|
LECTURE
SEVENTEEN
Dornach,
8 January 1917
When, after repeated requests, I decided to speak about some aspects
of most recent history leading up to the present, I expressly stated
that my concern was the understanding of the facts and that there was
no question of entering into politics or anything to do with politics.
I frequently repeated this statement. Despite this, it seems to me that
a definite carelessness — not to use a stronger word — is gaining
ground amongst us in this respect. People do not consider that when
someone is speaking the truth with the intensity that has been the
case, he has a right to claim that attention is also paid to the manner
of its expression. It appears that here and there people have been
speaking about these lectures as if they were political lectures. Lack
of consideration has for a long time been the order of the day among
some of our members — only a few, of course; I refer only to those who
are meant. Everything I have said and repeated over and over again out
of anxiety for our concerns has fallen on deaf ears in some quarters.
It is perfectly apparent that again and again the matters we speak
about here are reported to outsiders in the strangest manner.
As such, I have nothing against reports if they remain within the
obvious bounds. But it is clear from various recent publications —
among them a most scandalous compilation from the Vollrath
[ Note 1 ]
camp — that matters are not reported in a manner befitting the way they
are discussed here, but in a manner — perhaps from want of a better
understanding — that enables the most horrible distortions to be
fabricated. I know very well that the source of this is to be found in
our midst, and if again and again I hold my peace and refrain from
taking steps against those so-called members who behave in this way, it
is out of love for our whole Movement and our whole Society. It is
surely not possible to hold a constant succession of hearings. It
would, however, be possible for members who understand what is going
on, to approach in a suitable manner those of whom it is known that
their attitude to the spiritual content given here is not what it ought
to be. I do not even want to maintain — though sometimes it is indeed
the case — that there is a direct lack of morality in people's
behaviour, but there is certainly a lack of insight into the way one
might behave. If someone wants to speak about what he has heard, it is
incumbent upon him to ask himself with honest — let me say —
self-knowledge, whether he has really understood it in a way which
enables him to pass it on.
It is necessary, unfortunately, to draw attention to this from time
to time. I assure you that I am not doing so without good reason. If
things go on as they are, it will become necessary to remain silent
about certain matters, and it is easy to see what would then become of
our Movement. And a share in bringing this about would lie with those
members who again and again fail to prevent themselves from using the
most awful expressions which can then lead to frightful distortions.
Surely it is not necessary to speak about these things in places where
they can be overheard by people who do not belong amongst us, and to
use expressions which might come easily to the tongue, but which in no
way correspond to the whole purpose on which these lectures are founded!
I must admit that having decided after repeated requests to give these
lectures, I can only view as entirely personal attacks the instances
in which they have been described as ‘political lectures’.
Now that we have discussed the many considerations contained in the
lectures of the past few weeks, it will today be possible to draw some
of them together in order to throw light on aspects which can help us
to understand what is happening today. I shall first endeavour to
recount quite baldly, in the most external fashion, the historical
sequence of events as they occurred, and then, on the basis of the
insights gained over the past weeks, I will point out some of the
deeper-lying causes. I want to state expressly that, particularly
today, I shall attempt to weigh carefully every single expression so
that each one provides an exact delineation within which the view it
expresses can come to light. Let me start, then, by describing quite
externally and briefly certain events, viewpoints and impulses.
As you of course all know, the present painful events have come
about in connection with the murder in June 1914 of Franz Ferdinand,
heir to the Austrian throne. This assassination was followed in the
whole of Europe by a newspaper campaign which showed, in what might be
called surging waves, the degree to which passions had been aroused in
every quarter. All this led to the well-known ultimatum from the
monarchy of Austria-Hungary to Serbia which, in the main, was rejected
by Serbia; then on to the Austro-Serbian conflict which was intended by
the leading Austrian statesmen to consist of a military entry into
Serbia, without any annexation of Serbian territory, for the purpose of
exerting military pressure in order to force an acceptance of the
ultimatum. The purpose of the ultimatum was to prevent Serbia from
inciting unrest against the stability of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy
via Austria's southern Slav population.
As you know, Austria comprises quite a number of nations — there are
thirteen recognized languages and many more than thirteen distinct
peoples. In the southern region the population is Slav; more to the
West are the Slovenian Slavs; to the East, adjacent to them, the
Dalmatian, Croatian, Slovenian, Serbian, Serbo-Croat population; then
also the various groups who live in the territories of Bosnia and
Herzegovina which were annexed by Austria in 1908, though occupied by
her long before that. Serbia borders on the territories populated by
these southern Slavs. Austria believed it could be proved — and
evidence of this proof can be found all over the place by anyone who
cares to seek it — that Serbia was inciting unrest with the aim of
founding a Southern Slav kingdom under the sovereignty of Serbia and
entailing the detachment of the southern Slav population of Austria.
At all costs the assassination of Franz Ferdinand had to be linked
with these things, for the following reason: From 1867 onwards, the
monarchy of Austria-Hungary was a dual state comprising, in accordance
with a not very concise description ‘the kingdoms and lands represented
in the Reichsrat’, and secondly ‘the lands
of the Holy Crown of St Stephen’. Among the lands
represented in the Reichsrat were
Upper and Lower Austria, Salzburg, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola and
Istria, Dalmatia, Moravia, Bohemia and Silesia, Galicia, Lodomeria and
Bukovina. To the lands of the Holy Crown of St Stephen belong first and
foremost the Magyar regions to which was annexed what had formerly been
Transylvania, which is inhabited by a number of peoples; further,
Croatia and Slavonia, the latter enjoying a kind of limited
self-government within the Hungarian state. A dual monarchy, in other
words.
Now it was known that Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the throne,
wanted to overcome the drawbacks of the dualism of Austria-Hungary and
replace this dualism with a ‘triadic’ reorganization. This triadic
structure was to come about by making the southern Slav territories
belonging to Austria self-governing, in the way the lands and kingdoms
represented in the Reichsrat and also the lands of the Holy Crown of St
Stephen were self-governing. This would have put a triadic structure in
place of the existing dualism. You can see how, had it been realized,
this would have led to an individualization of the separate southern
Slav peoples within a kind of southern Slav community in the
Austro-Slav regions. It would have meant a step closer to the aim of
assimilating the western Slavs with western culture, thus working
against what I have called Russianism in these lectures. This could
quite well have worked out, for the structure of the Austrian state is
entirely federalistic, not centralistic, and before the war it tended
anyway increasingly to grant federal status to the different peoples.
