TENTH LECTURE
5th July, 1924
And now we must go on
to say something about the cases you have with you at Lauenstein.
[Curative home in
Jena-Lichtenhain, founded by Franz Löffler, Siegfried Pickert,
and Albrecht Strohschein.]
I
would like to speak first of that eldest boy of yours, who is sixteen
years old, and in whom we can clearly recognise an inferiority
occasioned by the failure of the I and astral body to penetrate the
physical organisation. He was given into your care comparatively
late; you did not, I think, have him with you until he was in his
sixteenth year? So you have here a case with antecedents that have
already undergone marked development. If the boy could have been
taken in hand earlier on and given the advantage of Waldorf School
education, then, in the time between the change of teeth and puberty,
he would have experienced the principle of authority in the right
way. Care would also have been taken, first of all, to watch all the
time and see what things really interested him, and then, starting
from these, to extend his field of interest. Had this been possible,
and if in addition the boy could at the same time have been given
lead in gently administered doses, then notwithstanding his inherent
difficulties the boy's soul would be today on quite a different
level. For it is plain, the boy has interests. He has moreover
definite ability. You will however have seen from the quite simple
test that we put to him, where the lad's trouble lies.
You
will remember, I set him a comparatively simple sum in arithmetic
a problem in subtraction, put in the form that accords with the
methods of Waldorf School education. For we always ask, you know:
What have I to take from a given number in order to leave another
given number as remainder: Thus, we do not, as is usually done in
teaching arithmetic, give the minuend and subtrahend, but instead the
minuend and the remainder, leaving the subtrahend to be found. This
way of stating the problem puts the condition of mind and soul to
severer test; on the other hand, the child is helped far more in his
development when he has to tackle the problem in this form, than when
it is put to him the other way round. As you saw, the boy was able to
do the sum, but not able to do it at once. As soon as he had solved
the problem, he came up to me with great delight; but it must have
been an hour and a half later. He took thus an hour and a half to do
the sum, and was happy and delighted when he had found the answer.
There was therefore no doubt about it, the boy had the necessary
ability, he was able to do the sum. All the members of his organism
were in readiness to be directed to the task; there was, so to speak,
no fault in the contact. The trouble with him is only
that he needs longer time. And the reason for this is, that from the
very outset his ether body and his physical body offer resistance;
they fail to unfold the activity that is proper to them, in spite of
the fact that the possibilities for the activity are there all the
time.
Follow
carefully how the boy's interests work. You will find they remain in
the head organisation; they cannot make their way down into the rest
of the body. This fact was clearly demonstrated in a little incident
that took place during my visit. You saw how the boy came up to us
with his little Kodak and wanted to take our photograph. He managed
it quite well, carrying the whole thing through with intense
interest. Afterwards I tried to suggest to him that he should make
another exposure. This would have necessitated his going to fetch a
new film; his interest would have had to reach beyond what lay
immediately to hand. He resisted the idea, and nothing would persuade
him to listen to it. When an interest seizes hold of him in the very
movement, here and now he is ready for it he is all
there: but if the situation requires that he should bring the
interest down into his metabolism-and-limbs system, then at once his
ether and physical bodies set up a powerful resistance. What should
one do in such a case?
With
a boy already in his teens, it is of course much more difficult than
it would have been earlier; we should however set ourselves even now
to intervene with our pedagogical therapy. Taking as our starting
point things that the boy follows with a certain interest, we should
go on from these, widening the circle of his interest in all
directions. A great deal can be achieved by recognising and appealing
to an entirely healthy instinct that the boy undoubtedly possesses
despite his difficulties. For you must realise that even in persons
who are abnormal, healthy instincts are yet always present. And with
this boy, you will find that as soon as you draw his attention to
objects and processes that call for skilful handling, he will
at once begin to experience a widening of his circle of interests.
