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LECTURE SIX
Dornach, 17 December 1916
In order to reach the goal of our discussions, we shall have to
endeavour to comprehend the whole nature of the fifth post-Atlantean
period in all its deepest significance. It is impossible to come to
an understanding of events as deeply important as those of the
present day by refusing to enter into concrete matters, and by
insisting on considering only general aspects of the universe and man
in the way that can be done when one is not concerned with specific
circumstances. Unfortunately, I have to stress that an understanding
for the deeply important nature of these events is largely lacking
today.
For certain quite definite reasons which will become apparent, I
yesterday spoke to you about two matters. First of all I told you how
the book by Brooks Adams had been launched on mankind, a kite flown
to gauge the scale on which such things are understood, at least by a
few individuals. This book describes how a nation should be seen as a
living organism which comes into being and passes through phases of
childhood, youth, maturity and decline in a similar way to a human
being, though of course only similar, not identical. Furthermore it
is pointed out that at certain stages of their development nations
evolve two characteristics which belong together, namely, at one
stage those of an imaginative and a warlike nature, and at another
those of a scientific and an industrial or commercial nature. So it
is assumed that nations which are imaginative and warlike by nature,
and others which are scientific and industrial or commercial, live
side by side and that in the mutual interplay of such nations the
universal development of mankind proceeds.
I told you that this was a one-sided view. How do such views
surface in the first place? What does it signify that they are
launched on the public?
Views of this kind have made an impression on individuals of a
certain standing and therefore have become part of the impulses
working today. In such matters it is always a question of
disconnecting portions of the overall spiritual knowledge of
man's evolution and planting them in the world when needed or
wanted. By taking a portion of the total occult picture of
mankind's development it is possible to achieve definite things
in the service of a particular group and its particular egoism.
Knowledge of the whole picture always serves the whole of mankind.
Portions taken out of context always serve the egoism of individual
groups. It is significant and important to take into account that
much that is launched on the public from occult sources is not
untrue, but half true, a quarter true, an eighth true, and just
because it bears within it a part of the truth it can be used
to achieve one aim or another in a one-sided way. That is why those
who see through these things gain a significant impression from the
fact that, on the part of America, the twentieth century is
introduced by the launching of certain ideas in the world via some
channels of the bookselling trade serving certain movements which
make use of occult means.
The second matter about which I spoke was the remarkable treatise
by the noble Thomas More on the best form of public adminstration in
the state and on the island of Utopia. Out of this treatise by Thomas
More I quoted to you yesterday the passage in which More says through
the mouth of a stranger what he wants to say about Utopia. This
stranger is presented as a fictitious person; perhaps we shall get to
know him better today, but he is not fictitious, as you will see. Out
of a certain mood of his time, which I described yesterday, he
develops the theme of his feelings and then describes Utopia
itself.
This description of Utopia by Thomas More, who flings these
particular ideas into the midst of human development at the beginning
of the fifth post-Atlantean period, is indeed quite remarkable. I
have found a number of people who have read
Utopia,
but not a single one who has
read it carefully enough to become even partly aware of all the
extraordinary ins and outs and unlikely details the book describes.
People simply take the description of the island of Utopia as that of
an imaginary island and just read on, page after page. This is
understandable in the present age, which is void of all spirituality.
But at least one should notice either that Thomas More is describing
something incomprehensible, even if it is only meant to be imaginary,
or that he must have been a complete idiot, an absolute fool. But
such logical conclusions are not drawn in our time; people far prefer
to pass over things by means of superficial judgements. I shall now
call up before our souls an outline of the content of this work. If
you want all the details, you must read
Utopia
yourselves.
It is significant that Utopia is described as having reached a
certain maturity in its institutions. It is expressly stated that the
situation being described did not exist in the beginning but has
taken 1,760 years to achieve, so that we are now presented with a
kind of finished product of some maturity.
The first point to be particularly stressed is that property is
common, nobody owns anything. The state is divided into certain
families who, if we can put it like this, elect elders, and from
among the elders a prince is elected. From time to time a council is
called at which public matters are discussed in accordance with the
instructions of the different sections of the population. Here we
immediately come to an extraordinary arrangement: Public affairs may
only be discussed in the prescribed manner. Anybody who privately
discusses public affairs is liable to be condemned to death. Further,
we discover a highly sensible arrangement: When a suggestion is made
during the council meeting it may never be discussed immediately;
people must first go home and think about it and it is then brought
up again on a subsequent occasion. The one who is telling us the
story says that in this way people have an opportunity to think about
things, and do not make hasty judgements which they would naturally
defend with stubbornness and egoism, just because they have become
attached to their own judgement instead of thinking carefully and
coming to the right conclusion.
