LECTURE
FOUR
THE
SECRET OF INVESTIGATION INTO OTHER REALMS
THROUGH THE METAMORPHOSIS OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Blackboard Drawing 5, August 14, 1924
I have
spoken about the form, substantiality and metallity of the mineral
kingdom in so far as they are related to the different levels of
consciousness in man. Before extending my observations to include
certain metallic substances, I must make my position perfectly
clear.
From what I
have said it might readily be inferred that I was recommending the
ingestion of these substances in the form of nutriments as a means of
inducing states of consciousness that differ from the normal.
When discussing methods of achieving spiritual insight through inner
training and discipline, one often hears the remark: I would be only
too glad to know something of other worlds and other states of
consciousness, but it is too difficult to carry out the
exercises which are recommended; they take up so much
time.
A little
later, perhaps, these people make a start. Then, after a time, the
immediate demands of life intervene and they find they are unwilling
to sacrifice their ingrained habits. By degrees they lose enthusiasm
and the exercises are quietly dropped. Not surprisingly these people
achieve nothing; they find the need to practise spiritual
exercises excessively irksome.
When they
hear, for example, that the qualities of certain metals are
associated with other levels of consciousness, they feel more
reassured. If a small dosage of copper is all that is required in
order to preserve a spiritual link with another after death, then why
not take it, they conclude, if it enables one to develop a higher
level of consciousness.
The idea
becomes all the more attractive when they hear that the practice
adopted in the ancient Mysteries was not so very dissimilar, though
in those days, of course, it was only carried out under the
continuous and closest supervision of the Initiates. And when people
are told of this, they wonder why these old practices are not
revived. But they overlook the fact that in ancient times the whole
physical organization of man was differently constituted. In
those days, and even as late as the Chaldean epoch, he lacked our
present intellectuality. Thoughts were not self-generated as today,
but came to him through inspiration. Just as we realize today that we
do not create the red of the rose, but receive the impression of the
rose from without, so the men of ancient times were aware that
thoughts were transmitted via external objects, they were
“in-spired,” breathed into them. The reason for this was
to be found in the different constitution of the physical organism,
including even the composition of the blood. Therefore it was
possible to administer highly potentized doses of those metals I have
spoken of — homoeopathic doses as we call them today
— in order to assist people in carrying out their spiritual
exercises.
A man of the
Chaldean epoch, we will suppose, has been prescribed highly
potentized doses of copper. Before taking it — this was the
general practice of the time — he was directed to perform
certain specific spiritual exercises. In such cases, years rather
than days of training were demanded of him before the highly
potentized copper could be administered. And because his physical
constitution was different from ours, he learned, through his
training, to retrace the reactions upon the upper part of the
body, of this finely distributed, highly potentized copper that
was circulating in his blood stream. When copper was administered
after this careful training, he felt inwardly that his words
took on added warmth, because he himself had generated warmth in his
larynx and in the nerves leading from the larynx to the
brain.
Now because
his physical make-up was different, he was able to react with such
extreme sensitivity to what was taking place within him. If one
were to administer highly potentized copper in similar circumstances
today, it would of course take effect, but it would provoke a
laryngeal condition and nothing further.
It is
important, therefore, to understand the difference between the
physical constitution of man in those times and that of today. Then
one will no longer be tempted to induce other states of consciousness
by administering medicaments, which was the normal practice in
ancient times and was still frequently practised in the Middle
Ages.
At the
present time the only valid method is for man to have an inner
perception of the nature, the essential being of copper as I
indicated yesterday and thus develop a sensitive response to the
colour of burnished copper, to the behaviour of copper in copper
sulphate solution. By concentrating and meditating upon this
response, he will ensure that he reacts in the right way.
But, you
will object, in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
there is no indication of what preparatory steps should be undertaken
in order to develop this response to copper. That is so. But in
principle the directives are given in my book, though copper is not
specifically mentioned. A description is given of how one should
enter into the being of crystals, plants, etc. and the preparatory
exercises are indicated. But of course no information is given of how
to meditate on the nature of copper; a whole library (rather than a
book) would be needed for that. Nor was it necessary, since
directives have already been given — exercises to promote
self-confidence, for example, and exercises in concentration upon
some specific theme or object. Such exercises, in effect, are already
covered by what I have just said about the nature of copper. There is
no specific statement to the effect that one should meditate
upon the nature of copper. It is suggested that some simple subject
or theme should be selected for purposes of meditation morning and
evening. That is tantamount to meditating upon the nature of copper.
