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Background to the Gospel of St. Mark
GA 124

10 June 1911, Berlin

X. Rosicrucian Wisdom in Folk-Mythology

There is no doubt that the Spiritual Science we have been studying for many years is beginning to make more and more headway in the world and to find increasing understanding in the hearts and minds of our contemporaries. It might be useful occasionally to speak of how the ideas of Spiritual Science are being made known and many of you would be glad to know what effect the spiritual nourishment you have yourselves received has had upon others at the present time. It is only now and then that I can speak of this spread of spiritual-scientific thought in the outer world, but it will be some satisfaction to you to know that we can see how the spirit inspiring us all is finding entry in various countries. I could see, for instance, that our ideas were beginning to find a footing when I was lecturing in the south of Austria, in Trieste, recently. Then, when I gave a course of lectures in Copenhagen1The Spiritual Guidance of Man and of Mankind. (Obtainable from Rudolf Steiner Press.) only a few days ago, there too it was evident that the spirit we are trying to cultivate under the symbol of the Rose Cross is gaining more and more ground. Signs such as these make it clear that there is a need and also a longing for what we call Spiritual Science.

It is fundamental to the spirit informing our Movement that we should refrain from any agitation or propaganda and far rather pay heed to the great, all-embracing wisdom needed by the hearts and souls of modern men if they are to feel any security in life to-day. It is our duty to make these spiritual thoughts into real nourishment for our souls. You will certainly have understood enough of the great law of Karma to know that it is by no chance or accident that an individual feels urged to come down into the physical world at this particular time. The souls of all of you here have felt the longing to incarnate in a physical body at the turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century because of a desire to experience what can be achieved in the present physical environment.

Let us look at our own epoch and see how its spiritual aspect appears to souls which, like yours, have been born into it. At the turn of the century conditions were very different from what they had been fifty or sixty years earlier. Human beings who—like all of you here—are growing up at the present time, attempt now and then to hear about the spiritual guidance and leadership of the world, about the spiritual forces and influences pervading the external world in the different kingdoms of nature and penetrating into the souls of men. But for the last fifty years a soul longing and searching for spiritual nourishment has found very little. This longing has been present in the depths of men's souls, although it may have been a very faint voice, easily silenced. Nevertheless the longing is there and everyone is seeking for spiritual nourishment, whatever his position in life and whatever use he may make of his faculties. No matter in what department of science you may be working to-day, you learn only external, material facts; they can be utilised very cleverly and ingeniously to advance modern culture but they are no help at all towards understanding what the spirit may reveal. No matter whether you are an artist or are engaged in some practical work, you will find little that can pass into head or hand to give you not only energy and impetus for your work but also security and comfort in life. By the beginning of the nineteenth century people had forebodings that in the near future very little spiritual nourishment would be left. During the first half of the century, when vestiges of an old spiritual life were still present, although in a different form, many people felt that there was something in the air presaging the complete disappearance of the ancient treasures of the spirit handed down by tradition from olden times. Yet it is precisely the legitimate progress of culture during the nineteenth century that will completely wipe out the spiritual traditions handed down from the past.

During the first half of the nineteenth century, many voices are to be heard speaking in this strain and I will quote one example of a man who lived during that period and had a wide knowledge of the old form of theosophy, but who also knew that owing to the course of events in that century it was bound to disappear; at the same time he was convinced that a future must come when there would be a revival of this old theosophy but in a new form. I am going to read you a passage written towards the end of the first half of the nineteenth century, in 1847. Its author was a thinker of a type no longer in existence to-day—men who were still sensitive to the last echoes of those old traditions which have now been lost for a considerable time.—

‘It is often difficult to learn among the older theosophists what the real purpose of theosophy is ... but it is clear that along the paths it has taken hitherto, theosophy can acquire no real existence as a science nor achieve any result in a wider sphere. Yet it would be very ill-advised to conclude that it is a phenomenon scientifically unjustifiable and also ephemeral. History itself decisively disproves this: it shows how this enigmatic phenomenon could never make itself really effective in the world but for all that was continually breaking through and was held together in its manifold forms by the chain of a never-dying tradition. ... At all times there have been very few in whom this insistent speculative need has been combined with a living religious need. But theosophy is for these few alone. ... The important thing is that if theosophy ever becomes scientific in the real sense and produces obvious and definite results, these will gradually become the general conviction, be acknowledged as valid truths and be universally accepted by those who cannot find their way along the only possible path by which they could be discovered.

But all this lies in the womb of the future which we do not wish to anticipate. For the moment let us be thankful for the beautiful presentation given by Oetinger, which will certainly be appreciated in wide circles.’

This shows what a man such as Rothe of Heidelberg felt about the theosophical spirit in 1847. The passage is from his Preface to a treatise on Oetinger, a theosophist living in the second half of the eighteenth century.

What, then, can be said about the spirit of theosophy? It is a spirit without which the genuine cultural achievements of the world would never have been possible. Thinking of its greatest manifestations, we shall say: Without it there would never have been a Homer, a Pindar, a Raphael, a Michelangelo; there would have been no depth of religious feeling in men, no truly spiritual life and no external culture. Everything that man creates he must create from out of the spirit. If he thinks that he can create without it he is ignorant of the fact that although in certain periods spiritual striving falls into decline, the less firmly rooted a thing is in the spirit the more likely it is to die. Whatever has eternal value stems from the spirit and no created thing survives that is not rooted in it. But since everything a man does is under the guidance of the spiritual life, the very smallest creation, even when used for the purposes of everyday life, has an eternal value and connects him with the spirit. We know that our own theosophical life has its source in what we have called the Rosicrucian stream; and it has often been emphasised that since the eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth centuries the Masters of Rosicrucian wisdom have been preparing conditions that began at the end of the nineteenth century and will continue in the twentieth. The future longed for and expected by Rothe of Heidelberg is already the present and should be recognised as such. But those who caused this stream to flow into souls, at first in a way imperceptible to men, have been preparing conditions for a long, long time. In a definite sense what we have called the Rosicrucian path since the twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries is present in our Theosophical Movement in a more conscious form; its influence has flowed into the hearts and minds of the peoples of Europe and sets its stamp upon them.

From what has happened in European culture, can we form an idea of how this spirit has actually taken effect? I said just now that it has worked as the true Rosicrucian spirit since the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries; it was always present although only at that time did it assume Rosicrucian form. This Rosicrucian spirit goes back to a very distant past—it had its Mysteries even in Atlantean times. The influence has been taking effect for long ages, becoming more and more conscious as it streamed into the hearts and souls of men.

Let us try to form some idea of how this spirit made its way into humanity. We meet together here and our studies help us to perceive ways in which the human soul develops and gradually rises to regions where it can understand the spiritual life, and perhaps actually behold it. Many of you have for years been trying to let concepts and ideas which mirror the spiritual life stream into your souls as spiritual nourishment. You know how we have tried to acquire some understanding of the riddles of the world. I have often described the different stages of the soul's development and how it can rise to the higher worlds; how a higher part of the Self must be distinguished from a lower part; how man has come from other planetary conditions, having passed through a Saturn-, a Sun- and a Moon-evolution, during which his physical, etheric and astral bodies were formed; and how finally he entered into the period of Earth-evolution. I have told you that there is something within us that must receive its training here on the Earth in order to rise to a higher stage. We have also said that the development of certain beings—the Luciferic beings—was retarded during the Old Moon-period and they later approached man's astral body as tempters, and also in order to impart to him certain qualities. I have often told you too how man must overcome certain tendencies in his lower self and through this conquest rise into the spheres to which his higher Self belongs, into the higher regions of the spiritual life. Words of Goethe must be remembered:

And as long as thou knowest it not,
This Dying and Becoming,
Thou art but a troubled guest
Upon the dark Earth!

The degree of development that is possible to-day and can give strength, assurance and a genuine content to life is within our reach if we acquire knowledge of the manifold nature of man and realise that his constitution is not a haphazard medley but consists of physical body, etheric body, astral body and Ego. We have formulated definite ideas, for example of the temperaments, by studying the process of education and the development of the physical body up to the seventh year, of the etheric body up to the fourteenth and of the astral body up to the twenty-first year. By studying the mission of Truth, of Prayer, of Anger, our ideas of the three bodies, of the sentient soul, intellectual or mind-soul and consciousness—or spiritual soul, do not remain mere abstractions but impart meaning, clarity and content to our existence.

In this way we have achieved some understanding of the riddles of the world. And although there are large numbers of people outside our circle who still, consciously or unconsciously, persist in materialism, there are nevertheless many souls who feel it necessary to their very existence to listen to expositions of the kind we have been able to give. Many of you would not have been present among us for years, sharing our experiences and activities if it were not a necessity of your very lives. Why are there souls to-day who understand these things and for whom the ideas and concepts developed here become a guide on their life's way? The reason is this.—Just as you have been born into the modern world with these longings, so our forbears in Europe—and this means very many of those present here to-day—were born during past centuries into a world and environment very different from those of the nineteenth century. Let us cast our minds back to the sixth, seventh or even the twelfth and thirteenth centuries of our era when many of those present here were incarnated, and think of the sort of things that souls then living might have experienced.

In those times there was no Theosophical Society where subjects such as those with which we are concerned were studied; the influence of the environment upon the souls of men took a very different form. People did not travel about giving lectures on spiritual-scientific subjects, but minstrels went from village to village, from city to city, proclaiming the spirit. These minstrels did not speak about theosophy, about the lower and higher Ego, about man's physical, etheric and astral bodies and so on. As they moved around the land their mission was to speak of the spirit in the way it was wont to be proclaimed at that time. The following story was told all over Middle and Eastern Europe.—

Once upon a time there was a King's son. During a ride one day he heard moans coming from a ditch, and following the course of the ditch in order to discover the source of the moans, he found an old woman. He dismounted, climbed down into the ditch and helped the old woman who had fallen into it, to get out. Then he saw that she had injured her leg and could not walk. He asked her how the accident happened and she told him: ‘I am old and I have to get up soon after midnight to go to the city and sell my eggs; on the way I fell into this ditch.’ The King's son said to her: ‘You cannot get home by yourself so I will put you on my horse and take you.’ This he did, and the woman said to him: ‘Although you are of noble birth, you are a kind and good man; and because you have helped me I will give you a reward.’ He guessed now that she was not an ordinary woman, for she said: ‘You shall have the reward which your kind soul has earned. Do you want to marry the Flower-Queen's daughter?’ ‘Yes!’ he replied. She went on: ‘For that you will need something that I can easily give you,’ and she gave him a little bell, saying: ‘If you ring this bell once the Eagle-King will come with his hosts to help you in the predicament in which you find yourself; if you ring twice the Fox-King will come with his hosts to help you in the predicament in which you find yourself; and if you ring three times the Fish-King will come with his hosts to help you in the predicament in which you find yourself.’—The King's son took the little bell and returned home, announced that he was going to search for the Flower-Queen's daughter, and rode off. He rode a long, long way but nobody could tell him where the Flower-Queen lived with her daughter. By this time his horse was completely exhausted and could carry him no longer so that he was obliged to continue his journey on foot. He came across an aged man and asked him where the Flower-Queen lived. ‘I cannot tell you,’ the aged man replied, ‘but go on and on and you will find my father who may perhaps be able to tell you.’ So the King's son went on, year after year, and then found another, still more aged man. He asked him: ‘Can you tell me where the Flower-Queen lives?’ But the aged man replied: ‘I cannot tell you, but you must go on and on for many more long years and you will find my father who will certainly be able to tell you where the Flower-Queen lives.’—So the King's son went on and at last found an old, old man and asked him if he could tell him where the Flower-Queen lived with her daughter. The old man replied: ‘The Flower-Queen lives far away, in a mountain which you can see from here in the distance. But she is guarded by a fearsome Dragon. You cannot get near at present for this is a time when the Dragon never sleeps; he sleeps at certain times only and this is one of his waking periods. But you must go a little further, to another mountain, and there you will find the Dragon's mother; through her you will attain your goal.’ So he went on and found the Dragon-mother, the very archetype of ugliness. But he knew that whether he could find the Flower-Queen's daughter would depend on her. Then he saw seven other dragons around her, all eager to guard the Flower-Queen and her daughter who had been long imprisoned and were destined to be set free by the King's son. So he said to the Dragon-mother: ‘I know that I must become your servant if I am to find the Flower-Queen.’ ‘Yes’, she said, ‘you must become my servant and perform a task that is not easy. Here is a horse which you must lead to pasture the first day, the second day and the third. If you can bring it home in good condition you may possibly achieve your object after three days. But if you fail, the dragons will devour you—we shall all devour you.’ The King's son agreed to this and the next morning he was given the horse. He tried to lead it to pasture but it soon disappeared. He searched for it in vain and was in despair. Then he remembered the little bell given him by the old woman, took it out and rang it once. A host of eagles gathered, led by the Eagle-King, looked for the horse and found it, so that the King's son was able to take it back to the Dragon-mother. She said to him: ‘Because you have brought the horse back I will give you a cloak of copper so that you can attend the Ball tonight at the court of the Flower-Queen and her daughter.’ Then, on the second day, he was again given the horse to take to pasture, but again it disappeared and he could not find it. So he took out the bell and rang it twice. Immediately the Fox-King appeared with a host of his followers; they looked for and found the horse and the King's son was again able to take it back to the Dragon-mother. She then said to him: ‘To-day you shall have a cloak of silver so that you can attend the Ball to-night at the court of the Flower-Queen and her daughter.’ At the Ball the Flower-Queen said to him: ‘On the third day ask for a foal of that horse and with it you will be able to rescue me and we shall be united.’ Then, on the third day, the horse was again handed to him to lead to pasture, and again it soon disappeared, for it was very wild. So he took out the bell and rang it three times, whereupon the Fish-King appeared with his followers, found the horse, and for the third time the King's son brought it home. He had now successfully performed his task. The Dragon-mother then presented him with a mantle of gold as his third garment in order that on the third day he might attend the Flower-Queen's Ball. He was also given as a fitting reward the foal of the horse he had cared for. With it he was able to lead the Flower-Queen and her daughter to their own castle. And around the castle, since there were others who wanted to steal her daughter, the Flower-Queen caused a thick hedge to grow to prevent the castle from being invaded. Then the Flower-Queen said to the King's son: ‘You have won my daughter and henceforth she shall be yours, but only on one condition. You may keep her for half the year but for the other half she must return beneath the surface of the earth and be restored to me. Only on this condition can you be united with her.’ So the King's son won the Flower-Queen's daughter and lived with her for half the year, while for the other half she was with her mother.—

This story, as well as others like it, was listened to by many people in those days. They listened and drank in what they heard but did not, like many modern theosophists, proceed to invent allegories, for symbolic or allegorical interpretations of such matters are valueless. People listened to the stories because they were a source of delight to them and a warm glow pervaded their souls as they listened. They wanted nothing more than this as they listened to the story of the Flower-Queen and the King's son with his bell and his wooing of the Flower-Queen's daughter.

