The Mystery of Death
GA 159
7 March 1915, Leipzig
4. The Intimate Element of the Central European Culture and the Central European Striving
We live in grievous, destiny-burdened days. Only few souls wait with full confidence what these destiny-burdened days will bring to us earth people. Above all, the significance of that what expresses itself by the events of these days, does not speak with full strength in the souls. Some human souls attempt to experience the impulses more and more that spiritual science demands to be implanted into the cultural development. They should know being connected with their deepest feeling with that which, on one side, takes place around us so tremendously and, on the other side, so painfully.
Something takes place that is matchless not only according to the way but also according to the degree within the conscious history of human development, that is deeply intervening and drastic in the whole life of the earth's development. One needs to imagine only what it means—and this is the case today with every human being of the European and also of many parts of the other earth population—to be in the centre of the course of such significant events. We have to feel that this is just a time which is not only suitable but also demands that the soul frees itself from merely living within the own self, and should attempt to experience the common fate of humankind. The human being can learn a lot in our present if he knows how to combine in the right way with the stream of the events. He frees himself from a lot of pettiness and egoism if he is able to do this. Such great events take place that almost anybody caring for himself ignores the destinies of the other human beings.
In particular the population of Central Europe—which immense questions has it to put to itself about matters that it can learn basically only now! The human being of Central Europe can perceive how he is misunderstood, actually, how he is hated. And these misunderstandings, this hatred did not only erupt since the outbreak of the war, they have become perceptible since the outbreak of the war. Hence, the outbreak of the war and the course of the war can be even as it were that what draws attention of the Central European souls to that how they must feel isolated in a certain way more or less compared with the feeling of those people who stand on all sides around this Central European population really not with understanding emotions. If anybody could arouse deeper interests in the big events of life in the souls dedicating themselves to spiritual science—this would be so desirable, especially now—events that lead the soul from the ken of its ego to the large horizon of humankind! Then one were able to deepen the look, the whole attitude of the souls who recognise the encompassing forces, because they have taken up spiritual science in themselves, and release them from the interest in the narrow forces that deal only with the individual human being! If one hears the world talking today, in particular the world which is around us Central Europeans, if one reads which peculiar things there are written about the impulses which should have led to this war, then one has the feeling that humankind has lost the obligation to judge from larger viewpoints in our materialistic time, has lost so much that you may have the impression, as if people had generally learnt nothing, but for them history only began on the 25th July, 1914.1Serbia refuses the ultimatum of Austria-Hungary
It is as if people know nothing about that what has taken place in the interplay of forces of the earth population and what has led from this interplay of forces to the grievous involvements which caught fire from the flame of war, finally, and flared up. One talks hardly of the fact that one calls the encirclement by the previous English king who united the European powers round Central Europe, so that from this union of human forces around us, finally, nothing else could originate than that what has happened. One does not want to go further back as some years, at most decades and make conceptions how this has come what is now so destiny-burdened and painful around us.
But the matters lie still much deeper. If one speaks of encirclement, one must say: what has taken place in the encirclement of the Central European powers in the last time, that is the last stage, the last step of an encirclement of Central Europe, which began long, long ago, in the year 860 A. D. At that time, when those human beings drove from the north of Europe who stood as Normans before Paris, a part of the strength, which should work in Europe, drove in the west of Europe into the Romance current which had flooded the west of Europe from the south. We have a current of human forces which pours forth from Rome via Italy and Sicily over Spain and through present-day France. The Norman population, which drives down from the north and stands before Paris in 860, was flooded and wrapped up by that which had come as a Romance current of olden times. That what is powerful in this current is due to the fact that the Norman population was wrapped up in it. What has originated, however, as something strange to the Central European culture in the West, is due to the Romance current. This Romance current did not stop in present-day France, but it proved to be powerful enough because of its dogmatically rationalistic kind, its tendency to the materialistic way of thinking to flood not only France but also the Anglo-Saxon countries. This happened when the Normans conquered Britain and brought with them that what they had taken up from the Romance current. Also the Romance element is in the British element which thereby faces the Central European being, actually, without understanding. The Norman element penetrated by the Romance element continued its train via the Greek coasts down to Constantinople. So that we see a current of Norman-Romance culture driving down from the European north to the west, encircling Central Europe like in a snake-form, stretching its tentacles as it were to Constantinople.
We see the other train going down from the north to the east and penetrating the Slavic element. The first Norman trains were called “Ros” by the Finnish population which was widely propagated at that time in present-day Russia. “Ros” is the origin of this name. We see these northern people getting in the Slavic element, getting to Kiev and Constantinople at the same time. The circle is closed! On one side, the Norman forces drive down from the north to the west, becoming Romance, on the other side, to the east, becoming Slavic, and they meet from the east and from the west in Constantinople. In Central Europe that is enclosed like in a cultural basin what remained of the original Teutonic element, fertilised by the old Celtic element, which is working then in the most different nuances in the population, as German, as Dutch, as Scandinavian populations. Thus we recognise how old this encirclement is.
Now in this Central Europe an intimate culture prepares itself, a culture which was never able to run like the culture had to run in the West or the culture in the East, but which had to run quite differently. If we compare the cultural development in Central Europe with that of the West, so we must say, in the West a culture developed—and this can be seen from the smallest and from the biggest feature of this culture—whose basic character is to be pursued from the British islands over France, Spain, to Sicily, to Italy and to Constantinople. There certain dogmatism developed as a characteristic of the culture, rationalism, a longing for dressing everything one gets in knowledge in plain rationalistic formulae. There developed a desire to see things as reason and sensuousness must see them. There developed the desire to simplify everything. Let us take a case which is obvious to us as supporters of spiritual science namely the arrangement of our human soul in three members: sentient soul, intellectual soul or mind-soul, and consciousness-soul. The human soul can be understood in reality only if one knows that it consists of these three members. Just as little as the light can be understood without recognising the colour nuances in their origin from the light, and without knowing that it is made up of the different colour nuances which we see in the rainbow, on one side the red yellow rays, on the other side the blue, green, violet ones, and if one cannot study the light as a physicist. Just as little somebody can study the human soul what is infinitely more important. For everybody should be a human being and everybody should know the soul. He, who does not feel in his soul that this soul lives in three members: sentient soul, intellectual soul or mind-soul, consciousness-soul, throws everything in the soul in a mess. We see the modern university psychologists getting everything of the soul in a mess, as well as somebody gets the colour nuances of the light simply in a mess. And they imagine themselves particularly learnt in their immense arrogance, in their scientific arrogance throwing everything together in the soul-life, while one can only really recognise the soul if one is able to know this threefolding of the soul actually.
The sentient soul also is at first that what realises, as it were, the desires, the more feeling impulses, more that in the current earth existence what we can call the more sensuous aspect of the human being. Nevertheless, this sentient soul contains the eternal driving forces of the human nature in its deeper parts at the same time. These forces go through birth and death. The intellectual soul or mind-soul contains half the temporal and half the eternal. The consciousness-soul, as it is now, directs the human being preferably to the temporal. Hence, it is clear that the nation, who develops its folk-soul by means of the consciousness-soul, the British people, after a very nice remark of Goethe, has nothing of that what is meditative reflection, but it is directed to the practical, to the external competition. Perhaps, it is not bad at all to remember such matters, because those who have taken part in the German cultural life were not blind for them, but they expressed themselves always very clearly about that. Thus Goethe said to Eckermann2conversation with Eckermann, 1st September 1829—it is long ago, but you can see that great Germans have seen the matters always in the true light—when once the conversation turned to the philosophers Hegel, Fichte, Kant and some others: yes, yes, while the Germans struggle to solve the deepest philosophical problems, the English are directed mainly to the practical aspects and only to them. They lack any sense of reflection. And even if they—so said Goethe—make declamations about morality mainly consisting of the liberation of slaves, one has to ask: which is “the real object?”—At another occasion, Goethe wrote3letter to Zelter, 20th February 1828 that a remark of Walter Scott expresses more than many books. For even Walter Scott admitted once that it was more important than the liberation of nations, even if the English had taken part in the battles against Napoleon, “to see a British object before themselves.” A German philologist succeeded—and what does the diligence of German philologists not manage—in finding the passage in nine thick volumes of Napoleon's biography by Walter Scott to which Goethe has alluded at that time. Indeed, there you find, admitted by Walter Scott, that the Britons took part in the battles against Napoleon, however, they desired to attain a British advantage. He himself expresses it “to secure the British object.”—It is a remark of the Englishman himself, one only had to search for it. These matters are interesting to extend your ken somewhat today.
You have to know, I said, that the human soul consists of these three members, properly speaking that the human self works by these three soul nuances like the light by the different colour nuances, mainly in the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms. Then one will find out that the human being, while he has these three soul nuances, can and must assign each of these soul nuances to a great ideal in the course of human progress. Each of these ideals corresponds to a soul nuance not to the whole soul. Only if people can be induced by spiritual science to assign the corresponding ideals to the single soul members, will the real ideal of human welfare and of the harmonious living together of human beings on earth come into being.
Because the human being has to aim at another ideal for his sentient soul, for that which he realises as it were in the physical plane, at another soul ideal for that what he realises in the intellectual soul or mind-soul, and again another ideal in his consciousness-soul. He improves a soul member through one of these ideals; the other soul members are improved through the others. If one develops the soul member in particular through brotherliness of the human beings on earth, one has to develop the other one through freedom, the third through equality. Each of these three ideals refers to a soul member. In the west of Europe everything got muddled, and it was simplified by the rationalists, by that rationalism, which wants to have everything in plain formulae, in plain dogmas, which wants to have everything clearly to mind. The whole human soul was taken by this dogmatism simply as one, and one spoke of liberty, fraternity, equality. We see that there is a fundamental attitude of rationalising civilisation in the West. We could verify that in details. For example, just highly educated French can mock that I used five-footed iambi in my mystery dramas4cf. the lecture On the Mystery Dramas “The Portal of Initiation” and “The Soul's Probation” 19th December 1911, Steiner's Collected Works volume 127 but no rhymes. The French mind cannot understand that the internal driving force of the language does not need the rhyme at this level. The French mind strives for systematisation, for that what forms an external framework, and it says: one cannot make verses without rhyme.
However, this also applies to the exterior life, to everything. In the West, one wants to arrange, to systematise, and to nicely tin everything. Think only what a dreadful matter it was, when in the beginning of our spiritual-scientific striving many of our friends were still influenced by the English theosophical direction. In every branch you could find all possible systems written down on maps, boards et cetera, on top, nicely arranged: atma, buddhi, manas, then all possible matters in detail which one systematises and tins that way. Imagine how one has bent under the yoke of this dogmatism and how difficult it was to set the methods of internal development to their place, which we must have in Central Europe, that one thing ensues from the other, that concepts advance in the internal experience. One does not need systematising, these mnemonic aids which wrap up everything in certain formulae. Which hard work was it to show that one matter merges into another, that you have to arrange matters sequentially and lively. I could expand this account to all branches of life; however, we would have to stay together for days.
We find that in the West as one part of the current which encircled Central Europe. If we go to the East, then we must say: there we deal with a longing which just presents the opposite, with the longing to let disappear everything still in a fog of lacks of clarity in a primitive, elementary mysticism, in something that does not stand to express itself directly in clear ideas and clear words. We really have two snakes—the symbol is absolutely appropriate,—one of them extends from the north to southeast, the other from the north to southwest, and both meet in Constantinople. In the centre that is enclosed what we can call the intimate Central European spiritual current, where the head can never be separated from the heart, thinking from feeling, if it appears in its original quality.
One does not completely notice that in our spiritual science even today, because one has to strive, even if not for a conceptual system, but for concepts of development. One does not yet notice that everything that is aimed at is not only a beholding with the head. However, the heart and the whole soul is combined with everything, always the heart is flowed through, while the head, for example, describes the transitions from Saturn to the Sun, from the Sun to the Moon, from the Moon to the earth et cetera. Everywhere the heart takes part in the portrayal; and one can be touched there in the deepest that one ascends with all heart-feeling to the top heights and dives in the deepest depths and can ascend again. One does not notice this even today that that what is described only apparently in concepts one has to put one's heart and soul in it at the same time if it should correspond to the Central European cultural life. This intimate element of the Central European culture is capable of the spiritual not without ideal, not to think the ideal any more without the spiritual. Recognising the spirit and combining it intimately with the soul characterises the Central European being most intensely. Hence, this Central European being can use that what descends to the deepest depths of the sensory view and the sensory sensation to become the symbol for the loftiest. It is deeply typical that Goethe, after he had let go through his mind the life of the typical human being, the life of Faust, closed his poem with the words:
Alles Vergängliche
All that is transitoryIst nur ein Gleichnis
Is only a symbol;
and the last words are:
Das Ewig-Weibliche
The eternal feminine drawsZieht uns hinan
Us up to higher levels.
A cosmic mystery is expressed through a sensory picture, and just in this sensory picture the intimate character of the Central European culture expresses itself. We find this wonderfully intimate character, for example, so nicely expressed and at the same time rising spiritually to the loftiest just with Novalis. If you look for translations of this last sentence: “Das Ewig-Weibliche zieht uns hinan,” in particular the French translations, then you will see what has become of this sentence. Some French did explain it not so nicely, but they do not count if it concerns the understanding of Faust.
The Central European being aims at the intimacy of spiritual life most eminently, and this is that what is enclosed by the Midgard Snake in the East and the West. So far we have to go to combine completely in our feeling with that what happens, actually. Then we gain objectivity just from this Central European being to stand in front of the present great events with the really supranational human impulses, and not to judge out of the same impulses which are applied by the East and the West. Then we understand why the Central European population is misunderstood that way, is hated by those who surround them. Of course, we have to look at the mission of Central Europe for the whole humankind with all humility. We are not allowed to be arrogant, but we must also protect the free look for what is to be done in Central Europe.
The Central European population has always gone through the rejuvenating force of its folk-soul. It arrived at the summit in the ideals of Lessing, Schelling, Hegel, and Grimm. However, everything that already lived there lived more in a striving for idealism. Now this must gain more life, more concrete life. The profound ideas of German idealism have to get contents from spirituality, by which they are raised only from mere ideas to living beings of the spiritual world. Then we can familiarise ourselves in this spiritual world. The significance of the Central European task has now to inspire German hearts, and also the consciousness of what is to be defended in all directions, to the sides where the Midgard Snake firmly closes the circle. It is our task in particular because we are on the ground of spiritual science to look at the present events in such a higher sense. We cannot take the most internal impulse of our spiritual science seriously enough if we do not familiarise ourselves with such an impersonal view of the spiritual-scientific striving if we do not feel how this spiritual-scientific striving is connected in every individual human being with the whole Central European striving as it must be united with the whole substantiality of this Central European striving. We have to realise that something of what we have in mind exists only in the germ, however, that the Central European culture has the vocation to let unfold the germs to blossoms and fruits.
I give you an example. When the human being tries to further himself by means of meditation and concentration, by the intimate work on the development of his soul, then all soul forces take on another form than they have in the everyday life. Then the soul forces become as it were something different. If the human being works really busily on his development, by concentration of thought and other exercises as I described them in the book How Does One Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds?, the human being begins to understand vividly, I would like to say to grasp vividly that he does no longer think at the moment, when he approaches the real spiritual world, as he has to think in the everyday life. In the everyday life, you think that the thoughts start living in you. If you face the sensory world, you know: that is me, and I have the thoughts. You connect one thought with the other and you thereby make a judgment, you combine the thoughts and let them separate. In my writing which is entitled The Threshold of the Spiritual World, I have compared somebody developing thoughts to one putting his head into a world of living beings.
The thoughts start internally prickling and creeping, they become, if I may say so, living beings, and we are no longer those who connect one thought to the other. One thought goes to the other, and frees itself from the other, the life of thoughts starts coming to life. Only when the thoughts start as it were becoming shells and containers which contract in a small room and extend then again largely, bag-like, then the beings of the higher hierarchies are able to slip into our thoughts, then only! So our own way of life, the whole thinking changes when we settle in the spiritual world. Then you start perceiving that on the other planets other beings live not human beings like on the earth. These other beings of the other planets, they penetrate as it were our living thinking, and we do no longer think about the beings of the other worlds and world spheres, but they live in us, they live combined with our selves. Thinking has become a different soul-force; it has developed from the point on which it stood to another soul-force, to that force which surpasses us and becomes identical with that world, the spiritual world.
Here we have an example of that what humankind has to conceive if it should develop the condition in which it now lives to a higher one for the earth future. This must really become common knowledge that such thinking is possible, and that only by such a thinking the human being can get to know the spiritual world. Not every human being has to become a spiritual researcher, just as little as everybody needs to become a chemist who wants to understand the achievements of chemistry. However, even if there can be few spiritual researchers, everybody can see the truth of that using unbiased thinking and understand what the spiritual researcher says. But it must become clear that there are unnoticed soul forces in the human being during life which when the human being goes through the gate of death become the same forces as an initiate has. When the human being goes through the gate of death, thinking becomes another soul-force: it intervenes in the being. It is as if antennas were perpetually put out, and the human being experiences the higher worlds which are in these antennas.
There was a witty man setting the tone in the 19th century, who contributed to the foundation of the materialistic world view: Ludwig Feuerbach.5Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872): the censorship confiscated his writing Thoughts on Death and Immortality (Nuremberg, 1830) He wrote a book Thoughts on Death and Immortality, and it is interesting to read the following in a passage of this book. Feuerbach says there for instance: the summit human being is able to reach is his thoughts. He cannot develop higher soul forces than thinking. If he could develop higher soul forces than thinking, some effects and actions of the inhabitants of the star worlds would be able to penetrate his head instead of thoughts.—This seems so absurd to Ludwig Feuerbach that he regards everybody as mentally ill who speaks of such a thing at all. Imagine how interesting this is that a person—who just becomes a materialist because he rejects higher soul forces—gets on that the soul-force is that which represents the higher development of thinking. He even describes it, but he has such a dreadful fear of this development that just because it would have to be that way, as he suspects, he declares this soul-force a matter of impossibility, a fantasy.
The spiritual development in the 19th century comes so near to that what must be aimed at, but it is so far away at the same time because it is pushed, as it were, from the inside to that what should be aimed at, but cannot penetrate the depths, because it must regard it as absurd, because it is afraid of it really, fears it quite terrifically. As soon as it only touches what should come there, it is afraid. The Central European cultural life has to come back to itself, then we will attain that this Central European cultural life just develops and overcomes this fear. That has become too strong what wants to suppress this Central European spiritual light.
Some examples may also be mentioned. Hegel, the German philosopher, raised his voice in vain against the overestimation of Newton. If you today hear any physicist speaking—you can read up that what I say in many popular works,—then you will hear: Newton set the tone in the doctrine of gravitation, a doctrine through which the universe has only become explicable.—Hegel said: what has Newton done then, actually?—He dressed that in mathematical formulae what Kepler, the German astronomer, had expressed. Because nothing is included in Newton's works what Kepler did not already say. Kepler worked out of that view with which the whole soul works not only the head. However, Newton brought the whole in a system and thereby all kinds of mistakes came into being, for example, the doctrine of a remote effect of the sun which is not useful for the judgment of planetary motion. With Newton it is real that way, as if the sun had physical arms, and stretches these arms and attracts the planets.—However, the German philosopher warned in vain that the Central European culture would be flooded by the British culture in this field.
