MYSTERIES OF THE GREAT OPERAS
by
Max Heindel
[1865-1919]
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THE RING OF THE NIEBELUNG
THE RHINE MAIDENS
THE RHINE MAIDENS
Repetition is the keynote of the vital body
and the extract of the vital body is the intellectual soul, which is the pabulum
of the Life Spirit, the true Christ principle in man. As it is the particular
work of the Western World to evolve this Christ principle, to form the Christ
within that it may shine through the material darkness of the present time,
reiteration of ideas is absolutely essential. Unconsciously the whole world is
obeying this law.
When newspapers start out to inculcate
certain ideas into the public mind, they do not expect to accomplish this by a
single editorial, no matter how powerfully written, but by articles of daily
recurrence they gradually create the desired sentiment in the public mind. The
Bible has been preaching the principle of love for two thousand years, Sunday
after Sunday, day by day, from hundreds of thousands of pulpits. War has not yet
been abolished, but the sentiment in favor of universal peace is growing
stronger as time passes. These sermons have had but a very slight effect is so
far as the world at large is concerned, no matter how powerfully a particular
audience might be moved for the time being; for the desire body is that part of
the composite man which was impressed at the time and was stirred thereby.
The desire body is a later acquisition than
the vital body, hence not so crystallized, and , therefore, more impressionable.
Because it is of a finer texture than the vital body, it is less retentive, and
the emotions so easily generated are also easily dissipated. A very small impact
is made upon the vital body when ideas and ideals filter into it through the
auric envelope, but whatever it gets from study, sermons, lectures, or reading
is of a more lasting nature, and many impacts in the same direction create
impressions which are powerful for good or for ill according to their nature.
In order that we may benefit by this law of
cumulative impacts, we take up for study, another of the great soul myths which
throws light upon the mystery of life and being from a different angle, so that
we may learn whence we have come, why we are here, and whether we are going more
thoroughly than before.
As previously said, all myths are vehicles of
spiritual truths veiled under allegory, symbol, and picture, and, therefore,
capable of comprehension without reason. As fairy stories are a means of
enlightenment to children, so these great myths were used to convey spiritual
truth to infant humanity.
The Group Spirit works upon animals through
their desire bodies, calling up pictures which give to the animal a feeling and
a suggestion of what it must do. Likewise, the allegorical pictures, which are
contained in myths, laid the foundation in man for his present and future
development. Subconsciously these myths worked upon him and brought him to the
stage where he is today. Without that preparation he would have been unable to
accomplish that work which he is now doing.
Today these myths are yet working to prepare
us for the future, but some are more under their spell than others. The path of
empire and civilization has followed the Sun's course from east to west, and in
the etheric atmosphere of the Pacific coast these mythical pictures have almost
faded away, and man is contacting spiritual realities more directly. Further
east, particularly in Europe, we find still the atmosphere of mysticism brooding
over the land. There, people love the ancient myths which speak to them in a
manner incomprehensible to the westerner. The soul life of the people among the
fjords and fjelds of Norway, on the heaths and moors of Scotland, and the deep
recessed of the Black Forest of Germany, and among the Alpine Glaciers, is as
deep and mystical today as a thousand years ago. They are in closer touch with
Nature Spirits and other gabled realities by feeling than we who have gone ahead
upon the path of aspiration by direct knowledge. If we recall this feeling and
combine it with our knowledge, we shall have attained an enormous advantage. Let
us, therefore, try to assimilate one of the deepest mystical stories of the
past, The Ring of the Niebelung, the great epic poem of northern Europe. It
relates the story of man, from the time when he dwelt in Atlantis, until this
world shall have come to an end by a great conflagration and the Kingdom of the
Heavens shall have been established, as foretold in the Bible.
The Bible tells us of the Garden of Eden
where our first parents dwelt in close touch with God, pure and innocent as
children. It tells us how that state of being was abrogated and how sorrow, sin,
and death came into the world. In ancient myths, like The Ring of the Niebelung,
we are also introduced to mankind living under similar conditions of childlike
innocence. The opening scene in this drama of Wagner represents life under the
waters of the Rhine where the Rhine maidens swim about with rhythmic motion and
a song upon their lips, imitating and undulating swell of the dancing waves. The
waters are lighted by a great lump of lustrous gold and around this the Rhine
daughters circle as planets move about the central Sun; for we have here the
microcosmic replica of the macrocosm where the heavenly bodies move around the
Central Light-giver in a majestic circle dance.
The Rhine maidens represent primitive
humanity during the time when we dwelt at the bottom of the ocean in the dense,
foggy atmosphere of Atlantis. The gold, which lighted the scene as the Sun
illuminates the solar universe, is a representation of the Universal Spirit
which then brooded over mankind. We did not then see everything in clear, sharp
contours as we view objects around us today, but our internal perception of the
soul qualities in others was much keener than it is now.
The individual Spirit feels itself an Ego
and designates itself "I" in sharp contradistinction to all others,
but this separative principle had not entered into the child men of early
Atlantis. We had no feeling of "me" and "thee"' we felt
ourselves as one great family, as children of the divine Father. Neither were we
troubled about what we should eat or drink any more than children now-a-days are
burdened with the material necessities of life. Time was to us one grand play
and frolic.
But this state could not continue, or there
would have been no evolution. As the child grows up to become a man or woman to
take its part in the battle of life, so also primitive mankind was destined to
leave its natal home in the lowlands and ascent through the waters of Atlantis,
when they condensed and flooded the basins of the Earth. Evolving humanity then
entered the aerial conditions in which we live today as told of the ancient
Israelites who went through the Red Sea to enter the Promised Land, and of Noah,
who left his native place when flood waters descended.
The northern myths tells us the story in
another way, but though the angle of vision is different the main points of the
narrative bring out the same essential ideas. In the Garden of Eden our first
parents did not think for themselves. They obeyed unquestioningly whatever
commands were given them by their divine leaders, much as a child in early years
does as its parents wish because it has no sense of self. It lacks
individuality. This, according to the Bible story, was gained when Lucifer
imbued them with the idea that they might become like the gods and know good and
evil.
In the Teutonic myth we are told that
Alberich, one of these children of the Mist (NIEBEL is mist, UNG is child - they
were thus called because they lived in the foggy atmosphere of Atlantis),
coveted the gold which shone with such luster in the Rhine. He had heard that
whoever obtained the gold and formed it into a ring would thereby be enabled to
conquer the world and master all others who did not possess the treasure.
Accordingly, he swam up to the great rock where the gold lay, seized it and swam
rapidly towards the surface, pursued by the Rhine daughters who were in great
distress at the loss of this treasure.
When Alberich, the thief, had reached the
surface of the water he heard a voice telling him that no one could form the
gold into a ring as required to master the world, save by forswearing love; this
he did instantly and forthwith commenced to rob the Earth of its treasure and
gratify his desire for wealth and power.
As said before, the gold, as it lay in its
unformed state upon the rock of the Rhine, represents the Universal Spirit which
is not the exclusive property of anyone, and Alberich represents the foremost
among mankind who were impelled by the desire to conquer new worlds. They first
became ensouled by the indwelling Spirit and emigrated to the highlands above;
but when once in the clear atmosphere of Aryana, the world as we know it, they
saw themselves clearly and distinctly as separate entities. Each realized that
his interests were different from those of others; that to succeed and to win
the world for himself, he must stand alone, he must look after his own interests
regardless of others. Thus the Spirit drew a ring about itself and all inside
that ring was "me" and "mine," a conception which made him
antagonistic to others. Hence in order to form this ring and keep a separate
center it was necessary for him to forswear love. Thus, and thus only, could he
disregard the interests of others that he might thrive and master the world.
Alberich is not alone is his desire to draw
a ring around himself for the purpose of gaining power, however. "As above
so below" and vice versa, says the Hermetic axiom. The gods are also
evolving. They also have aspirations for power-a desire to draw a ring around
themselves-for there is war in heaven as well as upon Earth. Different cults
seek to master the souls of men and their limitations are also symbolized by
rings.
THE RING OF THE GODS
By appropriating a part of the Rhinegold,
representing the Universal Spirit and forming it into a ring symbolical of the
fact that it (the Spirit) has neither beginning nor end, the Ego came into
existence as a separate entity. Within the confines of this auric ring it is
supreme ruler, self-sufficient, and resents encroachment upon its domain. Thus,
it placed itself beyond the pale of fellowship. Like the prodigal son, it
wandered far from the Father, but even before it realized that it was feeding
upon the husks of matter, religion stepped in to guide it back to its eternal
home, to free it from the illusion and delusion incidental to material
existence, to redeem it from the death incurred in this phase of the dense
embodiment, and to show it the way to truth and life eternal.
