III
HEN
we observe how life takes its course around us, how it throws
its waves into our inner life, into everything we are destined to
feel, to suffer or to delight in during our present existence on the
earth, we can think of several groups or kinds of experiences.
As regards our own
faculties and talents, we find, to begin with, that when we succeed
in something or other, we may say: being what we are, it is quite
natural and understandable that we should succeed in this or that
case. But certain failures, perhaps just those that must be called
misfortune and calamity, — may also become intelligible when
viewed in the whole setting of our nature.
In such cases we may
not, perhaps, always be able to prove exactly how this or that
failure is connected with our own shortcomings in one direction or
another. But when we are obliged to say of ourselves in a general
way: In many respects you were a superficial character in your
present life, so it is understandable that in certain circumstances
you were bound to fail — then we may not immediately perceive
the connection between the failure and the shortcomings, but
generally speaking we shall realise that if we have been frivolous
and superficial, success cannot always be at our finger-tips.
From what has been
said you may think that some kind of causal connection could have
been evident between what inevitably happened and your faculties or
incompetencies. But there are many things in life where, however
conscientiously we set to work, we are not able at once to connect
success or failure with these faculties or shortcomings; how we
ourselves were at fault or why we deserved success, remains a
mystery. In short, when thinking more of our inner life we shall be
able to distinguish two groups of experiences: in the case of the one
group we are aware of the causes of our successes and failures; in
the case of the second group we shall not be able to detect any such
connection, and that we failed in one particular instance and
succeeded in another will seem to be more or less chance. To begin
with, we will bear in mind that there is ample evidence in life of
this latter group of facts and experiences, and will return to it
later.
In contrast to what
has just been said, we can think more about our destiny in outer
life. There again, two groups of facts will have to be kept in mind.
There are cases where it is inwardly clear to us that in connection
with events that befall us—not, therefore, those we ourselves
initiated — we did certain things and consequently are to blame
for these happenings. But of another group of experiences we shall be
very liable to say that we can see no connection whatever with what
we resolved, what we intended. These are events of which it is
usually said that they broke in upon our life as if by chance; they
seem to have no connection whatever with anything we ourselves have
brought about.
It is this second
group of experiences in their relation to our inner life that we
shall now consider, that is to say, those happenings where we are
unable to perceive any direct or immediate connection with our
faculties and shortcomings — outer events, therefore, which we
call chance events, of which we cannot at the outset perceive how
they could have been brought about by any preceding factor. By way of
test, a kind of experiment can be made with these two groups of
experiences. The experiment entails no obligations; it is a question
merely of putting to the test what will now be characterised.
The experiment can
take the following form. — We ask ourselves: How would it be if
we were to build up in thought a kind of imaginary human being,
saying of him just those things between which we can see no
connection by means of our own faculties; we endow this imaginary man
with the qualities and faculties which have led, in our own case, to
these incomprehensible happenings. We there imagine a man possessing
faculties of such a kind that he will inevitably succeed or fail in
matters where we cannot say the same in connection with our own
shortcomings or faculties. We imagine him as one who has quite
deliberately brought about the events which seem to have come into
our life by chance.
Simple examples can
serve as the starting-point here. Suppose a tile from a roof has
fallen upon and injured our shoulders. We shall be inclined to
attribute this to chance. But to begin with as an experiment, we now
build up in thought an imaginary man who acts in the following
strange way. He climbs on a roof, quickly loosens a tile, but only to
the point where it still has a certain hold; then he runs quickly to
the ground so that when the tile has become quite detached, it falls
on his shoulders. The same can be done in the case of all events
which seem to have come into our life by chance. We build up an
imaginary man who is guilty of or brings about all those things of
which in ordinary life we cannot see how they are connected with
us.
Such procedure may
seem at first to be nothing but a play of fancy. No obligation is
incurred by it, but one remarkable thing emerges. When we have
imagined such a man with the qualities referred to, he makes a very
memorable impression upon us. We cannot get rid of the picture we
have thus created in thought; although the picture seems so
artificial, it fascinates us, gives the impression that it must,
after all, have something to do with ourselves. The feeling we have
of this imaginary thought-man accounts for this. If we steep
ourselves in this picture it will most certainly not leave us free. A
remarkable process then takes shape within our soul, an inner process
that is enacted in human beings all the time. We may think of
something, make a resolution; for this we need something we once
knew, and we use all sorts of artificial means for recalling it. This
effort to call up into memory something that has escaped us is, of
course, a process in the life of soul —
“recollection” as it is usually called. All the thoughts
we summon up to help us to remember something are auxiliary thoughts.