Another example: Goethe founded a theory of colours which originated completely from the Central European thinking and which you only understand if you recognise the connections of the physical with the spiritual a little bit. The world did not accept the Goethean theory of colours, but the Newtonian theory of colours.—Goethe founded a teaching of evolution. The world did not understand it, but it only accepted what Darwinism gave as a theory of evolution, as a theory of development in a popular-materialistic way. You may say: the Central European human being who is encircled by the Midgard Snake has to call in mind his forces. It concerns not to bend under that what rationalism and empiricism brought in.
You see the gigantic task; you see the significance of the ideal. One does not notice that at all because it still passes, I would like to say, in the current of phenomena if one asserts the Central European being. I do not know how many people noticed the following. When for reasons which were also mentioned yesterday in the public lecture6The Bearing Force of the German Spirit. Lecture of the same title in Berlin, 25th February 1915, in Steiner's Collected Works volume 185 our spiritual-scientific movement had to free itself from the specifically British direction of the Theosophical Society and when long ago as it were that happened beforehand in the spiritual realm what takes place now during the war—and preceded for good reasons,—I have discussed and explained the whole matter in those days on symptoms. There are brainless people who want to judge about what our spiritual-scientific movement is and have often said: well, also this Central European spiritual-scientific movement has gone out from that which it has got from the British theosophical movement.
I say the following not because of personal reasons, but because it characterises the situation, the whole nerve of the matter in a symptom, I would like to remind you of the fact that I held talks in Berlin which were printed then in my writing Mysticism at the Dawn of the Modern Spiritual Life, before I had any external interrelation with the British theosophical movement. In this writing nobody will find anything of western influence, but there everything is developed purely out of the Central European cultural life, from the spiritual, mystic movement of Master Eckhart up to Angelus Silesius. When I came to London the first time, I met one of the pundits of the theosophical society in those days, Mr. Mead.7George M. S. Mead: last private secretary of H. P. Blavatsky. He left the Theosophical Society later. He had read the book which was immediately translated in many chapters into the English, and said that the whole theosophy would be contained in this book.—So far as people admitted that they could go along with us, so far we could unite with the whole object, of course; but nothing else was done.
What matters is that we reflect on our tasks of the Central European spiritual culture and that we never deviate from them. The one or the other sent the medals, certificates and the like back to the English. That is, nevertheless, less important. The important thing will be first to send back Newtonianism, the English coloured Darwinism, that means to release the Central European cultural life from it. Something is to be learnt from the way how—free of other influence—the Central European cultural life has made itself noticeable just as spiritual science. But you have to call to mind the essential part once and to stand firmly on this ground. It is very peculiar how mysteriously matters work.
Imagine the following case: Ernst Haeckel has taken care basically through his whole life to direct the German world view to the British thinking. The British thinking, the British empiricism flows into Ernst Haeckel's writings completely. He now rails against England the most. These are processes which take place in the subconscious of the soul of the Central European; these are also matters which are tightly connected in such a soul with karma. Consider please what it means that Haeckel places himself before the world and says, he himself has accomplished the first great action of the great researcher Huxley, while he stamped the sentence of the similarity of the human bone and the animal bone; that he, Haeckel, then has pointed to the big change in the view of the origin of the human being, and that he accepted nothing in the evolution theory but what came from the West.—Then one sees that he is urged now to rail against that what has constituted his whole intellectual life. It is the most tragic event of the present for such a soul which can be only thought. It is spiritual dynamite, because it bursts, actually, all supporting pillars on which such a soul stands.
Thus you can, actually, look into the depths of the present dreadful events. Only if you really consider the matters that way, are you able to consider them beyond a narrow horizon under which they are often considered today. You will be able to learn a lot—and this will be the nicest, at the same time the most humiliating and the loftiest teaching. For this teaching the prevailing active world spirit determined the Central European human being who is now embraced by the Midgard Snake, enclosed like in a fortress, surrounded by enemies everywhere. If the events become a symbol of the deepest world weaving and world being, then only we release ourselves from a selfish view of the present grievous, destiny-burdened events. Then we feel only that we must make ourselves worthy of that what, for instance, Fichte also spoke about in a time in which Germany experienced destiny-burdened days in his Addresses to the German Nation. There he wanted to speak, as he expresses it himself, “for Germans par excellence, of Germans par excellence,” and he spoke like one had to speak of the German par excellence to the German par excellence in those days. But like in those days Fichte spoke of the German mission, of the German range of tasks, we have today to experience the seriousness as the sunrise of the Central European consciousness within the containment by hating enemies. Indeed, a word which is found at the end of Fichte's addresses may be transformed: the spiritual world view must flow into the souls for the sake of humankind's welfare. The world spirit is looking at those who live in Central Europe that they become a mouthpiece for that what he has to say and bring to humankind in continuous revelation.
Without arrogance, without national egoism one can look at that which the sons of Germany and Central Europe have to defend with body, blood and soul generally. However, one has also to realise that. Then only from the immense sacrifices, which must be brought from the sufferings, must that result what serves the welfare of humankind. We stand at a significant threshold. One may characterise this threshold in the human development that one says: in future the abyss must be bridged between the physical and the spiritual worlds, between the physically living and the spiritually living human beings, between the earthly and that what lies beyond the earthly death. A time must come to us as it were when not only the souls are alive to us which walk about in physical bodies, but when we feel being integrated to that bigger world to which also the souls belong living between death and new birth disembodied in our world. The view of the human being has to turn beyond that which sensory-physical eyes are only able to see. Indeed, we are standing at the threshold of this new experience, of this new consciousness. What I said to you of the widening of the consciousness, of the ascending development of the consciousness, this must become a familiar view. The Central European culture prepares itself to make this a familiar view; it really prepares itself for that.
I have shown you how the best heads of the 19th century are afraid even today to get into their consciousness what the soul has in its depths; only its earthly soul forces cannot yet turn the attention to it. That thinking exists, into which the supersensible forces and supersensible beings extend, and this thinking also opens straight away after the human being has gone through the gate of death. The materialists are afraid of admitting that the human consciousness can be extended that really the barrier between the physical and the spiritual experience can fall, between that what lies on this side of death and beyond death. Because they are afraid, they reject it as something fantastic, dream-like, nay as mentally ill. However, one will recognise that the human being when he has gone through the gate of death develops only the forces which he also has now already between birth and death. Only they work in such depths that he does not behold them. They cause processes in him which are done, indeed, in him, but escape his attention in the everyday life. With the forces of thinking, feeling and willing, about which the human being knows, he cannot master the physical-earthly life. If the human being could only think, feel and will, as well as now he is able to do it, he would be never able to develop his body, for example, plastically that the brain matched its dispositions. Formative forces had to intervene there. However, they already belong to that what the soul does no longer perceive in the physical experience what belongs to a more encompassing consciousness than to the segment of consciousness which we have in the everyday life.
When the human being goes through the gate of death, he has not a lack of consciousness, but then he lives at first in a consciousness which is much richer and fuller of contents than the consciousness here in the physical life. Because from a more encompassing consciousness the body cuts out a piece and shows everything that can be shown only in a mirror. However, what is in the body and the human being bears through the gate of death that has an encompassing consciousness in itself. When the human being has gone through the gate of death, he is in this encompassing consciousness. He then does not have not enough, but on the contrary too much, too rich a consciousness. About that I have spoken in my Vienna cycle8Inner Nature of Man and Life Between Death and Rebirth, eight lectures (Vienna, 1914), Steiner's Collected Works volume 153 at Easter 1914. The human being has a richer consciousness after death. When the often described retrospect, caused by the etheric body, is over, he enters into a kind of sleeping state for a while. However, this is not a real sleeping state, but a state which is caused by the fact that the human being is in a richer consciousness than here on earth. As our eyes are blinded by overabundant light, the human being is blinded by the superabundance of consciousness, and he only must learn to orientate himself. The apparent sleep only consists in the fact that the human being orientates himself in this superabundance of consciousness that he then is able to lessen the superabundance of consciousness to that level he can already endure according to the results of his life. This is the essential part. We do not have not enough, but too much a consciousness, and we are awake when we have lessened our sense of direction to the level we can endure. It is reducing the superabundance of consciousness to the endurable level what takes place after death. You must get such matters clear in your mind by the details of the Vienna cycle.9Inner Nature of Man and Life Between Death and Rebirth, eight lectures (Vienna, 1914), Steiner's Collected Works volume 153
I want to illustrate that today only with the help of two obvious examples. I could state many such examples, because many of our friends have gone through the gate of death recently and also before. But as a result of characteristic circumstances, just by the fact that it concerns the last deaths, these considerations are more obvious. I would like to take the starting point from such examples to speak to you of that which makes our hearts bleed because it has happened in our own middle out of the circle of our spiritual-scientific movement.
Recently we have lost a dear friend (Sibyl Colazza) from the physical plane, and it was my task to speak words for the deceased at the cremation. There it turned out to me automatically by the impulses of the spiritual world, in such a case speaking clearly enough, as a necessity to characterise the qualities of this friendly soul. We stood—it was in Zurich—before the cremation of a dear member of our spiritual-scientific movement. Because her death occurred on a Wednesday evening and the cremation took place in the early Monday morning, it is comprehensible that the retrospect of the etheric body had already stopped. Actually, without having wanted it, I was induced by the spiritual world to begin and close the obituary with words which should characterise the internal being of this soul. This internal being of the friend deceased in the middle of life was real that I had to delve in this being and to create it spiritually by identification with this being. That means to let the thinking dive in the soul of the dead and that what wove in the soul of the dead let flow into the own thoughts. Then I got the possibility to say as it were in view of this soul how the soul was in life and how it is still now after death. It has turned out by itself to dress that in the following words. I had to say the subsequent words at the beginning and at the end of the cremation:
You walked among us.
Your being's gentle spirit
Spoke through the quiet power of your eyes—
Ensouled, alive, peace
Flowed in waves,
With your glance
To things and people
Bearing your inner weaving;
And your voice ensouled this being—
Your voice that eloquently,
More in the kind of words
Than in the words themselves,
Revealed what worked hidden
Within your beautiful soul;
Yet your sacrificial love
Unveiled itself completely
To sympathetic people without words—
This being, who, from noble, quiet beauty,
Heralded the sensitive awareness
Of worlds-and-souls creation.
The being of this soul appeared to me that way during the days before the cremation, when I identified myself with it, after the retrospect of the etheric body was over. The soul was not yet able to orientate itself in the superabundance of consciousness. It was sleeping as it were when the body was about to be cremated. The above-mentioned words were spoken in the beginning and at the end of the cremation. Then it happened that the flame—that what looks like the flame, but it is not—grasped the body, and while the body was grasped from that what looks like the flame what is, however, only the ascending warmth and heat, the soul became awake for a moment. Now I could notice that the soul looked back at the whole scene which had taken place among the human beings who were at the cremation. And the soul looked particularly back at that what had been spoken, then again it sank back into the superabundance of consciousness, you may say: in the unconsciousness. A moment later, one could perceive when such a looking back was there again. Then such moments last longer and longer, until finally the soul can orientate itself entirely in the superabundance of consciousness.
But one can recognise something significant from that. I could notice that the words spoken at the cremation lighted up the retrospect, because the words have come from the soul itself which had something awakening in them. From that you can learn that it is most important after death to overlook your own experience. You have to begin as it were with self-knowledge after death. Here in the life on earth you can miss self-knowledge, you can miss it so thoroughly that is true what a not average person, also a not average man of letters, but a famous professor of philosophy, Dr. Ernst Mach10Ernst Mach (1838–1916), Austrian physicist and philosopher—not Ferdinand Maack, I would not mention him—admits in his Contributions to the Analysis of Sensations, a very famous work: as a young man I crossed a street and saw a person suddenly in a mirror who met me. I thought: what an unpleasant, disgusting face. I was surprised when I discovered that I had seen my own face in the profile.—He had seen his own face which he knew so little that he could make this judgment. The same professor tells how it has happened to him later when he was already a famous professor of philosophy that he got in a bus after a long trip, surely exhausted, there a man also got in from the other side—there was a big mirror opposite,—and he confesses his thoughts quite sincerely, while he says that he thought: what a disagreeable and down-and-out schoolmaster gets in there?—Again he recognised himself, and he adds: so I recognised the type better than the individual.—This is a nice example of how little the human being already knows himself by his external figure in life if he is not a flirtatious lady who often looks in the mirror.—But much less the human being knows the qualities of his soul. He passes those even more. He can become a famous philosopher of the present without self-knowledge. But the human being needs this self-knowledge when he has passed through the gate of death.
The human being must look back just at the point of his development from which he has gone through death, and he must recognise himself there. As little the human being, who stands in the physical life and looks back with the usual forces of life is able to see his own birth, as little this stands before the usual soul-forces—there is no one which can look back with the usual soul-forces at the physical birth,—in the same way it is necessary that the moment of death is permanently there at which one looks back. Death stands always before the soul's eyes as the last significant event. This death, seen from the other side, seen from beyond, is something different than that from the physical side. It is the most beautiful experience which can be seen from the other side, from the side of the life between death and new birth. Death appears as the glorious picture of the everlasting victory of the spiritual over the physical. Because death appears as such a picture, it wakes up the highest forces of the human nature permanently when this human nature lives in the spirituality between death and new birth. That is why the soul looking back or striving for looking back must look at itself at first. Just in these cases which we have gone through recently it was clear in which way the impulse originated to characterise this soul. The so-called living human being works together with the so-called dead that way. More and more such a relation will come from the so-called living to the so-called dead.
We experienced another case in the last time, that of our dear friend Fritz Mitscher. Even if Fritz Mitscher is less known to the local friends, nevertheless, he worked by his talks among many other anthroposophists, by that what he performed wonderfully from friend to friend by the way he familiarised himself with the anthroposophical life. His character has just to be regarded as exemplary, because he whose soul forces were directed to go through a learnt education was keen to take up and collect everything in himself according to his disposition of scholarship, to embrace it intimately in his soul-life, to insert it then in his spiritual-scientific world view. We need this kind of work, in particular, while we want to carry the spiritual-scientific ideals into future in a beneficial way. We need human beings, who try to penetrate the education of our time with understanding to immerse it in the stream of spiritual education; who offer that as it were as a sacrifice. Also there—and I speak only of matters that resulted from karma with necessity—karma caused that I had to speak at the cremation. Out of internal necessity it turned out that I had to characterise the being of our dear friend again in the beginning and at the end of the funeral speech. I had to characterise this being:
A hope, filling us with happiness:
You entered the field
Where, through the power of soul being,
Earth's spirit blossoms
Reveal themselves to investigation.Your longing was bound from the beginning
To pure truth-loving being;
To create out of spirit-light
Was the earnest life goal
For which you strove without rest.You nurtured your beautiful gifts
To tread with steady steps
Bright paths of spirit-knowledge
As truth's true servant
You trained your spirit-organs
That, with courage and persistence,
On both sides of the path
Repelled error for you
And made a space for truth for you.For you, to form your Self
For the revelation of pure light
So the soul's sun-power
Might shine mightily within you
Was your life's concern and joy.Other cares, other joys
Barely touched your soul,
For knowledge seemed to you to be
The light that gives existence meaning,
Seemed to you life' s true value.A hope, filling us with happiness:
You entered the field
Where, through the power of soul being,
Earth's spirit blossoms
Reveal themselves to investigation.A loss that pains us deeply,
You disappeared from the field
Where the Spirit's earthly kernels
In the womb of soul being
Ripened your senses for the spheres.Feel how we lovingly gaze
Into the heights that now
Call you to other works.
Give to the friends left behind
Your power from spirit-realms,Hear our souls' entreaties
Sent to you in confidence and trust:
For our earthly work here we need
Strong forces from spirit-lands,
For which we thank dead friends.A hope, filling us with happiness,
A loss that pains us deeply:
Allow us to hope, that you, far-near,
Un-lost, light our life
As a soul-star in spirit-realm.
In the following night the soul which was not yet able to orientate itself returned of own accord something like an answer what is connected with the verses, which were directed to its being at the cremation. Such words like those are spoken that the own soul writes them down really without being able to add a lot. The words are written down while the soul oriented itself to the other soul, out of the other soul. It was unclear to me at all that two stanzas are built in a quite particular way, until I heard the words from the friend's soul who had gone through the gate of death:
For me, to form my Self
For the revelation of pure light
So the soul's sun-power
Might shine mightily within me
Was my life's concern and joy.Other cares, other joys
Barely touched my soul,
For knowledge seemed to me to be
The light that gives existence meaning,
Seemed to my life's true value.
I could only know now, why these stanzas are built that way; I spoke them exactly the same:
For you, to form your Self
For the revelation of pure light
So the soul's sun-power
Might shine mightily within you
Was your life's concern and joy.
However, any “you” came back as “I,” any “your” came back as “my;” thus they returned transformed, expressed by the soul about its own being.
This is an example in which way the correspondence takes place, in which way the mutual relation already exists between the world here and the world there in the time after death. It is connected with the meaning of our spiritual-scientific movement that this consciousness penetrates the human souls. Spiritual science will give humankind the consciousness that the world of those who live between death and a new birth also becomes a world in which we know ourselves connected with them. Thus the world extends from the narrow area of reality in which the human being lives provisionally. However, this is connected intimately with that what should be in Central Europe. Somebody who has well listened finds just in the words directed to Fritz Mitscher's soul what is deeply connected with this meaning of our spiritual-scientific movement, because the words are spoken from a deep internal necessity:
Hear our souls' entreaties
Sent to you in confidence and trust:
For our earthly work here we need
Strong forces from spirit-lands,
For which we thank dead friends.
Sometimes one may doubt, even if not in reality but concerning the interim period, whether the souls, which are embodied in the flesh here on earth, do really enough for the welfare of humans and earth what must necessarily be made concerning the spiritual comprehension of the world. However, somebody who is engaged completely in the spiritual-scientific movement may also not despair. For he knows that the forces of those who ascended into the spiritual worlds are effective in the current, in which we stand in this incarnation. In their previous lives those souls felt stronger here because they had taken up spiritual science in themselves. It is as if one communicates with a friend's soul who has gone through the gate of death if one says to him what one owes to the friend's force for the spiritual movement, if one is able to communicate as it were with the soul to remain united with its forces. We have it always among us, so that it always works on among us. We take up not only ideas, concepts and mental pictures in our spiritual science, that does not only concern, but we create a spiritual movement here on earth to which we really bring in the spiritual forces.
It suggests itself to us just at this moment, out of the sensations which perhaps inspire our local friends to turn the thoughts to the soul of somebody who has always dedicated his forces to this branch. We want to feel united also with him and his forces, after he has gone through the gate of death; therefore, we get up from our seats. The Leipzig friends know of which friendly soul I am speaking, and they have certainly turned their thoughts to this soul with moved hearts.
It was my responsibility to bring these ideas home to you today, while we were allowed to be together. These words were inspired through the consciousness that the grievous and destiny-burdened days in which we live must be replaced again with such which will pass in peace on earth in which the forces of peace will work. But a lot will be transformed, nay, must absolutely be transformed by that what happens now in the earthly life of humankind. We who bear witness to spiritual science must particularly keep in mind how much it depends on the fact that must take place on the ground—for which so much blood flows for which so often now souls go through the gate of death on which so many fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, sons and daughters are mourning—what can be done by those whose souls can be illumined through the forward-looking thoughts of spiritual science.
