Scene 6

A space not circumscribed by artificial walls but enclosed by intertwined plants like trees and structures which spread out and send shoots into the interior. Owing to natural occurrences the whole is moving violently and is sometimes filled with storm. The stage is divided into two groves, separated for a short distance by a row of trees. The grove on right of stage is appropriated later by Lucifer and his Spirits, and the left grove by Ahriman and his Spirits. The dance movements are set to music. Maria and Capesius are on the stage as the curtain rises; then Benedictus, Philia, Astrid, Luna, the other Philia, Lucifer, Ahriman, and Creatures which move in a dancing fashion and which represent thoughts, lastly the Soul of Dame Balde.

Benedictus (invisible as yet, only audible):

Within thy thinking, cosmic thoughts do live.

Capesius (in astral garb):

There echoes Benedictus’ noble voice;

His words are ringing in the spirit here,

And are the same as in the book of life

Are written down to aid his pupils’ work,

Which souls on earth find hard to understand

And which are even harder to fulfil.

What part of spirit-land is this, where sound

The words which serve to test the souls on Earth?

Maria:

Hast thou abode so long in spirit-land

In such a way that thou hast learned so much

And yet this region is unknown to thee?

Capesius:

What lives here in its own reality

Souls, versed in spirit-ways, can grasp with ease;

Each thing explains itself through something else.

The whole may stand revealed in light, when part

Seen by itself, may often still seem dark.

But when a spirit-essence doth unite

With earthly nature to create some work,

The soul begins to lose her grasp of things.

And not alone a part, but e’en the whole

Is oft concealed from her by darkness deep.

Why words which come in Benedictus’ book

And which were written for men’s souls on Earth,

Should echo here, within a place like this,

That is the problem which doth offer here.

Benedictus (still invisible):

Within thy feeling, cosmic forces play.

Capesius:

Again there come the words which on the Earth

Did Benedictus to his pupils trust;

And here in his own voice they echo forth.

They stream through all the limitless expanse

Of this great realm arousing darksome powers.

Maria:

I feel already what I must pass through

Within the boundless spaces of this realm;

And Benedictus’ nearness draws me on.

In this place he will let me gaze on things

Incomprehensible to souls on Earth

The while they dwell in bodies bound by sense,

And e’en whilst serving spirit-pupilship.

So must the master bring them to this place

Where words do not depend on human speech,

But are imprinted on their souls by signs;

Here he transforms to speech world happenings—

A world-descriptive language for the soul.

I’ll loose my inmost being from the Earth,

Condensing all my powers within my soul,

And so await whate’er may be revealed

To indicate my way through spirit-space.

And then when I return to life on Earth

’Twill be a thought which, when recalled will shine

As knowledge in mine inmost depths of soul.

Benedictus (appears from the background):

Win thou thyself in power of cosmic thought,

Lose thou thyself in life of cosmic force;

Thou shalt find earthly aims reflect themselves

Through thine own being in the cosmic light.

Capesius:

So Benedictus is in spirit here!

Perhaps his words re-echo of themselves.

Doth then the teacher bring the lore of earth

To vivify and work in spirit-realms?

But what can be the meaning here of words

Which he doth use on earth in other ways?

Benedictus:

Capesius, thou hast in thine earth-life

Entered within my circle, though in truth

Thou ne’er wast conscious of thy pupilship.

Capesius:

Capesius is not within this place;

And his soul will not hear him spoken of.

Benedictus:

Thou wilt not feel thou art Capesius

But him in spirit thou shalt see and know.

For thee the powerful work of thought hath now

In thy soul-body caged the spirit-life.

So that thy soul-life can release itself

From thought’s dream-play within thine earthly frame.

Too weak it felt itself to wander forth

From out world distances to depths of soul;

Too strong to gaze at lofty spirit-light

Through all the darkness that surrounds the Earth.

I must accompany each one who gains

The spirit-light from me in earthly life

Whether he knows, or doth not know, that he

Came as a spirit-pupil to myself.

And I must lead him further on those paths

Which he in spirit learned to tread through me.

Thou hast through thy soul-sight in cosmic space

Learned to draw nigh the spirit consciously

Since loosed from body thou canst follow it.

But, not yet freed from thought, thou canst not see

True being in the spirit-realm as yet.

First thy sense-body thou must lay aside

But not the fine corporeal web of thought.

Thou only canst perceive the world in truth

When nothing of thy personality

Remains to cloud the clearness of thy sight.

