It
is a little difficult to continue what has been given in the last
lectures, because so many friends who have not taken part in
these studies are here today. On the other hand it is hardly
possible to make a new beginning, for many things contained in
the previous lectures have still to be completed. Friends who
have just arrived will have to realise that if some of our
thoughts today prove somewhat difficult to understand, it is
because they are connected — inwardly, though not outwardly
— with preceding lectures. At Easter we shall have a
self-contained course, but to-day I must continue what has gone
before. We did not expect so many friends at this date, although
needless to say we are extremely glad that they have come.
In
recent lectures we have been speaking of definite karmic
relationships — not with the object of finding anything
sensational in the successive earthly lives we have studied, but
in order to arrive step by step at a really concrete
understanding of the connections of destiny in human life.
I
have described successive earthly lives of certain historic
figures, in order to give an idea of how one earthly life works
on into the next — and that is not an easy matter.
Again
and again it must be emphasised that a new trend has come into
the Anthroposophical Movement since the Christmas Foundation
Meeting at Dornach. Of this I should now like to say a few
introductory words. — You know, my dear friends, that since
the year 1918 there have been all manner of undertakings within
the Anthroposophical Society. Their origin is clear. When the
Anthroposophical Society was founded, this question was really
being asked out of a deep occult impulse: Would the
Anthroposophical Society continue to evolve by virtue of the
inner strength which (in its members) it had acquired until then?
There was only one way to make the test. Until then I, as General
Secretary, had had the leadership of the German Section, which
was the form in which the Anthroposophical Movement had existed
within the Theosophical Society. The only way now was for me no
longer to take in hand the leadership of the Anthroposophical
Society but to watch and see how this Society would evolve
through its own inherent strength.
You
see, my dear friends, that is something quite different from what
the position would have been if already at that time (as at our
Christmas Foundation Meeting) I had said that I would undertake
the leadership of the Society. For the Anthroposophical Society,
if led by me, must naturally be an altogether different thing
than if led by someone else. Moreover, for certain profound
reasons, the Society might have been led all the better without
me having the administrative leadership. Many things might have
been done if human hearts had spoken — things which in fact
remained undone, or which were even done from outside, often
enough under resistance from the anthroposophists.
During
the War, of course, we had little opportunity to unfold our
forces in all directions. So it came about that after the year
1918 the prevailing state of affairs was taken advantage of by
those who wanted to do this or that. If I had said at the time,
“No, these things shall not be done”, then of course
we should hear it said today: “If this or that had only
been allowed, we should now have many flourishing undertakings.”
For
this very reason it was the custom at all times for the leaders
of occult movements to let those who want to do something try it
out and see what becomes of it, so that convictions might be
determined by the facts themselves. For that is the only way to
call forth conviction. And so it had to be in our case too.
The
upshot of it all has been that since the year 1918 opposition to
our Movement has become rife and has brought about the present
state of affairs, when it is impossible for me, for instance, to
give public lectures in Germany. These facts must in no way be
concealed from the Anthroposophical Movement. We must face them
with all clarity. As long as we work with unclear situations we
shall make no progress.
As
you know, all manner of experiments were made in the hope of
being ‘truly scientific’ — shall we say? Quite
naturally so, in view of the characters of those concerned
scientists who also partake in our Society naturally like to be
scientific. But that is the very thing that annoys our opponents.
When we say to them, “As scientists we can prove this or
that truth”, they come forward with all their so-called
scientific claims, and then of course they become furious. We
should be under no illusions on this point. Nothing has annoyed
our opponents more than the fact that our members have tried to
speak on the same subjects as they themselves do, and in the same
manner, only — as these our members often used to say —
“letting a little Anthroposophy flow into it.” It was
precisely this which called forth our opponents in such
overwhelming numbers.
Again,
we offend most strongly against the life-conditions of
Anthroposophy if we give ourselves up to the illusion that we can
win over the adherents of various religious communities by saying
the same or similar things as they, only once more “letting
Anthroposophy flow into it.”