In Utopia everyone has to learn farming while still a child. Later
they also learn a trade, usually that pursued by their parents,
though they may choose another if they have the skill for it. Work is
strictly regulated and nobody need labour for more than six hours a
day.
Everything else is also arranged in the best way; there are three
hours of work in the morning but, before this, at sunrise, those who
wish may gather to learn about spiritual and similar things. Games
such as those we know outside Utopia do not exist there. They have,
however, a competitive game something like chess, a kind of
arithmetical battle, and also another competitive game, again similar
to chess, in which the vices and the virtues compete with one
another.
Under the supervision of the elected representatives those who are
suitable are declared scholars. From among their number the
ambassadors and the priests are elected. The dirtiest work is
performed by slaves who are either recruited from amongst conquered
peoples or else are criminals. Every true Utopian is free. There is
another arrangement in Utopia which we, who are not from Utopia, have
only just come to enjoy: no journey may be made without permission
from the appropriate authority. A passport is necessary for even the
shortest journey. Money does not exist. Anything available for
consumption is taken to the markets where anybody can help himself.
Since this is so well arranged that no one takes more than he needs,
there is no necessity to pay anything, for everyone receives what he
requires. Money or anything like it is simply not necessary.
The only metal of any value is iron. Please take note of this, for
it is very significant. Silver is valued less and gold least of all.
Gold is not fashioned into the articles non-Utopians would use it
for, but mainly into chains for criminals, and for similar objects.
Gold is forged into chains for criminals; they have to wear them as a
symbol of their shame. Certain receptacles which one does not mention
in polite company are also made of gold, and so on. This had a
curious consequence once, when some foreign diplomats visited Utopia
and sought to impress the Utopians by festooning themselves in gold
chains and jewellery. The Utopians thought them to be of very lowly
origin, since such things were only used as toys for children, who
discarded them as they grew older. When the diplomats came, the
children watched them pass by in the street and said: Look at those
old fogeys still wearing children's playthings!
No value is attached in Utopia to the wearing of fine clothes, for
they say: How can anyone fancy it matters whether his clothes are
made from this wool or that wool? The sheep were the first to wear
them. How can you fancy there is anything special in wearing what the
sheep first wore naturally!
In Utopia there is also another peculiarity; good and evil, virtue
and vice are only judged in connection with religious ideas. A goal
to be striven for in life is a kind of epicureanism in the pleasures
one enjoys. The more fun one has in life, the more virtuous one is
considered to be. The Utopians believe in the immortal soul of man
and have a kind of religion of reason. They consider that everybody
may use his common sense to see that God rules the world like an
overseer, that man has an immortal soul and that after death this
will enter into a spiritual world where there will be reward and
punishment for virtue and vice.
The Utopians think nothing of jewels for they say: When somebody
buys a jewel he has to seek the assurance of the seller that it is
genuine; why on earth should something be valuable if you cannot see
with your own eyes whether it is a genuine or a counterfeit jewel?
This could only happen in Utopia. Hunting is also scorned as
something undignified. Only butchers are allowed to hunt, and theirs
is not an esteemed profession.
The man who tells all these things explains that he himself
introduced the Utopians to Greek literature and art and that they
proved to be extraordinarily intelligent. Indeed their language seems
to have affinities with Greek, and their culture is unusual in that
it seems to remind one of that of Greece mingled with something of
Persia. The manner in which husband and wife are selected I shall not
describe for reasons which you will understand if you read the book.
There are no lawyers in Utopia; they are considered to be the most
harmful people. Contracts are not entered into because the Utopians
believe that if someone wants to keep an agreement he can do so
without a contract, whereas if he does not, he can break it even if
he has a contract.
In war, they avoid bloodletting if at all possible; it is
considered the most shameful thing. They say: If one spills blood in
war, one is no better than wolves and tigers. Other methods must be
sought, for man has intelligence. Only in absolute extremity, if
there is no other hope, will they spill blood. They set about the
matter of making war on another nation by sending out scouts whose
task it is either to bring about confusion among the enemy so that
they start to quarrel among themselves, or to murder one or another
member of the enemy force, or something similar. In other words they
seek to use ‘love and good sense’ to bring about discord
and dissension as well as mutual irritation among those on whom they
wish to make war, and only if this fails will they decide to shed
blood. And even then they use quite special methods which show that
they intend to cease the bloodletting at the first possible
opportunity.
Another point is that religious tolerance is a fundamental
characteristic of the Utopians. So long as he does not break the law,
anybody may belong to any sect or represent any religious view he
likes. This was instituted by the founder of Utopia, Utopus himself.
However, all must believe in a highest being, whom they call Mythra.
The one who tells us this has himself attempted to introduce
Christianity there. The A-94-Utopians proved to be most open to it
and recognized it as being indeed the best religion. The utmost
religious tolerance prevails, and all may believe whatever they will,
except that someone who is a materialist or who does not believe in
the immortality of the soul forfeits all civil and other rights,
indeed is declared to be without rights.