In the Teutonic myth, the warders of
religion are represented as gods. Chief among them is Wotan, who is identical
with the Latin Mercury, and Wotanstag or Wednesday, is still named in his honor.
Freya, the Venus of Norway, was goddess of beauty, who fed the other gods on the
golden apples which preserved their youths. Friday is her day. Thor, the Jupiter
of the Norsemen, is said to drive her car over the heavens and the noise then
heard is the thunder, and the lightning sparks that fly from his hammer when he
strikes at his enemies. Loge is the name of the god of Saturday. (Lorday in
Scandinavian, a derivation from lue, the Scandinavian name for flame.) He is
really not one of the gods, but related to the giants or nature forces. His
flame is not alone the physical flame, but is also a symbol of illusion, and he,
himself, is the spirit of deceit, sometimes currying favor with the gods and
betraying the giants, at other times deceiving the gods and helping the giants
to further his own schemes. Like Lucifer, the fiery Mars Spirit, he is also a
spirit of negation, but delights also in obstructing life like the cold Saturn.
There is in northern mythology a reference
to the still earlier cult wherein the deities of the water were worshiped, but
the gods we mentioned superseded them, and are said to ride to the judgment seat
every day over a rainbow bridge, Bifrost. Thus, we see that this religion dates
from the dawn of the present epoch, when mankind had emerged from the waters of
Atlantis into the clear atmosphere of Aryana-in which we are now loving-and
where they saw the rainbow for the first time.
It was said to Noah, when he led primitive
mankind out of the Flood that so long as the sign of the rainbow remained in the
clouds, the alternating cycles of summer and winter, night and day, should not
cease, and the northern myth also shows us the gods gathered at the rainbow
bridge in the beginning of this era. It and the gods remain until the moment
when this phase of our evolution is ended, an event which will be shown to be
identical with the description given in the Christian Apocalypse, which the
Scandinavian myth will materially help to explain.
Truth is universal, and unlimited. It knows
no boundaries, but when the Ego enveloped itself in a ring of separate vehicles
which segregated it from others, this limitation made it incapable of
understanding absolute truth. Therefore a religion embodying the fullness of
pure truth would have been incomprehensible to mankind and unsuited to help
them. Hence, as a child who goes to school and learns a few elementary lessons
the first year to prepare it for more complicated problems later, so humanity
were given religions of the most primitive nature to educate them to something
higher by easy stages.
Thus the warders of religion, the gods, are
represented as desirous of building a walled fortress so that they may entrench
themselves behind that wall and focalize their powers against the other faith.
The Spirit cannot be limited without enmeshing itself in materiality; therefore,
the gods, on the advise of Loge, the spirit of deceit and delusion, make a
bargain with the giants, Fafner, and Fasolt, (representing selfishness), to
build the wall of limitation. When that wall surrounds the gods they have lost
the universal light and knowledge; therefore, the myth tells us that part of
their payment to the builders of Valhal was to be the Sun and Moon.
Furthermore, when religion has thus limited
itself behind the wall of creed, the spirit of decay is introduced; it waxes old
as a garment, and, therefore, it is also said that Wotan (wisdom or reason),
agreed to give the giants, Freya, the goddess of beauty, who fed the gods on her
golden apples to preserve their youth. Thus, by listening to advise from Loge,
the spirit of deceit, the gods have sacrificed their light, their knowledge, and
their hope of eternal youth and usefulness. Still, as already said, this was in
a manner necessary, for mankind could not have grasped truth in its fullness
then; we cannot understand it even now.
The spiritual power of religion is
symbolized by the magic wand of Aaron in the Bible, by the magic spear of
Parsifal in the Grail myth, and by the spear of Wotan in the story of the
Niebelung. To bind the bargain with the giants, magic characters were cut in the
handle of the spear, which was thus weakened, and in that manner it is shown
than religion loses in spiritual power what it gains in material ways when it
makes a bargain with the world rulers and panders to the baser appetites.
According to the teaching of the Norsemen,
those only who died in battle were entitled to be taken to Valhal. Wotan desires
none but the strong and the mighty warriors. Those who died of illness or in
peace upon their beds were condemned to the realm of hell, the underworld. In
this also there is a great lesson, for none but the noble and the fearless who
spend their days fighting the battle of life TO THE VERY LAST BREATH are worthy
of advancement. The shirkers who love ease and peace, rather than the work of
the world, are not entitled to promotion in the school of life. It does not
matter where we work or what the line of our experience may be, so long as we
faithfully battle with the problems of life as they appear before us. Neither
will it suffice if we do this for a year or two and then lapse into inactivity;
we must keep on working and striving until the day of life is done.
Thus the old Norse religion teaches the same
lesson as Paul taught when he counseled "patient persistence in well
doing." Even if we realize that we have not all truth, that we are placed
under limitations by separateness, the egoism symbolized by the Ring of
Niebelung, and by creed and convention symbolized by the Ring of the Gods, still
if we fill our appointed niche to the best of our ability throughout our whole
life we shall be certain of advancement in a future age. We shall see more
clearly through the veil of egoism when we willingly live the life where we have
been placed, for the Recording Angles make no mistakes. They have put us in that
place where we have been given the lessons needed to prepare us for a greater
sphere of usefulness.
From what has been said, it is evident that
the creedbound condition of the various churches-the insistence on dogma and
ritual-are not, unmitigated evils, as it may have appeared to many, but in
reality the necessary outcome of the limitations incidental to the material
existence through the human Spirit is now passing, as thus each class is being
properly taken care of. It receives as much truth as it can comprehend, and as
is good for its present development. There is not need of worrying about anyone.
No one can or will be lost, for, as in God we live, and move, and have our
being, so, if one were lost, a part of the Divine Author of our system would be
missing, an unthinkable proposition.
But while a great majority of mankind are
thus being taken care of by the orthodox religions, there always a few
pioneers-some whose faculty of intuition tells them of greater heights unscaled,
who see the sunlight of truth beyond the wall of creed. Their souls are starving
on the husks of dogmas, and they long ardently for the apples of youth, and love
sold by the gods to the giants. Even the gods are growing old rapidly, for no
religion which is devoid of love can ever hope to hold mankind for any length of
time. Therefore, the gods were forced to seek again the advice of Loge, the
spirit of deceit, hoping through his wiles to extricate themselves from the
dilemma. Loge tells then how Alberich, the Niebelung, has succeeded in hoarding
up an immense treasure by enslaving his brothers. With the consent of the gods,
he uses deceitful means to capture Alberich and forces him to disgorge all his
treasures. He then plays upon the avaricious nature of the giants and finally
succeeds in ransoming Freya.
Thus the curse of the Ring (egoism and
selfishness) has tainted even the gods. For the sake of the Ring (power),
Alberich, the Niebelung, forswore love. He oppressed his brothers and ruled them
with an iron rod. Religion, on its side, forswore love by the sale of Freya. It
also stooped to deceit to force the rulers of the world to pay tribute and when
the Ring of the Niebelung passed into the hands of the giants the evil fate
followed it, for one brother slays the other that he may be the sole possessor
of the wealth of the world.
The gods have indeed regained Freya, but she
is no longer the pure goddess of love. She has been prostituted; hence; she is
but the semblance of her former self and fails to satisfy those whose intuition
sees deeper than the surface; such are called Walsungs in the Scandinavian myth.
The first syllable is the derivation of the German word, walhlen, to choose or
the Scandinavian, vaelge. The last syllable means children. They are children of
desire for free will and choice, who want to choose their own path and who seek
to follow their own divine instinct.
THE VALKYRIE
"The Valkyrie" is the name of the
second part of Wagner's great musical drama, founded upon the northern myth of
the Niebelungs, and the bearers of the name were children of Wotan, as were also
the Walsungs.
The appropriateness of this name will be at
once apparent when we understand that the mission of the Valkyrie was to go to
battles whether fought between two or more, take the slain upon their horses,
and carry them to Valhal. Therefore, a battle field or a place of combat was
called VALPLADS, the place where Wotan, the god, chose the valiant ones who died
fighting the battle for truth (as they saw it), to be his companions in the
realm of bliss (as they conceived it). Brunhilde, the spirit of truth, was
therefore chief among the Valkyries, the leader of her sisters, the other
virtues. She was the favorite daughter of the god Wotan.
But when the gods had limited themselves and
shut away the universality of truth by the Ring of Creed and dogma--symbolized
by Valhal--the Walsungs, who are truth seekers first and foremost, rebelled.
They manifest under different aspects as shown by the names given them in the
northern myth. The root of their name is SIEG, a German word which means
victory, and it is highly appropriate, for no matter what odds are against it,
truths will win in the end.
