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LECTURE
EIGHTEEN
Dornach,
13 January 1917
It seems to me today more then ever necessary that the members of
our Movement should be knowledgeable about what is going on in the
world. Indeed this purpose has been served to a greater or lesser
degree by the discussions we have been having here. To speak of
spiritual science in the way we understand it means to fill ourselves
with knowledge of how our world, which we observe with our physical
understanding and senses, is in fact a revelation of the spirit. As
long as the spiritual world is taken in the abstract, as long as the
human being is divided up into his constituent parts, as long as all
kinds of theories about karma and reincarnation are expounded —
something we have really never done here in such a theoretical way —
spiritual science cannot become fruitful for life. That is why I have
been directing your attention in all kinds of ways to external reality,
whereby I never lost sight of all that stands behind this external
reality, either by way of direct occult factors, or by way of impulses
being used in one way or another by human beings.
Those who understand the true situation today to some extent will
find it becoming increasingly obvious in future, when looking back at
this time, that the old way of looking at history is no longer
sufficient for an understanding of the present. Circumstances will make
certain occult teachings necessary for the increasingly mature
understanding of human beings, and those who shut out such
possibilities will in future have to bear the mark of ignorance, of
lack of understanding,
Since the nineteenth century it has been the custom to construct history
purely materialistically, on the basis — as people put it — of
the available documents. Today it is not yet realized that this does
not lead to a true depiction of historical impulses, but merely to a
description of materialistic spectres — paradoxical though this may
sound: a description of materialistic spectres. Even in the best
history books, the description of people and events of the past right
up to the present shows nothing but spectres without any real life,
however realistic it is meant to be. It can, indeed, only be a
description of spectres because all reality is founded on spiritual
impulses, and if these are omitted, what remains are spectres. Thus up
to today, the recounting of history has been spectral, yet in a certain
way it has satisfied human souls; it has worked in a certain way.
In many respects, today's great tragedy is the way in which karma is
lived through in such untrue, spectral ideas which people have
gradually amassed. But within our Movement, too, we must not allow the
process of history to fall into two disconnected halves — though there
are some among us who would like this: On the one hand to luxuriate in
so-called supersensible ideas, which remain, however, more or less
abstract concepts, and on the other hand to become firmly stuck in
habitual opinions, no different from the ordinary vulgar understanding
of external reality viewed entirely materialistically. These two
aspects, external physical reality and spiritual existence, must unite,
that is, we must understand that in place of traditional historical
methods something must be developed which I have called symptomatic
history, a history of symptoms which will teach us that the historical
process expresses itself in some phenomena more strongly than in others.
Recently I have perhaps described things rather too realistically,
though only for those whose feeling makes them ask: Why is he telling
us things we anyway hear elsewhere? Look more closely, however, and you
will find that you do not, actually, hear them elsewhere in the way
they are described here. You do not find them juxtaposed as they are
here, as symptoms in which various characteristic details unite to form
a living concept of reality. The obvious question now is: How do
symptoms such as the ones I have quoted come about? Let me go a little
further into this.
During the course of these lectures I have mentioned a whole series
of facts, some of which people might well consider excessively minute,
such as that of the descendant of the Voidarevich family, the voivodes
of Herzegovina, or that matter of the Russian-Slav Welfare Committee
and so on. Such things could, in one way, be viewed as utterly
insignificant. In another way, though, you could say: What is the
connection between such things? What is this way of looking at history
that collects widely different and separate details and then endeavours
to fit them together in a total picture? A more direct way of asking me
this question could be: How has it come about that as you have gone
through life you have collected and know all about just these
particular events, which have to be seen as characteristic of our time?
I should like to answer this question in a way which I hope will give
you a living idea of how spiritual science can intervene in life.
During the course of life one comes to know about certain things if
one's karma leads to them, and if one's karma is allowed to take its
course honestly and truthfully. Many people believe they are giving
their karma a free reign, or are surrendering themselves to their
karma, but this can be a great illusion. No one can follow external
events in such a way that the truth is revealed to him, if he fails to
surrender himself genuinely to his karma, if he fails to leave much in
the subconscious realm, if he fails to let much pass unnoticed before
his soul, for every morsel of sympathy or antipathy clouds free vision.