There are many souls alive to-day who in those days heard such tales with inner delight, and the effects lived on in them. Their feelings and perceptions were converted into thoughts and experiences and their souls were transformed by new forces. These forces have changed into the longing for a higher interpretation of the same secrets, a longing for Spiritual Science. In those days the wandering minstrels did not go about saying that man strives towards his higher self and to that end must overcome his lower self which holds him back. They gave their message in the form of a story about a King's son who rode out into the world, heard moans coming from a ditch and thereupon performed a good deed. To-day we speak simply of a good deed, a deed of love and sacrifice. In earlier times the deed was described in pictures. To-day we say that man must develop a feeling for the spirit which will awaken in him an inkling of the spiritual world and create powers through which he can establish relationship with it. In earlier times this was expressed in the picture of the old woman who gave the King's son a bell which he rang. To-day it is said: Man has taken into himself all the kingdoms of nature and unites in harmony everything that lies outspread before him. But he must learn to understand how what is outspread in the external world lives within him and how he can overcome his lower nature, for only if he can bring what is at work in the kingdoms of nature into the right relationship with his own being can it come to his aid.

We have spoken often enough of man's evolution through the periods of Saturn, Sun and Moon and of how he left behind him the other kingdoms of nature, retaining within himself the best of each in order that he might rise to a higher stage. To what stage has he evolved? To indicate what lives in the human soul Plato had already used the picture of the horse on which man rides from one incarnation to another. In the times of which we have been speaking the picture used was that of the bell which was rung to summon the representatives of the kingdoms of nature—the Eagle-King, the Fox-King and the Fish-King—in order that the being destined to become the ruler of these kingdoms might establish the right relationship with them.

Man's soul is unruly and can be brought into the right relationship with the kingdoms of nature only when it is tempered by love and wisdom. In earlier times this truth was presented in pictorial form and the soul was helped to understand what we to-day express differently. Men were told that the King's son rang the bell once and the Eagle-King appeared; twice and the Fox-King appeared; three times and the Fish-King appeared. It was they who brought back the horse. In other words: the tumults which rage in the human soul must be recognised; when they are recognised the soul can be freed from lower influences and brought into order.

In the modern age we say that man must learn how his passions, his anger and so on, are connected with his development from one seven-year period to another. In other words, we must learn to understand the threefold sheaths of the human being. In earlier times a wonderful picture was placed before men: the King's son was given a mantle, a sheath, every time he rang the little bell—that is to say, when he had subjugated one of the kingdoms of nature. To-day we speak of studying the nature of the physical body; in earlier days a picture was used—of the Dragon-mother giving the King's son a cloak or mantle of copper. We study the nature of the etheric body; in earlier times it was said that the Dragon-mother gave the King's son a silver cloak on the second day. We speak of the astral body with its surging passions; in earlier times it was said that on the third day the Dragon-mother gave the King's son a cloak of gold. What we learn to-day about the threefold nature of man in the form of concepts was conveyed through the picture of the copper, silver and golden cloaks. Instead of the pictures of the copper, silver and golden cloaks we speak to-day in terms which convey an understanding of how the solid physical body is related to the other sheaths of the human being as copper ore is related to silver and gold.

We speak to-day of seven classes of Luciferic beings whose development was retarded during the Moon-evolution and who set about bringing their influence to bear upon man's astral body. The minstrels said: When the King's son came to the mountain where he was to be united with the Flower-Queen's daughter, he encountered seven dragons who would have devoured him if he had not accomplished his task. We know that if our evolution does not proceed in the right way it will be corrupted by the forces of the sevenfold Luciferic beings. We say nowadays that by achieving spiritual development we find our higher Self. The minstrels said: The King's son was united with the Flower-Queen. And we say: A certain rhythm must be established in the human soul. You will remember that a few weeks ago I said that when an idea has arisen in the soul we must allow time for the idea to mature, and it will then be possible to detect a certain rhythm in the process. After seven days the idea has penetrated into the depths of the soul; after fourteen days the maturing idea can lay hold of the outer astral substance and allow itself to be baptised by the World-Spirit. After twenty-one days the idea has become still more mature. And only after four times seven days is it ready to be offered to the world as a gift of our own personality. This is the manifestation of an inner rhythm of the soul. A man's creative faculty can work effectively only if he does not try immediately to force upon the world something that occurs to him but is aware that the ordered rhythm of the external world repeats itself in his soul, that he must live in such a way that the Macrocosm is reflected in the Microcosm of his own being. The minstrels said: Man must bring the forces of his soul into harmony, must seek the Flower-Queen's daughter and enter into a union with her during which he spends half of the year with his bride and for the other half leaves her to be with her mother who lives in the depths. This means that he establishes a rhythm within himself and the rhythm of his life takes its course in harmony with the rhythm of the Macrocosm.

These pictures—and hundreds like them could be mentioned—stimulated the soul through the thought-forms they created; and the result is that souls living to-day have become sufficiently mature to listen to the different kind of presentation given by Spiritual Science. But before this could happen man had perforce to experience a sense of deprivation and intense longing. The spiritual longings of the soul had first to be engulfed in the physical world. This did in fact happen in the first half of the nineteenth century; and then, in the second half of the century, came the materialistic culture with its devastating effect upon spiritual life. But the longing grew all the stronger and the ideal of the spiritual-scientific Movement became all the more significant. In the first half of the century there were only few who in a kind of silent martyrdom felt that ideas once conveyed in the form of pictures in narratives still survived but only in a state of decline.

In the soul of a man born in the year 1803, echoes of the old wisdom of past times were still reverberating. Something closely akin to theosophical ideas was a living reality in him. His soul was completely engrossed in what we to-day call the spiritual-scientific solution of the riddle of world-existence. His name was Julius Mosen. His soul was able to survive only because for most of his life he was bedridden. Soul and body could not adjust themselves to each other because owing to the way in which Mosen had grasped these ideas without being able to penetrate them spiritually, his etheric body had been drawn out of his physical body which was paralysed as a result. His soul had nevertheless risen to spiritual heights. In 1831 he wrote a remarkable book, Ritter Wahn. He had learnt of a wonderful legend still surviving in Italy, an old Italian folk-legend. As he studied it he became convinced that it enshrined something of the spirit of the universe, that those who created its imagery were filled with the living spirituality of the World Order. The result was that in 1831 he wrote a truly wonderful work—which, needless to say, has been forgotten, in common with so much that is the product of spiritual greatness.

Ritter Wahn sets out to conquer death and on his way he comes across three old men—Ird, Time and Space. Julius Mosen hit on the German word Ird to translate the Italian il mondo, because he knew that there was something particularly significant in it. Ird, Time and Space are the names of the three old men who, however, can be of no use to Ritter Wahn because they are themselves subject to death. Ird denotes everything that is subject to the laws of the physical body, and so to death; Time, the etheric body, is by its very nature transitory; and the third, the lower astral body, which gives us the perception of Space, is also subject to death. Our individuality passes from incarnation to incarnation; but according to the Italian folk-legend, Ird, Time and Space represent our threefold sheath.

Who is ‘Ritter Wahn?’ Each of us, passing from incarnation to incarnation, looks out upon the world and faces maya, the great Illusion; each of us, in that we live a life in the spirit, goes forth to conquer death. On this quest we meet the three old men who are our three sheaths. They are indeed very old! The physical body has existed since the evolutionary period of Old Saturn, the etheric body since the period of Old Sun, and the astral body since the period of Old Moon. The Ego, the ‘I’, has been embodied in men in the course of the Earth period itself. Julius Mosen depicts Ritter Wahn seeking to overcome death. He uses the Platonic image of a rider on horseback—an image that was known all over Middle Europe and still farther afield. Ritter Wahn rides out in an attempt to conquer the heavens with materialistic thinking—like those who cling to the sense-world and are imprisoned in illusion and maya. But when through death they enter the spiritual world, what happens is faithfully described by Julius Mosen. Such human beings have not lived out their lives to the full and long to come down again to the Earth in order that their souls may continue to evolve. So Ritter Wahn returns to the Earth. He sees the beautiful Morgana, the soul, which is destined to be stimulated by whatever is earthly and—like the Flower-Queen's daughter—represents the union with what man can acquire only through schooling on Earth. He falls a victim to death through being again united with the Earth and the beautiful Morgana. This means that he passes through death in order that he may raise his own soul, represented by Morgana, to higher and higher stages during each succeeding incarnation.

It is from pictures like these which carry the stamp of their thousands of years’ life that ideas stream into artists of the calibre of Julius Mosen. In his case they were given expression by a soul too great to live healthily in a physical body during the approaching age of materialism and Julius Mosen had consequently to endure the silent martyrdom imposed on him by his passionate soul.—Such was the impulse at work in a man living in the first half of the nineteenth century. It will become active again but in such a way as to kindle human powers and forces; and it will enable us to have some understanding of what is meant by the spirit of Rosicrucianism—the spirit that must make its way into the souls of men.

We can now surmise that what we ourselves are cultivating has always existed. Were we to imagine that anything in the world can prosper without this spirit working in men we should be succumbing to the delusions suffered by Ritter Wahn.

Whence came the minstrels of the seventh, eighth or even thirteenth centuries, wandering as they did through the world to create thought-forms that would enable souls in our own day to have a different kind of understanding? Where had these minstrels learnt how to bring such pictures to men? They had learnt from the centres we think of to-day as the Rosicrucian schools. They were pupils of Rosicrucians. Their teachers said to them: You cannot now go forth into the world and clothe your message in concepts and ideas, as will have to be done later on; you must speak of the King's son, of the Flower-Queen and of the three cloaks, in order that from these pictures thought-forms may come into being and live in the souls of men. And when these souls return to Earth they will understand what is needed for their further progress.—Messengers are continually sent out from the centres of spiritual life in order that in every age what lies in the depths of the spirit may be made accessible to men.

It is a superficial view to believe that such tales can be invented by human fancy. The old tales which give expression to the spiritual secrets of the world came into being because those who composed them gave ear to others who were able to impart the spiritual secrets. Consequently we can say with truth that the spirit of all humanity, of the Microcosm and the Macrocosm, lives in them.

The minstrels were sent out to tell their stories from the same centres whence we to-day draw the knowledge on which the culture needed by humanity is based. Thus it is that the spirit in which mankind is rooted moves on from epoch to epoch. The Beings who in pre-Christian times imparted instruction to individuals in the temples, teaching them what they had themselves brought over from former planetary evolutions—these Beings placed themselves under the leadership of Christ, the unique Individuality who became the great Teacher and Guide of mankind. Stories which have come down through the centuries and have inspired in the whole of Western culture thought-forms expressing in pictures the same teaching about Christ as we give to-day, make it quite clear that in the period after the Mystery of Golgotha the spiritual leadership of mankind, working through its centres of learning, was vested in Christ. All spiritual leadership is connected with Him. If we can make ourselves conscious of this fact we shall be turning our gaze to the light we need in order to understand the longings of human souls incarnated in the nineteenth century.

If we think deeply about souls who reveal the longings of earlier times, we shall recognise with a sense of profound responsibility that they waited for us to bring their longings to fulfilment. Julius Mosen, the author of Ritter Wahn and Ahasver, and others like him, were the last prophets of the West because the teachings once given by messengers from the holy temples in the form of pictures to prepare souls for later ages, were living realities to them. And their yearning is indicated in words written by Rothe of Heidelberg in 1847: ‘... if theosophy ever becomes scientific in the real sense and produces obvious and definite results, these will gradually become the general conviction, be acknowledged as valid truths and be universally accepted by those who cannot find their way along the only possible path by which they could be discovered ...’ At that time a man who had these yearnings—thinking not only of himself but also of his contemporaries—could only say with resignation that all this lay in the womb of the future which he had no wish to anticipate. In 1847, men who were cognisant of the secrets of the Rosicrucian temples had not yet spoken in a way that could be generally understood. But what lies in the womb of the future can become living power if there are enough souls who realise that knowledge is a duty—a duty because we must not give back undeveloped souls to the World-Spirit. Were we to do that we should have deprived the World-Spirit of forces implanted in us. If there are souls who recognise their duty to the World-Spirit and endeavour to understand the riddles of the world, the hopes cherished by the best men of earlier times will be fulfilled. They looked to us, who were to be born after them, and longed that theosophy should become scientifically acceptable and lay hold of the hearts of men. But these hearts must exist! And that depends upon people who have identified themselves with our spiritual-scientific Movement being convinced of the need for spiritual illumination of the riddles of existence. It depends upon every single soul among us whether the longings of which I have spoken prove to have been empty dreams on the part of those who had hoped for the best in us or to have been dreams now brought to fulfilment.

