MEMORY AND LOVE
RUDOLF STEINER
Stuttgart,
4 December, 1922
T
gives me great satisfaction to be able to speak to you today
on passing through Stuttgart, and I should like to make this an
opportunity for discussing several things connected with the last two
lectures I have been permitted to give here. I spoke then about man's
relation to the spiritual world in so far as knowledge of it can be
advanced by bringing to light the processes that go on during sleep
without our being conscious of them, and by the illumination that
spiritual science can throw on the experiences undergone by man in the
spiritual world between death and a new birth.
Today I would
like to speak of how man's life on earth is in a certain sense a reverse
image of those experiences. Human life on earth is understood only when
particular expressions of it can be related to their counterparts in the
spiritual world, where man spends the major part of his existence.
I would like
first to speak of some of the ways in which the human soul expresses itself
during earthly life, in so far as they can be related to experiences in
the spiritual world. From my last two lectures here you will have gathered
that the experiences of the human soul between death and rebirth differ
essentially from those between birth and death. Here on earth a man's
experiences are all mediated through his body, be it the physical body
or the etheric body. Nothing of what he experiences on earth can be
experienced without the support of the bodily nature. We might easily
imagine, for example, that thinking is a purely spiritual act, and that
in the way it comes about on earth in the human soul it has nothing to
do with existence in a body. In one sense this is so. But spiritually
independent as human thinking is, it could not take its course here in
earth existence were it unable to have the support of the body and its
processes. I may avail myself of a comparison which I have often used
here on similar occasions. When a man is walking, the ground he walks on
is certainly not the essential part of his activity; the essential part
is inside his skin; but without the support of the ground he could not
get along.
It is the
same with thinking. In essence, thinking is certainly not a
brain-process, but without the support of the brain it could not take
its earthly course. In the light of this comparison one gets a right
conception of the spirituality as well as of the physical limitations of
human thinking In short, my dear friends, here in earthly life there is
nothing in man that does not depend on the body for support. Within the
body we carry our organs — lung, heart, brain, and so on. In
normal health we have no conscious perception of our internal organs. We
perceive them only when they are ill, and then in a very imperfect way.
We can never say that we have knowledge of an organ by looking directly
at it, unless we are studying anatomy, and then we are not studying a
living organ. We can never say that we have the same view of an internal
organ that we have of an external object. It is characteristic of
earthly life that we do not know the interior of our body by means of
ordinary consciousness. Least of all does a man know what he generally
considers of most value for his bodily existence — the interior of
his head. For when he begins to know anything of it, as a rule the
knowledge proves most unpleasant — headache and all that goes with
it.
In
spiritual life between death and a new birth the exact opposite
prevails. There we do really know what is within us. It is as if here on
earth we were not to see trees and clouds outside, but were to look in
the main inside ourselves, saying: Here is the lung, here the heart,
here the stomach. In the spiritual world we contemplate our own
interior. But what we see is the world of spiritual beings, the world we
come to know in our anthroposophical literature as the world of the
higher Hierarchies. That is our inner world. And between death and
rebirth we feel ourselves actually to be the whole world — when I
speak of the whole it is only figuratively, but it is entirely true
— at times we each of us feel ourselves to be the whole world. And
at the most important moments of our spiritual existence between death
and a new birth we feel within us and experience the world of spiritual
beings and are conscious of them. It is just as true that we are
conscious there of spirits of the higher world within us as it is true
that here on earth we have no consciousness of our interior, of liver,
lungs, and so on. What is most characteristic is that in spiritual
experience all our physical experience is reversed. Gradually, through
initiation-knowledge, we learn how this is to be understood.
Now,
however, there is an essential process — or group of processes
— related to this inward living together with the beings of the
higher Hierarchies. Were we in the spiritual world to perceive inwardly
only the world of the higher Hierarchies, we would never find ourselves.
