VI
MICHAEL AND THE DRAGON
When we turn our gaze back into earlier times of human evolution, we
are inevitably struck with the change that has come about in the
pictures man makes for himself pictures, on the one hand, of
Nature, on the other hand, of Spirit. Nor do we need to go back very
far to observe the change. As late as the eighteenth century the
forces and substances of Nature were thought of in a much more
spiritual manner than they are to-day, while spiritual things were
conceived more in pictures taken from Nature. It is only in quite
recent times that men's ideas of the Spirit have become so utterly
abstract and their ideas of Nature been referred to a spirit-estranged
matter that human perception cannot hope to penetrate. For the human
understanding of the present-day Nature and Spirit fall apart, and men
can find no bridge that shall lead over from one to the other.
The consequence is that sublime world-pictures which in past times had
great significance for man as he sought to comprehend his place in the
Universal Whole have passed completely into the region of things
deemed to be no more than airy fancy mere fancy to which man
could only give himself up so long as an exact science was not there
to forbid him. Such a cosmic picture is that of Michael fighting with
the Dragon.
This picture belongs to a time when man traced back his own evolution
quite differently from the way that is taught to-day. To-day as we
follow the history of man back into primeval times, we look to find
beings less and less human, from whom the man of the present day is
descended. We pass from more spiritual to less spiritual beings. In
earlier times it was different. Then as men traced back the evolution
of mankind, it led them to more spiritual conditions of existence than
prevail to-day.
They looked back to a pre-earthly condition when the present form of
man did not as yet exist. They pictured to themselves beings in the
existence of that time who lived in a finer substance than that of
which man is composed to-day. These beings were more
spiritual than the men of to-day. Of such a nature was the
Dragon-being whom Michael fights. He was destined one day in a later
age to assume human form. But he must bide his time. The
time did not depend on him, but on the decree of Spirit-Beings who
stood above him. Until that time it was for him to remain entirely
within the will of these higher Spirit-Beings.
But now before his hour was come, pride was begotten in him. He wanted
to have an own will in a time when he should have been
still living in the higher Will. Thus did he set himself in opposition
to the higher Will. Independence of will was only possible to such
beings in a denser matter than then existed. If they persisted in
opposition, they must needs change and become different beings. This
being found it impossible any longer to live in the same spirituality.
His fellow-beings felt his existence in their realm as disturbing, nay
even destructive. Michael felt it so. Michael had remained in the Will
of the Spirit Beings. He undertook to compel the opposing being to
assume the form which was alone possible for an independent will at
that stage of the world's development, to assume that is, animal form,
the form of the Dragon, of the Serpent. Higher
animal forms had not yet made their appearance. This
Dragon was of course not even then imagined as visible,
but as supersensible.
Such was the picture the man of an earlier time had in his mind of the
fight of Michael with the Dragon. For him it was a fact that had taken
place before ever there was a Nature visible to the human eye, before
even man was, in his present form.
The world we know has proceeded from out of the world in which this
event took place. The kingdom into which the Dragon was driven has
become Nature, and is now so constituted as to be visible
to the senses; it is, as it were, in substance the deposit of the
earlier world. The kingdom in which Michael has preserved his
spirit-devoted will, has remained above purified,
like a liquid from which a substance once contained in solution has
been deposited. It is a kingdom that must still continue invisible to
the senses.
Nature however, considered apart from man, has not succumbed to the
Dragon. The power of the Dragon was not strong enough to come to
visibility in Nature. It remained in her as invisible Spirit. The
Dragon had to sunder his being from Nature. She became a mirror of the
higher spirituality from which he had fallen.
Into this world Man was set. He was able to partake in Nature and in
the higher spirituality. He became thus a kind of double being. In
Nature herself the Dragon remained powerless. In Nature as she comes
to life in man, he retains his power. The Nature man receives into
himself lives in him as desire, as animal lust. Into this sphere the
fallen spirit has entrance. And so we have the Fall of
Man.