Only that is given as a subject for meditation which could refer to
its metallic nature.
A meditation
upon some specific theme such as “wisdom radiates in the
light” has a decisive influence upon the inner life, if carried
out in earnest. The effect would be the same as if someone were to
explore the nature of copper from all angles and to concentrate on
its physical aspect. In the first instance, our approach is from the
moral standpoint, in the second, from the physical and chemical
standpoint. It is far better for the non-chemist to enter the
spiritual world from the moral standpoint.
It is
necessary, therefore, to see things in their proper relationship,
because it would be a mistake for the man of today to follow
uncritically the methods of the ancient Mysteries in order to gain
insight into the spiritual world. The right course for today is to
replace the external, physical approach by a more moral and spiritual
approach. With the development of his physical organism man's whole
relationship to nature has been transformed. Composition of the
blood, tissue fluid and the whole physical constitution are different
today from those of the ancient Chaldeans. This cannot be proved by
anatomical analysis. In the first place, the anatomist spends most of
his time dissecting corpses. Recently a scientific congress raised a
cry of alarm and clamoured for more corpses. Anatomists found there
was a shortage of corpses for investigating the hidden secrets of
life. But it would not be easy to procure Chaldean corpses in order
to pursue these investigations! In the second place, with his crude
technique, the anatomist would find no answer to the hidden secrets
of life; these must be explored by spiritual means.
Since our
physical body is differently constituted from that of the ancients,
one point must be clearly established. It is still possible today to
dispense highly potentized substances, metal potencies, for
example. What is the reason for this? The explanation is that we have
a deeper insight into the real being of nature. If we really
understand the nature of the human body, we know that its functioning
is modified by the metals I have mentioned — tin, copper, lead,
and so forth. And I have shown how they modify, in the first
instance, the conditions of consciousness.
Today,
however, we are aware that changes take place in the body, even in
normal life, if I may use such a mundane expression. Let us assume,
for example, that we experience a change in that region of the body
which radiates the activity of copper as I pointed out yesterday. Any
such change is reflected in disturbances of the digestive organs, in
the metabolic-limb system — in disturbances of the organs
predominantly associated with metabolism, digestion and assimilation
of nutrients. Every such disturbance in the human organization
which we call dis-ease is also associated with the evocation of
a different state of consciousness. The full implication of this must
be borne in mind.
Now what is
the significance of organic disease? I said yesterday that for the
man of today his normal condition of waking consciousness lies in the
heart centre. Other states of consciousness are associated with other
organs, but they always remain in the subconscious. The region of the
larynx, including the area extending from the larynx to the brain,
lives continuously in a state of consciousness sequential to the
normal state which I described yesterday. The region in the
neighbourhood of the digestive organs shares the same time-scale as
the dead after death. Man always participates in this state of
consciousness. Everyone shares the after-death experiences of those
he knew personally in life. But he experiences them below the
heart, not in the heart. Therefore he knows nothing of this
experience; it remains in the subconscious, below the threshold of
consciousness. When some disturbance occurs, such as dyspepsia, for
example, in that region where man is spiritually in touch with the
dead, the consciousness below the heart centre is modified; it begins
to operate too actively.
What then is
the explanation of a certain kind of gastric disorder? From the
physical angle it is simply a label for the practitioner's diagnosis.
Now the point of view presented here is in no way directed against a
purely physical approach to medicine. I recognize and appreciate its
value. As Anthroposophists we do not adopt the attitude of the
dilettante, the amateur or the charlatan who disparage or criticize
orthodox medicine. We fully accept its findings. When a person
suffers from a gastric disorder, the symptoms can be diagnosed
physically; but as a result of his gastric condition he is more able
to share in the life of the dead immediately after their death. Of
course a physical diagnosis is made before therapeutic treatment can
begin. From the spiritual standpoint we would say that such a person
feels impelled to preserve, after their death, his spiritual link
with the souls he has known on Earth. But he is unable to enter into
the consciousness that lies below the heart. He is unaware that he is
in communion with the dead.
That is the
spiritual aspect of such a complaint. Gastric disorders arise because
one is too much attached to the dead. Under such conditions one is
dominated by the dead. We are strongly influenced by that world
which, as I indicated yesterday, is so much more real than the
physical world.
