NINTH LECTURE
4th July, 1924
We
had before us yesterday a succession of children to whom we gave our
attention. It is in this way for the most part that the study of the
treatment of abnormal children has necessarily to be pursued
namely, in relation to particular examples. Abnormality manifests in
all possible directions, and each single case is a case by itself.
The only way you can begin to learn how to deal with such children is
to devote yourself to an individual case, and thereby, as time goes
on, gradually acquire the skill that will be needed for dealing with
other cases.
You
will remember the boy of twelve years old who was brought before us
yesterday and whom I had to describe as a kleptomaniac. I explained
to you how spiritual vision can discern, in the case of such a
kleptomaniac, that on account of hindrances in the astral body, he
has no means of access to the capacity for judgement that ordinarily
belongs to human beings in the world. In this connection, you must
realise that everything which has to do with morality, everything of
which it can be said that our conception of it must needs include
moral impulses, comes to expression within Earth existence alone. We
really could say it would of course be misunderstood by the
superficial thinking of the present day that where the Earth
comes to an end, where one goes out beyond into the super-sensible
realm, moral judgements such as we are familiar with on Earth cease
to exist; for the reason that out there, in the realm of the
super-sensible, morality is, so to say, a complete matter of course.
Moral judgements begin only where there is a possibility of choice
between good and evil. For the spiritual world, good and evil are
simply characteristic qualities. There are good beings and there are
bad beings. As little as you can say of a lion that he ought, or
ought not, to be lion-like, just so little can you say, when you have
come away from the Earth, that good and evil ought or ought not to be
as they are. To speak in this way pre-supposes the possibility of
choice, of saying Yes or No, a possibility which comes in question
solely within the organisation of man and where human beings are
living socially together. Now, in the case of an illness such as
kleptomania, owing to the hindrances of which we spoke, the person in
question has not evolved his astral body far enough to enable him to
develop a sensitivity to moral judgements. Consequently, the moment a
boy of this kind feels a particular interest in some object, he sees
no reason at all why he should not take it. He does not understand
that it may belong to someone, the idea of mine
and thine has no meaning for him. His astral body does not get
far enough into the physical world for him to be able to appreciate
the concept of possession.
We
have here exactly the same kind of phenomenon as when someone is
colour-blind. It's no use talking about colours to one who is
colour-blind; and it would have just as little sense to speak in the
higher world about possession and non-possession. The child does not
find his way far enough into the physical world for him to be able to
attach any meaning at all to what he hears people say about
possessing things. What is particularly strong in him
is the idea of discovery the idea that he has lighted
upon some object or other which astonishes him, which fills him with
delight and interest. But there his capacity for forming ideas comes
to a full stop. The truth is that up to now his astral body has not
penetrated to the region of the will, but has remained more or less
in the intellectual sphere. We have evidence of this in the fact that
the organs of the will are deformed at the side. Consequently,
whatever he finds good intellectually he at once turns into will. Let
the same defect show itself in the intellect, and you will find the
children are dull and stupid; but when, as here, it shows itself in
the will, they are kleptomaniacs.
An
abnormality of this kind is very difficult to contend with. For at
the age of life when it would be important to make a strong stand
against the failing, it generally escapes notice altogether. At this
early age, the child is naturally imitative, doing what he sees done
around him, and so one may easily fail to discern in his behaviour
the tendency to kleptomania. Only after the change of teeth, will the
tendency begin to be apparent. When the change of teeth has taken
place, the child is however even then not far enough out yet on the
physical plane to develop a sense for any moral judgement other than:
What I like is good, what I don't like is bad. His judgements, that
is to say, are entirely aesthetic. It will therefore be for the
teacher to awaken in the child the feeling for the good the
meaning of good by bringing it about that the
child looks up to him and takes him for his pattern and example. That
is why in our Waldorf School education we take particular care that
authority shall make itself felt in this age of life. Quite as a
matter of course it should come about that the child regards his
teacher with devotion. The teacher will then speak of things that are
good always in such a manner as to arouse the child's
interest and enjoyment, and of things that are bad in
such a manner as to arouse his antipathy. For this to achieve the
desired result, it is of course essential that there be first the
natural acceptance of the teacher's authority. If this is necessary
in the case of a so-called normal child, it is in the very highest
degree necessary in the case of such a child as we are considering.