We would indeed know that various beings were living in us, but we would
never become fully aware of ourselves. Hence in our experience between
death and a new birth there is a rhythm. It consists in an alternation
between our inward contemplation and experience of the world of
spiritual beings described in anthroposophical literature, and a damping
down of this consciousness. We do the same with the spiritual within us
when in physical life we close our eyes and ears and go to sleep. If I
may put it like this, we turn our attention from the world of spiritual
beings within us and begin to perceive ourselves. Certainly it is as if
we were outside ourselves, but we know that this being outside ourselves
is what we are. Thus in the spiritual world we alternately perceive
ourselves and the world of spiritual beings.
This
constantly repeated rhythmical process can be compared with two
different things here in physical existence on earth. It can be compared
with in-breathing and out-breathing, and also with sleeping and waking.
In physical existence on earth both these are rhythmical processes; both
may be compared with what I have been describing. But with the processes
that take place in the spiritual world between death and rebirth, it is
not a question of knowing something in a purely abstract way, or —
I might add — for the satisfaction of spiritual curiosity; it is a
matter of recognising life on earth as an image of the super-earthly.
And the question necessarily arises: What takes place in earthly life
that is like a faculty of memory such as man does not have in ordinary
consciousness, a faculty that might be possessed by beings of the
Hierarchies, Archangels? What is there in physical life that is like a
memory of living oneself into the world of spiritual beings, or like a
memory of experiencing oneself there?
Now, my
dear friends, had we no experience between death and a new birth of
looking within ourselves and finding there the world of the spirit, down
here on earth there would be no such thing as morals. What we retain of
this experience of beings in the spiritual world when we enter life on
earth is an inclination towards the moral life. This inclination is
strong in proportion to the clearness with which between death and a new
birth a man has experienced his living together with the spirits of the
higher world. And anyone who in a spiritually right sense sees into
these things, knows that immoral men, as a result of their preceding
life on earth, had too dull an experience of this spiritual existence.
But if between death and a new birth we were able to experience only
what makes us one with the beings of the higher world, and were never
able to experience ourselves, then on earth it would be impossible for
us ever to achieve freedom, consciousness of freedom, consciousness of
our personality, which is fundamentally identical with the consciousness
of freedom. Thus when on earth we develop morality and freedom, they are
memories of the rhythm we experience in the spiritual world between
death and a new birth. But by directing our gaze to the soul we can
speak more exactly of what echoes on in the soul — the becoming
one with spiritual beings on the one hand, and on the other our
experience of spiritual consciousness of the self. What during earthly
life remains in our soul as an echo of the becoming one with the beings
of the spiritual world is the capacity for love. This capacity for love
is more deeply connected than people think with the moral life. For
without the capacity for love there would be no moral life here on
earth; it all arises from the understanding with which we meet the soul
of another, and from striving to accomplish what we do out of this
understanding. How we behave to others with selflessness, or how in love
we can act morally, are essentially echoes from our life between death
and rebirth in common with spiritual beings; and this remains with us
after our experience of what one might call loneliness — for so it
is felt to be — the lonely experience of our self in the spiritual
world. For we do then feel lonely when we, as it were, breathe out.
In-breathing is like an experience of spiritual beings; out-breathing
like an experience of our self. But feeling lonely — well, this
feeling lonely has its echo here on earth as our capacity for
remembering — our memory. As human beings we should have no memory
were it not an echo of what we have described as a feeling of
loneliness. We are real individuals in the spiritual world because
— I cannot say because we withdraw into ourselves — but
because we can liberate ourselves from the higher spirits within us.
That makes us independent in the spiritual world. Here on earth we are
independent because we are able to remember our experiences. Just think
what would become of your independence if in your thoughts you had
always to live in the present. Your remembered thoughts are what make it
possible for you to have anything of an inner life. Remembering makes us
into personalities here on earth. And remembering is the echo of what I
have described as the experience of loneliness in the spiritual
world.