The Adversary has found his abode in man. Michael has remained true to
his nature. When man turns to Michael with that part of his life which
has its origin in the higher spirituality, then there arises in the
soul of man the inward fight of Michael and the Dragon.
As recently as the eighteenth century such a conception was still
current. External Nature was still to many men the mirror of a higher
spirituality, Nature in man still the seat of the Serpent, which the
soul must fight through devotion to the power of Michael.
And now, when conceptions of this kind were living in a man's soul,
how must he look out upon external Nature? The time of the approach of
Autumn must needs recall the fight with the Dragon. The leaves fall
from the trees, all the flowering and fruiting life of the plants dies
away. In gentle and friendly guise did Nature receive man in Spring;
tenderly she cherished him through the long Summer days, nurturing him
with the warmth-laden gifts of the Sun. When Autumn comes, she has
nothing more to give him. Her forces of decay press in upon him,
through his senses he beholds them in pictures. From out of his own
being man must give himself what hitherto Nature has given him. Her
power grows weaker and weaker within him. From out of the Spiritual he
must create for himself forces that shall help where Nature fails. And
with Nature the Dragon too loses his power. The picture of Michael
rises up before the soul Michael the opponent of the Dragon.
That picture was dimmed, when Nature, and with her the Dragon, was
all-powerful. With the oncoming of the frost, the picture looms up
again before the soul. Nor must we think of it merely as a picture, it
is a reality for the soul. It is as if the warmth of summer had dropped
a curtain before the spiritual world, and this curtain were now
lifted. Man partakes in the life of the year, he goes with it in its
course. Spring is his earthly friend and comforter; but she enmeshes
him in that kingdom where the adversary sets the ugliness
of his invisible power within man over against the beauty of Nature.
(see Note 1)
With the beginning of autumn appears the spirit of strength in
beauty the while Nature hides her beauty, driving the adversary
too into concealment.
With such thoughts and feelings did men of ancient times keep the
Festival of Michael in their hearts.
In the picture of the fight of Michael with the Dragon one thing is
clearly and strongly present; that is, the consciousness that man
himself must give to his inner life of soul the direction and guidance
that Nature cannot give. Our present-day thinking is inclined to
mistrust such an idea. We are afraid of becoming estranged from
Nature. We want to enjoy her in all her beauty, to revel in her
abundance of life, and we are loath to let ourselves be robbed of this
enjoyment by admitting that Nature has fallen from the Spiritual. In
our striving for knowledge moreover we want to let Nature speak. We
fear to lose ourselves in all kinds of fantasy, should we allow the
Spirit, that transcends the perception of external Nature, to have a
voice concerning the reality of things.
Goethe had no such fear. He found nowhere in Nature any estrangement
from the Spirit. He opened his heart to her beauty, to the inner power
and might of all that she revealed. In the life of man he felt the
presence of much that was inharmonious, much that grated and jarred,
or that gave rise to doubt and confusion. And he felt an inner urge
and impulse to live in communion with Nature, where the eternal laws
of sequence and compensation prevail. Some of his most beautiful poems
have sprung from such a life with Nature.
Goethe was however at the same time fully conscious of how the work of
man must fulfil and complete the work of Nature. He felt all the
beauty of the plants. But he felt too something incomplete in that
life which the plant displays before man. In that which weaves and
works unseen within the plant, there lay for him far more than
manifests itself to the eye within the bounds of visible form. For
Goethe, what Nature attains is not the whole. He felt as well what we
may call the purposes of Nature. He did not let himself be deterred by
the fear of personifying Nature. He knew well that he was not as it
were dreaming such purposes into the life of the plant out of any
subjective fancy, he beheld them there quite objectively, just as
truly as he could behold the colour of the flowers.