In all education nothing contributes so much to true progress as that
the child has trust and confidence in the one who is his teacher; and
in dealing with abnormal children it is absolutely essential that
this right relationship between child and teacher can be relied on
from the outset.
In
a course of study such as we are now engaged in, we must not omit to
point out how important it is, when dealing with quite little
children, to make careful observation of the whole way in which their
development takes place. If we notice that a little child grows very
happy and animated on account of something he has learned
learned, I mean, before the change of teeth if we notice, for
instance, that a child who is learning to speak takes inordinate
pleasure in some new sound he has learned to utter, then we must be
prepared for the possibility that things may go wrong with that
child! Children who later on become kleptomaniacs, develop this kind
of egotism in the tender age of early childhood; they will perhaps
click their tongue with satisfaction, when they have acquired a new
word. This is rare with very young children, but it certainly can
occur.
One
has to learn to be able to look ahead and see what may be the outcome
of such a trait in future years. Far more important for the doctor as
well as for the educator, than the principles upon which he has to
work although a knowledge of these is, of course, to be taken
for granted far more important for him is that he should
acquire a sensitive perception for what is going on in the world
around him. You must not, you see, be like Wulffen
[See
Lecture 2];
you must be ready to appreciate what a vast deal
depends on the environment of a growing child. Take, for
instance, such a case, where a very little child has the habit I
spoke of just now: he clicks his tongue with satisfaction over some
new thing he has learned. This delight at acquiring something in the
intellectual sphere will change, about the time of the second
dentition, into a conspicuous vanity; the child will grow vain and
conceited in relation to other things as well. It should indeed be a
matter for grave concern, for instance, if at about the time of the
change of teeth a child develops as it were, from an inborn
tendency a hankering after fine clothes. Symptoms of this
nature should be carefully noted. But let us now consider two kinds
of environment into which such a child may grow up.
The
child may be born in a region we will imagine for the purpose
some quite small territory where people are accustomed to
live in an easy-going way and let things take their course, and where
they look upon the militia as something that is necessary for
the defence of their territory, but that arouses in them no
enthusiasm or at best an enthusiasm that has to be artificially
stimulated. There will then develop in every child as a matter of
course, during the period between the seventh and fourteenth years, a
feeling for what is expected of him as a member of the community. The
boy grows up; and if particular care has not been taken that he is
able to look up with love and respect to his teacher (for parents, as
you know, do not always concern themselves about such a matter in
this period of the child's life), then the tendency which we have
seen at work in the intellectual sphere slips down now into the will,
and it is quite possible that kleptomania may ensue.
And
now let us see, on the other hand, what happens when a child of this
kind grows up, not in a country where the militia is regarded as a
somewhat troublesome burden, but in a region where the child finds
himself surrounded by a kind of Prussianism. (As you will see, I am
giving just characteristic features of a particular case.) Militarism
is here looked upon by no means merely as a necessity, but as
something that gives one tremendous pleasure, something that thrills
one with wonder and admiration and to which one is loyal through
thick and thin. The child does not remain at home in the family, he
is sent to school and then later to the University. And now the trait
that was not at all advantageous to the other boy turns out to be of
great advantage to him. The disposition of which we have spoken and
which was already present in him as a child finds its fulfilment and
expression when he becomes a researcher in natural science. He is
engaged in preparing microscopic slides; he will look round in all
directions for objects to bring under the microscope, and in this
regular and at the same time irregular way, satisfy
his longing to acquire things for himself. The impulse will
experience its full satisfaction. For the boy has found his way into
a milieu within which the habit of stealing has no place; if things
are taken, then it is things with which one does
not associate the concept of stealing. The kleptomania will in this
case go on developing beneath the surface. The boy becomes later a
lecturer in physiology, he becomes the most famous physiologist of
his time. Something of the kleptomaniac propensity remains with him
for life, but it is associated in him with a kind of enthusiasm for
war. This enthusiasm now changes however the sphere of its activity,
finding its way especially into the imagery he uses in his lecturing;
these are all about fighting and going to war. And then, strangely
enough, this tendency may in certain circumstances degenerate into a
kind of vanity. A feeling may get hold of him that his rhetorical
figures are his own possession and that no one else has a right to
use them. Suppose some daring and rather mischievous student of his,
who is a bit of a genius, ventures in his examination to use the very
same figures of speech. That student will certainly be failed. And if
he should go so far as to click his tongue at the same time, then
things will go very badly with him.