Now why do
we come down at all to the physical out of the spiritual world? You may
gather from what I said here last time that the forces holding us
together with higher spiritual beings grow weaker. Here in physical life
we become old because the forces holding us in connection with the
physical earth weaken; over there the forces weaken which hold us in
connection with spiritual beings. Above all, those forces weaken that
enable us to grasp ourselves within spiritual beings and so to be
independent. In the spiritual world, an appreciable time before
descending to earth, we lose the capacity for living together with
spiritual beings. With the help of spiritual beings we form the
spirit-seed of our physical body: this we send down first; then we take
up our etheric body and follow after. I pictured this for you in my last
lecture. Our capacity for living with spirit-beings in the spiritual
world fades out, and we feel how through the forces of the moon we
approach ever nearer to the earth. We feel ourselves as a self, but
continually become less able to comprehend, to maintain, ourselves
within spiritual realms; this capacity becomes increasingly feeble. We
have a growing feeling that faintness may overcome us in the spiritual
world. This creates in us a need for what we can no longer carry within
us, the feeling of self, to be supported by something outside, namely
our body — a need to be supported by a body. I might put it thus,
that we have gradually to unlearn flying and learn to walk. You
understand that I am speaking figuratively, but the picture is in
absolute accord with truth, with reality. Thus we find our way into our
body. The feeling of loneliness finds a refuge in the body and becomes
the faculty of remembering, and we have to win through to a new feeling
for community on earth. This proves to be very significant when with the
aid of spiritual science we study the state of sleep.
I described
this state of sleep from a certain aspect last time I was here. I now
want to add something about the processes mentioned then. I know that
such things are easily misunderstood. Over and over again one hears that
people are saying: “Last time he described man's experience
between going to sleep and waking, and now he is telling us something
different about it.” My dear friends, if I tell you what an
official experiences in his office, it does not contradict what later I
tell you about him in the bosom of his family. The two things go
together. So you must be clear that when I tell you of experiences
between going to sleep and waking this is not the whole story, just as
an official can still have a family life outside his office.
Thus man,
between going to sleep and waking, actually experiences a kind of
backward repetition of what he accomplished in the course of the day. It
is not simply that between going to sleep and waking — the sleep
can be quite short, and then things are telescoped together — it
is not simply that between going to sleep and waking man has a
retrospective view of his experiences during the day, an unconscious
view, for naturally it must be unconscious — no, when the soul
during sleep becomes really clairvoyant, or when the clairvoyant soul
looks back in memory on the experiences between going to sleep and
waking, it is seen that man really experiences the going backward of
what he has experienced since the last time he woke. If he sleeps
through the night in an ordinary way, he goes backward through what he
has done by day. The last event takes place immediately on going to
sleep, and so on. The whole of his sleep works in a wonderfully
regulating way. I can but tell you what can be investigated by spiritual
science. When you fall asleep for a quarter of an hour, the beginning of
the sleep knows when it will end, and in this quarter of an hour you
experience in backward order what you have brought about since last you
woke. It is all given its right proportion — marvellous as this
may seem. And this backward experience may be said to lie somewhere
between reality and semblance.
If one has
a memory-picture of something experienced in physical life twenty years
before, a healthy, thoughtful person will not take it for a present
experience; it is in the nature of the memory-picture itself that we
relate it to a past experience. Anyone who looks clairvoyantly into what
the soul experiences during sleep in backward order does not connect
this with the present; he connects it with the future after death. Just
as anyone realises that his recollection of something experienced twenty
years before refers to that past time, so does anyone who clairvoyantly
sees into the state of sleep know that what he sees has no significance
for the present but foreshadows what is to be experienced after death,
when we have to go backwards through all that we have done on earth.
That is why this sleep-picture is half-reality and half-semblance
— it is related to the future. Thus for ordinary consciousness it
is an unconscious experience of what man has to live through in what I
called in my book,
Theosophy,
the soul world. And the intuitive and inspired consciousness described
in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
gathers from the observation of
sleep what man has to go through during the first stage after death.
These things are not mere fabrications; they are plainly observed once
the gift of observation has been acquired. Thus, from going to sleep
till waking, man lives without his body through what he has done with
his body when awake.
