IN
the last lecture
[Allgemeine Menschenkunde als Grundlage der
Pädagogik, third lecture (the accompanying
course. See Preface).]
I drew your attention to the necessity,
as a point of departure in teaching, for a certain artistic
shaping, to engage the whole being, above all, the
“will-life.” From the discussions which we have
pursued you will see at once why it is important, and you will
see, further, that teaching must be managed so as always to
take into account that man contains a dead, a dying element,
which must be transmuted into something living. When we
approach nature and other realms of the world in a merely
contemplative attitude, by mental pictures, we are in the line
of death; but when we approach nature and other world-beings
with our will, we take part in a process of vivification. As
educators, then, we shall have the task of continually
vivifying dead substance, to protect from total expiration that
quality in man which gravitates towards death; even, in a
sense, to fertilize it with what vivifying element the will can
give rise to. For this reason we must not be afraid of
beginning our work with the child with a certain artistic form
of teaching.
Now
everything which approaches man artistically falls into two
streams — the stream of the plastically formative and the
stream of the musically poetical. These two domains of art,
that of the plastically formative and the musically poetical,
are really poles apart, although precisely through their polar
antithesis they are well able to be reconciled in a higher
synthesis, in a higher unity. You will be familiar, of course,
with the fact that this duality of the artistic element comes
to light even in racial terms during the course of the
evolution of the universe. You need but remember certain
writings by Heinrich Heine for this duality to be evident
— he showed that what proceeded from the Greek people, or
was related to them, that is what grew racially from their
inner nature, is pre-eminently disposed towards the plastically
formative shaping of the world, whereas all that sprang from
the Jewish element is especially disposed to the really musical
element in the world. You find, then, these two streams
racially distributed, and anyone who is sensitive to these
things will very easily be able to trace them in the history of
art. Naturally there are continually arising aspirations,
justified aspirations, to unite the musical with the
plastically formative. But they can only really be
completely united in a perfectly developed Eurhythmy,
where the musical and the visible can become one —
naturally not yet, for we are only at the beginning, but in the
aims and ultimate achievement of Eurhythmy. It must,
therefore, be remembered that the whole harmonious nature
of man contains a plastically formative element towards which
the will-impulse in man inclines. How, then, can we properly
describe this human talent for becoming plastically
creative?
Were we to be purely intellectual beings, were we only to
observe the world through conceptions, we should gradually
become walking corpses. We should, in actual fact, make the
impression here on earth of dying beings. Only through the urge
we feel within us to animate plastically-creatively with the
imagination what is dying in concepts, do we save
ourselves from this dying. You must beware of wanting to reduce
everything to unity in an abstract way, if you wish to be true
educators. Now you must not say: “We are not to cultivate
the death-giving element in man, we are to avoid cultivating
the conceptual, the thought-world in the human being.” In
the psychic spiritual realm that would result in the same error
as if doctors, turning into great pedagogues, were to
contemplate the course of civilization and to say: “The
bones represent the side of death in man; let us, then, protect
man from this dying element, let us try to keep his bones
alive, soft.” The opinion of such doctors would end in
giving everyone rickets. It always implies a false principle to
proceed to say, as many theosophists and anthroposophists like
to do, if there is any talk of Ahriman and Lucifer
[R. Steiner,
Outlines of Occult Science,
Philosophical-Anthroposophical Press of the Goetheanum, Dornach,
also the
Four Mystery Plays.]
and their influences on
human evolution; they say these things harm human nature,
therefore we must beware of them. But that would be equivalent
to excluding man from all the elements which should form his
constitution. In the same way, we cannot prevent the
cultivation of the conceptual element; we must cultivate it,
but at the same time we must not neglect to approach human
nature with the plastically formative. In this way there
results the desired unity. It does not result from the
extinction of the one element, but from the cultivation of
both, side by side. In this respect people to-day cannot think
in terms of unity. For this reason, too, they do not understand
the Threefold State.
[R. Steiner,
The Threefold State.]
In social life the only right solution is for the spiritual
life, economic life, and the life of rights, to stand side by
side and for their union to take place of itself, creatively,
and not through human abstract organization. Only imagine what
it would mean if people were to say: “As the head is a
unity, and the rest of the body, too, the human body is really
an anomaly; we ought to evolve the head from the rest of the
body and allow it to move freely in the world!” We only
act in accordance with nature when we allow the whole to grow
out of one-sided aspects.
