary now to pay attention to such things when
out of the depths of the soul the impulse for truth comes over
us. I am often reminded of a beautiful passage in Herman
Grimm's biography of Michelangelo in which he speaks of his
Last Judgment. He says that many such Last Judgment pictures
were painted at that time and that the people experienced in
full reality the truth of what was painted on the walls. They
lived in the truth of those pictures. Today we should not look
at such a picture as Michelangelo's Last Judgment without being
aware that we do not feel as those people did for whom the
artist painted it; that we have lost their feeling and at best
can say: This is the picture of something we no longer believe
in as an immediate reality.
Just consider how differently man confronts such a picture with
his modern consciousness. He no longer thinks that angels
really descend, or that the devils carry on as they do in
Michelangelo's picture. If, however, one is aware that what
modern man feels when looking at this picture is something gray
and abstract, then one is called upon inwardly to experience
the whole living movement in these pictures on the wall of the
Sistine Chapel. One is stirred to asking how it was possible
for the people of Michelangelo's time (although he painted
after the decline of the fourth post-Atlantean period his
paintings originated in the spirit of that period since he
stood at the boundary of the fourth and fifth periods) —
how was it possible for people like him and his contemporaries
to experience such tremendous imaginations, such mighty
pictures? This question confronts us in all its magnitude if
one is conscious of how drab and lifeless is what man feels
today in front of such a picture by Michelangelo. We must ask:
What caused human souls of that time to conceive of the earth's
end in such a way? Whence came the structure of these
pictures?
The
reason lies in the following: Since the time when the Mystery
of Golgotha entered earth evolution and had given it its
meaning, certain things that existed in the ancient manner had
to recede into the background and were destined to be regained
by mankind later on. One of these was the idea of repeated
earth lives. The totality of human life takes its course
through earth life, then life in the spiritual world, then
earth life again, and so on. This course of the total life of
man was the content of the atavistic, instinctive world-view in
ancient times. Christianity had to arouse in man concepts
different from those of ancient wisdom. By what means, above
all, has Christianity accomplished this? It directed human
consciousness only to a certain point in time, namely, to the
beginning of one's life on earth. It did not consider man as an
individuality prior to birth or conception but merely as a
thought of the Godhead. Before earth-life man proceeds out of
the spiritual world as a thought of the Godhead, only at birth
did he begin to be a real human being. Then, after his life on
earth, the life after death. In the first period of the
development of Christianity the experience of repeated earth
lives was, so to say, misplaced. Human experience was limited
to looking into the origin of man and the life after death.
This, however, supplied the equilibrium out of which the
pictures of the Last Judgment were created. Through the fact
that Christianity first eradicated from human feeling the
teaching of pre-existence, the pictures of the Last
Judgment could arise. Today there wells up again out of the
deep recesses of the human soul the longing for a recognition
of repeated earth lives. Therefore, those pictures fade away
which only focus their attention upon the one earth life and a
vague spiritual world before and after it. Now there exists the
most intense longing to enlarge the Christian world-view of the
early ages. The Mystery of Golgotha is not merely effective for
those who believe only in one earth life, it is also valid for
those who know of repeated earth lives. The present age is in
need of this enlargement. Therefore, we should see clearly that
we live in a period when we must use the ghost-like nature of
ordinary conceptual knowledge, and the senselessness of willing
released by industrialism, in order to rise to spiritual
knowledge and spirit-permeated willing, as I have described it;
and also, in order to enlarge religious consciousness so as to
include repeated earth lives.
The
great and full importance of this enlargement of human
consciousness in the present time should be deeply inscribed in
the soul of modern men, for upon this depends whether they
really understand how to live in the present, and how to
prepare the future in the right sense. Everyone, in the
situation in which life has placed him, can make use of this
enlarged consciousness. Even the external knowledge people gain
will cause him to demand something that today plays a large
role in the subconscious depths of soul life but that has
difficulty in rising and sounding out into full consciousness.
Truly, the most striking fact of modern life is that there are
so many torn human souls; souls full of problems who do not
know what to do with life, who ask again and again, “What
precisely is my task? What does life mean to do specifically
with me?” They start this or that and yet are never
satisfied. The number of these problematic natures increases
steadily. What is the reason for it? It comes from a lack in
our educational system. Today we educate our children in a way
which does not awaken in them the forces that make man strong
for life. Man becomes strong through being an imitator up to
his seventh year; through following a worthy authority up to
the fourteenth year; and through the fact that his capacity for
love is developed in the right way up to the twenty-first year.
Later on this strength cannot be developed. What a person lacks
because the forces were not awakened which should have been
awakened in definite periods of his youth — this is what
makes him a problem-filled nature. This fact must be made
known!
For
this reason, I had to say yesterday that if we will to bring
about a true form of society in future it must be prepared
through people's education. To this end we must not proceed in
a small way but on a large scale; for our educational system
has gradually taken on a character that leads directly to what
I described yesterday as mechanization of the spirit,
vegetizing of the soul, and animalization of the body.