Just try for once to realise how many and how often such thoughts
have to be used and dropped again, in order to get at what we want to
know. The purpose of these auxiliary thoughts is to open the way to
the recollection needed at the moment.
In exactly the same,
but in a far more comprehensive sense, the ‘thought-man’
described represents an auxiliary process. He never leaves us alone;
he is astir in us in such a way that we realise: he lives in us as a
thought, as something that goes on working, that is actually
transformed within us into the idea, the thought, which now flashes
up suddenly into our soul in the ordinary process of recollection; it
is something that overwhelms us. It is as though something says to
us: this being cannot remain as he is, he transforms something within
you, he becomes alive, he changes! This forces itself upon us in such
a way that the imaginary man whispers to us: This is something that
has to do with another earth-existence, not with the present one. A
kind of recollection of another earth-existence — that is the
thought which quite definitely arises. It is really more a feeling
than a thought, a sentient experience, but of such a kind that we
feel as though what arises in the soul is what we ourselves once were
in an earlier incarnation on this earth.
Anthroposophy,
regarded in its entirety, is by no means merely a sum-total of
theories, of presentations of facts, but it gives us directives and
indications for achieving our aspirations. Anthroposophy says: If you
carry out certain exercises you will be led nearer to the point where
recollection is easier for you. It can also be said —
and this is drawn from the sphere of actual experience: If you adopt
this procedure you get an inner impression, a sentient impression, of
the person you were in an earlier life. We there achieve what may be
called an extension of memory. What discloses itself to us is, to
begin with, a thought-reality only, as long as we are building up the
imaginary man described. But this imaginary man does not remain a
thought-being. He transforms himself into sentient impressions,
impressions in the life of soul, and while this is going on we
realise that this experience has something to do with our earlier
incarnation. Our memory extends to this earlier incarnation.
In this present
incarnation we remember those things in which our thoughts
participated. But in ordinary life, what has played into our life of
feeling does not so easily remain vivid and alive. If you try to
think back to something that caused you great pain ten or twenty
years ago, you will be able to recall the mental picture of it
without difficulty; you will be able to cast your thoughts back to
what then took place; but you cannot recapture the actual, immediate
experience of the pain felt at the time. The pain fades, the
remembrance of it streams into the life of ideation. What has here
been described is a memory in the soul, a memory belonging to the
life of feeling. And as such we actually feel our earlier
incarnation. There does, in fact, arise what may be called a
remembrance of earlier incarnations. It is not possible immediately
to perceive what is playing over into the present incarnation, what
is actually the bearer of the remembrance of earlier incarnations.
Consider how intimately our thoughts are united with what gives
expression to them, with our speech and language. Language is the
embodiment of the world of thoughts and ideas. In each life, every
human being has to learn the language anew. A child of the very
greatest philologist or linguist has to learn his mother-tongue by
dint of effort. There has yet to be a case of a grammar-school boy
learning Greek with ease because he rapidly remembered the Greek he
had spoken in earlier incarnations!
The poet Hebbel
jotted down one or two thoughts for the plan of a drama he intended
to write. It is a pity that he did not actually carry out this
project, for it would have been an extremely interesting drama. The
theme was to have been that Plato, reincarnated as a school-boy,
received the very lowest marks for his understanding of the Plato of
old! We need not remind ourselves that some teachers are severe, or
pedantic. We realise that what Hebbel jotted down is due to the fact
that the element of thought, which is also in play in the mental
pictures of immediate experiences, is limited more or less to the
present incarnation. As we have now heard, the first impression of
the earlier incarnation comes as a direct memory in the life of
feeling, as a new kind of memory. The impression we get when this
memory arises from the imaginary man we have created in thought, is
more like a feeling, but of such a kind that we realise: the
impression comes from some being who once existed and who you
yourself were. Something that is like a feeling arising in an act of
remembrance is what comes to us as a first impression of the earlier
incarnation.
