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Karma of Untruthfulness II
GA 173b

30 December 1916, Dornach

Lecture XII

Our recent considerations have, on the one hand, referred to human evolution as a whole, in so far as this has been affected by the Mystery of Golgotha. We have concerned ourselves to some degree with the loftiest, the most significant aspects of universal and human evolution. On the other hand, it is surely understandable that we have gone into the events of the moment. It was especially necessary to do this because a large proportion of our friends had expressed the wish to hear something about these current events. We have to admit that the gravity of the times encourages us to link the concrete experiences of the day with the nerve centre, the inmost impulse, of our spiritual-scientific striving. For after much investigation we can surely say that the reasons for the catastrophe we now see all around us in human evolution are buried very deeply indeed, and that it is superficial to look at current events solely by taking account of only the most external ramifications.

Looking only at these we would never reach a fruitful view of present events. A fruitful view would be one which would give us the possibility of finding thoughts on how to extricate ourselves from the catastrophe in which the world now finds itself. So let us look at some more details. I then intend tomorrow to show an important connection revealed by spiritual science, a connection which will touch our souls in a way which will enable us to gain an active and understanding grasp of these things. So let us now prepare for this with some more details.

First, let me stress once again that nothing is further from my intention than to put forward political considerations. This is most certainly not our task. It is our task to use our considerations to gain knowledge, knowledge of how things are linked together. For this we have to look at the details. And for this very reason our considerations are very far removed from any form of taking sides. Especially in this respect I beg you not to misunderstand me. Whatever point of view one or other of us might have in relation to national aspirations must not be allowed to interfere in any way with the deeper foundations of our spiritual-scientific striving. My intention is solely to make suggestions on which a judgement might be based. In no way do I want to influence anyone's opinion.

Misunderstandings can easily arise in this field, and it seems to me that some of the things I have said recently have indeed been open to misunderstanding. Let me therefore say immediately—since anyone can be misunderstood in this way—that, for instance, when I have spoken about the question of Belgian neutrality and events connected with it, I have had absolutely no intention of defending or attacking anything but merely wanted to state facts. Indeed, the first time I mentioned this I was simply quoting Georg Brandes who, so it seems to me, has expressed a truly neutral judgement.

It has not been my concern to criticize politically one measure or another taken by one side or another. My intention has been to stress the importance of the principle of truth in the world, to stress that the karma which has fulfilled itself in mankind has often come about because the attention paid to facts, the attention paid to historical and other connections of life in our materialistic age, is not permeated with the truth. When truth is not at work, when that extraordinary opposite of truth, namely, the lack of inclination to seek the truth, is at work, when there is little yearning for truth—all this is connected with the karma of our time. This is what we must study.

When we see what is being said during these years in which mankind is living, through what is today called war, we cannot object that such things are said only by the newspapers. What matters is the effect. These things have powerful effects. When we pay attention to what is said and to how these things are said, we find that it is just in this ‘how’ that something works which truly does not run concurrently with the truth. Do not believe that thoughts and statements are not objective forces in their own right! They are objective, actual forces! It is inevitable that they are followed by consequences, even if these are not translated into external deeds. What people think is far more important for the future than what they do. Thoughts become deeds in the course of time. We live today on the thoughts of past times; these are fulfilled in the deeds committed today. And our thoughts which flood through the world today will flow into the deeds of the future.

I am now coming to something which has easily led to misunderstandings, so let me say in advance: I am using the following as a model for the manner in which one may seek the truth. I said some days ago that peace would have been preserved if Sir Edward Grey had replied in the affirmative to the question from the German ambassador in London as to whether England would remain neutral if Germany respected Belgian neutrality. This statement may be disputed. I maintain, however, that it cannot be denied that things would certainly have taken a different course if Sir Edward Grey had answered in the affirmative; for then the violation of Belgium's neutrality would not have taken place.

If you recall everything I have said—and please consider that what matters here are the nuances—you will see that with not a single word have I anywhere defended the violation of Belgian neutrality. I certainly have not done this. But neither do I need to brand it as a violation of the law. To do so would be to carry coals to Newcastle, as the saying goes. Right at the beginning of the war the German Chancellor himself admitted that it was a violation of the law. It cannot be my task to add anything to this or to excuse anything about it. It has been admitted by those competent to judge that it was a violation of the law.

The fact remains—and I beg that we should understand one another properly today, my dear friends—the fact remains that on 1 August the English Foreign Minister was asked: Would England remain neutral if Germany refrained from violating Belgian neutrality? And he gave an evasive answer! The way the question was framed leaves no doubt that, if the answer had been affirmative, Belgium's neutrality would not have been violated.