From 1867 to 1879 centralism was the aim; from 1879 onwards the efforts
to centralize had to be seen as a failure, and from then on federalism
was the aim.
In opposition to this were the efforts on the part of Serbia to
found a confederation of southern Slavs under the hegemony of Serbia.
This did not arise from within the Serbian people, but I have described
to you how peoples are, in a way, led simply by means of suggestion.
For this to happen, the southern Slav territories would, of course,
have to be wrested from Austria-Hungary.
This concludes my brief summary of what lies behind the
Austro-Serbian conflict. What I have just been telling you is all to do
with the Austro-Serbian conflict. It is thinkable that this conflict
could have been ‘localized’ — I have used this expression once before.
Had this come about — I am speaking hypothetically — the European world
war would have been avoided. What would have happened if the strictly
circumscribed intentions of the Austrian statesmen had been realized?
Part of the Austro-Hungarian army would have marched into Serbia and
stayed there until Serbia agreed to accept the ultimatum which would
have quashed the possibility of a southern Slav conferation under
Serbian hegemony, and, of course, Russian supremacy. If no other
European power had interfered in this matter, if they had all done
nothing more than stand to attention, as it were, then nothing would
have taken place except the acceptance of this ultimatum. For Austria
had guaranteed that she had no intention of annexing any parts of
Serbian territory in any way. As a result, such assassinations as took
place many times — that of Franz Ferdinand was only the last in a whole
sequence incited by Serbian agitators — such assassinations would not
have taken place, and without such agitation the establishment of a
southern Slav confederation under the supremacy of Russia is, or rather
would, of course, have been impossible. If events had taken this course
— I speak hypothetically again — this war need never have broken out.
So what is the connection between this Austro-Serbian conflict and
the World War? To comprehend this connection it is necessary to pass
beyond an understanding of the external situation and, if I may say so,
enter the deeper secrets of European politics. It is not politics we
want to enter; we want to understand in our soul what it was that lived
in these politics. I want to answer the question: How did a European
conflict arise out of the Austro-Serbian conflict? What is the link
between the Austro-Serbian question and the European question?
We must turn our attention to what I have just said about the
southern Slav confederation. It was the British Empire, the more it
took on a conscious form, that was interested in a southern Slav
confederation, independent of Austria, but under the supremacy of
Russia. In the societies I have mentioned it was the establishment of
what was termed the Danube confederation — by which was meant this
southern Slav confederation, which was to comprise the southern Slav
peoples together with Romania and include the southern Slavs of Austria
— that was expressly discussed. In the nineties of the nineteenth
century we find everywhere in the occult schools of the West, under the
direct influence of British occultists, indications that such a Danube
confederation would have to come into being. Attempts were also made to
manipulate the whole of European politics towards the creation of this
Danube confederation, which would entail the relinquishing of the
Austro-Slav territories.
Why was the British Empire interested in this Danube confederation,
a project which was anti-Austrian and pro-Russian? The powers which
have been in opposition to one another most strongly in recent times as
a consequence of the imperialism which has broken out across the world,
those powers which actually coexist with the greatest hostility, are
the British Empire and the Russian Empire. Such hidden hostilities can
indeed manifest outwardly as friendships and alliances. When there is
such bitter hostility between countries outwardly coexisting
peacefully, a certain consequence results from the fact that our earth
has a specific characteristic: namely, that it is spherical in shape.
If our earth were a flat plain stretching in all directions, such
conflicts could not come about. But since our earth is round, not only
do we eventually arrive back at our starting point if we walk long
enough in a straight line, but something else also happens: Expanding
empires come up against each other at a certain point, and when they
collide they have to follow through with their opposing interests. This
occurred between the British and the Russian Empires. Among many other
situations, it became most obviously apparent when they collided with
great force in Persia. The question was: Should Russia succeed in
moving down against India and there gradually hem in the British
Empire, or would the British Empire erect defences?
When your aim is to gain sovereignty, you can pursue it by means of
war, or by other means, depending on which seems the most favourable.
For the British Empire it seemed for the moment — in the case of
states, only limited periods of time are reckoned with — more
favourable to prevent Russia from proceeding against India by providing
a different channel, by diverting her attention in another direction in
which she could achieve the satisfaction of her natural ambition.
Empires are always ambitious. This was to be brought about by conceding
to Russia the sovereignty over the so-called Danube confederation. Thus
the British Empire was indirectly interested in making the Danube
confederation as extensive as possible, for the Slavs in the South
wanted to belong together, and this feeling of belonging was stirred up
in the way I have described to you. Thus the confederation of southern
Slavs was to be played into Russia's hand so that she might withdraw
her attention from other directions. This was why the confederation of
southern Slavs, to be set up under Russian sovereignty, was in the
British interest. It was a long story, prepared well beforehand.
Here we see one of the threads linking the Austro-Serbian question
to the question of sovereignty on a world scale. This is how the whole
relationship between the British and the Russian Empires was drawn into
the matter. It was not a matter of Austria and Serbia, for the whole
Austro-Serbian question necessarily became the question: Should Austria
take the step towards a triadic structure, thus diverting the
confederation of southern Slavs from its path, or should steps be taken
towards a Russian-dominated southern Slav confederation? In this way
the Austro-Serbian question became coupled with the European question.
When such situations exist — for what I have just described lived in
human beings as absolutely real impulses — it is like an electric
charge which will at some point have to be discharged. This, then, was
one of the threads.
It is still, however, highly questionable whether the Austro-Serbian
conflict would have led to the World War, if there had not been further
aspects in addition to those we have just discussed. Indeed, it is
highly unlikely that it would have done, if there had been no other
causes. But there were plenty of other impulses, all of which
reinforced the situation. First and foremost among these was the
Franco-Russian alliance within the general European situation. This
Franco-Russian alliance had existed since the nineties of the
nineteenth century and, looking at the situation objectively, it could
not have been more unnatural. No one will doubt that France had entered
into this alliance with a view to winning back Alsace-Lorraine, for
there is no other imaginable reason for this alliance. All other
reasons would only have spoken against such an alliance. In the end,
though, those other reasons carry little weight in comparison with the
driving forces, for the fact is that an alliance such as this exists;
through its very existence it represents a real force. It is there.