But
now, since the Christmas Foundation Meeting, an entirely new
element must come into all that is being done in the field of
Anthroposophy. Those of you who have observed the way
Anthroposophy is now being presented here, or the way it was
presented at Prague and again at Stuttgart, will have observed
that impulses are now at work which call forth something
altogether new, even where our opponents are concerned. If we try
to be ‘scientific’ in the ordinary sense of the word
— as, unfortunately, many of our members have tried to be —
then we are presuming that it is possible to enter into
discussion with them. But now take the lectures that have been
given here, or the lectures at Prague, or the single lectures at
Stuttgart — can you believe for a single moment that there
can be any question of entering into discussion with our
opponents on these matters? It goes without saying: we can enter
into no discussion with our opponents when we speak of these
things. How, for example, should we discuss with any
representative of the civilisation of today the statement, for
example, that the soul of Muavija appeared again in the soul of
Woodrow Wilson? [See Vol. I, lecture X.]
Thus
in the whole Anthroposophical Movement there is now a prevailing
quality which can tend to nothing else than this. — We must
take it at last in real earnest that there can be no question of
entering into discussion or argument with our opponents. For if
we do so, it will in any case lead nowhere. Thus we must realise
that, with regard to our opponents, it can only be a question of
refuting calumnies, untruths and lies. We must not give up
ourselves to the illusion that these things can be discussed.
They must expand by their own inherent power; they cannot be
decided by any dialectic.
Through
the whole tenor of the Anthroposophical Movement as it has been
since Christmas last, this will perhaps be realised increasingly,
even by our members. Henceforth the Anthroposophical Movement
will take this attitude: It will no longer pay heed to anything
other than what the spiritual world itself requires of it.
It
is from this standpoint that I have placed before you various
thoughts on karma. Those of you who were here, or who heard my
last lecture at Stuttgart, will remember that I tried to show how
the individualities who lived in the 8th and 9th centuries A.D.
at the Court of Haroun al Raschid in Asia, having continued to
evolve after death in different directions, played certain
definite parts in their new incarnations. At the time of the
Thirty Years' War (and a short time before) we have on the one
hand the individuality of Haroun al Raschid, reincarnated in the
Englishman, Francis Bacon of Verulam. And a great organiser at the Court
of Haroun al Raschid, who had lived at the Court — not
indeed as an initiate, but as the reincarnation of an initiate —
this individuality we found again as Amos Comenius, whose field
of action was in Central Europe. From these two streams much in
the spiritual part of modern civilisation flowed together. In the
spiritual and intellectual aspect of modern civilisation, the
Near East — as it was in the time immediately after
Mohammed — lived again, on the one hand through the
reincarnated Haroun al Raschid, Bacon of Verulam; and on the
other hand through Amos Comenius, who had been his counsellor.
In
the present lecture I wish to emphasise the following fact: —
The evolution of man does not merely take place when he is here
on earth, but also when he is between death and a new birth.
Bacon as well as Amos Comenius, having fastened Arabism —
so to speak from two different sides — on to the
civilisation of Europe, died again and passed into the life
between death and a new birth. And there they were together with
many souls who came down to earth after their time. Bacon and
Amos Comenius, having died in the 17th century, lived on in the
spiritual world. Other souls, who came down to earth in the 19th
century, were in the spiritual world together with the souls of
Bacon and Amos Comenius from the l7th to the 19th centuries. On
the one hand there were souls who gathered mainly around the soul
of Bacon — Bacon whose work became so dominant. Then there
were the souls who gathered around Amos Comenius. And though this
is rather a pictorial way of speaking, we must not forget that
there are ‘leaders’ and ‘followers’ —
albeit under quite different conditions — even in the
spiritual world which men pass through between death and a new
birth. Such individualities as Bacon or Amos Comenius worked not
only through what they brought about on earth — through
their writings, for example, or through the traditions of those
which lived on earth. No, these leading spirits were also working
through the souls of those they sent down, or the souls with whom
they were together and who were then sent down; they worked by
causing certain tendencies to germinate in these souls in the
spiritual world. Thus among the people of the 19th century we
find souls who had become dependent already in their evolution in
the pre-earthly life on one or other of these two spirits —
the discarnate Amos Comenius, and the discarnate Bacon.