When we see the barrenness of science, art and every domain of social life we must tell ourselves that we need not succumb to it but that there is a way out. For again an age has dawned when voices from the holy temples are speaking—not in pictures and stories but proclaiming truths which many people still regard as theories but which can and must become sources of life and nourishment to the soul. Each individual can resolve with the highest powers of his soul to receive this source of life.

This is what we must impress upon our souls as the epitome of the meaning and spirit of the guidance of mankind. If we allow this thought to be active in our souls it will be an impulse in us for many months. We shall find that it can grow into an impressive structure—quite independently of the words used to express it. My words may well be imperfect but it is the reality in the thought that matters, not the form in which it is expressed. This reality can live in every single soul. The totality of truth is present in every soul as a seed and can be brought to blossom if the soul devotes itself to the development of that seed.

Zehnter Vortrag

Es ist in unserer Zeit zweifellos zu bemerken, daß jener Geist geisteswissenschaftlicher Weltanschauung, von welchem in diesem Zweige und überhaupt innerhalb unserer deutschen Sektion seit Jahren nun schon gesprochen werden konnte, sich immer mehr und mehr in der Welt einzuleben beginnt, Verständnis zu finden beginnt in den Herzen und in den Gemütern unserer Zeitgenossen. Es ist natürlich nicht möglich — was vielleicht zuweilen ganz wünschenswert wäre zur gegenseitigen Verständigung -, ab und zu von der Einführung unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Empfindungen und Gefühle und Erkenntnisse in die gegenwärtige Welt zu sprechen. Gewiß wollte mancher von Ihnen gern wissen, wie das, was er selbst in seine Seele als seine geistige Nahrung aufnimmt, in unserer Gegenwart auf andere Herzen, andere Persönlichkeiten wirkt. Es kann ja nur bei gewissen Gelegenheiten von dieser äußeren Verbreitung unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Anschauung gesprochen werden. Aber es kann Sie vielleicht doch mit einer gewissen Befriedigung erfüllen, wenn ich einleitungsweise sage, daß wir immer wieder und wieder sehen können, wie in den verschiedenen Landesgebieten, unter den verschiedenen Himmelsstrichen der Geist, von dem wir alle beseelt sind, seinen Einzug hält, dort mehr, dort weniger. Als ich vor einiger Zeit an einem südlicheren Punkte Österreichs, in Triest, für unsere Ideen Verständnis zu erwecken suchte, da war zu sehen, wie die Anschauungen, die wir hegen, anfangen, auch dort schon Fuß zu fassen. Und wenn wir von diesem südlicheren Punkte heraufgehen nach Kopenhagen, wo in den letzten Tagen in einer Anzahl von Vorträgen an die Herzen das herangebracht werden konnte, was wir als Geist anerkennen, so konnten wir auch dort bei unsern nördlichen Freunden sehen, wie immer mehr und mehr der Geist einzieht, der von uns gepflegt wird unter der Signatur des Rosenkreuzes. Wenn man einzelne von solchen äußeren Tatsachen zusammennimmt, dann zeigt es sich, daß Bedürfnis und Sehnsucht vorhanden ist nach dem, was wir Geisteswissenschaft nennen in unserer Gegenwart.

Es ist ja nun wahrhaftig der innerste Nerv jener Gesinnung, die unsere geistige Richtung durchdringt, nicht in einem äußeren Sinne irgendwelche Agitation oder Propaganda zu treiben, sondern lediglich hinzuhorchen auf das, was von den großen umfassenden Weistümern der Welt die Herzen und die Seelen der Gegenwartsmenschen brauchen - brauchen, um die Möglichkeit und Sicherheit des Lebens in unserer Zeit zu haben. Da können wir eben, mit dem Gedanken einer allgemeineren Betrachtung anknüpfend, uns darauf besinnen, daß es für uns in unserer Zeit gewissermaßen eine Art von Verpflichtung ist, diese spirituelle Gesinnung zur Nahrung unserer Seele zu machen. Das hängt ja zusammen mit der ganzen Art und Weise, wie wir hereingewachsen sind in unsere Zeit. Wir haben gewiß schon alle genügend aufgenommen von dem großen Gesetz des Karma, um zu wissen, daß es nicht eine Zufälligkeit ist, nicht eine Nebensächlichkeit, wenn diese oder jene Individualität gerade in dieser ganz bestimmten Zeit sich gedrängt fühlt, herunterzusteigen in die physische Welt, um einen physischen Leib anzunehmen. Und alle diejenigen Seelen, die hier sitzen, haben die Sehnsucht empfunden, einen physischen Leib anzunehmen um die Wende des 19., 20. Jahrhunderts, weil das, was innerhalb der physischen Umgebung während dieser Zeit gepflegt und getan werden kann, erlebt werden will von diesen Seelen - von Ihren Seelen.

Betrachten wir einmal unsere Zeit, wie sie sich darstellt geistig für die Seelen, die eben - wie die unsrigen - in unsere Zeit hineingeboren worden sind. Es ist wirklich recht anders um die Wende des 19., 20. Jahrhunderts, in der geistigen Umwelt wie auch draußen in der exoterischen Welt, als es selbst noch vor fünfzig, sechzig Jahren war. Der Mensch, der heute heranwächst — und Sie waren ja alle in dieser Lage -, er versucht da oder dort von dem zu hören, was der Geist, die geistige Führung, die geistige Leitung der Welt ist, was die Außenwelt durchdringt in den Schöpfungen der verschiedenen Naturreiche und was in unsere Seele einzieht. Und wir dürfen sagen, seit einem halben Jahrhundert findet eine nach dem Geistigen sehnsüchtige Seele überall da, wo sie wirklich echte, geistige, spirituelle Nahrung zu empfangen sucht, außerordentlich wenig. Ja, im tiefsten Innern der Seele ist diese Sehnsucht vorhanden, die höchstens übertäubt werden kann, wenn sie nicht laut zu sprechen scheint; da ist diese Sehnsucht, und da will ein jeglicher, wo er auch steht im Leben, was er auch tun soll, geistige, wirkliche spirituelle Nahrung empfangen. Ob man sich heute auf dem Gebiete irgendeiner Wissenschaft umtut — man lernt ja nur die äußeren materiellen Tatsachen kennen, die zwar in kluger, großartiger, scharfsinniger Weise zu den großen Kulturfortschritten der Gegenwart verwertet werden, denen aber nicht abgelauscht wird, was man durch den Geist offenbaren will. Ob man als Künstler in der Welt tätig ist oder in einem praktischeren Lebenszweige steht: man findet überall wenig von dem, was man braucht, damit es in Geist, in Kopf und Hände gehen kann, damit wir nicht nur Kraft und Impulse zur Arbeit haben, sondern auch Sicherheit und Trost und Kraft im Leben. Und die Menschen am Anfange des 19. Jahrhunderts ahnten in einer gewissen Weise schon, daß in einer nahen Zukunft wenig davon vorhanden sein würde. Mancher Mensch in der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts, da noch Reste eines alten geistigen Lebens, wenn auch in einer andern Form, vorhanden waren, sagte sich: Es ist so etwas in der Luft wie ein vollständiges Verschwinden der alten Geistesschätze, die durch Tradition aus alten Zeiten heruntergekommen sind. Aber gerade die berechtigten Kulturfortschritte des 19. Jahrhunderts werden völlig auslöschen, was an geistigen Überlieferungen aus alten Zeiten zu uns gekommen ist.

Manche solche Stimme hören wir. Und ich möchte zum Zeugnis dafür, wie solche Stimmen in der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts ertönten, einiges jetzt hier anführen. Es soll die Stimme eines Mannes hier unter uns gehört werden, der in der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts viel in der alten Art von Theosophie, kann man sagen, wußte, der auch wußte, daß nun die alte Art vollends unter dem Gang der Ereignisse des 19. Jahrhunderts verschwinden müsse, der aber zugleich fest davon überzeugt war, daß es eine Zukunft geben müsse, wo die alte Theosophie wieder kommen müsse. Die Worte, die ich jetzt vorlesen will, sind im Jahre 1847 niedergeschrieben, also als die erste Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts zu Ende ging. Und der sie niedergeschrieben hat, war einer derjenigen Denker, die es heute nicht mehr gibt, die eben die letzten Nachklänge jener alten Überlieferungen noch fühlten, die allerdings vor noch längerer Zeit abhanden gekommen sind:

«Was die Theosophie eigentlich will, das ist bei den älteren Theosophen oft schwer zu erkennen, ... nicht minder deutlich aber auch, daß es die Theosophie auf ihrem bisherigen Wege zu keiner wissenschaftlichen Existenz und mithin auch zu keiner ins Größere gehenden Wirkung bringen kann. Sehr voreilig würde man daraus schließen, daß sie überhaupt ein wissenschaftlich unberechtigtes und nur ephemeres Phänomen sei. Dagegen zeugt schon die Geschichte laut genug. Sie erzählt uns, wie diese rätselhafte Erscheinung nie durchdringen konnte, und dessen ungeachtet immer wieder von neuem hervorbrach, ja, durch die Kette einer nie aussterbenden Tradition in ihren verschiedenartigsten Formen zusammengehalten wird. ... Es gibt vollends zu allen Zeiten wenige, in denen dieses lebendige spekulative Bedürfnis mit lebendigem religiösen Bedürfnis zusammen ist. Nur für diese letzteren aber ist die Theosophie. ... Und was die Hauptsache ist, wenn sie nur erst einmal eigentliche Wissenschaft geworden ist, und also auch deutlich bestimmte Resultate abgesetzt hat, so werden diese schon nach und nach in die allgemeine Überzeugung übergehen oder populär werden, und sich so auch als gemeingültige Wahrheiten für diejenigen vererben, die sich in die Wege nicht finden können, auf denen sie entdeckt wurden und allein entdeckt werden konnten.

Doch dies ruht im Schoße der Zukunft, der wir nicht vorgreifen wollen; für jetzt mögen wir uns der schönen Darstellung des lieben Oetingers dankbar erfreuen, die gewiß in einem weiten Kreise auf Teilnahme rechnen darf.»

So sehen wir, wie der theosophische Geist empfunden wurde im Jahre 1847 von einem Manne wie Rothe in Heidelberg, der sich in seinem Vorwort beruft auf einen Theosophen, Oetinger, von der zweiten Hälfte des 18. Jahrhunderts.

Was ist denn der theosophische Geist eigentlich für ein Geist? Das ist ein Geist, ohne den in der Welt niemals überhaupt die wahren Kulturtaten hätten geschehen können. Und wenn wir an das Größte denken: es ist der Geist, ohne den es nie einen Homer, einen Pindar, Raffael, Michelangelo, ohne den es keine religiöse Vertiefung der Menschen gäbe, aber auch kein geistiges Leben und auch keine äußere Kultur. Denn alles, was der Mensch schaffen will, muß er aus dem. Geiste heraus schaffen. Und wenn er ohne den Geist glaubt schaffen zu können, so weiß er nicht, daß das ganze geistige Streben in Verfall kommt für gewisse Zeiten und daß etwas, was in geringerem Maße aus dem Geiste heraus stammt, auch um so mehr eher dem Tode geweiht ist als dasjenige, was aus dem Geiste heraus geschaffen ist. Was ewigen Wert hat, das stammt aus dem Geiste, und kein Schaffen bleibt, das nicht aus dem Geiste stammt. Aber auch das kleinste Schaffen, selbst wenn es für den Alltag geschieht, hat einen Ewigkeitswert und verbindet uns mit einem Geistigen, denn es steht alles, was der Mensch tut, unter der Führung des geistigen Lebens. Wir in unserem theosophischen Leben, wie wir es pflegen, wissen, daß diesem Leben die Strömung zugrundeliegt, die wir die Rosenkreuzerströmung nennen, und wir haben es öfter betont, daß die Meister der Rosenkreuzerweisheit seit dem 11., 12., 13. Jahrhundert vorbereitet haben, was seit dem Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts begonnen hat zu geschehen und was im 20. weiter geschehen wird. Was Rothe in Heidelberg zum Beispiel als eine Zukunft bezeichnet, was er ersehnt und erhofft, das soll ja für uns schon Gegenwart sein. Und es wird für uns immer mehr und mehr Gegenwart. Aber das haben seit langen Zeiten diejenigen vorbereitet, welche diese geistige Strömung zuerst auf eine dem Menschen unwahrnehmbare Weise in die Seelen haben einfließen lassen. In spezifischem Sinne ist dasjenige, was wir den Rosenkreuzerweg nennen seit dem 12., 13., 14. Jahrhundert, in unserer theosophischen Bewegung in bewußterer Gestalt vorhanden - was seit dem 11.., 12., 13., 14. Jahrhundert einströmte in die Herzen, in die Wissenschaft, was den Geist der Menschen Europas geprägt hat.

Kann man sich denn aus den Vorgängen, die sich in unserer Kultur abgespielt haben, eine Vorstellung davon machen, wie dieser Geist eigentlich gewirkt hat? Ich sagte, seit dem 11., 12., 13., 14. Jahrhundert hat er als eigentlicher Rosenkreuzergeist gewirkt; aber er war immer da, hat nur die letzte Rosenkreuzerform angenommen seit dem genannten Zeitraum. Dieser Geist, der jetzt als Rosenkreuzergeist wirkt, geht zurück bis in alte Menschheitszeiten. Er hat schon in der alten atlantischen Zeit seine Mysterien gehabt. Und was in der neueren Zeit seine Wirksamkeit entfaltet, das strömte, immer bewußter und bewußter werdend, in älteren Zeiten, in Zeiten, die gar nicht lange hinter den unsrigen liegen, unbewußt in die Herzen und Seelen der Menschen herein.