Those thoughts which come from the consciousness of the living relationship of the human soul with the spiritual world have to ascend from the earth into the spiritual heights. Souls now enter these spiritual worlds, and there will be spiritual forces which are produced just by our destiny-burdened days. Imagine how many people go through the gate of death in the prime of their lives in this time. Imagine that the etheric bodies of these human beings who go between their twentieth and thirtieth years, between their thirtieth and fortieth years through the gate of death are etheric bodies which could have supplied the bodies still for decades here in the physical life. These etheric bodies are separated from the physical bodies; however, they keep the forces still in themselves to work here for the physical world. These forces keep on existing in the spiritual worlds, separated from the unused etheric bodies of the souls which went through the gate of death. The bright spirituality of the unspent etheric bodies of the heroic fighters turns to the spiritual welfare and progress of humankind. However, that what flows down there has to meet the thoughts coming from the souls which—aware of spirit—they can have by spiritual science. Hence, we are allowed to summarise the thoughts of which we made ourselves aware today in some words showing the interrelation of the consciousness based on spiritual-scientific ideas with the present events. They express how for the next peacetime the room has to be filled with thoughts which have ascended from souls to the spiritual worlds, from souls which experienced spiritual science. Then that can flourish and yield fruit in the right sense what is gained with so big sacrifices, with blood and death in our time, if souls are found, aware of spirit, which turn their senses to the realm of spirits. That is why we are allowed to say taking into account the grievous and destiny-burdened days today:
From the courage of the fighters,
From the blood of the battles,
From the grief of the bereaved,
From the nation's sacrifices
Will grow up the fruits of spirit
If souls aware of spirit turn
Their senses to the spirit-land.
Das Intime Element Der Mitteleuropäischen Kultur Und Das Mitteleuropäische Streben
In schweren, schicksaltragenden Tagen leben wir. Und was diese schicksaltragenden Tage uns Erdenmenschen bringen werden, dem sehen noch recht wenig Seelen mit voller Zuversicht entgegen, und vor allen Dingen ist die Bedeutung dessen, was sich durch die Geschehnisse dieser Tage ausspricht, nicht mit voller Kraft in den Seelen sprechend. Gerade diejenigen aber, welche versuchen, sich als Menschenseelen immer mehr und mehr hineinzuleben in das, was als Impulse einverleibt werden soll der Menschenkulturentwickelung, der geistigen Kulturentwickelung durch die Forderungen der Geisteswissenschaft, sollten mit ihrem tiefsten Empfinden, mit ihrem tiefsten Fühlen sich verbunden wissen dem, was sich auf der einen Seite so groß und gewaltig und auf der andern Seite so schmerzvoll, so traurig um unsere Seelen herum abspielt. Was sich vollzieht, ist ja etwas, was nicht nur der Art, sondern auch dem Grad nach im Grunde beispiellos ist innerhalb der bewußten Geschichte der Menschheitsentwickelung, was tief eingreifend und tief einschneidend ist in alles Leben der Erdenentwickelung. Und man braucht sich nur einmal vor die Seele zu führen, was es heißt - und das ist ja heute bei jedem Menschen der europäischen und auch vieler Teile der andern Erdenbevölkerung der Fall -, mitten darinzustehen in dem Gang der so bedeutsamen Ereignisse, um zu fühlen, daß dies gerade eine Zeit ist, nicht nur im eminentesten Sinne geeignet, sondern auch im eminenten Sinne fordernd, daß die Seele sich frei macht und immer freier mache von dem bloßen Leben innerhalb des eigenen Selbstes, innerhalb des eigenen Ich, und mitzuleben versuchen sollte, was als ein gemeinsames Geschick durch die Menschheit geht. Vieles wird die Seele in unserer Gegenwart lernen können, wenn sie sich in der rechten Weise zu verbinden weiß mit dem Strom der Ereignisse. Und von vielem Engherzigen und Egoistischen wird sie frei kommen können, wenn sie dies zu tun weiß. Gehen doch so große, so gewaltige Dinge vor, daß fast jedes Denken an sich selbst in dieser unserer Zeit als ein Raub erscheinen muß, den unsere Seele begeht an dem Leben mit den allgemeinen Geschicken.
Insbesondere die Bevölkerung Mitteleuropas - welche ungeheuren Fragen muß sie sich stellen über Dinge, die sie im Grunde erst jetzt lernen kann! Gewahr werden kann der Mensch Mitteleuropas, wie er eigentlich mißverstanden, ja wie er gehaßt wird. Und diese MiBverständnisse, dieser Haß, sie sind ja nicht etwa erst ausgebrochen seit dem Kriegsbeginn, nur bemerkbar sind sie geworden seit dem Kriegsbeginn. Daher kann der Kriegsbeginn und der Verlauf des Krieges auch nur gleichsam dasjenige sein, was die mitteleuropäischen Seelen darauf aufmerksam macht, wie sie sich in einer gewissen Beziehung mehr oder weniger vereinsamt fühlen müssen gegenüber dem Fühlen und Empfinden derjenigen Menschen, die ringsherum um diese mitteleuropäische Bevölkerung wirklich nicht mit verständnisvollen Empfindungen und Gefühlen stehen. Könnte man doch — das wäre so wünschenswert, besonders jetzt — in den Seelen, die sich der Geisteswissenschaft widmen, vertieftere Interessen für die großen Ereignisse des Lebens anfachen, welche die Seele hinausführen aus dem Horizont ihres Ich auf den großen Horizont der Menschheits- und Erdenereignisse! Könnte man doch den Blick, die ganze Gesinnung der Seelen gerade deshalb, weil sie Geisteswissenschaft in sich aufgenommen haben, zur Vertiefung bringen in der Erkenntnis der umfassenden Kräfte und sie herausbringen aus dem Interesse an den engeren, bloß mit dem einzelnen Menschen sich beschäftigenden Kräften! Denn wirklich, wenn man heute die Welt, namentlich die Welt, die um uns Mitteleuropäer herum ist, reden hört, wenn man liest, was da an Sonderbarem über die Impulse gesprochen wird, die zu diesem Kriege geführt haben sollen, dann hat man das Gefühl, daß die Verpflichtung, nach größeren Gesichtspunkten zu urteilen, der Menschheit eigentlich recht, recht sehr in unserer materialistischen Zeit abhanden gekommen ist, so sehr abhanden gekommen ist, daß es manchmal den Eindruck hat, als ob die Leute überhaupt nichts gelernt hätten, sondern für sie die Geschichte im Grunde genommen am 25. Juli 1914 erst begänne. Es ist, als ob die Leute nichts wüßten von dem, was sich im Kräftespiel der Erdenbevölkerung zugetragen hat und was aus diesem Kräftespiel heraus zu den schweren Verwicklungen geführt hat, welche in der Kriegsflamme endlich sich entzündet haben und aufgelodert sind. Kaum daß man von dem redet, was man die Einkreisung durch den vorigen englischen König nennt, der die europäischen Mächte rings um Mitteleuropa herum vereinigt hat, so daß durch diese Vereinigung der ringsherum befindlichen Menschenkräfte endlich nichts anderes entstehen konnte als dasjenige, was entstanden ist. Kaum daß man einige Jahre, höchstens Jahrzehnte zurückgeht und sich daraus Vorstellungen machen will, wie das gekommen ist, was jetzt so schicksaltragend und schmerzlich um uns herum ist.
Aber die Dinge liegen ja noch viel, viel tiefer. Wenn man von Einkreisung spricht, muß man sagen: Was sich in der Einkreisung der mitteleuropäischen Mächte in der letzten Zeit vollzogen hat, das ist die letzte Etappe, der letzte Schritt einer Einkreisung Mitteleuropas gewesen, die begonnen hat vor langer, langer Zeit, die schon im Jahre 860 begonnen hat. Damals, als vom Norden Europas diejenigen Menschen heruntergezogen sind, welche im Jahre 860 als Normannenbevölkerung vor Paris standen, zog ein Teil der Kraft, welche sich in Europa ausleben sollte, im Westen Europas in die romanische Strömung hinein, die den Westen Europas vom Süden herauf überflutet hatte. Wir haben einen Strom von Menschenkräften, der so verläuft, daß er sich von Rom über Italien und Sizilien über das heutige Spanien und durch das heutige Frankreich ergießt. Und die Normannenbevölkerung, die von Norden herunterzieht und 860 vor Paris steht, wird überflutet von dem, was von alten Zeiten her als romanische Strömung gekommen ist, und geht in dieser romanischen Strömung unter. Dasjenige, was an Kraftvollem in dieser Strömung ist, rührt davon her, daß die normannische Bevölkerung darin untergegangen ist. Was aber an Fremdem gegenüber der mitteleuropäschen Kultur im Westen aufgegangen ist, rührt von dem eingeflossenen romanischen Strome her. Dieser romanische Strom hat ja nicht etwa im heutigen Frankreich haltgemacht, sondern er erwies sich durch die dogmatisch rationalistische Art, durch seine Hinneigung zu materialistischer Denkungsweise mächtig, nicht nur Frankreich zu überschwemmen, sondern als dann die Normannen wiederum nach den heute angelsächsischen Ländern hinüber die Hand ausstreckten, war es das Maßgebende, daß dort zu dem Angeltum, dem Sachsentum das hinzukam, was nicht die Normannen gebracht haben von Norden nach Süden, sondern das, was sie vom Süden her aufgenommen haben. Auch im britischen Element ist es das romanische Element, das dadurch dem mitteleuropäischen Wesen eigentlich ohne Verständnis gegenübersteht. Und dieses vom romanischen Element durchsetzte normannische Element hat dann seinen Zug weiter fortgesetzt über die griechischen Küsten herunter bis nach Konstantinopel. So daß wir einen Fluß normannisch-romanischer Kultur sich herunterziehen sehen vom europäischen Norden nach dem Westen hin, schlangenförmig Mitteleuropa umkreisend, bis nach Konstantinopel herüber die Fangarme ausstreckend. Den andern Zug, der von Norden herunterging, sehen wir nach dem Osten fließen und in das slawische Element eindringen. Die ersten Normannenzüge wurden von der damals in weiter Ausbreitung im heutigen Rußland lebenden finnischen Bevölkerung «Ros» genannt, wovon der Name Russen gekommen ist, der also anklingt an die Benennung, welche die Finnen der normannischen Bevölkerung gegeben haben. Wir sehen diese nordischen Völker sich hineinerstrecken in das slawische Element, immer weiter in das slawische Element vordringend, und gleichzeitig mit dem Zeitpunkt, an welchem die Normannen 860 vor Paris standen und da ihreRomanisierung begann, sehen wir das normannische Element hineintauchen in den slawischen Strom und auf der andern Seite bis über Kiew und bis nach Konstantinopel herunterziehen. Und der Kreis ist geschlossen! Es ziehen von Norden herunter die normannischen Kräfte auf der einen Seite nach Westen, sich romanisierend, auf der andern Seite nach dem Osten, sich slawisierend, und sie stoßen zusammen vom Osten und vom Westen aus in Konstantinopel. Und in Mitteleuropa ist wie in ein Kulturbecken eingeschlossen dasjenige, was zurückgeblieben ist in dem von dem alten Keltentum befruchteten, ursprünglichen Germanentum, das dann in der verschiedensten Nuancierung in der Bevölkerung, die sich als deutsche, als holländische, als skandinavische Bevölkerung geltend macht, als Element ausgesprochen vorhanden ist. So sehen wir, wie alt diese Einkreisung ist.
In diesem Mitteleuropa bereitet sich nun vor, was wir nennen können eine intime Kultur, eine Kultur, welche niemals imstande war, so zu verlaufen, wie die Kultur im Westen oder die Kultur im Osten, sondern welche ganz anders verlaufen mußte. Wenn wir vergleichen, was sich in Mitteleuropa an Kultur entwickelt hatte, mit demjenigen, was im Westen sich entwickelt hat, so müssen wir sagen, im Westen entwickelte sich -— und das kann aus dem kleinsten und aus dem größten Zuge dieser Kultur ersehen werden - eine Kultur, deren Grundcharakter von den britischen Inseln über Frankreich, Spanien, bis nach Sizilien, Italien hinein und bis nach Konstantinopel hinüber zu verfolgen ist. Da entwickelte sich als Grundzug der Kultur ein gewisser Dogmatismus, ein Rationalismus, eine Sehnsucht, all dasjenige, was man an Erkenntnissen bekommt, in einfache rationalistische Formeln zu kleiden. Es entwickelte sich ein Trieb, die Dinge so zu sehen, wie Verstand und Sinnlichkeit sie sehen müssen. Es entwickelte sich der Trieb, alles zu vereinfachen. Nehmen wir einen Fall, der uns als Bekenner der Geisteswissenschaft naheliegen kann, die Gliederung unserer Menschenseele in drei Glieder: Empfindungsseele, Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele und Bewußtseinsseele. Die Menschenseele kann in Wirklichkeit nur begriffen werden, wenn man weiß, daß sie aus diesen drei Gliedern besteht. Ebensowenig wie das Licht begriffen werden kann, ohne die Farbennuancen in ihrem Ursprung aus dem Licht zu erkennen, und ohne daß man weiß, es gliedert sich in die verschiedenen Farbennuancen, die wir im Regenbogen sehen, auf der einen Seite die roten, die gelben Strahlen, auf der andern Seite blau, grün, violett, und wenn man das nicht weiß, kann man nicht als Physiker das Licht studieren, ebensowenig kann man die menschliche Seele studieren, was unendlich wichtiger ist; denn jeder soll ein Mensch sein und jeder soll von der Seele Bescheid wissen. Wer in seiner Seele selbst nicht fühlt, daß diese Seele sich auslebt in den drei Gliedern: Empfindungsseele, Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele, Bewußtseinsseele, der wirft alles in der Seele durcheinander. Wir sehen es an den modernen Universitätspsychologen, wie sie alles in der Seele durcheinanderwerfen, so wie man die Farbennuancen des Lichtes einfach durcheinanderwirft; und sie dünken sich in ihrem ungeheuren Hochmut, ihrem wissenschaftlichen Übermut ganz besonders gelehrt, wenn sie alles im Seelenleben durcheinanderwerfen, während man die Seele wirklich nur erkennen kann, wenn man imstande ist, diese Dreigliederung der Seele wirklich zu wissen.
Wenn die Empfindungsseele auch zunächst dasjenige ist, was gewissermaßen die Triebe, die mehr empfindungsgemäßen Impulse darlebt, mehr dasjenige im jetzigen Erdendasein, was wir nennen können das mehr Sinnliche des Menschen, so enthält doch diese Empfindungsseele zugleich in ihren tieferen Teilen die ewigen Triebkräfte der Menschennatur, diejenigen Kräfte, die durch Geburt und Tod gehen. Die Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele enthält zur Hälfte das Zeitliche, zur Hälfte das Ewige. Die Bewußtseinsseele, wie sie jetzt ist, enthält vorzugsweise die Hinlenkung des Menschen zum Zeitlichen. Daher ist es verständlich, daß das Volk, welches seine Volksseele durch die Bewußtseinsseele ausbildet, das britische Volk, nach einem sehr schönen Ausspruch Goethes, nichts hat von alledem, was tiefsinnige Reflexion ist, sondern daß es auf das Praktische, den äußerlichen Konkurrenzkampf gerichtet ist. Es ist vielleicht gar nicht schlecht, sich einmal an solche Dinge zu erinnern, denn diejenigen, die am deutschen Geistesleben teilgenommen haben, waren nicht blind für diese Dinge, sondern sie haben sich immer sehr deutlich darüber ausgesprochen. So hat Goethe Eckermann gegenüber — es ist lange her, aber man kann daraus sehen, daß große Deutsche die Dinge immer im wahren Lichte gesehen haben -, als einmal die Rede war von den Philosophen Hegel, Fichte, Kant und auch noch von einigen andern, ausgesprochen: Ja, ja, während sich die Deutschen abquälen damit, die tiefsten philosophischen Probleme zu lösen, sind die Engländer vorzugsweise auf das Praktische gerichtet und nur darauf. Ihnen fehlt jeder Sinn für die Reflexion. Und selbst wenn sie — so sagte Goethe — Deklamationen machen über die Moral, die darin liegt, die Sklaven zu befreien, so muß man fragen: Welches ist «das reale Objekt» dabei? — Und bei einer andern Gelegenheit schrieb Goethe, was sehr bezeichnend ist, es sei mehr als Bände sprechend, daß sogar Walter Scott einmal zugestanden habe, daß es, wenn auch die Engländer teilgenommen hätten an den Kämpfen gegen Napoleon, doch wichtiger für sie sei als alles Befreien der Völker, wovon dazumal gesprochen worden sei, «ein britisches Objekt vor sich zu sehen». Es ist einem deutschen Philologen gelungen - und was gelingt nicht alles dem Fleiße der deutschen Philologen -, in den neun dicken Bänden der Napoleon-Biographie von Walter Scott die Stelle aufzufinden, auf die Goethe damals angespielt hat, und da findet sich in der Tat, von Walter Scott selbst eingestanden, daß zwar die Briten teilgenommen haben an den Kämpfen gegen Napoleon, daß aber dahinter der Wunsch steht, einen britischen Vorteil zu erlangen, das heißt, wie er sich ausdrückt «to secure the British object», «das britische Objekt zu sichern». — Es ist durchaus ein Ausspruch des Engländers selbst, man mußte ihn nur suchen. Diese Dinge sind interessant, um sich heute den Gesichtskreis etwas zu erweitern.
Man muß also wissen, sagte ich, daß die menschliche Seele aus diesen drei Gliedern besteht, besser gesagt, daß das menschliche Selbst durch diese drei Seelennuancen wirkt, wie das Licht durch die verschiedenen Farbennuancen, vorzugsweise in den drei Reichen: Mineral-, Pflanzen-, Tierreich. Dann wird man darauf kommen, daß der Mensch, indem er diese drei Seelennuancen hat, jeder dieser Seelennuancen ein großes Ideal zuerteilen kann und im menschlichen Fortschritt zuerteilen muß, daß das Ideal dieser Seelennuancen ein großes Ideal ist, aber jedes dieser Ideale ist eben da für eine der Seelennuancen, nicht für die ganze Seele. Und nur dann, wenn sich die Menschen durch die Geisteswissenschaft dahin bringen lassen, daß sie den einzelnen Seelengliedern ihre entsprechenden Ideale zuerkennen, wird das eintreten, was das eigentliche Ideal des Menschenheiles und des harmonischen Zusammenlebens der Menschen auf der Erde sein kann. Denn der Mensch muß anstreben, für dasjenige, was vorzugsweise mit seiner Empfindungsseele zusammenhängt, für dasjenige, was er gewissermaßen auslebt im Umfang des physischen Planes, ein anderes Seelenideal zu haben als das, was er auslebt durch die Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele, und wiederum ein anderes Ideal für dasjenige, was er auslebt durch die Bewußtseinsseele. Durch das eine dieser Ideale wird das eine Seelenglied veredelt, durch das andere wird das andere Seelenglied veredelt. Wenn man das eine Seelenglied insbesondere durch die Brüderlichkeit der Menschen untereinander auf der Erde ausbildet, muß man das andere ausbilden durch die Freiheit, das dritte durch die Gleichheit. Diese drei Ideale beziehen sich jedes auf ein Seelenglied. Im Westen Europas wurde das alles durcheinandergebuttert, und es wurde durch die Rationalisten vereinfacht, durch diesen Rationalismus, der alles in glatten Formeln, in glatten Dogmen haben will, der alles verstandesklar haben will. Durch diesen Dogmatismus wurde die ganze Menschenseele einfach als eine genommen und von Freiheit, Brüderlichkeit, Gleichheit gesprochen. Da sehen wir, wie im Westen ein Grundnerv der Rationalisierung der Kultur darinsteckt. Und so könnten wir es bis in die Einzelheiten hinein nachweisen. Es können zum Beispiel gerade feingebildete Franzosen sich darüber aufhalten, wenn, sagen wir, in meinen Mysteriendramen die Sprache so gewählt ist, daß sogar fünffüßige Jamben, aber keine Reime verwendet sind. Der französische Geist kann das nicht begreifen, daß die innere Triebkraft der Sprache auf dieser Stufe den Reim nicht brauchen kann. Er strebt nach Systematisierung, nach dem, was äußerlich eine Umrahmung bildet, und er sagt: Verse kann man doch ohne Reim nicht machen!