This is why he was so indignant when Schiller designated as
idea and not experience the picture Goethe had
sketched with a few strokes for his poet friend of the inner striving
of the plant towards life and growth. Goethe's reply was that if that
were an idea, then he could see ideas with his eyes just as well as he
could perceive colours and shapes.
Goethe was conscious of how there is in Nature not only an ascending
but also a descending life. He felt the growth from the seedling to
leaf and bud and blossom and fruit; but he felt too how all in turn
withers, decays, dries up and dies away. He felt the Spring: but he
felt also the Autumn. In Summer he could partake with his own inner
sympathy in the unfolding of Nature, but in Winter he could also
partake in her death with the same openness of heart.
We may not find in Goethe's works a clear expression in words of this
twofold experience with Nature, but we cannot fail to be sensible of
it in his whole manner of thought. It is as it were an echo of the
experience of Michael's fight with the Dragon. Only, the experience is
lifted in Goethe to the consciousness of a later age.
The nineteenth century has not given us any further development of
thought on these lines. The new perception of the Spirit that is now
being attained must set itself to strive after a continuation and
development of Goethe's understanding of Nature.
Our experience of Nature is incomplete as long as we partake in our
inner being with her ascending life alone seed, shoot, leaf,
bud, blossom, and fruit. We need to have a feeling also for the
withering and dying away. Nor shall we thereby become estranged from
Nature. We have not to shut ourselves up from her Spring and her
Summer, we have but to enter as well into her Autumn and her Winter.
Spring and Summer require of man that he give himself up to Nature;
man lives his way out of himself and into Nature. Autumn and Winter
would have man withdraw into his own human domain and set over against
the death and decay of Nature the resurrection of the forces of soul
and spirit. Spring and Summer are the time of man's
Nature-consciousness; Autumn and Winter are the times when he must
experience his own human self-consciousness.
As Autumn approaches, Nature withdraws her life into the depths of the
Earth; she takes away all sprouting and blossoming far from the sight
of man. What she leaves to his view bears within it no fulfilment;
therein lies hope, hope for a new Spring to come. Nature leaves man
alone with himself.
Then begins the time when it rests upon man to prove by his own forces
within him that he is quick and alive and not dead. Summer said to
man: I receive your Ego, your I; I let it bloom in my
bosom with the flowers. Autumn begins now to say to man: Descend into
the depth of your soul, there to find the forces whereby your
I may live, the while I hold my life hidden in the depths
of the Earth. Goethe resented Haller's thought:
Ins Innere der Natur dringt kein erschaffener Geist;
glückselig, wem sie nur die äussere Schale weist.
(see Note 2)
Goethe's feeling was:
Natur hat weder Kern noch Schale;
alles ist sie mit einem Male.
(see Note 3)
Nature has need of death for her life; man can also live this
dying through with her. Thereby he enters only more deeply into the
inner being of Nature. In his own organism man experiences his
breathing process and his blood circulation. They are for him his
life. The germinating life of the Spring is in reality as near to man
as his own breathing, it entices him out into Nature-consciousness. So
too the death and decay of Autumn is in reality no further away from
man than his own blood; it steels self-consciousness within him.
The Festival of Self-consciousness, bringing man near to his true
humanity wherever the leaves are falling, there it is
solemnized, man only needs to become conscious of it. It is the
Festival of Michael, the Festival of the Beginning of Autumn. The
picture of Michael Triumphant can be there; it can live in
man. In Summer man is received lovingly into Nature; but if he would
not be deprived of the centre and balance of his being, he must not
lose himself in her but be able to rise up in Autumn in the strength
and might of his own spirit-being. Then will the picture of Michael
Triumphant live within him.
- Note 1:
- See also The Cycle of the Year as Breathing Process of the
Earth, 5 lectures, Anthroposophical Publishing Co.
- Note 2:
- No created spirit can penetrate the inner being of Nature: happy is
he to whom she shows even the outer shell.
- Note 3:
- Nature hath neither shell nor kernel; Nature is all, and all in one.
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