Once
we have the insight to see and understand things of this kind when we
meet them in life, the insight itself will guide us to the right
method of dealing with them. We must resolve to make ourselves
acquainted with life in all its manifold shades and varieties. Then
we shall be ready to notice quickly when traits begin to show
themselves that point in this or that direction.
I
have already spoken to you of a good curative measure that can be
employed in the psychological sphere. You have to cultivate your
power of invention and tell the boy a story, in which this
characteristic of his plays a part. You tell him of people who do the
same kind of thing, and then you make it clear that all the time they
are only digging a pit for themselves into which they afterwards
fall. If the dramatic character of the story be developed with real
enthusiasm, you can attain your end in this way, provided you sustain
the effort without any slackening. In addition, you will at the same
time need to treat such a child therapeutically; he must receive
injections with hypophysis cerebri and honey, because, as you saw,
the temporal lobes are stunted and we must do all we can to encourage
forces of growth that shall counteract this deformation.
Very
good results can also be obtained from the use of Curative Eurythmy;
but it must be carried out with tremendous energy. All the movements
that belong to the vowels, the boy must be got to make with his legs.
For what we have to do is to expel from the will the intellectual
element, and at the same time impel into the will the striving, the
taking pains, that lives in the vowel sounds.
Finally,
it is most important that by virtue of the authority we have with the
child, we should find it possible to speak with him quite plainly and
unreservedly on the matter, showing him how objectionable such a
habit is. But this must not be done too early. It has to be brought
home to the child's intellect, and by attempting it too early we can
easily spoil everything. We must go to work with our stories in the
first place, and then gradually lead over to this appeal to the
intellect.
It
is most difficult to point to any success in these measures, for the
good results are simply not noticed. The truth is, however, that many
a kleptomaniac would never have been one at all, if early on, so soon
as symptoms began to show themselves, those in charge of the child
had at once begun telling the right kind of stories. Such stories
always work; but we must have patience. One can be quite sure that in
such a case as this boy, good results can be achieved
although, if the habit is deeply ingrained, perhaps only after a very
long time.
And
now for the other difficult child of whom I was speaking yesterday,
who is not yet quite a year old, the case of hydrocephalus. Treatment
has indeed in this instance been very difficult so far. For what do
we observe in this child? What strikes us about him? First and
foremost, excessive excitability and irritability of the
nerves-and-senses system. This it is that has made possible such a
prodigious enlargement of the head. Marked irritability of nerves and
senses will always be found to express itself in an enlargement of
the head. We must however be careful here to look at relative and not
absolute measurements. If a person who is predisposed to be small
altogether, has a head of the same size as that of a big, tall
person, then he has what is for him a large head. This must not be
forgotten when we are considering cases that are not abnormal. The
child we saw yesterday is abnormal. The inordinate sensitiveness and
irritability of the nerves-and-senses system, which are so evident in
him, have been induced by the conditions under which he was living in
the embryo time; I described these conditions to you yesterday,
explaining them as due to the uneven way in which the influences of
mother and father co-operated in the embryo.
What
must we do in order to bring the child nearer to normality?
Everything that could excite or irritate the nerves-and senses system
must be shut out for as many hours of the day as possible.
Accordingly we have had the child in a dark room, a room that is
completely darkened, so that as he lies there, he is all the time in
the quiet and the dark, receiving no impressions. As a matter of
fact, I overestimated at first the results that could be attained by
these means, for the child is actually not yet responsive to light.
His sensitivity to light is exceedingly weak; on this account the
exclusion of light is of less importance than might have been
presumed. Nevertheless, this is the right principle to go on
to let the child live in the quiet and in the dark, having around him
as few impressions as ever possible; then the impulse for quick and
restless movement an impulse of the will will be
aroused from within, and will work counter to the
nerves-and-senses system. This then will be the first rule we set out
to follow. Another thing we must do is to try to influence the
nerves-and-senses system through the appropriate agencies. We have
been using gneiss as an internal remedy. Quartz itself, used
directly, would induce shock, and that we must at all costs avoid;
with gneiss, the effects of the influence of quartz are more
distributed. In quartz, the forces are strongly radiant
in their working, sharp and spear-like; whereas when the same forces
are distributed as in gneiss, they are mild in their working and
spread out in the organism, reaching the periphery with a lighter
touch. Gneiss in a high potency can here lead to the desired result.