Siegmund, the courageous one, who is
impelled to seek truth no matter what the consequences, may be slain as the
result of his audacity. We shall hear how and why, presently. Sieglinda, his
sister and later his wife, who has the same inward urge but dares not openly
follow it, may die in despair. She transmits the hunger for the truth to their
offspring Siegfried, he, who through victory gains peace, so that what one
generation of truth seekers fails to accomplish, will eventually be achieved by
their descendants, and in the end truth will triumph over creed and stand
supreme.
We are taking time by the forelock when
relating or hinting at events which will be unfolded in the beautiful tale
before us, but we cannot refrain from iterating and reiterating that glorious
thought, "For now we see through a glass darkly." Though the walls and
limitations of physical existence are about us in every direction, the time is
coming when "we shall see and know even as we are known."
When Siegmund, impelled by the
uncontrollable desire for truth, leaves Valhal, Wotan is enraged and in order to
put a check on the independent spirit of the Walsungs, he orders the marriage of
Sieglinda to Hunding, who is the spirit of convention. She swoons despairingly
in his arms, for she has not the courage to leave her ancestors as her brother
had done. Thus she is a fit symbol of those who, though they rebel in their
innermost natures, are married tot he conventions of the world and are afraid to
make a radical change from the established code of the church, for fear of what
people will think of them. Thus, though outraged in their innermost nature and
thwarted in their holiest ambitions, they continue to bear the yoke of
conventionality and go through the established church services for the sake of
appearance.
In the course of time, Siegmund comes by
chance to the house of Hunding and finds his sister whom at first he does not
know, but when they have recognized each other, he induces her to flee with him.
They bout know that this acts of theirs, this outrage against Hunding, the
spirit of convention, will not be condoned by the gods, and to fortify
themselves in the battle which they know is before them, they take with them a
magical sword called Nothung. NOTH is need or distress, and UNG as we have
already seen, means child. Thus the sword is the child of distress, the courage
of despair. This sword had been buried to the hilt in Yggdrasil by no less a
person than Wotan, himself, against just such an emergency as this. In order
that we may thoroughly understand this beautiful symbol and the seemingly
paradoxical conduct of Wotan, it will be necessary to elucidate the meaning of
Yggdrasil, the World Ash, the tree of life and being, as explained in the
Scandinavian mythology.
According to their concept, this wonderful
tree reached from Earth to heaven. One of its roots was in the underworld with
Hel, a terrible hag who ruled over those who had died of disease and were not,
therefore, qualified to dwell with Wotan in Valhal. They represent the class of
people who are indolent and neglect to fight the battle of life to the last. Hel
has three children, who are closely akin to her and are always fighting the
gods. who have the welfare of man at heart. They are symbols of the elements
which make up the material world where death alone reigns. One is the Midgaard
Serpent, a prodigious monster encircling the Earth and biting its own tail: it
is the ocean. The other is the wolf Fenris, which is so subtle, yet so strong,
that nothing can hold him: He represents the atmosphere surrounding the Earth
and the winds which cannot be controlled. Loge, with whom we have already become
acquainted, is the spirit of fire, deceit, and illusion. The other root of
Yggdrasil is with the Forest Giants in chaos, whence this whole universe
originated. The third root is with the gods.
Under the roof, which is with Hel, the
Serpent, Nidhog, lies gnawing. It is the spirit of envy and malice which is
subversive of good: NID means envy, and HOG, to fell. Because Yggdrasil, the
tree of life in manifestation, lives by love, envy and malice would fell the
tree and bring it down to death and Hel. But under the root that is with the
gods, is the fountain, fountain, Urd, whence the three Norns, or Fates, fetch
the water of life--the spiritual impetus wherewith to water the tree and keep
its leaves fresh and green. The names of these three Norns are Urd, Skuld, and
Verdande. Urd is from the German, UR, the past, primordial, or virgin state in
relation to man and the universe. She spins upon her wheel the thread of fate
generated by us in the past; and Skuld, a name signifying debt, is the second
Norn, who represents the present. To her, Urd delivers the thread of fate of
past lives which we must expiate in this embodiment. It is then given to
Verdande, the third Norn, whose name is a derivation of WERDENDE, the German
word for becoming. She represents the future, and when the thread of fate
symbolizing the debt paid at the present time is handed to her, she breaks it
off piece by piece. Thus this wonderful symbol tells just that when the
causation generated in past lives has worked itself into effects in this life,
the debt is cancelled for all time to come.
The northern mythology further tells us that
besides these three chief Norms, there were many others, and that one officiated
at each birth and took charge of the destiny of the child then born. We are also
told that these Norns, or Fates, did not work according to their own will but
were subject to the dictates of the invisible Orlog. The name is a corruption of
the word UR, meaning primordial, and LOG, law. Thus we see the northern symbol
teaches that the Norns were not subject to the gods, and that our destiny is not
ruled by caprice but by an inexorable law of Nature, the Law of Cause and
Effect.
Under the third root, which was with the
Frost Giants, was the well of Mime. The Frost Giants, or nature forces, had
existed prior to the establishment of the Earth. They had helped its formation
and, therefore, knew many things which were hidden from the gods. Therefore,
even Wotan, the god of wisdom, was wont to go to the well of Mime to drink
therefore, that he might receive a knowledge of the past. He also had to drink
from the fountain of Urd that he might renew his life.
Thus we see that the Hierarchies, who help
us to evolve, are themselves living to learn; and the very fact that they are
learning shows their liability to err, and, also the reason why Wotan, their
chief, should provide the sword, Nothung--the courage of despair--so that in an
emergency those against whom he erred might have a weapon wherewith to defend
themselves. Much more might be said about this wonderful World Ash, the
Yggdrasil, but the student has now sufficient information to enable him to
understand the relation of the sword to that which follows.
When Siegmund and Sieglinda, fortified with
the magic sword--the courage of despair--leave the house of Hunding, the spirit
of convention, to seek truth in the wide world, the outraged Hunding needs not
the command of Wotan to pursue them with intent to kill. Wotan bids Brunhilde,
the Valkyrie, to be invisibly present at the expected battle and fight for
Hunding, the spirit of conventionality. But the spirit of truth cannot fight
against the truth seeker, so Brunhilde sorrowfully refuses to comply with
Wotan's orders. When Siegmund meets Hunding in deadly combat and is about to
vanquish him, Wotan interposes his spear, and upon that the sword, Nothung, is
shattered and Siegmund, defenseless, is killed by a blow from Hunding.
Thus truth is ever upon the side of the
truth seeker in his battle against the conventionalities of the church and
social customs. But when the power of religion, which furnished him the courage
of despair necessary to stand up for his convictions, is pitted against the
power of creed symbolized by the spear of Wotan, many an earnest soul has been
vanquished, though not convinced. Siegmund may die, and Sieglinda may follow him
to the grave, broken-hearted, when, assisted by Brunhilde she has given birth to
Siegfried, the victor; for, as already said, the thirst for truth once felt can
never be quenched until it has gained satisfaction.
In the meantime, Wotan powerless to abandon
Valhal, the Ring of Creed, is forced to put away from himself Brunhilde, the
spirit of truth, who has disobeyed him; for it is a condition of creed that it
be autocratic and brook no gainsaying. But as all religions are inherently
imbued by a spirit of love and a sincere desire to benefit and uplift mankind,
Wotan feels an overwhelming sorrow at the step which is necessary for the
continuance of the policy he had adopted, and which he adheres to despite the
heart- rending pleadings of Brunhilde. It is a terrible thing to part company
with truth, and both feel this more keenly than words can express, when the poor
creed bound Wotan must perforce put Brunhilde to sleep, as he says:
"Never to be wakened, until one shall
come who is more free than I."
And in that saying he discloses the
principal requirement in the quest of truth. "Unless a man leave father and
mother," said Christ, "He cannot become my disciple." All
limitations must have been swept away before we can hope for success in the
quest of truth.
SIEGFRIED, THE TRUTH SEEKER
We have seen that it is necessary to set
aside all limitations of religion, family, environment, and whatever else
hinders in order to be able to grasp truth, but there is still another great
requirement, or one which perhaps is comprehended in the first. We cling to our
religion, our friends, and our families through fear of standing alone. We obey
conventions because we fear to follow the dictates of the inner voice that urges
us on toward the higher things which are incomprehensible to the majority; and
therefore in reality, fear is the chief obstacle which prevents us from getting
at truth and living it.
This is also shown in the Ring of the
Niebelung. Wotan decrees that Brunhilde, the spirit of truth, is to be put to
sleep, because he fears the loss of his power if he retains her after she has
rebelled against his limitations and refuses to shield Hunding, the spirit of
convention. He pronounces her doom in sorrow, saying that she must remain asleep
until one more free than he, the god, shall waken her. "Perfect love
casteth out all fear," and only the fearless are free to love and to live
truth. Therefore, Brunhilde is put to sleep on a desolate rock, and around her
burns forever a circle of flame kindled by loge, the spirit of delusion. No one
but the free--the unfettered and fearless soul--can ever hope to penetrate that
circle of hallucination (conventionality) and live to love the reawakened spirit
of truth, ever lovely and young.