Machen wir uns eine Vorstellung, wie dieser Geist unbewußt in die Menschheit hereinströmte. Sie sitzen hier zusammen. Wir pflegen miteinander das, was uns zeigt: In dieser oder jener Weise entwickelt sich die Menschenseele, um nach und nach hinaufzukommen in die Regionen, wo sie verstehen kann das geistige Leben, wo sie vielleicht auch schauen kann das geistige Leben. Viele von Ihnen haben sich schon seit Jahren bemüht, die Begriffe und Ideen, die uns das geistige Leben abbilden, in die Seele hereinfließen zu lassen, um aus diesen Begriffen und Ideen ihre geistige Nahrung zu haben. Sie kennen die Art und Weise, wie wir uns verständigen über die Rätsel der Welt. Oftmals ist es von mir gesagt worden, wie die verschiedenen Stufen der Entwickelung der Seele vor sich gehen, wie die Seele sich hinauflebt in die höheren Welten. Es ist gesagt worden, wie der Mensch einen höheren Teil seines Selbst von einem niederen Teil zu unterscheiden hat, es ist geschildert worden, wie der Mensch herübergekommen ist von anderen planetarischen Zuständen, wie er durchgemacht hat eine Saturn-, eine Sonnen- und eine Mondentwickelung, in der sich sein physischer Leib, sein Ätherleib und sein Astralleib ausbildete, und wie er dann seine Erdenentwickelung angetreten hat. Es ist gesagt worden, wie etwas in uns wohnt, das hier seine Schulung haben soll, um zu einem Höheren aufzusteigen. Auch das ist gesagt worden, daß gewisse Wesenheiten auf dem Monde als luziferische Wesenheiten zurückgeblieben sind, die sich dann später als Verführer heranmachten an den menschlichen Astralleib, um dem Menschen das zu geben, was sie ihm geben konnten. Dann haben wir oftmals davon gesprochen, wie der Mensch zu überwinden hat in seinem niederen Selbst dieses oder jenes, wie er zu besiegen hat dieses oder jenes, um hinaufzukommen in die Sphären, denen sein höheres Selbst angehört, wie er, um hinaufzukommen in die höheren Regionen des geistigen Lebens, das Goethe-Wort zu erfüllen hat:

Und so lang du das nicht hast,
Dieses Stirb und Werde,
Bist du nur ein trüber Gast
Auf der dunklen Erde!

Wir haben weiter gesagt, daß die menschliche Entwickelung, die heute möglich ist, und die uns Kraft und Sicherheit und wirklichen Lebensinhalt geben kann, dadurch zu erreichen ist, daß wir uns aneignen zum Beispiel die Kenntnis von der Mehrgliedrigkeit der Menschennatur, daß wir verstehen lernen, daß dieser Mensch nicht chaotisch zusammengefügt ist, sondern aus physischem Leib, Ätherleib, Astralleib und Ich besteht. Wir haben das damit Gemeinte nicht als bloße Worte empfunden, sondern durch die Charakterisierung der verschiedenen Temperamente, durch die Betrachtung der Erziehung des Menschen, wie sie verläuft als Entwickelung des physischen Leibes bis zum siebenten Jahr, des Ätherleibes bis zum vierzehnten Jahr, des Astralleibes bis zum einundzwanzigsten Jahr, da haben wir diese Dinge zu bestimmten Vorstellungen gebracht. Und aus Betrachtungen über die Mission der Wahrheit, der Andacht, des Zornes und so weiter haben wir ersehen, wie es nicht abstrakte Begriffe bleiben, was wir als physischen Leib, Ätherleib, Astralleib, Empfindungsseele, Verstandes- oder Gemütsseele und Bewußtseinsseele kennengelernt haben, sondern wie sie die Anschauungen vom Leben beleben, wie sie uns durchsichtig, klar und inhaltvoll unsere Umgebung machen.

So verständigen wir uns über die Rätsel der Welt. Wir können uns heute darüber verständigen. Und wenn es auch draußen noch viele Menschen gibt, die, bewußt oder unbewußt, im Materialismus verharren, so ist doch eine gewisse Anzahl von Seelen vorhanden, welche es als eine Notwendigkeit des Lebens empfinden, auf solche Darstellungen, wie sie gegeben werden können, hinzuhorchen. Viele von Ihnen würden nicht seit Jahren hier sitzen, mitleben und mitempfinden, was wir hier treiben, wenn es nicht eine Notwendigkeit des Lebens für sie wäre. Warum gibt es heute Seelen, die dies so verstehen, die in den Begriffen und Anschauungen, die wir hier entwickeln, den menschlichen Lebensweg verfolgen können? Das ist aus folgendem Grunde der Fall. Wie Sie heute mit solchen Sehnsuchten hereingeboren wurden in eine Welt, wie ich sie gerade vorhin zu schildern versuchte, so wurden unsere Vorfahren in Europa, das heißt eine große Anzahl von den heute hier anwesenden Seelen, durch die verflossenen Jahrhunderte hereingeboren in eine andere Umgebung, in eine andere Welt, als es die des 19. Jahrhunderts ist. Blicken wir zurück auf das 6., 7. oder auch auf das 12., 13. Jahrhundert, wo viele von den hier sitzenden Seelen damals inkarniert waren, und schauen wir auf das, was solche Seelen damals erlebten.

In jenen Zeiten gab es allerdings keine Theosophische Gesellschaft, wo man so über alles redete, wie wir es heute tun; sondern damals hörte die Seele etwas ganz anderes von ihrer Umgebung. Versuchen wir uns zu vergegenwärtigen, was damals die Seelen hörten — von denen hörten, die nicht herumreisten, um geisteswissenschaftliche Vorträge zu halten, sondern die als Rhapsoden vortrugen oder in einer andern Weise von Dorf zu Dorf, von Stadt zu Stadt zogen, um vom Geiste zu künden. Was sprachen solche Leute damals für Worte? Wir wollen es einmal in einem einzelnen Falle vor uns hintreten lassen. Damals sagte man noch nicht: Es gibt eine Theosophie, eine Lehre vom niederen und höheren Ich; der Mensch hat einen physischen Leib, Ätherleib, Astralleib und so weiter; sondern da zogen Rhapsoden herum, das heißt solche Menschen, die berufen waren, vom Geiste zu künden, und erzählten etwa folgendes - und ich will einiges von dem, was damals durch Mittel- und Osteuropa besonders vorgetragen wurde, jetzt einmal wiederholen:

Es war einmal ein Königssohn. Der ritt hinaus und kam an einen Graben und hörte dort, wie es aus dem Graben herauf wimmerte. Er folgte dem Lauf des Grabens, um zu sehen, was da wimmerte, und fand darin eine alte Frau. Da ließ er sein Pferd stehen, stieg herunter in den Graben und half der alten Frau herauf, denn sie war hinuntergefallen in den Graben. Als er nun sah, daß sie nicht gehen konnte, weil sie sich das Bein verletzt hatte, fragte er sie, wie sie zu diesem Unfall gekommen wäre. Da erzählte ihm die Frau: Ich bin eine alte Frau und muß früh nach Mitternacht fort in die Stadt, um Eier zu verkaufen; da bin ich in den Graben gefallen. Da sagte der Königssohn zu ihr: Sieh, du kannst jetzt nicht in deine Wohnung gehen, da will ich dich auf mein Pferd setzen und in deine Wohnung bringen. Und das tat er. Da sagte ihm die Frau: Du bist, trotzdem du von hoher Geburt bist, doch ein lieber und guter Mensch, und du sollst, weil du mir geholfen hast, von mir eine Belohnung erhalten. Und er ahnte jetzt, daß sie mehr als eine alte Frau war, denn sie sagte: Weil du solche Güte an mir bewiesen hast, sollst du den Lohn bekommen, der deiner guten Seele gebührt. Willst du die Tochter der Blumenkönigin heiraten? - Ja! sagte er. Und sie sprach weiter: Dazu brauchst du, was ich dir leicht geben kann. Und da gab sie ihm ein Glöckchen mit den Worten: Wenn du es einmal läuten wirst, kommt der Adlerkönig mit seinen Scharen und hilft dir in einer Lage, in welche du schon kommen wirst; wenn du es zweimal läutest, kommt der Fuchskönig mit seinen Scharen und hilft dir in einer Lage, in welche du schon kommen wirst; und wenn du es dreimal läutest, kommt der Fischkönig mit seinen Scharen und hilft dir in einer Lage, in die du schon kommen wirst. - Der Königssohn nahm das Glöckchen und ging nach Hause und sagte dort, daß er die Tochter der Blumenkönigin aufsuchen wolle, und ritt davon. Er ritt lange und lange, und niemand konnte ihm sagen, wo die Blumenkönigin mit ihrer Tochter wohnte. Da war dann sein Pferd schon unbrauchbar geworden und ging vollends zugrunde, so daß er die Wanderung zu Fuß fortsetzen mußte. Da kam er zu einem Greis, den er fragte, wo die Wohnung der Blumenkönigin sei. Ich kann es dir nicht sagen, gab ihm dieser zur Antwort, aber gehe nur fort, weiter und immer weiter, und du wirst meinen Vater finden, der wird es dir vielleicht sagen können. Der Königssohn ging also weiter, viele, viele Jahre, und fand einen uralten Greis. Den fragte er: Kannst du mir sagen, wo die Wohnung der Blumenkönjgin ist? Der aber antwortete ihm: Ich kann es dir nicht sagen. Aber gehe nur weiter, immer weiter, durch lange Jahre noch; da wirst du meinen Vater finden, und der wird dir ganz gewiß sagen können, wo die Wohnung der Blumenkönigiin ist. Der Königssohn ging also weiter und fand endlich einen uralten Greis, den er fragte, ob er ihm sagen könne, wo die Blumenkönigin mit ihrer Tochter wohne. Da sagte ihm der Greis: Die Blumenkönigin wohnt fern in einem Berge, den du hier von weitem siehst. Sie wird aber bewacht von einem wilden Drachen. Du kannst zunächst nicht heran, denn der Drache schläft nie in dieser Zeit; er hat nur eine gewisse Zeit, wo er schläft, und jetzt ist gerade Wachenszeit. Aber du mußt ein Stück weitergehen, zu dem andern Berg; da lebt die Drachenmutter, durch die wirst du dein Ziel erreichen. - Mutig ging er also weiter, kam zum ersten Berg, kam zum zweiten Berg und fand dort die Drachenmutter, das Urbild der Häßlichkeit. Er aber wußte, daß es von ihr abhing, ob er die Tochter der Blumenkönigin finden könnte. Da sah er in ihrer Umgebung sieben andere Drachen, die alle gierig darnach waren, die Blumenkönigin und ihre Tochter zu bewachen, die in alter Gefangenschaft waren und durch den Königssohn erlöst werden sollten. Da sagte er zu der Drachenmutter: O ich erkenne, daß ich dein Knecht werden muß, wenn ich die Blumenkönigin finden will! - Ja, sagte sie, du mußt mein Knecht werden, aber du mußt einen Dienst tun, der nicht leicht ist. Hier ist ein Pferd, das mußt du auf die Weide führen, den ersten Tag, den zweiten Tag und den dritten Tag. Wenn du es gesund nach Hause bringst, dann kannst du vielleicht nach drei Tagen erreichen, was du willst. Bringst du es aber nicht gesund nach Hause, so fressen dich die Drachen auf - wir alle fressen dich auf! — Der Königssohn ging darauf ein, und am nächsten Morgen wurde ihm das Pferd übergeben. Er wollte es auf die Weide führen, aber bald war es verschwunden. Er suchte es, aber er konnte es nicht finden und wurde darüber ganz unglücklich. Da erinnerte er sich an das Glöckchen, das ihm die alte Frau gegeben hatte, zog es heraus und läutete es einmal. Da versammelten sich

viele Adler, geführt vom Adlerkönig, die suchten das Pferd, und er konnte es so der Drachenmutter wiederbringen. Die sagte zu ihm: Weil du das Pferd zurückgebracht hast, gebe ich dir einen kupfernen Mantel, damit kannst du an dem Ball teilnehmen, der heute Nacht in dem Kreise der Blumenkönigin und ihrer Tochter stattfindet. Am zweiten Tage sollte er dann das Pferd wieder auf die Weide führen. Es wurde ihm wieder übergeben, bald aber war es wieder verschwunden, und er konnte es nirgends finden. Da zog er sein Glöckchen heraus und läutete es zweimal. Alsbald erschien der Fuchskönig, gefolgt von vielen seiner Heeresfolge, die suchten das Pferd, und er konnte es wieder der Drachenmutter überbringen. Da sagte sie ihm: Heute bekommst du einen silbernen Mantel, damit kannst du wieder zu dem Ball gehen, der heute Nacht im Kreise der Blumenkönigin und ihrer Tochter stattfindet. - Auf dem Balle aber sagte ihm die Blumenkönigin: Verlange am dritten Tage ein Füllen von diesem Pferde! Mit diesem Füllen kannst du mich erlösen, und wir werden vereinigt sein. - Am dritten Tage wurde ihm dann wieder das Pferd übergeben, um es auf die Weide zu führen. Bald war es wieder verschwunden, denn es war sehr wild. Er zog daher das Glöckchen heraus, läutete es dreimal, und es kam der Fischkönig mit seiner Heeresfolge, die suchten ihm das Pferd, und er brachte es so zum dritten Mal nach Hause. Glücklich hatte er seine Aufgabe vollendet. Da gab ihm die Drachenmutter als Lohn einen goldenen Mantel, als seine dritte Hülle, damit konnte er am dritten Tage an dem Ball bei der Blumenkönigin teilnehmen. Und außerdem konnte er als sein ihm gebührendes Geschenk das Füllen jenes Pferdes bekommen, das er gehütet hatte. Mit dem konnte er dann die Blumenkönigin und ihre Tochter hinführen zu ihrer eigenen Burg. Und um die Burg herum, da alle die andern die Tochter rauben wollten, ließ sie eine dichte Mauer von Gesträuchwerk wachsen, so daß die Burg nicht eingenommen werden konnte. Und da sagte dann die Blumenkönigin zu dem Königssohn: Du hast dir meine Tochter erworben; du sollst sie fernerhin haben, aber nur unter einer Bedingung: du darfst sie nur ein halbes Jahr haben, das andere halbe Jahr muß sie zurück unter die Oberfläche der Erde, damit sie mit mir vereint sein kann, denn nur so ist es möglich, daß du mit ihr vereinigt sein kannst. — So also bekam er die Tochter der Blumenkönigin und lebte mit ihr immer ein halbes Jahr, während sie die andere Hälfte des Jahres bei ihrer Mutter war.