And then we must try to calm down the excited state of the nerves in
the region also of the will. For in a very little child the
whole human being, you must remember, is nerves-and senses system.
This can be achieved by giving poppy baths. Baths are prepared, using
the common field poppy.
When
you see before you a state of affairs such as shows itself in this
child, two things must go hand in hand the whole time
observation of the case, and whatever therapy is possible. You
are dealing, you see, with an individual case. You will be in a
better position to appreciate the importance of what I am saying if I
tell you now what further symptoms have presented themselves to our
observation. To begin with, we noticed that during the time of the
treatment by injection the temperature dropped. Shortly afterwards
the head was found to have increased in size. The child was sleeping
by day and crying in the night. That changed when we began to give
poppy baths in the evening. The fæces are hard, and a
difference can be noticed according as the baths are given in the
daytime or at night. The connection of astral with physical body is
quite different morning and evening.
What
we have to do is to bring order into the processes whereby what comes
from the digestive system works into the brain. You will easily
realise that mother's milk is not able under all circumstances to
benefit a child of this kind in the same way that it does another
child. (Normally, you know, mother's milk has an inherent tendency, a
natural readiness to transfer itself from the digestive system to the
nerves-and senses system.) We therefore discontinued mother's milk at
the beginning of March, and the child was from then on nourished by
other means. Nectar was given the content of the nectaries
found in the flowers of certain plants. Nectar has the effect of
strengthening the ego in the region of the will. By administering a
nourishment that develops with something even of the dynamic
of a parasite in the region of the blossom, we make appeal to
the inner individuality of the child, we try to call forth this inner
individuality and bring it to activity. We have had some measure of
success in this direction. But I must warn you how necessary it is,
when one has a plan of this kind on hand, to decide on a suitable
time for carrying it out, and then prepare oneself thoroughly for the
occasion. Set-backs can always occur, and these are misjudged by
anyone who looks at the matter from a layman's point of view. We have
it here on record that for some days the child was having nectar and
the fæces became softer. Afterwards diarrhoea ensued. The
nectar was then discontinued. The diarrhoea stopped, and a condition
set in during the night of 11th-12th June, that brought a kind of
crisis. The child was crying, and blinking, and passing a great deal
of water; the body sank in with every expiration; there were attacks
of cramp in the left leg, while the left arm grew tense and rigid;
the fontanels were also quite taut, and the reflex actions more
pronounced. Hot compresses were applied, and compresses of poppy
juice, after which the child fell asleep, and his condition on the
following day was good. Appetite and evacuation of the bowels were in
order.
You
must understand that it is impossible to steer clear of such crises
unless one is prepared to steer clear of all hope of a cure! For the
very work we have to set ourselves to do in the organism is bound at
some time or other to express itself in such a crisis. When this
happens, it is of course necessary immediately to intervene
as Frau Dr. Wegman did. After the application of hot compresses and
poppy juice compresses the crisis will subside in a proper way. The
only advice that can be given for a crisis of this nature is on no
account to allow yourself to be alarmed or thrown off your guard.
There are moments in such a case when everything depends on prompt
and immediate action.
I
would like to tell you of an interesting little experience that I had
on this occasion. News reached me from another quarter that the child
was in a very bad way. Frau Dr. Wegman herself said nothing about it;
I was accordingly reassured, and was confident that the condition was
taking its inevitable course. For one must, you know, retain the
whole time a mood of readiness for the natural development of the
illness; that is essential. And then one can listen quite quietly to
someone or other who, without any real understanding of the case, is
frightened and disturbed at the turn the illness is taking. In cases
like this, where anything may happen, we must first be perfectly
clear in ourselves that we are doing what requires to be done; if
this is so, then we can also rest assured that everything is as it
should be. It is of course most important to be watchful for crises
and, when they come, to give them every care and attention; but we
must know that they will certainly occur in a case of this kind.
Feelings of pity and the like, which tend to make one agitated and
upset, cannot help. It is never of the least use to be overcome with
a feeling of pity, that way we merely get bewildered and distraught;
the one and only thing that can help is to face the situation quite
objectively and do what has to be done.
