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Bee-Speak

7 September 2016 – Astro-Weather:

Sagittarius-teapot-asterism

Evenings this week are great times for exploring Sagittarius, the constellation of the Archer. This star group lies due south around 9 pm, just as the last vestiges of twilight fade away. The central regions of the Milky Way pass through Sagittarius. The brightest stars within the constellation form the shape of a teapot.

For a more esoteric look https://sway.com/8gvTgTPzvoY7LMGf

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“The farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.” ~Winston S. Churchill

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

70 – A Roman army under Titus occupies & plunders Jerusalem

251 – Deathday of Saint Regina a virgin martyr born in Autun, France

1191 – Third Crusade: Battle of Arsuf – Richard I of England defeats Saladin at Arsuf. The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem was a crusader state established in the Southern Levant in 1099 after the First Crusade. The kingdom lasted nearly two hundred years, from 1099 until 1291 when the last remaining possession, Acre, was destroyed by the Mamluks, but its history is divided into two distinct periods. The sometimes so-called First Kingdom of Jerusalem lasted from 1099 to 1187, when it was almost entirely overrun by Saladin. After the subsequent Third Crusade, the kingdom was re-established in Acre in 1192, & lasted until that city’s destruction in 1291. This second kingdom is sometimes called the Second Kingdom of Jerusalem or the Kingdom of Acre, after its new capital.

1228 – Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II lands in Acre, Israel, & starts the Sixth Crusade

1695 – Henry Every perpetrates one of the most profitable pirate raids in history with the capture of the Grand Mughal ship Ganj-i-Sawai. In response, Emperor Aurangzeb threatens to end all English trading in India

1927 – The first fully electronic television system is achieved by Philo Farnsworth. (In later life, Farnsworth invented a small nuclear fusion device)

Thylacinus_cynocephalus_2_Gould

1936 – Deathday of Benjamin The last thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) a carnivorous marsupial dies alone in its cage at the Hobart Zoo in Tasmania

1940 –The German Luftwaffe begins the Blitz, bombing London & other British cities for over 50 consecutive nights

1945 – Japanese forces on Wake Island, which they had held since 1941, surrender to U.S. Marines

1945 – The Berlin Victory Parade

1953 – Nikita Khrushchev is elected first secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

1979 – The Chrysler Corporation asks the United States government for US$1.5 billion to avoid bankruptcy

1986 – Desmond Tutu becomes the first black man to lead the Anglican Church in South Africa

1999 – A 5.9 magnitude earthquake rocks Athens, rupturing a previously unknown fault, killing 643, & leaving 50,000 people homeless

2004 – Hurricane Ivan, a Category 5 hurricane hits Grenada, killing 139 & damaging 90% of its buildings.

2005 – Egypt holds its first-ever multi-party presidential election

2008 – The US Government bails out the two largest mortgage financing companies in the US, Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac.

2012 – A series of earthquakes in Yunnan, China, kills 889 people

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bee comb dreamers s.edelstein s.edelstein

My POD (Poem Of the Day)

~Golden Hexagram 

Raw Geometry 

Viscus wax

In sticky sacrifice

~hag

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bee painting1 Martin BridgeMartin Bridge

BEE-cause

From the earliest times of our agrarian history the relationship between farmers & the bees that pollinate & confirm their crops has been one of reciprocal preservation. The bee as agents of pollination, are the catalyst that brings about change & facilitates fertilization, allowing the crop to mature, develop & reproduce. It is easy to see why their function is so important & why the bee is ascribed a mystical place within the human experience.

Bees have an important place in human history, yet come, as we all do, from the spiritual realm. The mythology that surrounds them is potent, & indicates a close, reciprocal relationship between the bee & the human race- companions in the great plan of divine evolution.

The Kalahari Desert ‘San’ people tell of a bee that carried a mantis across a river. The exhausted bee left the mantis on a floating flower but planted a seed in the mantis’s body before it died. The seed grew to become the first human.

Traditionally the bee was perceived as a creature that bridged the gap between the physical & the super-sensible world – the intermediary between these states of existence.

Potnia, the Minoan-Mycenaean “Mistress

The bee was an emblem of Potnia, the Minoan-Mycenaean “Bee Mistress”, also referred to as “The Pure Mother Bee”. Her priestesses received the name of “Melissa” (“Bee”), as did some of the Delphic oracles, as well as those worshipping Artemis & Demeter .

In Egyptian mythology, bees grew from the tears of the sun god Ra when they landed on the desert sand.

The bowstring on Hindu love god Kamadeva’s bow is made of honeybees.

Bee Thriae

The Homeric Hymn to Apollo acknowledges that Apollo’s gift of prophecy first came to him from 3 Bee maidens, usually identified with the Thriae, a trinity of pre-Hellenic Aegean Bee Goddesses.