The
question, then, is to develop the one isolated aspect,
conceptual education. Then the other isolated aspect, the
plastically formative, animates what is developed in the mere
concept. The question here is to elevate these things into
consciousness without losing our naivety, for this age always
annihilates consciousness. There is no need to sacrifice
our naivety if we fashion things concretely, not abstractedly.
For instance, it would be a very good thing from all points of
view to start as early as possible with the plastically
formative, by letting the child live in the world of colour, by
saturating oneself as a teacher with the instructions
given by Goethe in the didactic part of his “Theory of
Colour” (Farbenlehre). What is the basis of the
didactic part of Goethe's Farbenlehre?
[See the
Introduction to Goethe's works on Natural Science, edited by
Rudolf Steiner.]
The secret is that Goethe always imbues each
separate colour with a feeling-shade. He emphasizes, for
instance, the rousing quality of red, he emphasizes not only
what the eye sees, but what the soul experiences in red. In the
same way he lays stress upon the tranquillity, the
self-absorption, experienced by the soul in blue. It is
possible, without jarring on the child's naivety, to introduce
him into the world of colour so that the feeling-shades of the
world of colour issue forth in living experiences. (If,
incidentally, the child gets itself at first thoroughly grubby
it will be a good step in his education if he is trained to get
himself less grubby.)
Begin as early as possible to bring the child in touch with
colours, and in so doing it is a good idea to apply different
colours to a coloured background from those you apply to a
white surface; and try to awaken such experiences in the child
as can only arise from a spiritual scientific
understanding of the world of colour.
[R. Steiner's
Theory of Colour.]
If you work as I have done with a few
friends at the smaller cupola of the Dornach building,
[Wege zu einem neuen Baustil
(“Ways to a New Style in Architecture”)
five lectures by Rudolf Steiner,
with 104 illustrations. The Philosophical-Anthroposophical
Press of the Goetheanum, Dornach, Switzerland.]
you acquire a
living relation to colour. You then discover if, for instance,
you are painting with blue, that the blue colour itself
possesses the power to portray inwardness. We can say, then,
that in painting an angel impelled by his own inwardness
you will feel the spontaneous urge to keep to blue, because the
shading of blue, the light and dark of blue, produces in the
soul the feeling of movement pertaining to the nature of
the soul. A yellow-reddish colour produces in the soul the
experience of lustre, giving a manifestation towards the
external. If, then, the impression is aggressive, if we are
encountered by a warning apparition, if the angel has something
to say to us, if he desires to speak to us from his background,
we express this by shades of yellow and red. In an elementary
fashion we can invite children to understand this living
inwardness of colours.
Then we ourselves must be very profoundly convinced that mere
drawing is something untrue. The truest thing is the experience
of colour; less true is the experience of light and shade, and
the least true is drawing. Drawing as such already approaches
that abstract element present in nature as a process of dying.
We ought really only to draw with the consciousness that we are
essentially drawing dead substance. With colours we should
paint with the consciousness that we are evoking the living
element from what is dead. What, after all, is the horizontal
line? When we simply take a pencil and draw a horizontal line,
we do an abstract, a dead thing, something untrue to nature,
which always has two streams: the dead and the living. We
extract the one trend and affirm that it is nature. But if I
say: “I see green and I see blue, which are different
from each other,” the horizontal line emerges from the
contiguity of the colours and I express a truth. In this way
you will gradually realize that the form of nature really
arises from colour, that therefore the function of drawing is
abstraction. We ought to produce already in the growing child a
proper feeling for these things, because they vivify his whole
soul's being and bring it into a right relation with the
outside world. Our civilization is notoriously sick for lack of
a right relation to the outside world. There is
absolutely no need, I wish to remind you, to return to
one-sided-ness again in teaching. For instance, it will be
quite wise gradually to pass from the purely abstract art which
people produce in their delight in beauty, to concrete art, to
the arts and crafts, for humanity to-day sorely needs truly
artistic productions in the general conditions of civilization.
We have in actual fact reduced ourselves in the course of the
nineteenth century to making furniture to please the eye, for
example to making a chair for the eye, whereas its inherent
character should be to be felt when it is sat on. To that end
it should be fashioned; we should feel the chair; it must not
only be beautiful; its nature must be to be sat on. The whole
fusion of the sense of feeling with the chair, and even the
cultivated sense of feeling — with the way in which the
arms are formed on the chair, etc. — should be expressed
in the chair, in our desire to find support in the chair.