In viele, viele Seelen zogen diese und andere Geschichten damals ein. Die Seelen horchten hin und nahmen es auf - nahmen es aber nicht auf, um es etwa nach der Weise von sonderbaren Theosophen der Neuzeit allegorisch auszulegen, denn als symbolische und allegorische Auslegungen sind diese Dinge nichts wert. Nein, die Menschen nahmen es auf, weil sie ihre Lust und ihr Vergnügen daran hatten, weil sie das warme Leben bei solchen Erzählungen durch ihre Seele ziehen fühlten. Und nichts weiter wollten sie, wenn dies durch ihre Seele zog, wenn ihnen erzählt wurde von dem Königssohn, von seinen Taten mit dem Glöckchen und seiner Erwerbung der Tochter der Blumenkönigin. Und viele Seelen leben jetzt, die damals so etwas gehört und in Lust und Freude aufgenommen haben. Und wenn so etwas aufgenommen wird zum Entzücken und zur Befriedigung der Seele, so lebt es weiter in der Seele. Dann nehmen solche Seelen Gedankenformen in Gefühlen und Empfindungen auf, und dann sind sie etwas anderes geworden, als sie vorher waren. Das bringt Früchte, das gibt Kräfte den Seelen, und diese Kräfte verwandeln sich, werden zu etwas anderem. Was sind sie denn geworden? Zu dem sind sie geworden, was jetzt in den Seelen ist als Sehnsucht nach einer höheren Auslegung derselben Geheimnisse, als Sehnsucht nach der Geisteswissenschaft. Damals haben die Rhapsoden nicht erzählt: Es gibt einen Menschen, der strebt zum höheren Selbst hinauf und muß dazu überwinden, was ihn herunterdrücken will als sein niederes Selbst. Sondern sie haben erzählt: Einen Königssohn gab es; der zog aus und fand einen Graben, aus dem es herauf wimmerte, und tat das, was eine gute Tat war. Heute sagen wir: Der Mensch muß etwas tun, was eine gute Tat, eine Tat der Liebe, des Opfers ist. Damals erzählte man ein solches Tun im Bilde. Heute sagen wir: Der Mensch muß in sich jene Stimmung des Geistes bekommen, durch die er eine Ahnung erhält von der geistigen Welt, einen Zusammenhang mit ihr und durch die er fähig wird, seine Kräfte so zu entwickeln, daß er mit der geistigen Welt in eine Beziehung kommen kann. Damals sagte man das im Bilde: Die alte Frau gab dem Königssohn ein Glöckchen, das läutete er. Heute wird gesagt: Der Mensch hat in sich aufgenommen die übrigen Naturreiche; was da ausgebreitet vorhanden ist, das hat der Mensch in sich harmonisch vereinigt. Er muß aber verstehen, wie das in ihm lebt, was draußen ausgebreitet ist, und kann seine niedere Natur nur dadurch überwinden, daß er das, was in den Naturreichen wirkt, in das rechte Verhältnis zu sich bringt, so daß es ihm zu Hilfe kommen kann.

Wie oft haben wir gesprochen von der Entwickelung des Menschen durch die Saturn-, Sonnen- und Mondenzeit hinauf, wie er zurückgelassen hat die andern Reiche und das, was das Beste ist, aus ihnen herausgezogen hat, um hinaufzusteigen zu einer Höhe. Wozu hat er sich da entwickelt? Zu dem, wofür schon Plato ein Bild gebraucht, um hinzudeuten auf das, was in des Menschen Seele lebt: das Bild des Pferdes, mit dem er dahinreitet von Inkarnation zu Inkarnation. Damals stellte man das Bild hin von dem Glöckchen, das geläutet wurde, damit die Naturreiche in ihren Repräsentanten, dem Adlerkönig, dem Fuchskönig und dem Fischkönig, kamen, um das, was Beherrscher der drei Naturreiche werden soll, in das rechte Verhältnis zu bringen.

Die Seele des Menschen ist wild, und nur dadurch, daß Liebe und Weisheit sie ergreifen und glätten, kommt der Mensch in das rechte Verhältnis. Damals trat es in bildhafter Weise vor die Menschen hin. Gelenkt wurde die Seele dahin, daß sie das, was wir heute anders erzählen, verstehen kann. Damals wurde erzählt: Wenn er das Glöckchen einmal läutete, kam der Adlerkönig, wenn er es zweimal läutete, kam der Fuchskönig, und wenn er es dreimal läutete, kam der Fischkönig; die brachten das Pferd zurück. Das heißt, die Stürme der Menschenseele, die wild dahinstürmt, müssen erkannt werden, und wenn wir sie erkennen, kann auch die Seele von dem Niederen befreit und in Ordnung gebracht werden.

Wir sagen: Der Mensch muß kennenlernen, wie seine eigenen Leidenschaften, Zorn und so weiter, in seiner eigenen Entwickelung zusammenhängen mit seiner Entwickelung von sieben zu sieben Jahren, das heißt, wie wir in dem menschlichen Leben kennenlernen müssen die dreifache Hüllennatur des Menschen. Damals stellte man das grandiose Bild hin: Jedesmal wenn der Königssohn mit dem Glöckchen geläutet hatte, das heißt, wenn er eines der Reiche in seine Macht gezwungen hatte, so bekam er eine Hülle. - Wir sagen heute: Wir studieren die Natur des physischen Leibes. Damals brauchte man das Bild: Die Drachenmutter gab ihm einen Mantel aus Kupfer. Wir sagen: Wir lernen kennen die Natur unseres Ätherleibes. Damals: Die Drachenmutter gab ihm das zweitemal einen silbernen Mantel. Wir sagen weiter: Wir lernen unsern Astralleib kennen mit allen auf- und abwogenden Leidenschaften und so weiter. Damals sagte man im Bilde: Die Drachenmutter gab ihm am dritten Tage einen goldenen Mantel. — Was wir heute in unsern Begriffen über die dreifache Hüllennatur des Menschen lernen, das wurde damals angeregt durch das Bild vom kupfernen, silbernen und goldenen Mantel. Und für die Seelen, die damals die Gedankenformen von dem kupfernen, dem silbernen und dem goldenen Mantel aufgenommen haben, sagen wir heute dasjenige, was ihnen Verständnis erwecken kann für den dichten physischen Leib, der sich zu den andern Hüllen des Menschen verhält wie das Erz des Kupfers zu Silber und Gold. - Wir sagen heute: Es sind auf dem Monde zurückgeblieben luziferische Wesenheiten, siebenerlei Arten, die machen sich an den Astralleib des Menschen heran. Damals sagte der Rhapsode: Als der Königssohn zu dem Berge kam, wo er die Vereinigung mit der Tochter der Blumenkönigin finden sollte, traf er sieben Drachen, die wollten ihn auffressen, wenn er sein Tagewerk nicht richtig erfüllte. Wir wissen: Wenn unsere Entwickelung nicht in der richtigen Weise geschieht, so wird durch die Kräfte der luziferischen Wesenheiten, die siebenfacher Art sind, unsere Entwikkelung eben verdorben. — Wir sagen heute: Indem wir eine geistige Entwickelung durchmachen, finden wir unser höheres Selbst. Damals stellte man das Bild hin: Der Königssohn vereinigte sich mit der Blumenkönigin. — Und wir sagen: Die menschliche Seele muß in einen gewissen Rhythmus hineinkommen.

Vor einigen Wochen habe ich gesagt: Die menschliche Seele muß, wenn in ihr irgendeine Idee aufgestiegen ist, diese in der Zeit ausreifen lassen, und sie wird dabei einen gewissen Rhythmus beobachten können, denn nach sieben Tagen ist die Idee in die Tiefe der Seele eingedrungen, nach vierzehn Tagen kann die reifer gewordene Idee die äußere Astralsubstanz ergreifen und sich vom Weltengeiste taufen lassen; nach einundzwanzig Tagen ist sie wieder reifer geworden, und erst nach viermal sieben Tagen ist sie so weit, daß wir sie als unser Persönliches der Welt übergeben können. Das ist ein innerer Rhythmus der Seele. Und nur der kann in günstigem Sinne schaffen, der nicht gierig das, was ihm einfällt, in die Welt hineinpreßt, sondern der da weiß, daß sich die Regelmäßigkeit der äußeren Welt in seiner eigenen Seele wiederholt, daß wir so leben müssen, daß wir in uns mikrokosmisch den Makrokosmos wiederholen. - Der Rhapsode sagte: Der Mensch muß seine Seelenkräfte in Einklang versetzen, muß die Tochter der Blumenkönigin suchen und mit ihr eine Ehe eingehen, wo er den einen Teil des Jahres mit der Tochter lebt und sie den andern Teil des Jahres der Mutter überläßt, die in den Tiefen wirkt. Das heißt, der Mensch setzt sich in einen Rhythmus, und der Rhythmus seines Lebens verläuft wie der Rhythmus des Makrokosmos.

Diese Bilder - und wir könnten Hunderte solcher Bilder anführen — regten durch ihre Gedankenformen die Seelenkräfte an, so daß heute die entsprechenden Seelen reif geworden sind, die andere Form, die wir in der Geisteswissenschaft pflegen, zu hören. Aber es mußte so kommen, daß, man möchte sagen, durch die Entbehrung die Sehnsucht erst recht groß wurde; erst mußte gleichsam alles, was in der Seele an geistiger Sehnsucht lebte, in der physischen Welt verschwinden. In der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts ist so vieles verschwunden. Mit der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts kam dann die materialistische Kultur, und öde wurde es in bezug auf das geistige Leben. Um so größer aber wurde die Sehnsucht und um so bedeutungsvoller das Ideal der spirituellen Bewegung. Nur wenige Menschen gab es, die wie in einem stillen Martyrium in der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts noch empfanden, wie die Ideen, die einmal erschaut worden sind, die dann erzählt wurden, fortlebten, aber im Untergange waren.

Da war im Jahre 1803 ein Mensch geboren worden. In seiner Seele war noch so recht etwas von dem Nachklang der alten Weistümer der Vorzeit lebendig. Es lebte etwas in ihm, was ganz verwandt war mit unserer theosophischen Idee. Seine Seele war voll von dem, was wir heute nennen die geisteswissenschaftliche Lösung der Weltenrätsel: es ist Julius Mosen. Seine Seele konnte nur dadurch bestehen, daß sein Leib während des größten Teiles seines Lebens an das Bett gefesselt war. Es paßte die Seele nicht mehr zusammen mit dem Leibe, denn durch die Art und Weise, wie er diese Dinge gefaßt hatte und sie doch wieder nicht spirituell durchdringen konnte, hatte er seinen Ätherleib aus dem physischen Leib herausgezogen, der dadurch gelähmt war. Die Seele aber erhob sich in die geistigen Höhen. Im Jahre 1831 schrieb er ein merkwürdiges Werk, «Ritter Wahn». Er war gewahr geworden, daß in Italien eine wunderbare Sage lebte, eine alte italienische Volkssage vom Ritter Wahn, und indem er diese Sage betrachtete, sagte er sich: Darin lebt Geist vom Weltengeist; diese Volkssage ist so entstanden, diese Bilder sind dadurch geformt worden, daß diejenigen, welche sie geformt haben, durchdrungen waren von dem lebendigen Spirituellen der Weltenführung. -— Und was brachte er damit zustande? 1831 schrieb er ein Werk, wunderbar und hinreißend groß. Es ist natürlich vergessen worden - wie alle Dinge, die so dem geistig Großen entstammen.

Ritter Wahn geht aus, den Tod zu überwinden. Auf seinem Wege findet er drei Greise. Es ist Julius Mosen nun gelungen, in merkwürdiger Weise den Namen des einen Greises, il mondo, zu übersetzen mit Ird; denn er wußte, daß etwas Eigentümliches darin liegt, um es in die deutsche Sprache herüberzubringen. Ird, Zeit und Raum sind die drei Greise, die Ritter Wahn findet, als er auszieht, um den Tod zu überwinden. Aber er kann diese drei Greise nicht brauchen, denn sie sind dem Tode unterworfen. Ird ist alles das, was unterworfen ist den Gesetzen des physischen Leibes und somit dem Tode. Zeit, der Ätherleib, unterliegt der Vergänglichkeit. Und der dritte, der niedere Astralleib, der uns die Anschauung des Raumes gibt, ist auch dem Tode unterworfen. Unsere Individualität geht von Inkarnation zu Inkarnation; worinnen wir aber als in unserer dreifachen Hülle stekken, das lebt nach der italienischen Volkssage in Ird, Zeit und Raum.