Let us
imagine we have a balance in front of us. If the pointer is
deflected, the zero reading is restored by loading the other
scale-pan. The state of disbalance in a person who has developed such
abnormal sensitivity in this consciousness below the heart that
he is too attached to the dead — and he is quite
unconscious of this — is analogous to the scale-pan that is
loaded on the one side. Equilibrium is restored by adding an
equivalent load to the other side.
Thus, if the
consciousness below the heart is too active, the consciousness in the
region of the larynx must be diminished; the heart lies
between, it acts as a regulator and it is the knife edge on which the
beam of the balance oscillates. Equilibrium is restored by
administering copper. I have already pointed out that man's body
today is constituted in such a way that the larynx reacts to
copper.
The
metabolic and laryngeal systems are as closely related as the two
sides of the balance. One may be adjusted by means of the other. If
suitable doses of copper are administered, the patient is
inclined to withdraw somewhat from the realm of the dead and thereby
benefits in health, whereas otherwise he is increasingly identified
with it. That is the spiritual aspect of healing.
Today we
know, therefore, that all substances have both a physical and moral
aspect. The old Initiates could make use of the physical aspect for
the benefit of their pupils but only after their pupils had undergone
extensive training. It should no longer be used in the same way
today. Today the moral attributes are the province of psychic
development, the physical attributes that of the doctor. It is
important that the man who is familiar with the physical side of
substances and has occasion to make a detailed study of this
aspect should also supplement his information by a knowledge of
the moral side. This must be strictly adhered to for present day
perception and for practical perception in the field of spiritual
methods. The human organism has changed radically with the passage of
time and the close relationship that used to exist between the
knowledge of the moral and physical aspect of substances has been
lost and must be restored again. I shall have more to say presently
about the loss of this relationship.
The
relationship between medical science with its predominantly
physical outlook and spiritual science must none the less be
different today from that of the remote past. In both cases this
relationship must continue, but it will assume a different form
today. It is upon the knowledge of such things that our ability to
distinguish between the true and false paths in spiritual
investigation depends.
A brief
review of man's whole attitude to knowledge over the centuries may
help to throw further light upon what I have already
discussed.
Let us look
at the evolution of mankind in retrospect, when the interpretation of
knowledge and research was so very different. The enormous advances
made in recent times in the knowledge of thermo- and electro-dynamics
and of living organisms are c1assffied today under nature, natural
history, natural science and, in England, natural philosophy.
The way nature is presented in schools today is highly abstract.
Nature is seen as a sum of “natural laws” —
that is the expression used — which children are expected
to memorize. And the abstract character of this study is carried over
into life.
Consider how
cold and abstract even the most enthusiastic student finds
natural science today. In botany he is obliged to learn by heart
lists of botanical terms for plants and plant species, in zoology,
the names and classifications of animals and animal species. He soon
forgets them and has to go over the ground again and again for
examination purposes. And after the examination he often forgets them
completely; should he need them again, he looks them up in a book of
reference. It could hardly be said that a student of today has the
same relationship to botany and zoology as he has to some personality
to whom he is devoted. That is out of the question.
Nature today
has become something vague and nebulous, a catalogue of laws of
gravitation, heat, light, electricity, magnetism — the laws of
mechanics. Natural science and natural history deal with the study of
stones and plants. But natural science includes in addition the life
and inner constitution of the organs of plants, animals and man
of which we are admittedly ignorant. In brief, natural science and
natural philosophy today include much that we claim to know and much
of which we are totally ignorant.
Now this is
a state of affairs that hardly inspires confidence; everything
is so nebulous and confused, the thinking so superficial and
abstract. Nowadays we strive manfully to master this abstraction we
call “nature” and many, it must be admitted, have grown
somewhat indifferent to this abstract approach. And if we do not
belong to the younger generation which is in active revolt against
what is being taught in our schools as natural science, we adopt an
attitude of benevolent neutrality. This was not always the
case. I should like now to characterize briefly the attitude to
knowledge a few centuries ago.