There is a sect which holds animals to be creatures who have souls
like people. There are priests who teach in special mystery churches
and perform cultic rites. Festivals are celebrated at the end and the
beginning of each year. Musical instruments differ somewhat from
those in other countries, for they are particularly suited to
expressing in music what the human soul feels in its various moods.
And so on.
I have told you all this just as it is described in the book. You
will have noticed I said on the one hand that the Utopians have a
religion of good sense, in which each individual believes what his
good sense tells him is right; and yet, on the other hand, we are
told that Christianity has been introduced and that all believe in a
kind of Mythra. Further, it is said that tolerance prevails, and yet
those who are materialists forfeit their rights as citizens. In
short, you will find in the book one contradiction after another.
So what is this book really about? What is it describing? We can
indeed only understand it on the basis of spiritual science. We must
understand that Thomas More, like Pico della Mirandola and others, is
a man who stands with part of his being in the fourth post-Atlantean
period while another part already projects into the fifth. But he is
also a man who knows that this is so and develops it in full
consciousness because he possesses a certain spiritual life.
Thomas More spent many hours every day in meditation, and with his
meditations he achieved certain quite definite results. But these
results came about because, as I said, part of his being still lived
in the fourth post-Atlantean period, so that atavistic elements
joined in him with a conscious raising of his soul into the life of
the spiritual world. Yet he lived a whole century after the beginning
of the fifth post-Atlantean period and in his soul everything lived
which was characteristic of that fifth period: intellectuality and
reasoning as we know them today — which did not yet exist
during the fourth period, contrary to the opinion of those whose view
of history is utterly fantastic. All this worked and mingled in his
soul. You can discover what must have gone on in such a soul if you
study Pico della Mirandola and also the relationship of Pico della
Mirandola to Savonarola.
We have, then, a man into whose soul we must penetrate a little if
we are to understand what he meant with his description of Utopia.
Such a man as this knew that occult impulses work and weave in the
evolution of mankind, and also that at the turn of the fourth to the
fifth post-Atlantean period it was necessary to provide the right
impulse for many people. Whether they then make use of it is another
question. What did such people know? We have often discussed that
things are different nowadays, but this is what it was like then; so
what did such people know? They knew that mankind must grow decadent
if only those things were developed which were, let me say,
unspiritual, thought-out, merely reasoned. Such people know that
human beings must become desiccated even down to their physical
bodies — of course not during the course of a few centuries but
over a long period — if only dry reasoning, if only that
spiritual element is developed on which materialistic views are
founded. Such people have quite a different concept of the truth from
that which gradually evolved during the fifth post-Atlantean period.
They know that thoughts must be thought which do not relate to the
physical plane, because, quite apart from the truth of such matters,
human beings, if they do not wish to wither, must think thoughts
which do not relate to the physical plane. These are the thoughts
which bring life, which make life possible and help it to make
progress. This is why what is spiritual is so important, quite apart
from the aspect of truth.
Through his meditations Thomas More had come to experience
pictures of the higher worlds in a partly atavistic and partly
conscious way, but these were mingled with the material aspect of the
dream worlds. Out of these actual experiences arose what he relates in
Utopia.
It is not something he has thought out, it is not fantasy, but something
he really experienced as the fruit of his meditation. He placed it
before us just as he experienced it, in order to say: Behold! A man
who lives in England under King Henry VIII, a man who is even a
servant of Henry's state, a man who bears in his soul the
feelings, the desires, the intimate goals of England at this time
— when his visions stir up his inner being, he experiences what
is here described to be a kind of ideal state. He wanted to express
what are the wishes, the goals, the ideas lurking in the subconscious
of those who are dissatisfied with the external world. This is what
he wanted to express.
So it can be said: this is the astral self-knowledge of a man of
that time. A wise man such as Thomas More does not simply set before
his contemporaries a fantastic ideal for the future. He sets before
them what he himself experiences because, through this, in his own
way and in keeping with his own time, he wants to present them with
the great truth that the external world perceived by the senses is
maya and that this external world of the senses must be seen in
conjunction with the supersensible world. But if one sees them in
conjunction in this way — so that all the desires, all the
wishes which belong to a particular age and are in keeping with that
age, are allowed to play their part — then the outcome is
something which, if looked at closely, is by no means a proposition
that could be considered ideal. For I must admit, if I were to be
born in Utopia I would probably see it as my primary task to overcome
the prevailing conditions as quickly as possible and replace them
with others. I might even consider the conditions prevailing here or
there on our earth — apart from those of the immediate present
— to be more ideal than those in Utopia. But it was not Thomas
More's aim to describe ideal conditions. His intention was to
show what he really experienced under the conditions as I have
described them. He wanted to say to people: If you could see your
wishes, if you could see before your eyes what you imagine to be
ideal conditions, you would find that you were not in agreement with
them at all.