Orators, powerful speakers & those who can enrapture their audience through their linguistic ability are said to have lips that have been anointed with honey.

Bee-holding in reverence

~Hazel Archer Ginsberg 

One Who Shows the Way

26 August 2016  – Astro-Weather: Venus & Jupiter have closed to only 1° apart, very low in the west after sunset. That’s less than a finger-width at arm’s length. Tomorrow they reach complete conjunction

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worldwoman

“To truly know the world, look deeply within your own being; to truly know yourself, take real interest in the world.” Rudolf Steiner

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

Feast day of Samuel, literally meaning “Name of God” in Hebrew, is a leader & Judge of ancient Israel. He is also known as a prophet & is mentioned in the second chapter of the Qur’an.  Aa a seer, Samuel is associated with the bands of musical ecstatic roaming prophets.

Feast Day of Melchizedek, (“God most high”) Priest & king of Salem mentioned in the 14th chapter of the Book of Genesis. He brings out bread and wine & blesses Abram. In the Epistle to the Hebrews, he is depicted as being “Without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life.” Jesus Christ is identified as “a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek

melchizadek Meeting_of_abraham

“Even when some individual was to be the leader of a particular people he would be required to develop a measure of understanding for every human soul. This is indicated magnificently in the Old Testament in the passage describing the meeting between Abraham and Melchizedek, the priest of the Most High. Those who understand this passage know that Abraham, who was destined to become the leader of his people, underwent an Initiation at this time — even if not in full consciousness as is the case in later Initiations. Abraham’s Initiation was connected with realisation of the Divine element that can flow into all human souls. The passage which tells of the meeting of Abraham with Melchizedek contains a deep secret connected with the evolution of humanity. “~Rudolf Steiner, Between Death & Rebirth, Lecture 2

Black Madonna of Częstochowa

Feast Day of The Black Madonna of Częstochowa, The Virgin Mary is shown as the “Hodegetria” (“One Who Shows the Way“)The icon has been intimately associated with Poland for the past 600 years.

Its history prior to its arrival in Poland is shrouded in numerous legends which trace the icon’s origin to St. Luke who painted it on a cedar table top from the house of the Holy Family.

The same legend holds that the painting was discovered in Jerusalem in 326 by St. Helena, who brought it back to Constantinople & presented it to her son, Constantine the Great.

The legend concerning the two scars on the Black Madonna’s right cheek is that the Hussites stormed the Pauline monastery in 1430, plundering the sanctuary. Among the items stolen was the icon. After putting it in their wagon, the Hussites tried to get away but their horses refused to move. They threw the portrait down to the ground, as the robber struck the painting twice, the face of the Virgin Mary started to bleed; in a panic, the scared Hussites retreated & left the painting

Women’s Equality Day

michelangelo_pieta_grt

1498 – Michelangelo is commissioned to carve the Pietà

1789 – The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen is approved- directly influenced by Thomas Jefferson, working with General Lafayette. Also by the doctrine of “natural right“, held to be universal: valid at all times & in every place, pertaining to human nature itself. It became the basis for a nation of free individuals protected equally by law. Inspired in part by the American Revolution, & also by the Enlightenment philosophers, the Declaration was a core statement of the values of the French Revolution & had a major impact on the development of freedom & democracy in Europe & worldwide

1791 – John Fitch is granted a United States patent for the steamboat

seal-of-cagliostro

1795 – Deathday of Cagliostro, the alias of the occultist Giuseppe Balsamo, an Italian adventurer & self-styled magician. He became a glamorous figure associated with the royal courts of Europe where he pursued various occult arts, including psychic healing, alchemy & scrying. His reputation lingered for many decades after his death. Steiner called him an initiate.

1883 – Eruption of Krakatoa

1910 – Birthday of Mother Teresa

1914 – Rudolf Steiner meets Helmuth von Moltke, Chief of the German General Staff, near Koblenz

1920 – The 19th amendment to United States Constitution takes effect, giving women the right to vote

1942 – The Holocaust in Chortkiv, western Ukraine, over 4000 die

1970 – The feminist movement, led by Betty Friedan, leads a nationwide Women’s Strike for Equality

1995 – Deathday of Daskalos, the Greek word for teacher, a Greek Cypriot mystic & healer. He set up the circle, “The Researchers of Truth.”

1999 – Russia begins the Second Chechen War

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abstract_colors_eola_retro-1680x1050-895234

My POD (Poem Of the Day)

~Standing in the obvious

Plunging my hands

Into the oblique angles

Of the obscure…

Any suggestions…?