Thus the second part of the mystic drama
ends with the abandonment of truth, and the triumph of convention. Creed is
firmly established on Earth. Siegmund, the truth seeker, lies vanquished and
dead. His sister-wife, Sieglinda, also has paid with her life for entering the
quest and it would seem as if Brunhilde must sleep forever. now the Walsungs
have only one representative, the orphan child Siegfried, who was left in the
cave of Mime, the Niebelung, by the dying mother, Sieglinda.
In time, however, the child grows up in
youthful vigor, developing the strength of a giant. Beautiful as a god, he is a
strange contrast to Mime, the ugly Niebelung, a dwarf who claims to be his
father. This Siegfried can scarcely believe, for when he looks about him in the
forest, he sees that the nestlings resemble their parents, that the young of all
animals have the same characteristics which are found in their parents. He alone
is different from the one who claims him as a son.
When with prodigious strength he has caught
a bear, and leads it into the cave of Mime, the latter is almost paralyzed with
fear, an emotion utterly unknown to Siegfried. Mime, one of the most cunning
smiths among the Niebelung, has forged sword after sword for the use of this
young giant, but each in turn has been shattered by the powerful arm that
wielded it. Mime has indeed tried to weld the sword Nothung, the child of
distress, which was shattered upon the spear of Wotan in the fatal fray between
Siegmund and Hunding. The fragments of this sword were brought by Sieglinda to
the cave of Mime, but NO ONE WHO IS A COWARD can either forge or wield the
sword, Nothung, the courage of despair; therefore, Mime, despite all his skill,
has failed every time he has tried. One day when Siegfried taunts him because of
his inability to make a sword that will stand, Mime brings out the fragments of
Nothung, and tells him that if he can weld it, it will serve him well.
Possessing that cardinal qualification of the trust seeker, fearlessness,
Siegfried accomplishes with unskilled hand what Mime has failed to do. He forges
anew the magic sword and is thus prepared for the quest of truth and knowledge.
Though ages have passed since Alberich, the
Niebelung, was forced to part with the Ring as ransom to the gods, neither he
nor his tribe have forgotten the power wielded by its possessor. And the longing
to regain the lost treasure is still rife among all of them. For mankind, being
inherently spiritual and free, will never be reconciled to the loss of
individuality insisted upon under the regime of the church. Though, like Mime,
they may be imbued with an uncontrollable fear; though they may cringe and fawn
before the higher powers, as Alberich fawned before Wotan, they always, whether
subconsciously or otherwise, remember their spiritual heritage and seek to
recover their estate as free agents, unbound by creed or other limitations.
To this end they scheme and plot in the most
subtle manner, as symbolized by the aid Mime gives Siegfried to forge anew the
sword once shattered by Wotan. He sees that the young truth seeker is fearless.
He knows that Fafner, one of the giants, who obtained the Ring from the gods,
broods over his treasure in the form of a huge dragon, awe inspiring in the
extreme. He can scarcely believe it possible for anyone to vanquish this
monster, but he believes that if it can be done, this fearless young giant,
Siegfried, is the only one able to accomplish the feat. It has, indeed, been
said that the one who forges Nothung, will slay him; and Mime trusts to his
cunning and hopes that if Siegfried kills the dragon, he, Mime, may be able to
obtain possession of the Ring of the Niebelung and become the master of the
world.
There is a very deep spiritual significance
in this tale, namely, that of the lower nature, plotting to use the higher self
or its own vile purposes. Siegfried (he, who through victory gains peace), is
the higher self at that stage of its pilgrimage where it has been left all
alone, without kith or kin, where it sees that the shape of clay symbolized by
Mime is not part of it, but of an entirely different race and breed, where it is
ready to continue its search for truth, attempted in previous lives as did
Siegmund and Sieglinda, from whom the indomitable courage, that knows neither
fear nor defeat, has been inherited.
But though the seeking soul may forsake the
world, as did Herzleide, the mother of Parsifal, who gave birth to the truth
seeker in a dense forest, and as Sieglinda who bore the child, Siegfried, in the
cave of Mime, the lower nature follows, scheming to use the power of spirit for
worldly ends. Alas! how many have left the churches in despair because of creed,
as Siegmund left Wotan; who have gained a certain knowledge of the higher things
and have then misused their heavenly powers of hypnotism and mental suggestion,
to attract to themselves the goods of this world, seeking rather the things of
Earth which fetter than the treasures of heaven which free the soul.
There has never been an age on Earth when
this part of the great myth was so generally enacted as it is today. There are
many thousands of people who represent in themselves, Siegfried and Mime--Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. They are roused to a greater or lesser realization of the
powers of the spirit, of their divine nature and attributes as Siegfried was,
but the lower phase of their nature, Mime, keeps on scheming for material
benefit.
And whether we call this use of the divine
powers, Christian, or by an other name, it is not the science of the soul. We
should be honest with ourselves and recognize the fact, that He, who had not a
place whereon to lay His head, and who was the very embodiment of the attracting
Christ power, refused to use that power for His own benefit. Even at the point
of death He refrained, and it was said of Him that others He saved, but Himself,
He could not (would not) save because the Law of Sacrifice is greater than the
law of Self-preservation: "For what shall it profit a man, though he gain
the whole world and lose his own soul?"
The moment we set out upon the path in
earnest, the lower nature is doomed despite all its efforts of cunning to save
itself. And when Mime plans to send Siegfried against the dragon, Fafner, the
spirit of desire, he has in fact sealed his own fate; for when the soul has
conquered the desire for worldly possessions, we are dead to the world, even
though we may still live here and perform our work in the world. We are then in
the world, but not of it.
Led by Mime, Siegfried finds the giant
Fafner guarding the cave where he has hidden the hoard of the Niebelungs. The
lower nature always urges the higher to seek the material wealth of the world,
seeking, thereby, to obtain standing and power in society. It is, alas, all too
common, this desire and thirst for wealth and power! We are all like Mime, ready
to risk our lives in the quest of gold. And though Mime quakes at the very
thought of being near the dreadful dragon, he keeps on plotting, for he knows
that when the Ego, represented by the Ring of the Niebelung, is so enmeshed in
the snares of materiality that the body may be said to own it, when all its
energies are directed by the lower nature, there is no limit to the power it may
attain. But Siegfried, the fearless truth seeker, when he has vanquished the
dragon, representing the desire nature, also slays Mime who is emblematic of the
dense body.
Freed from the mortal coil, the Spirit is
able to understand the language of Nature. Intuitively it senses where truth,
represented by Brunhilde, the Valkyrie, is hidden, and following this intuition,
represented in the myth by a bird, he starts for the fire girt rock, to wake and
to woo the sleeping beauty. But though we may, by laying aside the physical
body, enter the realm where truth is to be found, the pathway is not by any
means clear; for Wotan, the warder of creed, stretches his spear across the path
of Siegfried, endeavoring to the last to dissuade or discourage the independent
searcher for truth. However, the power of creed, represented by the spear of
Wotan, was weakened when he bargained with the giants; in other words when it
appealed to the lower side of man's nature. And in token of this weakening,
magic characters were cut upon the shaft of the spear. This is therefore, easily
broken in twain at the first blow from Nothung, the courage of despair.
When the truth seeker has come to the point
here described, he will no longer allow himself to be thwarted in his quest,
whether the opposing power be devils like Fafner or gods like Wotan. Every
obstacle he removes with ruthless hand for he has only one desire in the world,
an overwhelming craving to know truth. Therefore, after shattering the spear of
Wotan, he presses onward, led by the bird of intuition, until he comes to he
circle of flame hiding Brunhilde, the sleeping spirit of truth. Neither is he
daunted at sight of loge's flames of illusion and hallucination. He plunges
boldly through, and behold! there lies that for which he has panted during many
lives. He stoops, gathers Brunhilde in his strong, yet tender arms, and with a
fervent kiss he awakens the spirit of truth from her age long sleep.
THE BATTLE OF TRUTH AND ERROR
There are no words adequate to convey a
conception of what the soul feels when it stands in that presence, far above
this world (where the veil of flesh hides the living realities under a mask)
also, beyond the world of desire and illusion where fantastic and illusory
shapes mislead us into believing that they are something very different from
what they are in reality. Only in the Region of Concrete Thought, where the
archetypes of all things unite in that grand celestial choir which Pythagoras
spoke of as "the harmony of the spheres," do we find truth revealed in
all its beauty.
But the Spirit cannot stay there forever.
