LECTURE
III.
Dornach,
November 25, 1923.
IN
the last lecture I spoke to you of the way in which man is subject
during his life to that which, from the natural scientific point of
view, we are accustomed to call heredity. I spoke further of how man
is subject to the influences of the outer world, to adaptation to
environment; how everything which is bound up with heredity is
connected with the Ahrimanic sphere, while that which, in the widest
sense, is comprised in adaptation to the external world is connected
with the Luciferic realm. I told you also how in the cosmos, i.e.,
within the spiritual substance which lies at the foundation of the
cosmos care has been taken that the Luciferic and Ahrimanic
influences should play their part in the right way in human life. We
shall add certain things today to what has been said, keeping in
mind, at the same time what was explained in the first of these
lectures.
We have seen how memory, everything in the nature of
memory, fashions man within as regards the soul. In reality, far more
than we think we are fashioned as soul-beings by our memories. The
way in which our experiences have become memories has really
fashioned our souls; we are a result of our memory-life more than we
think, and he who can exercise even a little self-observation, so far
as to enter into the life of memory will see what a great part the
impressions of childhood play throughout the entire earthly life. The
manner in which our childhood was spent, which indeed plays no great
part in conscious life, the time, for instance, during which we
learned to speak and walk, during which we received our first, the
inherited teeth, the impressions received during all these periods of
development play a great part in the human soul-life throughout the
entire life on earth. Many things which rise up inwardly as thoughts
which are connected with memories — and everything we grasp in
thought that is not caused by external impressions is connected with
memories — everything which arises in this way making us
inwardly joyful or causing us inner pain (these are generally
delicate shades of pleasure and pain which accompany our thoughts
when they arise freely) all the life of memory within us is carried
out by our astral body when we pass over into the condition of sleep.
If now with Imaginative vision we can behold man in sleep as a
psychic spiritual being the matter presents itself in the following
way. Picture to yourselves during sleep the etheric and physical
bodies remaining within the human skin while the astral body is
outside (the ego we will consider later). We can then observe the
astral body, really consisting in memories. We can also see how these
memories which live in the astral body outside of man whirl around in
and out of each other. Experiences which lie far asunder in time and
in regard to space also are brought together, while some things are
left out of certain experiences altogether. In this way the whole
memory-life is transformed during sleep. If man dreams it is just
because this transformed life of memory appears before his
consciousness, and in the constitution of the dream he can inwardly
perceive that whirling in and out, inwardly perceive that which,
observed from outside can be seen by Imaginative clairvoyance.
But something else presents itself; that which from
falling asleep until waking up figures in this way as memories, that
which forms the chief content of the human astral soul-life unites
during sleep with the forces which lie behind the phenomena of
nature. We can therefore say: All that lives as astral body in these
memories forms a union with the forces that lie behind the minerals,
actually in the inner being of the minerals, in the inner being of
the plant forces, and the forces which lie behind the clouds, and so
on.
To one who can perceive this truth it is really
terrible, I must say, when people say that behind the phenomena of
nature there are only material atoms. Not with material atoms do our
memories unite during sleep, but with that which really lies behind
the phenomena of nature, with the spiritually active forces. It is
with these that our memories unite during sleep. Our memories rest in
them during sleep.
Thus we can really say: During sleep our soul with its
memories dives down into the inner being of nature, and you are
saying nothing untrue, nothing unreal if you utter the following:
“When I fall asleep I consign my memories to the powers which
rule spiritually in the crystal, in plants, in all the phenomena of
nature.” You may go for a walk and see by the wayside yellow
flowers, blue flowers, green grass and shining promising ears of corn
and you can say: “When I pass you by in the daytime I see you
from outside, but when I sleep I sink my memories into your spiritual
being. You take up what I have transformed during life from
experiences into memories. You take up these memories of mine when I
go to sleep.” It is perhaps the most beautiful of all feeling
for nature to have with the rose-bush not only an external
relationship but to be able also to say: “I love the rose-bush
especially because the rose-bush has this peculiarity (bear in mind
that space plays no part in these things; no matter how far the rose
may be removed from us in space we find our way to it in sleep) —
the rose-bush has this peculiarity, that it receives the earliest
memories of our childhood.” That is the reason why people love
roses so much, only they are not aware of it; but they love roses
because they are the recipients of the very first memories of
childhood.