Was ist Ritter Wahn? Wir haben oft von dem gesprochen, was als Maya in uns einzieht. Wir sind es selbst, wir Menschen, die von Inkarnation zu Inkarnation schreiten und hinausschauen in die Welt und die große Täuschung empfangen. Wir sind ein jeder der Ritter Wahn und gehen ein jeder aus, indem wir ein Leben im Geiste führen, den Tod zu besiegen. Da treffen wir auf die drei Greise, unsere Hüllen. Alt sind sie! Der physische Leib besteht seit der Saturnzeit, der Ätherleib seit der Sonnenzeit, der Astralleib seit der Mondenzeit, und was als Ich im Menschen lebt, hat sich während der Erdenzeit eingefügt. Julius Mosen stellt es nun so dar, daß Ritter Wahn mit der Seele, durch die er den Tod besiegen will, zunächst dahinzustürmen sucht als Reiter - nach dem platonischen Bilde, das in ganz Mitteleuropa und weit darüber hinaus gelebt hat. So stürmt Ritter Wahn heran und will den Himmel erobern mit dem materialistischen Denken wie die Menschen, die sich an den Sinnenschein hängen, weil sie befangen bleiben in Täuschung und Maya. Wenn sie aber dann auch eintreten in die geistige Welt mit dem Tode, dann geschieht, was Julius Mosen so schön dargestellt hat: Sie haben ihr Leben nicht ausgelebt, sie sehnen sich wieder herunter auf die Erde zur Weiterentwickelung der Seele. Und Ritter Wahn kommt wieder herunter. Und als er die schöne Morgane erblickt, die Seele, die angeregt werden soll durch alles Irdische und — wie die Tochter der Blumenkönigin darstellen soll die Vereinigung mit alledem, was uns nur durch die Erdenschule gegeben werden kann, da, als er so verbunden ist mit der schönen Morgane, als er wieder mit der Erde verbunden ist, da verfällt er auch dem Tode — das heißt, er geht durch den Tod hindurch, um diese eigene Seele, die als Morgane auftritt, immer weiter emporzubringen während einer jeden Inkarnation.

Aus diesen Bildern, die den Stempel von Jahrtausenden an sich tragen, fließen die Ideen herein, die sich ausleben in Künstlern wie bei Julius Mosen, bei dem sie sich herausrangen aus einer Seele, die zu groß war, um während der heranrückenden materialistischen Zeit in einem Leibe gesund zu leben, so daß er das stille Martyrium auf sich nehmen mußte für die Größe seiner glühenden Seele. Das war 1831. Das lebte in einem Menschen der ersten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts. Das soll wieder auferstehen, aber jetzt so, daß es der Menschen Stärke, der Menschen Kräfte befeuert. Und es wird wieder auferstehen! Und das gibt uns das Bewußtsein von der Bedeutung dessen, was wir als theosophischen Geist erkennen und was als Rosenkreuzergeist in die Menschen einziehen soll.

Jetzt ahnen wir, daß immer vorhanden war, was wir selbst pflegen. Wir verfallen den Täuschungen des Ritters Wahn, wenn wir annehmen wollten, daß irgend etwas in der Welt gedeihen kann, ohne daß dieser Geist durch die Adern der Menschen wirkt. Woher kamen denn die Rhapsoden des 7., 8. oder des 12. Jahrhunderts, die hinauszogen in die Welt, um die Gedankenformen zu erregen, damit die Seelen jetzt etwas anderes fassen können? Wo war das Zentrum dieser Rhapsoden? Wo hatten sie gelernt, solche Bilder vor die Menschen hinzustellen? - In denselben Tempeln hatten sie es gelernt, die wir als die Schulen der Rosenkreuzer anzusehen haben. Sie waren Schüler der Rosenkreuzer, und ihnen sagten die Lehrer: Heute könnt ihr noch nicht hinausziehen und in Ideen zu den Menschen sprechen, wie dies später der Fall sein wird; heute müßt ihr von dem Königssohn, von der Blumenkönigin und von dem dreifachen Mantel erzählen, damit die Gedankenformen sich bilden, die in den Seelen leben sollen. Und wenn die Seelen wiederkommen werden, dann werden sie verstehen, was sie dann brauchen zum weiteren Fortschritt. - Immerzu senden die geistigen Zentren ihre Abgesandten in die Welt, damit in einem jeden Zeitalter das, was in den Tiefen des Geistes ruht, an die Menschenseelen herangebracht werden kann.

Es ist eine triviale Anschauung, wenn heute die Menschen glauben, aus ihren Phantasien heraus Märchen formen zu können. Die alten Märchen, die Ausdruck sind der alten geistigen Geheimnisse der Welt, sind so entstanden, daß die, welche sie für die Welt geformt haben, hinhorchten und lauschten bei denen, die ihnen die geistigen Geheimnisse erzählen konnten, so daß die Zusammenfügung, die Komposition gemäß den geistigen Geheimnissen ist. Deshalb können wir sagen: Es lebt in ihnen der Geist der ganzen Menschheit, des Mikrokosmos und des Makrokosmos.

Von denselben Tempeln heraus wurden die Rhapsoden geschickt, um inhaltsvolle Märchen zu erzählen, und aus denselben Tempeln stammen die Erkenntnislehren der heutigen Zeit, die eintreten in die Seelen und Herzen der Menschen, um die Kultur möglich zu machen, welche die Menschheit braucht. So schreitet der Geist, welcher der Menschheit zugrundeliegt, von Epoche zu Epoche. Diejenigen Wesenheiten, welche in der vorchristlichen Zeit die Individualitäten, die in den heiligen Tempeln saßen, unterwiesen und das lehrten, was sie sich selbst aus früheren planetarischen Zuständen mitgebracht hatten, unterstellten sich der Führung des Christus, dieser einzigartigen Individualität, um in dessen Sinne weiterzuwirken. Der große Lehrer, der Menschenführer ist der Christus geworden. Und wenn ich Ihnen heute noch erzählen könnte, daß die Märchen, die seit Jahrhunderten leben, auf dieselbe Weise entstanden sind, und daß sie innerhalb der ganzen westlichen Kultur Gedankenformen angeregt haben, die dasselbe ausdrücken, nur im Bilde, wie das, was wir heute vom Christus zur Welt sprechen, dann würden Sie sehen, wie in der Zeit nach dem Mysterium von Golgatha die geistige Führung der Menschheit an ihren zentralen Stätten sich in der Tat unterstellt hat der Führung des Christus. $o steht alles in der geistigen Führung im Zusammenhange mit dem Christus. Werden wir uns dieses Zusammenhanges bewußt, dann blicken wir auf zu dem Lichte, das wir haben müssen, das wir insbesondere ausnützen müssen in bezug auf das, wonach sich die Seelen gesehnt haben, als sie sich im 19. Jahrhundert inkarnierten.

Lassen wir solche Gestalten auf uns wirken, die uns bekannt-machen mit den Sehnsuchten früherer Zeiten, dann fühlen wir mit ganzer Verantwortung auf unseren Seelen ruhen: Die andern haben gewartet, damit wir das vollbringen können, wonach sie sich gesehnt haben! Was diese Geister wie zum Beispiel Julius Mosen, der einen «Ritter Wahn» und einen «Ahasver» geschaffen hat wie ein letzter Prophet des Abendlandes, ersehnten, weil in ihnen lebendig wurde, was die Abgesandten der heiligen Tempel erzählt hatten in Bildern, in Hunderten und Hunderten von Bildern, um die Seelen für die spätere Zeit vorzubereiten - was diese Geister ersehnten, das zeigt sich in den Worten, die Rothe. in Heidelberg im Jahre 1847 hinschrieb: «Wenn sie nur erst einmal eigentliche Wissenschaft geworden ist, und also auch deutlich bestimmte Resultate abgesetzt hat, so werden diese schon nach und nach in die allgemeine Überzeugung übergehen oder populär werden, und sich so auch als gemeingültige Wahrheiten für diejenigen vererben, die sich in die Wege nicht finden können, auf denen sie entdeckt wurden und allein entdeckt werden konnten!» Damals mußte ein Mann, der die Sehnsucht hatte, nicht nur für sich, sondern auch für seine Zeitgenossen, sich in die resignierten Worte finden: «Doch dies ruht im Schoße der Zukunft, der wir nicht vorgreifen wollen!» 1847 hatten in einer äußerlich vernehmbaren Weise diejenigen, welche die Geheimnisse der Rosenkreuzertempel kennen, nicht gesprochen. Was aber im Schoße der Zukunft ruht, das kann lebendig werden, wenn sich genügend viele Seelen finden, die da wissen, daß Erkenntnis Pflicht ist, weil wir unsere Seele nicht unentwickelt an den Weltengeist zurückgeben dürfen; denn sonst haben wir dem Weltengeiste selber etwas entzogen, was er uns an Kräften einverleibt hat. Wenn sich solche Seelen finden, die wissen, was sie dem Weltengeiste schuldig sind, indem sie nach Erkenntnis der Weltenrätsel streben, dann werden sich die Hoffnungen erfüllen, welche die besten Leute der alten Zeiten hegten. Ja, sie sahen auf uns, als auf die Nachgeborenen, hin und sagten: Wenn sie nur erst einmal Wissenschaft geworden sein wird, dann müßte sie populär werden, dann müßte sie die Herzen ergreifen! - Diese Herzen müssen nur erst einmal da sein, müssen erscheinen! Von denen hängt es ab, die mit richtigem Verständnis in unserer nach dem Spirituellen strebenden Vereinigung sind, um zu wissen: Ich muß sie haben, diese geistige Beleuchtung der Daseinsrätsel! Von jeder einzelnen Seele, die in unserer Vereinigung ist, hängt es ab, ob solche charakterisierten Sehnsuchten nur ein eitler Traum derer waren, die auf unser Bestes gehofft haben, oder ob es wertvolle Träume waren, die wir ihnen erfüllen.

Wenn wir in unserer Zeit die wissenschaftliche Öde sehen, die Öde in der Kunst, im gesellschaftlichen Leben und überall, dann müssen wir uns sagen: Wir brauchen nicht aufzugehen in dieser Öde; wir können heraus aus ihr. Denn wieder ist eine Zeit angebrochen, in welcher die heiligen Tempel sprechen - und jetzt nicht bloß in Bildern und Märchen, sondern in solchen Wahrheiten, die zwar von vielen heute noch als Theorien genommen werden, die aber immer mehr und mehr lebendige Lebenssäfte, Blut der Seelen werden können und werden müssen. Es kann jeder einzelne sich entschließen, mit dem Besten, was er in seiner Seele hat, dieses Lebensblut aufzunehmen.

So ist ein Gedanke, der wie ein Ergebnis hervorgeht aus dem, was wir uns aus der Betrachtung der Zeiten haben bilden können. Und so soll der Gedanke sein, den wir jetzt in unsere Seele senken, der die Zusammenprägung ist von dem eigentlichen Sinn und Geist der Leitung und Führung der ganzen Menschheit. Wenn wir diesen Gedanken in unserer Seele wirksam sein lassen, haben wir reichliche Seelenanregung wieder für Monate, können durch Monate hindurch diesen Gedanken wieder verarbeiten. Denn wir werden sehen, daß viel in ihm ist, daß er zu einem Bau erwachsen kann - nicht etwa deswegen, weil er mit diesen oder jenen Worten ausgesprochen ist. Meine Worte mögen noch so unvollkommen sein: nicht wie der Gedanke ausgesprochen, sondern was er in Realität ist, darauf kommt es an. Und was er in Realität ist, kann in jeder einzelnen Seele leben. Denn alle Summe der Wahrheit ist in jeder einzelnen Seele als Keim vorhanden und kann erblühen, wenn sich die Seele diesem Keim hingibt.

Tenth Lecture

It is undoubtedly noticeable in our time that the spirit of spiritual science, which has been discussed in this branch and within our German section in general for years now, is beginning to take root more and more in the world and to find understanding in the hearts and minds of our contemporaries. Of course, it is not possible—although it would sometimes be desirable for mutual understanding—to speak from time to time about the introduction of our spiritual scientific feelings, emotions, and insights into the present world. Certainly, many of you would like to know how what you yourselves take into your souls as spiritual nourishment affects other hearts and other personalities in our present time. It is only on certain occasions that we can speak of this external spread of our spiritual scientific view. But it may perhaps fill you with a certain satisfaction if I say by way of introduction that we can see again and again how, in different regions of the world, under different climatic conditions, the spirit that animates us all is making its entrance, here more, there less. Some time ago, when I was trying to awaken understanding for our ideas in Trieste, in the south of Austria, it was clear to see how the views we hold are beginning to take root there too. And when we move from this southern point up to Copenhagen, where in recent days a number of lectures have brought to the hearts of many what we recognize as spirit, we could also see there among our northern friends how more and more the spirit that we cultivate under the sign of the Rosicrucians is taking hold. When one takes individual examples of such external facts and puts them together, it becomes clear that there is a need and a longing for what we call spiritual science in our present time.

It is truly the innermost nerve of the attitude that permeates our spiritual direction not to engage in any kind of agitation or propaganda in an external sense, but simply to listen to what the great, comprehensive teachings of the world offer that the hearts and souls of contemporary human beings need—need in order to have the possibility and security of life in our time. Here we can reflect, with the thought of a more general consideration, that it is, in a sense, a kind of obligation for us in our time to make this spiritual attitude the nourishment of our soul. This is connected with the whole way in which we have grown into our time. We have certainly all absorbed enough of the great law of karma to know that it is not a coincidence, not a triviality, when this or that individuality feels compelled to descend into the physical world at this particular time in order to take on a physical body. And all those souls sitting here have felt the longing to take on a physical body at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, because what can be cultivated and done within the physical environment during this time wants to be experienced by these souls — by your souls.