The
boy has, you see, difficulty in following the road that leads from
the head organisation to the metabolism-and limbs organisation, and
thence, as I have explained to you, out again beyond. This latter
part of the journey he accomplishes only with great difficulty, since
there is in him no capacity to perceive what is going on there. Even
the slight measure of perception that is present in a normal human
being is in his case lacking. Once, however, he can be brought to
see, he has an object plainly before him, the skilfulness of his own
limbs, the sight will fill him with joy. You must get him to do
things which will bring this about. An excellent plan will be to give
him Curative Eurythmy exercises, to be done with legs and hands, but
especially taking care to see that the toes and fingers move with
great energy. Then draw the boy's attention to these movements that
are going on in his limbs, let him watch himself making the
movements.
If
it should happen that you have to do with younger children who
already show signs of this kind of difficulty, where what has been
decided upon by the head does not easily find its way down into the
rest of the organism, try getting them to touch their feet with their
head. In the case of the boy we are considering, it is too late for
this, but you may any day receive into your Home quite little
children with the same disability. Try it yourselves; you will find
it is no easy matter! But for small children it is a very good
exercise; they can be brought even to kiss their own toes. Another
thing that never fails to help in such cases and it could
prove a real blessing even to your boy is to get the child to
hold a pencil between his great toe and the next, and with the pencil
contrive to trace out some letters of the alphabet, and so have the
enjoyment of discovering that he can write with his feet. It is quite
possible that even at his age this boy of yours could receive very
great benefit from such an experiment. For in cases such as his,
Curative Eurythmy and writing with the toes is a kind of
Curative Eurythmy! can be of the very greatest help. Whether
also a course of treatment with lead will at his age afford him the
help he stands in need of, we shall discover when we begin to make
trial with it and note its effects.
All
that I have been saying will have demonstrated to you the imperative
need for a delicate and fine power of observation. The simple
calculation that took the boy an hour and a half to make, the
reluctance to go back into the house to fetch a new film
facts like these may seem trifling and insignificant, and yet it is
just this kind of thing that we must learn to make the object of
careful observation. As we come to do so, we shall realise what an
invaluable aid it can be to the educator of backward children if he
is sensitive to every little thing that happens with the child he
wants to help.
And
now you will be wanting to say to me: It looks as though the
education of backward children is going to take up all one's time;
one will have to be perpetually giving one's whole attention to the
children, and will have no time left to meditate, no time in fact to
do anything else whatever! That is not the case; and the esoteric
nature of a life-work such as you are undertaking should not allow
you ever to admit for a moment this point of view. What is wanted is
not that you should all day long be constantly on the watch
not that at all, but rather that you should acquire a quick sense for
characteristic happenings. If one has already learned how to watch
quite a number of children and knows how to make the right use at
every turn of one's powers of perception, it is, under certain
circumstances, quite possible to carry out a thorough investigation
of a single child in five or ten minutes. It does not depend at all
on the length of time one devotes to the matter, but wholly on the
degree to which one is able to unite oneself inwardly with the act of
perception. If people would only realise that one has to really
connect oneself inwardly with the phenomena in question then a great
deal of time would be saved, especially for those who work in the
professions.
(See .)
Now,
there was at Lauenstein another boy, a typical case, a
fifteen-year-old epileptic. You could see the same type in the boy we
had here before us the other day; only, your boy at Lauenstein is
several years older. The first thing that claims our attention in his
case is the difficult situation created by the fact that he is at the
age of transition to puberty. He has been castrated, has he not? Now
what we are concerned with is the process of attaining puberty as it
has to go forward in the whole organism. The fact that the boy
has been castrated, means that in his case we have to reckon with a
phenomenon that manifests in him with extraordinary vehemence
namely, the reaction that is induced as a result of this unnatural
influence that has been brought to bear on the evolution of sex. The
boy gives indeed every appearance of one in whom the transition to
puberty is going to prove difficult. The gradual attainment of
puberty is, as we have said, a process that belongs to the whole
organism; and the sole significance that castration possesses for the
boy at the present time consists in the reactionary influence it has
in him upon the attainment of puberty.