When we look
back to the ninth, tenth, eleventh and even to the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries we come across men — though they were
considerably fewer at that time — whom we should describe
today as savants, men adjudged to be the outstanding scholars of
their day, who taught in the famous School of Chartres in the
eleventh and twelfth centuries, such as Bernardus Silvestris,
Bernard of Chartres, Alanus ab Insulis. These personalities were
still fortunate enough at that time to be associated with Initiates,
men who had profound insight into the mysteries of existence, such as
the famous medieval Initiate Joachim of Fiore or that other
illustrious personality known to the world as John of Hanville.
[or Hauteville; in Latin, Altavilla. His work
Architrenius (1184) is mentioned in one of Rudolf Steiner's
notebooks. The work is a long epic describing the allegorical journey
of a young man seeking the help and counsel of the Goddess
Natura.]
I mention
these names, to which many others could be added, in order to evoke
the spirit of the age, in order to characterize the attitude towards
knowledge that was prevalent at the time.
When we
enter into the spiritual outlook of such personalities, we find
that their conception of nature is wholly different from our own. In
the case of the typical botanist, pathologist or histologist of
today, the expression on his face belies any deep interest in the
mysteries of pathology or anatomy; it reflects rather the memories of
the dance he had attended the night before. We learn more about the
festive occasion than about the mysteries of nature!
It was a
very different matter to look into the eyes of a Joachim of Fiore, an
Alanus ab Insulis or a Bernardus Silvestris. Tragedy was
written on their countenances. They felt they were living in an epoch
which had suffered irreparable loss. And the growing realization of
this loss filled their hearts with tragic sorrow.
Or again, if
we had looked at their fingers, fingers which the modern decadent
world would describe as ‘nervous,’ sensitive fingers,
which bore living witness to their desire to probe into those ancient
mysteries, the loss of which was written on their faces, we should
have perceived a yearning to revive the ancient wisdom of the
past.
There were
brief moments when they were able to conjure up pictures of
those ancient times for their pupils; but they were only phantom
images.
Now what I
am about to depict to you is no poetic fantasy, but a reality.
We can visualize Alanus ab Insulis of the School of Chartres, where
the magnificent Cathedral still stands today, speaking to his pupils
about nature and saying: Nature is a Being who eludes us when
we draw near to her. Man now directs his energies to other ends; he
no longer shares that intuitive understanding of nature which the
sages of former times once possessed. Nature, in their eyes, was a
majestic Being endowed with spirit, operating everywhere
— where rock formations were created, where plants sprang out
of the Earth, and jewelled stars sparkled in the heavens. Everywhere
a Being of infinite grandeur was at work, who revealed herself in the
wondrous form of a woman weaving nature's web. The ancients
experienced this intuitively. From their descriptions we can still
picture how nature appeared in their eyes, weaving and working in all
around, in the manifestations of warmth, light, colour and life. They
realized that the Goddess Natura was a divine-spiritual Being
whose real essence could be known only through direct
perception.
A
personality such as Alanus ab Insulis was still able to present such
conceptions to his pupils in the School of Chartres. But
because the Initiates saw this old conception of the Goddess Natura
gradually fade and die, saw replete with life and vitality the nature
that we today regard as dead and abstract because we have lost touch
with her, sorrow and tragedy were written on their faces.
Then, again,
we hear of such men as Brunetto Latini, Dante's famous teacher.
During his travels, through some strange karmic incident, he suffered
a heat-stroke which produced a change of consciousness. This event
was far more important for his development than the sufferings he
endured when the last of the Guelphs were expelled from his native
city. Because of this transformation of consciousness he was still
able to perceive this Goddess Natura and described her in his
book Tesoretto. He gives a graphic description, imaginatively
inspired, of how, on his homeward journey to his native Florence, he
came upon a hill in the midst of a desolate forest and on this hill
he saw the Goddess Natura weaving at her loom. She revealed to him
the significance of thinking, feeling and willing for the human
soul the intrinsic nature of the four temperaments and the function
of the five senses.
And the eyes
of his spirit and soul were opened. This experience on his homeward
journey from Spain to his native Florence under the influence of a
depressed, pathological condition was a spiritual reality. As a
result of this inward transformation, he saw the weaving life of the
four Elements, fire, earth, water and air, the flux and movement of
the planets and the soul emerging from the body into the Cosmos. All
this he experienced under the influence of a spiritual teaching at
the hands of the Goddess Natura.