The creation of an
imaginary man in thought is simply a means of proving to us that this
means is something that transforms itself into an impression in the
life of soul, or the life of feeling. Everyone who comes to
Anthroposophy has the opportunity of carrying out what has now been
described. And if he does so he will actually receive an inner
impression of which — to use a different illustration—he
might speak as follows. I once saw a landscape; I have forgotten what
it actually looked like, but I know it delighted me! If this happened
during the present life, the landscape will no longer make a very
vivid impression of feeling; but if the impression of the landscape
came from an earlier incarnation the impression will be particularly
vivid. In the form of a feeling we can obtain a very vivid impression
of our earlier incarnation. And if we then observe such impressions
objectively, we may at times experience something like a feeling of
bitterness, bitter-sweetness or acidity from what emerges as the
transformation of the imaginary thought-man. This bitter-sweet or
some such feeling is the impression made upon us by our earlier
incarnation; it is an impression of feeling, an impression in the
life of soul.
The endeavour has now
been made to draw attention to something that can ultimately promote
in every human being a kind of certainty of having existed in an
earlier life — certainty through having engendered a feeling of
inner impressions which he knows were most definitely not received in
this present life. Such an impression, however, arises the same way
as a recollection arises in ordinary life. We may now ask: How can
one know that the impression is actually a recollection? There it can
only be said that to ‘prove’ such a thing is not
possible. But the process is the same as it is elsewhere in life,
when we remember something and are in a sound state of mind. We know
there that what arises within us in thought is actually related to
something we have experienced. The experience itself gives the
certainty. What we picture in the way indicated gives us the
certainty that the impression which arises in the soul is not related
to anything that had to do with us in the present life but to
something in the earlier life.
We have there called
forth in ourselves by artificial means, something that brings us into
connection with our earlier life. We can also use many different
kinds of experiences as tests, and eventually awaken in ourselves
feelings of earlier lives.
Here again, from a
different aspect, the experiences we have in life can be divided into
groups. In the one group may be included the sufferings, sorrows and
obstacles we have encountered; in a second group may be included the
joys, happinesses and advantages in our life. Again as a test, we can
take the following standpoint, and say: Yes, we have had these
sorrows, these sufferings. Being what we are in this incarnation,
with normal life running its course, our sorrows and sufferings are
dire misfortunes, something that we would gladly avoid. By way of a
test, let us not take this attitude but assume that for a
certain reason we ourselves brought about these sorrows, sufferings
and obstacles, realising that owing to our earlier lives — if
there have actually been such lives — we have become in a sense
more imperfect because of what we have done. After all, we do not
only become more perfect through the successive incarnations but
also, in a certain respect, more imperfect. When we have affronted or
injured some human being, are we not more imperfect than we were
before? We have not only affronted him, we have taken something away
from ourself; as a personality taken as a whole, our worth would be
greater if we had not done this thing. Many such actions are marked
on our score and our imperfection remains because of them. If we have
affronted some human being and desire to regain our previous worth,
what must happen? We must make compensation for the affront, we must
place into the world a counterbalancing deed, we must discover some
means of compelling ourselves to overcome something. And if we think
in this way about our sufferings and sorrows, we shall be able in
many instances to say: These sufferings and sorrows, if we surmount
them, give us strength to overcome our imperfections. Through
suffering we can make progress.
In normal life we do
not think in this way; we set our face against suffering. But we can
also say the following: Every sorrow, every suffering, every obstacle
in life should be an indication of the fact that we have within us a
man who is cleverer than we ourselves are. Although the man we
ourselves are is the one of whom we are conscious, we regard him for
a time as being the less clever; within us we have a cleverer man who
slumbers in the depths of our soul. With our ordinary consciousness
we resist sorrows and sufferings but the cleverer man leads us
towards these sufferings in defiance of our consciousness because by
overcoming them we can strip off something. He guides us to the
sorrows and sufferings, directs us to undergo them. This may, to
begin with, be an oppressive thought but it carries with it no
obligation; we can, if we so wish, use it once only, by way of trial.
We can say: Within us there is a cleverer man who guides us to
sufferings and sorrows, to something that in our conscious life we
should like most of all to have avoided. We think of him as the
cleverer man. In this way we are led to the realisation which many
find disturbing, namely that this cleverer man guides us always
towards what we do not like. This, then, we will take as an
assumption: There is a cleverer man within us who guides us to what
we do not like in order that we may make progress.