Now we have made the acquaintance of the stranger who describes
Utopia: he is the astral self of Thomas More. These things must be
seen as being much more real than is usually supposed. At certain
points of human evolution the fundamental facts must be sought out if
one wants to understand this human evolution. A judgement cannot be
made simply by taking the few facts closest to hand. A valid
judgement cannot be based on these, for it would merely relate to
sympathies and antipathies. These are valid, of course, but they take
us no further, and mankind cannot be served by them.
My purpose here — and we shall return to these things later
— has been to place before you a man who is particularly
typical of the turning point between two ages, namely, between the
fourth and the fifth post-Atlantean ages: one who is able to bring to
the surface what is characteristic of his deeper soul life in such a
way that he has an experience of self. Let me just leave this as a
fact for the moment.
In order to gain an understanding of the kind for which a number
of our friends here have expressed a wish, we must now also work on
achieving a comprehension of the concrete reality of a folk soul. For
our materialistic age and way of feeling tends to make us confuse the
folk soul with the individual soul. I mean, when we speak of a
people, a nation, we believe that this has something to do with the
individuals who constitute this nation. To use a rather
rough-and-ready, though graphic comparison: To say that an Englishman
or a German can be identified with the folk soul of his nation is,
for the spiritual scientist, as nonsensical as saying that a son or
daughter can be identified with father or mother.
This is a rough-and-ready comparison, as I said, because on the
one hand we are dealing with two physical people, whereas on the
other we mean one physical and one non-physical being, which differ
totally from one another when examined concretely. Not until there is
an understanding of the mysteries of repeated earth lives and of the
karma which these involve will there really be a comprehension of
what underlies all this, which it is highly necessary to understand
if one wants to speak on a firm basis about these things. An
immensely important truth lies in the fact that one lives within a
certain folk spirit only for a single incarnation, whereas one bears
within one's own individual being something quite different,
something immeasurably greater and yet also immeasurably smaller than
that which lives within a folk soul. To identify oneself with a folk
soul is, in reality, totally devoid of meaning once one goes beyond
what is described by such words as love of the fatherland, love of
the homeland, patriotism and so on. We shall only understand these
things properly, once we can look earnestly and deeply at the truths
of reincarnation and karma.
I have spoken recently in various places about the connection
between the human soul between death and rebirth and what comes into
being when man enters a new existence through birth. I pointed out
that between death and rebirth man is linked with the forces which
bring people together over many generations. Through the
ever-repeated union of different pairs of parents and all that leads
to descendants, as well as other aspects of the succession of
generations, it comes about that the human being between death and
rebirth finds himself within a whole stream which, in the end, leads
him to the parents through whom he can incarnate. Just as in physical
life one is linked with one's physical body, so between death
and rebirth is one linked with the conditions which prepare for birth
through a particular pair of parents. One is immersed in the forces
which bring one to particular parents, and which brought father and
mother to their parents, and so on back through the generations, in
all their offshoots and ramifications, and whatever works together
here in the most varied ways — in all this one is immersed for
centuries!
Consider the imposing number of centuries one would remain within
all this in order to pass through a mere thirty generations. The
period from Charlemagne to the present day encompasses approximately
thirty generations, and over all that time, in all that has taken
place in the way of meeting, falling in love and begetting
descendants which at last led to our own parents — in all this
we have ourselves been involved, all this we have ourselves
prepared.
I am repeating this because in connection with those personalities
one calls leaders, those who can be recognized as leading
personalities in some respects, it is important to understand that
what makes them significant for mankind comes about through all that
I have just described. I shall draw your attention now to a leading
personality, and the climax of what I have to say about him will be
expressed in the words of another. You will see in a moment why this
is so.
We see in Dante a most eminent personality who lived at the end of
the fourth post-Atlantean period. We may juxtapose such an eminent
personality with those personalities who gained a certain eminence
after the beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean period, such as, for
instance, Thomas More. Let us look closely at what may be recognized
in general in a personality such as Dante. A personality such as
Dante is of far-reaching significance, gives far-reaching impulses.
It is therefore interesting to consider, or at least to guess, how
such a soul before entering through birth into a physical existence
that is to be significant for mankind, puts together — excuse
this rather peculiar expression — what he is to become, in
order to be born in the right way through the right parents.
Obviously these conditions are brought about out of the spiritual
world, but they are realized with the help of the physical tools. In
a certain sense the spiritual world guides this blood to that blood,
and so on.
As a rule, a personality like Dante cannot be born of homogeneous
blood. To belong to a single nation is impossible for such a soul. It
needs a mysterious alchemy; various blood streams must flow together.