When we were children other people loved us and often
made us smile. We have forgotten it but it forms part of our life of
feeling; and the rose-bush absorbs into its own being while we are
asleep at night the memories which we have ourselves forgotten. Man
is far more united than he realizes with the outer world of nature,
that is, with the spirit which rules in the external world. These
memories of the first years of childhood are especially remarkable
with reference to human sleep, because in reality, during those years
and during the years extending to the change of teeth — that
means to about the seventh year of life — the soul-element
alone is taken up during sleep. As regards human beings it is the
case that the spiritual inner part of nature takes into itself of our
childhood only the soul part. Other things also of course hold good.
The soul-element which we develop during our early childhood (for
instance if we were childishly cruel) remains also in us but this is
taken up by the thistle. This is said by way of comparison, but
nevertheless it actually points to a significant reality. That which
is not taken up from the child into the inner part of nature will be
immediately evident from what follows.
In the first seven years of life everything has been
inherited that is of a bodily nature. The first teeth are entirely
inherited; everything of a material nature which we have within us in
the first seven years of life is essentially inherited. But after
about seven years all the material substance is thrown off; it falls
away and is formed anew. Man remains as a form, as a spiritual form,
his material part he gradually throws off. After seven or eight years
everything that was in his body seven or eight years before has gone.
It is a fact that when we have reached the age of nine years our
whole human being has been renewed. We then build it in accordance
with our external impressions.
As a matter of fact it is extremely important,
especially for the child in the first periods of life, that it should
be in a position to build its new body — now no longer the
inherited body but a body developed out of its inner being —
according to good impressions from its environment, and in a healthy
adaptation to its environment. Whereas the body which a child has
when it comes into the world depends on whether the inherited
impulses it has received are good or bad, the later body which it
bears from the seventh to fourteenth year depends very much on the
impressions it receives from its environment.
Every seven years we build our body anew, but it is our
ego that builds it anew. Although the ego is not yet born as regards
the outer world in a child of seven years (as you know it is only
born later), yet it is working already, for naturally it is bound up
with the body, and it is the ego which is building therein. It
develops those things of which we have already spoken; it builds up
that which appears as the physiognomy, the gestures, the external
material revelation of the soul and spirit in man. It is a fact that
a human being who has an active interest in the world, who is
interested in many things, and because of his active interest in them
ponders over them and inwardly digests them, reveals in a material
way in the external expression of his countenance and in his gestures
what he has been interested in and absorbed. On the face of the human
being who has an intensely active interest in the outer world, who
inwardly works upon the fruits of this interest in external things
one will see in each wrinkle later in life how he formed these
himself, and one will be able to read much in his countenance, for
the ego is expressed in the gestures and in the physiognomy. A man
who goes through the world bored or without interest in the outer
world remains throughout his whole life with an unchanged
countenance; finer experiences are not imprinted in the physiognomy
and gestures. In many a face we may read a whole biography; in many
others we cannot read much more than the fact that he was once a
child — which is nothing very special.
The fact that man in this way through the changing of
his substance every seven or eight years shapes his own outer
appearance signifies a great deal. This work of man on his own
external appearance, in physiognomy and gesture, is also something
which he carries in sleep into the inner being of nature. If one then
looks at a man with imaginative clairvoyance and observes the ego
outside him as it is during sleep one sees that it really consists in
physiognomy and gesture. With those human beings who express much of
their inner being in their countenance we find a radiating and
shining ego. Now this resulting gesture and physiognomy unites itself
also with forces in the inner being of nature. If we have been
friendly and kind nature is inclined, as soon as this kindliness has
become a facial expression, shown in the countenance, to take this up
during our sleep into its own being. Nature takes up our memories
into her forces and our gesture-formation into her very essence, into
the nature-beings.
Man is so intimately connected with external nature that
what he experiences in his inner being as memories is of enormous
significance to external nature, as is also the way in which he
expresses his inner soul-life in his physiognomy and gestures, for
that lives on further in the inner being of nature.
I have often mentioned a saying of Goethe, which was
really a criticism of a remark by Haller. Haller said: “Into
the inner being of nature no created spirit can enter. Fortunate is
the man to whom she reveals even her external husk.” To this,
Goethe replied: “You pedant! We are everywhere in the inner
being of nature. Nothing is within her, nothing is outside her; that
which is within is without, and that which is without is within. Only
ask yourself which you are, whether the kernel or the husk.”