~hag

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Michelangelo-self-portrait

Michelangelo

“In Michelangelo we have a spirit who helped human evolution on its way because he had a maturity of soul which enabled him to imprint on the world of space and matter significant facts from the spiritual world. He stood wholly in the great current of his times yet his own inmost quality was not fully understood. A friend once wrote to him that even the Pope feared him; and yet in his soul there lived all the greatness of Christian impulses which flowed into his work. While he felt himself at one with the great Christian impulses he yet lived at the dawn of a later epoch — closely though it was still connected with earlier ages. The content of older Christian impulses still affected his soul and out of that he created something which in its form and artistic method was already part of the ties in which we ourselves live. Hence comes the mood of the poem which he wrote — probably during his last days as he looked back over his life — and which makes it clear what our relation is to him, and how we should allow his influence over us to work:

Now hath my life across a stormy sea like a frail barque reached that wide port, where all are hidden, ere the final reckoning fall of good and evil for eternity.

Now know I well how that fond phantasy, which made my soul the worshipper and thrall of earthly art, is vain; how criminal is that which all men seek unwillingly.

Those amorous thoughts which were so lightly dressed, what are they when the double death is nigh?

The one I know for sure, the other dread. 

Painting nor sculpture now can lull to rest my soul that turns to His great Love on high Whose arms to clasp us on the cross were spread. ~ Michelangelo

Michelangelo was a great poet also, and the poems of his which survive show the same spirit which we have found in his sculpture and painting. The last three lines of this sonnet make it clear that he could never be at ease in the world, and that was fundamentally true of him all his life. He was a sort of hybrid, still part of the old but already living within the new. This is particularly evident in that work which he carried out at the instigation of one of the Popes: the tombs of Giuliani and Lorenzo dei Medici.

 Michelangelo dawnandusk1Dawn & Dusk 

Michelangelo nightandday1Night & Day

In this chapel: the four allegorical figures, arranged two and two: Day and Night, Dawn and Dusk. I have often gazed at them; in fact they are one of the things which by a sort of spiritual compulsion I always look at longest when I have had the privilege of being in Florence. These figures are not mere allegories without force and without vitality. Use every means that Spiritual Science gives you to look at them and think about them; then if we remember that what anthroposophy calls the ego and the astral body leave the physical and etheric bodies at night, and if we ask ourselves what qualities and gesture of the etheric body we should select to represent plastically the truth which Spiritual Science tells us — how, that is, we should picture the physical body of the sleeping human being if we really feel him to be what Spiritual Science describes him as being — we know that he should be represented in the form which Michelangelo has given to “Night”. It is not just a symbol of night but the true spiritual reality of man as he really is in sleep which we have before us in this female figure. Thus Michelangelo, who knew so well how to set the figures in his works within the same space in which we ourselves stand, was also well aware what it means if the soul and spirit leaves man’s physical body but leave it with life still within it. If we also study the other individual members of the human being and then look at the other figures in the tomb, we shall see how closely they run parallel with what I once called spiritual chemistry.” ~Rudolf Steiner, Michelangelo, Berlin, 8th January, 1914

michelangelo-duskDusk michelangelo-nightNight

I live in the Open Palm of Strangers…

15 July 2016 – ASTRO-WEATHER –The southern skies host a Waxing Gibbous Moon, accompanied by the ringed-planet Saturn just below & a little left. Farther, but directly below the Moon is the red star Antares, while well to their right is the rusty-orange Mars. This group will be even closer together on August 11th

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RS smile roses

What is presented here can be useful to those who wish to follow the path of mankind’s spiritual development…There is no other way towards a world history in light of anthroposophy than to engage with concrete karmic facts” ~Rudolf Steiner

484 BC – Dedication of the Temple of Castor & Pollux in ancient Rome

holy sepulchre2

1099 –Christian soldiers take the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem lead by Godfrey of Bouillon who became the first ruler of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. He refused the title of King, however, as he believed that the true King of Jerusalem was Christ, preferring the title of Advocate of the Holy Sepulchre. He is also known as the “Baron of the Holy Sepulchre” & the “Crusader King”

1149 – The reconstructed Church of the Holy Sepulchre is consecrated in Jerusalem

1274 – Feast Day of Bonaventure, Italian bishop & saint called the “Seraphic Doctor”

1381 – English Priest John Ball, a leader in the Peasants’ Revolt, is hanged, drawn & quartered in the presence of King Richard II of England whose posthumous reputation was shaped by Shakespeare, in the play Richard II

Rembrandt, Self-Portrait, 1659

1606 – Birthday of Rembrandt

1741 –Aleksei Chirikov a Russian navigator & captain sights land in Southeast Alaska. He sends men ashore in a longboat, making them the first Europeans to visit Alaska

RosettaStone-CornerBYU

1799 – The Rosetta Stone is found in the Egyptian village of Rosetta by French Captain Pierre-François Bouchard during Napoleon’s Egyptian Campaign