If, therefore, we were to introduce into school-life teaching
in handiwork and manual skill with a decided
technical-industrial bias, we should render the school a great
service. For just imagine what a great cultural problem the
individual who means well to humanity is faced with to-day,
when he sees how, for instance, abstractions are on the point
of inundating modern civilization: there will no longer be even
a residue of beauty in civilization; this will be exclusively
utilitarian! And even if people dream of beauty, they will have
no sense of the compulsion we are under to emphasize more
emphatically than ever the necessity for beauty, because of the
socializing of life towards which we gravitate. This has to be
realized.
There must, therefore, be no reservations with the
plastically formative in teaching. But just as little
must there be reservations in the true experience of that
dynamic element which is expressed in architecture. It is very
easy here to fall into the error of introducing the child too
early to this experience. But, in a sense, even this must
happen; I had addressed a few words to the children of
Münich who were on holiday at Dornach, eighty of them, and
who had had twelve lessons in Eurhythmy from Frau Kisseleff,
[Eurhythmy teacher at the Goetheanum, 1913–27.]
and who were
able to demonstrate what they had learnt to a group of their
staff and Dornach anthroposophists. The children had their
hearts in their work, and at the end of the complete Eurhythmy
performance, which also included demonstrations by our Dornach
Eurhythmists, the children came up and said: “Did you
like our performance too?” They had the real urge to
perform as well. It was a beautiful thing. Now at the request
of the people who had arranged the whole entertainment, I had
to say a few words to the children. It was the evening before
the children were to be taken back again to Münich and
district. I expressly said: “I am saying something to you
now which you do not understand yet. You will only
understand it later. But notice if you hear the word ‘Soul’ in
future, for you cannot understand it yet!” This drawing
of the child's attention to something which he does not yet
understand, which must first mature, is extraordinarily
important. And the principle is false which is so much to the
fore in these days: We are only to impart to the child what he
can at the moment understand — this principle makes
education a dead thing and takes away its living element. For
education is only living when what has been assimilated is
cherished for a time deep in the soul, and then, after a while,
is recalled to the surface. This is very important in education
from seven to fifteen years of age; in these years a great deal
can be introduced tenderly into the child's soul which can only
be understood later. I beg you to feel no scruple at teaching
beyond the child's age and appealing to something which he can
only understand later. The contrary principle has introduced a
deadening element into our pedagogy. But the child must know
that he has to wait. It is one of the feelings we can promote
within the child that he must be ready to wait for a perfect
understanding until much later. For this reason it was not at
all a bad idea in olden times to make the children simply learn
1 ×
1 = 1, 2 × 2 = 4, 3 × 3
= 9, etc., instead of their learning it, as they do to-day,
from the calculating machine. This principle of forcing back
the child's comprehension must be overthrown. It can naturally
only be done with tact, for we must not depart too far from
what the child can love, but he can absorb a great deal of
material, purely on the teacher's authority, for which
understanding only dawns later.
If
you introduce the plastically formative element to the child in
this way you will see that you can vivify much of what is
sapping away life.
The
musical element, which lives in the human being from birth
onwards, and which — as I have already said —
expresses itself particularly in the child's third and
fourth years in a gift for dancing, is essentially an element
of will, potent with life. But, extraordinary as it may sound,
it is true that it contains as it plays its part in the child,
an excessive life, a benumbing life, a life directed against
consciousness. The child's development is very easily brought
by a profoundly musical experience into a certain degree of
reduced consciousness. One must say, therefore: “The
educational value of music must consist in a constant
inter-harmonizing of the Dionysian element springing up in the
human being, with the Apollonian. While the death-giving
element must be vivified by the plastically formative element,
a supremely living power in music must be partially subdued and
toned down so that it does not affect the human being too
profoundly.” This is the feeling with which we should
introduce music to children.
Now
this is the position: Karma develops human nature with a bias
towards one side or the other. This is particularly noticeable
in music. But I want to point out that here it is
over-emphasized. We should not insist too much: This is a
musical child; this one is not musical. Certainly the fact is
there, but to draw from it the conclusion that the
unmusical child must be kept apart from all music and
only the musical children must be given a musical education, is
thoroughly false; even the most unmusical children should be
included in any musical activity. It is right without a doubt,
from the point of view of producing music more and more, only
to encourage the really musical children to appear in public.
But even the unmusical children should be there, developing
sensitiveness, for you will notice that even in the unmusical
child there is a trace of the musical disposition which
is only very deep down and which loving assistance brings
to the surface. That should never be neglected, for it is far
truer than we imagine that, in Shakespeare's words
The
man that hath no music in himself
Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds,
Is fit for treasons, stratagems and spoils; ...
Let no such man be trusted.
[The Merchant of Venice, Act V, Scene I.]