Much more important than the actual aim of this alliance is the fact
that here are a western and an eastern state who in combination
constitute a monstrous military power. And between them lies Germany
who could not but feel permanently threatened militarily by the scale
of this combined French and Russian military might. It was this
encirclement of Germany to West and East by the Franco-Russian alliance
which became one of the driving forces in European affairs.
To discover further influences which played a part we must look at
the following: In recent decades, imperialism has led to a general
desire for expansion. You need only look, for instance, at the
monstrous growth of the British Empire. Or think of France, whose
territorial expansion over the last few decades has been incomparably
greater than at any earlier time, when France, as she herself said,
marched at the head of European civilization.
The events of recent decades have been like a chain reaction: In
every case what came next could not have taken place without what had
gone before. The most recent point of departure — of course we could go
back further — lies in the British Empire's seizure of sovereignty over
Egypt. For today's way of thinking it is perfectly reasonable to
justify such an action by claiming the necessity of rounding off and
securing one's assets. The expansion of British sovereignty over Egypt
was justified by saying that a bridge to India was needed. The hope was
that Arabia could be gained too, thus creating a direct link with India.
The expansion of the British Empire to include Egypt provided, to
some extent, a protective barrier against any awkward expansion of the
Russian Empire westwards; any such expansion westwards need not have
harmed the British Empire to any great extent if Egypt had been able to
provide the necessary link with India.
Now since the earth is spherical, there is insufficient territory
for unlimited expansion outwards by empires because eventually they
will clash. In consequence the expansion of one empire generates in the
other an equal lust for expansion. Thus the expansion by France to
include Morocco, in two stages in 1905 and 1911, was nothing other than
a consequence of the expansion of the British Empire to include Egypt.
[ Note 2 ]
The mutual recognition of these expansions — France's
recognition of British dominion over Egypt and British recognition of
France's dominion over Morocco — provided the threads with which an
Entente Cordiale between the French and the British Empires could be
spun. But because Germany was in the middle, efforts were made, as you
know, to establish the Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria, Italy.
However, the distribution of Morocco and Egypt, and what followed
this, meant that, at the Algeciras Conference,
[ Note 3 ]
and particularly with the help of an elderly Italian politician who was
well versed in these things, Italy was even then successfully drawn
into the sphere of influence of the western entente between France and
England. After the Algeciras Conference sensible people in Central
Europe no longer believed that Italy would be able to remain faithful
to the Triple Alliance. Because of the way she had behaved there had to
be consequences for her, resulting from the seizure of Morocco by
France. And the consequence was that Italy was permitted to establish
herself in Tripoli. In effect this meant that Italy had been given
permission by the West to wage war on Turkey. So Egypt led to Morocco,
and Morocco to Tripoli. Then, because Tripoli meant a new weakening of
the Turkish position, Tripoli led to the Balkan War. These events took
place like a chain reaction, Egypt-Morocco-Tripoli-Balkan War; each is
unthinkable without its predecessor.
Turkey having been weakened by the Italo-Turkish, or Tripoli War,
the southern Slav peoples, with the others in their wake, and also the
Greek peoples, believed themselves strong enough to win the Balkan
peninsula for themselves. As a result of this, the trend towards a
southern Slav confederation became linked with the national aspirations
of the Balkan countries. The linking of these two chains gave the
Balkan War an outcome in which Serbia was the strongest winner. Serbia
has grown very powerful, incomparably more so than she was before. In
consequence there came a revival of the ideal of founding the southern
Slav confederation under the hegemony of Serbia and the overall
sovereignty of Russia. This led to the agitations which culminated in
the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, which in turn led to the
Austro-Serbian War. Now we have brought the two links together: The
Austro-Serbian question was linked with the European question as a
consequence of the whole historical process.
Those who followed these events with understanding were able to see
under these circumstances many years ahead to the coming war, hanging
like a sword of Damocles over European culture and civilization.
Wherever these things were discussed you could hear how people realized
that Russia's pretensions would lead to a conflict between Central and
Eastern Europe. This conflict was inevitable. No one who studies the
realities of history will say that this conflict between Central and
Eastern Europe was not based on what may be called a spiritual
necessity. Just as in ancient times conflict arose between the Roman
and the Germanic peoples, so in modern times there had to be conflict
between Central and Eastern Europe. There were manifold forms it could
have taken, but conflict there had to be. Everything else, in so far as
it had to do with the East, was included in this conflict.
It was the pretensions of Russianism that led to the expectation
that somewhere or other these pretensions would lead to an attempt by
Russia to impose sovereignty on the Balkan league. This was expected.
The geographical situation made it inevitable that there would be a
clash between Russia and Austria. And when this clash occurred — so
said all those who had been contemplating these things over the years —
everything else would automatically follow.
How, it was asked, would the situation be shaped by the existing
structure of alliances at the moment of Russia's attack on Austria?
Obviously no one expected Austria to attack Russia of her own accord.
This was unthinkable; Austria could not possibly find herself in a
position to launch an attack on Russia. It had to be supposed,
therefore, that matters would arrange themselves in a way that would
enable Russia to attack Austria. Well and good! Because of the alliance
between Austria and Germany, Germany could be expected to stand by
Austria and attack Russia in her turn. And as a result of Germany's
attack on Russia — I am telling you what was presumed — the
Franco-Russian alliance would come into action. France would be obliged
to take Russia's side and attack Germany. And because of the
relationship between France and England — whether laid down in a treaty
or not — England would have to join in the attack on the side of Russia
and France. These things were foreseen. The structure of treaties and
alliances would automatically lead to a sequence of events.