1815 –Napoleon Bonaparte surrenders aboard HMS Bellerophon

1823 – A fire destroys the ancient Basilica of Saint Paul

1834 – The Spanish Inquisition is officially disbanded after nearly 356 years

Anton Chekhov

1904 – Deathday of Anton Chekhov, Russian playwright & short story writer

1929 – Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Austrian author, poet, and playwright

1955 – Eighteen Nobel laureates sign the Mainau Declaration against nuclear weapons, later co-signed by thirty-four others

1971 – The United Red Army is founded in Japan

1979 – U.S. President Jimmy Carter gives his so-called malaise speech, where he characterizes the greatest threat to the country as “this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation” but in which he never uses the word malaise

“…In a nation that was proud of hard work, strong families, close-knit communities, and our faith in God, too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption. Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one owns. But we’ve discovered that owning things and consuming things does not satisfy our longing for meaning….

I’m asking you for your good and for your nation’s security to take no unnecessary trips, to use carpools or public transportation whenever you can, to park your car one extra day per week, to obey the speed limit, and to set your thermostats to save fuel…. I have seen the strength of America in the inexhaustible resources of our people. In the days to come, let us renew that strength in the struggle for an energy-secure nation. . .”

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maryrevWillam Blake

~i am a child

the seed in every thing

the rhythm of flowers

the old story that never ends…

i live in the open palm of strangers

as i reach down & pull up

song…

~hag

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faust harry clarkeHenry Clark

And so today I leave for Dornach to be part of the International Faust Festival at the Goetheanum! Which has inspired today’s offering:

The first part of “Faust” displays the mood of a man who is tired of material existence, who suspects there are deep mysteries to life, but can’t penetrate them. Then we see how Faust lets himself be influenced by those signs which surround him, yet he is not ripe enough to really feel this spiritual environment. Still he suspects that the planet Earth is not simply the physical globe described by natural science, it has within it a soul, just like him.

In the currents of life, and action’s storm,

I float and wave      

With billowy motion!       

Birth and the grave,       

A limitless ocean,       

A constant weeding,       

With change still rife,       

A restless heaving,       

A glowing life —

Thus time’s whirring loom unceasing I ply,

And weave the life-garment of deity.”

Goethe presents to us a Faust that is incomplete, a human being that must strive ever higher, just as Goethe did when he traveled south on his famous journey to Italy. Goethe, like Faust, makes the effort to know the spirit behind nature, this is shown in his work before the completion of the second part of “Faust”; & of course, his progress is revealed in the second part. Most folks have no idea of the eternal wisdom embodied in this second part, a wisdom to which Goethe could only reach in the evening of his life, leaving it as testament behind him. In response to this blindness on the part of society Goethe said:

My Faust some people praise

And what not else

That I in writings phrase

To their advantage tells.

The oldest tag-and-rag

Pleases the pit;

The rabble cannot see

There’s more in it.”

After Goethe has introduced his Faust to Mephistopheles & the beginnings of his spiritual striving, he takes us thru the Gretchen-tragedy, which then leads Faust out into the great, exterior world — the world of the Emperors Court. And then into the true spiritual world of the super-sensible.

Goethe shows us in the second part the essence of the human soul — of human evolution. We see how occupied he is with Mephistopheles — that spirit who plays a part in everything Faust undertakes. But only in the second part, where Faust is to be introduced into the world of Spirit, can we realize the actual role Mephistopheles plays.

After Faust has passed through the events in the Imperial Court, he wants to meet the spirit of Helena, who lived many centuries ago. She has to be found for Faust. But that is impossible in the physical world; so Faust must descend into the spiritual world. Mephistopheles has the key to that world, but cannot enter there himself. He can describe it -a word is sounded & Faust must descend to the Mothers.

Who or what are the “Mothers”?  This could take life-times to describe, but in a nutshell, the Mothers are, for spiritual science, what we meet when our spiritual eyes are opened. When we enter the world of spirit we merge with the essence from which all things are born.

Mephistopheles represents the kind of Ahrimanic intelligence able to understand only the physical, though aware of the existence of a spiritual realm, he is unable to enter it. Mephistopheles stands at the side of Faust, just like how today he stands by the materialistic thinker, saying: ‘Pshaw, there is nothing real in the ‘spiritual’ – you are only dreaming!’ To this the Spiritual investigator must say: “In your nothing I hope to find the All.” These two powers stand in opposition internally.

When Faust descends into the realm of the Mothers — the spiritual world; he succeeds in bringing up with him the spirit of Helena. But he is not ripe enough to unite this spirit with his own soul. He can only embrace the archetype of Helena with sensual passion. This sets him back. That is the fate of every one who seeks to approach the Spiritual World harboring personal, egotistical feelings; they are repelled, like Faust. We must first mature- learning the real relationship between the 3 members of the human being’s nature.  That is the lesson Faust must learn -to truly embrace the archetype of Helena -the immortal, the eternal, which passes from life to life, from one incarnation to the other. Only then can he become united with the immortal spirit.