Nothing is more likely to cloud free vision than what is today called
the historical method. This historical method brings spectres into
being because today's historian is unable to surrender himself to his
karma. Obviously if he did so from his earliest years, he would fail
every exam. He is not allowed to surrender himself to his karma and
thus learn to know those things to which his karma leads him; he has to
learn to know what the exam regulations and so forth require of him.
But they require all kinds of things which of course tear his karma to
shreds, and he can never arrive at the actual truth if he follows the
stream of those requirements.
The actual truth can only be reached if these things about which
spiritual science speaks are taken as seriously as life — if they are
not taken as mere theories but as seriously as life. Another way of not
taking them as seriously as life is to allow one's view to be clouded
by all kinds of sympathies and antipathies. You have to approach things
objectively, and then the stream of the world will bring you what you
need in order to reach an understanding.
Now one aspect of surrendering to one's karma with regard to present
events may be found in the fact that you, my dear friends, have been
brought into the Anthroposophical Society by your karma. So it really
should be possible in the Anthroposophical Society to speak about the
facts without being hampered by sympathies and antipathies. If not, it
would mean that, even within this Society, karma was not being taken as
seriously as life.
I wanted to give you this introduction to what we still have to
discuss because I wish to show you certain important spiritual facts
which cannot, however, he understood unless we can link them to life,
and unless we can penetrate the really tangled undergrowth of untruths
which today buzz about in the world. The world today is filled with
untruthfulness, and the sense for truth must be cultivated in the
Anthroposophical Society for as long as it exists — and regardless of
how long it is likely to exist under present circumstances — if it is
to have a real meaning, a real sense for life.
I have — you could say — burdened you with a great variety of things
recently, not simply to throw light on them in one way or another, but
because I am filled with the conviction that it is important to correct
certain concepts. Those who believe that I say these things from any
kind of nationalistic feeling, simply do not understand me.
Terrible accusations are being continuously hurled at the centre
from what is today the periphery, all of which end, in some form or
other, in the phrase: Never mind, the German will be burnt. Of course,
people are ashamed to quote this directly. Among these insults is the
fact that in the widest circles certain personalities, whose works are
of course not known or understood, are pilloried as being the
despoilers, the corrupters of the German people. One of those brought
to the forefront in this way is the German historian Heinrich
Treitschke.
Now, as I have said, I should like to view such a personality not
from a national, but from a purely human standpoint. I told you that I
never had much to do with Treitschke but that I did meet him once. I
said that he was a somewhat blustering character. Today let me add that
at that meeting I did form a picture of his being and his character,
for we covered much more than just those first few words which I have
already quoted to you. We spoke about historical interpretation, about
publications on history which were causing rather a sensation then, in
the nineties, and there was time — banquets usually last for several
hours — to go into many questions of principle with regard to
scientific history. I was well able to form a picture of this man at
the end of his life — he died soon afterwards — quite apart from the
fact that his work as a historian is very well known to me.
The main thing I want to say is that Treitschke is a personality who
gives us cause to approach him to some extent from an occult
standpoint. Socrates spoke, in a good sense, of a kind of
daimon. In the case of Treitschke you could say that
he was indwelt by a form of daimon; not an evil demon,
a kind of daimon. You could sense
that he was not merely driven by considerations of the materialistic
intellect but that his driving force came from within, from what
Socrates called the daimonic forces. I could even say that this is what
led him throughout the course of his life. This man from Saxony was an
enthusiastic champion of the nascent German state; for he worked in a
most significant way even before this state was founded. His
German History,
[ Note 1 ]
though, was written after its founding. In a manner characteristic of
Central Europe, there lived in him something that is not known in the
periphery, not only not wanted but also not known, something which
people do not wish to understand. This was a sense for reality, for
what is concrete. There lived in him a certain aversion to abstract
theories and to everything expressed in empty phrases. This aversion
was present with daimonic force to such an extent that you could look,
you might say, through the personality to the spiritual forces speaking
out of it.