You could say that the neutrality of Belgium had been guaranteed since 1839, and that as matters stood there was no need to ask, since Germany was obliged to respect the neutrality of Belgium. Therefore Germany had no right to demand that England should remain neutral if Germany were to respect the law, since it was her duty to do so. The respecting of Belgium's neutrality ought not to have been made dependent on England's neutrality. You could say that the German ambassador merely asked: Will England remain neutral if Germany keeps her promise?

So if someone maintains that it was formally correct of Sir Edward Grey to answer evasively, he is absolutely right. He is so right that it is pointless to go into it any more. But legally formal judgements are never what matters in world evolution. Such judgements never conform to reality! World history proceeds in ways which cannot be encompassed by formal judgements. A formal judgement is foreign to reality. But someone who makes a formal judgement will, if only he shouts loudly enough, always be in the right because, of course, sensible people do not object to the rightness of formal judgements. Formal judgements are also very easily understood; but they do not encompass the realities.

May I remind you that in my recent book Vom Menschenrätsel I stressed that it is not only the formal correctness of a judgement that matters but also the degree in which it conforms to reality. The important thing is that judgements must encompass reality. Nobody can have any objection to the formal correctness of Sir Edward Grey's answer. There is nothing to discuss, for it is perfectly obvious. But it is the facts we must look at, although the way we look at the facts must be such as to show how we ought to judge external matters if we want to prepare ourselves to win correct perceptions about spiritual matters also. Spiritual matters must be comprehended in all their reality; and for this, formal judgements are insufficient. So we must accustom ourselves to keep the facts together as well as we possibly can in external matters also.

I could argue for a long time on this, for we could speak for days solely about this question. First of all, if it were a matter of establishing a legal basis—for if neutrality is to be violated, it must first exist—we should have to discover whether Belgium's neutrality did, in fact, exist at the time when it was supposed to have been violated. I am not referring here to documents which have been found during the war. There is no point in discussing these since they are questionable and various opinions are possible. But if the matter were being discussed, and if everything relevant were being scrutinized and assessed in the way other things are also judged in ordinary life, then this point would have to be raised too: Surely the old neutrality formalized in 1839 lost its validity when Belgium occupied the Congo. If a state creates new circumstances by entering into international relations at a level where it could give away or sell territories as extensive as those of the Congo—or do anything else with them in relation to other states—then, surely its neutrality must be suspect.

I know that in 1885 the Congo was declared neutral as well; but it would be a matter of deciding whether or not this was contestable. But I do not want to decide anything. I merely want to draw your attention to the difficulties which exist and to the fact that it is not so easy to form a truly objective judgement about such things. A number of other things of equal calibre could be brought into the argument, so this is where the difficulties begin. Neither shall we discuss how far the old agreement of 1839 could still be valid, since Germany was not founded until 1871. All these things would have to be considered. For into the objective progress of events there flow not only fantastic ideas which we formalize, but also actual facts, without any contribution from human beings; actual facts also play their part.

Now, is it really true that the German ambassador formulated a question about something that should have been a matter of course? The question he asked was: Would Great Britain remain neutral if Germany kept the promise of 1839, even though Germany did not exist at that time! Earlier on, Belgian neutrality was not taken as a matter of course either. When, in 1870, war broke out between Prussia—together with the German principalities allied with her—and France, an agreement was reached between Great Britain under Foreign Minister Gladstone and Germany on the one hand, and between Great Britain and France on the other hand. In each case it was agreed that Great Britain would remain neutral if the other two respected the neutrality of Belgium.

So, in the year 1870, Great Britain was in exactly the same situation. Yet she did not take the attitude that the old agreement of 1839 was definitely valid. Instead, in case anything should happen, she balanced the neutrality of Belgium against her own. If a prejudgement such as this occurs, it cannot afterwards be said that similar steps should not be taken at a later date. So let us refer once more to something I have stressed several times: There is continuity in the life that runs through history; things are linked together. Just as an individual cannot do something to undo what has once been done, so it is with nations. You cannot take something for granted if it has not previously been taken for granted.

So this, too, must be taken into consideration. Even if the matter had been so simple that it could have been said: The agreement of 1839 was obviously valid, and so there was no need to request Great Britain for an additional commitment—even if this could have been said—then the counter argument is: that in 1870 Great Britain herself took the initiative. It was Great Britain who asked France, on the one hand, and Germany, on the other, whether they would respect the neutrality of Belgium. So at that time discussions took place about neutrality. And when discussions take place, others can follow from them at a later date.