This truth and reality--so ardently desired by everyone who has been driven to
enter the quest by an inward urge stronger than the ties of friendship,
relationship, or any other consideration--is but a means to an end. TRUTH MUST
BE BROUGHT DOWN TO THIS REALM OF PHYSICAL FORM, IN ORDER THAT IT MAY BE OF REAL
VALUE IN THE WORLD'S WORK. Therefore Siegfried, the truth seeker, must of a
necessity leave the rock of Brunhilde, return through the fire of illusion and
re-enter the material world to be tempted and tried, to prove whether he will be
true to the vows of love which pass between himself and the re-awakened
Valkyrie.
It is a hard battle that is before him. The
world is not ready for truth, and however vehemently it may protest its desire
in that direction, it schemes and plots, by all means within its great power, to
down anyone who brings the truth to its doors; for there are few institutions
that can bear the dazzling brightness of its light.
Not even the gods can endure it, as
Brunhilde knows to her sorrow, for was she not exiled by Wotan, because she
refused to use her power on the side of convention! Any anyone who steps upon
conventionalities, to uphold truth, will find that the whole world is against
him and that he must stand alone. Wotan was her father and he professed to love
her dearly. Yes, he did love her in his way, but he loved the power symbolized
by Valhal more. The Ring of Creed, whereby he dominated humanity, was more
desirable, in his eyes, than Brunhilde, the spirit of truth; so he put her to
sleep behind the circle flame of illusion.
If such be the attitude of the gods, what
then may be expected from men who do not profess such high and noble ideals as
the gods, the keepers of religion, were supposed to inculcate into them? All
this and more than we can put into words--much that it will do the student good
to meditate upon--flashed upon the mind of Brunhilde in the moment of her
parting from Siegfried, and, in order to give him at least a chance in the
battle of life, she magnetizes, as it were, his whole body to make him
invulnerable. Every place is thus protected save one point on the back between
the shoulders. Here we have a case analogous to that of Achilles, whose body was
made invulnerable in all places save one of his heels. Thee is a great
significance in this fact; for as long as the soldier of truth wears this armor,
of which Paul speaks, in the battle of life, and boldly faces his enemies, it is
certain that, however hard he is beset, eventually he will win. Because, by
facing the world and baring his breast to the arrows of antagonism, calumny, and
slander, he shows that he has the courage of his convictions, and a power higher
than he, the power that is always working for good, protects him no matter how
great the onslaught he faces. But woe be unto him, if at any time he turns his
back! Then, when he is not watching the onslaught of the enemies of truth, they
will find the vulnerable spot be it in the heel or 'twixt the shoulders.
Therefore, it behooves us and everyone else who loves truth, to take a lesson
from this wonderful symbology, and TO REALIZE OUR RESPONSIBILITY TO ALWAYS LOVE
TRUTH ABOVE EVERYTHING. Friendship, relationship, and all other considerations
should have no weight with us compared with this one great work with truth and
for truth. Christ, who was the very embodiment of truth, said to His disciples,
"They have hated me, and they will hate you."
So let us not deceive ourselves: The path of
principle is a rugged road, and strenuous is the labor of climbing. On the way
we shall probably lose caste with everyone near and dear to us. Though the world
now professes to grant religious freedom, the day of persecution has not yet
ended. Creed and dogmatism are still in power, ready to prosecute and persecute
anyone who does not go along the conventional lines. But so long as we face them
and pursue our path regardless of criticism truth will always come out unscathed
from the battle. It is only when we show ourselves to be cowards and cravens,
that these inimical forces can give us our death blow through this vulnerable
spot.
Another point: when Siegfried starts out
from the rock of the Valkyrie to re-enter the world, he gives to Brunhilde the
Ring of the Niebelung. this Ring, as you remember, was formed from the
Rhinegold, representing the Universal Spirit, by Alberich the Niebelung. And we
also remember that he could not shape this nugget until he had forsworn love;
for friendship and love ceased when the Universal Spirit was surrounded by the
ring of egoism. From that time the battle of life has been waged in all its
fierceness: every man's hand being against his brother because of his egoism,
which impels each to seek his own, regardless of the welfare of others.
But when the Spirit has found truth and has
come in contact with the divine realities, when it has entered the Region of
Concrete Thought, which is heaven, an has seen that one great verity--THAT ALL
THINGS ARE ONE and that though they may seem separate here, there is an
invisible thread uniting each with all, when the Spirit has thus regained
universality and love, it cannot be separate any longer. So, when it leaves the
realm of truth, it leaves behind the feeling of separateness and self,
symbolized by the Ring. Thus it becomes universal in its nature. It knows
neither kin nor country, but feels like the much misunderstood Thomas Paine,
when he said, "The world is my country; to do good is my religion."
This attitude of mind is allegorically represented when Siegfried gives to
Brunhilde the Ring of the Niebelung.
As you will remember, the Valkyries were
daughters of Wotan, the chief god of the Norse mythology. They rode through the
air on horses at great speed, to any place where deadly combat, whether between
two or a greater number, was in progress. As soon as a warrior fell dead they
lifted him tenderly to their saddles and carried him to Valhal, and abode of the
gods, where he was resuscitated and lived in bliss forever after. You remember,
also, that the name Valkyrie was interpreted as--chosen by acclamation. those
who fought the battle of life to the very end were chosen by acclamation to be
the companions of the gods.
Brunhilde as chief of these daughters of
Wotan, and her horse Grane, was the swiftest of the steeds. This animal, which
had thus faithfully carried the spirit of truth, she gave to her husband; for
TRUTH MAY EVER BE CONSIDERED THE BRIDE OF THE ONE WHO HAS FOUND IT. The horse,
therefore, is symbolical of the swiftness and decision wherewith one who has
married truth is able to choose aright and discern truth from error--only,
PROVIDED HE REMAINS FAITHFUL.
Thus with the love of truth in his heart,
and mounted upon the steed of discernment, Siegfried starts out to fight the
battle of truth and bring the world captive to the feet of Brunhilde. Heaven and
Earth hang in the balance, for he may revolutionize the world if he is faithful
and courageous; but if he forgets his mission and becomes enmeshed in the sphere
of illusion, the last hope of redeeming the world is gone. The TWILIGHT OF THE
GODS IS CLOSE AT HAND, when the present order of things shall be done away, when
the heavens shall melt in the fiery heat so that out of the travail of Nature a
New Heaven and a New Earth may be born, wherein righteousness as a garment shall
clothe all and everything.
Let us now turn our eyes from heaven, from
Siegfried and Brunhilde, to Earth, where the world, which the truth is to set
free, waits for the coming hero. The northern myth introduces us to the court of
Gunther, a king honest and upright according to the standards of the world.
Gutrune, his sister, is the highest lady in the land, her brother being
unmarried. Among the courtiers there is Hagen, a name which means hook,
signifying inherent selfishness. He is scion of the Niebelungs, related to
Alberich who formed the fatal Ring. Ever since the days when that Ring passed
out of their possession, the Niebelungs have kept close watch upon its
possessors: first, Wotan, who tricked Alberich and robbed him of the Ring, then
Fafner and Fasolt, the giants who had built Valhal for Wotan, and who forced him
to give them the Ring in part payment to ransom Freya, the goddess of love and
youth, whom Wotan had prostituted and sold for the sake of power: then when
Fafner slew Fasolt, the Niebelungs watched closed the cave where Fafner lay
concealed, brooding over the hoard of the Niebelung as a huge dragon. And Mime,
the foster father of Siegfried, paid with his life for scheming to obtain
possession of the coveted treasure. Nor was Siegfried safe from their vigilant
watch, save when he was at the rock of the Valkyrie; for no Niebelung, nor one
who is a cur or coward, can ever penetrate beyond the circle flame of illusion
into the realm of truth. Therefore, the Niebelungs do not know what has become
of the Ring when Siegfried emerges anew into the world, though, of course, they
surmise that it has been left with Brunhilde, and instantly commence plotting
how to obtain it.
The court of Gunther lies directly in the
path of Siegfried, and Alberich speeds ahead and informs Hagen that the last
known possessor of the Ring is coming. Together, they scheme how to find out its
whereabouts and obtain possession, but each in his black heart, also plots how
to outwit the other and obtain the treasure for himself alone; for there is no
honor in the battle of the separate self; each is against all others regardless
of who they are. Though in the world we find co-operation for a common purpose,
the question that is uppermost in the mind of every one who participates is:
What can I get out of it? Unless this is plain and a personal reward is in
sight, the great majority of mankind are unwilling to work. The apostle tells
us, "not to be concerned with the things for self alone, but also, TO BE
MINDFUL OF THE THINGS OF OTHERS." and we have given intellectual assent in
the Christian countries, but, alas! how few are willing to live up to the ideal
of unselfish service.
