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LECTURE ELEVEN
Dornach, 26 December 1916
Yesterday I told you the story of Gerhard the Good — which most
of you probably know — so that today we can illustrate various
points in our endeavour to increase our understanding of the matters
we are discussing. But before I interpret parts of this story for
you, in so far as this is necessary, we must also recall a number of
other things we have touched on at various times during these
lectures. From what has been said over the past few weeks you will
have seen that the painful events of today are connected with
impulses living in the more recent karma of mankind, namely, the
karma of the whole fifth post-Atlantean period. For those who want to
go more deeply into these matters it is necessary to link external
events with what is happening more inwardly, which can only be
understood against the background of human evolution as seen by
spiritual science.
To begin with, take at face value certain facts which I have
pointed out a number of times. I have frequently said that, in the
middle of the nineteenth century, an endeavour was made to draw the
attention of modern mankind to the fact that there exist in the
universe not only those forces and powers recognized by natural
science but also others of a spiritual kind. The endeavour was to
show that just as we take in with our eyes — or, indeed, with
all our senses — what is visible around us, so are there also
spiritual impulses around us, which people who know about such things
can bring to bear on social life — impulses which cannot be
seen with the eye but are known to a more spiritual science.
We know what path this more spiritual science took, so I need not
go over it again. Around the middle of the nineteenth century, then,
it was the concern of a certain centre to draw people's
attention to the existence, as it were, of a spiritual environment.
This had been forgotten during the age of materialism. You also know
that such things have to be tackled with caution because a certain
degree of maturity is necessary in people who take in such knowledge.
Of course, not all those can be mature who come across, or are
affected by, this knowledge in accordance with the laws of our time,
which underlie public life. But part of what must be done at such a
time can be the requirement to test whether the knowledge may yet be
revealed publicly.
Now in the middle of the nineteenth century
[ Note 1 ]
two paths were possible. One, even then, would have been what we could
describe by mentioning our anthroposophical spiritual science, namely,
to make comprehensible to human thinking what spiritual knowledge reveals
about our spiritual environment. It is a fact that this could have
been attempted at that time, in the middle of the nineteenth century,
but this path was not chosen. The reason was, in part, that those who
possessed this esoteric knowledge were prejudiced, because of
traditions that have come down from ancient times, against making
such things public. They felt that certain knowledge guarded by the
secret brotherhoods — for it was still guarded at that time
— should be kept within the circle of these brotherhoods. We
have since seen that, so long as matters are conducted in the proper
way, it is perfectly acceptable today to reveal certain things. Of
course it is unavoidable that some malicious opponents should appear,
and always will appear, in circles in which such knowledge is made
known — people who are adherents for a time because it suits
their passions and their egoism, but who then become opponents under
all sorts of guises and make trouble. Also when spiritual knowledge
is made known in a community, this can easily lead to arguments,
quarrelling and disputes, of which, however, not too much notice can
be taken, since otherwise no spiritual knowledge would ever be made
known. But, apart from these things, no harm is done if the matter is
handled in the right way.
But at that time this was not believed. So ancient prejudice won
the day and it was agreed to take another path. But, as I have often
said, this failed. It was decided to use the path of mediumistic
revelation to make people recognize the spiritual world in the same
way as they recognize the physical world. Suitable individuals were
trained to be mediums. What they then revealed through their lowered
consciousness was supposed to make people recognize the existence of
certain spiritual impulses in their environment. This was a
materialistic way of revealing the spiritual world to people. It
corresponded to some extent to the conditions of the fifth
post-Atlantean period, in so far as this is materialistic in
character.
This way of handling things began, as you know, in America in the
middle of the nineteenth century. But it soon became obvious that the
whole thing was a mistake. It had been expected that the mediums
would reveal the existence of certain elemental and nature spirits in
the environment. Instead, they all started to refer to revelations
from the kingdom of the dead. So the goal which had been set was not
reached. I have often explained that the living can only reach the
dead with an attitude which does not depend on lowering the
consciousness. You all know these things. At that time this was also
known and that is why, when the mediums began to speak of revelations
of the dead, it was realized that the whole thing was a mistake. This
had not been expected. It had been hoped that the mediums would
reveal how the nature spirits work, how one human being affects
another, what forces are at play in the social organism, and so on.
It had been hoped that people would start to recognize what forces
might be used by those who understand such things, so that people
would no longer be dependent solely on one another in the way they
are when only their sense perceptions come into play, but would be
able to work through the total human personality. This was one thing
that went wrong.
The other was that, in keeping with man's materialistic
inclinations, it soon became obvious what would have begun to happen
if the mediumistic movement had spread in the way it threatened to
do. Use would have been made of the mediums to accomplish aims which
ought only to be accomplished under the influence of natural,
sense-bound reasoning. For some individuals it would have been highly
desirable to employ a medium who could impart the means of
discovering the knowledge which such people covet. I have told you
how many letters I get from people who write: I have a lottery
ticket; or, I want to buy a lottery ticket; I need the money for an
entirely selfless purpose; could you not tell me which number will be
drawn? Obviously, if mediums had been fully trained in the techniques
of mediumship, the resulting mischief with this kind of thing would
have been infinite, quite apart from everything else. People would
have started to go to mediums to find a suitable bride or bridegroom,
and so on.
Thus it came about that, in the very quarter that had launched the
movement in order to test whether people were ready to take in
spiritual knowledge, efforts were now made to suppress the whole
affair. What had been feared in bygone times, when the abilities of
the fourth post-Atlantean period still worked in people, had indeed
now come to pass. In those days witches were burnt, simply because
those people called witches were really no more than mediums, and
because their connections with the spiritual world — though of
a materialistic nature — might cause knowledge to be revealed
which would have been very awkward for certain people. Thus, for
instance it might have been very awkward for certain brotherhoods if,
before being burnt at the stake, a witch had revealed what lay behind
them. For it is true that when consciousness is lowered there can be
a kind of telephone connection with the spiritual world, and that by
this route all sorts of secrets can come out. Those who burnt the
witches did so for a very good reason: It could have been very
awkward for them if the witches had revealed anything to the world,
whether in a good or a bad sense, but especially in a bad sense.
So the attempt to test the cultural maturity of mankind by means
of mediums had gone awry. This was realized even by those who, led
astray by the old rules of silence and by the materialistic
tendencies of the nineteenth century, had set this attempt in train.