In the end, the sequence was not quite what had been expected by
those who concerned themselves day in, day out, with the future of
Europe. What form did it take? Let us see. I have already described to
you the history of the ultimatum, the rejection of the ultimatum, the
resulting insistence by Austria on acceptance of the ultimatum. But the
European powers did not remain indifferent to all this, for Russia
immediately made ready to enter the fray as Serbia's protector. This
made the localization of the Austro-Serbian question unthinkable. From
the British quarter came all sorts of meaningless suggestions of the
kind made by those who either want to take a hand in affairs without
thinking things through properly, or who want to build up for
themselves from the start a world-wide reputation of having endeavoured
to settle the matter by peaceful means. This is not actually the aim,
but it has to be possible later on to say that it was.
So the meaningless suggestion was made to call a conference made up,
of all things, of England, Germany, France and Italy, to decide about
the questions pending. Just imagine what would have been the outcome of
such a conference! A majority verdict would have been required on
whether Austria's demands to Serbia were justified or not. On the basis
of the real situation, imagine, please, how the voting would have gone!
Italy had inwardly deserted the Triple Alliance, France was on Russia's
side, Russia was obviously only satisfied if Austria was refused the
right to insist on acceptance of the ultimatum, England was in favour
of the Danube confederation. Leaving aside Austria, the majority would
have gone to Italy, France and England. Germany would obviously have
been out-voted at all costs. This conference could not possibly have
led to anything other than a refusal for what Austria, from her
position, was compelled to demand. That means that if this conference
had been held it would have been nothing but a farce, for Austria would
either have been forced to give up her pretensions, or, regardless of
the outcome of the conference, she would have continued to demand
acceptance of the ultimatum. In other words, the conference would have
been nothing but a bluff, as they say. A thorough study of the
documentation reveals, however, that from the start Russia's pretension
was to interfere in the Serbo-Austrian question. So it is really
irrelevant whether the World War came about as the result of an
automatic sequence of events or of deliberate scene-setting leading
inevitably to the War.
It was the scene-setting that took place for, in addition to the
various impulses, you must also take into account a quite particular
mood. Maybe no other world event, no other historical event but this,
has ever been quite so dependent on a certain mood. The mood of soul of
those participating in the outbreak of the War at the end of July 1914
was certainly one of the most important causes. Of course there were
also agitations at the outbreak of earlier wars, but they did not sweep
in with such stormy, such hurricane force, as did the events between 24
July and 1 August 1914. Within a few days a monstrous agitation had
gathered over the participants, an agitation in which was concentrated
all the accumulated anxiety of the many years during which this coming
event had been foreseen. This mood must definitely be taken into
account. Those who do not do so can only speak in empty phrases.
All kinds of points could be brought in to characterize this mood,
but I shall draw your attention to only one. An event had taken place
which was indirectly, though in fact very strongly, connected with the
outbreak of the War. If it is to be evaluated properly it will, and
must, be seen in its proper place amongst the other events in Europe.
This was the German defence bill,
[ Note 4 ]
laid before Parliament
after the Balkan War, which budgeted for an enlargement of the German
army by means of a single large defence payment. This enlargement of
the German army, which, by the way, was not anywhere near completion by
the time the War broke out, can be studied by anyone in connection with
the results of the Balkan War. These results showed that for an
uncertain time in the future the clash between Russia and Austria was
being manipulated. It was only because of certain situations, which I
do not want to go into here, that Russia was prevented as early as 1913
from attacking Austria in order to gain sovereignty and dominion over
the Balkan confederation. The enlargement of the German army was
undertaken for no other reason — as I said, I am choosing my
expressions very precisely today — than the threatened dispute with the
East. Yet the French reaction followed promptly: If Germany is
enlarging her army, then we must do something about strengthening ours.
What this means is that the destiny, the inevitable necessity for
Central Europe to take precautions with regard to the East, always
produced reinforcements in the West, which naturally produced further
reactions in their turn.
In this way matters progressed. In particular, everything connected
with the defence bill after the Balkan War generated terrible anxiety
in Central Europe because the whole of the European periphery was seen
to have turned against Central Europe. Opinions differed only in the
matter of Italy: Some still thought she would somehow throw in her lot
with Central Europe, while others no longer held this to be possible.
Let us still assume — hypothetically — that the World War did not
break out. There was only one precondition that could have prevented
it. Russia would have had to refrain from immediate war threats — in
other words mobilization, which under the prevailing circumstances
could only be regarded as a war threat. Central Europe could not for
one moment have thought that France would not go along with Russia, so
an assault on two fronts had to be reckoned with. The only course of
action open to those in positions of responsibility was to paralyse
this assault in some way. No one in a responsible position could have
thought: Let us spend the next fortnight at a conference! Not only
could this conference have led absolutely nowhere, as I said, but it
would have meant certain defeat. But no one can be expected to accept
certain defeat from the outset. So the only possibility was to match
the monstrous military superiority of West and East by means of speed.
For this the only possible course of action, as I showed earlier,
was to violate international law and march through Belgium. Any other
solution could only have led to the involvement of most of the German
army in a long war of defence in the West while leaving the way open to
invasion from the East. This was one of those historical moments at
which — whether you can express it aptly or not — a state is forced to
enter into a breach of the law in self-preservation. There is no other
course of action open to those responsible for that state. In Central
Europe it was — and I am choosing my words very carefully today in
order to make my meaning quite clear — for some of those in responsible
positions utterly monstrous to attempt war on two fronts at once.
So the attempt was made to restrict the matter to a single front.
Careful, carefully intentioned, attempts were made to keep France
neutral, and it was believed that France could be induced to remain
neutral. No one in Central Europe had any intention of harming France.
With a feeling of total responsibility it is possible to say that
absolutely no one in Central Europe, no one in Germany, had any
intention of harming France. What was done was done only with a view to
tying matters up as quickly as possible in the West in order to prevent
the threatened invasion from the East. It therefore never ceases to be
astonishing that so much talk persists in the world about all the
atrocities Germany has committed towards the West. None of the
atrocities would have occurred if only France had declared her
neutrality.
France was perfectly capable of protecting herself and Belgium
against any attack. That France was forced to keep her agreement with
Russia is her own affair and should not be trotted out in the same
breath as the atrocities committed by Germany, for the allegiance of
one state to another is no business of her enemies.