The
first thing to do therefore is to see that the boy is placed where he
will be sure of being treated in the way that is right and necessary
for boys who are attaining puberty that is to say, where care
is taken to provide conditions under which such boys have their
interest aroused in all the processes that go on in the world in
which they find themselves. Boys who are at the age of puberty
urgently need Waldorf School education. This boy must not be left to
the mercy of his own impulses and emotions; we must try to bring it
about that he is continually occupied with something outside himself,
and takes a keen interest in the objects and processes that he finds
around him. Tell me, how is he getting on at school? Perhaps you can
tell me this?
(S.
He can neither read nor write. During the past year we have
not even made a beginning with school for him. Frau F. did once begin
to teach him reading and writing; it was on the Montessori method,
and he did not get on at all, he seemed unable to make any progress.
His school attainments have really to be counted as nil.)
He
shows, you see, a certain obtuseness to external impressions. We
shall here be under the necessity of applying Waldorf School
education in the way we are accustomed to do with quite little
children taking our start, that is, from painting, and
so providing the opportunity for the boy to put out into colour
whatever is tormenting him inwardly. Get him to paint, and you will
see what can be got rid of this way. And then you can go farther with
him in whatever direction his own inclinations and abilities
indicate.
There
can moreover be no question but that we must intervene here also with
our therapy. We have not, I think, up to now, prescribed any
medicaments? The boy should have algae and belladonna. Therapeutical
treatment will consist then of these two remedies. You probably
understand in a general way the nature of algae injections, but you
will do well to enter a little more deeply into the significance of
them; for you should, you know, be ready to make use of them on your
own responsibility, in individual cases. Why do we propose for this
boy algae injections?
In
the algae we have plants that have neither strongly developed root
formation nor strongly developed flower formation. It is indeed
almost as though flower and root had been telescoped. The leaf
organisation is the main thing; everything else is produced from it.
In algae therefore, since foliage preponderates, we find no very near
relationship to the earth. Nor, on the other hand, is there any very
near relationship to the outer cosmos. There is however a
relationship to the watery and airy elements that are active
immediately over the surface of the earth. Algae and the same
applies also to mushrooms are plants that are, as it were,
completely steeped in the interplay of air and water. And these two
kinds of plants have in addition this characteristic in common, that
they are strongly attracted to the minute quantity of sulphur which
is to be found everywhere today in water as well as in air.
Consequently, when these plants are introduced into the rhythmic
organism of man, they are peculiarly adapted to restore harmony
between astral body and ether body. And harmony between astral body
and ether body is precisely what is lacking in a boy of this type.
In
cases where we perceive a disturbance due to the ego organisation
making too great demand upon the astral body and not allowing it to
enter into the etheric body, we must have recourse rather to the
mushroom type of plant. The algae, which come nearer to the ordinary
plant, are to be used when the physical body and etheric body refuse
to allow the astral body to enter that is to say, when the
disharmony is due not to an excessive attraction exerted by the ego
organisation, but to a special resistance put up by the ether body.
(See .)
Then there was a girl you had at Lauenstein. Perhaps you would kindly
describe her for us, in accordance with the indications I gave at the
time?
(S.:
I too have seen this girl only on that one occasion a
girl with protruding lips. You pointed out that something very
serious must have happened to her astral body between the ages of 3
and 4; the child must, you said, have had at that time a violent
attack of itching and scratching. The mother confirmed afterwards
that high temperatures had occurred at that age, accompanied by
irritation and itching. For treatment, nicotiana enema was
prescribed; and if that did not help, nicotiana injections were to be
given. The girl is fifteen years old.)
So
we have here a girl who has attained the age of fifteen, and in whom
we can see quite clearly that the astral organisation has made very
weak connection with the organism as a whole. The girl is obviously
of that type.
(See .)