But let us still do
something else. Let us take our joys, our advantages, our
happinesses, and say to ourselves, again by way of trial: How would
it be if you were to conceive the idea—irrespectively of how it
tallies with the actual reality — that you have simply not
deserved these happinesses, these advantages; they have come to you
through the Grace of higher, spiritual Powers. It need not be so in
every case, but we will assume, by way of test, that all our sorrows
and sufferings were brought about because the cleverer man within us
guided us to them, because we recognise that in consequence of our
imperfections they were necessary for us and that we can overcome
them only through such experiences. And then we assume the opposite:
That our happinesses are not due to our own merit but have been
vouchsafed to us by spiritual Powers.
Again this thought
may be a bitter pill for the vain to swallow, but if, as a test, a
man is capable of forming such a thought with all intensity, he will
be led to the feeling — because again it undergoes a
transformation and in so far as it lacks effectiveness, rectifies
itself: — In you there lives something that has nothing to do
with your ordinary consciousness, that lies deeper than anything you
have experienced consciously in this life; there is a cleverer man
within you who gladly turns to the eternal, divine-spiritual Powers
pervading the world. Then it becomes an inner certainty that behind
the outer there is an inner, higher individuality. Through such
thought-exercises we grow to be conscious of the eternal, spiritual
core of our being, and this is of extraordinary importance. So there
again we have something which it lies in our power to carry out.
In every respect
Anthroposophy can be a guide, not only towards knowledge of the
existence of another world, but towards feeling oneself as a citizen
of another world, as an individuality who passes through many
incarnations.
There are experiences
of still a third kind. Admittedly it will be more difficult to make
use of these experiences for the purpose of gaining an inner
knowledge of karma and reincarnation. But even if what will now be
said is difficult, it can again be used again by way of trial. And if
it is honestly applied to external life it will dawn upon us clearly
— as a probability to begin with, but then as an ever-growing
certainty — that our present life is connected with an earlier
one.
Let us assume that in
our present life between birth and death we have already reached or
passed our thirtieth year. (Those below that age may also have
corresponding experiences). We reflect about the fact that somewhere
near our thirtieth year we were brought into contact with some person
in the outside world, that between the ages of thirty and forty many
different connections have been established with human beings in the
outside world. These connections seem to have been made during the
most mature stage of our life so that our whole being was involved in
them. Reflection discloses that it is indeed so. But reflection based
on the principles and knowledge of Spiritual Science can lead us to
realise the truth of what will now be said — not as the outcome
of mere reflection but of spiritual-scientific investigation. What I
am saying has not been discovered merely through logical thinking; it
has been established by spiritual-scientific research, but logical
thinking can confirm the facts and find them reasonable. We know how
the several members of man's constitution unfold in the course
of life: in the seventh year, the ether-body; in the fourteenth year,
the astral body; in the twenty-first year the sentient-soul, in the
twenty-eighth year the intellectual or mind-soul and in the
thirty-fifth year the consciousness-soul (spiritual soul). Reflecting
on this, we can say: In the period from the thirtieth year to the
fortieth year we are concerned with the unfolding of the mind-soul
and the spiritual soul.
The mind-soul and the
spiritual soul are those forces in our nature which bring us into the
closest contact of all with the outer physical world, for they unfold
at the very age in life when our intercourse with that world is more
active than at any other time. In earliest childhood, the forces
belonging to our physical body are directed, determined, activated,
by what is still entirely enclosed within us. The causal element
engendered in previous incarnations, whatever went with us through
the Gate of Death, the spiritual forces we have garnered —
everything we bring with us from the earlier life works and weaves in
the upbuilding of our physical body. It is at work unceasingly and
invisibly from within outwards; as the years go by, this influence
diminishes and the period of life approaches when the old forces have
produced the body and we confront the world with a finished organism;
what we bear within us has come to expression in our external body.
At about the thirtieth year — it may be somewhat earlier or
somewhat later — we confront the world in the most strongly
physical sense; in our intercourse with the world we are connected
more closely with the physical plane than during any other period of
life. We may think that the relationships in life into which we now
enter are more physically intelligible than any others, but the fact
is that such relationships are least of all connected with the forces
which work and weave in us from birth onwards. Nevertheless we may
take it for granted that at about the age of thirty we are not led by
chance to people who are destined, precisely then, to appear in our
environment. We must far rather assume that there too our karma is at
work, that these people too have something to do with one of our
earlier incarnations.