So ist es aber auch mit dem äußerlichen Leben, so ist es mit allem. Man muß im Westen gliedern, systematisieren, man muß alles hübsch einschachteln. Bedenken Sie doch nur einmal, was für eine furchtbare Sache es war, wie im Beginn unseres geisteswissenschaftlichen Strebens dadurch, daß viele unserer Freunde noch beeinflußt waren von der englischen theosophischen Richtung, man in jedem Zweig, in den man kam, immer wieder alle möglichen Systeme auf Karten, Tafeln und so weiter aufgeschrieben finden konnte, oben, hübsch angeordnet: Atma, Buddhi, Manas, dann alle möglichen Dinge der Quere und der Länge nach, die man so systematisiert und eingeschachtelt hat. Bedenken Sie, wie man sich unter das Joch dieses Dogmatismus gebeugt hat und wie schwierig es war, die inneren Entwickelungsmethoden an seine Stelle zu setzen, wie wir sie in Mitteleuropa haben müssen: daß das eine aus dem andern hervorgeht, daß Begriffe im inneren Erleben vorwättsschreiten! Das Systematisieren, diese Eselsbrücken des Geistes, die alles in ganz bestimmte Formeln bringen, kann man nicht brauchen. Was hat es für Mühe gekostet, zu zeigen, daß man es zu tun hat mit einem Übergehen des einen in das andere, mit einem folgemäßigen Gliedern und Vorwätrtsschreiten, mit einem lebendigen organischen Gestalten! Ich könnte diese Schilderung auf alle Zweige des Lebens ausdehnen, doch da würden wir tagelang zusammenbleiben müssen.
Das also finden wir im Westen als den einen Teil des Stromes, der Mitteleuropa einkreiste. Und wenn wir nach dem Osten herübergehen, so müssen wir sagen: Da haben wir es zu tun mit einer Sehnsucht, die gerade das Entgegengesetzte darbietet, mit der Sehnsucht, heute alles noch in einem Nebel von Unklarheiten verschwinden zu lassen, in einer primitiven, elementaren Mystik, in etwas, was nicht verträgt das unmittelbar wirkliche Aussprechen in klaren Ideen und klaren Worten. Wir haben tatsächlich zwei Schlangen — das Symbolum ist absolut zutreffend -, die sich, die eine von Norden nach Südosten, die andere von Norden nach Südwesten erstrecken und die sich gegen Konstantinopel hin ineinander verfangen. Und inmitten haben wir eingeschlossen, was wir die intime mitteleuropäische Geistesströmung nennen können, diese mitteleuropäische Geistesströmung, bei der niemals, wo sie in ihrer Ureigentümlichkeit auftritt, getrennt sein kann der Kopf von dem Herzen, getrennt sein kann das Denken von dem Fühlen.
An unserer Geisteswissenschaft bemerkt man das heute noch nicht völlig, weil gestrebt werden muß, wenn auch nicht nach begrifflicher Systematik, so doch nach Begriffen der Entwickelung. Man merkt noch nicht, daß alles, was da angestrebt wird, nicht nur Kopfschauen ist, sondern daß überall mit allem das Herz und die ganze Seele verbunden sind, daß immer das Herz durchströmt ist, indem der Kopf zum Beispiel die Übergänge schildert von Saturn zur Sonne, von der Sonne zum Mond, vom Mond zur Erde und so weiter, daß da überall das Herz mit dabei ist in der Schilderung, und man da im Tiefsten ergriffen sein kann, daß man mit allem herzmäßigen Fühlen in die höchsten Höhen hinaufsteigt und in die tiefsten Tiefen untertaucht und wieder aufsteigen kann. Das merkt man heute noch nicht, daß dasjenige, was nur scheinbar in Begriffen beschrieben ist, zugleich mit Herzblut geschrieben sein muß, wenn es mitteleuropäischem Geistesleben entsprechen will. Dieses intime Element der mitteleuropäischen Kultur vermag das Spirituelle nicht ohne das Ideelle, das Ideelle nicht mehr ohne das Spirituelle zu denken. Den Geist zu erkennen, um mit dem Geist in einer intimen Weise zu gleicher Zeit eine ArtVermählung der Seele einzugehen, dieses Moment ist es, das am intensivsten das mitteleuropäische Wesen charakterisiert. Daher kann dieses mitteleuropäische Wesen das, was bis in die tiefsten Tiefen der sinnlichen Anschauung und der sinnlichen Empfindung heruntersteigt, verwenden, um zum Symbol zu werden für das Allerhöchste. Und es ist tief bezeichnend, wenn Goethe, nachdem er sein ganzes Leben hindurch das Leben nicht nur des typischen Deutschen, sondern des typischen Menschen, das Leben des Faust vor seiner Seele hat vorbeirollen lassen, seine Dichtung schließt mit den Worten:
Alles Vergängliche
Ist nur ein Gleichnis,
und als letzte Worte hat:
Das Ewig-Weibliche
Zieht uns hinan.
Da wird ein kosmisches Geheimnis durch ein sinnliches Bild ausgedrückt, und gerade in diesem sinnlichen Bild spricht sich der intime Charakter der mitteleuropäischen Kultur aus, dieser wunderbar intime Charakter, den wir zum Beispiel so schön ausgedrückt finden, zart und zu gleicher Zeit geistig sich zum Höchsten erhebend gerade bei Novalis. Suchen Sie sich einmal die Übersetzungen, die man da und dort gemacht hat von diesem letzten Satz: «Das Ewig-Weibliche / Zieht uns hinan», namentlich die französischen Übersetzungen, dann werden Sie sehen, was aus diesem Satz geworden ist! Er ist ja allerdings oftmals gerade nicht schön von Franzosen erklärt worden, aber die zählen ja nicht, wenn es sich um Faust-Verständnis handelt.
Intimität des spirituellen Lebens, das ist es, worauf das mitteleuropäische Wesen im eminentesten Sinne hinzielt, und das ist dasjenige, was von der Midgardschlange im Osten und Westen eingeschlossen ist. Und so weit müssen wir gehen, um uns in unserem Empfinden ganz zu verbinden mit dem, was eigentlich geschieht! Dann werden wir gerade aus diesem mitteleuropäischen Wesen uns Objektivität aneignen, um nicht aus denselben Impulsen heraus, aus denen im Osten und Westen die Dinge beurteilt werden, sondern aus den wahrhaft übernationalen menschlichen Impulsen heraus stehen zu können zu unseren großen Ereignissen der Gegenwart. Dann werden wir einiges davon begreifen, warum die mitteleuropäische Bevölkerung so mißverstanden, ja gehaßt wird von denen, die sie umgeben. Selbstverständlich müssen wir das, was in Mitteleuropa für die gesamte Menschheit an Sendung vorhanden ist, mit aller Demut betrachten können. Wir müssen zu der Stimmung kommen können, die nicht sich überhebt, aber wir müssen auch den freien Blick uns sichern für das, was in Mitteleuropa zu verrichten ist.
Die mitteleuropäische Bevölkerung ist durchgegangen durch eine Volksseelenkraft, die immer eine verjüngende war. Sie hat eine Höhe erreicht in den Idealen der Lessing, Schelling, Hegel, Fichte, Goethe, Grimm. Aber all das, was da schon lebte, lebte mehr in einem Streben nach Idealismus. Das muß nun weiteres Leben gewinnen, konkreteres Leben gewinnen. Die tiefen Ideen des deutschen Idealismus müssen Inhalt bekommen durch das, was aus dem Spirituellen kommen kann, und wodurch sie erst aus bloßen Ideen zu lebendigen Wesen der geistigen Welt erhoben werden, durch die wir dann uns selbst in diese geistige Welt hineinfinden können. Die Größe der mitteleuropäischen Aufgabe ist es, die jetzt deutsche Herzen beseelen muß, und das Bewußtsein davon, was zu verteidigen ist nach allen Seiten hin, nach den Seiten hin, wo die Midgardschlange den Kreis fest umschlossen hält. Es ziemt insbesondere uns, die wir auf dem Boden der Geisteswissenschaft stehen, in einem solch höheren Sinne das zu betrachten, was heute sich wirklich vollzieht. Und wir können auch den innersten Impuls unserer Geisteswissenschaft nicht ernst genug nehmen, wenn wir uns nicht hineinfinden in eine solch unpersönliche Auffassung des geisteswissenschaftlichen Strebens, wenn wir nicht fühlen, wie dieses geisteswissenschaftliche Streben in jedem einzelnen verbunden ist mit dem gesamten mitteleuropäischen Streben, wie es verbunden sein muß mit der ganzen Substantialität dieses mitteleuropäischen Strebens. Wir müssen uns klar sein darüber, daß manches von dem, was uns vorschweben muß, erst noch im Keim vorhanden ist, daß aber gerade die mitteleuropäische Kultur dazu berufen ist, die Keime zu Blüten und zu Früchten sich entfalten zu lassen.
Dafür sei nur ein Beispiel angeführt. Wenn der Mensch versucht, nach und nach durch seine Meditation und Konzentration, durch das intime Arbeiten an der Entwickelung seiner Seele sich vorwätrtszubringen, dann nehmen alle Seelenkräfte eine andere Form an, als sie im gewöhnlichen Leben haben. Dann werden gewissermaßen die Seelenkräfte zu etwas anderem. Wenn der Mensch wirklich emsig an seiner Entwickelung arbeitet, durch Gedankenkonzentration und anderes, wie es in dem Buche «Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten?» dargestellt ist, so kommt der Mensch dazu, zu begreifen, lebendig zu begreifen, ich möchte sagen, lebendig zu ergreifen, daß er dann in dem Augenblick, in welchem er der wirklichen geistigen Welt sich nähert, nicht mehr so denkt, wie man im gewöhnlichen Leben denken muß. Im gewöhnlichen Leben denkt man so, daß die Gedanken anfangen in einem zu leben. Wenn man der Sinnenwelt gegenübersteht, da weiß man: Das bin ich, und das Ich hat die Gedanken. Man verbindet einen Gedanken mit dem andern und bildet sich dadurch ein Urteil, man bringt die Gedanken zusammen und läßt sie auseinandergehen. Ich habe in meiner Schrift, die betitelt ist «Die Schwelle der geistigen Welt», das Entwickeln der Gedanken verglichen mit einem Hineinstecken des Kopfes in eine Welt von lebendigen Wesenheiten. Die Gedanken fangen an, innerlich zu kribbeln und zu krabbeln, sie werden, wenn ich so sagen darf, lebendige Wesenheiten, und wir sind es nicht mehr, die einen Gedanken zum andern bringen, sie gehen, der eine zum andern, der eine faßt den andern und löst sich vom andern los, das Gedankenleben fängt an, lebendig zu werden. Erst dann, wenn die Gedanken gleichsam anfangen, Hülsen und Behälter zu werden, die sich im kleinen Raum zusammenziehen und dann wiederum groß, sackartig sich ausdehnen, dann können die Wesen der höheren Hierarchien hineinschlüpfen in unsere Gedanken, dann erst! Also unser Eigenleben, das ganze Denken ändert sich, wenn wir in die geistige Welt uns einleben. Dann beginnt man wahrzunehmen, wie auf den andern Planeten nicht Menschen wie auf der Erde, sondern andere Wesenheiten leben, wie die andern Planeten von andern Wesenheiten bevölkert sind. Diese andern Wesenheiten der andern Planeten, die dringen gleichsam in unser lebendig gewordenes Denken ein, und wir denken nicht mehr über die Wesenheiten der andern Welten und Weltensphären, sondern die leben in uns, sie leben mit unserem Selbst vereint. Das Denken ist also eine ganz andere Seelenkraft geworden; es hat sich von dem Punkt, auf dem es stand, entwickelt zu einer andern Seelenkraft, zu jener Kraft, die über uns selbst hinauswirkt und hinauswächst und mit der Welt identisch wird, welche die geistige Welt ist.
Da haben wir ein Beispiel von dem, was der Menschheit aufgehen muß, wenn sie den Zustand, in dem sie jetzt lebt, für die Erdenzukunft zu einem höheren entwickeln soll. Das muß wirklich Gemeingut werden, daß solches Denken möglich ist, und daß nur durch solches Denken der Mensch mit der geistigen Welt Bekanntschaft machen kann. Dazu braucht nicht jeder Mensch ein Geistesforscher zu werden, ebensowenig wie jeder ein Chemiker zu werden braucht, der die Errungenschaften der Chemie verstehen will. Doch wenn es auch nur wenig Geistesforscher geben kann, jeder kann durch unbefangenes Denken die Wahrheit dessen einsehen und begreifen, was der Geistesforscher sagt. Aber das muß klarwerden, daß im Menschen während des Lebens unbemerkte Seelenkräfte liegen, die, wenn der Mensch durch die Pforte des 'T’odes tritt, von selbst auch zu dem werden, was sie bei einem Initiierten werden. Wenn der Mensch durch die Pforte des Todes tritt, wird das Denken eine ganz andere Seelenkraft: sie greift ein in die Wesenheit. Es ist ein fortwährendes Ausstrecken von Fühlhörnern, und die höheren Welten sind in diesen Fühlhörnern darinnen, und man erlebt sie selbst.
Nun gab es einen tonangebenden Geist des 19. Jahrhunderts, der so recht durch seine Geistreichigkeit — denn geistreich war er — beigetragen hat zur Begründung der materialistischen Weltanschauung: Ludwig Feuerbach. Er hat ein Buch geschrieben «Gedanken über Tod und Unsterblichkeit», und es ist interessant, an einer Stell e dieses Buches folgendes zu lesen. Da sagt Feuerbach etwa: Das Höchste, was der Mensch entwickeln kann bei sich, das sind seine Gedanken. Höhere Seelenkräfte kann er nicht entwickeln als die Gedanken. Könnte er höhere Seelenkräfte als die Gedanken entwickeln, so würde ja in seinen Kopf hineindringen können dasjenige, was von den Bewohnern der Sternenwelten lebt, und er würde statt der Gedanken die Wirkungen und Taten der Wesenheiten, die auf den Planeten sind, im Kopfe haben. — Das kommt diesem Ludwig Feuerbach so absurd vor, daß er natürlich jeden für seelenkrank hält, der überhaupt von so etwas spricht. Denken Sie, wie interessant das ist, daß ein Mensch, der gerade deshalb Materialist wird, weil er höhere Seelenkräfte ablehnt, darauf kommt, wie die Seelenkraft ist, die die Höherentwickelung des Denkens darstellt. Er beschreibt sie sogar, aber er hat eine so heillose Furcht, eine so heillose Angst vor dieser Entwickelung, daß gerade, weil sie so sein müßte, wie er ahnt, er diese Seelenkraft für eine Unmöglichkeit, für Phantasterei erklärt.
So nahe ist die Geistesentwickelung im 19. Jahrhundert dem, was angestrebt werden muß, aber so ferne zugleich ist sie, weil sie zwar gleichsam hingestoßen wird aus dem Inneren zu dem, was angestrebt werden soll, aber nicht in das Tiefere hinein kann, da sie es als absurd ansehen muß, da sie sich davor wirklich fürchtet, ganz kolossal fürchtet. Sobald es ihr nur aufstößt, was da kommen soll, fürchtet sie sich. Zu sich kommen muß das mitteleuropäische Geistesleben, dann werden wir es erlangen, daß aus diesem mitteleuropäischen Geistesleben heraus gerade das sich entwickelt, was die Furcht überwindet. Zu stark ist dasjenige geworden, was dieses mitteleuropäische Geisteslicht unterdrücken will.
Dafür seien auch einige Beispiele genannt. Hegel, der deutsche Philosoph, hat vergebens seine Stimme erhoben gegen die Überschätzung Newtons. Wenn Sie heute irgendeinen Physiker sprechen hören — Sie können das, was ich sage, in vielen populären Werken nachlesen —, dann werden Sie hören: Newton ist der große Tonangeber der Gravitationslehre, einer Lehre, durch die der Kosmos erst erklärlich geworden sei. — Hegel hat gesagt: Was hat denn eigentlich Newton getan? — Er hat das, was Kepler, der deutsche Astronom, ausgesprochen hat, in mathematische Formeln gekleidet. Denn es ist nichts in Newtons Werken enthalten, was Kepler nicht schon gesagt hat. Kepler hat aus jener Anschauung heraus geschaffen, bei der gewissermaßen die ganze Seele wirkt, nicht nur der Kopf allein. Newton aber hat das Ganze hineingebracht in ein System und dadurch allerlei Mißgriffe gemacht, zum Beispiel die Lehre von einer Wirkung der Sonne in die Ferne, die für die Beurteilung der Planetenbewegung nicht brauchbar ist. Bei Newton ist es wirklich so, wie wenn die Sonne physische Arme hätte, und diese Arme ausstreckte und die Planeten anziehe. - Aber vergeblich hat der deutsche Philosoph davor gewarnt, daß die mitteleuropäische Kultur von der britischen Kultur auf diesem Gebiet überschwemmt werde.
Um ein anderes Beispiel zu erwähnen: Goethe hat eine Farbenlehre begründet, die ganz aus dem mitteleuropäischen Denken heraus entstanden ist und die man erst begreifen wird, wenn man ein wenig die Zusammenhänge erkennen wird des Physischen mit dem Geistigen. Die Welt hat nicht die Goethesche Farbenlehre angenommen, sondern die Newtonsche Farbenlehre. - Goethe hat eine Evolutionslehre begründet. Die Welt hat sie nicht begriffen, sondern sie hat erst das angenommen, was in einer populär-materialistischen Weise im Darwinismus als Evolutionslehre, als Entwickelungslehre gegeben worden ist. Man kann sagen: Sich besinnen auf die Kräfte, die der mitteleuropäische Mensch hat, der von der Midgardschlange eingekreist ist, das ist es, worauf es ankommt, sich nicht zu beugen unter das, was an Rationalismus und Empirismus hereingebracht wird!
