EIGHTH LECTURE
3rd July, 1924
To begin with, dear
friends, I want to show you the drawings done by this boy here, of
whom we shall be speaking later on. He makes very good pictures. He
has a feeling for detail; the drawings give evidence of a clear grasp
of detail. Notice in this one, for instance, how accurately he has
perceived everything. Here is another, where you can see how he plans
and arranges his picture. Evidently he likes to do things in the way
he learns to do them at school. And this is how it is done in our
school here; and then each child is left free to fill in the picture
in his own way. As you will see, we are economical and always use
both sides of the paper. (Turning to the boy) Allow me now to draw
you on the blackboard. There, that is what I wanted you for!
(Another child is
brought in.) Bring the little one over here; that will be best
so.
Just look how
tremendously large the head can become in a hydrocephalic child! We
will discuss presently how that happens. The head actually measures
64 cm. When we first admitted the child, the measurement was 44 cm.
[If accurately reported, this
must refer to the earlier time when the child was first brought to
the Clinic for advice.] On the 25th February it was nearly 54
cm, by the 7th April it had increased to 56 cm, and between the 7th
and 11th it grew still bigger. On the 19th April the measurement was
more than 58 cm, on the 28th May it had risen to nearly 61 cm and on
the 1st July to 64 cm. Otherwise, the child's bodily development has
not been at all abnormal; he is just like any other child. He takes
hold of things, he has a very good appetite, and with the exception
of one crisis he has been cheerful and happy.
You can get an idea of
the size of the head by looking at the little ears which are of
course of ordinary size; you will at the same time notice just where
the enlargement begins. It begins, you see, here, and then
continues in this direction. The face is not affected; it is a
little swollen and puffy, but not enlarged. As you look at the child,
you will very likely think that he is perceiving things with his
eyes. As a matter of fact, he has no more than a general impression
of light no precise impressions at all.
And now we have to take
note of the tragic fact that just before I came here to give these
lectures I received a telegram to say that the father of the child
has died of a heart attack.
If you look at the
child as a whole, and compare it with the form and proportions of an
embryo, you will find that you have in this child nothing else than a
giant embryo! You can see quite plainly that he has remained at the
embryo stage, his growth in the post-embryo stage continuing to
accord with the laws of growth of the embryo stage. That we have not
up to now succeeded in achieving any reduction in the size of the
head must be attributed to the extraordinary strength with which the
internal tendencies that make for enlargement are working. I am
however quite hopeful that after a certain point has been reached, we
shall be able definitely to bring the head more nearly into harmony
with the rest of the body. The child is in all other respects quite a
jolly little fellow.
A striking fact that
comes home to us when studying the riddles of human nature is that
abnormalities of this kind throw great light upon the life of man as
a whole not only upon the life of man, but upon the life of
the entire universe.
(Some extracts from the
history of the case are read out.) The child was six months old when
he came to us. He was born in August last year, and received from me
his name; it was just in the time when I was away in England. The
birth was normal. The mother was strong and healthy throughout the
time of pregnancy. Please note these facts carefully; later on we
shall have to find their interpretation. And let me ask for your
special attention to what I said last that the mother felt
particularly well during the pregnancy. In this time she did a great
deal of typing. There was nothing strange or unusual to be seen in
the child at birth. Mark that well: at birth that is to say,
immediately on his being let go, as it were, from the embryo
condition the child showed nothing unusual. The embryo
condition had, you see, been normal throughout; not until after the
child started breathing with the lungs did abnormality begin. The
umbilical cord was wound round the neck; the amniotic fluid contained
meconium. The baby weighed 5 ¾ lb. Two weeks after birth he
had convulsions a solitary attack; an important fact to note,
for it provides the first clear evidence that the ego organisation
and the astral body are finding it impossible to make their way into
the physical and the ether body. The child hit out around him with
his arms and got blue in the face. Blueness is always a sign of
inability to dive down into the physical body. If it is very marked,
it has a more individual significance. It may mean nothing else than
that the astral body had at birth a strong and pronounced
configuration. For this, you know, can happen; as it did with Goethe,
who was born quite blue and could only after some time be induced to
receive into him the astral body and ego organisation. In the child
now before us, the convulsions (and blueness) occurred of course
later. Development is said to have been entirely normal during the
first half year. It was not entirely normal; but the lack of right
relationship between head and limbs escaped observation in the
earliest months, and was noticed only later on. The child was
breast-fed. The head was at birth noticeably small, which goes to
show that the causes of the trouble are not to be sought in any
weakness of the nerves-and-senses organisation. From September
onwards, we are told, the size of the head began very gradually to
increase. It began of course earlier than this. The mother did not
yet consider the head abnormal at a time when it must already have
grown to a considerable size. The enlargement of the head was noticed
only when the discovery was made that in one week the child had put
on weight to the extent of nearly 1 lb. In the middle of December the
head measured 19 inches. The child was quiet, and did not cry much;
he was apathetic. The fontanels were taut. Appetite was good.