Goethe says that he heard this remark in the sixties and secretly
cursed it; for he felt (naturally he did not then know Spiritual
Science) that when one whom he could only regard as a pedant said:
“Into the inner being of nature no created spirit can enter,”
he knows nothing of the fact that man, simply because he is a being
of memories, and a being of physiognomy and gesture is continually
entering into the inner being of nature. We are not beings who only
stand at the door of nature and knock in vain. Just through that
which is our innermost being do we stand in most intimate communion
with the inner being of nature.
Because the young child, up to his seventh year, has a
body which is entirely inherited, nothing of his ego, of his
physiognomy and gesture pass over into the inner being of nature.
Only at the change of teeth do we begin to develop our real being.
Therefore only after the change of teeth do we gradually become ripe
to think about nature. Before that time more important thoughts arise
in the child, thoughts which have not much to do with nature, and are
so full of charm just for that reason.
The
best way to approach a child is to make poetry in its presence, to
represent the stars as the eyes of heaven, for example, when things
we speak of to the child are as far as possible from external
physical reality.
Only
from the change of teeth onwards does the child grow in such a way
that his thoughts can coincide with the thoughts of nature;
fundamentally the whole life from the age of seven to fourteen is
such that the child grows in an inward direction, and he then carries
his memories outside his soul into nature, as also his gestures and
physiognomy, and this then continues throughout his whole life. As
regards any relationship with the inner being of nature we, as single
human individuals, are only born at the change of teeth. For this
reason those beings whom I have designated as elementary spirits, the
gnomes and undines, listen so eagerly when man relates something of
his child life up to the seventh year, because, as far as these
spirits of nature are concerned man is only born at the change of
teeth. The change of teeth to them is an extremely interesting
phenomenon. Previous to this age man is to the gnomes and undines a
being “on the other side,” and it is for them something
of an enigma that man appears at this age having already reached a
certain perfection! It would be extraordinarily inspiring for
pedagogical or educational phantasy if a man, having imbibed
spiritual knowledge, could really transpose himself into these
dialogues with the nature-spirits, and enter into the soul of the
spirits of nature in order to obtain their views concerning what he
is able to tell them about children; for in this very way the most
beautiful fairy-tales arise. When, in ancient times fairy-tales were
so wonderfully apt and rich in content, this is because the poets who
composed them could converse with gnomes and undines, could tell them
something and not merely hear something from them.
These nature-spirits are often very egoistic, they
become silent also if one does not tell them something of that
concerning which they are curious. Their favourite stories are about
the deeds of babies. In return, one may hear many things from them
which can then be woven into the form of fairy-tales.
Thus, for the practical spiritual life that which today
appears highly fantastic to us may become extremely important. It is
the case that these dialogues with the spirits of nature, on account
of the conditions I have mentioned, may be extremely instructive to
both sides.
On the other hand, what I have said may in a sense
naturally cause anxiety, because while he is asleep man continually
creates pictures of his innermost being. Behind the phenomena of
nature, behind the flowers of the field, and extending right up into
the etheric world there exist reproductions of our memories, both
good and useless memories; for the earth is simply teeming with what
lives in human souls, and in reality human life is very intimately
connected with such things.
We find therefore first of all the spirits of nature,
those beings into whom we penetrate with our world of gesture; but we
also find the world of the Angels, Archangels and Archai, and grow
also into these Beings. We enter into them. We plunge into the deeds
of the Angels through our memories. We enter into the living beings
of the angelic world through what we have imprinted in ourselves as
physiognomy and gesture. This penetration which takes place in sleep
is such that we can say: When we pass over livingly into nature the
process is that the further we go out in a direct line the more do we
come into the regions of the Angels and Archangels and the Archai. We
come into the sphere of the third Hierarchy. And when in sleep we
dive down with our memories and our gestures as into a flowing sea of
weaving beings of Angels, Archangels and Archai, then from one side
there comes another stream of spiritual beings, the second Hierarchy,
Exusiai, Kyriotetes, Dynamis. If we wish to express in the outer
world that which we have just described, we must say: This stream
flows in such a way that the course of the sun by day from east to
west marks the way the second Hierarchy crosses the third Hierarchy.
The third Hierarchy, the Angels, Archangels and Archai, are as if
floating up and down “offering one another the golden buckets.”