These
experiences were described by the men of that epoch with a clarity
and concreteness that could scarcely be bettered today. At the same
time, they felt that the ancients had experienced this knowledge in a
different way and that in the course of time it had gradually been
lost. In order to revive the knowledge of these mysteries it was
necessary to induce a pathological condition. And they felt an
irresistible urge to keep alive the real image of Natura.
And when in
retrospect we review man's whole attitude to nature knowledge, we
feel that our approach to nature is abstract, that nature is a
catalogue of laws. We are proud if we can see these laws even to some
extent as a related whole. If we look back a few centuries we see
that a living relationship existed between man and a divine Being who
was living, weaving and working in natural phenomena — in the
rising and setting of the Sun, in the transmission of warmth to the
stones and plants, a warmth that is actively operating within all
this life, growth and proliferation. How different was a science that
took into account the activities of the Goddess Natura. The mood in
which the students of the School of Chartres — the majority
were of the Cistercian Order — came out of their lectures was
vastly different from the mood of students leaving their
lecture-rooms today! Their response was vitally alive and a deeper
expression of their inner being. And the same living reality is
reflected in the descriptions of such men as Brunetto Latini, the
celebrated teacher of Dante. The vigorous, creative spirit of
the time can readily be imagined, for the characters and
splendid pictorial descriptions of Dante's Commedia are
inspired by the graphic descriptions of his teacher Brunetto Latini
who owed his Initiation to a karmic incident. And the School of
Chartres and other Schools were indebted to Initiates such as
Joachim of Fiore and others for much of the instruction given at the
time.
The term
Natura was not used in our abstract sense; it implied something
operating creatively in external sensible phenomena, but which
remained veiled and escaped one's gaze.
Another
factor must also be taken into consideration. Let us assume —
and again I am describing a fundamental reality, not some poetic
fantasy — that, as an elderly student, you had attended a
course of lectures given by Alanus ab Insulis and had taken part in
the discussions; the students had been dismissed and you were walking
alone with Alanus ab Insulis discussing the problems at
issue.
The
conversation might have turned upon some particular point. You
might have spoken of the Goddess Natura who manifests herself in the
phenomenal world, but who is veiled from you. Then Alanus ab Insulis
who had warmed to the discussion would have said: If we still shared
in our life of sleep the condition formerly possessed by the
ancients, we would be in touch with the hidden side of nature. Our
sleep leads to oblivion; but it was precisely in the unconscious that
the ancients were in contact with the hidden side of nature. Could we
but experience again the clairvoyant sleep of the ancients, we should
know the Goddess Natura.
And if, in a
similar situation, you had been engaged in intimate conversation with
Joachim of Fiore, he would have replied: our sleep is devoid of
content, our consciousness is obliterated. It would be difficult
therefore to know the Goddess Natura weaving and working in all
created things. The ancients were aware of her hidden and her visible
aspects. They never used the term Natura. They never maintained that
the Being whose presence we vaguely sense, but do not know, was the
Goddess Natura. They gave her another name — Proserpina, or
Persephone.
This was
common knowledge in those days. What I have just described has been
transformed into our abstract conception of nature. And what
lived in the souls of such men as Bernardus Silvestris, Alanus ab
Insulis, John of Hanville, and above all in Brunetto Latini, was a
transformation of the Goddess whom the ancients saw as Proserpina,
the daughter of Demeter — the entire universe; Proserpina (the
modern term sounds commonplace) — nature, nature who can live
only half of her life in the upper world, who reveals only her
physical and sensuous aspect to mankind, whilst the other half of her
life is spent in those realms where man dwells in sleep, realms which
man can no longer inhabit today because his sleep is emptied of true
reality.
Our
knowledge of nature, though we are unable to realize it owing to our
present abstract conception, is an echo of what once lived in the old
Greek myth of Persephone.
The fact
that the men of sorrowful countenance were aware of this and that it
could still be known in their day, shows how much the paths of
knowledge have changed with the passage of time. As I said in the
earlier part of my lecture, we can only develop the right feeling
for, and sense the subtle distinctions in these things, when we
review in retrospect the nature of the knowledge that once existed. I
have quoted these examples, not with the idea of reviving ancient
forms of knowledge, but in order to call attention to the kind of
knowledge that was prevalent in former times.