Blisters filled with pus began to form on the skin of the head.
Appetite and evacuation of the bowels were good. And then the child
was brought to us.
What we have to do,
when such a case is brought to us, is to take the facts as they lie
there before us and among them the most important of all are
of course whatever we can observe for ourselves by simply looking at
the child and then, working from these, win our way through
to where we can behold also the spiritual in the child.
Following this line of investigation we were able to see that the
child carries in him an astral body which bears clearly and
unmistakably the characteristic features of the astral body of the
mother. The mother was of course present at the time. Seldom indeed
does one come upon such a striking resemblance as here stood
revealed! The same cannot be said of the ego organisation. The ego is
still no more than rudimentary; it reminds one of an ego organisation
such as children have in the sixth or seventh month of pregnancy. The
child has in fact remained at that stage. Owing to the astral body
being so extraordinarily strongly developed, the ego organisation
seems to have missed sharing in the life and development of the last
months of pregnancy. And now, after birth, the child retains within
him, thanks to this powerful astral body, all the forces he had in
the embryo time.
Let me at this point
remind you that in the first few months after birth, the orientation
of the embryo time virtually continues, with the result that in these
first months the development of a child outside the body of the
mother still bears a strong resemblance to its development in the
embryo time. How are we to account for this? The radical change which
the bodily nature of the child undergoes at birth is concerned, first
or all, with the breathing system. The child comes into connection
with the outside air. But now this connection with the air does not
establish itself all at once, but only slowly; a considerable time
has to go by before it is extended over the whole organism. The
connection with the air has its influence upon the organism
from the beginning, as we very well know. Nevertheless, the complete
establishment of the connection throughout the organism is a gradual
process. Consequently, in the earliest months, since the embryonic
forces continue to work as before, there may frequently be no sign of
any such devastation as can show itself in the organism later on, if
infantilism goes so far as it does in the child before us; for we
have in him an extreme instance of infantilism, where the embryo
organisation is simply retained and continued.
Now, the characteristic
feature of the embryo organisation is, as you know, that we have
there to do with an immense head organisation and a small body. The
head organisation owes its origin entirely to the co-operation of
cosmic forces. Almost everything that takes place with the head
organisation in the embryo condition is to be regarded as a work of
cosmic forces. The mother's womb provides the place where the work
that is going on can be protected from the intrusion of earthly
forces. You must think of the mother's womb as a bodily organ that
encloses a space, shutting away this space from earthly influences,
so that it can be reserved for cosmic influences alone. Thus we have
in the womb of the mother a space that stands in immediate connection
with the cosmos, a space within which cosmic influences have free
play. And there, in that enclosed space, the development of the head
organisation goes forward.
When the time comes for
the human forces of the mother's womb, in so far as these do receive
the child at all when the time comes for these human forces
of the womb to work upon the child, then the metabolism-and-limbs
organisation begins to let itself be orientated into these forces. In
this child, the cosmic forces have simply continued their working
into the post-embryo condition. The cosmic forces have had here the
ascendancy over what should have been provided for by the
strength and forces that normally a child receives in addition for
his earthly development, notably for the development of the system of
metabolism and limbs. What follows from this is obvious. For suppose
the child had remained longer in the womb of the mother. It is of
course an absurd hypothesis, but suppose the child had remained there
beyond the ten months, what would have happened? The head would have
gone on growing, and the limbs would not have been able to develop.
For there, in the mother's womb, it is the extra-earthly, the cosmic,
in the human being, that alone is given opportunity to grow.
And now we have to ask
ourselves the question: What has led to this condition? And here I
must say, it is most significant, it is indeed quite startling, that
in the very moment when we are going to speak together about this
whole strange case, a telegram is handed in, telling that the father
has died of a heart attack. The following became clear to me and I
confirmed it afterwards from the mother's memory. For I felt it
necessary to ask her: Did you not have a rather special
feeling in your soul during pregnancy? I even worded the
question as follows: Were you not sorry that the child did not
remain within you instead of coming into the world? The mother
assented to this. She had founded her whole connection with the child
upon the close association of the embryo period; as far as her
feeling was concerned, the situation was that she was sorry
she could not keep the child with her in the womb, she was sorry when
it was torn away from her by the event of birth. This feeling on the
part of the mother points on the one hand to an extraordinarily
strong karmic connection between her and the child; on the other hand
it has provided the conditions under which the forces that are active
in the embryo time have been able to remain in the child. The
abnormality of soul begins, you see, in the mother, and as one would
naturally expect with such a deep karmic connection, transfers itself
to the child.