Sie sehen die kolossale Aufgabe, die vorliegt, Sie sehen die Größe des Ideals. Es wird gar nicht bemerkt, weil es noch, ich möchte sagen, im Strom der Erscheinungen verfließt, wenn man einmal das mitteleuropäische Wesen geltend macht. Ich weiß nicht, von wievielen das Folgende bemerkt worden ist. Als aus den Gründen, die auch gestern im öffentlichen Vortrag genannt wurden, unsere geisteswissenschaftliche Bewegung sich von der spezifisch britischen Richtung der Theosophischen Gesellschaft frei machen mußte und als vor langer Zeit das gewissermaßen im Geistigen vorausgeschehen ist, was jetzt im Kriege sich vollzieht —- und aus guten Gründen vorausgegangen, vorausgeschehen ist -—, habe ich dazumal an Symptomen die ganze Sache besprochen und erklärt. Es gibt törichte Menschen, welche urteilen wollen über das, was unsere geisteswissenschaftliche Bewegung ist. und oftmals gesagt haben: Nun ja, auch diese mitteleuropäische geisteswissenschaftliche Bewegung ist ja von dem ausgegangen, was sie von der britischen theosophischen Bewegung bekommen hat. Da möchte ich doch daran erinnern, daß ich erzählt habe - ich sage das nicht aus persönlichen Gründen, sondern weil es die Lage, den ganzen Nerv der Sache an einem Symptom charakterisiert —, wie ich, bevor ich irgendwie einen äußeren Zusammenhang hatte mit der britisch-theosophischen Bewegung, in Berlin Vorträge gehalten habe, die dann gedruckt wurden in meiner Schrift «Die Mystik im Aufgange des neuzeitlichen Geistesleben». In dieser Schrift wird kein Mensch etwas von irgendeinem Einfluß vom Westen finden, sondern da ist rein aus dem mitteleuropäischen Geistesleben heraus alles entwickelt, aus der spirituellen, mystischen Bewegung von Meister Eckart bis zu Angelus Silesius. Und als ich das erste Mal nach London gekommen bin, hat dazumal eine der Koryphäen der’Theosophischen Gesellschaft, Mr. Mead, der das Buch gelesen hat, das gleich in vielen Kapiteln ins Englische übersetzt worden ist, gesagt, in diesem Buche stehe eigentlich die ganze 'Theosophie darin. —- So weit, als die Leute zugegeben haben, daß sie mit uns gehen können, so weit konnten wir selbstverständlich uns mit der ganzen Sache vereinigen; aber etwas anderes ist auch nicht gemacht worden.
Das ist es, worauf es ankommt: daß wir uns besinnen auf unsere Aufgaben der mitteleuropäischen Geisteskultur und daß wir niemals von ihnen abweichen! Man hat von dieser oder jener Seite den Engländern die Orden zurückgeschickt, die Diplome und dergleichen. Das ist vielleicht doch das weniger Wichtige. Das Wichtige wird erst sein, wenn man den Newtonismus, den englisch gefärbten Darwinismus zurückschickt, das heißt, das mitteleuropäische Geistesleben davon befreit. Und dafür ist einiges zu lernen aus der Art, wie — frei von allen andern Einflüssen — das mitteleuropäische Geistesleben eben als Geisteswissenschaft sich geltend gemacht hat. Aber man muß sich darauf besinnen, muß das Wesentliche einmal ins Auge fassen und muß fest auf diesem Boden stehen. Es ist sehr eigentümlich, wie geheimnisvoll die Dinge eigentlich wirken.
Denken Sie doch nur einmal den folgenden Fall: Ernst Haeckel hat im Grunde genommen sein ganzes Leben hindurch sich bemüht, die deutsche Weltanschauung in Bahnen zu lenken, die ganz beeinflußt sind von britischem Denken, von britischem Wesen. In Ernst Haeckels Schriften fließt ganz das britische Denken, der britische Empirismus. Und jetzt wettert er am allermeisten gegen England. Das sind Vorgänge, die sich im Unterbewußten der Seele des Mitteleuropäers vollziehen; das sind auch Dinge, die in einer solchen Seele mit dem Karma eng zusammenhängen. Denken Sie einmal, was es heißt, wenn Haeckel sich hinstellt vor die Welt und sagt, er selbst habe die erste große Tat des großen Forschers Huxley vollbracht, indem er den Satz von der Ähnlichkeit des Menschenknochen mit dem Tierknochen prägte; wie er, Haeckel, dann hingewiesen hat auf den großen Umschwung in der Auffassung von der Abstammung des Menschen, und wie er in die Evolutionslehre nichts hereinnahm als das, was aus dem Westen kam und wenn man dann sieht, wie er jetzt gedrängt wird, zu wettern gegen dasjenige, was sein ganzes Geistesleben gebildet hat. Es ist das tragischste Ereignis der Gegenwart für eine solche Seele, das sich nur denken läßt. Es ist geistiger Dynamit, denn es zersprengt eigentlich alle Grundsäulen, auf denen eine solche Seele steht.
Und so sieht man hinein in die Tiefen desjenigen, was sich eigentlich gegenwärtig vollzieht, aber auch in das Furchtbare, auf das wir aufmerksam sein müssen. Nur dann, wenn man wirklich die Dinge so betrachtet, wird man in die Lage kommen, sie über den engen Hotrizont hinaus, unter dem sie heute häufig betrachtet werden, einmal ins Auge zu fassen. Man wird vor allen Dingen eine große Lehre ziehen können - und das wird die schönste, zugleich die demütigendste und erhabenste Lehre sein, die Lehre von dem, wozu der waltende, wirkende, wesende Weltengeist den mitteleuropäischen Menschen bestimmt hat, der jetzt, umschlungen von der Midgardschlange, wie in einer Festung eingeschlossen ist, allüberall von Feinden umgeben. Wenn uns dasjenige, was geschieht, zum großen Symbolum wird für tiefstes Weltenweben und Weltenwesen, dann erst kommen wir frei von einer selbstischen Auffassung der schweren, schicksaltragenden Ereignisse der Gegenwart. Und dann werden wir erst fühlen, wie wir uns würdig machen müssen dessen, was etwa Fichte auch in einer Zeit, in der Deutschland in schicksaltragenden Tagen stand, gesprochen hat in den «Reden an die deutsche Nation», wo er sprechen wollte, wie er sich ausdrückt, «für Deutsche schlechtweg, von Deutschen schlechtweg», und in der Richtung sprach, in der man dazumal sprechen mußte vom Deutschen schlechtweg zum Deutschen schlechtweg. Aber wie Fichte dazumal von alledem gesprochen hat, was die deutsche Mission, der deutsche Pflichtenkreis ist, so ist das Schwere, das wir heute erleben innerhalb der Einschließung durch hassende Feinde, dasjenige, was wir erleben müssen als den Sonnenaufgang des mitteleuropäischen Bewußtseins. In der Tat darf ein Wort, das sich in Fichtes Reden am Schluß findet, heute umgesetzt werden dahin, daß gesagt wird: Zu der Menschheit Heil muß die spirituelle Weltanschauung einfließen in die Seelen. Und auf diejenigen, die in Mitteleuropa wohnen, auf die sieht hin der Weltengeist, daß sie Sprachrohr werden für dasjenige, was er der Menschheit in fortlaufender Offenbarung zu sagen und zu bringen hat.
Ohne Hochmut, ohne Überhebung, ohne nationalen Egoismus kann man also auf dasjenige, was mit Leib und Blut und Seele die Söhne Deutschlands und Mitteleuropas überhaupt zu verteidigen haben, hinschauen. Doch muß man sich auch dessen bewußt werden. Dann allein kann aus den ungeheuren Opfern, die gebracht werden müssen, aus den Leiden, die erfließen, folgen, was zu der Menschheit Heil ist. Denn wir stehen an einer wichtigen Schwelle, an einer bedeutungsvollen Schwelle, und man könnte diese Schwelle in der Menschheitsentwickelung so charakterisieren, daß man sagt: In der Zukunft muß der Abgrund überbrückt werden zwischen dem Physischen und dem Geistigen, zwischen dem physisch Lebendigen und dem geistig Lebendigen, zwischen dem Irdischen und dem, was jenseits des irdischen Todes liegt. Die Zeit muß gewissermaßen über uns kommen, wo uns nicht nur die Seelen lebendig sind, die im physischen Leibe herumwandeln, sondern wo wir uns eingegliedert fühlen jener größeren Welt, der auch angehören die Seelen, die zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt entkörpert in der Welt leben, die wir im großen Stile die unsrige nennen. Hinausgerichtet werden muß der Blick der Menschen über das, was nur sinnlich-physische Augen sehen können. An der Schwelle zu diesem neuen Erleben, zu diesem neuen Bewußtsein stehen wir in der Tat. Und was ich Ihnen sagte von dem Erweitern des Bewußtseins, von dem Höherhinaufentwickeln des Bewußtseins, das muß eine geläufige Anschauung werden. Die mitteleuropäische Kultur ist vorbereitet dazu, dies zu einer geläufigen Anschauung zu machen; sie ist wirklich dazu vorbereitet.
Ich habe Ihnen gezeigt, wie sich beste Geister des 19. Jahrhunderts heute noch fürchten, das in ihr Bewußtsein hineinzubekommen, was die Seele in ihren Tiefen hat; nur kann sie von ihren irdischen Seelenkräften aus die Aufmerksamkeit noch nicht darauf verwenden. Jenes Denken ist ja da, in welches hineinreichen die übersinnlichen Kräfte und übersinnlichen Wesenheiten, und dieses Denken öffnet sich auch sogleich, wenn der Mensch durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen ist. Die Materialisten fürchten sich davor, sich zu gestehen, daß das menschliche Bewußtsein also erweitert werden könne, daß wirklich die Schranke zwischen dem physischen und dem geistigen Erleben fallen kann, zwischen dem, was diesseits des Todes und jenseits des Todes liegt. Und weil sie sich fürchten, lehnen sie es ab als phantastisch, träumerhaft, ja sogar als seelenkrank. Aber erkennen wird man, daß der Mensch, wenn er durch die Pforte des Todes geschritten ist, nur die Kräfte entwickelt, die er auch jetzt schon hat zwischen Geburt und Tod. Nur wirken sie in solchen Tiefen, daß er sie selber nicht schaut. Sie bewirken Dinge in ihm, die zwar getan werden in ihm, aber auf die im gewöhnlichen Leben die Aufmerksamkeit nicht gelenkt wird. Mit den Kräften, von denen der Mensch weiß, mit diesen Kräften des Denkens, Fühlens und Wollens allein könnte das physisch-irdische Leben nicht verrichtet werden. Wenn der Mensch nur denken, fühlen und wollen könnte, so wie er es jetzt kann, würde er niemals imstande sein, seinen Leib zum Beispiel plastisch so auszubilden, daß das Gehirn zu seinen Anlagen paßte. Dazu mußten plastisch bildende Kräfte eingreifen. Die gehören aber schon zu dem, was die Seele gar nicht mehr wahrnimmt im physischen Erleben, was einem umfassenderen Bewußtsein angehört als dem Kreisausschnitt des Bewußtseins, den wir im gewöhnlichen Leben haben.
Wenn der Mensch durch die Pforte des Todes tritt, dann hat er nicht Mangel an Bewußtsein, sondern dann lebt er zunächst in einem Bewußtsein, welches viel reicher und inhaltvoller ist als das Bewußtsein hier im physischen Leben. Denn von einem umfassenderen Bewußtsein schneidet der Leib ein Stück heraus und zeigt alles das, was gezeigt werden kann, dazu noch alles nur im Spiegel. Das aber, was im Leibe steckt und was der Mensch durch die Pforte des Todes trägt, das hat in der Tat in sich ein umfassendes Bewußtsein. Und wenn der Mensch durch die Pforte des Todes getreten ist, dann ist er in diesem umfassenden Bewußtsein darin. Er hat nicht zu wenig, sondern im Gegenteil zu viel, zu reiches Bewußtsein, wenn er durch die Pforte des Todes geht. Darüber habe ich gesprochen in meinem Wiener Zyklus an Ostern 1914. Der Mensch hat ein reicheres Bewußtsein nach dem Tode, und wenn er eine Zeitlang, nachdem jene durch den Ätherleib bewirkte, oft geschilderte Rückschau vorbei ist, in eine Art Schlafzustand eintritt, so ist das nicht ein wirklicher Schlafzustand, sondern ein Zustand, der dadurch herbeigeführt wird, daß der Mensch in einem reicheren Bewußtsein darin ist als hier. Und wie durch überreiches Licht, durch eine Überfülle des Lichtes unsere Augen geblendet werden, so ist der Mensch geblendet durch die Überfülle des Bewußtseins, und er muß sich erst orientieren lernen. Der scheinbare Schlaf besteht nur darin, daß der Mensch in dieser Überfülle des Bewußtseins so sich orientiere, daß er dann die Überfülle des Bewußtseins herabstimmen kann zu dem, was er schon ertragen kann nach den Ergebnissen seines Lebens. Das ist das Wesentliche. Nicht zu wenig, sondern zu viel Bewußtsein haben wir, und wir wachen dann auf, wenn wir unser Orientierungsvermögen herabgestimmt haben auf das, was wir ertragen können. Es ist also ein Herabdämpfen bis zum ertragbaren Grade der Überfülle des Bewußtseins, was nach dem Tode eintritt. Solche Dinge müssen Sie sich durch die Einzelheiten des Wiener Zyklus klarmachen.
Ich will es heute nur veranschaulichen an zwei uns naheliegenden Beispielen. Ich könnte viele solche Beispiele anführen, denn es sind ja in letzter Zeit und auch schon früher aus dem Kreise unserer Freunde viele durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen. Aber durch die besondere Eigenart der Umstände, gerade dadurch, daß es sich um letzte Tode handelt, liegen gewissermaßen diese Betrachtungen näher, und ich möchte von solchen Beispielen ausgehen, um Ihnen von dem zu sprechen, was so nahe unserem Herzen gehen kann, weil es in unserer eigenen Mitte geschehen ist aus dem Kreise unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung.
Vor kurzem haben wir vom physischen Plane eine liebe Freundin verloren, und es war meine Aufgabe, bei der Einäscherung Worte zu sprechen für die durch die Pforte des Todes hindurchgegangene Seele. Da war es so, daß es sich mir durch die in einem solchen Falle deutlich genug sprechenden Impulse der geistigen Welt wie von selbst als eine Notwendigkeit ergab, die Seeleneigentümlichkeit dieser befreundeten Seele zu charakterisieren. Wir standen also — es war in Zürich - vor der Einäscherung eines lieben Mitgliedes unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung. Wirklich, ohne daß ich es gewollt habe, ist mir in der damals etwas längeren Zeit, die zwischen dem Eintritt des Todes an einem Mittwochabend und der Einäscherung am Montag früh verflossen war - es ist begreiflich, daß die Rückschau durch den Ätherleib schon aufgehört hatte -, aus der geistigen Welt heraus die Notwendigkeit gekommen, zu beginnen und zu schließen die Worte, die ich am Sarge zu sprechen hatte, mit Worten, welche charakterisieren sollten das innere Wesen dieser Seele. Dieses innere Wesen der in der Lebensmitte dahingegangenen Freundin war wirklich so, daß man sich in dieses Wesen vertiefen mußte und durch Identifizierung mit demselben es innerlich geistig schaffen, das heißt also, das Denken untertauchen lassen mußte in die Seele der Verstorbenen und dasjenige, was in der Seele der Verstorbenen webte, in die eigenen Gedanken hineinHießen lassen. Dann bekam man die Möglichkeit, gleichsam im Hinblick auf diese Seele zu sagen, wie die Seele war im Leben und wie sie jetzt nach dem Tode noch ist. Und es hat sich von selbst ergeben, das in die folgenden Worte einzukleiden. Ich mußte am Beginn und am Schluß der Einäscherung die folgenden Worte sagen:
Du tratest unter uns.
Deines Wesens bewegte Sanftmut
Sprach aus Deiner Augen stiller Kraft
Ruhe, die seelenvoll belebt,
Floß in den Wellen,
Mit denen Deine Blicke
Zu Dingen und zu Menschen
Deines Innern Weben trugen;
Und es durchseelte dieses Wesen
Deine Stimme, die beredt
Durch des Wortes Art mehr
Als in dem Worte selbst
Offenbarte, was verborgen
In Deiner schönen Seele weset;
Doch das hingebender Liebe
Teilnahmsvoller Menschen
Sich wortlos voll enthüllte — —
Dies Wesen, das von edler, stiller Schönheit
Der Welten-Seelen-Schöpfung
Empfänglichem Empfinden kündete.
So ergab sich das Wesen dieser Seele durch die Identifikation mit der Seele in den Tagen vor der Einäscherung, nachdem die Rückschau durch den Ätherleib vorbei war. Die Seele hatte noch nicht die Möglichkeit gefunden, in dem Übermaße des Bewußtseins sich zu orientieren. Sie war also gewissermaßen schlafend, als der Leib der Einäscherung gegenüberstand. Die Einäscherungsrede war gesprochen — am Anfang und am Schlusse diese Worte. Dann war es, daß die Flamme - das, was so aussieht wie die Flamme, es aber nicht ist — den Körper ergriff, und während der Körper ergriffen wurde von diesem, was aussieht wie die Flamme, was aber nur die aufsteigende Wärme und Hitze ist, da war es, daß wie ein Augenblick des Erwachens über die Seele kam. Und jetzt konnte man sehen, wie die Seele zurückblickte auf die ganze Szene, die sich abgespielt hatte unter den Menschen, die bei der Einäscherung waren. Und ganz besonders blickte sie zurück, diese Seele, auf das, was gesprochen worden ist, dann wiederum begann das ja natürliche Zurücksinken in die Überfülle des Bewußtseins, man kann sagen: in die Bewußtlosigkeit. Später war ein Moment wahrzunehmen, wo wiederum ein solches Zurückblicken da war. Das dauert dann immer längere Zeit, bis endlich ein vollständiges Orientieren in der Überfülle des Bewußtseins da sein kann.