In this presentation we have the second Hierarchy going with the sun,
as it were, from east to west. This is not apparent, because here the
Copernican world-conception does not hold good, but this stream
actually does go from east to west, following the course of the sun
during the day.
Thus we see — i.e., if we have the ability to see
— how man during sleep grows into the third Hierarchy; but this
third Hierarchy is continually being graciously permeated from one
side by the second Hierarchy. Thus this second Hierarchy also makes
itself felt in the life of our soul.
I pointed out in the
last lecture but one the significance of transposing oneself vividly
again into the experiences of one's youth. In this connection you can
get a very impressive feeling if you take up the
Mystery Plays,
and there read, perhaps now with greater understanding than was
formerly the case, what is represented there in regard to the
appearance of the Youth of Johannes. It is indeed the case that man
can vivify his own inner nature and make it intensely perceptible to
himself if he goes back actively over his youth. I told you how he
might take up old school-books from which he might perhaps have
learned something (or perhaps not!). He immerses himself in what he
learnt, or did not learn. It makes no difference whether one learned
anything or not; the point is that one should immerse oneself
intensely in what one formerly went through with it. For in this way
one may have personal experiences. For instance, it was of immense
significance to me personally, a few years ago, to transpose myself
into such a situation belonging to my own youth. I then needed to
intensify the forces of spiritual understanding. The following events
occurred to me quite accidentally when I was just eleven years of
age. I was given a school-book. The first thing that happened to it
was that I carelessly upset the ink-pot on it and thereby damaged two
pages, so that I could no longer read them. That was an event of many
years ago, but I have often lived through this event again, this
school-book with the damaged pages, with all that I experienced
thereby; for this book had to be replaced by a poor family. It was
something dreadful, all that one could experience through this
school-book, with its gigantic ink smudges. As I said, it is not a
question of having behaved well in connection with the circumstance
which one recalls; it is rather a question of having experienced them
with intensity. If you attempt this with all inner intensity you will
also experience something else. You will experience in a true vision
a scene which you have inwardly lived through and evoked in the soul.
When night has come and everything is dark around you and you are by
yourself you will experience the situation as if spread out in space,
which you had previously experienced in time. Suppose, for instance,
that you evoke before your soul a scene which you once experienced,
let us say, at 11 o'clock. Afterwards you went to a place where you
sat with and amongst other human beings. You sat down and other
people sat around you. Here you have recalled something which you
experienced inwardly. What was then around you externally now meets
you entirely as a spatial vision. One only needs to look for such
connections and then quite important discoveries can be made. Let us
say for instance, that when you are seventeen years of age you had
your midday meal in a pension where the guests were continually
changing. Call up inwardly in your soul one such scene which you
experienced. Recall it vividly. Then in the night you find yourself
sitting down at the table. Around you people are sitting, people whom
you did not often see, because in this pension they continually came
and went. In one face you recognize, “That is something I
experienced at that time.” External space is added to the
soul-experience, when you make your memories active in this way.
This means in reality that you are living with this
stream which flows from east to west; because gradually you feel more
and more strongly: There in the spiritual world which you enter in
sleep your life does not merely consist in being merged with the
spiritual, but in this spiritual there transpires something which was
reflected externally at the time you sat around the pension table
with these human beings. You have forgotten it long ago but it is
still there. You behold, it as you can behold those things which can
often be seen inscribed in the Akashic Record. The moment you have
this before you, you have identified yourself with this stream
flowing from east to west, the stream of the second Hierarchy. In
this stream of the second Hierarchy something lives which is
outwardly reflected by day.
Now days vary in the course of the whole year. In Spring
a day is longer, in Autumn shorter; in summer it is longest, in
winter shortest. The day is subject to change throughout the year.
That is caused by a stream which flows from west to east, counter to
the stream from east to west; and that is the stream of the first
Hierarchy, of the Seraphim, the Cherubim and the Thrones. Observe
therefore how the day changes in the course of the year. If you pass
on from the day to the year then you come in contact with what meets
you during sleep as the opposite stream. As a matter of fact it is
the case that we go forth in sleep into the spiritual world in a
direct line, not in the direction which goes from west to east, nor
in the direction which goes from east to west.
If we realize this, then, as I have told you, when we
vividly recall some memory we must place spatial winter before our
souls.