The relationships of
life are very complicated, and it is not at all easy always to see
everything in its right connection. Many a time, however, the facts
themselves will place the things together for our perception; and
they do so here. Look at what has happened! Not a year has gone by
since the child was born, and the father dies of a heart attack.
There is always some connection to be found in such events; they
don't just happen. The father had for a long time been
suffering from a diseased heart. Now, you know what a strong
connection there is between heart disease and the condition of the
limbs. Under the influence of certain kinds of heart disease, the
organisation of the legs will grow weak at once; for just the most
important and essential part of the limbs, namely the tissues of the
joints and the synovial fluid, suffer in consequence of heart
disease. And then you must remember that, in the relationships of
heredity, it is the limb organisation that is more strongly
influenced by the father, and the head organisation by the mother.
Now imagine, conception takes place. In certain circumstances it can
happen that an incapacity on the part of the father to bring the
forces of his organisation into the limbs is transferred to the
child; in which case the head organisation, which is under the
influence of the mother, is bound to undergo an inordinate
development. And now you have the explanation of the fact that the
mother loved to have the child in her womb. It was because the child
received but little of heredity forces from the father, and the
mother was accordingly able to make the main contribution.
There you have then a
description of the case that is before us. And you must know that
such a case is typical of a great number of children suffering from
abnormality. For what you have observed in this child is an extreme
instance of infantilism an infantilism, namely, that goes
back to the embryo condition; and you will find infantilism in all
possible forms throughout the stages of child development. Here it is
the embryo condition which, like an overgrown plant, spreads itself
out over the later development; but the first epoch of life may do
the same, extending its working beyond the change of teeth. Or again,
just as there can be this failure to grow and develop rightly into
the post-embryo condition, so can it also happen that a boy or girl
does not grow into the third epoch of life in the right way. There
are children who attain puberty in the outward sense, but do not with
their full and entire constitution grow into the epoch that lies
between puberty and the beginning of the twenties; such children
retain instead during that epoch the orientation of the forces that
work between the seventh and fourteenth year. Actually a whole
succession of infantilisms can be met with. We have here the
absolutely radical example; and it is fortunate from a medical and
educational point of view that you should have opportunity to observe
in this extreme case what you will be able to detect, to a lesser
extent and in less pronounced form, in a vast number of backward
children.
Our purpose in today's
lecture is to make adequate preparation for passing on tomorrow to
the therapy and pathology of the cases in question; I will
accordingly confine myself to giving descriptions of the cases, and
then tomorrow we will carry our consideration of the same to a
conclusion and speak also of their pedagogical aspect.
You saw, at the
beginning of the lecture, the boy of whom you may well be inclined to
ask: Why ever is he brought forward for demonstration? A sensible
question, for when you make his acquaintance in an ordinary
superficial way, you can hardly do otherwise than find him a kindly
disposed and friendly little boy, who learns painting just as other
children do, who answers you quite properly and with perfect
friendliness when you speak to him, a little boy, in fact, with whom
you could quite happily converse by the hour. Is it not so? Those who
have to do with him will tell you that it is as I have said. You
would not be able to notice anything abnormal about the child, and
would perhaps say to yourself: Strange people these
Anthroposophists! They put their children in a clinic for treatment,
when all the time they are children who might well be held up as an
example to other children! The fact is, the boy is a
kleptomaniac. You would never think it! But that is due to a
characteristic feature of kleptomania namely, its almost
complete isolation from the rest of the soul life. And in this boy
you will find that consciousness which should, generally
speaking, send its light into all the events and doings that occur in
the life of man is simply shut out from his kleptomaniac
actions. You will have the distinct feeling that he himself has very
little knowledge of what he is doing, in spite of the fact that he
carries it out and please note this! in a most clever
and crafty manner. He had to be expelled when he went to school in
Berne, and again also when he attended a school in another town; and
he had arranged everything so slyly, that the authorities had to go
to no end of trouble before they could establish grounds for his
expulsion.
The boy is not at all
egoistic in the matter. He is quite capable of making presents to his
friends of the things that he steals in this wily manner, or of
spending it all on some jollification in order to give them pleasure.