One notices at once that the astral organisation is far too weak to
restrain the ego in face of the temptation that always assails man
when he eats the temptation to enjoy the eating too much, to
revel in the sweet and pleasant taste of the food. When the astral
body is not sufficiently active in the lower region of the face, then
the lips will be found to protrude noticeably a symptom that
is due to the excessive pleasure experienced in tasting food and also
in the initial process of digestion, that takes place in the mouth.
Phenomena such as these have far-back antecedents; obviously they
cannot be making their appearance for the first time at this somewhat
late stage of childhood. As has been said, I stated at the time that
an irregularity must have occurred in the child's development about
the 3rd or 4th year.
How
can you learn to perceive such facts for yourselves? You can find
your way to such perceptions if you set out to do so with the love
that I have described to you and upon which you will remember I laid
such stress. You must never say: In order to perceive such things, I
should have to be clairvoyant. To say that betokens an inner laziness
a quality that must on no account ever be found in one who
undertakes the task of education. Long before you attain to the
clairvoyance that is required for spiritual research in general, you
can beget in yourself the faculty simply to perceive what is really
the matter. The power to do this can be born in you, if you approach
with loving devotion all that shows itself in the child, and
especially just those developments that come with abnormal
conditions. What you say to yourself at that moment will be true.
There is of course need here for esoteric courage. This esoteric
courage can and does develop in man provided only that one
thing does not stand in the way.
It
is strange, and at the same time significant, that these inner
intuitions are so little noticed by the very people who are,
comparatively speaking, well able to have them. Anthroposophists have
many an opportunity to pay heed to such inner intuitions! For they
have these intuitions, far more than is supposed, but they
fail to attend to them the reason being that in the moment
when they should do so, they find themselves assailed by a vanity
that is hard to overcome. With the discovery of faculties not
known before, all manner of impulses that spring from vanity begin to
crop up in the soul. Along with the other characteristics of our age
that I described for you in my lecture yesterday, as well as on
several other occasions, we have to reckon also a tendency to grow
vain and conceited, for it is a tendency that is terribly prevalent
in present-day mankind.
This
is a matter that should receive serious consideration from those of
the present-day Youth and you yourselves are of course among
the number who are devoting their lives to some great and
noble calling. There is in our time great need that young men and
women should rise up among us and exercise a regenerating influence
upon mankind; and what I am now going to say is not said out of
misunderstanding of the Youth Movement of our day, nor from lack of
understanding, but out of a true understanding of it. It is a
necessity, this Youth Movement, it is something of quite
extraordinary significance; for those older people who can understand
it, the modern Youth Movement is interesting in the highest degree.
Not a word shall be uttered here against it. Nor shall we attempt to
deny that there is only too often a deplorable lack of readiness on
the part of the older generation to understand this Youth Movement,
and that a great many plans have suffered shipwreck just because the
Movement has not been taken seriously enough, just because people
have not troubled themselves to look into it sufficiently. But the
Youth Movement does need to beware of one thing when it sets out to
undertake specific practical tasks; and it is incumbent on those of
us who have had experience in the matter to call attention to it, for
it makes one seriously apprehensive for the whole future of the
Movement. I mean a certain vanity that shows itself there on every
hand.
This vanity is not so much due to a lack of education and culture,
but is rather the consequence of an inevitable situation. For the
will to action necessitates of course a strong development of inner
capabilities, and then it follows all too easily that under the
influence of Ahriman vanity begins to spring up in the soul. I have
had opportunity in my life to make careful and intimate observation
of persons who were full of promise persons too of the most
various ages of life in whom one could see again and again
how with the dawn of the Age that has followed Kali Yuga, vanity
began to grow and thrive in their souls. It is not, therefore, only
among the Youth that the vanity shows itself. What concerns us at the
moment however is the special form of it that manifests in the Youth
and that has in point of fact hindered them from developing the right
and essential character that lies inherent in present-day Youth,
waiting to be developed. Hence the phenomenon with which we are so
familiar, this endless talk of missions, of great
tasks, with all too little inclination to set to work upon the
details, to take pains about the small things that require to
be done in carrying out these tasks.