Whatever those over-patriotic people might say who claim great
personalities for a single people, there is no great reality behind
it!
As regards Dante, so that you do not think I am taking sides I
shall now let another, who knows him intimately, describe what is
clearly apparent in his being. It would be easy to imagine that I
might be carrying on politically, which is actually furthest from my
intentions. So for this reason I have made enquiries of Carducci,
[ Note 1 ]
the great Italian poet of today, who is an expert on Dante.
Behind Carducci — and this is why I am quoting him —
stand what are called ‘Massonieri’ in Italy, and what is
connected with all those secret brotherhoods to whom I have drawn
your attention. Because of this, Carducci's theoretical
arguments about the actualities of life are, to a certain extent,
based on some deeper knowledge. I would not maintain that he has
flaunted this deeper knowlege all over the market place or that he is
in any way an occultist. But what he says does contain a certain
amount of what has come to him via all kinds of secret channels.
Carducci says: Three elements work in Dante, and it is only
because these three elements work together that Dante's being
was able to become what it was. First, through certain branches of
his lineage, there was an ancient Etruscan element. This gave Dante
whatever it was that opened the supersensible worlds to him; because
of this he was able to speak so profoundly about the supersensible
worlds. Secondly, there was in him a Roman element which gave him a
proper relationship to the life of his time and a basis of certain
legal concepts from which to proceed. And thirdly, says Carducci,
there was a Germanic element in Dante. From this he gained the
boldness and freshness of his views, a certain candour, and the
courage of his convictions in what he had set himself. These three
elements, says Carducci, made up the soul life of Dante.
The first element points to the ancient Celtic influence which
pulses through him like blood in a certain way, leading him back to
the third post-Atlantean period; for the Celtic element in the North
leads back to what we have come to know as the third post-Atlantean
period. After this we find the fourth post-Atlantean period in the
Roman, and the fifth in the Germanic element. Carducci maintains that
the elements in Dante's soul are composed of these three
periods and their impulses, so that we really have three layers lying
side by side — or rather one above the other — the third,
fourth and fifth post-Atlantean periods: Celtic, Roman, Germanic.
Dante experts of some stature have gone to great pains to discover
how, from the spiritual world, Dante managed to mingle his blood in
such a way as to obtain the final composition with which he was born.
Of course, they did not express this in these words, but they went to
great pains and came to believe that much may be put down to the fact
that a great many of Dante's ancestors are to be found in the
Grisons area of present-day Switzerland. This is borne out to some
extent by history. The chain of Dante's predecessors points in
every direction of the compass, including this district, where so
much mixing of blood streams took place.
We now see how, in a single personality, the remarkable working
together of the three layers of European human evolution is revealed.
We also see how a man like Carducci, whose judgement is based on a
certain objectivity and not on present-day nationalistic madness,
points to the foundation on which Dante stands.
Herewith we touch on conditions which are well-known in circles
familiar with the realities of life, conditions which may be reckoned
with and which may be used as forces if one wants to do certain
things. These conditions are by no means unknown to the secret
brotherhoods, neither in their rightful use, nor in that other
direction which uses secret knowledge in one way or another in the
service of some group egoism. For the secret of how the three
consecutive layers — which are exceedingly meaningful, mainly
for Europe — work together, is discussed most carefully in all
secret brotherhoods worthy of the name, though naturally in some
cases in a manner which deflects from what might be termed the good
direction.
Please be sure not to forget that knowledge about such things
exists, and that it is taught — even though, in the external,
clever world no one wants to know much about it — very
systematically and with great care, especially in the western and
American secret brotherhoods.
Having now prepared the way and brought to your attention the
teaching about what is, in a certain way, a mystery of evolution and
which is taught, albeit with the most varying aims, I shall now point
to some further teachings simply by describing them to you. These
teachings formed the content of the instruction given in certain
occult schools, particularly towards the end of the nineteenth
century. They continued into the twentieth century, but it was
particularly in the nineteenth century that they were taken up, at
which time they gained a considerable degree of influence. Efforts
were made to bring them into all kinds of situations in which it was
felt necessary to use them for certain ends. So to start with I shall
simply report, quite uncritically, on certain teachings from the
secret brotherhoods of England, whereby I shall be alluding to what I
have prepared.
The following was taught and is still taught: The evolution of
Europe can be comprehended if, to start with, one looks at the
transition from the Roman, the fourth post-Atlantean period, to the
fifth post-Atlantean period. The teaching was — please remember
that I am merely reporting — that the mystery of the transition
from the fourth to the fifth period or, as was said in these
brotherhoods, from the fourth to the fifth sub-race, must be
understood. You know that we cannot use the term
‘sub-race’ for the reasons I have frequently expressed,
for to use this term means to pursue one-sided group aims, whereas
group aims can never be our concern, but solely the general aims of
mankind. So the teaching was that the fourth sub-race is represented
mainly by the Roman, the Latin peoples. Throughout human evolution it
is the case that when things develop in sequence it is not a question
of what comes after taking its place behind what came before. What
came before remains and takes its place side by side with what comes
afterwards, so that they remain side by side in space. Thus, the
stragglers of the fourth sub-race, consisting chiefly of the Roman
and Latin elements, have remained during the period of the fifth
sub-race.