In this way we can see how Faust is led by the Homunculus to the classical Walpurgisnight, to begin to receive the true teaching of evolution. Homunculus receives the counsel: You must begin with the lowest kingdom & rise higher & higher. The human soul is, in the first place, sent to the mineral kingdom. There we are informed that we have to pass through the vegetable kingdom: There the soul gathers all the natural elements to develop further.

Only after that can we hope to see Eros, the spirit of love, approaching us -after the soul has formed the body from out of the kingdoms of nature. Body, soul & spirit are then united. The soul of the Homunculus, with its newly organized body, comes into union with the spirit of Helena who now, in the third act of the second part, can appear to us, incarnate. The teaching of reincarnation is artistically & practically interspersed in the second part of Faust. One cannot unite with Helena by approaching her with stormy passion, we must experience the mysteries of existence in reality to be able to pass thru to rebirth.

Faust unites with Helena ie. the spiritual world. A child is the result, but not an ordinary child, it is Euphorion, who is as pure & true as he is poetic. He shows what comes to life in our soul when it unites with the spiritual world in its evolution -a moment arrives which has profound meaning for the soul.  We feel how Euphorion, the spiritual child of the true spiritual  seeker, sinks down into the realm of spirit, which Faust cannot, as yet, quite enter. This can be an experienced by the spiritual investigator as losing or leaving behind a child born of that realm when returning to everyday life. “Leave me in realms forlorn, Mother, not all alone!” — the voice of the spiritual child calling to our soul as its mother.

But this soul must go on – severed from all that is only personal desire. As long as there remains one selfish aim, one tinge of self-will, we will fail to perceive the spiritual world. Until we can say as Faust did “that now I stand upon the free foundation; I will endeavor to gain from nature everything that I can use for the benefit of others.”

Yet, as he gazes at the hut of Philemon & Baucis, it shows what can happen when his false ego, which wishes to selfishly experience the  pleasure of an unobstructed view, is not yet under control -The spirit of evil once more approaches him. The hut is destroyed by fire. Now he meets the anxiety which greets anyone still harboring selfish aspirations, preventing an ascent into the spiritual world. This is shown to us by Faust’s blindness in old age; his physical sight has gone, but now he can see the spiritual world. Night penetrates deeper & deeper, but within, is a bright light, capable of illuminating the world in which the soul lives between death & birth  — the realm of the Mothers. Only now can Faust commence his journey into the spiritual world, so beautifully presented by his ascension.

In the chorus mysticus, Goethe shows what Faust has achieved in the time of his striving, when he was 1st sick of science & turned away from it, till he gained spiritual perception. Here condensed in a few words, is the key to all the world mysteries -how everything temporal is only a symbol for the eternal. What the physical eye can see is only a glyph for the spiritual, the immortal, a sign pointing to the knowledge of reincarnation.

In Goethe final words, we touch that Great Fact, that we must seek the Eternal-Feminine, which aspires to union; to become one with the Divine-Spiritual. “The ineffable wrought in love.” That is the great secret expressed by Goethe in the words:

All that is changeable

Is but reflected;

The unattainable

Here is effected;

Human comparison

Here is passed by;

The Eternal-Feminine

Draws us an high

With this Goethe completed his life’s work. It was only after his death that it was given to humanity, & we will need to concentrate deeply, with the help of  Spiritual Science, in order to penetrate the mysteries of this powerful work.

Sourced from a Lecture given by Rudolf Steiner given in Strassburg, on January 23rd, 1910 -‘Goethe’s Faust’ from the Point of View of Spiritual Science

Until my return Aug. 15th

Blessings and Peace ~Hazel Archer Ginsberg

Unraveling the Karmic Knot

May 14, 2016 “To truly know the world, look deeply within your own being; to truly know yourself, take real interest in the world.” Rudolf Steiner

St. Matthias

Feast Day of Matthias – According to the Acts of the Apostles, Matthias was chosen to replace Judas Iscariot following the betrayal of Jesus & his subsequent suicide. This calling as an apostle is unique, since his appointment was not made personally by Jesus, since it was after the Ascension, but made before the descent of the Holy Spirit at Whitsun.

1804 – The Lewis and Clark Expedition departs from Camp Dubois & begins its historic journey by traveling up the Missouri River.