This is also the case when we become conscious of our
will. When we become conscious of our will, that is what enters into
our gestures and our physiognomy.
That
which I am now saying should have a certain significance especially
for eurhythmists, although, naturally there is not any intention in
Eurhythmy of bringing to expression what I am now about to say. It is
a fact that when a man really fashions his external appearance more
and more from out of his inner being, when his ego is expressed more
and more in his physiognomy and gestures, he not only receives an
impression from the day to pass over from vivid inner experiences of
memory to the vision of spatial external things. He experiences over
again what he learnt, let us say at the age of seventeen, and sees
the people with whom he sat in that pension. He sees them in
picture-form, as in the Akashic Record. That is Day experience. But
one can also experience the year. This is done by paying attention to
the way in which the will works in us, and observing that it is
relatively easy to bring the will to expression when we are really
warm, whereas it is difficult to let the will stream through the body
if we are very cold. Anyone who can experience in this way the
relation between the will and the fact of being warm or cold will
gradually be able to speak of a winter-will and a summer-will.
We find that the best expression of this will comes from
the seasons. Let us observe, for example, the will that carries our
thoughts out into the cosmos. They escape, as it were, out of the
finger-tips, and we feel that it is easy to develop the will.
If we stand before a tree, something at the top of the
tree may give us particular pleasure; and if the will becomes warm in
us our thoughts are carried to the top of the tree. Indeed they often
go even to the stars, if in summer nights we feel endowed with this
warm will.
On the other hand, if the will has cooled within us it
is as though all our thoughts were carried in our heads, as if they
could not penetrate into the arms or legs; everything goes into the
head. The head carries this coldness of the will, and if the coldness
does not become so severe as to produce a frosty feeling the head
becomes warm through its own inner reaction and then develops
thoughts.
Thus we can say: summer-will leads us out into the
expanses of the universe. Summer-will, warm will carries our thoughts
in all directions. Winter-will carries them into our head. We can
thus learn to differentiate our will, and then we shall feel that the
will which carries us out everywhere into the cosmos is related to
the course of summer; while the will which carries the thoughts into
our head we feel to be related to the winter. Through the will we
come to experience the year in the same way as we formerly did the
day.
There is a possibility of feeling as a reality the words
which I am now going to write on the board. If a man experiences
winter in his human will he can perceive it in such a way that he
says:—
O, Cosmic Pictures!
Ye float down to me
From cosmic distances,
Ye strive to reach me,
Ye penetrate into
The thinking forces
Of my head.
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WINTER-WILL.
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These
words are not a mere abstraction; for if a man feels his own will
united with nature, he can, at the approach of winter feel as if from
out of space his own experiences are borne towards him, experiences
which he himself had first given to nature. He can perceive on the
waves of these words his own experiences which have already passed
over into nature.
That is the feeling of the winter-will; but man can also
feel the summer-will which expands our thoughts out into the
universe:—
Ye creative Soul-forces of my head
Ye fill out mine own being.
Ye press out of my being
Into universal space,
And unite me
With world-creative powers.
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SUMMER-WILL.
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That means, the thoughts which are first experienced in
the head pass over into the whole body. They first fill the body and
then press out of the body again. These words express the nature of
the summer-will, the will in us which is related to the summer. We
may also say: “I have called up from my inner being the active
memory of something experienced long ago; the day with its night
confronts me with it in supplementing it with the external perception
of space; and that corresponds to the stream from east to west.”
We may also say: “In us winter-will changes into summer-will,
and summer-will into winter-will.” We are no longer related to
the day with its interchange of light and darkness. We are related to
the year through our will, and thereby are identified with the stream
flowing from west to east, the stream of the first Hierarchy, the
Seraphim, Cherubim and the Thrones.
As we go on we shall see how man is hindered or helped
through heredity or external adaptation to environment with reference
to this relationship with the inner being of nature; for what I have
explained to you today relates to the way in which man, if he is
hindered as little as possible by the Luciferic and Ahrimanic forces,
can grow in this way with his thought and will into the inner being
of nature, and is received by the time-forces, the day-forces and the
year-forces, — the third Hierarchy, the second Hierarchy and
the first Hierarchy. But the Ahrimanic forces as they appear in
heredity and the Luciferic forces as they appear in adaptation to
environment have an essential influence on all this. This great
question shall occupy us in the next lecture.
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