If we can
hold fast to the words which might have been spoken perhaps by
Joachim of Fiore or John of Hanville: “What we regard as nature
today, or whatsoever is veiled from us because we cannot apprehend it
spiritually, this was once known as Proserpina,” and if this
myth of Proserpina (for it has survived only as a myth) is renewed
within us, then the images evoked by this myth awaken images of still
earlier relationships. They are images from the time when man knew
neither the abstract nor the tragic aspect of the Goddess Natura,
when he saw Proserpina-Persephoneia herself, in her aspect of radiant
beauty and tragic gloom.
And in what
aspect did she appear in those far-off days of her prime? These were
not the days of Plato's philosophy, nor of Socrates' dialogues, but
much earlier times, when knowledge was far more vitally alive than at
the height of Greek culture.
Let us try
to envisage the different forms knowledge has taken in the course of
human evolution so that we may see in the right perspective what we
have already discussed from the standpoint of the present and which
will be discussed in further detail in the course of these
lectures.
Though of
necessity our account will be brief and imperfect, let us try
to envisage the nature of the Mysteries into which the Greek
philosopher Heraklites was initiated, the ‘dark’ and
‘gloomy’ Heraklites as he was called, because, in later
years, a psychic darkness had descended upon all that he had received
at the hands of the Mysteries. Let us picture that period in the
development of the Mysteries when the Greeks drew upon them for their
imaginative vision and the creation of their myths. And let us
picture to ourselves the Mysteries of Ephesus into which Heraklites
had been initiated.
Knowledge
from primeval times was still extant in Ephesus and persisted into
Homer's time and even into the time of Heraklites' Initiation, though
in an emasculated form. These ancient Mysteries were still actively
flourishing. A strong and powerful spiritual atmosphere was present
in that temple which was adorned on the Eastern side with the statue
of the Goddess Diana, the Goddess of Fertility, who symbolizes the
superabundant fertility of nature everywhere. When conversations were
held, momentous secrets of existence, profound spiritual secrets were
imparted to the pupils through the spoken word immediately after they
had taken part in the Mysteries and had received the mighty impulses
of the Mysteries from the ceremonies in the Temple of Ephesus.
And these profound conversations were continued after the
participants in the ceremonies had left the Temple. At the twilight
hour, when nature invites to contemplation, they would follow
the pathway leading from the Temple doorway into a grove with
arboured walks, planted with dark-green trees in which paths fanning
out from the Temple of Ephesus were gradually lost to view in the
distance. I should like to offer you a somewhat inadequate picture of
conversations of this kind.
It was not
unknown for someone who had received a partial Initiation into the
Mysteries of those times to enter into conversation with a pupil of
either sex. Now you must realize that in those days equality of
rights between the sexes, though forfeited immediately afterwards,
was very much more a living reality than it is today. We can speak,
therefore, both of male and female pupils at Ephesus. And in these
conversations there was a lively interest in the spiritual
aspect of the myth of Persephone. But how was such a conversation
conducted? First, there was the teacher, the Priest-Initiate, who,
from the spiritual impulses he had received, was empowered to speak
of the contingencies in the world of forms, of the
inter-relationships of entities in that world. Speaking from his
Initiate knowledge he would say something like the following to his
pupil. — It is now twilight, and sleep which reveals the
spiritual world will soon overtake us. Look upon your human form in
its totality. Beneath our feet are the plants and around us are
the lengthening shadows of twilight and the dim green light of the
temple grove. The first stars are beginning to shine in the heavens.
Behold the majesty and grandeur of life's inexhaustible
vitality in the Heavens above and the Earth beneath. Then
behold yourself and remember that a whole universe lives and stirs
within you, that all organic activity, all the changes and chances of
your inner life bear witness every moment of the day to a plenitude
of facts and to endless transformations of your being. Realize that
you are a microcosm which, though spatially delimited, is richer in
mystery and wonder than the macrocosm which you apprehend
visually and intellectually. Learn then to feel and know this world
within you. Realize that you are now looking out from your
microcosmic world into the larger world that reaches from the Earth
to the stars. Then sleep will overtake you; you will no longer be a
prisoner of your own body, of your own world, but will inhabit that
other world you now behold, a world that embraces the Earth and the
stars. Your soul and spirit will have relinquished the physical
body and you will be sharing the radiance of the stars and the
exhalations of the Earth. You will ride the winds and think with
star-radiance. You will now be living in the spiritual world and will
look back upon your microcosmic self.