1948 – Founding of the State of Israel

August Strindberg Gosta Adrian-NilssonGosta Adrian-Nilsson

1912 – Death-Day of Johan August Strindberg, something of a polymath, Swedish playwright, novelist, poet, essayist & painter, Strindberg was also a telegrapher, theosophist, painter, photographer & alchemist. Rudolf Steiner speaks about him in Karmic Relationships, Volume IV: Lecture II:

“…Thus I made the acquaintance of this doctor, a man of our own day. When I met him I was in the company of another person whom I had known very well for a long time. This other person had always made, I will not say a deep, but a very thorough impression on me. He was exceedingly fond of the society of men who were interested in occultism in the widest possible range, though an occultism somewhat externally conceived. He was fond of relating the views of his many acquaintances on all kinds of occult matters, and especially on the occult connections of what the modern artist should strive for, as a lyric and epic poet, or as a dramatist. Around this person there was what I might call a kind of moral, ethical aura. I am applying the word ‘moral’ to all that is connected with the soul-qualities under the command of the will.

I was paying a visit to him, and in his company I found the other man first mentioned, whom I knew by reputation and respected very highly for his literary and medical career. Everything that took place during this visit made a deep impression on me and impelled me to receive the whole experience into the realm of spiritual research.

Then a very remarkable thing happened. By witnessing the two persons in the company of one another, and by the impression which my new acquaintance made on me — (I had known him for a long time as an eminent literary and medical man and had a great regard for him, but this was the first time that I saw him in the flesh) — by these impressions I gained certain perceptions. To begin with however, it enabled me, not to investigate in any way the connections in life and destiny of my new acquaintance. On the contrary, my seeing them together shed light as it were upon the other one, whom I had long known. And the result was this. — He had lived in ancient Egypt, not in his last, but in one of his former lives on earth. And (this is the peculiar thing) he had been mummified, embalmed as a mummy. Soon afterwards I discovered that the mummy was still in existence. Indeed a long time afterwards I saw the actual mummy. This, then, was the starting-point. But once the line of research had been kindled in connection with the person whom I had long known, it shed its light still farther, and eventually I was enabled to investigate the karmic connections of the other man, my new acquaintance, the doctor. And the following was the result.

As a general rule one is led from one earthly life of a human being to the preceding one. But in this case intuition led far back into ancient Egypt, to a kind of chieftain in ancient Egypt. It was a chieftain who in a certain sense, indeed in a very interesting way, possessed the ancient

Egyptian Initiation, but had become somewhat decadent as an Initiate. In the further course of his life, he began to take his Initiation not very seriously, indeed he even treated it with a certain scorn. Now this man had a servant, who in his turn was extremely serious. This servant was of course not initiated; but both of them together were given the task of embalming mummies and procuring the substances for this purpose, which was no easy matter.

Now especially in the more ancient periods of Egypt, the process of embalming mummies was very complicated and demanded an intimate knowledge of the human being, of the human body. Nay more, of those who had to do the embalming — if they did it legitimately — deep knowledge of the human soul was required. The chieftain of whom I spoke had been initiated for this very work, but he gradually became, in a manner of speaking, frivolous in relation to this, his proper calling. So it came about that in the course of time he betrayed (so they would have put it in the language of the Mysteries) the knowledge he had received through his Initiation to his servant, and the latter gradually proved to be a man who understood the content of Initiation better than the Initiate himself. Thus the servant became the embalmer of mummies, and at length his master did not even trouble to supervise the work, though of course he still took advantage of the social position, etc., which this honourable task involved. But at length his character became such that he no longer enjoyed great respect, and he thus came into various conflicts of life. The servant, on the other hand, worked his way up by degrees to a very, very earnest conception of life, and was thus taken hold of, in a remarkably congenial way, by a kind of Initiation. It was no real Initiation, but it lived within him instinctively. Thus a large number of mummies were mummified under the supervision and co-operation of these two people.

Time went on. The two men passed through the gate of death and underwent the experiences of which I shall speak next time — the experiences in the super-sensible which are connected with the development of karma or destiny. And in the Roman epoch they both of them came back to earthly life. They came back at the very time when the dominion of the Roman Emperors was founded, in the time of Augustus — not exactly, but approximately, in the time of Augustus himself.

The chieftain, who had gradually become a really frivolous Initiate, and who, when he had passed through the gate of death, had felt this as an extraordinarily bitter trial of earthly life, experiencing it in all the bitterness of its effects — we find him again as Julia, the daughter of Augustus. She married Tiberius, the step-son of Augustus, and led a life which to herself seemed justified but was considered, in the Roman society of that time, so immoral that at length both she and Tiberius were banished.

The other man — the servant who had worked his way from the bottom upwards nearly to the grade of an Initiate — was born again at the same time, as the Roman historian Titus Livius, or Livy.