And
now let us go a little further into the subject of treatment. As we
have seen, it is not possible to do anything much yet in the way of
psychological-pedagogical treatment; we have only one possibility in
this direction, namely, to help psychologically by giving rest and,
as far as possible, darkness. It is important however to find a way
of bringing into the organism the principle of disintegration. We
must replace the strong tendency that is at work there towards the
watery element, towards fluidity by the principle of disintegration.
Water does not fall asunder or disintegrate; it flows and spreads. We
want to call upon forces that can promote disintegration, that can
aid and encourage it. Such are the forces of lead. In lead we have a
most effective means of inducing decomposition, disintegration.
Whenever you see that upbuilding forces are rampant in the very place
where breaking-down forces should be at work and is not a
preponderance of upbuilding over breaking-down forces the fundamental
phenomenon to be observed in a giant-embryo such as this little
child? whenever you see this, you may always start on a
course of medical treatment with lead. Lead, especially when
injected, can have extraordinarily good results.
Let
me describe to you how lead takes effect in the organism. Lead has,
of course, long been known as a remedy; for thousands of years those
who have had any understanding of such things have pointed to the
medicinal influence of lead. The knowledge of its beneficial working
has however been tending gradually to disappear although now
in our own time it is coming into notice again in a most remarkable
way, from quite a new quarter. But now consider for a moment
where, in the whole earth, are the most powerful forces of
disintegration to be found? We find them where radium occurs. And
from radium we get, along with helium, an intermediary product which,
undergoing further transformation, produces lead. Here, then, you
have the inner connection. In the great world outside, in the cosmos,
the most powerfully working forces of cleavage produce in lead the
substance in which these forces of cleavage are ultimately
concentrated. If therefore you bring lead into the human body, you
are bringing into it cosmic destruction, cosmic disintegration. Think
what this means. You introduce the lead, by means of injection, into
the blood-circulation. In the circulation of the blood we have an
immediate reflection of the structure of the universe. The 25,000
years that the sun takes to go round the universe these
25,000 years we have in the circulation, in the pulsation of the
blood. [The exact number is
25,920.] And now you bring disintegrating forces straight into
the organism. The cosmos, as we know, gives itself time to work;
nevertheless, if we have a real insight into the matter, it will be
evident to us that the introduction of such a substance as lead can
be of real help.
Treatment
for this child will therefore be as I have described. We have also
used hypophysis, applying it to the legs as an ointment; the
formative, shaping forces that are active in the secretion of
hypophysis counteract deformation. We shall in this way form
while we heal. We have of course at the same time to see that the
right stimulation is provided in order for the remedies to be able to
work.
One
can, you know, be very thankful that we have now surmounted a first
crisis; one can be glad of the crisis that occurred between the 11th
and 12th July, when the child manifested the symptoms we described.
He will in all probability have to go through many such crises, and
we must be very watchful to see that we cure the child, in the
positive sense. For it is, you know, quite possible for a cure to
take place in a negative sense. It comes to this we have to
cure, not for death, but for life. It is indeed a most delicate
matter ever to deal with an organ therapeutically.
I
would like also at this point to draw your attention to the fact that
nothing could be achieved by puncturing and letting water flow out;
the trouble then only starts again and grows even more serious than
before. Obviously, however, so long as we have not yet ourselves
attained any success in diminishing the size of the head, it is not
for us to begin criticising other methods of treatment.
This
is going to be a particularly interesting case, and for me personally
it has as a matter of fact quite a special interest. For, whenever I
think of this little fellow, whenever I look at him, it is not merely
this child that I see before me. Imagine to yourselves this child
grown to be thirty years old. He would then be an adult human being.
It might well happen. He would be about six times as big as he is
now. The head would be perhaps three-and-a-half times its present
size, and the rest of the body six times. Imagining this, I see
before me a man whom I actually did have before me when I was a boy
of six years old. We used to meet constantly, for he was always there
at the station when the trains arrived. He was obliged to use
crutches, because his body could not carry his head. The whole
muscular system that is involved in walking had not developed
properly. He had an immense head. The man had in fact remained an
embryo, he was a thirty-year-old embryo.