You know, of course, that the activities of mediums have not been
entirely curtailed, and that they still exist, even today. But the
art of training mediums to a level at which their revelations could
become significant has, so to speak, been withdrawn. By this
withdrawal the capabilities of mediums have been made more or less
harmless. In recent decades, as you know, the pronouncements of
mediums have come to amount to not much more than sentimental
twaddle. The only surprising thing is that people set so much store
by them. But the door to the spiritual world had been opened to some
degree and, moreover, this had been done in a manner which was
untimely and a mistake.
In this period came the birth and work of Blavatsky.
[ Note 2 ]
You might think that the birth of a person is insignificant, but this
would be a judgement based on maya. Now the important thing is that
this whole undertaking had to be discussed among the brotherhoods, so
that much was said and brought into the open within the brotherhoods.
But the nineteenth century was no longer like earlier centuries in
which many methods had existed for keeping secret those things which
had to be kept secret. Thus it happened that, at a certain moment, a
member of one of the secret brotherhoods, who intended to make use in
a one-sided way of what he learnt within these brotherhoods,
approached Blavatsky. Apart from her other capacities Blavatsky was
an extremely gifted medium, and this person induced her to act as a
connecting link for machinations
[ Note 3 ]
which were no longer as
honest as the earlier ones. The first, as we have seen, were honest
but mistaken. Up to this point the attempt to test people's
receptivity had been perfectly honest, though mistaken. Now, however,
came the treachery of a member of an American secret brotherhood. His
purpose was to make one-sided use of what he knew, with the help of
someone with psychic gifts, such as Blavatsky. Let us first look at
what actually took place. When Blavatsky heard what the member of the
brotherhood had to say, she, of course, reacted inwardly to his words
because she was psychic. She understood a great deal more about the
matter than the one who was giving her the information. The ancient
knowledge formulated in the traditional way lit up in her soul a
significant understanding which she could hardly have achieved solely
with her own resources. Inner experiences were stimulated in her soul
by the ancient formulations which stemmed from the days of atavistic
clairvoyance and which were preserved in the secret brotherhoods,
often without much understanding for their meaning on the part of the
members. These inner experiences led in her to the birth of a large
body of knowledge. She knew, of course, that this knowledge must be
significant for the present evolution of mankind, and also that by
taking the appropriate path this knowledge could be utilized in a
particular way.
But Blavatsky, being the person she was, could not be expected to
make use of such lofty spiritual knowledge solely for the good of
mankind as a whole. She hit upon the idea of pursuing certain aims
which were within her understanding, having come to this point in the
manner I have described. So now she demanded to be admitted to a
certain occult brotherhood in Paris. Through this brotherhood she
would start to work. Ordinarily she would have been accepted in the
normal way, apart from the fact that it was not normal to admit a
woman; but this rule would have been waived in this case because it
was known that she was an important individuality. However, it would
not have served her purpose to be admitted merely as an ordinary
member, and so she laid down certain conditions. If these conditions
had been accepted, many subsequent events would have been very
different but, at the same time, this secret brotherhood would have
pronounced its own death sentence — that is, it would have
condemned itself to total ineffectiveness. So it refused to admit
Blavatsky. She then turned to America, where she was indeed admitted
to a secret brotherhood. In consequence, she of course acquired
extremely significant insights into the intentions of such secret
brotherhoods; not those which strive for the good of mankind as a
whole, disregarding any conflicting wishes, but those whose purposes
are one-sided and serve certain groups only. But it was not in
Blavatsky's nature to work in the way these brotherhoods
wished. So it came about that, under the influence of what was termed
an attack on the Constitution of North America, she was excluded from
this brotherhood.
So now she was excluded. But of course she was not a person who
would be likely to take this lying down. Instead, she began to
threaten the American brotherhood with the consequences of excluding
her in this way, now that she knew so much. The American brotherhood
now found itself sitting under the sword of Damocles, for if, as a
result of having been a member, Blavatsky had told the world what she
knew, this would have spelt its death sentence. The consequence was
that American and European occultists joined forces in order to
inflict on Blavatsky a condition known as occult imprisonment.
Through certain machinations a sphere of Imaginations is called forth
in a soul which brings about a dimming of what that soul previously
knew, thus making it virtually ineffective. It is a procedure which
honest occultists never apply, and even dishonest ones only very
rarely, but it was applied on that occasion in order to save the life
— that is the effectiveness, of that secret brotherhood.
For years Blavatsky existed in this occult imprisonment, until
certain Indian occultists started to take an interest in her because
they wanted to work against that American brotherhood. As you see, we
keep coming up against occult streams which want to work one-sidedly.
Thus Blavatsky entered this Indian current, with which you are
familiar. The Indian brotherhood was very interested indeed in
proceeding against the American brotherhood, not because they saw
that they were not serving mankind as a whole, but because they in
turn had their own one-sided patriotically Indian viewpoint. By means
of various machinations the Indian and the American occultists
reached a kind of agreement. The Americans promised not to interfere
in what the Indians wanted to do with Blavatsky, and the Indians
engaged to remain silent on what had gone before.
You can see just how complicated these things really are when you
add to all this the fact, which I have also told you about, that a
hidden individual, a mahatma behind a mask, had been instituted in
place of Blavatsky's original teacher and guide. This figure
stood in the service of a European power and had the task of
utilizing whatever Blavatsky could do in the service of this
particular European power. One way of discovering what all this is
really about might be to ask what would have happened if one or other
of these projects had been realized.
Time is too short to tell you everything today, but let us pick
out a few aspects. We can always come back to these things again
soon.
Supposing Blavatsky had succeeded in gaining admission to the
occult lodge in Paris. If this had happened, she would not have come
under the influence of that individual who was honoured as a mahatma
in the Theosophical Society — although he was no such thing
— and the life of the occult lodge in Paris would have been
extinguished. A great deal behind which this same Paris lodge may be
seen to stand would not have happened, or perhaps it would have
happened in the service of a different, one-sided influence. Many
things would have taken a different course. For there was also the
intention of exterminating this Paris lodge with the help of the
psychic personality of Blavatsky. If it had been exterminated, there
would have been nothing behind all those people who have contributed
to history, more or less like marionettes. People like Silvagni,
Durante, Sergi, Cecconi, Lombroso and all his relations,
[ Note 4 ]
and many others would have had no occult backers behind them. Many a
door, many a kind of sliding door, would have remained locked.