He only who hath learned to view his thoughts

As things outside himself, e’en as the seer

Beholds his earthly form released from him,

Can penetrate to spirit verities.

So look upon this picture that it may

Turn into knowledge through clairvoyant powers

Thoughts, whose true being is built up in space

To forms, which mirror forth the thoughts of men.

(A cheerful subdued light diffuses itself. Philia, Astrid, and Luna appear in glowing clouds.)

(Exeunt Capesius and Maria.)

Voices (which sound together, spoken by Philia, Astrid, and Luna):

Let thoughts hover round

Like weaving of dreams

And build themselves in

To souls that are here;

Let will that creates

And feeling that stirs

And thought that doth work

The dreamer arouse—

(While this sounds, Lucifer approaches from one side, and Ahriman from the other. They go to their thrones raised on each side at the back of the stage, facing the audience; Lucifer on the right of the stage, Ahriman on the left.)

Lucifer (in a loud voice, emphasizing every word):

Within thy will do cosmic beings work.

(On Lucifer’s side, beings with golden hair, dressed in crimson and radiantly beautiful representing thoughts, begin to move. These carry out, in a dancing fashion, movements which represent the forms of thought corresponding to Lucifer’s words.)

Ahriman (speaking in a loud, hoarse voice):

These cosmic beings do but puzzle thee.

(After these words Lucifer’s group is still and the thought-beings on Ahriman’s side move and carry out dancing movements which make forms corresponding to his words. They have grey hair and are clad in indigo blue, being square in build, and in appearance distinguished more by force than beauty. After this the movement from both groups is carried on together.)

Lucifer:

Within thy feeling cosmic forces play.

(The thought-beings on Lucifer’s side repeat their movements.)

Ahriman:

The cosmic forces are but mocking thee.

(The thought-beings on Ahriman’s side repeat their movements, then again both together.)

Lucifer:

Within thy thinking cosmic thought doth live.

(Repetition of the movements in Lucifer’s group.)

Ahriman:

The cosmic thought doth but bewilder thee.

(Repetition of the movements in Ahriman’s group.)

(The movements of each group are then repeated four times separately and thrice together.)

(The thought-beings vanish left and right; Lucifer and Ahriman remain: Philia, Luna, and Astrid advance from the background, and speak together the words they spoke before with the following alteration.)

Philia, etc.:

Thoughts hovered around

Like weaving of dreams

And built themselves in

To souls that are here—

Then will that creates

And feeling that stirs

And thought that doth work

The dreamer aroused—

(Philia, Astrid, and Luna vanish. Enter Capesius in astral garb, and after he has spoken a few words Maria joins him, though at first he cannot see her.)

Capesius:

The soul lives out her life within herself:

Believes she thinks because she does not see

Thoughts all spread out in space in front of her—

Believes she feels, because the feelings show

No flash like lightning leaping from the clouds;

She sees this realm of space, and gazeth on

The clouds above her …; and were this not so,

Supposing that the lightning were to flash,

And not an eye looked up above to see,

She needs must think the lightning was in her.

She does not see how Lucifer springs forth

From out her thoughts, and pours her feelings in,

And so believes she is alone with them.

Why doth delusion lead her captive thus?

O soul, give answer to thyself … yet … whence?

From out thyself? Ah, nay … perhaps that, too,

Were answered … not by thee … but Lucifer.…

Maria:

And if it were; why then shouldst thou not seek?

Go forth into the deep to find it there.…

Capesius:

A being here, who hears the speech of souls?

Maria:

Souls are not here divided each from each

As when within the body they are pent.

Here each soul hears itself in other’s speech.

So dost thou only speak unto thyself

When I say: ‘Seek thine answer in the deep.’

Capesius (hesitatingly):

Ah, in the deep there threatens darksome … fear.

Maria:

Yea truly, fear is there: but ask thyself,

As thou hast forced thy way within her realm

If she doth not reveal herself to thee.

Ask Lucifer, before whom thou dost stand

If on thy weakness he is pouring fear.

Lucifer:

Who flees from me will love me all the same.

Children of Earth have loved me from the first

And only think that hatred is my due.

So do they ever seek me in my deeds.

If I had not as ornament to life

Sent beauty to their souls, they would long since

Have pined away in truth’s cold empty forms

Throughout the long dull progress of the Earth.

’Tis I who fill the artist’s soul with power

And whatsoe’er of beauty men have seen

Hath had its prototype within my realm—

Now ask thyself, if thou shouldst fear me still.