As
I said, I want to lead you more and more into the concrete way in
which karma works. Therefore I will now draw your attention to
two personalities of the 19th century whose names will be known
to most of you. One of them was especially influenced in his
pre-earthly life by Bacon, and the other by Amos Comenius.
If
we observe Bacon as he stood in earthly civilisation — in
his earthly life as Lord Chancellor in England — if we
observe him there, we find that his working was such that an
Initiate stood behind him. The whole Bacon-Shakespeare
controversy, as it is outwardly pursued by the historians of
literature, is appallingly barren. All manner of arguments are
brought forward which are supposed to show that Shakespeare the
actor did not really write his dramas, but that they were written
by Bacon the philosopher and Lord Chancellor, and so on.
All
these things — working with external methods, seeking out
similarities in the way of thought in Shakespeare's dramas and
Bacon's philosophic works — all these are barren
superficialities. They do not get at the real truth. For the
truth is that at the time when Bacon, Shakespeare, Jacob Boehme,
and a fourth individual were active on the earth, there was one
Initiate who really spoke through all four. Hence their kinship,
for in reality it all goes back to one and the same source. Of
course, the people who dispute and argue do not argue about the
Initiate who stood behind, especially as this initiate —
like many a modern initiate — is described to us in history
as a rather intolerable fellow. But he was not only so. No doubt
he was so sometimes in his external actions, but he was not
merely so. He was an individuality from whom immense forces
proceeded, and to whom were really due Bacon's philosophic works
as well as Shakespeare's dramas and the works of Jacob Boehme,
and also the works of the Jesuit, Jacob Balde. If we bear this in
mind, then we must see in Bacon, in the philosophic realm, the
instigator of an immense and far-reaching stream of the time.
It
is most interesting to observe what could become of a soul who
lived throughout the two centuries, in the life beyond the earth,
under the influence of the dead Bacon. We must turn our attention
to the way in which Bacon himself lived after his death. For our
studies of human history it will in fact be more and more
important to observe the human beings who have lived on earth not
only until the moment of their death but in their activities
beyond death, where they work on and on upon those souls who are
afterwards to descend to earth. This applies especially to those
who have themselves been responsible for great spiritual
achievements.
No
doubt these things may be somewhat shocking for people of the
present time. So for instance I remember — if I may make
this digression — I remember on one occasion I was standing
at the entrance to the railway station in a small German
University town with a well-known doctor who went in a great deal
for occultism. Around us stood many other people. Presently he
warmed up to his subject and out of his enthusiasm said to me in
a loud voice, so that many of those who were around could hear
him: “I will make you a present of the biography of Robert
Blum; but that is a biography which begins only after his death.”
Spoken loudly as it was, one could well observe the shock it gave
to those who were standing around us! One cannot say without more
ado to the people of today, “I will make you a present of
the biography of a man, but it begins only after his death.”
For
the rest — apart from this two-volumed biography of Robert
Blum, which begins not with his birth but with his death —
little has yet been done in the way of relating the biographies
of people after their death. Biographies generally begin at birth
and end at death; there are not yet many works that begin with a
person's death. Yet, for the real happenings of the world, what a
person does after his death is immensely important, notably when
he passes on the results of what he did on earth —
translated into the spiritual — to the souls who come down
after him. We cannot understand the age which succeeds a given
age if we do not observe this side of life.
Now
I was especially interested in observing those individualities
who surrounded Bacon after his death. Among them were
individualities who were subsequently born as natural scientists.
But there were also others who were born as historians; and if we
observe the influence of the dead Lord Bacon on these souls, we
see how the materialism which he founded upon earth — the
mere researching into the world of sense (for, as you know,
everything else was for him an ‘idol’) —
translated into the spiritual, reverts into a kind of radicalism.
And so indeed, in the very midst of the spiritual world, these
souls received impulses which worked on in such a way that after
their birth, having descended to the earth, they would attach no
value to anything that was not a concrete fact visible to the
senses.