REBIRTH, AND THE LETHAL DRINK
"Birth is but a sleep and a forgetting.
The soul that rises with us, our life's star,
Has elsewhere had its setting,
And cometh from afar." --WORDSWORTH.
When Siegfried leaves the rock of the
Valkyrie and reaches the worldly court of Gunther, he is given a drink
calculated to make him forget all about his past life and Brunhilde, the spirit
of truth, whom he had won for his very own.
It is usually supposed that the doctrine of
rebirth is taught only in the ancient religions of the Orient, but a study of
the Scandinavian mythology will soon rout that misconception. Indeed, they
believed in both rebirth and the Law of Cause and Effect as applied to moral
conduct, until Christianity clouded these doctrines, for reasons given in THE
ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION (p. 167). And it is curious to read of the
confusion caused when the ancient religion of Wotan was being superseded by
Christianity. Men believed in rebirth in their hearts, but repudiated it
outwardly, as the following story told of Saint Olaf, King of Norway, one of the
earliest and most zealous converts to Christianity, will show; when Asta, the
Queen of King Harold, was in labor but could not bring to birth, a man came to
the court with some jewels, of which he gave the following account: King Olaf
Geirstad, who had reigned in Norway many years before and was the direct
ancestor of Harold, had appeared to him in a dream and directed him to open the
great earth-mound in which his body lay, and having severed it from the head
with a sword, to convey certain jewels, which he would find in the coffin, to
the queen, whose pains would then cease. The jewels were taken into the queen's
chamber, and soon after she was delivered of a male child, whom they named Olaf.
It was generally believed that the Spirit of Olaf Geirstad had passed into the
body of the child, who was named after him.
Many years after, when Olaf had become King
of Norway, and had embraced Christianity, he rode one day, as he often did, by
the mound where his ancestor lay, and a courtier, who was with him at the time
asked,
"Is it true, my lord, that you once lay
in this mound?"
"Never," replied the king,
"has my Spirit inhabited two bodies."
"Yet, it has been reported that you
have been heard to say, on passing this mound, 'Here was I. Here I lived.'"
"I have never so said," returned
the king, "and never will I say so."
He was much discomfited, and rode hastily
away, presumably to avoid discussion of an inward conviction which all the
dogmas of the new faith could not eradicate.
As a matter of fact, all ancient people,
whether in the East or in the West, knew much about birth and death which has
been forgotten in modern times, because second sight was more prevalent then. To
this day, for instance, many peasants in Norway assert ability to see the Spirit
passing out of the body at death, as a long narrow white cloud, which is, of
course, the vital body; and the Rosicrucian teaching--that the deceased hover
around their earthly abode for some time after death, that they assume a
luminous body and are sorely afflicted by the grief of dear ones--was common
knowledge among the ancient Northmen. When the deceased King Helge of Denmark
materialized to assuage the grief of his widow, and she exclaimed in anguish
"The dew of death has bathed his warrior body,' he answered:
" 'Tis thou, Sigruna,
Art cause alone,
That Helge is bathed
With dew of sorrow.
Thou wilt not cease thy grief,
Nor dry the bitter tears.
Each bloody tear
Falls on my breast,
Icy cold. They will not let me rest."
Students, when they realize the fact of
rebirth, generally wonder why the memory of past lives is blotted out, and many
are filled with an almost overpowering desire to know the past. They cannot
understand the benefit derived from the lethal drink of forgetfulness, and they
look with envy at people who claim to know their past lives--when they claim to
have been kings, queens, philosophers, priests, et cetera. there is, however, a
most beneficent purpose in this forgetfulness, for no experience is of value in
life except for the impress which it leaves by the purgatorial or heavenly
post-mortem experience. This impress then acts in such a manner that at the
proper time it directs, warns, or urges a certain line of action, and this
warning, or urge, though dissociated from the experience, or rather for the
reason that it is dissociated from the experience wherefrom it was extracted,
acts with a quickness greater than that of thought.
To make this point clear we may perhaps
liken this record, graven upon our subtler vehicles, to a phonograph record,
which playing, will cause a battery of tuning forks placed near it to vibrate as
each note is struck. From the outward point of view there seems to be no reason
why a certain indentation on a phonographic record should correspond to a
certain one on the tuning fork, and when the needle falls into that indentation,
a definite sound should be produced which sets the tuning fork vibrating. But
whether we understand it or not, demonstration shows that there is a tie of tone
between that little indentation and the tuning fork. And this does not depend
upon a knowledge of how the impress came to be imprinted on the record, or what
caused the tuning fork to respond to that vibration. It is there, whether we
know all the facts about it, or not.
Similarly, when we have had a certain
experience in life, be it joyful or the reverse, it is condensed in the
post-mortem experience, leaving an impress upon the soul to warn, if the
experience is purgatorial; to urge, if heavenly. And in a later life, when an
experience comes up similar to the one which caused the impress, the vibration
is sensed by the soul, it awakens the tone of pain or pleasure, as the case may
be, in the record of the past life, far more speedily and accurately than if the
experience itself were called up before our mind's eye. For we might not, even
at the present time, be able to see the experience in its true light while we
are hampered by the veil of flesh, but the fruit of the experience, gathered in
heaven or hell, tells us unerringly whether to emulate our past, or shun it.
Moreover, supposing we did know our past
lives: that by our present endeavors to live well and worthily we had acquired
that faculty. Supposing that we had lived lives of debauchery, cruelty, crime,
and selfishness! If people now despised us accordingly, we would then hold that
they ought not to judge us by the past--that they were wrong in ostracizing us.
We would contend that our present life of worthy endeavor should be made the
basis of judgment, to the exclusion of former conditions, and in this we should
be perfectly right. But then, for the same reason, why should we claim honor in
the present life, adulation or admiration, because in the past life we were
kings and queens? Even if it were true that we had held such positions, why
should we lay ourselves open to the ridicule of skeptics by telling such
stories? So, whether we have memory of our past lives or not, it is better to
concentrate our efforts upon the highest possibilities of today.
There is no doubt, that one who is able to
search the Memory of Nature, and who does so for the sake of investigation in
connection with the progress and evolution of man, will, at some time or other,
come into touch with glimpses of his or her own past. But a true servant who
really feels himself to be a laborer in the vineyard of Christ, will never allow
himself to swerve from the path of service and follow the trail of curiosity.
The Disciple who receives instructions from the Elder Brothers, is warned at the
first Initiation never to use his power to gratify curiosity, and on all
subsequent visits to the Temple this idea is dinned into his ears.
The distinctions between the legitimate and
illegitimate use of spiritual powers are so fine and so subtle, that, as one
grows, the restrictions whereby one seems beset, multiply to such an extent,
that were the tale told to others, ninety out of a hundred would say: "But
what is the use then of having spiritual sight or of being able to leave the
body? When you are so restricted, it seems that the possibility of trespassing
is multiplied to such an extent, that there is scarcely any use of having these
faculties." Nevertheless, they are of great value, and the responsibility
is only the natural result of added growth.
An animal takes freely anything that it
wishes: it commits no sin and is not held responsible for its action, because it
knows no better. But as soon as the idea of "mine" and
"thine" has been imprinted upon our consciousness, then also the
responsibility comes. As our knowledge grows, so does our responsibility; and
the finer the soul qualities, the finer the distinctions between right and
wrong. This we observe in our daily lives, that the standards of the permissible
or non-permissible vary according to the quality of each individual.
And when we aspire to that power whereby we
may know the past, we shall find that we are no more justified in using this
power for aggrandizement, than we would be justified in using it to obtain
worldly wealth or power. So the life, or the lives, we have led are hidden from
us for a purpose, until we know how to unlock the door; and when we have the key
we shall probably not want to use it.
For that reason, then, Siegfried is given
the lethal drink the moment he enters the court of Gunther, and straightway he
forgets about his past life with Mime, the dwarf, who claimed him as a son. He
forgets how he forged the magic sword, "the courage of despair," which
stood him in such good stead in the fight with Fafner, the spirit of passion and
desire. He forgets that he had thus won the Ring of the Niebelung, the emblem of
egoism, whereby he gained knowledge of his true spiritual identity and slew
Mime, the personality, who wrongfully claimed to be his progenitor. He forgets
how, as a free Spirit undaunted by fear, he broke the spear of Wotan, the warder
of creed, and followed the bird of intuition to the abode of the sleeping spirit
of truth. The forgets his marriage to her and the vow of unselfishness, implied
when he gave her the ring.
But each and every one of these important
events has left its impress upon his soul, and now it is to be tested: whether
that impress has been deep or superficial. Temptation comes to us, life after
life, until the treasure laid up in heaven has been tested and tried by
temptation on Earth--whether or not it will withstand the moth of corruption.