The
reason why this man made such a remarkable impression on me as a
little boy was that he was unbelievably clever. I did so enjoy
talking to him! A deformity is of course a bit of a shock to a boy of
seven or eight years old; but then, on the other hand, the man was,
as I have said, astonishingly clever. One could learn a great deal
from him; and all his judgements were pervaded with a great
gentleness. This gentleness and mildness seemed to overflow from him
like his head! When he spoke his sentences were not
unduly drawn out, they took the normal length of time to utter, but
as he spoke them, it was almost as though he had some sugary moisture
on his lips, as though he were rubbing his lips together and tasting
the sweetness all the time. There was indeed something quite original
about the man. He was moreover genuinely inventive. Inventions of
many kinds were attributed to him which he was said to have
made first on a small scale. Altogether, a most interesting
personality. In course of time he had become less sensitive about his
abnormality, he had grown accustomed to it. After all, he lived, you
see, in a village, where a person of this kind is regarded with a
certain measure of understanding. I have in fact never yet come
across a village where some afflicted child had not grown up in this
manner, becoming the child of the whole village, and receiving
constant care and help from those around.
If
we should have a child of this kind to look after, who is rather
older than the little fellow we are considering, we would have
to adopt other measures, such as I described to you in part when I
told you how I had to treat the hydrocephalic boy of eleven years old
who was given into my care, and who was in time completely healed.
Now
let us go on to the next the little girl who was rather
unruly and troublesome. This child weighed 41 lb. at birth, was a
nine months child and was breast-fed for seven months. She learned to
walk in her first year, and learned also to speak at the proper time.
When a year and a half old, she ceased to wet the bed at night, but
wet herself by day. At the age of three-and-a-half she had an attack
of influenza with headache and high fever, and three weeks later
developed measles. The mother had influenza at the same time and was
nervous and worried. The child's appetite is bad. She sometimes has
disturbing dreams.
We
have here a condition that is frequently to be met with among these
children; we might even describe the little girl as a normally
abnormal child. Our chief concern must be to see that the astral body
receives the right form and configuration that will enable it to fit
itself into the ether and physical bodies in a harmonious manner. To
achieve this end, we always give arsenic baths that is, we
use arsenic externally; and occasionally we administer arsenic
internally as well. The treatment has the effect of harmonising the
relationships of astral body, ether body and physical body. Then, to
ensure that the externally administered arsenic shall really strike
home, we reinforce it by applying mustard compresses to the feet
before and after the bath, using also grated horse-radish for this
purpose. I should add that in the latter case, you must make sure
that the horse-radish is not grated until immediately before use. It
is most important that it should be freshly grated; if allowed to
stand for some hours, it loses its efficacy.
Coming
to the psychological aspect of the case, we must try to cure the
child of the habit of being so excited. For she is still always
restless and excited; I don't think the environment here has so far
had any marked influence on her. We must break her of this habit.
Altogether, the breaking of some habit or trait of character in a
child can often lead to most salutary results a fact that
should not be overlooked. In the case we are considering, a great
deal can be achieved by bringing the child to be quiet and still at
the very moment when something is being told her of a kind that
generally makes her excited and restless even if, in order to
keep her still, we have to resort to mechanical means. First of all,
therefore, we observe, when we are relating some story, what things
in the story particularly excite the child. Then, we compel her to
restrain herself and not get excited, to become inwardly a little
stiff and hold herself in. If we can bring this about we shall find,
as time goes on, that the characteristic trait in the child is
somehow being broken down. Instead of evincing excitement, she will
begin even to show signs of weariness when the story is told. We let
this weariness work say, for a week or two; and then for a
while we simply let the child go her way, treating her as though she
were quite normal. After a time there will be some return of the
excitability; then we shall have to set to work all over again, and
repeat our course of treatment. The pauses are necessary; otherwise,
if we go straight on without interruption, a reaction will come. The
weariness, the slight signs of depression, will, if we push too far
with our treatment, lead on to conditions of bodily depression, and
we shall harm the child rather than heal.
We
have now come to the point where I can indicate for you the principle
that underlies the psychological treatment of all such children. We
have to be ready and attentive, watching what is there in the child,
realising that the abnormalities of soul are symptoms of what is
going on within him, symptoms of the behaviour of ether body, astral
body, ego organisation, etc. I say etc.; what do I
mean? For when we divide the human being into
- Physical body
- Ether body
- Astral body
- Ego organisation
- Spirit-Self
we
generally go on to say, do we not, that the spirit-self has not yet
been evolved by man and does not therefore immediately concern him.