These
will emphatically be need in the future for what has been described
in simple words as devotion to detail.
Devotion
to detail and to little things is something which the Youth of our
time need to develop. They are far too apt to revel in abstractions;
and this revelling in abstractions is the very thing that can then
lure them with irresistible force into the snare of vanity. I do beg
you to bethink yourselves of the difficulties that beset your path on
this account. Make it a matter of esoteric striving to master this
tendency to vanity; for it does indeed constitute a real hindrance to
any work you undertake.
Suppose
you want to be able to speak to some fellow human being from out of
an intuitive power of vision. The things you need to behold in him
are by no means written plain for all to see; and you may take it
that statements made about backward children from the ordinary lay
point of view are generally false. What you have to do is to see
through what lies on the surface, see right through it to the
real state of affairs. If therefore you want to come to the point of
being able to say something to him out of intuitive vision, what do
you need for that? You need to tell yourself with courage and with
energy not just saying it at some particular moment, but
carrying it continually in your consciousness, so that it determines
the very quality and content of your consciousness:
I can do it. If, without vanity, in a spirit of
self-sacrifice, and in earnest endeavour to overcome all the things
that hinder, you repeat these words, not only feeling them, but
saying them to yourself over and over again, then you will begin to
discover how far you are able to go in this direction. Do not expect
to find the development of the faculty you seek, by spinning out all
manner of theories and thoughts. No, what you need to do is to
maintain all the time this courageous consciousness, which develops
quite simply of itself when once you have begun to fetch up from the
depths of your soul what lies hidden there, buried (metaphorically
speaking) beneath an accumulation of dust and rubbish.
Generally
speaking, people are not able to achieve anything of this kind in the
realm of pedagogy. They could do so if only they would set themselves
seriously to bring to life within them a certain truth. Let me
explain to you how this can be done.
Try
to accustom yourselves to live your way every evening into the
consciousness: In me is God. In me is God or the
Spirit of God, or what other expression you prefer to use. (But
please do not think I mean just persuading yourself of this truth
theoretically which is what the meditations of the majority
of people amount to!) Then, in the morning let the knowledge: I am
in God shine out over the whole day. And now consider! When you
bring to life within you these two ideas, which are then no longer
mere thoughts, but have become something felt and perceived inwardly,
yes, have even become impulses of will within you, what is it you are
doing?
First,
you have this picture before you:
In me is God;
| Figure 3 Click image for large view | |
and on the following morning, you have this picture before you:
I am in God
(see
Figure 3,
right).
They are one and the same, the upper and the lower
figure. And now you must understand: Here you have a circle (yellow);
here you have a point (blue). It doesn't look like that in the
evening, but in the morning the truth of it comes to light. And in
the morning you have to think: Here is a circle (blue); here
is a point (yellow). Yes, you have to understand that a circle
is a point, and a point a circle. You have to acquire a
deep, inner understanding of this fact.
But
now, this is really the only way to come to a true understanding of
the human being! You remember the drawing I made for you, of the
metabolism-and-limbs man and the head man
(see
Figure 1.).
That drawing was nothing
else than a realistic impression or record of what you have before
you now in this simple figure for meditation. In the human being it
becomes actual reality; the I-point of the head becomes in the limb
man the circle naturally, with modifications. Adopting this
line of approach, trying, that is, to understand man inwardly, you
will learn to understand the whole of man. You must, first of all, be
quite clear in your mind that these two figures, these two
conceptions, are one and the same, are not at all different from one
another. They only look different from outside. There is a
yellow circle; here it is too! There is a blue point;
here it is too! Why do they look different? Because that
drawing is a diagram of the head, and this a diagram of
the body. When the point claims a place for itself in the body, it
becomes the spinal cord. It makes its way in here
| Figure 5 Click image for large view | |
and then the part it plays in the head organisation is continued in the
spinal cord. There you have the inner dynamic of the morphology of man.