It is most interesting how Livy came to be an historian. In the ancient Egyptian times he had embalmed a large number of mummies. The souls who had lived in the bodies of these mummies — very many of them — were reincarnated as Romans. And certain ones among them were actually reincarnated as the seven Kings of Rome. For the Seven Kings were no mere legendary figures. Going back into the time when the chieftain and his servant had lived in Egypt, we come into a very old Egyptian epoch. Now through a certain law which applies especially to the reincarnation of souls whose bodies have been mummified, these souls were called back again to earth comparatively soon. And the karmic connection of the servant of the chieftain with the souls whose bodies he had embalmed was so intimate, that he had to write the history of the very same human being whom in a previous life he had embalmed, though naturally, he also included the history of many others whom he had not embalmed. Thus Titus Livius became an historian. Now I would like some, indeed as many of you as possible, to take Livy’s Roman History, and, with the knowledge that results from these karmic connections, to receive a real impression of his style. You will see that his peculiar penetration into the human being and his tendency at the same time towards the style of the myth, is akin to that intimate knowledge of man which an embalmer could attain.

We do not perceive such connections until the corresponding researches have been made. But once this has been done, a great light is shed on many things. It is difficult to understand the origin of the peculiar style of Titus Livius, who as it were embalms the human beings whom he describes. For such is his style. Real light is thrown upon it when we point to these connections.

Thus we have the same two people again as Julia and Titus Livius. Then Julia and Livy passed once more through the gate of death. The one soul had had the experience of being an Initiate to a considerable degree, and having then distorted his Initiation by frivolous conduct. He had discovered all the bitterness of the after-effects of this in the life between death and a new birth. He had then undergone a peculiar destiny in his new life on earth as Julia, of which life you may read in history. The result was, that in his next life between death and a new birth (following on the life as Julia) he conceived a strong antipathy to this his incarnation as Julia. And in a curious way this antipathy of his was universalised. For spiritual intuition shows this individuality in his life between death and a new birth as though perpetually crying out: “Would that I had never become a woman! It was the evil that I did in yonder life in ancient Egypt which led me thus to become a woman.”

We can now trace the life of these two individualities still farther. We come into the Middle Ages. We find Livy again as the glad poet and minstrel in the very centre of the Middle Ages. We are astonished to find him thus, for there is no connection between the external callings. But the greatest possible surprises that a human being can possibly have are those that result from a real study of successive lives on earth. The Roman historian, with his style that proceeded from a knowledge of man acquired in embalming mummies, with his style so wonderfully light — we find him again as the poet Walther von der Vogelweide. His style is carried upwards, as it were, upon the wings of lyric poetry.

Walther von der Vogelweide lived in the Tyrol. He had many patrons; and among his many patrons there was one very peculiar man, who was on familiar terms with alchemists of every kind, for there were scores of alchemists at that time, in the Tyrol. This man was himself the owner of a castle, but he frequented all manner of alchemists’ dens and hovels. In so doing he learned extraordinarily much, and (as happened in the case of Paracelsus too) by spending his time in the dens of alchemists he was impelled to study all occult matters very intensely, and gained an unusually intense feeling for occult things. He thus came into the position of rediscovering in the Tyrol what was then only known as a legend, namely, the Castle in the Mountain — the Castle in the Rocks — (which indeed no one would have recognised as such, for it consisted of rocks, it was hollowed out of the rocks) — I mean, the Castle of the Dwarf King Laurin. The daemonic nature in the district of the Castle of the Dwarf King Laurin made a profound impression on him. Thus there was a remarkable combination in this soul — Initiation which he had carried into frivolity, annoyance at having been a woman and having thus been drawn into the sphere of Roman immorality and, at the same time, Roman cant and hypocrisy about morals; and lastly, an intimate knowledge, though still only external, of all manner of alchemical matters, which knowledge he had extended to a clear feeling of the nature-daemons and of other spiritual agencies in nature.

These two men — though it is not recorded in the biography of Walther, nevertheless it is the case — Walther von der Vogelweide and this other man often came together, and Walther received many an influence and impulse from him.

Here we have an instance of what is really a kind of karmic law. We see the same people drawn together again and again, called to the earth again and again simultaneously, complementing one another, living in a kind of mutual contrast. It is interesting once more, to enter into the peculiar lyrical style of Walther. It is as though at last he had grown thoroughly sick of embalming dead mummies and had turned to an entirely different aspect of life. He will no longer have anything to do with dead things, but only with the fullness and joy of life. And yet again, there is a certain undercurrent of pessimism in his work. Feel the style of Walther von der Yogelweide, feel in his style the two preceding earthly lives: feel too, his restless life. It is extraordinarily reminiscent of that life which dawns upon one who spends much of his time with the dead, when many destinies are unburdened in the soul. For such indeed was the case with an embalmer of mummies.

Now we go on. — My further researches into this karmic chain led me at length into the same room where I had visited my old acquaintance, whom I had recognised as an Egyptian mummy. And now I perceived that this very mummy had been embalmed by the other man whom I now met in his room. The whole line of research led me back to this same room. In effect, I found the soul who had passed through the servant of the old Egyptian embalmer, through Titus Livius, through Walther von der Vogelweide (the most celebrated of the Middle High German lyric poets) — I found him again in the doctor of our time, in Ludwig Schleich.(a German surgeon,writer philosopher, poet & painter)

Thus astonishingly do the connections in life appear. Who, with the ordinary consciousness alone, can understand an earthly life? It can only be understood when we know what is there in the foundations of a soul. Theoretically, many people know that deep in the foundations of the soul there are the layers of successive earthly lives. But it becomes real and concrete only when we behold it in a specific instance.

