Scene 2

The same. The persons who were at first assembled have left, with the exception of Felix Balde and Dr. Strader, who remain with Hilary True-to-God, the Grand Master; Magnus Bellicosus, the Second Preceptor; Albertus Torquatus, the First Master of the Ceremonies; Frederick Trustworthy, the Second Master of the Ceremonies; Maria; and Johannes Thomasius.

Hilary:

My son, what thou hast perfected must now

Within this holy place receive the seal,

Which sacred and primeval knowledge gives,

Besides the blessing of the Rosy Cross.

What thou hast brought the world must be through us

Unto the Spirit offered, that it may

Bear fruit in all the worlds, where power of man

Can be made use of for world-fashioning.

Bellicosus:

That thou might’st give unto the world this work

Thou had’st to part for many years with much

That in thine inmost soul thou loved’st best.

There stood a spirit-teacher at thy side,

Who went from thee, so that thy human soul

Might perfectly unfold its powers in thee.

Thou wast in closest touch with one dear friend;

She also left thee, for thou had’st to learn

That which men only learn when they are set

To follow out their soul’s powers in themselves.

With courage hast thou passed through this ordeal.

That which was taken from thee for thy good

Is, for thy good, restored to thee anew.

Thy friend stands here before thee: in the shrine

She waits for thee to follow out our wish.

Soon, thou wilt meet thy teacher once again.

These friends, who on our temple’s threshold stand,

Desire to join with us in greeting thee,

As one who brings great knowledge here with him.

Felix Balde (to Thomasius):

The mystic art which heretofore aspired

Through inward contemplation toward the light,

Will through thine act be able now to work

Through knowledge gained within the world of sense.

Strader (to Thomasius):

Those souls who after spirit-knowledge strive

While life still unto matter binds them fast,

Will now through thee find out a road by which

They can attain the light in their own way.

Thomasius:

Exalted Master, and ye, honoured sirs!

Ye think to see before you now a man

Who, through the Spirit’s power and earnest strife,

Was able to produce the work you praise

And can acknowledge with your fostering care.

Ye think that he will certainly succeed

In reconciling science of today

With ever-ancient sacred mystic art.

And truly were there anything besides

The voice of mine own soul, which could instil

Belief about it into me, I think

It well might be your words.…

Trustworthy:

It well might be your words.... The Master’s word

Doth but express that which without a doubt

Thou feelest in thy soul. There is no need

To strengthen what thine inner voice declares.

Thomasius:

Ah! were it so, most humbly would I stand

Before you and implore that I might gain

The temple’s blessing on this work of mine.

I used to think it so, when first I heard

The word by which I came to understand

That ye would take my work beneath your care

And open gateways to me, which before

Only initiates could e’er approach.

But as I trod the path that led to you

There opened out upon my soul a world

To which, at such a time ye certainly

Would not have wished to lead me. Ahriman

In all his greatness stood before me there.

And then I saw that he it is in truth

Who is the expert in real cosmic laws.

What human beings think they know of him

Is of no value. Only he can know

Who once hath seen him in the spirit-world.

It was from him alone that I could learn

The truth about this work of mine in full.

He showed how in the progress of the world

One could not judge effects of such a work;

Since its true progress cannot be appraised

By those impressions men may form of it

Who judge by science and strict logic’s law.

The final verdict cannot be pronounced

Till creature from creator is set free,

And, freed from him, can follow its own path

Throughout the courses of the spirit-life.

Yet now the work is so bound up with me

That it is possible that I might turn

That which I guide back from the spirit-realms

To something evil, even though it were

Good in itself and in its working power.

I must myself from out the spirit-world

Send forth afar my influence on all

Which shows itself on Earth as the result

Of that which I have brought forth from my mind.

And if I should let evil issue forth

From out the spirit-world, through these results,

Then would the truth do damage greater far

Than error, for men follow after truth

According to their insight, error not.

I shall for certain at some future time

Turn the results of this my act to ill

For Ahriman hath clearly shewn to me

That these results must all belong to him.

While I was at my work, and filled with joy

That it should lead me with such certain tread

Step after step, up truth’s great pyramid,

I only noticed in my soul that part

Which lent itself to help me in my search;

And all the rest I left without a guard.

All those wild impulses, which formerly

Were but in bud, could now in quietude

Bloom forth and ripen into full grown fruits.

I thought I dwelt in highest spirit-realms,

But was in truth in deepest night of soul.

It was the strength of these same impulses

Which showed me clearly Ahriman’s own realm.

And so I know the effect that I shall have,

For in the future all these impulses

Will go to form my personality.

Before I took this work in hand, I gave

Myself to Lucifer, because I wished

To learn to know and understand his realm.

Now know I, what I could not see before

When I was lost entirely in my work,

That he it was who wove around my thought

Those beauteous pictures, which within my soul

Brought forth wild impulses, which silent now

Will surely one day gain control of me.

Trustworthy:

How can one who hath reached such spirit-heights

And knows all this for certain, yet believe

That he hath no escape from evil left?

Why, thou canst see where danger for thee lies;

And so canst crush it, and with courage save

Thyself, and the results of thy great work:

A spirit-pupil is in duty bound

To kill what hinders progress in himself.

Thomasius:

I see, thou judgest not by cosmic laws,

I could e’en now fulfil what thou dost wish

And I myself could quite well tell myself

In this same hour all that thou tellest me.

But that which Karma now doth let me do

Will not in future be permissible.

For things must come which will o’ershadow me

And darken all my spirit, till I turn

To that which I described to thee just now.

Then as the world progresses I will seize

With greed on anything that’s in my work

Which can be used for harm, and all of this

I will embody in my spirit-life.

Then I shall have to love great Ahriman

And joyfully to his possession give

All that I have derived from earthly life.