We read about it of course in the books, but in the present epoch,
man reaches only as far as the ego organisation, and so we have no
call to trouble about the spirit-self. But, my dear friends, that is
not a true and full picture of the situation. Human beings, we say,
reach as yet only as far as the ego organisation; but not all the
beings with whom we humans have to do, come only as far as the ego
and no further! When we are dealing with growing children, we are
necessarily brought into contact with beings who attain to the
spirit-self, beings who are further on in evolution than man. If we
set out to develop Waldorf School pedagogy and really mean our work
to have life, then we must appeal not only to the human beings who
are congregated there in our school, but also to spiritual beings who
are more highly developed than man, spiritual beings who show quite
clearly that they have evolved to the spirit self. In dealing with a
growing child, we shall particularly have to do with one specific
class of such beings, namely, the beings to whom we give the name of
Genius of Language. Were it left to the human beings
themselves to hand on language to the next generation, man would pine
away and perish. Being lives in language, as truly as ever
being lives in man himself. Along with speech and language something
enters into man, wherein beings live whose whole life bears
unmistakably the stamp of the spirit-self, even as man in his life
bears the stamp of the ego organisation. These beings inspire us;
they live in us through the fact that we speak.
Think
how in Eurythmy we have to develop an artistic speaking in order for
a visible speech and language to arise. We are really very far from
comprehending what speech is in its fullness! A little part of the
working of the Genius of Language we elaborate in Eurythmy, so as to
enable a visible speech to come to birth. And then again in Curative
Eurythmy think how we appeal there to what these beings can
achieve with the spirit-self, in the intuitive stimulation of man's
will!
It
is really so: the moment we begin to speak of education, we have
immediately to make our appeal to spirits who have evolved the
spirit-self. And whenever we try to elucidate what lies hidden in
speech, we are actually describing the spirit-self. I would therefore
recommend anyone who is setting out to educate abnormal children, to
meditate upon what he can read in our books, about the spirit-self.
He will find this a good material for meditation. It is a prayer to
those spiritual beings who are of the same kind as the Genius of
Language.
Such
spiritual beings are verily present among us. Say, we come into the
schoolroom. If our behaviour and gestures as we enter give adequate
expression to what we are feeling and experiencing in our soul, then
they have an immense influence upon the child. And they are moreover
a proof that we are connected with the spiritual beings who bear
within them the spirit-self.
There
is a habit that is all too common among people today I am far
from suggesting you should start inveighing openly against it; in
matters of this kind, one must adopt a completely objective attitude,
the same objective attitude as is required in dealing with the
crises that occur in the little child. It is nevertheless a fact that
when whole communities of people have a habit of keeping their hands
in their trouser pockets and so avoiding any use of gesture, it
means nothing else than that they want to be God-forsaken, they want
to be left alone by the Gods the Gods who are next above the
spirit-man. It means, they would rather not have any knowledge of the
beings who have developed the spirit-self even as man has
developed the I organisation. And one of the first things that
happens to such persons is that their speech begins to be slovenly.
This, is, in fact, the great danger that faces the civilisation of
the West the danger that speech and language, instead of
being developed to become what they should become, deteriorate and
grow slovenly.
In
dealing with the growing child it is of the very first importance to
see that he speaks clearly and distinctly, and this is more than ever
necessary in the case of the abnormal child. We must on no account
overlook the smallest sign of slovenliness of speech. In all your
dealings with abnormal children, make it a rule to be watchful of how
they speak, mindful always that their speech shall be clear and
distinct and well-formed. Your watchfulness will react favourably on
the condition of the child.
And
then for the very young child who does not yet speak himself, it is
good if he hears well-formed speech spoken around him unless
of course special instructions have had to be given that he is to be
left still and quiet! And for children between the ages of seven and
fourteen whom we have received into our care as abnormal, we need not
have the slightest hesitation in bringing to them just as much as
ever we can in the way of good speaking and recitation. To listen
again and again to good speaking, well-ordered and articulate, is for
abnormal children an absolute need, a need that springs from the
inherent nature of the abnormality itself.