Let us consider our time as it appears spiritually to souls who, like ours, were born into our time. Things are really quite different at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, both in the spiritual environment and out in the exoteric world, than they were even fifty or sixty years ago. The person growing up today — and you were all in this situation — tries here and there to hear about what the spirit, the spiritual guidance, the spiritual leadership of the world is, what permeates the outer world in the creations of the various natural kingdoms and what enters our soul. And we can say that for half a century now, wherever the soul longs for the spiritual, it finds very little genuine spiritual nourishment. Yes, in the deepest depths of the soul this longing exists, which can at most be drowned out when it does not seem to speak loudly; there is this longing, and there everyone, wherever they stand in life, whatever they are supposed to do, wants to receive spiritual, real spiritual nourishment. No matter what field of science one pursues today, one only learns about external material facts, which are indeed used in clever, magnificent, and astute ways to advance the great cultural progress of the present, but which do not reveal what the spirit wants to reveal. Whether one is active in the world as an artist or in a more practical branch of life, one finds little of what one needs to keep the spirit, the head, and the hands working, so that we have not only strength and impetus for work, but also security, comfort, and strength in life. And the people at the beginning of the 19th century already sensed in a certain way that in the near future there would be little of this available. Many people in the first half of the 19th century, when remnants of an old spiritual life still existed, albeit in a different form, said to themselves: There is something in the air like a complete disappearance of the old spiritual treasures that have come down to us through tradition from ancient times. But the justified cultural advances of the 19th century will completely wipe out what has come down to us in spiritual tradition from ancient times.

We hear many such voices. And I would like to cite here some examples of how such voices sounded in the first half of the 19th century. Let us hear the voice of a man among us who, in the first half of the 19th century, knew much about the old form of theosophy, so to speak, who also knew that the old form would now have to disappear completely under the course of events in the 19th century, but who at the same time was firmly convinced that there must be a future in which the old theosophy would return. The words I am about to read were written in 1847, at the end of the first half of the 19th century. The person who wrote them was one of those thinkers who no longer exist today, who still felt the last echoes of those old traditions that had been lost long before:

“What theosophy actually wants is often difficult to discern in the older theosophists, ... but it is no less clear that theosophy, on its present path, cannot achieve a scientific existence and therefore cannot have any greater effect. It would be very hasty to conclude from this that it is a scientifically unjustified and merely ephemeral phenomenon. History itself is loud enough testimony to the contrary. It tells us how this enigmatic phenomenon was never able to penetrate, and yet broke forth again and again, held together in its most diverse forms by a chain of never-ending tradition. ... There are few times in history when this lively speculative need has been combined with a lively religious need. But theosophy is only for the latter. ... And what is most important is that once it has become a true science and has produced clearly defined results, these will gradually become part of general belief or become popular, and thus be passed on as universally valid truths to those who cannot find their way to the paths on which they were discovered and could only be discovered.

But this rests in the bosom of the future, which we do not want to anticipate; for now we may gratefully enjoy the beautiful presentation of dear Oetinger, which can certainly count on participation in a wide circle.”

Thus we see how the theosophical spirit was perceived in 1847 by a man like Rothe in Heidelberg, who in his preface refers to a theosophist, Oetinger, from the second half of the 18th century.

What, then, is the theosophical spirit? It is a spirit without which the true achievements of culture could never have come about in the world. And when we think of the greatest achievements, it is the spirit without which there would never have been a Homer, a Pindar, a Raphael, a Michelangelo, without which there would be no religious depth in human beings, but also no spiritual life and no external culture. For everything that man wants to create, he must create out of the spirit. And if he believes he can create without the spirit, he does not know that all spiritual striving falls into decay for certain periods of time and that something which originates to a lesser extent out of the spirit is all the more doomed to death than that which is created out of the spirit. That which has eternal value originates from the spirit, and no creation remains that does not originate from the spirit. But even the smallest creation, even if it is done for everyday life, has eternal value and connects us with the spiritual, for everything that man does is under the guidance of spiritual life. In our theosophical life, as we practice it, know that this life is based on the current we call the Rosicrucian current, and we have often emphasized that the masters of Rosicrucian wisdom have been preparing since the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries what began to happen at the end of the 19th century and will continue to happen in the 20th century. What Rothe in Heidelberg, for example, describes as a future, what he longs for and hopes for, is already present for us. And it is becoming more and more present for us. But this has been prepared for a long time by those who first allowed this spiritual current to flow into souls in a way imperceptible to human beings. In a specific sense, what we call the Rosicrucian path has been present in our theosophical movement in a more conscious form since the 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries—what flowed into hearts and science since the 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries, what shaped the spirit of the people of Europe.

Can we form an idea of how this spirit actually worked from the events that took place in our culture? I said that since the 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries, it has worked as the actual Rosicrucian spirit; but it was always there, only taking on the last Rosicrucian form since the period mentioned. This spirit, which now works as the Rosicrucian spirit, goes back to ancient times. It already had its mysteries in the ancient Atlantean era. And what is unfolding its effectiveness in more recent times flowed, becoming more and more conscious, in earlier times, in times not so long ago, unconsciously into the hearts and souls of human beings.

Let us imagine how this spirit flowed unconsciously into humanity. You are sitting here together. We cultivate together what shows us that in this or that way the human soul develops in order to gradually ascend to the regions where it can understand spiritual life, where it can perhaps also see spiritual life. Many of you have been striving for years to let the concepts and ideas that depict spiritual life flow into your souls, so that you may draw spiritual nourishment from these concepts and ideas. You know the way in which we communicate about the mysteries of the world. I have often spoken about how the various stages of soul development proceed, how the soul lives its way up into the higher worlds. It has been said how human beings must distinguish a higher part of themselves from a lower part; it has been described how human beings came over from other planetary states, how he has gone through a Saturn, Sun, and Moon development, in which his physical body, his etheric body, and his astral body were formed, and how he then began his Earth development. It has been said how something dwells within us that is to be trained here in order to ascend to a higher state. It has also been said that certain beings remained on the moon as Luciferic beings, who later approached the human astral body as seducers in order to give human beings what they could give them. Then we have often spoken of how human beings must overcome this or that in their lower self, how they must conquer this or that in order to ascend to the spheres to which their higher self belongs, how, in order to ascend to the higher regions of spiritual life, they must fulfill Goethe's words:

And as long as you do not have this,
This dying and becoming,
You are but a gloomy guest
On the dark earth!

We have further said that the human development that is possible today, and which can give us strength, security, and real meaning in life, can be achieved by acquiring, for example, knowledge of the multi-membered nature of the human being, by learning to understand that this human being is not chaotically put together, but consists of a physical body, an etheric body, an astral body, and the I. We did not perceive what this meant as mere words, but through the characterization of the different temperaments, through the observation of human education as it proceeds as the development of the physical body until the seventh year, of the etheric body until the fourteenth year, of the astral body until the twenty-first year, we have brought these things to definite ideas. And from reflections on the mission of truth, devotion, anger, and so on, we have seen how what we have come to know as the physical body, etheric body, astral body, sentient soul, intellectual or emotional soul, and conscious soul do not remain abstract concepts, but how they enliven our views of life, how they make our surroundings transparent, clear, and meaningful to us.

This is how we communicate about the mysteries of the world. We can communicate about this today. And even if there are still many people out there who, consciously or unconsciously, remain stuck in materialism, there are still a certain number of souls who feel it is a necessity of life to listen to such representations as they can be given. Many of you would not have sat here for years, living and feeling what we do here, if it were not a necessity of life for you. Why are there souls today who understand this, who can follow the human path of life in the concepts and views we develop here? This is the case for the following reason. Just as you were born today with such longings into a world as I have just tried to describe, so our ancestors in Europe, that is, a large number of the souls present here today, were born through the centuries into a different environment, into a different world than that of the 19th century. Let us look back to the 6th, 7th, or even the 12th or 13th centuries, when many of the souls sitting here today were incarnated, and let us look at what such souls experienced at that time.

In those days, however, there was no Theosophical Society where people talked about everything as we do today; instead, the soul heard something completely different from its surroundings. Let us try to imagine what souls heard back then — not from those who traveled around giving spiritual science lectures, but from rhapsodists or others who went from village to village, from town to town, to proclaim the spirit. What words did such people use back then? Let us consider a single example. At that time, people did not yet say: There is a theosophy, a teaching about the lower and higher self; man has a physical body, an etheric body, an astral body, and so on. Instead, rhapsodes traveled around, that is, people who were called to proclaim the spirit, and they told stories such as the following—and I will now repeat some of what was particularly popular in Central and Eastern Europe at that time:

Once upon a time there was a king's son. He rode out and came to a ditch, where he heard whimpering coming from below. He followed the course of the ditch to see what was whimpering, and found an old woman there. He left his horse standing there, climbed down into the ditch and helped the old woman up, for she had fallen into the ditch. When he saw that she could not walk because she had injured her leg, he asked her how she had come to this accident. The woman told him, “I am an old woman and must go to the city early after midnight to sell eggs; that is when I fell into the ditch. Then the prince said to her, “You cannot go to your home now, so I will put you on my horse and take you there.” And he did so. Then the woman said to him, “Although you are of high birth, you are a kind and good man, and because you have helped me, you shall receive a reward from me.” And he now suspected that she was more than an old woman, for she said, “Because you have shown such kindness to me, you shall receive the reward that your good soul deserves. Will you marry the daughter of the flower queen?” “Yes!” he said. And she continued, “To do so, you need something that I can easily give you.” And she gave him a little bell with the words, “If you ring it once, the eagle king will come with his hosts and help you in a situation you will find yourself in; if you ring it twice, the fox king will come with his hosts and help you in a situation you will find yourself in; and if you ring it three times, the fish king will come with his hosts and help you in a situation you will find yourself in.” The prince took the bell and went home and said that he wanted to find the daughter of the flower queen, and rode off. He rode for a long time, and no one could tell him where the flower queen and her daughter lived. By then his horse had become useless and was completely exhausted, so he had to continue his journey on foot. He came to an old man and asked him where the Flower Queen lived. “I cannot tell you,” he replied, “but go on, further and further, and you will find my father, who may be able to tell you.” So the prince went on for many, many years and found an ancient old man. He asked him, “Can you tell me where the flower queen lives?” But the old man replied, “I cannot tell you. But go on, keep going, for many years, and you will find my father, and he will certainly be able to tell you where the flower queen lives.” So the prince went on and finally found an ancient old man, whom he asked if he could tell him where the flower queen lived with her daughter. The old man said to him, “The flower queen lives far away in a mountain that you can see from here. But she is guarded by a fierce dragon. You cannot approach her, for the dragon never sleeps at this time of day; he only sleeps at certain times, and now is his waking hour. But you must go a little further, to the other mountain; there lives the dragon's mother, through whom you will reach your goal.” So he bravely went on, came to the first mountain, came to the second mountain, and there he found the dragon's mother, the very image of ugliness. But he knew that it was up to her whether he could find the daughter of the flower queen. Then he saw seven other dragons around her, all eager to guard the flower queen and her daughter, who had been held captive for a long time and were to be rescued by the king's son. So he said to the dragon mother: “Oh, I realize that I must become your servant if I want to find the flower queen!” “Yes,” she said, “you must become my servant, but you must do a service that is not easy. Here is a horse that you must lead to pasture on the first day, the second day, and the third day. If you bring it home safe and sound, then perhaps after three days you will achieve what you desire. But if you do not bring it home safe and sound, the dragons will eat you—we will all eat you!” The prince agreed, and the next morning the horse was handed over to him. He wanted to lead it to the pasture, but soon it disappeared. He searched for it, but he couldn't find it and became very unhappy. Then he remembered the little bell the old woman had given him, took it out, and rang it once. Then

many eagles, led by the eagle king, gathered and searched for the horse, and he was able to bring it back to the dragon mother. She said to him, “Because you brought the horse back, I will give you a copper coat so that you can attend the ball that is taking place tonight in the circle of the flower queen and her daughter.” On the second day, he was to lead the horse back to the pasture. It was handed over to him again, but soon it disappeared again, and he could not find it anywhere. So he took out his bell and rang it twice. Immediately the fox king appeared, followed by many of his army, who were looking for the horse, and he was able to return it to the dragon mother. Then she said to him: “Today you will receive a silver cloak, with which you can return to the ball that will take place tonight in the company of the Flower Queen and her daughter. But at the ball, the Flower Queen said to him: ”On the third day, ask for a foal from this horse! With this foal you can redeem me, and we will be united. On the third day, the horse was returned to him to be led to pasture. Soon it disappeared again, for it was very wild. So he took out the little bell, rang it three times, and the fish king came with his army, who searched for the horse, and he brought it home for the third time. He had happily completed his task. The dragon mother gave him a golden cloak as a reward, as his third covering, so that he could attend the ball with the flower queen on the third day. And in addition, he received as his due gift the foal of the horse he had guarded. With it, he was then able to take the flower queen and her daughter to their own castle. And around the castle, since all the others wanted to kidnap the daughter, she had a thick wall of bushes grow up so that the castle could not be taken. And then the flower queen said to the king's son: “You have earned my daughter; you shall have her, but only on one condition: you may have her for only half the year, and for the other half she must return beneath the surface of the earth so that she can be united with me, for only then will it be possible for you to be united with her.” — So he got the daughter of the flower queen and lived with her for half a year, while she spent the other half of the year with her mother.