After the Baptism, when the Spirit of Christ had descended into the fleshy body
of Jesus, it was taken into the wilderness of temptation to prove its weakness
or its strength. And, similarly, after each heavenly experience we must expect
to be brought back to Earth, that it may be learned whether we shall stand or
fall in the furnace of affliction.
THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS
When Siegfried reaches the court of
Gunther, Gutrune, the fair sister of the king hands him the magic cup of
forgetfulness. Forthwith, he loses memory of the past and of Brunhilde, the
spirit of truth, and stands a naked soul ready to fight the battle of life. But
he is armed with the sublimated essence of former experience. The sword of
Nothung, the courage of despair, wherewith he fought greed and creed symbolized
by Fafner, the dragon, and Wotan the god, is still with him; also Tarncap, or
the helmet of illusion, which is an apt symbol of what we in modern times call
hypnotic power, for whoever put this magic cap on his head appeared to others in
whatever shape he desired; and he has Brunhilde's horse Grane, discernment,
whereby he, himself, might always perceive truth and distinguish it from error
and illusion. He still has powers which he may use for good or evil according to
choice.
As we have said previously, our idea of
what truth is changes as we progress. We are gradually climbing the mountain
trial of evolution, and as we do phases of truth appear which we never before
perceived; and what is right at one stage, is wrong at another. Though, whenever
we are in the flesh we see through the veil of illusion symbolized by Loge's
flame which encircles the rock of Brunhilde, her swift charger Grane,
discernment is also with us; and is we only give him free rein, the material
brain mind, which is charged with the lethal drink of forgetfulness, can never
gain the ascendancy over the Spirit.
The early Atlantean Epoch, when mankind
lived as guileless "Children of the Mist" (Niebelung) in the foggy
basins of the Earth, is represented in the Rhinegold The later Atlantean time is
an age of savagery, where mankind has forsworn love, as Alberich did, and forms
"the Ring" of egoism, where it devotes its energies to material
acquisitions symbolized by "the hoard" of the Niebelung, over which
giants, gods, and men fight with savage brutality and low cunning, as set forth
in the "The Valkyrie."
The early Aryan Epoch marks the birth of
the idealist, symbolized as the "Walsungs" (Siegmund, Sieglinda, and
Siegfried), a new race which aspires with a sacred ardor to new and higher
things--valorous knights who had the courage of their convictions and were ever
ready to fight for truth as they saw it, and to give their lives as forfeit to
uphold their heartfelt convictions. Thus the age of realistic savagery gave
place to an era of idealistic chivalry.
We are now in the latter part of the Aryan
Epoch. The truth seekers of the past have again left the fire girt rock of
Brunhilde. We have again assumed the veil of flesh and partaken of the lethal
drink, and we are today actually playing the last part of the great epic drama,
"The Twilight of the Gods," which is identical in its import with our
Christian Apocalypse. "The gospel of the Kingdom" has been preached to
us, "the Way, the Truth, and the Life" has been opened to us, as it
was to Siegfried; and we are on trial now, as he was at Gunther's court, to see
if we will live as "married to truth," or whether we will drag her
from her retreat and prostitute her, as Siegfried did. In order to gain the hand
of Gutrune, he wrested the emblem of egoism, the Ring of the Niebelung, from
Brunhilde's hand and put it on his finger again; he bound her and carried her to
Gunther to be his wife; he prostituted her, and himself committed adultery with
Gutrune--for having once married truth, it is spiritual adultery to seek the
honors of the world.
Heaven and Earth are outraged at this
colossal betrayal of truth. The great World-Ash, the tree of life and being,
shakes at its root, where Urd, Skuld, and Verdande, the past, present, and
future, spin the thread of fate. It grows dark on Earth; Hagen's spear finds the
only vulnerable point in Siegfried's body--his life is the forfeit, and as the
highest ideal of the age has failed, there is no use in perpetuating the
existing order of things. Therefore, Heimdal, the heavenly watchman, souls his
trumpet, and the gods ride in solemn procession over the rainbow bridge for the
last time, to meet the giants in final battle involving the destruction of
heaven and Earth.
This is a very significant point: At the
opening of the drama we find the Niebelungen "at the bottom of the
river." Alberich later forges "the Ring" in fire, which can only
burn in the clear atmosphere such as we have in the Aryan age. During this age
the gods also hold their sacred councils at the rainbow-bridge, which is the
reflection of the heavenly fire. When Noah brought the original Semites through
"the Flood," he kindled the fire. "The bow" was then set in
the cloud to remain for the age and during that time it was covenanted that the
alternating cycles, summer and winter, day and night, et cetera, should not
cease. In the Apocalypse (IV:3), John is offered instruction concerning
"things which must be hereafter," by "One having a rainbow around
Him"; and later (X:160, a mighty Angel with a rainbow on its head solemnly
proclaims the end of time. Thus it is plain from the northern myth and the
Christina teaching, that the epoch began when the bow was set in the cloud; when
the bow is removed the epoch will end and a new condition of things physical and
spiritual, will be ushered in.
The other phenomenon attending this time of
trouble is set forth in the ancient myth. Loge, the spirit of illusion, has
three children: the Midgaard Serpent which encircles the Earth, biting its own
tail, is the ocean which refracts and distorts every object immersed therein.
Men fear the treacherous element; their cheeks have always paled at the thought
of what it may do when unleashed. The wolf Fenris, the atmosphere, is also a
child of illusion (optical), and the dread roar of the tempest may strike fear
into the stoutest heart. Hel, death, is the third of loge's children, and the
"queen of terrors." Before man entered concrete existence, as
described in the beginning of the great myth and in Genesis, his consciousness
was focused in the spiritual worlds where the illusive elements, Loge (fire),
Fenris (air), and the Serpent (water), are nonexistent; hence, death also was an
unknown quantity. But during the present epoch when the constitution of the
human body is subject to the action of the elements, death also holds sway.
At the sound of the trumpet of Heimdal, all
the factors of destruction press forward to the plain Vigrid, the counterpart of
Armageddon, where the gods of creed and their sworn supporters have assembled to
make a last stand. The sons of Muspel (physical fire), press forward from the
south, demolishing the rainbow bridge. The Frost Giants advance from the north.
With an awful roar, Fenris, the tempest-driven atmosphere, rushes upon the
Earth. So terrific is its velocity that the friction generates fire, hence it is
said that its lower jaw is upon the Earth, its upper reaches the Sun, and fire
streams from its nostrils. It swallows Wotan, the god in charge of the age of
air, when the bow was in the cloud. The Midgaard Serpent or watery element is
vanquished by Thor, the god of thunder and lightning, but when the electrical
discharges have finally disposed of the element, water, there can be no thunder
and lightning, hence the northern myth informs us that Thor dies of the fumes
from the Serpent. In our Christian Apocalypse we also hear of thunders and
lightnings, and are told that finally "there shall be no more sea."
But as the Phoenix arises rejuvenated and
beautiful from its ashes, so also a New Earth, fairer and more ethereal, was
seen by the ancient prophetess to arise from the great conflagration where
"the elements melt with fervent heat"--"Gimle," she called
it. Nor was it without population, for while the great conflagration was in
progress a man and a woman called Life and Liftharaser (life means life) were
saved and from them springs a new race which lives in peace and close to God.
"A hall I see,
More brilliant than the sun,
Roofed with gold.
On the summit of Gimle,
There shall live
A virtuous race,
An enjoy blessedness
To eternity.
"Thither cometh the Mighty One--all--
Father,
To the council of the gods,
In His strength from above.
He who thinketh for all,
Issueth judgments;
He causeth strife to cease,
And establisheth peace
To endure forever."
Thus the ancient northern myth teaches, but
from a different angle, the same truths as found in greater fullness in the
Christian Scriptures from Genesis to the Apocalypse, and it is important that we
should realize the truth of these tales. There are, alas, too many in the class
described by Peter as saying: "Where is the promise of His coming? For
since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as THEY WERE in the
beginning." There are few who realize the import of the statement in the
second chapter of Genesis, that "a mist went up from the ground and watered
the earth before it rained," and that thus the children of the mist must
have been physiologically different from the man of today who breathes air since
"the Flood," when the mist condensed and became the sea. But just as
sure as these changes happened in the past, so there is now another change
impending. True, it may not come in our time--"that hour knoweth no man,
neither the Angels, neither the Son," and repeatedly the warning of Noah is
held up before us in this connection. In that day they ate and drank, married
and were given in marriage, but suddenly the waters engulfed them and all who
had not evolved the physiological requisites, LUNGS, necessary to live in the
new condition perished. The Ark carried the pioneers safely through the
catastrophe.
To make the next change safely, a Wedding
Garment is required, and it is of utmost importance that we should work upon it.