You will understand that this is meant symbolically. In certain
countries editorial offices — I mean this as a picture! —
have a respectable door and a sliding door. Through the respectable
door you enter the office and through the sliding door you enter some
secret brotherhood or other working, as I have variously indicated
over the last few days, to achieve results of the kind about which we
have spoken. So the intention was to abolish something from the world
which would have done away with, at least, one stream which we have
seen working in our present time. Signor d'Annunzio would not
have given the speech we quoted.
Perhaps another would have been given instead, pushing things in a
different direction. But you see that the moment things are not fully
under control, the moment people are pushed about through a dimming
of their consciousness, and when occultism is being used, not for the
general good of mankind — and above all, in our time, not with
true knowledge — but for the purpose of achieving one-sided
aims, then matters can come to look very grave indeed.
Anyway, the members of this lodge were, from the standpoint of the
lodge, astute enough not to enter into a discussion of these things.
Later on, certain matters were hushed up, obscured, by the fact that
Blavatsky was prevented by her occult imprisonment from publicizing
the impulses of that American lodge and giving them her own slant,
which she would doubtless otherwise have done. Once all these things
had run their course, the only one to benefit from Blavatsky was the
Indian brotherhood. There is considerable significance for the
present time in the fact that a certain sum of occult knowledge has
entered the world one-sidedly, with an Indian colouring. This
knowledge has entered the world; it now exists. But the world has
remained more or less unconscious of it because of the paralysis I
have described.
Those who reckon with such things always count on long stretches
of time. They prepare things and leave them to develop. These are not
individuals, but brotherhoods in which the successor takes over from
the predecessor and carries on in a similar direction with what has
been started.
On the basis of the two examples I have given you, of occult
lodges, you can see that much depended on the actual impulses not
being made public. I do not wish to be misunderstood and I therefore
stated expressly that the first attempt I described to you was
founded on a certain degree of honesty. But it is extremely difficult
for people to be entirely objective as regards mankind as a whole.
There is little inclination for this nowadays. People are so easily
led astray by the group instinct that they are not objective as
regards mankind as a whole but pay homage to one group or another,
enjoying the feeling of ‘belonging.’ But this is
something that is no longer really relevant to the point we have
reached in human evolution. The requirement of the present moment is
that we should, at least to some degree, feel ourselves to be
individuals and extricate ourselves, at least inwardly, from group
things, so that we belong to mankind as human individuals. Even
though, at present, we are shown so grotesquely how impossible this
is for some people, it is nevertheless a requirement of our time.
For example, let me refer to what I said here a few days ago. A
nation as a whole is an individuality of a kind which cannot be
compared with human individualities, who live here on the physical
plane and then go through their development between death and a new
birth. Nations are individualities of quite a different kind. As you
can see from everything we find in our anthroposophical spiritual
science, a folk spirit, a folk soul, is something different from the
soul of an individual human being. It is nonsense to speak in a
materialistic sense, as is done today, of the soul of a nation while
at the back of one's mind thinking of something resembling the
soul of an individual — even though one, of course, does not
admit this to oneself. Thus you hear people speak of ‘the
French soul’; this has been repeatedly said in recent years. It
is nonsense, plain nonsense, because it is an analogy taken from the
individual human soul and applied to the folk soul. You can only
speak of the folk soul if you take into account the complex totality
described in the lecture cycle on the different folk spirits.
[ Note 5 ]
But to speak in any other sense about the folk soul is utter
nonsense, even though many, including journalists, do so — and
they may be forgiven, for they do not know what they are talking
about. It is mere verbosity to speak — as has been done —
for instance of the ‘Celtic soul and the Latin spirit’.
[ Note 6 ]
Maybe such a thing is just about acceptable as an analogy,
but there is no reality in. We must be clear about the meaning of the
Mystery of Golgotha. So often have we said that the Mystery of
Golgotha was accomplished in such a way that what has been united
with earth evolution ever since is there for all mankind, but that if
an individual speaks of a mystical Christ within him, this is no more
than idle talk. The Mystery of Golgotha is an objective reality, as
you know from much that has been said here. It took place for mankind
as a whole, which means for every individual human being. Christ died
for all human beings, as a human being for human beings, not for any
other kind of being. It is possible to speak about a Christian, about
one whose attitude of mind is Christian, but it is complete nonsense
to talk of a Christian nation. There is no reality in this. Christ
did not die for nations, nations are not the individualities for whom
He died. An individual who is close to the Being of the Mystery of
Golgotha can be a Christian, but it is not possible to speak of a
Christian nation. The true soul of a nation, its folk soul, belongs
to planes on which the Mystery of Golgotha did not
take place. So any dealings and actions between nations can never be
interpreted or commented upon in a Christian sense.
I am pointing out these things simply because it is necessary that
you in particular, my dear friends, should understand just how
important it is today to arrive at clear-cut concepts. This can only
be done by applying spiritual science, and yet mankind as a whole
strives to fish in muddy waters with concepts that are utterly
nonsensical and obscure. So the important thing is, above all, to
arrive at clear-cut concepts, to see everything in relation to
clear-cut concepts, and also to understand that in our time certain
occult, spiritual impulses have been working, chiefly through human
beings. This is fitting for the fifth post-Atlantean period.
Now if Blavatsky had been able to speak out at that time, certain
secrets would have been revealed, secrets I have mentioned as
belonging to certain secret brotherhoods and connected with the
striving of a widespread network of groups. I said to you earlier
that definite laws underlie the rise and evolution of peoples, of
nations. These laws are usually unknown in the external, physical
world. This is right and proper, for in the first place they ought to
be recognized solely by those who desire to receive them with clean
hands. What now underlies the terrible trials mankind is undergoing
at present and will undergo in the future is the interference in a
one-sided way, by certain modern brotherhoods, with the spiritual
forces that pulse through human evolution in the region in which, for
instance, nations, peoples, come into being. Evolution progresses in
accordance with definite laws; it is regular and comes about through
certain forces. But human beings interfere, in some part
unconsciously, though if they are members of secret brotherhoods,
then they do so consciously.