We come now
to an extraordinarily subtle concept. Just think how from outside we
have to live through our deeds again with our ego and our astral body.
The capacity to do so is acquired in proportion to the degree of love we
unfold. That is the secret of life where love is concerned. If a man is
able really to go out of himself in love, loving his nearest as himself,
he learns what he needs in sleep for experiencing in reverse, fully and
without pain, what has to be experienced in this way. For then he must
be quite outside himself. If a man is a loveless being, a feeling arises
when, outside himself, he has to experience the actions he performed
without love. This hems him in. Loveless persons sleep as if — to
use a metaphor — they were short-winded. So it is that whatever we
have been able to implant in ourselves through love becomes truly
fruitful while we are asleep. And in what is thus developed between
going to sleep and waking, we have something that goes through the gate
of death and then lives on further in the spiritual world. It is lost
between death and rebirth when we are living together with the spiritual
beings of the higher worlds and we recover it as a seed during earthly
life through love. For love discloses its meaning when with his ego and
astral body a man in sleep is outside his physical body and etheric
body. Between going to sleep and waking his essential being widens if he
is full of love and prepares himself well for what is to happen to him
after death. If he is loveless and is poorly prepared for what is to
happen to him after death, his being narrows. The seed for what happens
after death lies pre-eminently in the unfolding of love.
During our
life on earth between birth and death, our memories are extraordinarily
fleeting; only pictures remain. Think how little these pictures retain of
the events lived through. Just remind yourself of the unspeakable grief
experienced at the death of someone very close to you, and imagine vividly
the inner condition of soul attendant upon it, and then observe how this
appears as an inner experience when after ten years you call it up. It
has become a pale, almost abstract shadow. That is what our capacity for
recollection is — pale and abstract compared with the full vigour
of immediate life. Why is our recollection thus weak and shadowy? It is
indeed the shadow of our experience of self between death and a new
birth. Within it is the faculty of remembering, so that it really gives
us our existence. That which gives us flesh and blood here on earth,
between death and a new birth gives us the faculty of memory. Over there
memory is robust and full-blooded — if I may use such expressions
for what is spiritual — then it takes on flesh and becomes weak.
When we die. for a few days — I have often described this —
the last remnant of memory is still present in the etheric body. If when
we go through the gate of death we look back over our past life on
earth, memory fades out. And out of this memory there unwinds what the
force of love on earth has given us as force for life after death. Thus
the force of memory is the heritage we receive from our pre-earthly
life, and the force of love is the seed for what we have after death.
That is the relation between earthly life and the spiritual world.
Now, my
dear friends, I have compared what man experiences in connection with
higher beings in the spiritual world, alternating with his experience of
the self, with breathing — in-breathing, out-breathing. In our
breathing process, and in the processes concerned with speech and song,
we can recognise an image of
“breathing” in the spiritual world. As I have said, our life
in the spiritual world between death and a new birth alternates between
contemplation of the inner self, and becoming one with the beings of the
higher Hierarchies; looking out from within, becoming one with ourself.
This goes on like in-breathing and out-breathing. We breathe into
ourselves and then breathe ourselves out, and this is of course a
spiritual breathing. Here on earth this breathing process becomes memory
and love. And in fact memory and love also work together here in
physical earth-life as a kind of breathing. And if with the eyes of the
soul you are able to look at this physical life rightly, you will be
able to observe in an important manifestation of breathing —
speaking and singing — the physiological working together of
memory and love.
Study the
child up to the change of teeth. You will observe how the power of
recollection, of memory, gradually unfolds. At first it is quite
elementary. The child has a certain memory, but it becomes an
independent force only towards the time when the teeth change, and
is complete in its development when the child is ripe for school.
It is only then that we can begin to build upon memory. Earlier than
this, by building too much on memory we make the child rigid and create
a sclerotic condition of soul for its later life. When dealing with
children before the change of teeth, it is a question of their receiving
impressions of the present in the right way. It is between the change
of teeth and puberty that we may venture to build upon memory.