In ancient
times it was possible for the teacher to speak to his pupil after
this fashion, because the perception of the external world was not so
sharply defined as now, and the life of sleep had not yet become a
total blank. It was still crowded with experiences. When referring to
this state of sleep, the teacher spoke of realities, saying: You are
now in the presence of Proserpina, Persephone or Cora. Cora lives in
the stars, in the rays of sunshine, in the moonbeams and the growing
plants. Everywhere can be seen the activities of Persephone, for she
has woven the garment of the universe. And behind it all is Demeter,
her mother, for whom Persephone has woven this garment which
you see as the external world. — The teacher did not use the
term ‘nature;’ he preferred to speak of Persephone
or Cora.
And
continuing the dialogue with his pupil, the teacher went on: If
someone were to remain awake for a longer period than yourself, then,
whilst you were asleep, he would perceive the plants, mountains,
clouds and stars — external manifestations of Persephone
— exactly as you do now. Illusion lies in the manner of
our seeing. It is not Persephone, not her creative activities in
mountains, plants, clouds and stars that are illusory, but how you
see them. And now the moment has come for sleep. Through your eyes,
the organ of life's mysteries, Cora-Persephone will enter into
you. —
These things
were described so vividly because they had been so vividly
experienced; so that, whilst falling asleep, the sleeper not only
felt that sight, hearing and perception were being extinguished, but
he was aware of Persephone sinking down through the eyes into the
physical and etheric bodies from which his soul and spirit had
withdrawn whilst he slept.
In waking
life we live in the upper world, in sleep we live in the lower world.
Persephone entered through the eyes of the sleeper into the physical
and etheric bodies. She dwelt with Pluto, the Lord of sleep within
the physical and etheric bodies. The sleeping neophyte experienced
the activity of Pluto and Persephone. Through the instruction he had
received he became aware of the entry of Cora through the gateway of
the eyes. This became a living reality to him, and now he experienced
the deeds of Pluto and Persephone during sleep. And whilst the
neophyte experienced this, his teacher had corresponding experiences
that were related to the world of forms.
Then, when
teacher and pupil met together again, each had experience of his own
particular insights. And when they discussed plants and trees, the
teacher would describe how the forms arose, for they had been
revealed to him in sleep. Then he would discuss in detail the
configuration of the leaves and stems, of the whole nature-kingdom
and the formative forces which work down into the Earth from above.
And though the pupil had perhaps experienced different insights, he
could probably follow his teacher when he spoke of the mysteries of
chlorophyll and osmosis. Thus the conversations supplemented each
other: in this vivid picture of the Goddess Persephone in the
underworld, revealing her other aspect to man whilst he slept, these
secrets were revealed to the human soul and entered into
it.
Thus, in
those far-off times, the pupil learned from the teacher and the
teacher from the pupil. On the one hand, the teachings were of the
spirit and soul, on the other hand, of soul and spirit. From this
interchange of pooled experience they touched the highest
flights of knowledge. When they shared these deepest insights, when
next they saw the approach of dawn and the morning star shining in
the East, sending shafts of light into the dark green grove whose
avenues of majestic trees were gradually lost to view in the distant
vista, their hearts were gladdened. They had dwelt for a brief hour
in that realm we now call the realm of nature. And when they had
talked of these things amongst themselves, they knew for certain they
had held converse with Persephone. And they knew also that all that
was later incorporated into the myth of Persephone was, in reality,
the hidden source of man's knowledge of nature.
I can only
indicate imperfectly the fascination of these conversations that were
related to the Mysteries of Ephesus and were imbued with a vital,
living knowledge of Persephone. But in the course of time this
knowledge was toned down to the abstraction we know as nature today
and men such as Joachim of Fiore were saddened by this tragic
loss.
We can only
understand the path leading to an understanding of the
spiritual nature of man and the Cosmos when we draw attention to, and
characterize, not only the separate states of consciousness within
man's reach, but also show how these states have been transformed in
the course of the evolution of mankind; when we realize how very
different from our own was the knowledge ,that informed the
conversations of those who had participated in the Mysteries in the
Temple of Ephesus, and how different was the nature of the converse
held with such personalities as Joachim of Fiore and Alanus ab
Insulis; and how different today is the knowledge that we must strive
to attain once more, in order through spiritual training to seek
forms of knowledge which lead back from the Outer to the Inner, from
the Above to the Below and then from the Inner to the Outer and the
Below to the Above.
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