In addition to this, Treitschke went profoundly deaf very early in
life, so that he heard neither his own voice nor that of others, but
associated only with his own inner being. Such a destiny turns a person
in upon himself. The complete absence of a sense of hearing, far more
than the absence of one of the other senses, brings a person who is so
inclined into contact with occult powers which are at work and which
usually remain unnoticed because people are distracted by their
sense-perceptions from what speaks to them over and above their senses.
So there is definitely a significance in a karma which makes a person
totally deaf early on in life, and it is connected in this case with
what I have called a daimonic nature.
This nature, this human being, in contrast to many — indeed most —
people today, was formed and shaped as a whole. His intellect never
worked in isolation; his whole soul was always involved. There are
plenty of plain truths in the world, truths which can easily be
confirmed by ‘logical proof’. But special note should be taken, whether
one agrees with them or not, of truths with which human blood accords,
truths filled with warm human feeling. For the human being is the
channel linking the physical world with the spiritual world, and we
approach the spiritual world not only by studying the theories of
spiritual science, but also by acquiring a sense of how each individual
represents a channel between the physical world and the spiritual world.
Above all else, Heinrich Treitschke was a personality who strove to
form his knowledge and his thoughts on the basis of a broad
understanding, an understanding always founded on judgements of the
soul and not of the intellect. His judgements were always warm because
they were formed by the critical faculty of his soul. They may have had
a blustery quality, but they were always warm through having been
formed by his critical faculty of soul. From this angle Treitschke
always placed at the centre of his considerations the question of human
freedom, which — since he was a historian and prepared himself early on
to become the historian of his people — for him was always linked with
the question of political freedom, freedom from the state.
There is among German literature a work which deeply penetrates the
question of the relationship between the overall power of the state and
the freedom of the individual, not only the freedom living in the
individual soul, but freedom as it can be realized in social life. I
know of no other work in world literature which penetrates so deeply
into this question. It is entitled
The Sphere and Duties of Government
and is by Wilhelm von Humboldt,
[ Note 2 ]
the friend of Schiller and brother of the writer Alexander
von Humboldt. This work, written at the turn of the eighteenth to the
nineteenth century, defends most beautifully the human personality in
its full, free unfolding, against every aspect of state omnipotence. It
is said that the state may only intervene in the realm of the human
individual to the extent that such intervention leads to the removal of
obstacles standing in the way of the personality's free unfolding.
This work stems from the same source as Schiller's wonderful
Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man.
[ Note 3 ]
I could say that Wilhelm von Humboldt's work on the
limitations of the state is the brother of Schiller's
Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man.
It stems from an age when people were endeavouring to assemble every
thought from cultural life capable of placing the human being firmly on
the soil of freedom. For various reasons it was not much used during
the nineteenth century, yet it was often enough consulted by those who,
during the course of the nineteenth century, were endeavouring to reach
an understanding of the more external aspects of the concept of
freedom. Of course the nineteenth century was in one way the time when
in many respects the concept of freedom was laid in its grave. But
people were still keen to come to an understanding of the concept of
freedom, and in this connection Wilhelm von Humboldt's work
The Sphere and Duties of Government
gained a degree of international importance in Europe.
Both the Frenchman Laboulaye
[ Note 4 ]
and the Englishman John Stuart Mill
[ Note 5 ]
took it as their point of departure. This work
was an important point of departure for both these thinkers. Both, in
their turn, and each in his own field, endeavoured to come to grips
with the concept of freedom. Laboulaye considered that the institutions
of his country, in so far as they concerned the relationship between
state and individual, were suited only to the smothering of any true
freedom, any free unfolding of the personality, by the state. John
Stuart Mill, once he had discovered Wilhelm von Humboldt's work, took
his departure from it and argued forcefully, in his own work on
freedom, that English society could only undermine a true experience of
freedom. With Laboulaye it is the state, with John Stuart Mill society.
John Stuart Mill's work poses the question: How can an unfolding of the
personality be achieved in the atmosphere of unfreedom generated by
society?