I
will now speak in a somewhat popular form, but I beg you not to
take my words too literally, for if you do so it will of course
be only too easy to say: ‘How grotesque!’ Among these
souls there were also some who, by their former tendencies —
derived from former earthly lives — were destined to become
historians. And among them was one who was the greatest. (I am
still speaking of the pre-earthly lives of all these souls). One
among them was the greatest. Under the influence of Lord Bacon's
impulses all these souls said to themselves, in effect: It is no
longer permissible to write history as it was written in former
times, to write it with Ideas, investigating the inner
connections. Only the actual facts must now be the objects of our
research.
Now
I ask you, what does this mean? Are not the people's intentions
the most important things in history? — and they are not
outwardly real! These souls, however, no longer permitted
themselves to think in this way; and least of all did the soul
who afterwards appeared again as one of the greatest historians
of the 19th century — .
Leopold
von Ranke. von Ranke was a pre-earthly disciple of Lord Bacon.
Study
the earthly career of Leopold von Ranke as a historian. What is
his principle? Ranke's principle as a historian is this: nothing
must be written in history save what is to be read of in the
archives. We must compile all history from the archives —
from the actual transactions of the diplomats.
If
you read Ranke you will find it so. He is a German and a
Protestant, but with his sense of reality this has no effect on
him. He works objectively — that is to say, with the
objectivity of the archives. So he writes his History of the
Popes — the best that has ever been written from the pure
standpoint of archives. When we read Ranke we are irritated, nay
dreadfully so. It is a barren prospect to imagine the old
gentleman — quick and alert as he was until a ripe old age
— sitting forever in the archives and merely piecing
together the diplomatic transactions. That is no real history. It
is history which reckons only with the facts of the sense-world —
that is to say, for the historian, with the archives. And
so indeed, precisely by taking into account the life beyond the
earth we have the possibility to understand why Ranke became what
he was.
But
now we can also look across to Amos Comenius and observe how he
worked on the pre-earthly will of souls who afterwards descended
to the earth. For just as Leopold von Ranke became the greatest
disciple of Bacon — of Bacon after his death — so did
Schlosser become the greatest disciple of Comenius after
his death.
Read
Schlosser's History; observe the prevailing tone, the fundamental
note he strikes. On every page there speaks the moralist —
the moralist who would fain seize the human heart and soul —
whose object is to speak right into the heart. Often he scarcely
succeeds, for he is still rather a pedant. He speaks, in effect,
like a pedant speaking to the heart. Nevertheless, being a
pre-earthly disciple of Amos Comenius, he has absorbed something
of the quality that was in Comenius himself, who was so
characteristic by virtue of the peculiar quality of his spirit.
For after all, Comenius too came over from Mohammedanism. Though
he was very different from the spirits who gathered around Lord
Bacon, nevertheless Comenius too, in his incarnation as Comenius,
concentrated on the real, outer world. Everywhere he demanded
visibility, objectivity, in education. There must always be an
underlying picture. He demands vision — object lessons, as
it were; he too lays stress on the sense-perceptible, though in
quite another way. For Amos Comenius was also one of those who at
the time of the Thirty Years' War believed most enthusiastically
in the coming of the so-called Millennium. In his Pansophia
he wrote down great and world-embracing ideas. He wanted to work
for human education by a great impulsive power. This too worked
on Schlosser. It is there in Schlosser.
I
mention these two figures — Ranke and Schlosser — in
order to show you how we can understand what appears as the
spiritually productive power in man only if we also take into
account his life beyond the earth. Only then do we understand it
— just as we have also learnt to understand many things by
taking into account repeated lives on earth. For in the thoughts
which I have recently placed before you, we have observed this
marvellous working across from one incarnation to another. As I
said, I give these examples in order that we may then consider
how a person can think about his own karma. Before we can dwell
on the way in which good and evil — or illnesses or the
like — work over from one incarnation to another, we must
first learn to perceive how what afterwards emerges in the
spiritual and intellectual life of civilisation also works across
from one incarnation to another.