Facts of Spiritual
Science investigated at various times show that very often the people
with whom we come into contact somewhere around our thirtieth year
are related to us in such a way that in most cases we were connected
with them at the beginning of the immediately preceding incarnation
— or it may have been earlier still — as parents, or
brothers or sisters. At first this seems a strange and astonishing
fact. Although it need not inevitably be so, many cases indicate to
spiritual-scientific investigation that in very truth our parents, or
those who were by our side at the beginning of our previous life, who
gave us our place in the physical world but from whom in later life
we grew away, are karmically connected with us in such a way that in
our new life we are not again guided to them in early childhood but
only when we have come most completely on to the physical plane. It
need not always be exactly like this, for spiritual-scientific
research shows very frequently that it is not until a subsequent
incarnation that those who are then our parents, brothers or sisters,
or blood-relations in general, are the people we found around us in
the present incarnation at about the time of our thirtieth year. So
the acquaintances we make somewhere about the age of thirty in any
one incarnation may have been, or will be, persons related to us by
blood in a previous or subsequent incarnation. It is therefore useful
to say to oneself: The personalities with whom life brings you in
contact in your thirties were once around you as parents or brothers
and sisters or you can anticipate that in one of your next
incarnations they will have this relationship with you.
The reverse also
holds good. If we think of those personalities whom we choose least
of all voluntarily through forces suitable for application on the
physical plane — that is to say, our parents, our brothers and
sisters who were around us at the beginning of life — if we
think of these personalities we shall very often find that precisely
those who accompany us into life from childhood onwards were
deliberately chosen by us in another incarnation to be near
us while we were in the thirties. In other words, in the middle of
the preceding life we ourselves chose out those who in the present
life have become our parents, brothers or sisters.
So the remarkable and
very interesting fact emerges that our relationships with the
personalities with whom we come to be associated are not the same in
the successive incarnations; also that we do not encounter these
people at the same age in life as previously. Neither can it be said
that exactly the opposite holds good. Furthermore it is not
the personalities who were with us at the end of an earlier life who
are connected, in a different incarnation, with the beginning of our
life, but those with whom we were associated in the middle period of
life. So neither those personalities with whom we are together at the
beginning of life, nor those with us at its end, but those with whom
we come into contact in the middle of life, were around us as
blood-relations at the beginning of an earlier incarnation. Those who
were around us then, when our life was beginning, appear in the
middle of our present life; and of those who were around us at the
beginning of our present life we can anticipate that we shall find
ourselves together with them in the middle of one of our subsequent
incarnations, that they will then come into connection with us as
freely chosen companions in life. Karmic relationships are
indeed mysterious.
What I have now said
is the outcome of spiritual-scientific investigation. But I repeat:
if, in the way opened up by this investigation, we reflect about the
inner connections between the beginning of life in one of our
incarnations and the middle of life in another, we shall realise that
this is not void of sense or usefulness. The other aspect is that
when such things are brought to our notice and we adopt an
intelligent attitude to them, they bring clarity and illumination.
Life is clarified if we do not simply accept such things passively
— not to say dull-wittedly; it is clarified if we try to grasp,
to understand, what comes to us in life in such a way that the
relationships which are bound to remain elusive as long as karma is
only spoken of in the abstract, become concretely perceptible.
It is useful to
reflect about the question: Why is it that in the middle of our life
we are actually driven by karma, seemingly with complete mental
awareness, to form some acquaintanceship which does not appear to
have been made quite independently and objectively? The reason is
that such persons were related to us by blood in the earlier life and
our karma leads them to us now because we have some connection with
them.
Whenever we reflect
in this way about the course of our own life, we shall see that light
is shed upon it. Although we may be mistaken in some particular
instance, and even if we err in our conclusions ten times over,
nevertheless we may well hit upon the truth in regard to someone who
comes into our ken. And when such reflections lead us to say:
Somewhere or other I have met this person — thus thought is
like a signpost pointing the way to other things which in different
circumstances would not have occurred to us and which, taken in their
whole setting, give us ever-growing certainty of the correctness of
particular facts.