Taking it as your starting point, you will be able, by meditation, to
build up a true anatomy, a true physiology. And then you will acquire
the inner intuition that can perceive in how far the upper and lower
jaws are limbs; for you will begin to see in the head a complete
organism in itself, sitting up there on the top of the human being,
an organism whose limbs are dwarfed and have in process of
deformation turned into jaws. And you will come to a clear
perception of how teeth and toes are in polarity to one another. For
you have only to look at the attachments of the jawbones, and you can
see it all there before you the stunted toes, the stunted
hands and feet.
But,
my dear friends, meditation that employs such pictures as I have been
giving can never take its course in the kind of mood that would allow
us to feel: Now I am going to settle down to a blissful time of
meditation; it will be like sinking into a snug, warm nest! No, the
feeling must be continually present in us that we are taking the
plunge into reality that we are grasping hold of
reality.
Devotion
to little things yes, to the very smallest of all! We
must not omit to cultivate this interest in very little things. The
tip of the ear, the paring of a finger-nail, a single human hair
should be every bit as interesting to us as Saturn, Sun and Moon. For
really and truly in one human hair everything else is comprised; a
person who becomes bald loses a whole cosmos! What we see externally
we can verily create it inwardly, if only we achieve that
overcoming which is essential to a life of meditation. But we shall
never achieve it so long as any vestige of vanity is allowed to
remain and vestiges of vanity lurk in every corner and
crevice of the soul. Therefore is it so urgent, if you want to become
real educators, and especially educators of backward children, that
you should cultivate, with the utmost humility, this devotion in the
matter of little things. And when you have made a beginning in this
way in your own sphere, you can afterwards go on to awaken in other
circles of the Youth Movement this same devotion to little things.
And
then it will indeed become possible for you to receive, for example,
indications that are afterwards verified from external evidence
as happened, you remember, in the case we are considering. And here I
must say in connection with this very case, I have occasion to find
grave fault. The same kind of thing happens only too often in
connection with the various undertakings that have been begun within
our anthroposophical movement. The situation was as follows. Here was
a girl concerning whom I told you that a kind of abnormality must
have occurred in her development between the third and fourth year.
You question the mother, and the mother confirms that it was so. What
did you do then? Please tell me, honestly and sincerely: What did you
do, when the mother confirmed the fact? (Silence.) Please be
esoterically honest and tell me the truth, you three: what did you
do? (Silence.) If you had done the right thing, you would now be
telling me: We danced and jumped until we made a hole in the
ceiling! And the after-effect of this jumping for joy would be
still expressing itself today and not merely in words, it
would be shining out from you like a light.
That
is what you need enthusiasm in the experience of truth.
This enthusiasm is an absolute sine qua non: you cannot get on
without it. For years it has been so terribly painful to me, the way
the members of the anthroposophical movement stand there as if they
were rooted to the spot and the young too, almost as much as
the old. But now consider what it means, That they can stand there so
impassively. Look at Nietzsche! What a different sort of fellow he
was even if he did get ill from it! He made his Zarathustra
become a dancer. Can't you become dancers in the sense
Nietzsche meant it? Why, you should be leading lives of joy
deep inner joy in the truth! There is nothing in the world more
delightful, nothing more fascinating, than the experience of truth.
There you have an esotericism that is far more genuine, far more
significant than the esotericism that goes about with a long face.
Before everything else and long before you begin to talk
about having a mission there must be this
living inner experience of truth.