Since it proved impossible to keep France neutral by direct means,
the attempt was then made via England — here, too, without success. I
have touched a number of times on how England could have saved Belgium
and, equally well, France. These things must be viewed absolutely
objectively. Please accept as totally objective the statement that,
once the war between Austria and Serbia could no longer be localized
because Russia would not allow this, every effort was made at least to
prevent it from spreading to the West. Truly, no one in Central Europe
was seized with the madness of wanting to make war on two fronts, let
alone subsequently on three.
That all the other universal untruths followed on from this is
really not surprising now, when every day astonishes us with new lies,
spoken, written and printed. Before coming here today I found someone
had put on my desk a pamphlet by one of the participants engaged in the
neutrality debate with Georg Brandes. Here, on the English side, you
have William Archer, in whose pamphlet
[ Note 5 ]
you find juxtaposed
the black infamy of Germany and the pure innocence of the allies. Ten
points illustrate the black infamy, and the angelic, utter innocence of
the allies; we need consider only one of these, the second. The second
point states that in Germany there exists a notable faction which is
openly agitating for further territorial expansion, either in or
outside Europe. In contrast it is said of the allies — in English, mark
you: The allies have no desire for any territorial expansion, least of
all at Germany's expense; even France's feelings for Alsace-Lorraine
are exclusively peaceful.
My dear friends, much can be both printed and spoken these days! The
other nine points are in similar vein. Just think of the expansion
undertaken by England and France over recent decades; and then read
that these countries have no desire for territorial expansion. It is
quite possible nowadays to say and print the exact opposite of the
truth, just as it is possible for countless people to believe it.
People do indeed believe these things.
Here, then, you have the historical view of these events. Now we
must link this external historical process with what we can discover
through our knowledge of the impulses from the West which have been at
work for a long time. Not all the impulses that make use to a greater
or lesser degree of occult forces — such as we have discussed — are
included in what might be called the outer ramifications: namely,
Freemasonry, though as we have seen, a great deal is indeed brought
about by western Freemasonry. Many strings are pulled by those involved
there. And as I said, account is taken of long stretches of time.
Now add to the points I have been making the fact that modern
Freemasonry undergoes a process of consolidation in England at the
beginning of the eighteenth century, on foundations, of course, which
are older. Within Britain, not the Empire, but the United Kingdom,
Freemasonry remains — let me use the correct expression — essentially
respectable in the interests it pursues. But everywere else, outside
Britain, chiefly — or indeed exclusively — political interests are
pursued by Freemasonry.
Such political interests, to the most marked degree, are pursued for
instance by the French Grand Orient,
and also by other Grand Lodges. You could ask: What business is it of
the English if political trends in other countries are pursued by
certain orders of Freemasonry which possess an occult background? In
reply you might remind yourself that the first Grand Lodge in Paris was
founded under the jurisdiction of England, not France! Englishmen, not
Frenchmen, founded it; and then they let the French in. Then also
remind yourself that after the founding of this Grand Lodge in Paris in
1725, this Grand Orient in
turn sanctioned the founding of a lodge under its own jurisdiction in
Paris in 1729. There were, under the jurisdiction of England,
foundations in Gibraltar in 1729, Madrid in 1728, Lisbon in 1736,
Florence in 1735, Moscow in 1731, Stockholm in 1726, Geneva in 1735,
Lausanne in 1739 and Hamburg in 1737. I could carry on for a long time
with this list. I could show you how a network was founded of these
lodges, which were to act as the external tools for certain occult,
political impulses. They differed in character from those in the United
Kingdom itself. In addition to the breathtaking sequence of changes as
we see them in history, such as the Jacobins and the furore they
created, the Carbonari and their political activities, the Cortes in
Spain and others, they also have a strong influence on the culture of
their time and send out shoots which even show in the works of the
greatest spirits of their time. We need only think of Rousseau's
natural philosophy, or the critical philosophy of Voltaire, which
became ever more cynical though its aim was to enlighten, or the
efforts of the Illuminati, who wanted to overcome the prevailing
cynicism, and similar circles. These progressive circles were crushed
by reactionary streams, but continued to work in manifold ways
underground.
So here you have the source of much that I have been describing. And
you must attach a degree of importance to the following: The English
Freemasons can maintain today that their lodges are entirely
respectable and that any others are none of their business; yet if you
look beyond the historical connections and the interplay of opposing
currents, you are sure to find high-level British politics hiding in
the background.
To understand the deeper meaning of these politics it is necessary
to draw a little on recent history. Preparations having been under way
from the sixteenth century onwards, there has been a tendency ever
since the seventeenth century towards the democratization of society —
in some countries more quickly, in others more slowly — by taking power
away from the few and giving it to the broad masses. I am not here
involved in politics and I shall not therefore express myself in favour
of either democracy or anything else. I simply wish to state facts. The
impulse towards democracy is having its effect in modern times at
varying speeds, and so different streams are coming into being. It is a
mistake, where several streams are apparent, to follow the course of
only one. The way streams flow in the world is such that one always
forms a complement to the others. Let us say a green and a red stream
are flowing along side by side. Nothing occult is meant by these
colours — it is simply to illustrate that there are two streams flowing
side by side. Usually people are, let me say, hypnotized into looking
at only one of the streams, while they fail to see the other flowing
beside it during the same period in history. As you know, if you push a
hen's beak into the ground and then draw a line leading away, the hen
will always walk along this line. In the same way people today,
especially university historians, see only the one side, and can
therefore never really understand the historical process.
Parallel with the democratic stream there came into being the use of
occult motives in the various secret societies — in isolated cases,
also Masonic orders. In their purposes and aims these are not, of
course, spiritual, but there developed, let us call it, a spiritual
aristocracy parallel to that democratic stream which was at work in the
French Revolution; the aristocracy of the lodges developed. To see
clearly as a human being today, to be open to the world and to
understand the world, it is necessary not to be dazzled by democratic
logic — which has a place only in its own sphere — by empty phrases
about democratic progress and so on; it is necessary also to point to
that other stream which asserted itself with the intent of gaining
power for the few by means that lie hidden within the womb of the lodge
— the ritual and its suggestive influence. It is necessary to point to
this also.