Then Treitschke, with the critical faculty of soul I mentioned just
now, and linking his work to that of Laboulaye and Mill, himself wrote
about freedom
[ Note 6 ]
at the beginning of the eighteen-sixties.
Treitschke's paper on freedom is of particular and special interest
because as a historian and as a politician he is immersed in that
schism which invades the human soul when, on the one hand it recognizes
the necessity of a social structure called the state and, on the other,
is filled with enthusiasm for what we call human freedom. In this way,
in the sixties of the nineteenth century, Treitschke set himself to
discuss the concept of freedom on the basis of Laboulaye and John
Stuart Mill.
In this paper
Freedom
he endeavoured to work out a concept of the state which, on the one hand,
does not deny the necessity of a state structure, yet, on the other
hand, does make of the state something that is not the gravedigger of
freedom; but its cultivator and guardian. A state structure that could
achieve this was what he had in mind: This was the time, remember, when
a German, asked to name his fatherland, might easily have replied:
Schwarzburg-Sondershausen, or Reuss-Schleiz,
[ Note 7 ]
or something
similar. At the beginning of the sixties what we now call the German
Reich did not yet exist. At a time when a great many people were
thinking about bringing together in some way all the individual groups
in which Germans lived, Treitschke, too, was thinking about the
necessity of a state structure. But for him it was axiomatic that no
state should be allowed to come about which did not guarantee, to the
human personality, conditions in which it could unfold as freely as
possible. Even if it cannot be maintained that Treitschke achieved any
rounded-off philosophical concepts, nevertheless his paper on freedom
does contain many points worth considering very deeply.
In appreciating Treitschke and taking into account those aspects
which are important for an occult understanding of him, we must not
forget that he was a fearless person willing to serve no god other than
truth. Many things that are said today without any objectivity about
Treitschke are the height of stupidity. Such judgements buzzing about
in the world today cannot be given even the flimsiest of foundations,
for the simple reason that something is missing. I mentioned it the
other day when I said that if people were willing to investigate what
spiritual science has to say about the differences between the folk
spirits, then fewer stupid statements would be made. I said this
apropos of various stupid remarks made both by and about Romain Rolland.
[ Note 8 ]
I had to say it because a really penetrating view
of what is called a folk spirit can only be undertaken through
spiritual science. Those who do not want to become involved in this can
only reach subjective and therefore stupid judgements such as those of
Romain Rolland.
Those who are willing to take into account what arises out of a
spiritual scientific view of the folk spirits must be clear above all
about one thing: that a person who is typical of his people will bear
certain traits characteristic of that people. What made Treitschke
typical was his daimonic nature. And it is true to say that to
understand Treitschke is to understand much — not all, but much — of
what was characteristic of the German people in the second half of the
nineteenth century. Those for whom it is possible to gain a point of
view from spiritual knowledge must investigate — not through
cosmopolitan, but through national individuals — the fundamental
difference that exists between western European and Central European
judgements.
This cannot be taken into account for matters which are general and
human, but they are relevant in so far as the daimon of a people lives
in the folk spirit. With this reservation I shall say what I now have
to bring forward. When the characteristics of a people are seen working
through individuals it is possible to say what a certain American said.
It is better if I tell you what this American said, because if I use my
own words they might be taken amiss. He said: A French judgement, if it
comes out of the nature of the people — not an individual, whose
judgement might indeed be cosmopolitan — a judgement that comes out of
the very substance of the French people lives in the word; an English
judgement lives in practical political concepts; and a German judgement
lives in an a-national, a non-national, search for knowledge.
This was said by an American travelling in Europe. It means that
certain judgements formed in the West turn into something different
when they are taken into the substance of the German people. In the
West they are abstract in character. But a German belonging to the
German people tends to translate judgements into their concrete
components. He thus calls many things by their true name which are
never touched upon by their true name in the West. Let us take a
concept we have been discussing: the concept of the state.