The fifth sub-race, which began at the start of the fifteenth
century, is composed of those peoples who are called upon to speak
English in the world. The English-speaking peoples represent the
fifth sub-race, and the whole task of the fifth post-Atlantean period
consists in conquering the world for the English-speaking peoples. It
will be evident that the stragglers of the fourth sub-race, the
peoples touched by the Latin element, will fall more and more into a
certain materialism. They bear within themselves the element of their
own inner dissolution, and even in the physical sense bear their own
decadence within them. As I said, I am merely reporting and not
saying anything which I myself maintain to be true. Further, it is
said that the fifth sub-race bears within it a germ of spirituality,
of a capacity to comprehend the spiritual world. It is necessary, it
is said, to understand how the fourth sub-race affected the fifth,
and for this purpose one must look back to where the Nordic peoples,
who later became the Britons, the Gauls, the Germans,
[ Note 2 ]
came towards the Roman Empire. The question was asked: What were these
peoples at the time when the Roman Empire was making war on them; in
other words, when the conflict between the fourth and the fifth
sub-race began? As peoples they were at the stage of infancy! The
important point is that the Romans, the Roman element, the fourth
sub-race, came in order to be their wet-nurse. These expressions are
needed to enable us to draw the analogy between the folk element and
the element of the individual human being. So the Romans became
wet-nurses and they remained so for approximately as long as they
maintained their dominance over the peoples of the North who were
going through their infancy.
Infants grow to be children. This is the age in which the Papacy
is founded in Rome and in which the Pope in his reign becomes the
guardian of the child, just as the Roman Empire was the wet-nurse of
the infant. Again, I am merely reporting, and not maintaining that
this is the case. So now we have the interplay between the Papacy and
what is going on in the North, what developed through Central Europe
right out as far as Britain. This is the education of these people
under the guardianship of the Papacy, out of which the Roman element
from the fourth post-Atlantean period is still working. Round about
the twelfth century, when the Papacy began to be no longer what it
had been, the youth of these various people commenced, this being
characterized by the awakening of their own intelligence. The
guardian now withdraws. The youth of these peoples continues until
roughly the end of the eighteenth century. As a rule, when such
things are taught the present is omitted, because for certain reasons
this is thought to be a good thing to do. People must not be told too
clearly what one thinks about the present time; they learn about this
more through suggestion.
Thus, in the course of time in the North, under the rule of the
wet-nurse, the guardian, and so on, the present mature condition
grew. This bears within it the germ of rendering Britain the ruling
nation of the fifth post-Atlantean period, in the same way as were
not only the Romans but also the Roman element in the form of the
Papacy, which was derived from them. So, according to this doctrine,
while the remains of the Latin element crumble away from the human
race, a new fruitful element expands from the factor in which lives
the British element. Now it is hinted that all external actions and
measures which are to serve any purpose and be fruitful, must be made
under the sign of these views. Anything that is undertaken without
these views, anything that does not take into account that the Latin
element is in decline and the British element ascending, is doomed to
wither. Of course such things may be undertaken, say these people,
but they are condemned to remain meaningless, they will not grow. It
is like sowing seeds in the wrong soil.
In the doctrine I have sketched for you we have a foundation which
seeped into all the brotherhoods, even the more esoteric ones —
those who worked in the West as so-called high grade Freemasons and
suchlike. These things were insinuated into public affairs by people
who had either close or loose connections with these brotherhoods,
often in such a veiled way that those concerned had no idea how they
had come by their knowledge. Particularly since the sixteenth century
these things have been carried from the West into much that can be
experienced in human evolution.
Other things are also taught. It is said: Just as those people in
the North during the time of the Roman element were preparing
themselves to be the fifth sub-race, so today, in a similar way, the
Slav people are coming towards the West as the developing sixth
sub-race; in the same way the Germanic peoples came out of the North
to meet the Roman element. Thus it is said that living in the East,
under a despotic rule that is doomed to destruction, are a number of
individual peoples who, like the Germanic peoples when the Roman
Empire started to spread northwards, are not yet nations as such but
still tribal peoples. These tribal peoples constitute the separate
elements of the so-called Slav people, which for the moment is only
held together in an external way by a despotic government which is to
be swept away. I am using the terms which are customary within these
secret brotherhoods.