To be able to judge these things you need what yesterday I called
a wider horizon; you need the acquisition of a wider horizon. I
showed you the forces of which Blavatsky became the plaything, in
order to point out how such a plaything can be tossed about, from
West to East, from America to India. This is because forces are at
work which are being managed by human beings for certain ends, by
means of utilizing the passions and feelings of nationality, which
have, however, in their turn first been manufactured. This is most
important. It is important to develop an eye for the way in which a
person who, because of the type of passions in her — in
her blood — can be put in a certain position and be brought
under the sway of certain influences. Equally, those who do this must
know that certain things can be achieved, depending on the position
in which the person is placed. Many attempts fail. But account is
taken of long periods of time and of many possibilities. Above all,
account is taken of how little inclination people have to pay
attention to the wider — the widest, contexts.
Let us stop here and turn to yesterday's story. It tells us
about the time around the tenth century, when the constitution of
souls was still that of the fourth post-Atlantean period. We saw how
the spiritual world intervened in the life of Emperor Otto of the Red
Beard. His whole life is transformed because the spiritual world
makes him aware of Gerhard the Good. From Gerhard the Good he is to
learn the fear of God, true piety, and that one must not expect
— for largely egoistic reasons — a blessing from heaven
for one's earthly deeds. So he is told by the spiritual world
to seek out Gerhard the Good. This is the one side: what plays in
from the spiritual world.
Those who know that age — not as it is described by external
history, but as it really was — are aware that the spiritual
world did indeed play in through real visions such as that described
in connection with Emperor Otto the Red, and that spiritual impulses
definitely played a meaningful part. The one who wrote down this
story says expressly that in his youth he had also written many other
stories, as had other contemporaries of his. The man who wrote down
the story of Gerhard the Good was Rudolf von Ems, an approximate
contemporary of Wolfram von Eschenbach.
[ Note 7 ]
He said he had
written other stories as well but that he had destroyed them because
they had been fairy tales. Yet he does not consider this story to be
a fairy tale but strictly historical, even though externally it is
not historical — that is it would not be included in
today's history books which only take physical maya into
account. In the way he tells it, it cannot be compared with external,
purely physical history; and yet his telling is more true than purely
physical history can be for, on the whole, that is only maya. He
tells the story for the fourth post-Atlantean period.
You know, for I have repeatedly said this, that I am not taking
sides in any way but simply reporting facts which are to provide a
basis on which judgements may be formed. Only those who do not wish
to be objective will maintain that what I shall attempt to say is not
objective. Someone who does not wish to be objective cannot, of
course, be expected to find objectivity in what is, in fact,
objective. The fact that the spiritual world plays into human affairs
is not the only important aspect of the story of Gerhard the Good. It
is also significant that a leading personality receives from the
spiritual world the impulse to turn to a member of the commercial
world, the world of the merchant. It is indeed a historical fact
that, in Central Europe, at that time the members of the ruling
dynasty to which Otto the Red belonged did start to patronize the
merchant classes in the towns. In Europe this was the time of the
growth of commerce.
We should further take into account that at that time there were
as yet no ocean routes between Orient and Occident. Trade routes were
definitely still overland routes. Merchants such as Gerhard the Good
who, as you know, lived in Cologne, carried their trade overland from
Cologne to the Orient and back again. Any use of ships was quite
insignificant. The trade routes were land routes. Shipping
connections were not much more than attempts to achieve with the
primitive ships of those days what was being done much more
efficiently by land. So in the main the trade routes were overland,
while shipping was only just beginning. That is what is
characteristic of this time, for comprehensive shipping operations
only came much later.
We have here a contrast arising out of the very nature of things.
So long as Orient and Occident were connected by land routes, it was
perfectly natural that the countries of Central Europe should take
the lead. Life in these Central European countries was shaped
accordingly. Much spiritual culture also travelled along these
routes. It was quite different from what came later. As the centuries
proceeded, the land routes were supplanted by ocean routes. As you
know, England gradually took control of all the ocean connections
which others had opened up. Spain, Holland and France were all
conquered as far as their sea-faring capacities were concerned, so
that in the end everything was held under the mighty dominance which
encompassed a quarter of the earth's dry land, and gradually
also all the earth's oceans.
You can see how systematic is this conquering, this almost
exterminating, of other seafaring powers when you remember how I told
you some time ago that in the secret brotherhoods, especially those
which grew so powerful from the time of James I
[ Note 8 ]
onwards, it was taught as an obvious truth that the Anglo-Saxon race
— as they put it — will have to be given dominance over
the world in the fifth post-Atlantean period. You will see how systematic
the historical process has been when you consider what I have also
mentioned and what was also taught: that this fifth post-Atlantean
race of the English-speaking peoples will have to overcome the
peoples of the Latin race.
To start with, the main thing is the interrelation between the
English-speaking peoples and those whose languages are Latin in
origin. Recent history cannot be understood without the realization
that the important aim — which is also what is being striven
for — is for world affairs to be arranged in such a way that
the English-speaking peoples are favoured, while the influence of any
peoples whose language is based on Latin fades out. Under certain
circumstances something can be made to fade out by treating it
favourably for a while, thus gaining power over it. This can then
make it easy to engulf it.
In those secret brotherhoods, about which I have spoken so often,
little significance is attached to Central Europe, for they are
clever enough to realize that Germany, for instance, owns only one
thirty-third of the earth's land surface. This is very little
indeed, compared with a whole quarter of the land surface plus
dominance over the high seas. So not much importance is attached to
Central Europe. A great deal of importance was attached, however
— especially during the period when present events were being
prepared — to the overcoming of all those impulses connected
with the Latin races.
It is remarkable how short-sighted the modern historical view is
and how little inclination there is to go more deeply into matters
which are quite characteristic of situations. I have already pointed
out that what has so long been practised as a pragmatic view of
history is not important, reporting as it does on one event, followed
by another, and another, and yet another. What is important is to
recognize the facts characterized by the many interrelationships in
the events which follow one another. What matters is to point out
what is characteristic about the facts, namely, what reveals the
forces lying behind maya. Pragmatic history must today give way to a
history of symptoms.