In his lectures on politics,
[ Note 9 ]
which were later published,
Treitschke spoke about the state. Of course very many people speak
about the state; but let us for the moment consider only what it means
when someone speaks about the state by drawing on the very substance of
the people to whom he belongs. In the West people tend to speak about
it by using the state as a hook from which to suspend all sorts of
concepts which, for one reason or another, they want to link with the
concept of the state. Thus they attach to it such concepts as freedom,
justice and many others, and they might even come up with the peculiar
statement: The state must be divested of any concepts to do with power;
the state must be a Rechtsstaat,
a state subject to the law. You can say this only so long as you are
not obliged to look squarely at the concept of the state.
But if you approach the concept of the state in the way Treitschke
did, you discover the mystery of the state. Instead of demanding that
the state must be based on the principle that power is above the law —
an assertion slanderously attributed to Treitschke — you come to
realize that the concept of the state is unthinkable without the
concept of power. Power is simply a truth in this situation because it
is impossible to found a state except by basing it on power. If you
refuse to admit this, you are quite simply not representing the truth.
So Treitschke could not avoid speaking about the state in connection
with power. This is then distorted by those who claim Treitschke to
mean that in the German concept of the state, power is above the law.
Yet there is no question that Treitschke ever thought like this. His soul
was far too strongly imbued with the meaning of what Humboldt said in his
Sphere and Duties of Government.
Just because the state cannot avoid unfolding a
certain power, it must not be allowed to become omnipotent. A
Rechtsstaat, a state subject to the
law, is a contradiction in terms, like saying — perhaps not iron made
of wood, but certainly iron made of copper. The two concepts are
disparate, to use a term from the sphere of logic; they have nothing to
do with one another. But this conclusion can only be reached by one who
takes things really seriously.
From the same viewpoint Nietzsche arrived at his concept of ‘the
will to power’. Again, it is nothing but a monstrous defamation to
impute that Nietzsche defended the ‘principle of power’. The only
thing he defended was the need to consider how far power is indeed one of the
basic drives of human beings. It is quite in character that Nietzsche
should postulate the following. He says: There are people who from
certain principles of asceticism defend the thesis that power should be
opposed. Why do they do this? Because by their very nature they can
achieve quite a degree of power by means of opposing power! To oppose
power is their particular will to power! To stress powerlessness is
merely their particular will to power! To stress powerlessness in an
ascetic way gives them in their own way a particular power! What lay at
the foundation of what Nietzsche said, and also what pervades
Treitschke's considerations is: not to try and convince oneself that
black is white; to see things as they are in very truth and not to turn
out empty phrases.
So you see, neither Treitschke nor Nietzsche intended to introduce
into social life any kind of principle of power. Their concern was
simply to show that power lives wherever the state manifests, and that
it would be untruthful to maintain anything different. One could say
that the karma under which Treitschke worked was: to come upon the idea
that it is a monstrosity to live with the illusion of abstract, empty
concepts which one trumpets forth into the world. He wanted to take a
straightforward hold on reality and this is what is so attractive about
his writings. From the same standpoint he could say of the concept of
freedom: The question as to whether the state exists in order to
promote, or not to promote, freedom, is no question at all. In other
words, his object was to seek things where they live in their reality.
I do not want to defend this, but simply to describe it.
Surely a fearless human being who only wanted to state things as he
saw them with his sense for truth cannot be weeded out by means of
inciting opinion against him. And yet everywhere these days people are
weeded out by means of incitements against them. Treitschke is a
fearless spirit whose aim, no matter what he is discussing, is truly
never to mince his words. It would be far more to the point — I really
must repeat this again — to indicate how Treitschke was in reality a
kind of teacher for those who wanted to listen to him. There were not
nearly as many who listened as is claimed nowadays. When Treitschke
speaks about freedom he does this far less as a critic of other nations
than as an educator of his own. I should now like to read you a passage
from his article
Freedom,
which ought to be at least as well known as so much that is quoted out
of context and which cannot possibly be understood without proper
context. Having first discussed what aspects of society promote
freedom, Treitschke writes:
‘It is still most timely’ — he is speaking in the
eighteen-sixties — ‘to speak of class prejudices. How truly
discouraging to discover that this great civilized nation’ — he
means the Germans — ‘continues to acknowledge the legal concept of
misalliance in marriage, a concept thrown overboard by the ancients at
the beginning of their rise to civilization. We do not, of course,
refer to that crude titled gentry who hold a career in the stable to be
more respectable than a scientific calling, and the rule of the fist
more noble than the free citizen's respect for the law. That caricature
of aristocracy has had its comeuppance. But even the motley crowd of
the so-called educated, well-to-do classes cherishes a multitude of
unfree, intolerant class conceptions. How hard are the loveless
judgements passed on the shamefully misnamed dangerous classes! How
heartless the deprecation of “luxury” for the lower orders,
when a free and noble individual ought to be overjoyed to see the poor
beginning to take some pride in themselves and the decency of their
appearance! What abject fear at every sign of defiance and of self-respect
among the lower classes! German goodness of heart has perhaps preserved our
educated classes from developing this attitude in a form as crude as
that held among blunter Britons; but so long as aristocradc interests,
of which the cleverer among us have never been entirely free, take
these forms, there is not much hope for our inner freedom.