Aber ein Wichtiges kann man daraus ersehen. Es zeigte sich nämlich, daß dieser Seele dadurch, daß bei der Einäscherung Worte gesprochen worden sind, die aus ihrer eigenen Seele gekommen sind, diese Worte ihr selbst entzündeten den Rückblick, daß sie etwas Erweckendes hatte in diesen Worten. Und daraus kann man lernen, daß es zum Allerwichtigsten gehört nach dem Tod, sein eigenes Erleben zu überschauen. Gewissermaßen beginnen muß man nach dem Tod mit der Selbsterkenntnis. Hier im Erdenleben kann man die Selbsterkenntnis ja missen, man kann sie so stark missen, daß wahr ist, was ein nicht gewöhnlicher Mensch, auch nicht ein gewöhnlicher Literat, sondern ein berühmter Professor der Philosophie, Dr. Ernst Mach — nicht Ferdinand Maack, den würde ich nicht erwähnen -, in seiner «Analyse der Empfindungen», einem sehr berühmten Werk, etwa mit den Worten bekennt: Als junger Mensch ging ich einmal über die Straße und sah plötzlich in einem Spiegel einen Menschen, der mir entgegenkam. Ich dachte: Welch ein unsympathisches, widerwärtiges Gesicht. Wie erstaunt war ich, als ich entdeckte, daß ich mein eigenes Gesicht im Profil gesehen hatte. — Er hatte also sein eigenes Gesicht gesehen, das er so wenig kannte, daß er dieses Urteil fällen konnte. Und derselbe Professor erzählt, wie es ihm später passiert sei, als er schon ein berühmter Professor der Philosophie war, daß er nach einer langen Reise recht ermüdet in einen Omnibus gestiegen sei, da wäre von der andern Seite auch ein Mann eingestiegen — gegenüber hing ein großer Spiegel -, und er gesteht seine Gedanken ganz aufrichtig, indem er sagt, er habe gedacht: Was steigt denn da für ein herabgekommener unsympathischer Schulmeister ein? — Und wieder erkannte er sich selbst, und er fügt hinzu: Also kannte ich den Gattungshabitus besser als den eigenen. — Das ist ein schönes Beispiel dafür, wie wenig sich der Mensch schon seiner äußeren Gestalt nach im Leben kennt, wenn er nicht gerade eine kokette Frau ist, die oft in den Spiegel sieht. - Aber viel, viel weniger kennt man seine seelischen Eigentümlichkeiten. An denen geht man viel mehr vorbei. Ein berühmter Philosoph der Gegenwart kann man ohne Selbsterkenntnis werden. Aber der Mensch braucht diese Selbsterkenntnis, wenn er durch die Pforte des Todes geschritten ist.
Der Mensch muß also zurückschauen gerade auf den Punkt seiner Entwickelung, von welchem er durch den Tod geschritten ist, und er muß sich da erkennen. Sowenig wie der Mensch, der im physischen Leben steht und mit den gewöhnlichen Kräften des Lebens zurückschaut, jemals seine eigene Geburt erblicken kann, sowenig diese jemals vor den gewöhnlichen Kräften der Seele steht - es gibt ja keinen Menschen, der durch die gewöhnlichen Seelenkräfte auf die physische Geburt zurückschauen kann -, so notwendig ist es, daß in jedem Augenblick der Moment des Todes da ist, auf den man zurückblickt. Der Tod steht immer vor Augen als das letzte bedeutende Ereignis. Dieser Tod ist von der andern Seite gesehen, von jenseits des Todes gesehen, etwas ganz anderes als von der physischen Seite. Er ist das schönste Erlebnis, das überhaupt erblickt werden kann von der andern Seite, von der Seite des Lebens zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt. Er ist dasjenige, was erscheint als das glorreiche Bild des ewigen Sieges des Geistigen über das Physische. Und er ist dadurch, daß er als solches Bild erscheint, der stetige Erwecker der höchsten Kräfte der Menschennatur, wenn diese Menschennatur im geistigen Erleben zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt ist. Daher kommt es, daß die Seele, wenn sie zurückschaut, wenn sie zurückzuschauen trachtet, zunächst auf sich selbst schauen muß. Gerade bei diesen Fällen, die wir zuletzt durchgemacht haben, war es so klar, wodurch der’Trieb entstand, diese Seele noch besonders zu charakterisieren, um ihr entgegenzukommen in diesem Drang, beim Zurückblicken sich in Selbsterkenntnis vor sich zu haben. So wirkt das sogenannte Lebendige mit dem sogenannten Toten zusammen. Und immer mehr und mehr wird solche Korrespondenz kommen von sogenannten Lebendigen zu den sogenannten Toten.
Ein anderer Fall, den wir in der letzten Zeit erlebten, ist der unseres lieben Freundes Fritz Mitscher. Wenn Fritz Mitschet auch den hiesigen Freunden weniger bekannt ist, so hat er doch unter vielen andern Anthroposophen gewirkt durch seine Vorträge, durch das, was er von Freund zu Freund in wunderbarer Weise geleistet hat durch die Art, wie er sich hineinfand in das anthroposophische Leben, so daß gerade seine Art angesprochen werden muß als mustergültig, als vorbildlich, vorbildlich aus dem Grunde, weil er, dessen Seelenkräfte darauf gerichtet waren, eine gelehrte Bildung durchzumachen und in sich aufzunehmen, bestrebt war, alles das, was er bemüht war, zu sammeln nach seiner Anlage durch Gelehrtheit, zu umfassen durch die intime Art seines Seelenlebens, es dann aber in seine geisteswissenschaftliche Weltanschauung einzufügen. Diese Art des Wirkens, sie brauchen wir insbesondere, indem wir in segensreicher Weise der Zukunft dasjenige entgegentragen wollen, was die geisteswissenschaftlichen Ideale sind. Menschen brauchen wir, welche mit Verständnis zu durchdringen versuchen, was Zeitbildung ist, um es einzutauchen in den Strom der spirituellen Bildung; die gewissermaßen das Opfer darbringen, die Zeitbildung einzutauchen in den Strom des Spirituellen. Auch da - und ich spreche ja nur von Dingen, die sich durch das Karma mit Notwendigkeit ergeben haben — hat es das Karma mit sich gebracht, daß ich bei der Einäscherung zu sprechen hatte. Und auch da, aus innerer Notwendigkeit heraus hat es sich ergeben, das Wesen unseres lieben Freundes wieder zu charakterisieren am Anfang und am Ende der Einäscherungsrede. Und ich mußte dieses Wesen also charakterisieren:
Eine Hoffnung, uns beglückend:
So betratest Du das Feld,
Wo der Erde Geistesblüten,
Durch die Kraft des Seelenseins,
Sich dem Forschen zeigen möchten.Lautrer Wahrheitliebe Wesen
War Dein Sehnen urverwandt;
Aus dem Geisteslicht zu schaffen,
War das ernste Lebensziel,
Dem Du rastlos nachgestrebt.Deine schönen Gaben pflegtest Du,
Um der Geist-Erkenntnis hellen Weg
Unbeirrt vom Welten-Widerspruch
Als der Wahrheit treuer Diener
Sichern Schrittes hinzuwandeln.Deine Geistorgane übtest Du,
Daß sie tapfer und beharrlich
An des Weges beide Ränder
Dir den Irrtum drängten
Und Dir Raum für Wahrheit schufen.Dir Dein Selbst zur Offenbarung
Reinen Lichtes zu gestalten,
Daß die Seelen-Sonnenkraft
Dir im Innern machtvoll strahle,
War Dir Lebenssorg’ und Freude.Andre Sorgen, andre Freuden,
Sie berührten Deine Seele kaum,
Weil Erkenntnis Dir als Licht,
Das dem Dasein Sinn verleiht,
Als des Lebens wahrer Wert erschien.Eine Hoffnung, uns beglückend
So betratest Du das Feld,
Wo der Erde Geistesblüten
Durch die Kraft des Seelenseins
Sich dem Forschen zeigen möchten.Ein Verlust, der tief uns schmerzt,
So entschwindest Du dem Feld,
Wo des Geistes Erdenkeime
In dem Schoß des Seelenseins
Deinem Sphärensinne reiften.Fühle, wie wir liebend blicken
In die Höhen, die Dich jetzt
Hin zu andrem Schaffen rufen.
Reiche den verlaß’nen Freunden
Deine Kraft aus Geistgebieten.Höre unsrer Seelen Bitte,
Im Vertrau’n Dir nachgesandt:
ir bedürfen hier zum Erdenwerk
Starker Kraft aus Geistes-Landen,
Die wir toten Freunden danken.Eine Hoffnung, uns beglückend,
Ein Verlust, der tief uns schmerzt:
Laß uns hoffen, daß Du ferne-nah
Unverloren unsrem Leben leuchtest
Als ein Seelen-Stern im Geistbereich.
In der Nacht darauf war es bei der im übrigen noch durchaus nicht zur Orientierung gekommenen Seele so, daß sie von sich aus wie eine Antwort etwas zurückgab, was zusammenhängt mit den Zeilen, die bei der Einäscherung an ihr Wesen gerichtet waren. Solche Worte wie diese, sie sind so gesprochen, daß die eigene Seele wahrhaftig sie niederschreibt, ohne viel dazu tun zu können. Durch Orientierung an der fremden Seele, aus der fremden Seele heraus sind sie geschrieben. Und es war mir ganz unbewußt, absolut unbewußt, daß zwei Strophen in einer ganz besonderen Weise gebaut sind, bis ich hörte von der durch die Pforte des Todes gegangenen Freundesseele die Worte:
Mir mein Selbst zur Offenbarung
Reinen Lichtes zu gestalten,
Daß die Seelen-Sonnenkraft
Mir im Innern machtvoll strahle,
War mir Lebenssorg’ und Freude.Andre Sorgen, andre Freuden,
Sie berührten meine Seele kaum,
Weil Erkenntnis mir als Licht,
Das dem Dasein Sinn verleiht,
Als des Lebens wahrer Wert erschien.
Jetzt erst konnte ich wissen, warum diese Strophen so gebaut sind; sie sind von mir genau so gesprochen, daß es heißt:
Dir Dein Selbst zur Offenbarung
Reinen Lichtes zu gestalten,
Daß die Seelen-Sonnenkraft
Dir im Innern machtvoll strahle,
War Dir Lebenssorg’ und Freude.
Aber jedes Dir kam in Mir, jedes Dein kam in Mein zurück; so umgeändert, also von der Seele über ihr eigenes Wesen ausgesprochen, kamen sie zurück.
Das ist ein Beispiel, wie die Korrespondenz stattfindet, wie das gegenseitige Verhältnis in der Zeit nach dem Tode schon besteht zwischen der Welt hier und der Welt dort. Daß dieses Bewußtsein in die Menschenseelen eindringe, das ist mit dem Sinn unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung verknüpft. Daß uns die Welt auch derjenigen, die zwischen dem Tod und einer neuen Geburt leben, zu einer Welt wird, in der wir uns mit ihnen darinnen wissen, das wird Geisteswissenschaft der Menschheit geben und so die Welt erweitern aus dem engen Bereich der Wirklichkeit, in der der Mensch vorläufig steht. Das aber hängt innig mit dem zusammen, was in Mitteleuropa sein soll. Und wer gut zugehört hat, der wird gerade in den an Fritz Mitschers Seele gerichteten Worten finden, was mit diesem Sinne unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung tief zusammenhängt, denn aus einer tiefen inneren Notwendigkeit sind die Worte gesprochen:
Höre unsrer Seelen Bitte,
Im Vertrau’n Dir nachgesandt:
Wir bedürfen hier zum Erdenwerk
Starker Kraft aus Geistes-Landen,
Die wir toten Freunden danken.
Es ist manchmal, wenn auch nicht der Wirklichkeit nach, so doch den vorübergänglichen Zeiten nach so, daß man zweifeln kann, ob die Seelen, die im Fleische verkörpert sind hier auf dieser Erde, genügend dasjenige zum Menschen- und Erdenheil wirklich tun werden, was wirklich notwendig gemacht werden muß an geistiger Erfassung der Welt. Aber derjenige, der voll und lebendig in der geisteswissenschaftlichen Bewegung darinsteht, der kann auch aus dem Grunde nicht verzweifeln, weil er weiß, daß hineinwirken in den Strom, in dem wir im Leibe stehen, die Kräfte derjenigen, die hinaufgestiegen sind in die geistigen Welten, nachdem sie hier sich stärker gefühlt haben dadutch, daß sie Geisteswissenschaft in sich aufgenommen haben. Und es ist wie ein Sich-Verständigen mit einer Freundesseele, die durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen ist, wenn man ihr nachruft, was man der Kraft des Freundes verdanken kann für eine geistige Bewegung; wenn man sich gleichsam mit ihr verständigen kann, um vereint zu bleiben mit ihren Kräften, so daß wir sie immer unter uns haben, so daß sie immer unter uns fortwirkt. Nicht bloß, daß wir Ideen und Begriffe und Vorstellungen in der Geisteswissenschaft aufnehmen, nicht bloß darum handelt es sich, sondern daß wir eine Bewegung, eine Geistesbewegung hier auf Erden schaffen, in die wir wirklich die spirituellen Kräfte hineinbringen.
Es liegt uns ja gerade in diesem Moment nahe, aus den Empfindungen heraus, die vielleicht unsere hiesigen Freunde beseelen, die Gedanken zu richten nach der Seele desjenigen, der immer seine Kräfte diesem Zweige gewidmet hat. Daß wir uns auch mit ihm verbunden fühlen wollen, daß wir vereinigt mit seinen Kräften uns wissen wollen, nachdem er durch die Pforte des Todes gegangen ist, dazu erheben wir uns von den Sitzen. Die Leipziger Freunde wissen ja alle, von welcher befreundeten Seele ich spreche, und sie haben gewiß ihre Gedanken bewegten Herzens an diese Seele gerichtet.
Das sind die Vorstellungen gewesen, welche Ihrem Gemüt nahezubringen, heute, da wir zusammensein durften, mir oblag. Beseelt waren sie, diese Worte, von dem Bewußtsein, daß die schweren und schicksaltragenden Tage, in denen wir leben, abgelöst werden müssen wiederum von solchen, die friedevoll über die Erde gehen werden, in denen die Kräfte des Friedens wirken werden. Aber bei der Art, wie vieles, vieles stark umgestaltet werden wird durch das, was jetzt geschieht im Erden-Menschheitsleben, ja, umgestaltet werden muß, müssen wir, die wir uns zur Geisteswissenschaft bekennen, ganz besonders eingedenk sein, wieviel darauf ankommt, daß sich auf dem Boden, für den so viel Blut fließt, für den so oft jetzt Seelen durch die Pforte des Todes gehen, auf dem so viele Väter und Mütter, Brüder und Schwestern, Söhne und Töchter trauern, sich vollziehen muß, was sich vollziehen kann durch diejenigen, deren Seelen durchleuchtet sein können von den zukunftsicheren Gedanken der Geisteswissenschaft.
Ja, es werden aufsteigen müssen von dem Erdenboden in die geistigen Höhen hinauf diejenigen Gedanken, welche aus dem Bewußtsein des lebendigen Zusammenhanges der Menschenseele mit der geistigen Welt kommen. Es werden diese geistigen Welten jetzt Seelen betreten, und es werden geistige Kräfte sein, die gerade durch unsere schicksalschweren Tage hervorgebracht werden. Bedenken Sie, wie viele in der Blüte ihrer Jahre in dieser Zeit durch die Pforte des Todes gehen! Bedenken Sie, daß die Ätherleiber dieser Menschen, die zwischen dem zwanzigsten und dreißigsten Jahr, zwischen dem dreißigsten und vierzigsten Jahr durch die Pforte des Todes gehen, Ätherleiber sind, die noch durch Jahrzehnte hindurch hier im physischen Leben den Leib hätten versorgen können. Diese Ätherleiber werden getrennt von den physischen Leibern, sie behalten aber die Kräfte noch in sich, um hier für die physische Welt zu wirken. Diese Kräfte werden weiter walten in den geistigen Welten, getrennt von den unverbraucht durch die Pforte des Todes gegangenen Ätherleibern. Strahlend hell wird zum spirituellen Heil und Fortschritt der Menschheit die Geistigkeit aus den unverbrauchten Ätherleibern der Heldenkämpfer kommen. Aber begegnen wird sich müssen dasjenige, was da herunterströmt, mit dem, was an Gedanken von den Seelen herausströmen kann, die sie geistbewußt durch Geisteswissenschaft werden haben können, Daher dürfen wir die Gedanken, die wir uns heute vor die Seele geführt haben, zusammenfassen in einige Worte, die den Zusammenhang des von den geisteswissenschaftlichen Gedanken getragenen Bewußtseins mit den heutigen Zeitereignissen darstellen, die ausdrücken, wie der Raum für die kommende Friedenszeit wird erfüllt sein müssen mit Gedanken, die von Seelen in die geistigen Welten hinaufgelangen, von Seelen, die durch die Geisteswissenschaft hindurchgegangen sind. Dann wird das, was mit so großen Opfern, mit Blut und Tod in unserer Zeit erkämpft, errungen wird, im rechten Sinne Blüten und Früchte tragen können, wenn sich Seelen finden, die geistbewußt ihren Sinn ins Geisterreich hinaufwenden. Daher dürfen wir sagen, die heute so schweren schicksaltragenden Tage bedenkend:
Aus dem Mut der Kämpfer,
Aus dem Blut der Schlachten,
Aus dem Leid Verlassener,
Aus des Volkes Opfertaten
Wird erwachsen Geistesfrucht —
Lenken Seelen geistbewußt
Ihren Sinn ins Geisterreich!
The Intimate Element of Central European Culture and the Central European Aspiration
We are living in difficult, fateful days. And very few souls look forward with complete confidence to what these fateful days will bring us earthlings, and above all, the significance of what is being expressed through the events of these days does not speak with full force in our souls. But it is precisely those who, as human souls, are trying to live themselves more and more into what is to be incorporated as impulses into the development of human culture, into the spiritual development of culture through the demands of spiritual science, who should know themselves to be connected with their deepest feelings, with their deepest emotions, to what what is happening around our souls, which is so great and powerful on the one hand and so painful and sad on the other. What is taking place is something that is fundamentally unprecedented in the conscious history of human development, not only in terms of its nature but also in terms of its degree, something that is deeply affecting and deeply incisive in all life on Earth. And one need only consider what it means—and this is the case today for every human being in Europe and in many parts of the rest of the world—to stand in the midst of such momentous events in order to feel that this is precisely a time that is not only eminently suited, but also eminently demanding, for the soul to free itself and become ever freer from mere life within its own self, within its own ego, and to try to participate in what is passing through humanity as a common destiny. The soul will be able to learn much in our present time if it knows how to connect itself in the right way with the stream of events. And it will be able to free itself from much narrow-mindedness and selfishness if it knows how to do this. Such great, such mighty things are happening that almost every thought of oneself in our time must appear as a robbery that our soul commits against life with the general destiny.
The population of Central Europe in particular—what tremendous questions it must ask itself about things that it can only now begin to learn! The people of Central Europe can become aware of how misunderstood, even hated, they are. And these misunderstandings, this hatred, did not just break out since the beginning of the war; they have only become noticeable since the beginning of the war. Therefore, the beginning of the war and the course of the war can only be, as it were, what makes the souls of Central Europe aware of how they must feel more or less isolated in a certain respect from the feelings and sensibilities of those people who, all around them, do not really have understanding feelings and sensibilities toward the people of Central Europe. If only it were possible — and this would be so desirable, especially now — to awaken in the souls devoted to spiritual science a deeper interest in the great events of life, which lead the soul out of the horizon of its ego to the great horizon of human and earthly events! If only we could deepen the view, the whole attitude of souls, precisely because they have taken spiritual science into themselves, in the recognition of the comprehensive forces and bring them out of their interest in the narrower forces that concern only the individual human being! For truly, when one hears the world speak today, especially the world around us in Central Europe, when one reads the strange things that are said about the impulses that are said to have led to this war, one has the feeling that the obligation to judge from a broader perspective has actually been lost to humanity in our materialistic age, lost to such an extent that one sometimes has the impression that people have learned nothing at all, but that for them, history basically began on July 25, 1914. It is as if people knew nothing of what has happened in the power struggle of the earth's population and what has led out of this power struggle to the serious entanglements that finally ignited and flared up in the flames of war. Hardly does one speak of what is called the encirclement by the former English king, who united the European powers around Central Europe, so that through this union of the human forces surrounding it, nothing else could finally arise but what did arise. One hardly has to go back a few years, or at most a few decades, to imagine how what is now so fateful and painful around us came about.