Now
my dear friends, I must admit that for me one of the most
interesting personalities in modern spiritual life, with regard
to his karma, was
Conrad Ferdinand Meyer. Anyone who observes him closely will see that his most beautiful
works depend on a peculiar fact, namely this: Again and again, in
his whole human constitution, there was a kind of tendency for
the Ego and astral body to flee from the physical and the etheric
bodies.
Morbid
conditions appear in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer, bordering very
nearly on dementia. But these morbid conditions only express in a
rather more extreme form what was always present in him in a
nascent state. His soul-and-spirit tends to go out — holds
to the physical and etheric only by a very loose thread. And in
this condition — the soul-and-spirit holding to the
physical and etheric by a very loose thread only — the most
beautiful of his works originate; I mean the most beautiful of
his longer works and of his shorter poems too. Conrad Ferdinand
Meyer's most beautiful poems may even be said to have originated
half out of the body. There was a peculiar relationship between
the four members of his nature. Truly there is a great difference
between such a personality and an average person of the present
time. With an average person of this materialistic age we
generally find a very firm and robust connection of the
soul-and-spirit with the physical and etheric. The
soul-and-spirit is deeply immersed in the physical and etheric —
‘sits tight’, as it were. But in Conrad Ferdinand
Meyer it was not so. He had a very tender relation of the
soul-and-spirit to the physical and etheric. To describe his
psyche is really one of the most interesting tasks one can
undertake when studying the developments of modern spiritual
life. Many things that emerge in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer appear
almost like a dim, cloudy recollection — a recollection
which has however grown beautiful in growing dim. When Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer writes we always have the feeling: He is
remembering something, though not quite exactly. He changes it —
but changes it into something beautiful and form-perfected. We
can observe this wonderfully, piece by piece, in certain of his
works.
Now
it is characteristic of the inner karma of a human being when
there is such a definite relationship of the four members of his
nature — physical body, etheric body, astral body and Ego.
And in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer's case, when we trace back this
peculiarly intimate connection, we are led, first of all, to the
time of the Thirty Years' War. This was the first thing clear to
me in his case: there is something of a former earthly life at
the time of the Thirty Years' War. And then there is a still
earlier life on earth going back into the pre-Carlovingian age,
going back quite evidently into the early history of Italy.
When
we endeavour to trace Conrad Ferdinand Meyer's karma, the
peculiar, intangible fluidity of his being (which none the less
expresses itself in such perfection of form) — the
peculiar, intangible fluidity of his life somehow communicates
itself to our investigation, until at length we feel: We are
getting into confusion. I have no other alternative but to
describe these things just as they happened in the investigation.
We
go back into the time of the 6th century in Italy. There we have
the feeling: We are getting into an extraordinarily insecure
element. We are driven back again and again, and only gradually
we observe that this is not due to ourselves but to the object of
our research. There is really in the soul — in the
individuality — of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer something that
brings us into confusion as we try to investigate him. We are
driven to return again and again into his present incarnation or
into the one immediately before it. Again and again we must ‘pull
ourselves up’ and go back again.
The
following was the result. — You must remember, all that has
lived in a human soul in former incarnations becomes manifest in
the most varied forms — in likenesses which are often quite
imperceptible to outer observation. This you will have seen from
other instances of reincarnation given here.
So
at length we come to an incarnation in Italy in the early
Christian centuries — at the end of the first half of the
first millennium A.D. Here we come to a halt. We find a soul
living in Italy, to a large extent at Ravenna, at the Roman
Court. But now we come into confusion. For we must ask ourselves:
What was living in that soul? The moment we ask ourselves this
question (in order to call forth the further occult
investigation), the whole thing is extinguished once again.
We
become aware of the experiences which this soul underwent while
living at the Court at Ravenna — at the Roman Court. We
enter into these experiences and we think we have them, and then
again they are extinguished — blotted out from us; and we
are driven back again to Conrad Ferdinand Meyer as he lived on
earth in the immediate past. At length we perceive that in this
later life he obliterates from our vision the content of his soul
in the former life. Only after long effort do we perceive at
length how the matter really stands. Conrad Ferdinand Meyer —
or rather the individuality who lived in him — was living
at that time in a certain relationship to one of the Popes who
sent him, among others, to England on a Roman Catholic, Christian
Mission.