The whole situation leads to the development of a special form of not
altogether conscious lying; for he does not himself know exactly what
has happened, the details of the event not being shone upon by the
light of consciousness. He will relate the most incredible stories to
explain how he has come by some object, which he has of course simply
stolen. He will show you, with real shyness, just how he found the
things and just where they all were, making a long story of how it
all came about. There is really something impish about the way these
thefts take place. If I understood Frau Dr. Wegman aright, quite a
long time can elapse during which it seems as though the boy has
become a perfectly well-behaved little fellow, and then suddenly one
day, without our knowing that he has taken anything it will transpire
that something is missing out of someone's pocket. In a curious way
different people will begin to make the discovery that things of
theirs are simply disappearing. So then we would be confronted with
these two facts side by side. On the one hand, the strange report of
the dematerialisation of things in the Clinic, and on the other hand
the knowledge that the boy had been compelled to leave one school
after another. For that was known to us from his past history. These
two facts stood there together, side by side.
It is, moreover, you
will agree, an unpleasant situation suddenly to be placed under the
necessity of supposing that it might also be some adult who
had taken the things! We have in the Clinic at present fifty-two
persons, and it might be this one or that one, one simply did not
know. What one did know was that a spiritualist would have had here a
grand opportunity to make a full and thorough explanation of how
things dematerialise! A whole theory of the dematerialisation of
objects could have been built up.
We have the child here
with us in the Clinic, and I would like you to observe him and notice
how firmly the head organisation is compressed here (at the
temples) and how it goes apart here (towards the back of the
head). As to the spiritual findings, they are to the effect that the
parts of the astral body belonging to the several organs are
extraordinarily strongly developed, particularly here on the left
side. Externally, you will not find much else to note about the boy.
And now be so good as
to bring in the other child. We will speak about methods of treatment
tomorrow.
(The next child is
brought in.) Look at her! A dear little girl! Charming, is she not?
Look at her lovely fair hair. An interesting incident has taken place
with this little girl. One day the children were left alone together
for a short time. They were on very friendly terms with one another;
and presently the boy whom you saw the day before yesterday got the
idea that he must go and find some scissors. It was this little girl
of course who made him fetch the scissors. Being a polite and
obedient little gentleman, he brought them to her. What did she do,
but cut off all her hair! As you see, not at all a conventional young
lady! And now I would especially draw your attention to her lovely
blue eyes, and then to her fair hair with its beautiful lustre. You
can see at once, the child is very sulphurous. And she is so in her
behaviour too extraordinarily sulphurous. A dear child, but
with this strongly marked sulphurous quality. She is always on the go
and full of vigour. (The girl bites at Dr. Steiner's arm.) She is
only biting my sleeve. She weighed at birth a little under 4 ¼
lb., but had been carried in the womb for the full nine months. Thus
the embryo period had been gone through in the regular manner. The
child was breast-fed for seven months, and when a year old learned to
walk. That is a comparatively early age to learn to walk, but not
abnormal. She learned also to talk at the right time. Development
continued to give the appearance of being normal. By the time she was
a year and a half the child had ceased to wet the bed, although she
still wet herself during the day, but never any more at night. Here,
you see, is already an abnormality, in the fact that this weakness in
the child's organisation makes itself evident only when the astral
body is present, and not when the astral body has been removed.
A year and a half ago,
when she was three and a half years old note that this is
exactly half-way through the epoch of the first seven years and is a
moment of great importance, as is also the corresponding moment in
the second epoch, half-way between the seventh and fourteenth years
when three and a half years old, the child had headaches with high
fever, and immediately afterwards measles. She was a child who
readily caught illnesses. Since that time, she has been particularly
restless and excitable. The mother too was ill at the same time with
influenza and has also been restless since, and easily upset. You see
the parallelism between mother and child. The child's appetite is
always poor. And yet she is a fine, sturdy little girl, with powerful
limbs. As you know, however, the organisation of the limbs is not
built up, so far as substance is concerned, from food, but from the
cosmos via the breathing and the activity of the senses. It is in the
head that you will find the results of this poorness of
appetite. A poor appetite, which means then of course impaired
nutrition, affects the activity of the child's head. The little girl
is lively and imaginative; she is restless, not merely in her body,
but in her thoughts too. It can plainly be seen in her that her
imagination and fantasy come not from the head but from the limbs.
Her head organisation is very weak, her limb organisation
particularly strong. Clearly, her life of fantasy comes from her
limbs.
The child often has
restless dreams. Now, it is important to take careful note of how she
dreams in particular, whether the dreams occur just after
falling asleep or before waking up. Up to now, according to this
report of her case, it is the former alone that have been observed.
But the waking-up dreams must also come under observation. If we can
bring her now and then to relate these, they will be found to reveal
much that is of very great interest for us when they are in this way
recalled to memory. We must get her to tell them to us.
These then are the
three cases I wanted to put before you. Tomorrow we will meet again
at 8:30 and speak about methods of treatment.