[ Note 9 ]
Those who see through things in this way will be in a position to
form judgements about certain events which differ considerably from
those of people who reel off the events of world history — this
fable convenue
— one after the other, as is done in historical science today. Consider
some of the things you know well in connection with some others about
which I shall tell you. First of all, a simple fact: In 1618 the
Thirty Years War began because certain ideas of a reformative kind
developed within the Czech Slav element. Then certain aristocrats
belonging to these Slav circles took up the movement and rebelled
against what might be called the Counter-Reformation, namely, the
Catholicism from Spain which was favoured by the Habsburgs. The first
thing usually told about the Thirty Years War is the story of the
rebels going to the town hall in Prague and throwing the councillors
Martinitz and Slavata and the secretary Fabrizius out of the window.
Yet this is quite insignificant. The only interesting point is perhaps
that the three gentlemen did not hurt themselves because they fell onto
a dunghill. These are not things which can bring the Thirty Years' War
[ Note 10 ]
to life for us or show us its real causes.
The reformative party elected Frederick, Elector Palatine of the
Rhine, as counter-King of Bohemia in 1619. Then followed, as you
know, the battle of the White Mountain.
[ Note 11 ]
Up to the election of the Elector Palatine, all the events were caused
by the passionate feelings of these people for a reform movement, by a
rebellion against arbitrary acts of power such as the closure or
destruction of Protestant churches at Braunau and Kloster Grab. There
is not enough time for me to tell you the whole story. But now think:
Frederick, Elector Palatine of the Rhine, is elected King. Up to this
point the events are based on human passions, human enthusiasm, it is
even justified to say human idealism — I am quite happy to
concede this.
But why, of all people, was the Elector Palatine of the Rhine
chosen as King of Bohemia? It was because he was the son-in-law of
James I, who stands at the beginning of the renewal of the
brotherhoods! Here, then, we may discern an important finger in the
pie if we are trying to look at history symptomatically. Attempts
were being made to steer events in a particular direction. They
failed. But you see that there is a finger in the pie. The most
significant sign of what kind of impulses were to be brought to bear
in this situation is that the son-in-law of one of the most important
occultists, James I, was thrown into this position.
You see, the fact is that the whole of recent history has to do
with the contrast between the ancient Roman-Latin element and that
element, not of the English people — for they would get on
perfectly happily with the world — but that element which, as I
have described sufficiently, is to be made out of the English people
if they fail to put up any resistance. It is the conflict between
these two elements that is at work.
Meanwhile something else is manipulated, for a great deal can be
achieved in one place by bringing about events in another.
Let us look at a later date. You might pick up a history book and
read the history of the Seven Years War.
[ Note 12 ]
Of course the
history of this war is read just as thoughtlessly as any other. For
to understand what is really going on and investigate what forces of
history are playing a part, you have to look properly at the various
links between the different circumstances. You have to consider, for
instance, that at that time the southern part of Central Europe,
namely Austria, was linked with every aspect of the Latin element and
even had a proper alliance with France, whereas the northern part of
Middle Europe — not at first, but later on — was drawn to
what was to be made, by certain quarters, into the English-speaking,
fifth post-Atlantean race.
When you look closely at the alliances and everything else that
went on at that time — those things which were not maya, of
course — you discover a war that is in reality being waged
about North America and India between England and France. What went
on in Europe was really only a weak mirror image of this. For if you
compare everything that took place on the larger scale — do
extend your horizons! — then you will see that the conflict was
between England and France and that North America and India were
already starting to have their effect. It was a matter of which of
these two powers was cleverer and more able to direct events in such
a way that dominion over North America or India could be snatched
away from the other. At work in this were long-term future plans and
the control of important impulses. It is true: The influence snatched
by England from France in North America was won on the battle fields
of Silesia during the Seven Years' War!
Watch how the alliances shift when the situation becomes a little
awkward and difficult; watch the alliances from this point of
view!
Now, another story. It is necessary to look at these things, and
once one is not misunderstood, once it is assumed that one's
genuine purpose is to gain a clear picture of what is going on in the
world, once one strives to be objective, it will not be taken amiss
when such stories are told; instead it will be understood that our
concern is for comprehension and not for taking sides. In fact, it is
precisely those people who feel they are affected by a particular
matter who ought to be particularly glad to learn more about it. For
then they are lifted above their blindness and given sight, and
nothing is better for a person than real insight into how things work
in the world. So let us now take an example which can show you a
different side of how things work.
Through circumstances which you can look up in a history book, the
kingdoms of Hanover and England were once linked. The laws of
succession in the two countries were different — we need not go
into this in detail — and as a result of this, when Victoria
[ Note 13 ]
came to the throne of England, Hanover had to become
separate. Another member of the English royal house had to take the
throne of Hanover. The person elected, or rather the person jostled
onto the throne of Hanover was Ernst August, Duke of Cumberland,
[ Note 14 ]
who had previously been connected with the throne of
England. So this Ernst August came to the throne of Hanover at the
age of sixty-six. His character was such that, after his departure to
become the king of Hanover, the English newspapers said: Thank
goodness he's gone; let's hope he doesn't come
back! He was considered a dreadful person because of the whole way he
behaved. When you look at the impression he made on his
contemporaries and those who had dealings with him, a certain type of
character emerges which is striking for one who understands
characters of this kind. The Hanoverians could not understand him.
They found him coarse. He was indeed coarse, so coarse that the poet
Thomas Moore
[ Note 15 ]
said: He surely belonged to the dynasty of
Beelzebub. But you know the saying: The German lies if he is polite.
So they had a certain understanding for coarseness, but they did
presuppose that someone who is coarse is at least honest. Ernst
August, however, was always a liar as well as being coarse, and this
the Hanoverians could not understand. He had other similar traits as
well.
First, Ernst August repealed the Hanoverian constitution. Then he
dismissed the famous ‘seven professors’ of Göttingen
University. He had them sent straight out of the country, so that it
was not until they reached Witzenhausen, which lay beyond his
majesty's borders, that their students were permitted to take
leave of them. I need not tell you the whole story. But what is the
explanation? Those who seek no further for an explanation of this
extraordinary mask merely find Ernst August coarse and dishonest. He
even cheated Metternich, which is saying much indeed, and so on. But
there is something remarkably systematic in all this. And the
systematic aspect is not changed by the fact that he lived most of
his life up to the age of sixty-six in England, where he was an
officer of the Dragoons.