Maria:

In these domains which Lucifer commands

Fear hath not verily her proper place.

From hence he must send forth into men’s souls

Not fear, but wishes, as his gifts to men.

Fear comes from quite another realm of power.

Ahriman:

At birth I was the equal of the gods,

Who have curtailed my many ancient rights.

I wished in such a way to fashion men

For Lucifer, my brother, and his realm,

That each should bear his own world in himself.

For Lucifer as peer amongst his peers

Would only show himself in spirit-realms.

In others he but shows his pictured form

And so could never be a lord of men.

I wished to give unto mankind such strength

That they might grow to equal Lucifer.

And had I stayed within the realm of gods

This too had been in primal days fulfilled.

The gods however willed to rule on Earth,

And from their kingdom they did one day thrust

My power into the depths of the abyss,

So that I might not make mankind too strong.

And thus ’tis only from this place I dare

Send out my powerful strength upon the Earth.

But in this way my power turns into FEAR.

(As Ahriman finishes speaking, Benedictus appears.)

Capesius:

He who hath heard what both these two powers here

Spake from their places out into the worlds

May know from this where he can look and find

Both fear and hatred in their own domains.

Benedictus:

In cosmic speech thou shalt perceive thyself;

And feel thyself in cosmic power of thought.

And as thou now didst see outside thyself

What thou didst dream was all thine inmost self,

So find thyself, and shudder now no more

At that one word thou hast a right to use

To prove thine own existence to thyself—

Capesius:

So once more I belong to mine own self

Now will I seek myself, because I dare

To see myself in cosmic thought and live.

Benedictus:

And thou must add all this which thou hast won

To victories of old to give the world.

(Dame Balde in her ordinary dress appears in the background beside Benedictus.)

Dame Balde (in a meditative voice suitable for fairy tales):

Once on a time there lived a child of God

Who had affinity with those who weave

The thoughtful wisdom of the spirit-realms.

This child, brought up by truth’s almighty Sire

Grew up within his realm to ancient strength.

And when his body, radiant with light,

Did feel his ripened will creative stir

He often looked with pity on the Earth

Where souls of men were striving after truth.

Then to the Sire of truth the child would say:

‘The souls of men are thirsting for the drink

Which thou canst hand to them from out thy springs.’

With earnest speech the Sire of truth replied:

‘The springs, of which I am appointed guard,

Let light stream forth from out the spirit-suns;

Only such beings dare to drink the light

As need not thirst for air that they may breathe.

Therefore in light have I brought up a child

Who can feel pity for the souls on Earth

And manifest the light ’midst breathing men.

So turn and go unto mankind and bring

The light that’s in their souls to meet my light

Enfilled with confidence and spirit-life.’

So then the shining light-child turned, and went

To souls who keep themselves alive by breath.

And many good men found he on the Earth,

Who offered him with joy their souls’ abode.

These souls he turned to gaze with grateful love

Upon their Sire who dwells in springs of light.

And when the child heard from the lips of men

And joyous mind of men, the magic word

Of fantasy, he knew himself alive

Dwelling with gladness in the hearts of men.

But one sad day there came unto the child

A man who cast upon him chilling looks.

‘I turn the souls of men on earth toward

The Sire of truth who dwells in springs of light—’

Thus to the strange man did the light-child speak—

The man replied: ‘Thou dost but weave wild dreams

Into men’s spirits, and deceiv’st their souls.’

And since the day which witnessed this event

The child who can bring light to breathing souls

Hath often suffered slander from mankind.

(Philia, Astrid, Luna, and the Other Philia appear in a cloud of light.)

Philia:

Now let every soul

That drinks of the light

Awake to full power

In cosmic expanse.

Astrid:

So too let the spirit

That knoweth no fear

Arise in full power

In cosmic domains.

Luna:

Let man who doth strive

To reach to the heights

Hold firm with full strength

To innermost self.

The Other Philia:

Let man struggle on

To him who bears light

And opens out worlds

Which quicken in men

The sense of delight.

This beauty so bright

Awakened in souls,

Inspired to admire,

The spirit leads on

To realms of the gods.

Achievement consoles

The feelings that dare

The threshold to tread,

Which strictly doth guard

’Gainst souls that feel fear.

And energy finds

A will that grows ripe

And fearless doth stand

’Fore powers that create

And fashion the worlds.

Curtain falls whilst Benedictus, Capesius, Maria, Dame Balde, Lucifer, and Ahriman, and the four Soul-forms, are still in their places.