We
must not follow this direction. We must strongly develop the
forces that can be developed in a child's soul, so that
later on he can harvest the fruits of his childhood learning.
Today he looks back and feels what his childhood was and cannot
gather anything from it because nothing was developed there.
Our educational principles must be fundamentally changed if we
want to do the right thing for children. Above everything we
must listen very carefully to much that at present is highly
praised and considered especially wholesome.
So,
it is necessary that, without undue strain and exertion but
through an economy of educational effort, children acquire
concentration. This can be achieved, in the way modern man
needs it, only by abolishing what is so greatly favored today,
namely, the cursed curriculum of the schools; this instrument
of murder for the real development of human forces. Just
consider what it means: From 7 to 8 A.M. arithmetic, from 8 to
9 grammar, from 9 to 10 geography, from 10 to 11 history.
Everything that has moved through the soul from 7 to 8 is
extinguished from 8 to 9, and so on. Now here it is necessary
to get down to the bottom of things. We must no longer think
that subjects exist in order to be taught as subjects.
On the contrary, we must have clearly in mind that in children
from the seventh to fourteenth year, thinking, feeling,
and willing have to be developed in the right way.
Geography, arithmetic, everything must be employed so that
these faculties can be properly developed.
Much is said in modern pedagogy about the need of developing
individualities, of paying attention to a child's nature in
order to know which faculties should be developed. This is
empty talk. These questions take on meaning only when they are
discussed from the point of view of spiritual science,
otherwise they are mere phrases. In the future it will be
necessary to say that for a certain age group we must impart a
certain amount of arithmetic. Two or three months are to be
devoted to teaching arithmetic in the forenoon. Not a plan of
study that contains everything jumbled up but arithmetic for an
extended time, then on to another subject. Arrange things as
they are indicated by human nature itself for definite points
in time.
You
see the tasks that arise for a pedagogy which works toward the
future. Here lie the positive problems for those who seriously
think about the social future. As yet there is little
understanding for these problems. In Stuttgart, connected with
our previous activities, a school is to be built up as far as
possible within the present school system. Mr. Molt has decided
to found such a school for the children of his employees in the
Waldorf-Astoria Cigarette Factory.* Other children will be able to
come, but at first of course only in limited numbers.
Naturally, we will have to take into account the educational
goals of the State. The children will have to achieve this and
that by the end of a year, and we will have to make certain
compromises. But we will be able to intermix something with
what the State requires, because, according to socialistic
ideas, the State is the especially clever idol. So, we shall
have to intermix with what it demands that which is required by
the real nature of man. This has to be recognized. But who
today thinks of the fact that the prevailing plan of study is
the murderer of truly human education? There are people whose
thoughts in this direction are such that one is inclined to
say: The world stands on its head, one has to turn it back on
its legs. For many would shorten the lessons and change the
subjects every half hour. This today is considered ideal. Just
imagine: Religion, arithmetic, geography, drawing, singing, one
after the other. In our heads they tumble through each other
like the stones of a kaleidoscope. Only the outer world says,
“Now that's something like it!” — because
there is not the slightest interrelating between these
subjects.
Few
believe it is necessary now to think on a large scale; not to
think petty thoughts but to have great, comprehensive views. We
experience again and again that people finally have become
accustomed to saying, “Indeed, revolution is
necessary!” Even a large part of the bourgeoisie believes
today in revolution. I do not know if that is the case here,
but there are large areas where a majority of the bourgeoisie
believes revolution to be necessary. But if we offer them such
things as are stated in my book,
The Threefold Social Order,
they say: “We do not understand this. It is
too complicated.” Lichtenberg once said, “If a head
and a book strike together and a hollow sound results it is not
necessarily the fault of the book.” But people do not
believe this, because — it is not self-knowledge that is
chiefly produced in men's souls. One can experience that
throughout extensive regions the philistines believe in
revolution, yet they say, “O no, we cannot enter into
such deep questions, such comprehensive thoughts; you must tell
us how shoe production can be socialized, how the pharmacies
are to be socialized,” and so on. “You must tell us
how, in the revolutionized State, I can sell my
spices.”
One
gradually discovers then what these people really mean. They
mean that they agree there must be a revolution, but everything
should remain as it has been, nothing should be changed by it.
Many a person asks, how can we make the world over? — but
so that nothing is changed! The most remarkable ones in this
respect are the so-called intellectuals. With them one can have
the most extraordinary experiences. One heard it repeatedly
stated, “Very well, three members — autonomous
universities, a spiritual life that governs itself — but
then, how shall we live? Who will pay our salaries if the State
no longer pays us?”
Today we really have to confront these things. It is necessary
that we stop turning away from these questions again and again.
Precisely in the sphere of the spiritual life a change must be
brought about.
* By 1969
this amount, of course, has been greatly increased. —
Tr.
* In the
course of the next ten years this “Waldorf School”
became the largest private school in Germany, with a waiting
list of applicants from several European countries and the
United States.
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