Karmic connections
are not of such a nature that they can be discerned in one sudden
flash. The highest, most important facts of knowledge regarding life,
those that really do shed light upon it, must be acquired slowly and
by degrees. This is not a welcome thought. It is easier to believe
that some flash of illumination might enable it to be said: “In
an earlier life I was associated with this or that person,” or
“I myself was this or that individual.” It may be
tiresome to think that all this must be a matter of knowledge slowly
acquired, but that is the case nevertheless. Even if we merely
cherish the belief that it might possibly be so, investigation must
be repeated time and time again before the belief will become
certainty. Even in cases where probability grows constantly stronger,
investigation leads us farther. We erect barricades against the
spiritual world if we allow ourselves to form instantaneous judgments
in these matters.
Try to ponder over
what has been said to-day about the acquaintanceships made in the
middle period of life and their connection with individuals who were
near to us in a preceding incarnation. This will lead to very
fruitful thoughts, especially if taken together with what is said in
the book,
The Education of the Child in the light of Anthroposophy.
It will then be unambiguously clear that the
outcome of your reflection tallies with what is set forth in that
book.
But an earnest
warning must be added to what has been said to-day. The genuine
investigator guards against drawing conclusions; he lets the things
come to him of themselves. Once they are there, he first puts them to
the test of ordinary logic. Repetition will then be impossible of
something that recently happened to me, not for the first time, and
is very characteristic of the attitude adopted to Anthroposophy
to-day. A very clever man — I say this without irony, fully
recognising that he has a brilliant mind — said the following
to me: “When I read what is contained in your book,
An Outline of Occult Science,
I am bound to admit that it seems so
logical, to tally so completely with other manifest facts in the
world, that I cannot help coming to the conclusion that these things
could also be discovered through pure reflection; they need not
necessarily be the outcome of super-sensible investigation. The things
said in this book are in no way questionable or dubious; they tally
with the reality.” I was able to assure this gentleman of my
conviction that it would not have been possible for me to discover
them through mere reflection, nor that with great respect for his
cleverness, could I believe he would have discovered them by that
means alone. It is absolutely true that whatever in the domain of
Spiritual Science is capable of being logically comprehended simply
cannot be discovered by mere reflection! The fact that some
matter can be put to the test of logic and then grasped, should be no
ground for doubting its spiritual-scientific origin. On the contrary,
I am sure it must be reassuring to know that the communications made
by Spiritual Science can be recognised through logical reflection as
being unquestionably correct; it cannot possibly be the ambition of
the spiritual investigator to make illogical statements for the sake
of inspiring belief! As you see, the spiritual investigator himself
cannot take the standpoint that he discovers such things through
reflection. But if we reflect about things that have been discovered
by the methods of Spiritual Science, they may seem so logical, even
too logical to allow us to believe any longer that they actually come
from spiritual-scientific sources. And this applies to everything
said to have been the outcome of genuine spiritual-scientific
investigation.
If, to begin with,
the things that have been said to-day seem grotesque, try for once to
apply logical thinking to them. Truly, if spiritual facts had not led
me to these things, I should not have deduced them from ordinary,
logical thinking; but once they have been discovered they can be put
to the test of logic. And then it will be found that the more
meticulously and conscientiously we set about testing them, the more
clearly it will emerge that everything tallies. Even in the case of
matters where accuracy cannot really be tested, from the very way in
which the various factors fit into their settings, it will be found
that they give the impression of being not only in the highest degree
probable, but bordering on certainty — as in the case, for
example, of what has been said about parents and brothers and sisters
in one life and acquaintances made in the middle of another life.
Moreover such certainty proves to be well-founded when things are put
to the test of life itself. In many cases we shall view our own
behaviour and that of others in a quite different light if we
confront someone we meet in the middle period of life, as if, in the
preceding life, the relationship between us had been that of parent,
brother or sister. The whole relationship will thereby become much
more fruitful than if we go through life with drowsy
inattentiveness.
And so we can say:
More and more, Anthroposophy becomes something that does not merely
give us knowledge of life but directives as to how to conceive of
life's relationships in such a way that light will be shed upon
them not only for our own satisfaction, but also for our conduct and
tasks in life. It is important to discard the thought that in this
way we impair a spontaneous response to life. Only the timid, those
who lack a really earnest purpose in life, can believe such a thing.
We, however, must realise that by gaining closer knowledge of life we
make it more fruitful, inwardly richer. What comes to us in life
should be carried, through Anthroposophy, into horizons where all our
forces become more fertile, more full of confidence, a greater
stimulus to hope, than they were before.
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