That is a very fundamental truth. Nothing should therefore be
left undone to bring in touch with music the children
considered at first to be unmusical.
But
of the greatest importance, particularly socially, will be the
cultivation of music in an elementary way, so that, without any
paralysing theory, the children are taught from the elementary
facts of music. The children should get a clear idea of the
elements of music, of harmonies and melodies, etc., from the
application of the most elementary facts, from aural analysis
of melodies and harmonies, so that in music we proceed to build
up the structure of the artistic element as a whole in just the
same elementary way as we do with the plastically formative
element, where we begin with the isolated detail. This will
help to mitigate the persistent intrusion into music of
dilettantism; although it, must not for a moment be denied that
even musical dilettantism has a certain utility in the social
life of the community. Without it we should not with ease be
able to get very far, but it should confine itself to the
listeners. Precisely if this were done it would be possible to
give due prominence within our social life to those who can
really produce music. For it should not be forgotten that all
plastically formative art tends to individualize people:
all the art of music and poetry, on the other hand, furthers
social intercourse. People come together and unite in music and
poetry; but they become more individual through plastic and
formative art. The individuality is better preserved by the
plastically formative; social life is better maintained in
common enjoyment and experience of music and poetry. Poetry is
created in the solitude of the soul — there alone; but it
is understood through its general reception. With no intention
of inventing an abstraction we can say that man discloses his
innermost soul in the creation of poetry, and that his inner
soul finds response again in the innermost soul of other people
who absorb his creation. That is why pleasure, above all
things, in, and yearning for, music and poetry, should be
cultivated in the growing child. In poetry the child should
early become familiar with real poetry. The individual to-day
grows up into a social order in which he is tyrannized over by
the prose of language. There are to-day innumerable reciters
who tyrannize over people with prose, and place in the
foreground of the poem nothing but the prose-content. And when
the poem is so recited that the emphasis is laid on the thought
content, we consider it nowadays the perfect recitation. But a
really perfect recitation is one which particularly emphasizes
the musical element. In the few words with which I sometimes
introduce our Eurhythmy demonstrations, I have often drawn
attention to the way in which in a poet like Schiller a
poem arises from the depth of his soul. In many of his poems he
first feels the lilt of an undefined melody, and only later
into this undefined melody does he sink, as it were, the
content, the words. The undefined melody is the element in
which the content is suspended, and the poetical activity lives
in the fashioning of the language, not in the content, but in
the measure, in the rhythm, in the preservation of the rhyme,
that is in the music which underlies poetry. I said that the
present mode of recitation is to tyrannize over people, because
it is always tyranny to attach the greatest value to the prose,
to the content of a poem, to its abstract treatment.
Spiritual-scientifically we can only escape the tyranny by
presenting a subject, as I always try to do, from the most
different angles, so that comprehension of it is kept fluid and
artistic. I felt particular pleasure when one of our
artistically gifted friends said that certain cycles of my
lectures, purely in virtue of their inner structure, could be
transformed into a symphony. Something of this kind actually
does underlie the structure of certain cycles. Take, for
instance, the cycle given in Vienna
[Inneres Wesen des deuschen und Leben zwischen Tod und neuer Gebrut,
1914.]
on the life between death and a new birth, and you will
see that you could make a symphony out of it. That is possible
because an anthroposophical lecture should not make a
tyrannical impression, but should arouse people's will. When,
however, people come to a subject like the “Threefold
State,” they say that they cannot understand it. In
reality it is not difficult to understand; only they are not
used to the mode of expression.
It
is consequently of extreme importance to draw the child's
attention in every poem to the music underlying it. For this
reason the division of teaching should be arranged so that the
lessons of recitation should come as near as possible to those
of music. The teacher of music should be in close contact with
the teacher of recitation, so that when the one lesson follows
the other a living connection between the two is achieved. It
would be especially useful if the teacher of music were still
present during the recitation lesson and vice versa, so that
each could continually indicate the connections with the other
lesson. This would completely exclude what is at present
so very prominent in our school-life, and what is really
horrible — the abstract explanation of poems. This
detailed explanation of poems, verging perilously on grammar,
is the death of all that should influence the child. This
“interpretation” of poems is a quite appalling
thing.
Now
you will object: But the interpreting is necessary to
understand the poem! The answer to that must be: Teaching must
be arranged to form a whole. This must be discussed in the
weekly Staff-meeting. This and that poem come up for
recitation. Then there must flow in from the rest of the
teaching what is necessary for the understanding of the poem.