The SOMA PSUCHICON or "soul body" which Paul mentions (I Cor. XI :44),
is an etheric vehicle of paramount importance; for when the present elements
have been dissolved in the impending change, how shall we survive if we can
function only in a dense body as now!
The Germano-Anglo-Saxon race will of course
be succeeded by two more before the Sixth Epoch is definitely ushered in, but
today, and from our stock, there is being prepared the seed for the New Age. It
is exactly the mission of the Rosicrucian Order working through the Rosicrucian
Fellowship, to promulgate a scientific method of development suited particularly
to the Western people whereby this Wedding Garment may be wrought, so that we
may hasten the day of the Lord.
TANNHAUSER
PENDULUM OF JOY AND SORROW
THE PENDULUM OF JOY AND SORROW
In this drama we deal again with one of the
ancient legends. It was given to humanity by the divine Hierarchies who guided
us along the path of progress by pictorial terms so that mankind might
subconsciously absorb the ideals for which, in later lives, they were to strive.
In ancient times love was brutal; the bride
was bought or stolen or taken as a prize in war. Possession OF THE BODY was all
that was desired, therefore woman was a chattel, prized by man for the pleasure
she afforded him, and for that only. the higher, finer faculties in her nature
were given a chance of expression. This condition had to be altered or human
progress would have stopped. The apple always falls close to the tree. Anyone
born from a union under such brutal conditions must be brutal; and, if mankind
were to be elevated, the standard of love had to be raised. TANNHAUSER is an
attempt in that direction.
This legend is also called "The
Tournament of the Troubadours," for the minstrels of Europe were the
educators of the Middle Ages. They were wandering knights, gifted with the power
of speech and song, who journeyed from land to land, welcomed and honored in
court and castle. They had a powerful influence in forming the ideas and ideals
of the day, and in the Tournament of Song held in Wartburg Castle, one of the
problems of that day--whether woman had a right to her own body or not, a right
to protection against licentious abuse by her husband, whether she was to be
considered a companion to be loved as soul to soul or as a slave bound to submit
to the dictates of her master--was the question to be decided.
Naturally, at each change there are always
those who stand for the old things against the new, and champions of both sides
took part in that battle of song in Wartburg Castle.
The question is still rife. It is still
unsettled with the majority of mankind, but the principle enunciated is true,
and only as we conform to this principle by elevating the standards of love, can
a better race be born. This is particularly essential to one who is aiming to
lead a higher life. Though the principle seems so self-evident it is not even
yet agreed to by all who make high professions. In time everyone will learn that
only as we regard woman as the equal of man can mankind truly be elevated, for
under the Law of Rebirth the soul is reborn alternately in both sexes, and the
oppressors of one age become the oppressed of the next.
The fallacy of a double standard of conduct
which favors one sex at the cost of the other should be at once apparent to
anyone who believes in the succession of lives whereby the soul progresses from
impotence to omnipotence. It has been amply provide that, far from inferior to
man, woman is at least his equal and very often his superior in many of the
mental occupations; though that does not appear plainly for the drama.
The legend tells us that Tannhauser, who
represents the soul at a certain stage of development, has been disappointed in
love, because its object, Elizabeth, was too pure and too young to be even
approached with a request that she yield to him. Yearning with passionate
desire, he attracts something of an identical nature.
Our thoughts are like tuning forks. They
awaken echoes in others who are capable of responding to them, and the
passionate thought of Tannhauser brings him, therefore, to that which is called
"the Mountain of Venus."
Like A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM of
Shakespeare, this story of how he finds the Mountain of Venus, of how he is
taken in by this lovely goddess, and is kept in passion's chains by her charms,
is not entirely founded upon fancy. There are Spirits in the air, in the water,
and in the fire; and under certain conditions they are contacted by man. No so
much perhaps in the electric atmosphere of America, but over all of Europe,
particularly in the north, there broods a mystic atmosphere which has somewhat
attuned the people to the seeing of these elementals. The goddess of beauty, or
Venus, here spoken of, is really one of the etheric entities who feed upon the
fumes of low desire, in the gratification of which the creative force is
liberated in copious quantities. Many of the Spirit controls which take
possession of mediums and incite them to laxity of morals and abuses, who act as
their soul lovers and seriously weaken their victims, belong to this same class
which is exceedingly dangerous, to say the least. Paracelsus mentions them as
"incubi" and "succubi."
The opening scene of Tannhauser introduces
us to a licentious debauch in the cave of Venus. Tannhauser is kneeling before
the goddess who is stretched on a couch. He wakens as if from a dream, and his
dream has inculcated a longing to visit the Earth above again. this he tells the
goddess Venus who answers:
"What foolish plaint! Art weary of my love?
By sorrow once thy heart was crushed above.
Up minstrel, seize thy harp and sing of bliss divine,
For love's chief treasure, love's goddess is thine."
Inflamed with new ardor Tannhauser seizes
harp and sings her praise:
"All hail to thee! Undying fame attend thee.
Paeans of praise to thee be ever sung.
Each soft delight thy bounty sweet did lend me,
Shall wake my harp while time and love are young;
For love's sweet joy, and satisfaction's pleasure,
My sense did thirst, my heart did crave;
And thou, whose love a God alone can measure,
Gave me thyself, and in this bliss I lave.
But mortal am I, and a love divine,
Too changeless is to mate with mine.
A god can love without cessation,
But under laws of alteration,
Our share of pain as well as pleasure,
We mortals need in changing measure.
Too full of joy, again I long for pain,
So, Queen, I cannot here remain."
When mankind emerged from Atlantis, and
came into the air of Aryana, the rainbow stood for the first time in the sky as
the sign of the new age. At that time it was said that as long as this bow was
in the clouds the seasons would not cease to change; day and night, summer and
winter, ebb and flood, and all the other alternating measures of Nature would
follow one another in unbroken succession. In music there may not always be
harmony. Discord once in a while comes in to give appreciation of the melody
which follows. Thus it is with the question of pain and sorrow, of joy and
happiness: THEY ARE ALSO MEASURES OF ALTERNATION. We cannot live in one without
craving the other, any more than we could remain in heaven and gather
experiences that are only to be found upon Earth. And it is this inward urge,
this swing of the pendulum from joy to sorrow and back again, which drives
Tannhauser from the cave of Venus that he may again know the strife and struggle
of the world; that he may there gain the experience which sorrow alone can give
and forget the pleasures which bring to him no soul power. But it is
characteristic of the lower forces, however, that they always seek to influence
the soul against its will; that they always use every endeavor to keep it away
from the path of rectitude; and so Venus who stands as the representative of
these powers in the drama of Tannhauser, warningly and dissuasively says:
"In dust thy soul will soon be humbled,
Adversity thy pride will fell,
Then crushed in spirit, ardor crumbled,
Thou'lt plead again to feel my spell."
But Tannhauser is firm in his purpose. the
urge within him is so strong that nothing can keep him back, and though he still
feels the spell, he exclaims with great fervor:
"While I have life, but thee my harp will praise,
No meaner theme will e'er my song inspire;
Thou spring of beauty and of gentle grace,
With sweetest songs dost quicken love's desire;
The fire thou kindlest in my heart,
An altar flame will burn alone for thee,
An though in sorrow now from thee I part,
Thy champion I shall ever be.
But I must forth, the life of earth I crave,
Here I must aye remain a slave;
I thirst for freedom though my death it be,
Therefore, O Queen, from thee I flee!"
Thus when Tannhauser leaves the cave of
Venus he is the pledged champion of the low and sensual side of love; and this
he goes out into the world to teach, for that is the nature of mankind; WHATEVER
THE HEART FEELS, must out.
Knowing the country well, he at once turns
his steps toward Wartburg where a number of minstrels are always staying with
the lord and lady of the manor, who to a very large extent are patrons of
minstrelsy always anxious to be entertained, and always lavish with their gifts.
After awhile he meets a band of minstrels
who are walking in the woods, and these, his former friends, are surprised that
they have not seen him for so long. They ask him where he has been, but
Tannhauser, knowing that there is a general sentiment against being with the
lower elemental forces in Nature, hides his whereabouts during the period of his
absence from them, by giving an evasive answer. He is then told by the minstrels
that there is to be a tournament of the troubadours at the castle and is invited
to go with them.
Healing that the subject of the song
contest is to be love, and furthermore, that the prize will be given to the
winner by the hand of the beautiful daughter of the lord, namely Elizabeth, (the
lady Tannhauser has loved so ardently and who so inflamed his soul in past days
that it drove him to the cave of Venus) he hopes by the ardor with which he is
inspired, to induce the beautiful maiden to hear his plaint. As we always reap a
harvest of pain whenever we go contrary to the laws of progress, Tannhauser, by
this act, is sowing the seed that will one day bring him the harvest of pain he
coveted in the cave of Venus.
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