The
girl had, when three or four years old, an occult fever. It is even
called that in the medical world one of those instances where
medicine has retained an earlier form of speech. When a doctor does
not know what is the cause of a fever, he calls it an occult
fever. This occult fever, then, made its appearance. During the
period round about the third and fourth years, the astral body was
particularly weak. The physical body and the ether body reacted to
this and developed too strongly; and then the astral body was unable
to keep up with them. It is exceedingly important that we take
cognisance first of all of this fact: at the age of three the growth
of the astral body suffered a significant check, the child's astral
body became stunted and cramped within itself. I must come to its
aid. It must receive help to make up for what has been lost; and this
help can be given through education, by awakening the child's
interest in many directions. Tell me now, how has it been with this
girl at school?
(S.:
We are not having the girl with us in the Home, she will come
only for treatment. She was in a school for giving special help to
backward children up to the beginning of her sixteenth year, and can
read and write, and work with numbers up to about a thousand. In all
other respects we have really no knowledge of the girl, we had her
there only in order for you to see her. Enema containing nicotiana
was prescribed.)
It will be important to treat this girl with Curative Eurythmy.
(See .)
As
a result of the stunting of the astral body, a strong tendency to
deformation has, you see, made its appearance in the upper organism.
The child has about her an extraordinarily animal look, the reason
being that all that part which belongs to the organs of mastication
is deformed. We have already been making very careful tests here in
the Clinic of the influence of nicotiana juice in counteracting
deformation; and this girl is just a case in point, where it will be
able to do its good work. So you see it will be possible right away
to begin slowly to make some progress. The nicotiana
juice is given by the mouth, to start with; and then one has to watch
carefully one must acquire an eye for such things to
see whether the organs of mastication are beginning to come more
under the control of the organism. For, as it is, the organs of
mastication lie almost entirely outside the realm of the child's
control. They just hang there limp. The child can thus be
treated with nicotiana juice given by the mouth in suitable decimal
of dilution, beginning with the sixth and going up to the fifteenth.
If it should turn out that this does not work strongly enough, we
shall have to resort to injection of nicotiana juice in a high
potency into the circulation, so that it may make direct contact
there with the astral body and enable us to achieve in this way what
we failed to achieve when we administered nicotiana juice by
ingestion.
I
have also a further suggestion to make. The nicotiana juice is
intended to work within the astral body and remain there, and it will
perhaps be good if we try to prevent its influence from entering too
powerfully into the ego organisation if we try, that is, to
arrest it before it reaches the ego organisation. This result can be
induced by giving not often, perhaps only once a week
a weak sulphur bath.
Tomorrow
we will speak about the other cases that you have at Lauenstein, and
I shall be particularly glad to be able to consider with you the
interesting phenomenon of albinism, which we have opportunity
to study in two of your children. One of them is fifteen years old
and the other a much younger sister of hers. (Dr. Steiner asked Dr.
Vreede [the original leader of the Mathematical-Astronomical Section
at the Goetheanum] if she had drawn their horoscopes, and she handed
them to him. The dates were 6th December, 1909, approximately 4 a.m.,
and 18th May, 1921, approximately 3 a.m., both at Jena.) How does
Uranus stand? Did you not find any special constellations? (Dr.
Vreede replied that she had namely with Uranus and Neptune.
In the case of the elder girl, Neptune was in opposition to Uranus.)
Such
children always show two main characteristic peculiarities: fair
hair; and poor sight, with the variation in the eyes. These are the
essential phenomena of albinism. No more than a superficial study is
required to discover that in albinos we have to do with an
organisation that is very feeble at assimilating iron, but on the
other hand assimilates sulphur with the greatest ease. The
organisation resists iron; it resists dealing with it, and this
applies especially to the periphery of the body; assimilation of iron
stops short of the periphery. Sulphur, on the other hand, is driven
to the periphery; and not only so, but driven even out beyond it.
That is how it comes about that in the region of the hair, you see,
all around, a sulphur-aura, which pales and bleaches the hair and
takes the strength out of it. And in the eyes (which are formed
comparatively independently, being built into the organism from
without, in the embryo time) in the eyes you have a still
more striking manifestation of a sulphur-aura. Here it has the effect
of fairly forcing the eyes to betake themselves out of the etheric
into the astral. In such children we see the eye plucked right out of
its grotto, the etheric body of the eye left
disregarded and its astral body very much to the fore and fully
engaged.