We enter a field in which unfreedom and intolerance flourish
in abundance when we enquire after the class concepts of that
most mighty and exclusive of all “classes” — or
whatever else you would like to call this natural aristocracy — the
male sex. Unbelievably widespread amongst us, lords of creation, are
the ramifications of a silent consipiracy, thoroughly to defraud women
of a portion of harmonious human culture. For women gain a part of
their culture only through us. Yet we take it for granted amongst
ourselves that religious enlightenment is a duty of the educated man
but a bringer of corruption to the populace and to women. Indeed, how
many of us find a woman most particularly winsome the moment she
displays some glaring superstition. And as for “politically-minded
females”, they are an abomination we prefer not to mention. Is this
indeed our manly faith in the divine nature of freedom? Is religious
enlightenment really only a matter of sober understanding and not to a
far greater degree a need of the soul? Yet we imagine a woman's warmth
of heart might suffer if we let her take her own delight in the great
spiritual works of the last hundred years. Do we truly understand
German women so little as to imagine that they could ever become
“political” and start to worry their heads over ground rents and
commercial agreements? Yet the political poverty of our people has to
it a human side which might be more deeply, more delicately, more
intimately understood by women than by ourselves. Of this abundance of
enthusiasm and love, which we so often confront with coldness, inner
poverty and heartlessness, could not a small fraction be reserved for
our fatherland? Must the shame of the French occupation return once
more if our women are to feel themselves, as do their neighbours in
East and West, daughters of a great nation? With our unfree lack of
magnanimity we have maintained silence towards them for far too long
about what stirs in our breast; we felt that they were great enough to
be told no more than the most trifling of trifles; and because we were
too small-minded not to begrudge them the freedom of culture and
education, there is now only a minority of German women capable of
understanding the earnest gravity of this momentous era.’
You see how it is possible to quote from Treitschke passages which
refer to matters of general humanity, even though on his part he wrote
them out of a national spirit for his own nation. If any of the nations
who today abuse Treitschke had among them a spirit who meant to them
what he means to Germans, you would see that they would place him on
the highest pedestal. Imagine an Italian Treitschke. What would the
Italians say if the Germans were to speak of their Italian Treitschke
in the way they and many others speak of the German Treitschke. The
infinite tragedy of our age is that it is stamped with ignorance and
with all that counts on ignorance. It would be utterly impossible for
such untruths to buzz about in the world today if it were not at every
moment feasible to count on people's ignorance. By ignorance I do not,
of course, mean the fact that not everybody has time to inform himself
about everything. What I do mean is that a little self-knowledge is
what is needed.
Of course certain situations cannot be judged if certain things are
not known, and judgements born of ignorance, made about whole nations,
work in the most terrible way. Today so very much is born out of
ignorance. This is, as a matter of fact, caused by that black magic — I
have described it like this on other occasions too — known today as
journalism. It is a kind of black magic, and there was a certain truth
in the way folk legend felt the inventors of the art of printing — with
all the perspectives this opens up — to be black magicians.