An explanation may be found in the fact that in his whole manner
he was manifesting the impulses one has when one is a member of the
so-called ‘Orange Lodge’. His whole manner was an
expression of the impulses of the Orange Lodge, of which he was a
member.
What we must do is learn to understand history symptomatically and
widen our horizons. We need to develop a sense for what is important
and what really gives insight. So I told you the tale of Gerhard the
Good in order to demonstrate how, through such phenomena as the
Orange Lodge, and so on, what had been Central Europe was quite
systematically drawn over to the West. I am not uttering any
reproach, for it was a historical necessity. But one ought to know it
and not apply moral judgements to such things. What is essential is
to develop the will to see things, to see how human beings are
manipulated, to see where there might be impulses by which people are
manipulated. This is the same as striving for the sense for truth. I
have often stressed that this is not something that enables one to
say: But I really believed it, it was my honest and sincere opinion!
No indeed. One who possesses the sense for truth is one who
unremittingly strives to find the truth of the matter, one who never
ceases to seek the truth and who takes responsibility for himself
even when he says something untrue out of ignorance. For,
objectively, it is irrelevant whether something wrong is said
knowingly or unknowingly. Similarly it is irrelevant whether you hold
your finger in the candle flame through ignorance or on purpose;
either way you burn it.
At this point we must understand what happened at the transition
from the fourth post-Atlantean period-when commerce was still just
under the influence of the spiritual world, as is indicated in the
story of Gerhard the Good — to the fifth period, when
everything commercial was drawn over into the occult sphere which is
guided by the so-called ‘Brothers of the Shadow’. These
brotherhoods guard certain principles. From their point of view it
would be extremely dangerous if these principles should be betrayed.
That is why they were so careful to prevent Blavatsky from making
them public or causing them to pass over into other hands. They were,
in fact, to be passed over from the West to the East; not to India
but to the East of Russia.
Someone with a sense for what lies behind maya can understand that
external institutions and external measures can have differing
values, differing degrees of importance in the total context.
Consider an incident in recent history. I have told you so many
occult, spiritual things that I have, in a way, ‘done my
time’ and am now free to go on and give you some indications
out of more recent history. No one should say that I am taking this
time away from that devoted to occult matters; these things are also
important.
So let us take an example from more recent history. In 1909 a
meeting was arranged between the King of Italy and the Tsar of
Russia. So far there had not been much love lost between these two
representatives, but from then on it was considered a good thing to
manoeuvre them into each other's company. So the meeting at Racconigi
[ Note 16 ]
took place. It was not easy to arrange. In the
description of all the measures he had to take to prevent
‘incidents of an assassinatory nature’ you can read how
difficult it was for poor Giolitti, who was Prime Minister at the time.
Then there was the question of finding a suitable personage who
would pay Rome's homage to the Tsar. This had to be a personage
of a particular kind. Such things have to be prepared well in advance
so that when the right moment arrives they can be set in train on the
spot. For a really ‘juicy’ effect to be achieved, not
just any personage would do for the purpose of paying Rome's
homage to the Tsar — the homage of the Latin West to the
self-styled Slav East. It would have to be a special personage, even
one who might not easily be persuaded to undertake this task. Now
‘by chance’, as the materialists would say, but
‘not by chance’, as those who are not materialists would
say, a certain Signor Nathan
[ Note 17 ]
— what a very Italian
name! — was at that time the mayor of Rome. For many reasons
his attitude was rather democratic and not at all one that would make
him inclined to pay homage to the Tsar, of all people. He had only
taken Italian citizenship shortly before becoming mayor of Rome.
Before that he had been an English citizen. The fact that he was of
mixed blood should be taken into account; he was the son of a German
mother and had assumed the name of Nathan because his father was the
famous Italian revolutionary Mazzini.
[ Note 18 ]
This is a fact.
So persuading him to pay homage to the Tsar made it possible to
say: See how thoroughly democracy has been converted. Here was
someone who was not an ordinary person but one who had been anointed
with all the oils of democracy, but — also someone who had been
well prepared. From that moment onwards certain things start to
become embarrassing. Today it is known, for example, that from that
moment onwards all the correspondence within the Triple Alliance was
promptly reported to St Petersburg! Human passions also played some
part in the matter, since a special role was carried out in this
reporting by a lady who had found a ‘sisterly’ route
[ Note 19 ]
between Rome and St Petersburg. Such things can obviously
be ascribed to coincidence. But those who want to see beyond maya
will not ascribe them to coincidence but will seek the deeper
connections between them. Then, when one seeks these deeper
connections, one is no longer capable of lying as much, is no longer
capable of deceiving people in order to distract them from the truth,
which is what matters.
For instance — I am saying this in order to describe the
truth — it would obviously have been most embarrassing for the
widest circles if people's attention had been drawn to the fact
that the whole invasion of Belgium would not have taken place if that
sentence I have already mentioned, which could have been spoken by
Lord Grey — Sir Edward Grey has now become a lord — if
that sentence had really been spoken. The whole invasion of Belgium
would not have taken place. It would have been a non-event, it would
not have happened. But instead of speaking about the real cause, in
so far as this is the cause because it could have prevented the
invasion, it was obviously more comfortable to waste people's
time by telling them about the ‘Belgian atrocities’. Yet
these, too, would not have happened if Sir Edward Grey had taken this
one, brief measure. In order to hide the simple truth something
different is needed, something that arouses justified human passions
and moral indignation. I am not saying anything against this.
Something different is needed. It is a characteristic of our
time, even today when it is particularly painful, to make every
effort to obscure the truth, to blind people to the truth.
This, too, had to be prepared carefully. Any gap in the
calculation would have made it impossible. The whole of the
periphery, which had prudently been created for this very purpose,
was needed.
But these things were very carefully prepared, both politically
and culturally. Every possibility was reckoned with; and this was
certainly necessary, since the most unbelievable carelessness
sometimes prevailed, even in places where such a thing would be least
expected. Let me give you an example, an objective fact, which will
allow us to study this carelessness.
At one time Bismarck had a connection with a certain Usedom
[ Note 20 ]
in Florence and Turin. I have told you before: Modern Italy came
into being by roundabout means and actually owes her existence to
Germany; but this is connected with all sorts of other things. What I
am saying has profound foundations, and in politics all sorts of
threads interweave. Thus at one time threads were woven which were to
win over the Italian republicans. In short, at a certain time one
such link existed between Bismarck and Usedom in Florence and Turin.