After saying so many positive things about the Slavs, let me just
add in parentheses: It is true that these peoples are still tribal in
a certain way. This became evident at the Slav Congress in Prague in
1848. Each group wanted to speak in their own language, but this
proved impossible because they were then incomprehensible to the
others; so they were forced to use standard German instead. I do not
say this to amuse you but in order to show that what is taught in the
West about the Slavs does have a certain basis of truth.
It is said further in the English brotherhoods that the Poles have
evolved ahead of the other Slavs, for they have developed a
homogeneous cultural and religious life of a relatively high calibre.
The destinies of the Poles are described to some extent, but it is
then maintained that they really belong to the Russian Empire. Then
the Balkan Slavs are discussed. Of them it is said that they have
thrown off the yoke of Turkish oppression and formed themselves into
individual Slav states which, however — and this is repeated
over and over again — are destined to remain as they are only
until the next great European war. In the nineties particularly,
these brotherhoods held this great European war to be imminent, and
it was linked especially to evolutionary impulses which were to
emanate from the Balkan Slavs, born of the fact that these states,
which had come into being as a result of their disengagement from the
Turkish Empire, had to undergo a transition to new forms. Only until
the next great European war, it was said, would these Balkan Slavs
[ Note 3 ]
be able to maintain their independence. After that they
would meet with quite other destinies.
These peoples are at present, so it is taught, in their infancy.
So it is hinted that since they are the future sixth sub-race, while
the Britons are the present fifth sub-race, the Britons will have to
play a role towards them similar to that played by the Romans towards
the northern Germanic peoples, namely that of wet-nurse; to be a
wet-nurse to these peoples is their primary task. This role of
wet-nurse will cease to be necessary, it is said, at the moment when
these peoples will have reached a point when the Russian Empire no
longer exists and they have succeeded in creating their own forms out
of their own dawning intelligence. But gradually the wet-nurse must
be replaced by the guardian. This means that in the West a kind of
papacy must develop out of those who form the fifth sub-race. For
this, a strong spirituality must develop and, just as the Papacy
stood in relation to Central Europe, so a configuration will have to
come about which works comprehensively from the West over towards the
East. This must result in the East being used as a place where
certain institutions can be created in a manner similar to that in
which the Papacy created its institutions in Europe.
Of course we have now progressed by one sub-race. The Papacy
created churches and religious communities of all sorts. But now the
western ‘papacy’, which is to develop out of the British
element, will have the task of carrying out certain quite definite
economic experiments, that is, of instituting a certain form of
economic society of a socialist nature which, it is assumed, cannot
be founded in the West because there the fifth and not the sixth
sub-race has its being. The East, experimentally at first, must be
used for such experiments for the future. Political, cultural and
economic experiments must be carried out.
Of course these people are not so stupid as to maintain that the
dominance of the West will last forever, for no serious student of
spiritual matters would believe that. But they are quite clear about
the fact that just as at first the services of the wet-nurse were
offered, so must these be metamorphosed into the role of the guardian
— in other words a kind of future ‘papacy’ on the
part of western culture.
I have been reporting, my dear friends! These things are buried
deeply in the teachings of western Freemasonry and it is a matter of
recognizing whether the ones I have mentioned, which are very
influential, are really justified as being for the good of mankind in
general in its evolution, or whether it is necessary to think of them
as needing correction in some way. This is what we are concerned
with. We shall return to all this again.
Now I want to point out that certain stages of evolution are
really not mere fantasy, but that the more deeply one enters into the
real facts, the more does it become possible to prove in the external
world what was found at first by spiritual means. External science,
even today, is occupied with the search for theories which prove that
evolution takes place in stages which follow one another. That there
is really something correct in what the spiritual scientist says can
today be confirmed in some of the symptoms of ordinary science, if
only one has the good will to search for them.
Let me mention in this connection something of which I have
repeatedly spoken already. Although external culture cannot
comprehend these things there is, in spiritual development, something
which is expressed in laws which are as definite as the laws of
nature. I once drew your attention to a linguistic law. Human
evolution from the fourth post-Atlantean period up to the present
shows that Greek and Latin represent a particular stage of linguistic
development; the next stage was then Gothic, and the one after that
New High German. Evolution takes place here in a perfectly regular
manner. I can only sketch this for you, but these things follow laws
which are every bit as absolute as those of nature, and exceptions
merely seem to be so.
The sound D in Greek or Latin is transmuted into T and this again
into Th which, because of certain language laws, can also be Z. A
Greek Th or Z becomes a Gothic D, and this becomes T in New High
German. A Gothic Th or Z becomes a New High German T, and so the
circle continues. Similarly, a Graeco-Roman B becomes a Gothic P, and
this in turn a New High German F or Pf. A Greek F or Pf would be a
Gothic B and a New High German P. There is another circle which goes
from G to K to Ch. Take for example treis, three, drei: T / Greek; Th
/ Gothic; D / New High German. This is so in every case and
exceptions can be explained by special laws which complement the main
laws.