You might now exclaim: As if there were not enough follies and
oddities in anthroposophical spiritual science — now the art of
printing is described as black magic! But I did only say ‘a kind’ of
black magic. I have often stressed that it is wrong always to say: I
must not let Ahriman anywhere near me; away with him! I must not let
Lucifer anywhere near me; I only want to have dealings with the good
gods! If this is what you want, you can have no dealings with the
world, for whether you like it or not, the world hangs in the balance
between Ahriman and Lucifer. It is impossible to have dealings with the
world if you have this attitude of mind, an attitude which appears
particularly frequently in our circles. One must achieve truthfulness
even in the smallest matters. This must be the practical outcome of our
efforts in spiritual science — the practical outcome. You can feel this
in yourselves: If you cannot develop the urge for truthfulness in
yourselves, you will always be open to the danger of being infected,
influenced, by the untruthfulness that lives in the world.
That is why I said the other day: In future all the efforts that
have been made towards peace will be forgotten, and in the periphery
the only thing to be remembered will be the shouting-down of peace; but
it will not be remembered as a shouting-down but as something that was
justified; everything else will be forgotten. This is sure to be what
will happen. So at least our discussions here should be a contribution
to making it possible to sense the truth of the situation. For today
one of the foremost demands made of those who are truly concerned with
the welfare of mankind and the progress of mankind is that they should
not allow themselves to be taken in by untruthfulness.
Let us look at one of the facts of today totally sine ira but not
sine studio; without sympathy and
antipathy but with a basis of facts. You have, I am sure, all read the
note from the Entente to President Wilson.
[ Note 10 ]
From a certain
standpoint this note, in contrast to all the earlier ones, ceuld be
regarded as a favourable symptom for the future. For if things are
taken too far, if the bowstring threatens to snap, then there is once
again hope, the hope that if spiritual powers are challenged, then the
blow will also be returned by the spiritual side. This note certainly
outdid all the earlier ones.
Let us now look at the facts. Here, roughly, is Austria-Hungary as
it is today. [The lecturer drew.] Here is the Danube and this is where
Vienna would be. Now assume that the demands of the note from the
Entente are met. It says that the Italians — that is the Austrian
Italians — want to be liberated. The worst thing about this note from
the Entente is that it suffers from that inner untruthfulness which
arises out of total ignorance. That is why it is difficult to make the
drawing I now want to make. There will be difficulties, as you will
see. Assume that the Italian Austrians are liberated. Now the southern
Slavs are also to be liberated. This is rather difficult. If the
southern Slavs were liberated, the map would look like this, for they
live everywhere over here.
Further it is said, funnily enough: The Czecho-Slovaks are to be
liberated. We know the Czechs and also the Slovaks. It goes without
saying that only the Entente has heard of Czecho-Slovaks. Let us
presume that it is the Czechs and the Slovaks who are meant. If we go
by what the Czechs themselves think, the result would be like this.
Then on to the liberation of the Romanians. This is what it would look
like. Also to be liberated, as the note says ‘... in accordance with
the will of His Majesty the Tsar’, are the Poles inhabiting Galicia;
but this is to be done by Austria herself. In the end, Hungary would
look something like this, and Austria something like this.
This map is the result of carrying out what is said about Austria in
the note from the Entente. And at the same time it is said that there
is no intention of doing anything to the peoples of Central Europe!
The whole note demonstrates, for instance, a total lack of awareness
of the difficulties of managing all this here, where the Slavs are
in the majority, compared with there,
where they are a tiny minority. The whole note lays bare the most
arrogant, unscrupulous ignorance of the situation! With this ignorance,
historical notes are written. And to add insult to injury it is further
said that the only intention is ... I really don't know, for it is
almost too repulsive to repeat these empty phrases.
What could be better proof than this note from the Entente of the
fact that Austria was forced to defend herself? What could give better
proof? In short, this note can only be seen as something pathological.
It is a challenge to truth and reality. It is taking things too far. So
let us hope, since it is a challenge to the spiritual world, that this
spiritual world will find it necessary to put things right, even
though, of course, human beings will have to be the tools with which
the spiritual world will work.