But things go much, much deeper than that. When we speak of encirclement, we must say that what has taken place recently in the encirclement of the Central European powers is the last stage, the last step in the encirclement of Central Europe, which began long, long ago, as early as 860. At that time, when those people who stood before Paris in 860 as the Norman population were drawn down from northern Europe, part of the force that was to live out its life in Europe moved into the Romanesque current in western Europe, which had flooded western Europe from the south. We have a stream of human forces that flows from Rome via Italy and Sicily to present-day Spain and through present-day France. And the Norman population, which migrated southward from the north and stood before Paris in 860, was flooded by what had come from ancient times as the Romanesque movement and was absorbed into this Romanesque movement. The powerful force in this movement stems from the fact that the Norman population was absorbed into it. But what emerged in the West as foreign to Central European culture came from the inflow of the Romanesque current. This Romanesque current did not stop in present-day France, but proved powerful enough, through its dogmatic rationalism and its inclination toward materialistic thinking, not only to flood France, but when the Normans then reached out to the countries that are now Anglo-Saxon, it was decisive that what was added to the Anglo-Saxon and Saxon elements there was not what the Normans brought from north to south, but what they had absorbed from the south. Even in the British element, it is the Roman element that stands in opposition to the Central European character, which it does not understand. And this Norman element, permeated by the Roman element, then continued its journey down the Greek coast to Constantinople. So we see a flow of Norman-Roman culture stretching from the north of Europe to the west, encircling Central Europe like a snake, extending its tentacles as far as Constantinople. We see the other movement, which came down from the north, flowing eastward and penetrating the Slavic element. The first Norman movements were called “Ros” by the Finnish population living in what is now Russia, which was then widely spread, and from this came the name “Russians,” which echoes the name given to the Norman population by the Finns. We see these Nordic peoples stretching into the Slavic element, advancing further and further into it, and at the same time, when the Normans stood before Paris in 860 and their Romanization began, we see the Norman element diving into the Slavic stream and, on the other side, moving down to Kiev and Constantinople. And the circle is complete! The Norman forces move down from the north, on the one hand to the west, becoming Romanized, and on the other hand to the east, becoming Slavicized, and they collide from the east and west in Constantinople. And in Central Europe, what has remained of the original Germanic culture, fertilized by ancient Celtic culture, is enclosed as if in a cultural basin, and is then present as a distinct element in the most diverse nuances of the population, which asserts itself as German, Dutch, and Scandinavian. Thus we see how old this encirclement is.
In this Central Europe, what we might call an intimate culture is now developing, a culture that was never able to develop in the same way as the culture in the West or the culture in the East, but which had to develop in a completely different way. If we compare what developed in Central Europe with what developed in the West, we must say that in the West—and this can be seen in the smallest and largest features of this culture—a culture developed whose basic character can be traced from the British Isles through France and Spain to Sicily, Italy, and across to Constantinople. A certain dogmatism developed as a basic feature of this culture, a rationalism, a longing to clothe all knowledge in simple rationalistic formulas. A drive developed to see things as reason and the senses must see them. A drive developed to simplify everything. Let us take a case that is close to us as devotees of spiritual science, namely the division of the human soul into three parts: the sentient soul, the intellectual or emotional soul, and the conscious soul. The human soul can only really be understood if one knows that it consists of these three parts. Just as light cannot be understood without recognizing the nuances of color in their origin from light, and without knowing it is divided into the different shades of color that we see in the rainbow, with the red and yellow rays on one side and the blue, green, and violet on the other. If one does not know this, one cannot study light as a physicist, just as one cannot study the human soul, which is infinitely more important, for everyone is supposed to be a human being and everyone should know about the soul. Anyone who does not feel in their own soul that this soul lives out its life in three parts: the sentient soul, the intellectual or emotional soul, and the conscious soul, confuses everything in the soul. We see this in modern university psychologists, how they confuse everything in the soul, just as one simply confuses the shades of color in light; and in their immense arrogance, their scientific conceit, they think themselves particularly learned when they confuse everything in the life of the soul, whereas one can only truly know the soul if one is able to truly know this threefold division of the soul.
Although the sentient soul is initially that which, in a sense, brings to life the instincts, the more sentient impulses, more that which we can call the more sensual aspect of human beings in their present earthly existence, this sentient soul nevertheless contains in its deeper parts the eternal driving forces of human nature, those forces that pass through birth and death. The intellectual or emotional soul contains half the temporal and half the eternal. The consciousness soul, as it is now, contains primarily the human being's orientation toward the temporal. It is therefore understandable that the people who develop their national soul through the consciousness soul, the British people, according to a very beautiful saying by Goethe, have nothing of what is profound reflection, but are directed toward the practical, toward external competition. It is perhaps not a bad thing to remember such things, for those who participated in German intellectual life were not blind to these things, but always spoke very clearly about them. Goethe once said to Eckermann—it was a long time ago, but it shows that great Germans have always seen things in their true light—when the conversation turned to the philosophers Hegel, Fichte, Kant, and a few others: Yes, yes, while the Germans torment themselves with solving the deepest philosophical problems, the English are primarily focused on practical matters and nothing else. They lack any sense of reflection. And even when they declaim about the morality of freeing slaves, one must ask: What is the “real object” here? On another occasion, Goethe wrote something very telling, saying that it spoke volumes that even Walter Scott had once admitted that even if the English had taken part in the battles against Napoleon, it was still more important to them than all the liberation of peoples that had been talked about at the time to “have a British objective before them.” A German philologist has succeeded—and what cannot be achieved by the diligence of German philologists?—in finding the passage in Walter Scott's nine thick volumes of his biography of Napoleon to which Goethe was alluding at the time, and there we find Walter Scott himself admitting that although the British did take part in the battles against Napoleon, their underlying motive was to gain a British advantage, that is, as he puts it, “to secure the British object.” It is definitely a statement by the Englishman himself; one only had to look for it. These things are interesting for broadening one's horizons a little today.
So you must know, I said, that the human soul consists of these three elements, or rather, that the human self works through these three soul nuances, like light through different color nuances, preferably in the three kingdoms: the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms. Then one will come to realize that, because human beings have these three soul nuances, they can assign a great ideal to each of these soul nuances and must assign them in human progress, that the ideal of these soul nuances is a great ideal, but each of these ideals is there for one of the soul nuances, not for the whole soul. And only when human beings allow themselves to be led by spiritual science to recognize the corresponding ideals for the individual soul members will that which can be the true ideal of human salvation and harmonious coexistence on earth come about. For human beings must strive to have a different soul ideal for that which is primarily connected with their sentient soul, for that which they live out, so to speak, within the scope of the physical plane, than for that which they live out through their intellectual or emotional soul, and again a different ideal for that which they live out through their consciousness soul. One of these ideals ennobles one member of the soul, the other ennobles another member of the soul. If one develops one member of the soul in particular through brotherhood among human beings on earth, one must develop another through freedom and the third through equality. These three ideals each relate to one member of the soul. In Western Europe, all this was mixed up and simplified by the rationalists, by this rationalism that wants everything in smooth formulas, in smooth dogmas, that wants everything to be clear to the intellect. Through this dogmatism, the whole human soul was simply taken as one and spoken of in terms of freedom, brotherhood, and equality. Here we see how a fundamental nerve of cultural rationalization is embedded in the West. And we could prove this in detail. For example, highly educated French people may dwell on the fact that in my Mystery Dramas, the language is chosen in such a way that even five-foot iambic pentameter is used, but no rhymes. The French mind cannot comprehend that the inner driving force of language at this level does not need rhyme. It strives for systematization, for what forms an external framework, and it says: You can't write verses without rhyme!
But it is the same with external life, it is the same with everything. In the West, one must structure, systematize, one must neatly pigeonhole everything. Just think what a terrible thing it was at the beginning of our spiritual scientific endeavors, when many of our friends were still influenced by the English theosophical movement, that in every branch you entered, you could find all kinds of systems written down on cards, boards, and so on, neatly arranged at the top: Atma, Buddhi, Manas, then all sorts of things across and down, systematized and boxed up like that. Consider how people bowed under the yoke of this dogmatism and how difficult it was to replace it with the inner methods of development that we must have in Central Europe: that one thing emerges from another, that concepts advance in inner experience! Systematization, these mental crutches that reduce everything to specific formulas, are useless. What effort it took to show that we are dealing with a transition from one thing to another, with a logical structuring and progression, with a living, organic form! I could extend this description to all branches of life, but then we would have to stay together for days.
This, then, is what we find in the West as the one part of the stream that encircled Central Europe. And when we turn to the East, we must say: Here we are dealing with a longing that presents the exact opposite, with the longing to let everything disappear today in a fog of obscurity, in a primitive, elementary mysticism, in something that cannot tolerate immediate expression in clear ideas and clear words. We actually have two snakes—the symbol is absolutely accurate—one extending from north to southeast, the other from north to southwest, intertwining toward Constantinople. And in the middle we have enclosed what we can call the intimate Central European spiritual current, this Central European spiritual current in which, wherever it appears in its original form, the head can never be separated from the heart, thinking can never be separated from feeling.
This is not yet fully apparent in our spiritual science, because we must strive, if not for a conceptual system, then at least for concepts of development. It is not yet apparent that everything we strive for is not just intellectual speculation, but that everywhere, everything is connected with the heart and the whole soul, that the heart is always flowing through everything, when, for example, the head describes the transitions from Saturn to the Sun, from the Sun to the Moon, from the Moon to the Earth, and so on, that the heart is everywhere present in the description, and that one can be deeply moved, that one can ascend to the highest heights and descend to the deepest depths with all one's heartfelt feeling and rise again. We do not yet realize today that what is only apparently described in concepts must at the same time be written with heart and soul if it is to correspond to Central European spiritual life. This intimate element of Central European culture makes it impossible to think the spiritual without the ideal, or the ideal without the spiritual. Recognizing the spirit in order to enter into a kind of marriage of the soul with the spirit in an intimate way—this moment is what most intensely characterizes the Central European essence. Therefore, this Central European essence can use what descends into the deepest depths of sensory perception and sensory feeling to become a symbol of the highest. And it is deeply significant that Goethe, after spending his entire life letting not only the life of the typical German but the life of the typical human being, the life of Faust, pass before his eyes, concludes his poetry with the words:
All that is transitory
Is but a parable,
and as his last words:
The eternally feminine
Draws us upward.
Here, a cosmic mystery is expressed through a sensual image, and it is precisely in this sensual image that the intimate character of Central European culture is expressed, this wonderfully intimate character that we find so beautifully expressed, for example, in Novalis, who is both tender and at the same time spiritually elevated to the highest degree. Look up the translations that have been made here and there of this last sentence: “The eternal feminine draws us upward,” especially the French translations, and you will see what has become of this sentence! It has often been poorly explained by the French, but they don't count when it comes to understanding Faust.
Intimacy of spiritual life is what the Central European essence aims at in the most eminent sense, and that is what is enclosed by the Midgard serpent in the East and West. And we must go that far in order to connect ourselves completely in our feelings with what is actually happening! Then, precisely from this Central European nature, we will acquire objectivity, so that we can stand by our great events of the present, not out of the same impulses that judge things in the East and West, but out of truly supranational human impulses. Then we will understand some of the reasons why the Central European population is so misunderstood, even hated, by those around them. Of course, we must be able to view with all humility what Central Europe has to offer the whole of humanity. We must be able to arrive at a mood that is not presumptuous, but we must also secure a clear view of what needs to be done in Central Europe.
The people of Central Europe have been swept along by a national spirit that has always been rejuvenating. It reached its peak in the ideals of Lessing, Schelling, Hegel, Fichte, Goethe, and Grimm. But everything that already existed lived more in a striving for idealism. This must now gain further life, more concrete life. The profound ideas of German idealism must be given substance by what can come from the spiritual realm, which is what elevates them from mere ideas to living beings of the spiritual world, through which we can then find our way into this spiritual world. The greatness of the task facing Central Europe must now inspire German hearts, along with an awareness of what must be defended on all sides, on all sides where the Midgard serpent holds the circle tightly enclosed. It is especially incumbent upon us who stand on the ground of spiritual science to view what is really happening today in such a higher sense. And we cannot take the innermost impulse of our spiritual science seriously enough if we do not find our way into such an impersonal view of spiritual scientific striving, if we do not feel how this spiritual scientific striving is connected in each individual with the entire Central European striving, how it must be connected with the whole substance of this Central European striving. We must be clear that much of what we must have in mind is still only in its infancy, but that it is precisely the culture of Central Europe that is called upon to allow these seeds to blossom and bear fruit.
Let us take just one example. When a person tries to advance gradually through meditation and concentration, through intimate work on the development of his soul, then all the soul forces take on a different form than they have in ordinary life. Then, in a sense, the soul forces become something else. When human beings really work diligently on their development through concentration of thought and other means, as described in the book How to Know Higher Worlds , then the person comes to understand, to understand vividly, I would say to grasp vividly, that at the moment when he approaches the real spiritual world, he no longer thinks as one must think in ordinary life. In ordinary life, one thinks in such a way that thoughts begin to live within one. When one faces the sensory world, one knows: That is me, and I have the thoughts. One connects one thought with another and thereby forms a judgment; one brings the thoughts together and lets them go apart. In my book entitled The Threshold of the Spiritual World, I compared the development of thoughts to sticking one's head into a world of living beings. The thoughts begin to tingle and crawl inside, they become, if I may say so, living beings, and it is no longer we who bring one thought to another, they go, one to the other, one grasps the other and detaches itself from the other, the life of thought begins to become alive. Only then, when the thoughts begin, as it were, to become shells and containers that contract in the small space and then expand again into large, sack-like forms, can the beings of the higher hierarchies slip into our thoughts, only then! So our own life, our whole thinking changes when we settle into the spiritual world. Then we begin to perceive how beings other than humans live on other planets, how other planets are populated by other beings. These other beings from other planets penetrate, as it were, into our thinking, which has become alive, and we no longer think about the beings of other worlds and spheres of worlds, but they live within us, they live united with our self. Thinking has thus become a completely different soul force; it has developed from the point where it stood to another soul force, to that force which works beyond ourselves and grows beyond us and becomes identical with the world, which is the spiritual world.
Here we have an example of what must dawn upon humanity if it is to develop the state in which it now lives into a higher one for the future of the earth. It must truly become common knowledge that such thinking is possible and that only through such thinking can human beings become acquainted with the spiritual world. Not everyone needs to become a spiritual researcher, just as not everyone who wants to understand the achievements of chemistry needs to become a chemist. But even if there are only a few spiritual researchers, everyone can, through unbiased thinking, see and understand the truth of what the spiritual researcher says. But it must become clear that there are soul forces in human beings that remain unnoticed during life, but which, when the human being passes through the gate of death, automatically become what they become in an initiated person. When a person passes through the gate of death, thinking becomes a completely different soul force: it intervenes in the essence. It is a continuous reaching out of feeling horns, and the higher worlds are within these feeling horns, and one experiences them oneself.
Now there was a leading spirit of the 19th century who, through his intellectual wit — for he was indeed witty — contributed greatly to the establishment of the materialistic worldview: Ludwig Feuerbach. He wrote a book called “Thoughts on Death and Immortality,” and it is interesting to read the following passage from this book. Feuerbach says, for example: The highest thing that man can develop within himself is his thoughts. He cannot develop higher soul powers than thoughts. If he could develop higher soul powers than thoughts, then that which lives in the inhabitants of the star worlds could penetrate his head, and instead of thoughts he would have in his head the effects and deeds of the beings that are on the planets. This seems so absurd to Ludwig Feuerbach that he naturally considers anyone who talks about such things to be mentally ill. Think how interesting it is that a person who becomes a materialist precisely because he rejects higher soul forces comes to understand what the soul force is that represents the higher development of thinking. He even describes it, but he has such a hopeless fear, such a hopeless dread of this development that, precisely because it must be as he suspects, he declares this soul force to be an impossibility, a fantasy.
The spiritual development of the 19th century is so close to what must be strived for, but at the same time it is so far away, because although it is, as it were, pushed from within toward what must be strived for, it cannot penetrate into the deeper, since it must regard this as absurd, since it is truly afraid of it, colossally afraid. As soon as it is confronted with what is to come, it is afraid. The intellectual life of Central Europe must come to itself, and then we will achieve that out of this intellectual life of Central Europe, precisely that which overcomes fear will develop. That which wants to suppress this intellectual light of Central Europe has become too strong.
Let me give you a few examples. Hegel, the German philosopher, raised his voice in vain against the overestimation of Newton. If you hear any physicist speak today — you can read what I am saying in many popular works — you will hear: Newton is the great pioneer of the theory of gravity, a theory that has made the cosmos explainable. Hegel said: What did Newton actually do? He clothed what Kepler, the German astronomer, had expressed in mathematical formulas. For there is nothing in Newton's works that Kepler did not already say. Kepler created from that point of view in which, so to speak, the whole soul is at work, not just the head alone. Newton, however, brought the whole thing into a system and thereby made all kinds of mistakes, for example, the doctrine of the sun's influence at a distance, which is useless for assessing planetary motion. With Newton, it is really as if the sun had physical arms and stretched them out and attracted the planets. - But the German philosopher warned in vain that Central European culture would be overwhelmed by British culture in this field.
To mention another example: Goethe established a theory of colors that arose entirely from Central European thinking and that can only be understood once one recognizes the connections between the physical and the spiritual. The world did not accept Goethe's theory of colors, but Newton's. Goethe founded a theory of evolution. The world did not understand it, but instead accepted what was presented in a popular, materialistic way in Darwinism as a theory of evolution, as a theory of development. One can say: reflecting on the powers that the Central European human being, encircled by the Midgard serpent, possesses is what matters, not bowing down to what is brought in by rationalism and empiricism!
You see the colossal task that lies ahead, you see the greatness of the ideal. It is not noticed at all because it still, I would say, flows away in the stream of appearances when one asserts the Central European nature. I do not know how many people have noticed the following. When, for the reasons mentioned yesterday in the public lecture, our spiritual scientific movement had to free itself from the specifically British direction of the Theosophical Society, and when, long ago, what is now happening in the war was, so to speak, foreshadowed in the spiritual realm — and foreshadowed for good reasons — I discussed and explained the whole matter at that time on the basis of symptoms. There are foolish people who want to judge what our spiritual scientific movement is, and who have often said: Well, this Central European spiritual scientific movement also started from what it received from the British Theosophical movement. I would like to remind you that I have told you — I am not saying this for personal reasons, but because it characterizes the situation, the whole nerve of the matter in one symptom — how, before I had any external connection with the British theosophical movement, I gave lectures in Berlin which were then printed in my book “Mysticism at the Dawn of Modern Spiritual Life.” In this book, no one will find any influence from the West; everything in it has been developed purely from Central European spiritual life, from the spiritual, mystical movement from Meister Eckhart to Angelus Silesius. And when I first came to London, one of the luminaries of the Theosophical Society, Mr. Mead, who had read the book, which was immediately translated into English in several chapters, said that this book actually contained the whole of 'Theosophy'. —- As far as people admitted that they could go along with us, we could of course unite ourselves with the whole thing; but nothing else was done.