Many, many souls were moved by this and other stories at that time. The souls listened and took it in—but they did not take it in in order to interpret it allegorically in the manner of strange modern theosophists, for these things are worthless as symbolic and allegorical interpretations. No, people took it in because they enjoyed it, because they felt the warm life flowing through their souls when they heard such stories. And they wanted nothing more when this flowed through their souls, when they were told about the king's son, his deeds with the little bell, and his acquisition of the daughter of the flower queen. And many souls now live who heard such things at that time and accepted them with delight and joy. And when something like this is accepted to the delight and satisfaction of the soul, it lives on in the soul. Then such souls take on thought forms in feelings and sensations, and then they become something different than they were before. This bears fruit, gives strength to the souls, and these strengths transform themselves, become something else. What have they become? They have become what is now in the souls as a longing for a higher interpretation of the same mysteries, as a longing for spiritual science. At that time, the rhapsodes did not say: There is a human being who strives toward the higher self and must overcome what wants to hold him down as his lower self. Instead, they said: There was a king's son who went out and found a pit from which a voice was moaning, and he did what was good. Today we say: Man must do something that is a good deed, an act of love, of sacrifice. At that time, such actions were told in pictures. Today we say: Man must acquire within himself that mood of spirit through which he receives an inkling of the spiritual world, a connection with it, and through which he becomes capable of developing his powers in such a way that he can enter into a relationship with the spiritual world. At that time, this was told in a picture: The old woman gave the prince a little bell, which he rang. Today we say: Man has taken in the other natural kingdoms; what is spread out there, man has harmoniously united within himself. But he must understand how what is spread out there lives within him, and he can only overcome his lower nature by bringing what is at work in the natural kingdoms into the right relationship with himself, so that it can come to his aid.

How often have we spoken of the development of man through the Saturn, Sun, and Moon periods, how he left behind the other kingdoms and drew out the best from them in order to ascend to a higher level. Why did he develop in this way? To that for which Plato already used an image to indicate what lives in the human soul: the image of the horse with which he rides from incarnation to incarnation. At that time, the image of the bell that was rung so that the kingdoms of nature would come in their representatives, the eagle king, the fox king, and the fish king, was used to bring into the right relationship that which was to become the ruler of the three kingdoms of nature.

The soul of man is wild, and only when love and wisdom take hold of it and smooth it out does man come into the right relationship. At that time, it appeared before people in a pictorial way. The soul was guided so that it could understand what we tell differently today. At that time, it was said that when he rang the bell once, the eagle king came; when he rang it twice, the fox king came; and when he rang it three times, the fish king came, and they brought the horse back. This means that the storms of the human soul, which rage wildly, must be recognized, and when we recognize them, the soul can be freed from the lower and brought into order.

We say: Man must learn how his own passions, anger, and so on, are connected in his own development with his development from seven to seven years, that is, how we must learn in human life about the threefold nature of man. At that time, the grandiose image was presented: every time the king's son rang the bell, that is, when he had brought one of the kingdoms under his power, he received a shell. Today we say: we study the nature of the physical body. At that time, the image was needed: the dragon mother gave him a coat of copper. We say: We are learning about the nature of our etheric body. At that time: The dragon mother gave him a silver cloak the second time. We go on to say: We are learning about our astral body with all its rising and falling passions and so on. Back then, they used the image: The dragon mother gave him a golden cloak on the third day. What we learn today in our concepts about the threefold nature of the human being was inspired back then by the image of the copper, silver, and golden cloaks. And for the souls who at that time took in the thought forms of the copper, silver, and golden cloaks, we say today what can awaken their understanding of the dense physical body, which relates to the other sheaths of the human being as the ore of copper relates to silver and gold. Today we say: Luciferic beings of seven kinds have remained behind on the moon and attach themselves to the astral body of human beings. At that time, the rhapsode said: When the prince came to the mountain where he was to be united with the daughter of the flower queen, he met seven dragons who wanted to eat him if he did not fulfill his daily task properly. We know that if our development does not take place in the right way, our development will be corrupted by the forces of the Luciferic beings, who are of sevenfold nature. Today we say: By undergoing spiritual development, we find our higher self. At that time, the image was presented: the king's son united with the flower queen. And we say: the human soul must enter into a certain rhythm.

A few weeks ago, I said: when any idea arises in the human soul, it must allow it to mature in time, and in doing so it will be able to observe a certain rhythm, because after seven days the idea has penetrated into the depths of the soul, after fourteen days the more mature idea can grasp the outer astral substance and be baptized by the world spirit; after twenty-one days it has become more mature, and only after four times seven days is it ready to be handed over to the world as our personality. This is an inner rhythm of the soul. And only those who do not greedily force what comes to mind into the world can create in a favorable sense, but rather those who know that the regularity of the outer world is repeated in their own soul, that we must live in such a way that we repeat the macrocosm microcosmically within ourselves. The rhapsode said: Man must bring his soul forces into harmony, must seek the daughter of the flower queen and marry her, living with her for part of the year and leaving her for the other part of the year to her mother, who works in the depths. This means that man sets himself in a rhythm, and the rhythm of his life proceeds like the rhythm of the macrocosm.

These images — and we could cite hundreds of such images — stimulated the soul forces through their thought forms, so that today the corresponding souls have become ripe to hear the other form that we cultivate in spiritual science. But it had to come about, one might say, that through deprivation the longing became all the greater; first, everything that lived in the soul as spiritual longing had to disappear from the physical world. So much disappeared in the first half of the 19th century. Then, in the second half of the 19th century, materialistic culture came, and spiritual life became desolate. But this made the longing all the greater and the ideal of the spiritual movement all the more meaningful. There were only a few people who, as if in silent martyrdom in the first half of the 19th century, still felt how the ideas that had once been glimpsed and then told lived on, but were in decline.

In 1803, a person was born. In his soul, something of the echoes of the ancient mysteries of the past was still very much alive. Something lived in him that was closely related to our theosophical idea. His soul was filled with what we today call the spiritual-scientific solution to the riddles of the world: it is Julius Mosen. His soul could only survive because his body was confined to bed for most of his life. His soul no longer fit together with his body, for through the way in which he had grasped these things and yet could not penetrate them spiritually, he had withdrawn his etheric body from his physical body, which was thereby paralyzed. But his soul rose to spiritual heights. In 1831 he wrote a remarkable work, “Ritter Wahn” (Knight Madness). He had become aware that there was a wonderful legend in Italy, an old Italian folk tale about Knight Wahn, and as he considered this legend, he said to himself: “The spirit of the world spirit lives in this; this folk tale came into being in this way, these images were formed because those who formed them were permeated by the living spirituality of the world's guidance.” And what did he accomplish with this? In 1831, he wrote a work that was wonderful and captivatingly grand. It has, of course, been forgotten—like all things that originate from such spiritual greatness.

Knight Wahn sets out to conquer death. On his way he meets three old men. Julius Mosen has now succeeded in translating the name of one of the old men, il mondo, in a remarkable way as Ird, because he knew that there was something peculiar about it that needed to be conveyed in the German language. Ird, time and space are the three old men whom Knight Wahn finds when he sets out to overcome death. But he cannot use these three old men, for they are subject to death. Ird is everything that is subject to the laws of the physical body and thus to death. Time, the etheric body, is subject to transience. And the third, the lower astral body, which gives us the perception of space, is also subject to death. Our individuality passes from incarnation to incarnation; but what we are in our threefold shell lives on in earth, time, and space, according to Italian folklore.

What is Knight Wahn? We have often spoken of what enters into us as Maya. It is we ourselves, we human beings, who pass from incarnation to incarnation and look out into the world and receive the great deception. We are each Knight Madness, and we each go forth by leading a life in the spirit to conquer death. There we encounter the three old men, our shells. They are old! The physical body has existed since the Saturn era, the etheric body since the Sun era, the astral body since the Moon era, and what lives as the I in the human being has been incorporated during the Earth era. Julius Mosen now presents it in such a way that Knight Madness, with the soul through which he wants to defeat death, first tries to rush forward as a horseman—according to the Platonic image that has lived throughout Central Europe and far beyond. So Knight Wahn rushes forward and wants to conquer heaven with materialistic thinking, like people who cling to the appearances of the senses because they remain caught up in deception and Maya. But when they then enter the spiritual world with death, what Julius Mosen so beautifully described happens: They have not lived out their lives, they long to return to earth to continue the development of their souls. And Knight Madness comes back down. And when he sees the beautiful Morgane, the soul that is to be inspired by everything earthly and — as the daughter of the Queen of Flowers — is to represent the union with all that can only be given to us through the school of earth, there, when he is so connected to the beautiful Morgane, when he is connected to the earth again, he also succumbs to death — that is, he passes through death in order to continue to elevate his own soul, which appears as Morgane, during each incarnation.

From these images, which bear the stamp of millennia, flow the ideas that find expression in artists such as Julius Mosen, in whom they emerged from a soul that was too great to live healthily in a body during the approaching materialistic age, so that he had to take upon himself the silent martyrdom for the greatness of his glowing soul. That was in 1831. That lived in a human being in the first half of the 19th century. That is to be resurrected, but now in such a way that it fires the strength and powers of human beings. And it will be resurrected! And that gives us the awareness of the significance of what we recognize as the theosophical spirit and what is to enter into human beings as the Rosicrucian spirit.

Now we sense that what we ourselves cultivate has always been present. We fall prey to the delusions of the knight's madness when we assume that anything in the world can flourish without this spirit working through the veins of human beings. Where did the rhapsodists of the 7th, 8th, or 12th centuries come from, who went out into the world to stir up thought forms so that souls could now grasp something different? Where was the center of these rhapsodists? Where had they learned to present such images to people? They had learned it in the same temples that we must regard as the schools of the Rosicrucians. They were students of the Rosicrucians, and their teachers told them: Today you cannot yet go out and speak to people in ideas, as will be the case later; today you must tell of the king's son, the flower queen, and the triple cloak, so that the thought forms that are to live in souls may be formed. And when the souls return, they will understand what they need for further progress. The spiritual centers constantly send their emissaries into the world so that in every age what lies in the depths of the spirit can be brought to the souls of human beings.

It is a trivial view when people today believe that they can form fairy tales out of their fantasies. The old fairy tales, which are an expression of the ancient spiritual secrets of the world, came into being in such a way that those who formed them for the world listened and paid attention to those who could tell them the spiritual secrets, so that the composition is in accordance with the spiritual secrets. That is why we can say: The spirit of the whole of humanity, of the microcosm and the macrocosm, lives in them.

From these same temples, rhapsodes were sent out to tell meaningful fairy tales, and from these same temples come the teachings of knowledge of the present day, which enter into the souls and hearts of human beings to make possible the culture that humanity needs. Thus, the spirit that underlies humanity progresses from epoch to epoch. Those beings who, in pre-Christian times, instructed the individualities sitting in the sacred temples and taught them what they themselves had brought with them from earlier planetary states, placed themselves under the guidance of Christ, this unique individuality, in order to continue working in his spirit. The great teacher, the leader of humanity, has become Christ. And if I could tell you today that the fairy tales that have lived for centuries came into being in the same way, and that they have inspired thought forms throughout Western culture that express the same thing, only in images, as what we say today about Christ to the world, then you would see how, in the time after the Mystery of Golgotha, the spiritual guidance of humanity in its central places has indeed placed itself under the guidance of Christ. Thus, everything in spiritual guidance is connected with Christ. If we become aware of this connection, then we look up to the light that we must have, that we must make use of in particular in relation to what souls longed for when they incarnated in the 19th century.

If we allow such figures to influence us, who make us familiar with the longings of earlier times, then we feel with complete responsibility resting on our souls: The others have waited so that we can accomplish what they longed for! What these spirits, such as Julius Mosen, who created a “Knight Wahn” and an “Ahasver,” like a last prophet of the West, because what the emissaries of the holy temples had told in pictures, in hundreds and hundreds of pictures, to prepare souls for the time to come, came alive in them—what these spirits longed for is revealed in the words that Rothe wrote in Heidelberg in 1847: “Once it has become a real science and has thus also produced clearly defined results, these will gradually pass into general conviction. wrote in Heidelberg in 1847: “Once it has become a true science and has thus produced clearly defined results, these will gradually become general conviction or popular, and will thus be passed on as universally valid truths to those who cannot find their way to the paths on which they were discovered and could only be discovered!” At that time, a man who had a longing not only for himself but also for his contemporaries had to find himself in the resigned words: “But this rests in the bosom of the future, which we do not want to anticipate!” In 1847, those who knew the secrets of the Rosicrucian temples had not spoken in an outwardly audible way. But what lies in the bosom of the future can come to life if enough souls can be found who know that knowledge is a duty, because we must not return our souls to the world spirit undeveloped; for otherwise we would have deprived the world spirit itself of something that it has incorporated into us in the form of powers. When such souls are found who know what they owe to the world spirit by striving for knowledge of the world's mysteries, then the hopes cherished by the best people of ancient times will be fulfilled. Yes, they looked upon us as their descendants and said: Once it has become science, it must become popular, it must capture the hearts! These hearts must first exist, they must appear! It depends upon those who are in our association striving for the spiritual with the right understanding to know: I must have this spiritual illumination of the riddles of existence! It depends on every single soul in our association whether such characterized longings were only a vain dream of those who hoped for our best, or whether they were valuable dreams that we will fulfill for them.

When we see the scientific desolation of our time, the desolation in art, in social life, and everywhere, we must say to ourselves: We do not need to be lost in this desolation; we can get out of it. For once again a time has dawned in which the sacred temples speak—and now not merely in images and fairy tales, but in truths which, though still regarded by many as theories, can and must increasingly become the living sap, the blood of souls. Each individual can decide to take up this lifeblood with the best that is in his soul.

This is a thought that emerges as a result of what we have been able to form from our observation of the times. And this is the thought that we should now sink into our souls, which is the embodiment of the true meaning and spirit of the guidance and leadership of all humanity. If we allow this thought to be effective in our souls, we will have abundant spiritual inspiration again for months, and we will be able to process this thought again throughout those months. For we will see that there is much in it, that it can grow into a structure—not because it is expressed in these or those words. My words may be imperfect: it is not how the thought is expressed that matters, but what it is in reality. And what it is in reality can live in every single soul. For the sum total of truth is present in every single soul as a seed and can blossom if the soul surrenders itself to this seed.