(Pause, during which Thomasius meditates deeply.)

If all alone I could encounter this,

And bear it also in my soul alone,

I could await with fullest peace of mind

All that was destined for me on my way.

But it will harm your league as much as me.

Whatever bad shall follow from my work

Both for myself and other souls of men,

Will find its balance through just Karma’s law.

The fact that ye fell victims to this fault

Makes it far harder for the life of earth,

Since ye are leaders in this self-same life

And ought to read the spirit-worlds aright.

Ye ought not to have failed to notice then

That it was someone else, and not myself

Who should have had the doing of this work.

Ye should have known it must be put aside

For now; and later would appear again

Through one who otherwise would guide its course.

So by your judgment, ye deprive the league

Of rights it ought to have, if it would still

Direct the service of the Sacred Place.

Because this fate for you was shown to me

I now appear upon your threshold here.

Knowledge would otherwise have kept me far,

For truly I can claim no blessing now

Upon this work, which does both good and harm.

Hilary:

Dear brethren, that which we have just begun,

Cannot be carried any further now.

We must betake ourselves unto the Place

From whence the Spirit can make known His will.

(Hilary leaves the hall with Bellicosus, Torquatus, and Trustworthy. Doctor Strader and Felix Balde also leave. Only Maria and Thomasius are left.)

(The hall grows dark. After a short pause the three Spirit-forms Philia, Astrid, and Luna appear in a cloud of light, and group themselves so that they completely hide Maria. The following is a spirit-experience of Thomasius.)

Philia:

The soul is athirst

To drink of the light

Which flows from the worlds,

An all-caring will

Hides close from mankind.

But eagerly seeks

The spirit to hear

The language divine

Which wisdom in love

Doth hide from the heart.

For danger surrounds

The thoughts that would search

In realms of the soul,

Where secret things rule

The senses from far.

Astrid:

Yet souls are enlarged,

Which follow the light

And work through the worlds

Which bold spirit-sight

Reveals to mankind.

The spirit doth strive

Enraptured to live

In realms of the gods

Which wisdom benign

Makes known to the seer.

There mysteries beckon

The bold keen desire

To win those new worlds

Which far from man’s thought

Deep secrets conceal.

Luna:

It ripens the soul

To picture the sight

Whence powers will spring forth

Which will, reft of fear,

Doth kindle in man.

The ransoming powers

From primeval depths

Bring magical might

That sense cannot know,

Close barriered in earth.

And traces are there

That each searching soul

May find out the gate

Fast closed by the gods

’Gainst erring desire.

The Voice of Conscience (invisible):

Now totter thy thoughts

In Being’s abyss;

And what was lent as help to them,

Thou now hast lost.

And what shone as the sun for them

For thee is quenched.

Alone in cosmic depths thou wanderest,

Which men intoxicated with desire

Would seek to win.

Thou tremblest in the fundaments of growth

Where men must learn to be bereft of all

Comfort of soul.…

(The last words run straight on into the following ones spoken by Maria, who is still hidden by the Spirit-forms and cannot be seen. She speaks at first in a ghostly inward voice.)

Maria:

So blend thy soul

To powers of love

Which once could penetrate her with the hope

Of living warmth,

Which once could all her will illuminate

With spirit-light.

Rescue from loneliness

The powers of heart that seek

And feel the nearness of thy friend

In the darkness of thy strife.

(The Spirit-forms vanish with the cloud of light. Maria becomes visible in her old place. Maria and Thomasius are alone, standing opposite each other. From now onwards the experiences are on the physical plane.)

Thomasius (rousing himself from deep meditation):

Where was I even now? My powers of soul

Unveiled the conflict of my inner-self;

The conscience of the world revealed to me

What I had lost; and then as blessing came

The voice of Love within the darksome realm.

Maria:

Johannes, the companion of thy soul

May once again be present at thy side,

And follow thee to earth’s primeval depths,

Where souls can win perception e’en as gods,

By conquest that destroyeth, yet acquires

By bold persistence life from seeming death.

E’en in the ever empty fields of ice

She may go with her friend, where he will be

Encircled with the light which spirits form

When darkness wounds and maims the powers of life.

My friend, thou standest at that threshold now,

Where man must lose what once he hath attained.

Full many a glance thou hast toward spirit-realms

Directed, and from them hast gained the power

That made thee capable of thy great work.

It seems to thee, that now that work is lost;

Desire not then that it were otherwise,

For such desire must rob thee of all power

Of further progress into spirit-realms.

Whether thou walk’st in error or in truth,

Thou canst keep ever clear the view ahead,

Which lets thy soul press further on its path

If thou dost bravely bear necessities

Imposed upon thee by the spirit-realm.

This is the law of spirit-pupilship.

So long as thou still harbourest the wish

That what hath happened might be otherwise

Thou wilt forego the power which must be thine,

If thou dost wish to stay in spirit-land.

That thou hast lost what thou erewhile hadst won

Is surest sign to thee that thou may’st walk

In safety further on the spirit-path.

Henceforward thou must not rely upon,

If thou in truth regardest it as lost,

That understanding which thou hast till now

Well-used as the criterion of thy work.

Therefore thy being must become quite still

And wait in silence for the spirit’s gifts;

Then only wilt thou commune with thyself

When thou once more hast won thyself anew.

Oft hast thou met the solemn Guardian

Who on the Threshold keeps so strict a watch

When spirit-life must part from world of sense;

But past that presence hast thou never been.

At sight of him aye didst thou turn away

And all thy view was pictured from without.…

Ne’er in that inner world which widens out

Beyond thee as the spirit-verity,

Have thy steps trod: so must thou now await

That which shall be revealed, when at my side

Thou shalt not only to such world draw nigh,

But shalt pass o’er the Threshold’s boundary.

Curtain