Usedom was a friend of Mazzini and of others who enjoyed a certain
prominence in nationalistic circles. Usedom was a man who posed very
much as a wise person. He employed as his personal secretary somebody
who was supposed to be a follower of Mazzini. Later it turned out
that this personal secretary, of whom it had been said that he was
initiated into Mazzini's secret societies, was nothing but an
ordinary spy. Bismarck tells this tale quite naively and then adds,
as an excuse for having been so mistaken: But Usedom was a high-grade
Freemason. Many things could be told in this way and often it would
turn out that those involved are totally innocent because the ones
who pull the strings remain in the background.
You cannot maintain that there is no point in asking why such
things are permitted to happen by the wise guides of world evolution
— why human beings are, to a large degree, abandoned to such
machinations, by making the excuse that there is no way of getting to
the bottom of these things. For, indeed, if one only seeks them
honestly, there are many ways of finding out what is going on. But we
see, even in our own Society, how much resistance is put up by
individuals when there is a question of following the simple path of
truth. We see how many things which should be taken objectively in
pursuit of knowledge, when they would best serve the good of mankind,
are instead taken subjectively and personally. There are — are
there not? — within our Society groups who have studied very
attentively an essay
[ Note 21 ]
of, I believe, 287 pages which they
have taken utterly seriously and about which they are still puzzling,
as to whether the writer — who is well enough known to us
— might be right. In short, within our own circles we may
sometimes discover why it is so difficult to see through things. Yet
it is, in fact, not at all difficult to see through things if only
one strives honestly for the truth. For years so much has been said
within our Society. If you were to bring together all that has been
said since 1902 you would see that it contains much that could help
us to see through a great deal that is going on in the world. Yet our
anthroposophical spiritual science has never been presented as
belonging to a secret society. Indeed the most important things have
always been dealt with in public lectures open to anybody. This is a
contrast which should be noted.
I might as well say now: If certain streams within our
Anthroposophical Society continue to exist and if, for the sake of
human vanity, they continue to interpret to their own advantage
certain things which have been said behind closed doors — for
no more reason than one would exclude first-year students in a
university from what is told to those in their second year —
then, eventually there will be nothing esoteric left. If things are
not taken perfectly naturally, if people continue to stand up and
say: This is secret, that is very esoteric, this is occult, and I am
not allowed to speak about this! — if this policy continues to
be followed by certain streams in our Society, if they continually
fail to understand that any degree of vanity must stop, then
everything mankind must be told about today will have to be discussed
in public. Whether it is possible to make known certain things,
the needs of the moment will tell. But the Anthroposophical Society
is only meaningful if it is a ‘society’, that is, if each
individual is concerned to make a stand against vanity, against folly
and vanity and everything else which clothes things in false veils of
mysticism, serving only to puzzle other people and make them
spiteful. The mysteriousness of certain secret brotherhoods has
nothing to do with our Society, for we must be concerned solely with
bringing about what is needed for the good of mankind. As I have
often said, our enemies will become more and more numerous. Perhaps
we shall discover what our enemies are made of by the manner in which
they quarrel with us. So far we have had no honest opponents worth
mentioning. They would, in effect, only be to our advantage! The kind
of opposition we have met hitherto is perfectly obvious through their
ways and means of operation. We might as well wait patiently to
discover whether further opponents will be from within our circle, as
is frequently the case, or from elsewhere! I have just had news of
opposition from one quarter which will empty itself over us like a
cold shower. A forthcoming book has been announced during some lectures.
[ Note 22 ]
The author, a conceited fellow, has never
belonged to our Society but has been entertaining the world with all
sorts of double egos and such like. He has now used the opportunity
of the various national hatreds and passions to mount an attack on
our Anthroposophy of a kind which shows that his hands are not
clean.
So we must not lose sight of these things and we must realize that
it is up to us to hold fast to the direction which will lead to truth
and knowledge. Even when we speak about current issues it must only
be in pursuit of knowledge and truth. We must look things straight in
the eye and then each individual may take up his own position in
accordance with his feelings. Every position will be understandable,
but it must be based on a foundation of truth.
This is a word which must occupy a special place in our soul
today. So much has taken place in our time which has puzzled people
and which should have shown them that it is necessary to strive for a
healthy judgement based on the truth. We have experienced how the
yearning for peace only had to make itself felt in the world for it
to be shouted down.
[ Note 23 ]
And we still see how people actually
get angry if peace is mentioned in one quarter or another. They are
angry, not only if one of the combatants mentions peace, but even if
it is mentioned in a neutral quarter.
It remains to be seen whether the world will be capable of
sufficient astonishment about these things. Experience so far has
been telling, to say the least. In April and May 1915 a large
territory was to have been voluntarily ceded, but the offer was
rejected so that war could be waged. Since world opinion failed to
form an even partially adequate judgement about this event, there
seems to be really nothing for it but to expect the worst. We might
as well expect the worst, because people seem bent on telling, not
the truth, but what suits their purposes. Their thinking is strange
and peculiar to a degree. Yet to tackle things properly the right
points have to be found.
Let me read you a short passage written by an Italian before the
outbreak of the present war, at a time when the Italians were
jubilant about the Tripoli conflict — which I am not
criticizing. I shall never say anything against the annexation of
Tripoli by Italy, for these things are judged differently by those
who know what is necessary and possible in the relationships between
states and nations. They do not form judgements based on lies and
express opinions steeped in all kinds of moralistic virtues. But here
we have a man, Prezzolini,
[ Note 24 ]
who writes about an Italy
which pleases him, which has evolved out of an Italy which did not
please him. He starts by describing what this Italy had come to, how
it had gone down in the world, and he then continues — directly
under the impression of the Tripoli conflict:
‘And yet, totally unaware of
this economic
risorgimento,
Italy underwent at the same time the period of depression described above.
Foreigners were the first to notice the reawakening. Some Italians
had also expressed it, but they were windbags carrying on about the
famous and infamous “primacy of Italy”. The book by
Fischer, a German, was written in 1899, and that by Bolton-King, an
Englishman, in 1901. To date no Italian has published a work
comparable to these, even to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of
“unification”. The exceptional good sense of these
foreigners is notable for, truly, outsiders have neither wanted, nor
do they now want, to know anything about modern Italy. Then, as now,
people's judgement, or rather prejudgement of Italy amounted to
saying: Italy is a land of the past, not the present; she should
“rest on her past glory” and not enter into the present.