Today the
science of physiology has not reached the point when it can describe in
detail the process just pictured. Spiritual science is capable of this
and physiological science will certainly follow suit, for these things
can be discovered by a close observation of human nature. One may say:
When we give out a sound or a note, to begin with the head is engaged.
But from the head comes the same faculty that inwardly, in the soul,
gives memory, which plays into sound and tone: this comes from above.
For anyone to be able to speak without having a faculty of memory is
inconceivable. Were we always to forget what is contained in sound or
tone, we should never be able to speak or sing. It is precisely embodied
memory that lives in tone or sound, on the one hand; on the other hand,
for the part played by love, even in its physiological sense, in the
breathing process that gives rise to speaking and singing — for
this you have clear witness in the full inner volume of tone that comes
to the male with puberty, when love finds physiological expression
during the second important period of life: this comes from below. There
you have the two elements together — from above what lies at the
physiological basis of memory — from below what lies at the
physiological basis of love: together they form tone in speech and in
song. There you have their reciprocal interplay. In a way it is also a
breathing process running through the whole of life. Just as we breathe
in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide so, united in us we have the
force of memory and the force of love, meeting one another in speech,
meeting one another in tone. One can say that speaking and singing in
man are an alternating interchange of permeation by the force of memory
and by the force of love.
Herein lies
something extraordinarily significant for disclosing the real secret of
tone and sound.
Thus there
is real truth in what is expressed in the more ancient languages by
calling the sum of world forces and world thoughts the Logos. That is
the other side, the super-physical side of that which comes to physical
expression in speech. We do not only breathe in and breathe out higher
beings between death and rebirth, but we also speak, though this
speaking is at the same time a singing. In the alternation between going
out into the spiritual beings and coming back into ourselves, we speak a
spiritual speaking — with the beings of the higher Hierarchies.
When we are in the state of becoming one with the beings of the
spiritual world, we look upon them even though they are within
ourselves. When we are free from them again and come to ourselves, then
we have the after-effect, then we are ourselves. Over there they express
their own being in us: they tell us what they are: the Logos lives in
us. On earth this is reversed; in speech and song our own being is
expressed. We express our whole being in the process of out-breathing;
whereas when between death and rebirth we release the spirit beings, we
have received in the Logos the whole being of the world.
But, my
dear friends, the fact is that when we pass over from the spiritual
world into the physical we go through the great oblivion. Who with
ordinary consciousness sees here in the weak, shadowy force of memory
the echo of what we were as self in the spiritual world? Who still
recognises in speech, in the part that comes from memory, the
after-vibration of the self? Who recognises in the plastic forming of
speech, in singing and speaking, an echo of beings of the higher
Hierarchies? Nevertheless is it not true that whoever understands how to
listen to speech without taking the meaning into consideration, whoever
can give ear to what the tones express through their very nature, has a
feeling — particularly if he is artistically inclined — that
more is revealed in speaking and singing than what the ordinary
consciousness receives? Why then do we transform ordinary speech that we
have here on earth as a utilitarian faculty — why do we transform
it into song by divesting it of its utilitarian function and making it
express our own being in declamation, in song? Why do we transform it?
What are we doing then?
Now we get
the right idea of this if we say: Before descending to earth you were in
the spiritual world and lived there in the way described. The great
oblivion came. In what your mouth utters, in what your soul remembers,
in how your soul loves, you do not recognise the echo of what you were
in the spiritual world. In art, however, we retreat a few steps from
life, as it were, and come a few steps nearer to what we were in our
pre-natal life and what we shall be in our life after death. And if we
are able to recognise how memory is an echo of what we had in
pre-earthly life, and how the unfolding of love is the seed of what we
shall have after death, if through spirit-knowledge we picture the past
and the future of human existence, in art we call up into the present
— as far as this is possible for man within his physical
organisation — we call up into the present what unites us to the
spirit.