Very
important questions arise at this point. If we consider the forming
of man, we find that he stands in connection on the one hand with the
telluric forces that divulge themselves to us in the substances of
the earth, and on the other hand, with the whole cosmos. He is
dependent on both. Both sets of forces are present in the individual
process of evolution, as well as also in the stream of inheritance.
Let us take first, in considering these two children, the stream of
inheritance. Neither in the case of the father nor of the mother is
there any indication of albinism. They are both perfectly normal
human beings. There was however somewhere in the antecedents
was it a grandmother, of whom it is reported that she had signs of
albinism? (Frl. Dr. K.: It was a sister of the mother.)
An aunt, then. Albinism has been known in the family; that is all
that need concern us at the moment. A tendency to albinism is present
in the antecedents. And did you not tell me that there had been other
cases in the Saal region, also at Jena? (Frl. Dr. K.: Yes,
two children; and one adult, aged thirty-two, who is already married.
Of these three, in only one case had there been albinism before in
the family history.) It would seem, therefore, that albinism
is in some way endemic to a certain part of the country, but meets
also with many counter-influences. And so in fact it makes its
appearance quite sporadically! Only under certain circumstances will
an albino be born there. The equation will immediately suggest
itself: How does it come about that an albino is born in a particular
territory?
In
the case of an albino we have, as we have seen, a sulphurisation
process working outwards, so that little sulphur islets occur in the
aura, in the periphery. And now we look round in the native
environment of the children to see where we can find sulphur. The
whole valley of the Saal abounds in iron sulphide. Iron and sulphur
are thus present in combination. You can study first the presence of
iron in the neighbourhood, and then again the presence of sulphur;
and you can take special note of the whereabouts of the beautiful
pyrites (iron sulphide). These delicate and lovely cubes of pyrites
with their beautiful golden gleam are a characteristic product of the
valley of the Saale. Other regions nearby yield gypsum. Gypsum is, as
you know, calcium sulphate with 20 per cent water. So that here again
we have an opportunity to study sulphur this time in
combination with calcium. This kind of study of the soil will throw
light for us on all that lives in the atmosphere etc.; and so we
shall have first of all to give ourselves to the study of that which
comes out of the ground and is connected with the absorption of
sulphur and iron. For we have here a territory that is also very rich
in iron, and the question arises: How does this opposite relationship
come about in this territory in regard to earth and man, in the earth
has a great power of attraction for iron, while the human
being cannot attract iron at all, or only with difficulty? What
constellations must be present to cause the human being to be
particularly disposed to reject the iron and accept the sulphur?
Here
we come into the realm of the cosmic; we have to set about
investigating the constellations that were present at birth (we
cannot of course do it for conception). And this will lead us to ask
whether there were not in the case of these children who are albinos,
quite special constellations, constellations moreover that can only
seldom occur. We shall have to find what we can learn, not from the
planets that move more quickly, but from the constellations of the
planets that take a long time to revolve, such as Saturn and Uranus.
You see, therefore, to what kind of questions such cases will lead
us. We must first find the right questions to ask; when once we have
the questions, then we are ready to begin our study.
(See .)
Now,
for these children also, I would like to prescribe a little course of
treatment, basing it on the indications I have given today. We will
talk of that tomorrow.
I
gather from a remark that was made to me this morning, that you are
wanting something more than is contained in the lectures. These (you
feel) go too much in the direction of devotion to detail
too much, that is, in the direction that you need! But I am
really entirely ready to meet you in this matter, and propose to use
here the new method I have been using with the workmen at the
Goetheanum. For there I have allowed it gradually to come to this
that I ask them on what I am to speak; so that, ever since a
certain date, the workmen themselves have been specifying the themes
they want dealt with in the lectures. And now they can never complain
that they do not get lectures on subjects they want to hear about.