Then inner vision was directed out of this room once more. (For in the case of the other man, who had been mummified by this one, I was led to no more clues — at any rate to no important ones.) On the other hand I now perceived the further soul-pilgrimage of the old chieftain, of Julia, of the discoverer of Laurin’s Castle. For he came back to earth as August Strindberg.

Now I would like you to take the whole life and literary work of August Strindberg and set it against the background which I have just described. See the peculiar misogyny of Strindberg, which is no true misogyny, but proceeds from quite different foundations. Look, too, at all the strange daemonic elements that occur in his works. See his peculiar attraction to all manner of alchemistic and occult arts and artifices. And at length, look at the adventurous life of August Strindberg. You will find how well it stands out against the background which I have described.

Ludwig Schleich Ludwig Schleich

August-Strindberg-Quotes-1

Then read the Memoirs of Ludwig Schleich, his relations to August Strindberg, and you will see how all this arises once more against the background of their former earthly lives. Indeed, from the Memoirs of Ludwig Schleich a very remarkable light may suddenly arise, a light truly astonishing. For the man in whose company I first met Ludwig Schleich — the man of whom I said that in his ancient Egyptian life he was mummified by Schleich — it is he of whom Schleich himself tells in his Memoirs that he led him to Strindberg. In a past life, Strindberg and Schleich had worked together upon the corpse. And the soul who dwelt in that body, led them together again.

Thus, all that we have to explain to begin with about repeated earthly lives and the karmic connections in general, becomes real and concrete. Only then do the facts that appear in earthly life become transparent. A single human life on earth is an entire mystery. What else can it be, until seen against the background of the former lives on earth?

– See more at: http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA238/English/APC1957/19240907p01.html#sthash.phuf3nNA.dpuf

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SophiaDoveChaliceHranaJanto

Come join us for our upcoming Whitsun Festival May 15 featuring Biography Worker Leah Walker

Current Festival & Program Events

Until soon

Blessings & Peace –

~hag = Hazel Archer Ginsberg

 

Wedding Party

May 2, 2016 – Awakening to history:

Leonardo da Vinci selfself portrait

1519 – Deathday of Leonardo da Vinci

1536 – Anne Boleyn, Queen of England, is arrested & imprisoned on charges of adultery, incest, treason & witchcraft.

1568 – Mary, Queen of Scots, escapes from Loch Leven Castle.

1611 – The King James Version of the Bible is published for the first time in London, England, by printer Robert Barker.

Novalis self

1772 – Birthday of Novalis, German author & poet

1945 – World War II: Fall of Berlin: The Soviet Union announces the capture of Berlin & Soviet soldiers hoist their red flag over the Reichstag building.

2000 – President Bill Clinton announces that accurate GPS access would no longer be restricted to the United States military.

2011 – Osama bin Laden, the suspected mastermind behind the September 11 attacks & the FBI’s most wanted man, is killed by the United States special forces in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

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virtuesLiane Collot

~Imagine building a nurturing matrix

In the heart of a rising phoenix

A mystic union stronger then steel & bricks

A marriage of ethics & frolics…

Come…Join the Wedding Party…

~hag

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jacobsladderBlake!William Blake

Climbing Jacob’s Ladder – A Festival of Ascension, part 2 from a Lecture by  ~Hazel ArcherGinsberg

The Christ-Revelation ‘coming in the clouds’ is here- Showing us the bridge that brings a harmonizing spring-dialogue between the worlds. At the Ascension, Christ becomes “Lord of the heavenly forces upon earth”.

The fulfillment of the secret promise of the Ascension, is the Second Coming. It was said to the apostles, “He will come again, in like manner, as you have seen Him go up into the clouds of heaven.”  The Ascension is the seed of this Second Coming, & the Second Coming is the fulfillment of the Ascension.

The poet Novalis touched on this occult truth:

“In heavy clouds let Him ascend

And so also let Him downward tread.

In cooling streams let Him be sent,

In flames of fire blaze His descent,

In air & essence, sound & dew

To permeate our whole earth thru”

These lines from Novalis are a true prayer revealing the occult connection between the Ascension & the Second Coming.

Here too we see that, elemental beings form the earth under the patronage & protection of the higher worlds.

In this way Ascension can be called the Festival of the Elements.

to read the entire lecture:  Ascension 2014 Climbing Jacobs Ladder

Tomorrow we meet the Archangel Raphael.

Until soon

Xox

~hag = Hazel ArcherGinsberg