That is the
essential glory of art: it takes us by simple means into the spiritual
world in the immediate present. Anyone who is able to look into the
inner life of man will say: Generally a man remembers only the things he
has experienced in the course of his present earthly life. But the force
through which he remembers these earthly experiences is the weakened
force of his existence as a self in pre-earthly life. And the love that
he is able to unfold here as a universal love of humanity is the
weakened force of the seed which will come to fruition after death. And
as in song and in declamatory speech there must be united what a man is,
through memory, with what he can give the world, through love, so it is
in all art. A man may experience a harmony of the self with what is
outside, but unless he is capable of showing outwardly what is within
him — be it in tone, painting or any other branch of art —
of showing on the surface what he is, what life has made of him, what is
the essential content of his memory, he can be no artist. Neither is he
a true artist who in a pronounced way is impelled to be an egotist in
his art. Only those who are disposed to open out to the world, who
become one with their fellows, who unfold love, can unite this unfolding
of love closely with their own being. Altruism and egotism unite in one
stream. They flow together naturally and most intimately in the sounding
arts, but they flow together also in the plastic arts. And when through
a certain deepening of our forces of knowledge there is revealed to us
how man is connected with a super-sensible world where past and future
are concerned, we can also say that man has a present foretaste of this
connection in his creation and enjoyment of art. Actually art never
acquires its full value if it is not to some extent in accord with
religion. Not that it has to be sanctimonious — even art in a
jovial mood can have this accord.
Ample proof
of this lies in the way art has developed. Originally it was one with
religious life. In primitive ages of mankind it was woven into religious
cults. The images men formed of their gods was the source of plastic
art. As an instance of this let us recall the Samothracean Mysteries
alluded to by Goethe in the second part of his
Faust,
where he speaks of the Kabiri.
[See the lecture-cycle,
“Goetheanism as an impulse for man's transformation”
Dornach, January 1919.]
In my studio in Dornach I tried to make a picture of these Kabiri. And
what came of it? It was something very interesting. I simply set myself
the task of puzzling out intuitively how the Kabiri must have appeared
in the Samothracean Mysteries. And just imagine this: I arrived at three
pitchers, but pitchers, it is true, shaped plastically and in accordance
with art. At first I astonished myself, although Goethe actually spoke
of pitchers. The matter became clear to me only when I found that these
pitchers stood on an altar: then something in the nature of incense was
put into them, the sacrificial words were sung, and from the power of
the sacrificial words — which in the more ancient times of mankind
had a force of vibratory stimulus quite different from anything possible
today the smoke of the incense was formed into the desired image of the
divinity. Thus in the ritual you had the accompanying chant immediately
expressing itself plastically in the smoke of the incense.
Mankind had
truly drawn art from the religious life. And Schiller is right in saying:
“Only through the dawn of beauty do you press on into the land of
knowledge,” which you generally find quoted in books as “Only
through the door of beauty do you press on into the land of knowledge.”
If an artist makes a slip of the pen, it gets handed down to posterity.
The right reading, of course, is: “Only through the dawn of beauty
do you press on into the land of knowledge.” In other words —
all knowledge comes through art. Fundamentally, there is no knowledge that
is not intimately related to art. It is only the knowledge connected
with externals, with usefulness, which appears to have no connection
with art. But this knowledge can extend only to what in the world a mere
colour-grinder would know of painting. As soon as in chemistry or
physics one goes beyond — I am speaking figuratively but you will
know what I mean — what mere colour-grinding implies, science
becomes art. And when the artistic is grasped in its spiritual nature in
the right way, it gradually passes over into the religious. Art,
religion and science were formerly one, and we should still have a sense
of their common origin. This we can have only when there is a return to
the spirit in human civilisation and human development; when we take
seriously the relation existing between man here in his physical
existence on earth and the spiritual world. This knowledge we ought to
make our own from the most varied points of view.
Today I wished
to deal with one of these points of view, my dear friends, so that from a
certain aspect you may have a picture of how man is connected with the
spiritual world. I hope that we shall be able to go on enlarging these
studies in a not too distant future.
As published
in Golden Blade 1983
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