The
individuality who afterwards became Conrad Ferdinand Meyer had
first absorbed all that wonderful sense of form which it was
possible to absorb in Italy at that time. The Mosaic art of Italy
bears witness to it; also the old Italian paintings, the greater
part, nay practically the whole of which has been destroyed.
And
then he went on a Roman Catholic Christian Mission to the
Anglo-Saxons. One of his companions founded the Bishopric of
Canterbury. What afterwards took place at Canterbury began
essentially with this foundation. The individuality, however, who
afterwards appeared as Conrad Ferdinand Meyer, was only there as
a witness, so to speak. Nevertheless, he was a very active
person, and he called forth the ill-will of an Anglo-Saxon
chieftain, at whose investigation he was eventually murdered.
But
while he lived in England there was something in the soul of this
Conrad Ferdinand Meyer which robbed him of real joy in life. His
soul was deeply rooted in the Italian art of his time — or,
under a different name, in the Italian spiritual life. He gained
no happiness in the execution of his missionary work in England.
Yet he devoted himself to it with great intensity — so much
so that his assassination was a reaction to it.
This
constant unhappiness — being repelled from something which
he was none the less doing with all force and devotion out of
another impulse in his heart — worked on in such a way that
when he passed through his next earthly life there ensued a
cosmic clouding-over of his memory. The inner impulse was there
but it no longer coincided with any clear concept.
And
so it came about that in his subsequent incarnation as Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer, an undefined impulse was at work in him, to this
effect: ‘I was once working in England. It is connected
somehow with Canterbury. I was murdered owing to my connection
with Canterbury.’
So
indeed the outer life of Conrad Ferdinand Meyer in this
incarnation takes its course. He studies outer history, he
studies Canterbury and what happened there in connection with the
history of England. He comes across Thomas à Becket,
Chancellor of King Henry II in the 12th century. He learns of the
strange destiny of Thomas à Becket, who from being the
all-powerful Chancellor of Henry II, was murdered virtually at
his instigation. And so in this present incarnation as Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer, his own half-forgotten destiny appears to him in
Thomas à Becket. It comes before him, half-forgotten in
his subconsciousness, for I am speaking of course, of the
subconscious life which comes to the surface in this way. So he
describes his own fate in a far distant time. But he describes it
in the story of what actually happened in the 12th century
between King Henry II and Thomas à Becket of Canterbury,
whose fate he recounts in his poetic work Der Heilige (The
Saint). So indeed it is — only all this takes place in the
subconscious life which embraces successive incarnations. It is
as though within a single earthly life a man had experienced
something in his early youth in connection with a certain place.
He has forgotten it. He experienced it maybe in the second or
third year of his life. It does not emerge, but some other
similar destiny emerges. The very same place is named, and as a
result he has a peculiar sympathy for this other person's
destiny. He feels it differently from one who has no ‘association
of ideas’ with the same place.
Just
as this may happen within one earthly life, so it took place in
the concrete instance I am now giving you. There was the work in
Canterbury, the murder of a person connected with Canterbury (for
Thomas à Becket was Archbishop of Canterbury), the murder
of Thomas à Becket at the instigation of the King of
England. All of these schemes are connected. In the descriptions
in his poem he is describing his own destiny.
But
now it continues — and this is most interesting in Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer's case. He was born as a woman about the time of
the Thirty Years' War — a lively woman, full of spiritual
interest in life, a woman who witnessed many an adventure. She
married a man who first took part in all the confused events of
the Thirty Years' War, but then grew weary of them and emigrated
to Switzerland, to Graubünden (Canton Grisons), where he
lived a somewhat philistine existence. But his wife was deeply
affected and impressed by all that took place in the Graubünden
country under the prevailing conditions of the Thirty Years' War.