We have three stages, one above the other: Greek-Latin, Gothic
— which corresponds to the time when the Roman Empire was
coming up against the Germanic tribes — and the further stage
of New High German. The strange thing is, as I have said before, that
English has remained behind at the Gothic stage. So if you want to
find the English for a New High German word, you have to go back a
stage. Take ‘Tag’; to find the English for this you have
to go, not forwards, but backwards: ‘day’. Take
‘tief’; again you have to go backwards to
‘deep’; take New High German ‘zehn’; if you
want the English you have to go backwards: ‘ten’. Take
‘Zahn’; you have to go backwards if you want the English:
‘tooth’; take ‘Dieb’, here too you have to go
backwards: ‘thief’. New High German ‘dick’,
if you go backwards, becomes ‘thick’. So, to go from New
High German to English, the direction is opposite to the normal.
So we can say quite objectively: If we seek to find the evolution
of language as a folk element in respect of English, we have to go
back to the Gothic stage. New High German has risen in evolution to
become a special element. This is not said out of any patriotic or
nationalistic feeling but simply because it is true, just as there is
no need to say the polar bear is white out of any sympathy or
antipathy for him. The law I have demonstrated to you is a well-known
linguistic law, Grimm's law. I have only demonstrated it with
regard to some voiced and unvoiced plosives and some aspirated
sounds, but it can be done for the whole system of sounds.
[ Note 4 ]
The evolution of language proceeds in accordance with strict laws
and it corresponds to the impulses that rule in human evolution.
Little by little natural science discovers these things, though
sometimes only sporadically. In spiritual science you may find the
deeper foundations for all these things.
We shall come to other aspects of spiritual and cultural life
which will show that what applies to the realm of language holds sway
in other fields as well. Something unconscious, when it is brought to
light, bears witness to objective laws. This cannot be turned and
twisted according to sympathy or antipathy!
Do not imagine that this Grimm's law on sound-shifts is
unknown to those secret brotherhoods of whom we have spoken. Tomorrow
we shall see how they come to terms with such matters and how they
have relevant things to say about them too. What they have to say is
not foolish but perfectly in keeping with a certain kind of
occultism. It will be up to you to decide, when you know more about
it, how you want to judge it and whether it is something legitimate
or not. Through the karma of human evolution it will come about that
certain things are made more easily accessible to the public at
large, in particular as a result of the circumstance that a certain
amount of confusion has entered into the Masonic orders. Because of
these circumstances a variety of things are coming to light for the
outside world. We, however, want to understand, above all, the deeper
foundations of all this.
Some quite bizarre symptoms are indeed coming to light. For
instance there exists today an interesting dissertation
[ Note 5 ]
by a man who met his death — this too is a remarkable karmic
circumstance — on the battlefield of the present war. It is
about the parallelism that exists between French politics and French
secret societies, and it shows how the two run entirely parallel, how
the same forces live in both. Much more intimate and concealed are
the circumstances of English politics which are totally under the
influence of what lies hidden behind them in this way. Here the main
concern is to find ways of placing suitable people in the right
places. The people in the background who are involved in occult
manipulations are often like a number one; they do not amount to much
on their own. They need something else: a nought. Noughts are not
ones, but the two together make ten. If more noughts are added, so
long as there is a one somewhere as well, a great deal can result
— for instance a thousand — though every nought remains a
nought. And if the one remains hidden, then only the noughts are
visible. So the aim is to combine the noughts in a suitable way with
the ones, whereby the noughts have no need to know much about the way
in which they are combined with the ones.
There is, for instance, a certain man who is a perfectly honest
fellow. I have often said that I in no way look on him as the wicked
ogre — for which many in Central Europe want to take him. I
think he is an honest, nice man who, in his own way, longs to speak
the truth. Yet this does not prevent him from being a nought. This
man's education began at Winchester public school, whence he
proceeded to Balliol College, Oxford. Then he won something very
important, the Marlylebone Cricket Prize, followed by the Queen Anne
Tennis Prize. At the age of twenty-three he became a member of
parliament. At that age one is susceptible to all kinds of
influences. At thirty he became Secretary of State for Foreign
Affairs. He had long been Foreign Minister when he set foot outside
England for the first time in order to accompany the King of England
on a journey to Africa. He also wrote a little book on angling entitled
Fly Fishing.
Sir Edward Grey then ascended the social ladder before sinking into
obscurity. A fellow student at Oxford, ten years his senior, was Asquith,
[ Note 6 ]
with whom he spent his years there.
This is how those appear who are the visible accomplices. We shall
proceed thus far today and carry on tomorrow.
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