This has been forgotten during the age of materialism, but before
the fifties of the last century people did point these things out.
Study the philosophical historians prior to 1850 and you will see that
they pointed to the connection between the lodges and the French
Revolution with all that followed it. During the period that can be
seen as preparatory for today, western historical development, the
western world, never emancipated itself from the lodges. The influence
of the lodges was always strongly at work. The lodges knew how to find
channels through which to impress certain directions on people's
thoughts. Once a web like this has been spun — of which I have shown
you merely a few strands — the button need only be pressed for things
to be set in motion.
Emancipation from all these situations, and the impartial embracing
of humanity as such, only really came about under the influence of such
great spirituality as developed in German philosophy beginning with
Lessing, and developing through Herder and Goethe. Here you have a
spiritual stream which took account of all that lives in the lodges,
but in such a way that the mystery was brought out of the obscurity of
the lodges and transformed into a purely human matter. You need only
glance at Goethe's fairy tale
The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily,
at
Wilhelm Meister
and other of Goethe's writings. This was material with which the step to
emancipation could be taken and which still today makes emancipation
possible. So you may view that whole part of German cultural history
portrayed in my book
Vom Menschenrätsel
[ Note 6 ]
as a forgotten reverberation
which is entirely independent of all the intrigues of the lodges.
In western culture over the last few centuries preceding our own day
you will easily find many ways of demonstrating how the character of
ideas in the exoteric world stemmed from the esoteric thinking of the
lodges. Obviously this does not apply to the time before Queen
Elizabeth and Shakespeare but it is certainly true of what came later.
But the spiritual culture linked with Lessing, Herder and Goethe has no
such connections. You might ask: What about German Freemasonry — in
Austria it is proscribed, so there is none there — or Magyar
Freemasonry? Well, the others did not allow them to join in. They are
quite an innocuous crowd. Though they might appear as thick as thieves
with regard to their secrets, this is nothing but show.
The real, mighty impulses emanating from the quarters I have
described to you are truly not found in German Freemasonry, which I
have no wish to offend. So you can easily understand how it was
possible for some rather strange occurrences to take place. Suppose,
for instance, someone were to make known in Germany the things I have
told you about societies, their secret connections and their external
branches — the lodges of Freemasonry. It could be rather useful to make
these things known there, but what would be the consequence? Experts
would be asked to corroborate these things, and in this case the
experts are the Freemasons themselves. But it would never occur to any
Freemason in Germany to say anything other than that the English lodges
do not concern themselves with politics, that they are concerned only
with entirely respectable matters. This is all he knows, for he is
ignorant of anything else. You can even be told — and this has actually
happened — if you ask about specific names, that they are not on the
list of members. They have the list but are unaware that perhaps the
most important of all are not included in the list. In short, German
Freemasonry is a quite innocuous society.
This does not alter the fact, though — and this may truly be said
without any kind of arrogance or nationalistic affectation — that the
spiritual life cultivated by certain western secret brotherhoods actually
stems from Central Europe. Look at this historically. Robert Fludd:
[ Note 7 ]
pupil of Paracelsus;
[ Note 8 ]
Saint-Martin in
France: pupil of Jakob Böhme. The origin of the movement itself is
to be found in Central Europe. From the West comes the organization,
the establishment in degrees — some western lodges have ninety-two
degrees; just imagine how elevated you can become if you rise to the
ninety-second degree — the use of knowledge for political aims, and the
introduction of certain external elements.
We have just had an example which is quite typical, one to which I
drew your attention. I am only describing these things in order to make
you aware of their objective nature, just as the facts of natural
history can be described; not from any nationalistic affectation. I
drew your attention to the recent appearance of a book by Sir Oliver Lodge,
[ Note 9 ]
in which he reports on communications he has received
through various mediums from his son who was killed in action. A book
like this, written by such a distinguished scientist, is sure to cause
quite a sensation. Now that I have read the book there is no need for
me to retract anything I said to you a little while ago. I said at the
time that I would return to this subject. The strongest proof offered
by Sir Oliver Lodge is the following: Seances with various mediums
result in the manifestation of the soul of Raymond Lodge, who died in
action. These seances tell us nothing people do not know already and
would be unlikely to make any strong impression on anyone. But one
thing did make a strong impression on the eminent scientist Sir Oliver
Lodge and his whole family, who up to that point had been very
sceptical about such things. At one of the seances a group photograph
was mentioned, showing Oliver Lodge's son together with other people.
This photograph, one of several, was described as showing the same
people at the same place, but in varying arrangements; the same people
are seen, but with differing gestures. Raymond Lodge described this
photograph through the medium at that seance in England. But Sir Oliver
Lodge and his family knew nothing about this picture, for it had been
taken at the Franco-Belgian front at the end of Raymond Lodge's life
and sent by him to his family, though it had not yet arrived. So this
medium described a group photograph which existed but was unknown to
the family: the participants in the seance. They only saw it after it
had been described by the medium.
For those who dabble in the occult, this is naturally tremendously
convincing. What should you make of the fact that a group photograph is
described at a seance, the participants of which know nothing about it?
The family, the participants in the seance, know nothing of it and nor
do the mediums, because it has not yet arrived in England. It is still
on the way. It only arrived later. Yet an exact description is given of
where Raymond Lodge is sitting in relation to the others and even of
the way he has laid his hand on a friend's shoulder. What could be more
convincing than this?
However, Sir Oliver Lodge's interpretation can only have been reached
by someone who merely dabbles in the occult. If he had known nothing
much but had investigated the literature — for instance Schubert
[ Note 10 ]
or similar people who still wrote about such
things in Germany around the first half of the nineteenth century — he
would have found countless examples of something that every genuine
occultist knows: When consciousness is damped down even slightly,
future events can be seen. The most simple case of seeing a future
event is when someone experiencing a moment of lowered consciousness
sees a funeral procession which will not take place for several days. A
person has not even died, yet someone sees his funeral. Something in
the future is seen. This is quite normal when consciousness is lowered.
So this is what took place: A photograph has been taken in Flanders and
is on its way to England. The time will come when the family will focus
their eyes and their understanding on it, when they will bear it in
their thoughts. The medium foresees it as an image of the future.