It really is time for an illustration such as the one I have
sketched here to be shown all over the world in order to demonstrate
this utter historical ignorance and lack of understanding about Central
Europe. Obviously, where power rules, reason cannot have much effect.
But a start must be made by understanding that, when rights and
freedoms are mentioned, power is meant, actual power. Things must be
called by their true names. This is what our time is suffering from:
That people cannot bring themselves to call things by their right
names, that people cannot make the resolve to call things by their
right names. Many people fail to understand a great deal. When you come
up against something like this absolutely idiotic division of the
Austrian nations, it becomes perfectly obvious that this note stems
from people who know nothing of what exists in Central Europe, yet who
possess the arrogance to judge things about which they know nothing and
who want nothing other than to extend their power over these
territories. They could not care less what the real situation is.
But you do have to ask how such things could come about in the first
place. For instance in some versions it says: Liberation of the Slavs,
the Czechs and the Slovaks. But the Swiss newspapers, whose translation
is probably more accurate, speak about Czecho-Slovaks. You will agree,
if someone makes a correct statement, you are not curious about the
source of his information; but when someone speaks absolute balderdash,
such as the description of the nations in the note from the Entente,
you do begin to wonder about its source. It is indeed not uninteresting
to take note when situations seem to run, in a way, parallel, though of
course without basing any hypothesis on this, or drawing any
conclusions. I naturally asked myself: What is the source of these
nonsensical terms? I repeat: Without forming any kind of hypothesis or
conclusions, let me give you an aperçu.
In the last few days — I am not judging the fact, but simply telling
you this — a sentence passed in Austria on the Czech leader, Kramar,
[ Note 11 ]
has been made public. He was for a long time one of the most influential
people in Austria. He was sentenced to death, and this sentence was then
commuted to fifteen years hard labour. The wording of the sentence also
includes the statement that certain articles that had appeared in
The Times
— in English, of course — had been found in the
possession of Kramar in his own language. Now Dr Kramar has a friend,
the university professor Masaryk,
[ Note 12 ]
who has fled from Austria and now lives in London and Paris. So let us
consider certain sentences from Kramar's programme which were the basis
on which he was sentenced. If you understand nothing about the situation
in Austria and you read these sentences in
The Times,
or wherever else — they also appeared in Paris in
Revue tchèque
— and play
about a little with the wording, not forgetting that Kramar of course
uses the proper terms, you arrive, curiously enough, at the sentences
about the peoples of Austria as they appear in the note from the Entente.
And if the term ‘Czecho-Slovaks’ is indeed used, you gain the
strange impression that Kramar was hoping to found a state consisting
of Czechs and Slovaks, which would be meaningful. But those in western
Europe who know nothing about the actual situation would make of this:
‘Czecho-Slovaks’.
[ Note 13 ]
It is indeed necessary today, when so many underground channels play
their part, to clarify certain questions about interconnections. I do
not want to build any hypotheses, nor draw any conclusions in
connection with what I have said, but the fact remains that a curious
conformity exists between the sentence that was passed and the text of
the note from the Entente. Obviously you can have different opinions
about this sentence, depending on your point of view. Kramar could be
seen either as a martyr or a criminal. But I do not want to pass
judgement. The important thing is to be in a position to observe this
curious conformity. As I said, I simply noticed this when I was
puzzling about the origin, apart from everything else, of the
stupendous ignorance on which the note is based.
We must certainly speak about this stupendous ignorance. For it is
significant, and is one of the characteristics of our time, that on a
basis of this kind of reality an opinion is expressed by those who
dominate one half of the habitable earth. It is a challenge indeed to
the spirit of truth.
[The next few sentences in this lecture refer to a quotation from an
‘article’ dated 25 July 1914 mentioning Rasputin, which the
stenographer unfortunately did not record. Since they are meaningless
without the quotation, they have been omitted. Ed.]
It will always be possible, if one has the power, to give the facts
an impudent slap in the face — and the periphery does have this power.
But you cannot slap truth in the face. Truth speaks and will — let us
hope — also be an impulse which, when things are at their worst, can
lead mankind to some kind of salvation.
We shall continue tomorrow.
[ Note 14 ]
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