This
too is eclipsed, as though with another layer. For it is so with
this individuality: That which is living in him is easily
forgotten in the cosmic sense, and yet he calls it forth again in
a transmuted form, where it becomes more glorious and more
intense. For out of what this woman observed and experienced in
that incarnation there arises the wonderful characterisation of
Jürg Jenatsch, the man of Graubünden, in Conrad
Ferdinand Meyer's historic novel. Observing Conrad Ferdinand
Meyer in this incarnation, we have indeed no explanation of his
peculiarity if we cannot enter into his karma. I must say —
speaking with a grain of salt — that I envy the people who
‘understand’ him so light-heartedly. Before I knew
his reincarnations, all that I understood was that I did not
understand him. This wonderful inner perfection of form, this
inner joy in form, this purity of form, all the strength and
power that lives in Jürg Jenatsch, and the wonderful
personal and living quality in The Saint, — a good
deal of superficiality is needed to imagine that one understands
all this. Observe his beautiful forms — there is something
of clear line in them, almost severe; they are painted and yet
not painted. Here live the mosaics of Ravenna. And in The
Saint there lives a history which was undergone once upon a
time by this individuality himself; but a mist of the soul has
spread over it, and out of the mist it emerges in another form.
And
again one needs to know: All that is living in his romance of
Graubünden, Jürg Jenatsch, was absorbed by the
heart and mind of a woman; while in the momentum, the driving
power that lives in this romance there lives again the
swashbuckler of the Thirty Years' War. The man was pretty much of
a philistine, as I said, but he was a swashbuckler. And
so, all that comes over from former experiences on earth comes to
life again in a peculiar form in Conrad Ferdinand Meyer. Only now
do we begin to understand him. Now we say to ourselves: In olden
times of human evolution, people were not ashamed to speak of
Spirits from beyond descending to the earth, or of earthly human
beings finding their way upward and working on from spiritual
worlds. All this must come again, otherwise man will not get
beyond his present outlook of the earthworm. For all that the
natural-scientific conception of the world contains, it is the
world-outlook of the earthworm. People live on earth as though
only the earth concerned them, as though it were not true that
the whole Cosmos works upon all earthly things and lives again in
man. As though it were not true that earlier epochs of history
live on, inasmuch as we ourselves carry into later times what we
absorbed in former times.
We
do not understand karma by talking theoretically about successive
earthly incarnations. To understand karma is to feel in our
hearts all that we can feel when we see what existed ages
ago flowing into the later epochs in the souls of people
themselves. When we begin to see how karma works, human life
gains quite a new content. We feel ourselves quite differently in
human life.
Such
a spirit as Conrad Ferdinand Meyer feels his former earthly lives
like an undertone — an undertone that sounds from far away.
We understand what appears in him only when we develop an
understanding for this undertone. The progress of mankind in
spiritual life will depend on its ability to regard life in this
way, to observe in all detail what flows across from former
epochs of the world's evolution into later epochs through the
human beings themselves. Then we shall cease, in the childish way
of psychoanalysts, to explain the peculiarities of souls by
speaking of ‘hidden underlying regions’ and the like.
After all, one can ascribe anything one likes to what is
‘hidden’. We shall look for the real causes. In some
respects, no doubt, the psychoanalysts do quite good work. But
these pursuits remind us of the story of how someone heard that
in the year 1749 a son was born to a certain patrician.
Afterwards this son emerged as a very gifted man. To this day we
can point to the actual birthplace in Frankfurt of the man who
afterwards came forth as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. ‘Let
us make excavations in the earth and see by dint of what strange
emanations his talents came about’. Sometimes the
psychoanalysts seem to me just like that. They dig into the
earth-realm of the mind, into the hidden regions which they
themselves first invent by their hypotheses, whereas in reality
one ought to look into the preceding lives on earth and lives
between death and a new birth. Then if we do so, a true
understanding of human souls is opened out to us. Truly the souls
of men are far too rich in content to enable us to understand
their content out of a single life alone.
Thanks to the Rudolf Steiner Archive.
Continued in the next issue of SCR.
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