Whether you foresee a funeral procession, or whether you foresee how a
family receives such and such a photograph of their son in a few days'
time — it is the same phenomenon: that of seeing a future event in
advance. This is just a phenomenon.
If he had known something about real occult facts, he would not have
interpreted the event as he did. Such an interpretation arises because
occult values, occult laws, are seen from a materialistic standpoint.
It comes about because people avoid undertaking that form of
development which would enable them to comprehend the spiritual world
in an inward process. Instead they want to see the spiritual realm by
laboratory means, purely materialistically. The spirit is made
materialistic, whether by Sir Oliver Lodge or anybody else. But this is
only one example of what happens to everything that is spiritual. These
things can be observed, just as you can observe the progression from
Paracelsus to Fludd, from Jakob Böhme to Saint-Martin; everywhere
the spirit is made more materialistic.
As the Anthroposophical Society we only succeeded in saving
ourselves from becoming materialistic by emancipating ourselves from
the Theosophical Society. For impulses emanating from the kind of
society I have described penetrate deeply into the social fabric.
Naturally, here again I must beg you not to misunderstand me. I am not
saying that this is a natural characteristic of the western nations.
But it exists and has succeeded in influencing the course of history
and is not even without influence on the untruthfulness which is now
playing such a devastating part.
It is particularly to this untruthfulness that I am obliged to draw
you attention, for this untruthfulness always takes the form of
accusation, of blaming others. That dismal New Year's Eve note
[ Note 11 ]
is really nothing but an accusation based on a distortion of the
facts, just as is the article by Mr Archer which I read to you here.
But you see such things are beginning to be believed, they are
beginning to play their role. In a few weeks' time people will have
long forgotten that an opportunity to achieve peace was present in a
form that could not be overlooked by the world, and that this
opportunity was thwarted by the powers of the periphery. People in
Europe will once again begin to believe that the offer of peace was
refused by the powers of the Entente on purely humanitarian grounds, on
the basis of the extraordinary reasoning that if one wants peace one
must prevent it from coming about. Even such grotesque untruths as this
are believed nowadays. That they can be believed at all derives from
preparations made by the kind of occultism I have been describing to
you. It is indeed a sign of an arrant corruption of the soul when it
becomes possible to write down side by side the two sentences I
mentioned about the black and the white raven. And this corruption of
the soul comes about as a consequence of an atmosphere tampered with by
organizations such as I have described.
In this connection, too — I can say this quite objectively — there
has been a tendency for Central Europe to emancipate itself. In all the
Central European spiritual life thrown open by Lessing, Herder, Goethe,
such as we have spoken about during the course of our anthroposophical
life, you have seen clearly enough how the direction was towards a
gradual evolution into the spiritual world. What it is not inclined to
do, is enter into any kind of permanent compromise with what lives in
the western streams such as those I have described to you. This is
impossible. That is why things appear in a different way.
Let us look back for a moment to Fichte,
[ Note 12 ]
so disparaged in the West today; let us turn to his
Reden an die deutsche Nation.
What is Fichte aiming at? That the
German nation should educate itself! What he says in
Reden an die deutsche Nation
is not aimed at other nations; he is endeavouring to inspire Germans to
improve themselves. But others seem to have what we might call a real
‘genius’ for misunderstanding whatever comes into being in Germany.
That harmless national anthem
Deutschland, Deutschland über alles,
which, if you take the trouble to
read the next few lines, speaks of nothing more than loving one's
fatherland above all others — for only the different parts of the
fatherland are named — is made into something utterly grotesque. In the
same way, if one wants to, one can misunderstand Fichte, since he begins
Reden an die deutsche Nation
with the words ‘I speak for Germans as such, and about Germans as
such’. Why does he say this? Because Germany is divided into a whole
number of small individual states, and he does not want to address the
Prussians, or the Swabians or the Saxons, or the people of Oldenburg,
Mecklenburg or Austria and so on, but Germans as such. He wanted to
unite all the individuals. So he is talking to Germans and only to
Germans. I do not want to praise the Germans, but such things may
justifiably be included in a description of them.
I have brought up this matter today because there is definitely a
tendency to sound a note in the centre, a note differing from that of
the periphery. And if our anthroposophical work can contribute to this
other note, there is no reason why we should not say so amongst ourselves.
Just today I received a pamphlet by our friend Ludwig von Polzer,
[ Note 13 ]
who as you know worked here:
Thoughts during Wartime.
Whether you agree in detail with what he says or not, it is interesting
to note that he is not particularly concerned with attacking and insulting
others but rather with reading the riot act to his Austrian
compatriots. It is to them he speaks. Obviously he has come to be an
Austrian as a result of his karma, but he nevertheless reads the riot
act to his Austrian compatriots. He does not say: We are blameless, we
never did this or that, we are pure white angels and all the others are
black devils. No, he says:
‘Why does mankind hate itself and tear
itself to pieces? Are external political differences of opinion really
the cause of so much suffering? Every party to the fray claims to know
what it is about, but in reality none of them know.
A declining, decadent culture is fighting its deathly struggle. The
Central Powers, who are fighting for the first germination of a new
culture, have not recognized it as yet; they fight for something they
do not know, for something unknown to them; and they are themselves
still filled with the convictions against which their own soldiers are
bleeding in battle.
The old degenerate ways must be, as it were, vomited forth and that is
why in their final fling they are running so wild.
Do we not come up against it amongst ourselves wherever we turn, this
attitude of the Entente which bears the old, decadent culture? Has it
not infected us as well? We see it on the streets in the latest
fashions, it is embodied in modern architecture, it grins down at us
from the hoardings, in commerce it runs to orgies, it inflates itself
in bureaucratic madness, in its self-important untruthful humanism it
lies to itself, our press seeks to outbid its colleagues of the Entente
in devotion to the truth, and so on.
The Entente is here among us, fuming and raging, claiming to work for
our honest soldiers and compatriots, almost all of whom have meanwhile
died a sacrificial death.
All these things running so horrifyingly wild in our own country — let
it be hoped for the last time before the end — are not
deutsch.’