Care must be taken that the child brings ready with him to the
recitation lesson what he needs to understand the poem. You can
quite well — for instance, take Schiller's
Spaziergang — explain the cultural-historical
aspect, the psychological aspect of the poem, not taking one
line after the other with the poem in your hand, but so as to
familiarize the child with the substance. In the
recitation lesson stress must be laid solely on the
artistic communication of art.
If
we were to guide the artistic element like this, in its two
streams, to harmonize human nature through and through, we
should have very important results. We must simply consider
that when a human being sings it is an infinitely valuable
achievement of companionship with the world. Singing, you see,
is itself an echo of the world. When the human being sings he
expresses the meaningful wisdom from which the world is built.
But we must not forget that when he sings he combines the
cosmic melody with the human word. That is why something
unnatural enters into song. This can easily be felt in the
incompatibility of the sound of a poem with its content. It
would mean a certain progress if one were to pursue the attempt
already begun, to maintain sheer recitative in the lines, and
only to animate the rhyme with melody, so that the lines would
pass in a flow of recitative and the rhyme be sung like an aria.
[Paul Baumann, Songs of the Free Waldorf School.]
This would result in a clean severance of the music of a poem
from its words, which, of course, disturb the actually musical
person.
And
again, when the musical ear of the individual is cultivated he
himself becomes more disposed to a living experience of the
musical essence of the world. This is of the supremest value
for the evolution of the individual. We must not forget: In
the plastically formative we contemplate beauty, we live it; in
music we ourselves become beauty. This is extraordinarily
significant. The further back you go into olden times the less
you find what we really call music. You have the distinct
impression that music is only in process of creation, in spite
of the fact that many musical forms are already dying out
again. This arises from a very significant cosmic fact. In all
plastic or formative art man was the imitator of the old
celestial order. The highest imitation of a world-heaven order
is the plastic formative imitation of the world. But in music
man himself is creative. Here he does not create out of a given
material, but lays the very foundations for what will only come
to fulfilment in the future. It is, of course, possible to
create music of a kind by imitating musically, for instance,
the rushing of water or the song of the nightingale. But true
music and true poetry are a creation of something new, and from
this creation of the new will arise one day the Jupiter, Venus,
and Vulcan evolutions.
[R. Steiner,
Outlines of Occult Science.]
In linking up with music we retrieve, in a sense,
what is still to be; we retrieve it for reality out of the
present nullity of its existence.
Only in linking up in this way with the great facts of the
world do we acquire a right understanding of teaching. Only
this can confer on it the right consecration, and in receiving
this consecration it is really transformed into a kind of
divine service.
I
have set up more or less an ideal. But surely our
concrete practice can be ranged in the realm of the
ideal. There is one thing we ought not to neglect, for
instance, when we go with the children we are teaching —
as we shall, of course — into the mountains and the
fields, when, that is, we take them out to nature. In
introducing these children like this to nature we should always
remember that natural science teaching itself only belongs to
the school building. Let us suppose that we are just coming
into the country with the children, and we draw their attention
to a stone or a flower. In so doing we should scrupulously
avoid allowing so much as an echo of what we teach in the
school-room to be heard outside in nature. Out in the open we
should refer the children to nature in quite a different way
from what we do in the class-room. We ought never to neglect
the opportunity of drawing their attention to the fact that we
are bringing them out into the open to feel the beauty of
nature and we are taking the products of nature back into the
school-room, so that there we can study and analyse nature with
them. We should, therefore, never mention to the children,
while we are outside, what we explain to them in school, for
instance, about plants. We ought to lay stress on the
difference between studying dead nature in the class-room
— and contemplating nature in its beauty out of doors. We
should compare these two experiences side by side. Whoever
takes the children out into nature to exemplify to them out of
doors from some object of nature what he is teaching in the
class room is not doing right. Even in children we should evoke
a kind of feeling that it is sad to have to analyse nature when
we return to the class-room. Only the children should feel the
necessity of it, because, of course, the disturbance of what is
natural is essential even in the building up of the human
being. We should on no account suppose that we do well to
expound a beetle scientifically out of doors. The scientific
explanation of the beetle belongs to the class-room. What we
should do when we take the children out into the open is to
excite pleasure in the beetle, delight in the way he runs, in
his amusing ways, in his relation to the rest of nature. And in
the same way we should not neglect to awaken the distinct sense
in the child's soul that music is a creative element, an
element that goes beyond nature, and that man himself becomes a
fellow-creator of nature when he creates music. This sense will
naturally have to be formed in a very rudimentary manner as an
experience, but the first experience to be felt from the
will-like element of music is that man should feel himself part
of the cosmos.
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