That is what matters: that we reflect on our tasks in Central European spiritual culture and that we never deviate from them! People on this side and that have sent back the orders, diplomas, and the like to the English. That is perhaps the least important thing. The important thing will be to send back Newtonianism and English-tinged Darwinism, that is, to free Central European spiritual life from them. And for this there is much to learn from the way in which — free from all other influences — Central European spiritual life has asserted itself as spiritual science. But we must reflect on this, we must grasp the essential and stand firmly on this ground. It is very strange how mysterious things actually seem.
Just consider the following case: Ernst Haeckel basically spent his entire life trying to steer the German worldview in directions that were entirely influenced by British thinking, by the British character. Ernst Haeckel's writings are imbued with British thinking, British empiricism. And now he rails most vehemently against England. These are processes that take place in the subconscious of the soul of the Central European; they are also things that are closely connected with karma in such a soul. Just think what it means when Haeckel stands up before the world and says that he himself has accomplished the first great deed of the great researcher Huxley by coining the phrase about the similarity of human bones to animal bones; how he, Haeckel, then pointed to the great reversal in the view of human descent, and how he accepted into the theory of evolution nothing but what came from the West, and when one then sees how he is now being pressured to rail against that which has formed his entire intellectual life. It is the most tragic event of the present day for such a soul that one can imagine. It is spiritual dynamite, because it actually blows up all the pillars on which such a soul stands.
And so we see into the depths of what is actually happening at present, but also into the terrible things to which we must pay attention. Only when we really look at things in this way will we be able to see them beyond the narrow horizon under which they are often viewed today. Above all, we will be able to learn a great lesson—and it will be the most beautiful, at the same time the most humbling and sublime lesson, the lesson of what the ruling, active, essential world spirit has destined for the people of Central Europe, who are now, entwined by the Midgard serpent, enclosed as if in a fortress, surrounded by enemies on all sides. When what is happening becomes a great symbol of the deepest workings and essence of the world, only then will we be free from a selfish view of the grave, fateful events of the present. And only then will we feel how we must make ourselves worthy of what Fichte also said at a time when Germany was in the throes of fate, in his “Addresses to the German Nation,” where he wanted to speak, as he put it, “for Germans purely and simply, from Germans purely and simply,” and spoke in the way that one had to speak at that time, from Germans purely and simply to Germans purely and simply. But just as Fichte spoke at that time about all that is the German mission, the German sphere of duty, so the hardship we are experiencing today, enclosed by hostile enemies, is what we must experience as the dawn of Central European consciousness. In fact, a word found at the end of Fichte's speech can be translated today to mean that for the salvation of humanity, a spiritual worldview must flow into the souls. And the world spirit looks to those who live in Central Europe to become the mouthpiece for what it has to say and bring to humanity in continuous revelation.
Without arrogance, without conceit, without national egoism, we can therefore look at what the sons of Germany and Central Europe have to defend with their bodies, blood, and souls. But we must also be aware of this. Only then can the tremendous sacrifices that must be made and the suffering that will ensue result in what is for the good of humanity. For we stand at an important threshold, at a significant threshold, and one could characterize this threshold in human evolution by saying: In the future, the abyss must be bridged between the physical and the spiritual, between the physically living and the spiritually living, between the earthly and that which lies beyond earthly death. The time must come, so to speak, when we are not only alive in our souls that walk around in physical bodies, but when we feel integrated into that greater world to which also belong the souls that live in the world between death and new birth, which we call our world in the grand style. People's gaze must be directed beyond what the physical eyes can see. We are indeed standing on the threshold of this new experience, of this new consciousness. And what I have told you about the expansion of consciousness, about the higher development of consciousness, must become a common view. Central European culture is prepared to make this a common view; it is truly prepared for it.
I have shown you how even the best minds of the 19th century are still afraid to bring into their consciousness what the soul has in its depths; but they cannot yet turn their attention to it with their earthly soul forces. That thinking is there, into which the supersensible forces and supersensible beings reach, and this thinking opens immediately when the human being has passed through the gate of death. Materialists are afraid to admit that human consciousness can be expanded in this way, that the barrier between physical and spiritual experience, between what lies on this side of death and what lies beyond death, can really fall. And because they are afraid, they reject it as fantastic, dreamlike, even mentally ill. But it will be recognized that when a person has passed through the gate of death, they only develop the powers that they already have between birth and death. They only work at such depths that they cannot see them themselves. They bring about things within them that are indeed done within them, but to which attention is not directed in ordinary life. With the powers that man knows, with these powers of thinking, feeling, and willing alone, physical, earthly life could not be accomplished. If man could only think, feel, and will as he can now, he would never be able, for example, to form his body plastically in such a way that the brain would fit his predispositions. For this, plastic-forming powers had to intervene. However, these already belong to what the soul no longer perceives in physical experience, what belongs to a more comprehensive consciousness than the circle of consciousness we have in ordinary life.
When a person passes through the gate of death, they do not lack consciousness, but rather they initially live in a consciousness that is much richer and more meaningful than the consciousness here in physical life. For the body cuts out a piece of a more comprehensive consciousness and shows everything that can be shown, and even then only in a mirror. But what is contained in the body and what the human being carries through the gate of death has in fact a comprehensive consciousness within itself. And when the human being has passed through the gate of death, he is in this comprehensive consciousness. He does not have too little, but on the contrary too much, too rich a consciousness when he passes through the gate of death. I spoke about this in my Vienna Cycle at Easter 1914. Man has a richer consciousness after death, and when, after the often-described review brought about by the etheric body has passed, he enters a kind of sleep state, this is not a real sleep state, but a state brought about by the fact that the human being is in a richer consciousness than here. And just as our eyes are blinded by excessive light, by an overabundance of light, so the human being is blinded by the overabundance of consciousness, and must first learn to orient himself. The apparent sleep consists only in the fact that the person, in this excess of consciousness, orients himself in such a way that he can then reduce the excess of consciousness to what he can already bear according to the results of his life. That is the essential point. We do not have too little consciousness, but too much, and we wake up when we have tuned down our ability to orient ourselves to what we can bear. What happens after death is therefore a dampening down of the excess of consciousness to a bearable level. You must make such things clear to yourselves through the details of the Vienna cycle.
Today I will illustrate this with just two examples that are close to us. I could cite many such examples, for many of our friends have passed through the gates of death recently and in the past. But due to the special nature of the circumstances, precisely because these are final deaths, these considerations are, in a sense, more relevant, and I would like to start with such examples in order to speak to you about something that is so close to our hearts because it happened in our own midst, within the circle of our spiritual scientific movement.
We recently lost a dear friend from the physical plane, and it was my task to speak words for the soul that had passed through the gates of death at the cremation. It was then that, through the impulses of the spiritual world, which speak clearly enough in such cases, it became clear to me as a necessity to characterize the soul nature of this friend. So there we stood—it was in Zurich—before the cremation of a dear member of our spiritual scientific movement. Really, without wanting to, during the somewhat longer period of time that had elapsed between the death on a Wednesday evening and the cremation on Monday morning—it is understandable that the review through the etheric body had already ceased—the necessity arose from the spiritual world to begin and conclude the words I had to speak at the coffin with words that would characterize the inner essence of this soul. The inner essence of my friend, who had passed away in the prime of life, was such that one had to immerse oneself in this essence and, through identification with it, create it inwardly in the spirit, that is, one had to let one's thoughts submerge into the soul of the deceased and let what was weaving in the soul of the deceased flow into one's own thoughts. Then one had the opportunity, as it were, with regard to this soul, to say what the soul was like in life and what it is like now after death. And it came naturally to put this into the following words. At the beginning and end of the cremation, I had to say the following words:
You came among us.
The gentleness of your nature
Spoke from the quiet power of your eyes
Calmness that enlivens the soul
Flowed in waves
With which your gaze
Carried things and people
To the inner workings of your mind;
And this essence filled
Your voice, which eloquently
Through the nature of the word more
Than in the words themselves
Revealed what was hidden
In your beautiful soul;
But the devoted love
Of compassionate people
Revealed itself wordlessly — —
This being, which spoke of noble, quiet beauty
Of the creation of the souls of the worlds
Of receptive sensitivity.
Thus, the nature of this soul was revealed through identification with the soul in the days before cremation, after the review through the etheric body was over. The soul had not yet found the opportunity to orient itself in the excess of consciousness. It was, so to speak, asleep when the body faced cremation. The cremation speech was spoken — these words at the beginning and at the end. Then it was that the flame — that which looks like a flame but is not — seized the body, and while the body was seized by that which looks like a flame but is only the rising warmth and heat, there was a moment of awakening that came over the soul. And now one could see how the soul looked back on the whole scene that had taken place among the people who were present at the cremation. And this soul looked back especially on what had been said, then again the natural sinking back into the superabundance of consciousness began, one might say: into unconsciousness. Later, there was a moment when such a looking back occurred again. This takes longer and longer until finally a complete orientation in the superabundance of consciousness can be achieved.
But one important thing can be seen from this. It became apparent that, because words had been spoken at the cremation that came from her own soul, these words ignited the looking back in her, that there was something awakening in these words. And from this we can learn that one of the most important things after death is to review one's own experience. In a sense, after death one must begin with self-knowledge. Here in earthly life, one can lack self-knowledge, one can lack it so strongly that what an unusual person, not even an ordinary writer, but a famous professor of philosophy, Dr. Ernst Mach — not Ferdinand Maack, whom I would not mention — confesses in his “Analysis of Sensations,” a very famous work, is true: As a young man, I was once walking across the street and suddenly saw a person coming toward me in a mirror. I thought: What an unpleasant, repulsive face. How astonished I was when I discovered that I had seen my own face in profile. — So he had seen his own face, which he knew so little that he could make this judgment. And the same professor recounts how it happened to him later, when he was already a famous professor of philosophy, that after a long journey he got into a bus quite tired, and a man got in on the other side—there was a large mirror opposite him—and he confesses his thoughts quite sincerely, saying that he thought: What kind of down-and-out, unpleasant schoolmaster is getting on here? — And again he recognized himself, and he adds: So I knew the generic habitus better than my own. — This is a fine example of how little people know themselves in life, even in terms of their outward appearance, unless they are a coquettish woman who often looks in the mirror. - But we know much, much less about our own mental characteristics. We tend to overlook them much more. One can become a famous philosopher of the present day without any self-knowledge. But human beings need this self-knowledge when they have passed through the gates of death.
Human beings must therefore look back to the point in their development from which they passed through death, and they must recognize themselves there. Just as human beings who are in physical life and look back with the ordinary powers of life can never see their own birth, so this can never stand before the ordinary powers of the soul — for there is no human being who can look back on their physical birth through the ordinary forces of the soul — so it is necessary that at every moment the moment of death is there to look back on. Death is always before our eyes as the last significant event. Seen from the other side, from beyond death, this death is something completely different from what it is on the physical side. It is the most beautiful experience that can be seen from the other side, from the side of life between death and new birth. It is that which appears as the glorious image of the eternal victory of the spiritual over the physical. And because it appears as such an image, it is the constant awakener of the highest powers of human nature when this human nature is in spiritual experience between death and new birth. This is why, when the soul looks back, when it seeks to look back, it must first look at itself. It was precisely in the cases we have recently experienced that it was so clear what gave rise to the urge to characterize this soul in a special way, in order to meet it halfway in its desire to look back and see itself in self-knowledge. This is how the so-called living works together with the so-called dead. And more and more such correspondence will come from the so-called living to the so-called dead.
Another case we have experienced recently is that of our dear friend Fritz Mitscher. Although Fritz Mitscher is less well known to our friends here, he has nevertheless made an impression on many other anthroposophists through his lectures, through what he has achieved in a wonderful way from friend to friend, through the way he found his way into anthroposophical life, so that his way of being must be described as exemplary, as a model, because he whose soul forces were directed toward undergoing a scholarly education and absorbing it, strove to gather everything he endeavored to learn according to his aptitude through scholarship, to encompass it through the intimate nature of his soul life, and then to integrate it into his spiritual scientific worldview. We need this kind of activity in particular if we want to carry the spiritual-scientific ideals into the future in a beneficial way. We need people who try to understand what the education of the times is, in order to immerse it in the stream of spiritual education; who, in a sense, make the sacrifice of immersing the education of the times in the stream of the spiritual. There too — and I am only speaking of things that have necessarily come about through karma — karma has brought it about that I had to speak at the cremation. And there too, out of inner necessity, it arose to characterize the nature of our dear friend at the beginning and end of the cremation speech. And so I had to characterize this nature:
A hope that made us happy:
Thus you entered the field,
Where the spiritual blossoms of the earth,
Through the power of the soul,
Wish to reveal themselves to the seeker.A pure love of truth
Was your original longing;
To create from the light of the spirit,
Was the serious goal of your life,
Which you pursued tirelessly.You cultivated your beautiful gifts,
In order to walk the bright path of spiritual knowledge
Unperturbed by the contradictions of the world
As a faithful servant of truth
With sure steps.You exercised your spiritual organs,
That they might bravely and persistently
On both sides of the path
Drive error away from you
And create space for truth.To reveal your self
of pure light,
So that the power of the soul's sun
Might shine mightily within you,
Was your life's concern and joy.Other cares, other joys,
Barely touched your soul,
Because knowledge was your light,
Giving meaning to existence,
Appeared to you as the true value of life.With a hope that would make us happy,
You entered the field
Where the spiritual blossoms of the earth
Through the power of the soul
Wish to reveal themselves to the seeker.A loss that pains us deeply,
Thus you disappear from the field,
Where the seeds of the spirit
In the womb of the soul
Matured to your sense of the spheres.Feel how we look lovingly
Hear the plea of our souls,
To the heights that now call you
Call you to other creations.
Give your strength from the realms of the spirit
To your departed friends.
Sent after you in trust:
We need here on earth
Strong power from the realms of the spirit,
Which we give thanks to our dead friends.A hope that makes us happy,
A loss that pains us deeply:
Let us hope that you, far away yet near,
Shine undiminished upon our lives
As a star of the soul in the realm of the spirit.
That night, the soul, which was still completely disoriented, spontaneously responded with something related to the lines that had been addressed to her at the cremation. Words like these are spoken in such a way that one's own soul truly writes them down without being able to do much about it. They are written by orienting oneself to the foreign soul, out of the foreign soul. And I was completely unaware, absolutely unaware, that two verses were constructed in a very special way, until I heard the words of the soul of a friend who had passed through the gate of death:
To reveal my self to me
To shape pure light,
So that the soul's solar power
Might shine powerfully within me,
Was my life's concern and joy.Other worries, other joys,
Barely touched my soul,
Because knowledge was to me like light,
Giving meaning to existence,
Seemed to me the true value of life.
Only now could I understand why these verses are structured in this way; they are spoken by me exactly as follows:
To reveal your true self
In pure light,
So that the power of the soul's sun
May shine powerfully within you,
Was your life's concern and joy.
But everything that was yours came into me, everything that was mine came back to you; thus transformed, thus expressed by the soul through its own being, they returned.
This is an example of how correspondence takes place, how the mutual relationship already exists between the world here and the world there in the time after death. That this awareness should penetrate human souls is linked to the meaning of our spiritual scientific movement. That the world of those who live between death and a new birth should also become a world in which we know that we are there with them, this is what spiritual science will give to humanity and thus expand the world beyond the narrow realm of reality in which human beings currently find themselves. But this is intimately connected with what should be in Central Europe. And those who have listened carefully will find in the words addressed to Fritz Mitscher's soul what is deeply connected with this meaning of our spiritual scientific movement, for these words were spoken out of a deep inner necessity:
Hear the plea of our souls,
Sent to you in trust:
We need here for our earthly work
Strong power from the spiritual realm,
We thank our dead friends.
Sometimes, even if not in reality, at least in times past, one may doubt whether the souls embodied in flesh here on earth will really do enough for the salvation of humanity and the earth, what is truly necessary in terms of spiritual understanding of the world. But those who are fully and actively involved in the spiritual scientific movement cannot despair, because they know that the forces of those who have ascended to the spiritual worlds after feeling stronger here because they have taken spiritual science into themselves are working in the stream in which we stand in our bodies. And it is like communicating with a soul of a friend who has passed through the gate of death, when one calls after them what one owes to the strength of the friend for a spiritual movement; when one can, as it were, communicate with them in order to remain united with their forces, so that we always have them among us, so that they always continue to work among us. It is not merely a matter of absorbing ideas, concepts, and notions in spiritual science, but of creating a movement, a spiritual movement here on earth, into which we truly bring spiritual forces.
At this very moment, it is natural for us, out of the feelings that perhaps inspire our friends here, to direct our thoughts to the soul of the one who has always devoted his energies to this branch of knowledge. That we also want to feel connected to him, that we want to know ourselves united with his forces after he has passed through the gate of death, for this we rise from our seats. The friends in Leipzig all know of which friendly soul I speak, and they have certainly directed their thoughts to this soul with moved hearts.
These are the thoughts that I wanted to share with you today, now that we are able to be together. These words were inspired by the awareness that the difficult and fateful days in which we live must be replaced by days that will pass peacefully over the earth, in which the forces of peace will be at work. But in view of the way in which so much, so very much, will be transformed by what is now happening in the life of humanity on Earth—indeed, must be transformed—we who profess spiritual science must be particularly mindful of how important it is that, on the ground for which so much blood is being shed, for which so many souls are now passing through the gates of death, on which so many fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters, sons and daughters are mourning, what can be accomplished by those whose souls can be illuminated by the future-oriented thoughts of spiritual science.
Yes, those thoughts that come from the consciousness of the living connection between the human soul and the spiritual world must rise from the earth to the spiritual heights. Souls will now enter these spiritual worlds, and it will be spiritual forces that are brought forth precisely through our fateful days. Consider how many in the prime of life are passing through the gates of death at this time! Consider that the etheric bodies of these people who are passing through the gates of death between the ages of twenty and thirty, between thirty and forty, are etheric bodies that could have sustained the physical body here in physical life for decades to come. These etheric bodies are separated from the physical bodies, but they still retain the powers to work here for the physical world. These powers will continue to work in the spiritual worlds, separated from the etheric bodies that have passed through the gate of death unspent. The spirituality from the unused etheric bodies of the heroic warriors will shine brightly for the spiritual healing and progress of humanity. But what flows down will have to encounter what can flow out of the souls as thoughts, which they will have gained through spiritual science. Therefore, we can summarize the thoughts we have brought before our souls today in a few words that express the connection between the consciousness carried by spiritual scientific thoughts and the events of our time, which express how the space for the coming time of peace must be filled with thoughts that ascend from souls into the spiritual worlds, from souls that have passed through spiritual science. Then what is being fought for with such great sacrifice, with blood and death in our time, will be able to bear fruit in the right sense when souls are found who turn their minds spiritually toward the spiritual realm. Therefore, considering the difficult and fateful days of today, we may say:
From the courage of the fighters,
From the blood of the battles,
From the suffering of the forsaken,
From the sacrifices of the people
Spiritual fruit will grow —
Souls will turn their minds spiritually
Towards the spiritual realm!