[ Note 14 ]
So all those things worthy of censure in his own country he calls
‘not deutsch’. His main aim
is to appeal to the conscience of his own compatriots. There are
further, similar passages in this booklet. It is good that such a thing
is said for once in connection with our own endeavours. There is no
need for us to be in total harmony with every sentence that is written
amongst us. The most wonderful achievement will be to work on all these
things independently, preserving our individuality and taking nothing
as dogma or as the word of a higher authority. Those things which are
meant to come to the fore are quite able to do so without the help of
any authority. But to give our Society meaning we need to stand
together in unanimity. In part this means, of course, that we should be
alert to what goes on amongst us and should recognize those who work
alongside us and who endeavour to place before the world what goes on
within our Anthroposophical Society in such a way that it really
reflects the intentions of our Society. The main thing we can do to
help our age is to work with understanding through the impulses of this
age from our viewpoint. We need not lose heart, for however
unfavourable conditions become in time, we may recall Lessing's words:
Is not the whole of eternity mine?
[ Note 15 ]
This is a thought that
concerns every single human being.
We should be particularly careful to develop good practices with
regard to the proper evaluation and estimation of all that comes to the
fore amongst ourselves. In this connection I hope you will not mind my
mentioning something, without wishing to say anything unpleasant to
anyone. The periodical
Das Reich,
produced by Alexander von Bernus,
[ Note 16 ]
makes every endeavour to
move within our stream. So what does it matter if we agree or disagree
with one or another of the articles it publishes? It is quite possible
to disagree with a good deal. But many mistakes have been made on the
part of our members with regard to this periodical. Seeing how it has
been berated from all sides, I have to say that it is really not right
to throw obstacles in the path of efforts which genuinely endeavour to
work in harmony with our Movement. Of course everybody is entitled to
his own opinion about the verses which Alexander von Bernus composed in
connection with certain historical occult teachings which may be found
amongst us. But I do consider things have been taken too far when
floods of blatently rude letters start to arrive from our members.
Where will it lead if we ill-treat those who are on our side while
taking very little notice of those who insult us, just letting them go
on doing so?
I wanted to bring up the matter of this periodical
Das Reich,
which strives to promote
our endeavours, because I want to reply to the question that could be
asked: What can we do? The very reason why these lectures have been
given is to find a reply to this question: What can we do? What we can
do is maintain an understanding attitude, in accordance with our
anthroposophical spiritual science, towards everything going on at
present! For what would be the significance of this spiritual science
for us if we could really not transcend the attitude prevalent all over
Europe today of people who speak of national aspirations and the like,
and shape events in accordance with these national aspirations. Within
the Society which serves anthroposophical spiritual science no one need
become a faithless son of his nation, or deny anything he ought not to
deny because he is firmly united with a particular nation as a result
of his karma. But no one can be a true anthroposophist if he turns a
blind eye towards the enormity of what is going on just now and allows
himself to be deafened by all those means which some of those in power
use today to stun us in order to avoid having to state what they are
really playing at. So let me point out those things that are easily
believed when they come towards us in a sentimental form, whereas what
has always been hidden by the screens behind which occult events take
place still has to remain hidden away behind these screens.
It must become clear to us that a time could come again — I am
choosing my words very warily today, so I say could
come again — in which the
battle grows extremely terrible because peace is definitely not wanted.
It could grow even more terrible than it has hitherto been if something
is not introduced from one side or the other which can prevent this
terror. Then there will once again be an opportunity to speak about the
atrocities of Central Europe; then under the rubble and ashes will be
buried the fact that these atrocities could have been prevented if
people had not roared like a bull against moves towards peace. It was
within the power of countries of the periphery to bring about peace.
Yet the time will come — it is by no means unlikely that the time will
come — when it will be said once again: The Germans are doing this or
that and flouting every international law.
Indeed, my dear friends, it is once again fashionable for the
encircling powers, having failed to bring about what could have held
such actions in check, to accuse those who are encircled of protecting
themselves on all sides. We must come to see this clearly in all its
enormity. Beside all that may very well have happened, for instance in
Belgium, must be placed the fact that the British Empire could have
prevented all that has happened in Belgium.
Harsh though it might sound, it has to be said that it is untruthful
to speak about the atrocities in Belgium without taking into account
how easily they could have been prevented by the English. And it goes
without saying that we feel the tragic destiny of France. Yet France
was truly in a position which could have enabled her not to participate
in the war.
The Central Powers were not in a position to avoid waging a
defensive war once it became obvious that France would take part in any
case. It is all very well to say the two could have faced each other,
frontier to frontier. This is the very thing that was not possible,
because Franco-Russian militarism so greatly outweighs what is called
Prussian militarism.
However strongly we feel we belong to one group or another, we can
surely resolve to look at these things squarely — I say ‘can’, not
‘must’. Then, when we work through this and make it a part of our
lives, each in his own way will be able to do whatever he wants to do,
in answer to the question: What can the individual do? Unless ever more
and more people come to nurture the idea of making a united European
stand against the belligerence of powers now at work invisibly, the
collapse of European culture will indeed be inevitable. Even now a
belligerent wave from the East is threatening to engulf us — from
Japan, where a form of imperialism is in preparation which might turn
out to be far mightier than any imperialism the world has so far known.
The will to conquer is expressed in the cry of the new national anthem
[ Note 17 ]
which, reminiscent of the English hymn, ‘Rule Britannia’,
now resounds in ‘Rule Nippon’. To show you that the powers of Europe
would have good reason not to mock the word ‘peace’, not to mock the
content of the peace idea, let me read to you this hymn, now quoted in
Japanese newspapers:
When Nippon, at the Lord's command,
Rose from the sea at dawn,
There sounded throughout all the world
A call from heaven's blue dome:
Born, Japan, are you to rule.
Rise proudly with the morning sun:
You I choose to rule the world.
Torn by hate and blinding rage
Europe drowns in her own blood,
But you, devoid of blame or fault,
Shall be the guardian of the earth.
Born, Japan, are you to rule.
Rise proudly with the morning sun:
You I choose to rule my world.
This is what is now booming across the world from the East. This is
the Orient's answer to Europe, bathed in blood. Yet despite this, there
are people in Europe who want to scorn the call for peace! This is a
fact to which we cannot give too much thought.
|