They long for an Italy of archives, museums, hotels for honeymooners
and for the amusement of spleen and lung patients — an Italy of
organ-grinders, serenades, gondolas — full of ciceroni,
shoe-shiners, polyglots and pulcinelli. Though they are delighted to
travel nowadays in sleeping cars instead of diligences, they
nevertheless regret a little the absence of Calabrese highwaymen with
pistol and pointed velvet hat. Oh, the glorious Italian sky, defaced
by factory chimneys. Oh, la bella Napoli, defamed by steamships and
the unloading thereof; Rome filled with Italian soldiers; such regret
for the wonderful days of Papal, Bourbon and Leopoldine Rome! These
philanthropic feelings still provide the basis for every Anglo-Saxon
and German opinion about us. To show how deeply they run, remember
that they are expressed by people of high standing in other
directions, such as Gregorovius and Bourget. The Italy who reformed
herself and grew fat, the Italy who is seen to carry large banknotes
in her purse — this is the Italy who has at last gained a
proper self-confidence. We should forgive and understand her if she
now reacts by going a little further than she ought in her
enthusiasm. Ten years have hardly sufficed for the idea of the future
and strength of Italy to pass from those who first saw it, to the
populace at large who are now filled and convinced by it. It would
have been in vain had our great thinkers piled up volumes of
journals, statistical papers, philosophical works and books of modern
art.’
This is the attitude, my dear friends! ‘It would have been
in vain had our great thinkers piled up volumes of journals,
statistical papers, philosophical works and books of modern
art.’ All this would be worthless, he thinks, to raise up a
people. This modern man has no faith in the worth and working of
culture and spiritual values!
‘It would have been in vain had
our great thinkers piled up volumes of journals, statistical papers,
philosophical works and books of modern art; neither the people nor
the foreigners would ever have been convinced, at least not before
the passage of very many years.’
So this man has no confidence in creating spiritual culture in
this way.
‘A great and brutal force was
needed to smash the illusion and give every last and miserable
village square a sense of national solidarity and upward
progress.’
To what does he attribute the capacity to achieve what no
spiritual culture could produce? He says:
‘It is the war which has served
to do this.’
There you have it! This is what people believed. Tripoli was there
and it had to be there. Moreover, they also said: War is needed to
bring the nation to a point which it was not found necessary to reach
by means of spiritual culture.
Indeed, my dear friends, such things speak to us when we place
them side by side with another voice which says: We did not want this
war; we are innocent lambs who have been taken by surprise. Even from
this side comes the cry: To save freedom, to save the small nations,
we are forced to go to war. This man continues:
‘We young people born around the
year 1880 entered life in the world with the new century. Our land
had lost courage. Its intellectual life was at a low ebb.’
These were the people born
around the year 1880.
‘Philosophy: positivism.
History: sociology. Criticism: historical method, if not even
psychiatry.’
This may indeed be said in
the land of Lombroso!
‘Hot on the heels of
Italy's deliverers came Italy's parasites; not only their
sons, our fathers, but also their grandsons, our elder brothers. The
heroic tradition of risorgimento was lost; there was no idea
to fire the new generation. Among the best, religion had sunk in
estimation but had left a vacuum. For the rest it was a habit. Art
was reeling in a sensuous and aesthetic frenzy and lacked any basis
or faith. From Carducci, whom papa read to the accompaniment of a
glass of Tuscan wine and a cheap cigar, they turned to
d'Annunzio, the bible of our elder brothers, dressed according
to the latest fashion, his pockets full of sweets, a ladies'
man and vain braggart.’
Yet this marionette — of whom it is said here that he was
‘dressed according to the latest fashion, his pockets full of
sweets, a ladies' man and vain braggart’ — this
marionette had made clear to the people at Whitsuntide in 1915 that
they needed what no work of the spirit could give them!
When times are grave it is most necessary to make the effort to
look straight at the truth, to join forces with the truth. If we do
not want to recognize the truth we deviate from what may be good for
mankind. Therefore it is necessary to understand that precisely in
these times serious words need to be spoken. For we are in a position
today in which even one who is seven-eighths blind should see what is
happening when the call for peace is shouted down. Someone who
believes that you can fight for permanent peace while shouting down
the call for peace might, conceivably, hold worthwhile opinions in
some other fields; but he cannot be taken seriously with regard to
what is going on. If, now that we are faced with this, we cannot
commit ourselves to truth, then the prospects for the world are very,
very bad indeed.
It is for me truly not a pleasant task to draw attention to much
that is going on at present. But when you hear what is said on all
sides, you realize the necessity. We must not lose courage, so long
as the worst has not yet happened. But the spark of hope is tiny.
Much will depend on this tiny spark of hope over the next few days.
Much also depends on whether there are still people willing to cry
out to the world the utter absurdity of such goings on — as has
been done just now, even in the great cities of the world.
The world needs peace and will suffer great privation if peace is
not achieved. And it will suffer great privation if credence
continues to be given to those who say: We are forced to fight for
permanent peace; and if these same people continue to meet every
possibility for peace with scorn, however disguised in clever words.
But we have reached a point, my dear friends, when even a Lloyd George
[ Note 25 ]
can be taken for a great man by the widest circles! We may well say:
Things have come a very long way indeed!
Yet these things are also only trials to test mankind. They would
even be trials if what I permitted myself to express at the end of
the Christmas lecture were to happen, namely, if it were to be
recorded for all time that, in the Christmas season of the nineteen
hundred and sixteenth year after the Mystery of Golgotha, the call
for ‘peace on earth among men and women who are of good
will’ was shouted down on the most empty pretexts. If the
pretexts are not entirely empty, then they are indeed more sinister
still. If this is the case, then it will be necessary to recognize
what is really at work in this shouting down of every thought of
peace: that it is not even a question of what is said in the
periphery, but of quite other things. Then it will be understood that
it is justified to say that what happens now is crucial for the
fortune or misfortune of Europe.
I cannot go further tonight because of the lateness of the hour.
But I did want to impress these words on your heart!
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