The following can also be said. You know that it is not my task to defend the violation of neutrality, but I can say: If an affirmative answer from Great Britain had led to non-violation of Belgium's neutrality, then everything in the West would have taken a different course. But this was not my final word, for I added expressly: In addition, Germany offered to respect France and her colonies if England were to remain neutral. When no positive answer was forthcoming to this question either, the further question was asked: Under what conditions would England remain neutral? England was actually invited to name the conditions under which she would remain neutral. This was all over and done with on 2 August, for it happened on 1 August. England declined. Great Britain did not want to give any answer to questions on this subject. So you can really say: If Great Britain had given any kind of an answer, everything would have taken a different course in the West; even the external course of history shows this.

But I did not stop here either, for I said to you that I knew from other circumstances that even the whole war with France could have been avoided if Great Britain had given a suitable answer. The fact that there were other, more profound, reasons why this did not happen is something that weighs down the scales on the other side. But everything must be carefully considered if we want to form a judgement about the opinion that has been buzzing around the world for the last two and a half years. For there are still many people who believe that England entered the war because of the violation of Belgian neutrality, when in fact this very thing could have been avoided if she had not entered the war!

Now you might say: The whole war situation in the West would have been different if Germany had not violated the neutrality of Belgium. But then you are not distinguishing between what is formally and legally correct and all that is connected with the tragedy of world history. It is very important to distinguish between what is tragic and what is formally correct. Of course, things would have been different. What would have been different? Without, I beg you, bringing moral aspects into the discussion, let us now see what would have been different.

Let us assume that Belgium's neutrality had been respected despite Great Britain's refusal to make a commitment, which meant that at any minute she could be expected to enter the war. As things stood, the attitude of Great Britain made it absolutely inevitable that war would break out in the West. This must be obvious to anyone who really studies the matter, not only the Blue Paper but all the other documents as well. Whether it could have been avoided with the mood in France being as it was at that time is another question—hardly, perhaps! But let us assume that war broke out in the West because of Great Britain's attitude. What would have happened if Belgium's neutrality had nevertheless been respected? As I have said, I am not leading up to a moral judgement in any direction.

The following would have happened: By far the greatest part of the German army, which has been accused of so much, would have been entangled in France's defences and used up on the western side. Despite all the talk of Prussian militarism, the French army is hardly less powerful than the German—the figures are virtually identical—and this was the case before the war as well. Therefore, obviously the German army would have been used up in the West, and the invasion from the East which began in August and September, would have commenced with a vengeance. For the experts said that it would have been impossible to wage war in the West without engaging almost the whole of the German army all the time. Germany would have been totally exposed to the invasion from the East.

This was the situation. It might have been said that this was a wrong strategic judgement. This was arguable during the early months of the war, but not any longer. For since the failed attempt at Verdun, those who said that the whole German army would be used up if it was deployed solely in the West have been proved to be right.

So there was a choice between passing the death sentence on Germany or taking the tragic step of breaking in through Belgium, which was the only alternative if war in the West could not be avoided; for in the East it certainly could not be avoided! Anyone who says today that it could have been avoided must have the effrontery to say Yes and No at the same time. People today are hardly capable of considering what might be true and what false, but given that some might have the effrontery to say Yes and No at the same time, this is what they would maintain: We have been attacked by the Central Powers; we are not to blame for the commencement of the war; but we shall not end the war until we have attained our war goal, namely, to conquer this one or that one!

There you have Yes and No in the same breath! We are not the ones who want anything, it is the others who want something; they want to conquer, that is why they have attacked us; we, however, shall not end this war till we have achieved our long-standing aim of this or that conquest! It is really unbelievable that people exist who have the effrontery to say Yes and No in the same breath. Perhaps in the next few days you will discover that there is indeed a person who is capable of saying Yes and No in the same breath. Here is probably the most appalling document ever to have been published in recent times, for it depicts a logic riven beyond all meaning. This is indeed something that belongs to the karma of our time.

So what we have to do is distinguish between what is logical and formally legal and what is purely tragic. We must not succumb to the peculiar misconception that it could be possible in maya—that is, in the world of the physical plane—for real events to take place solely in accordance with what is merely formal and logical. But let us look further: We did not set out to defend or attack anything. Our intention was to show that it is not justifiable—especially while those accused are not in a position to defend themselves—to trumpet abroad that this war is being fought by one of the sides because of the violation of Belgian neutrality, without also proclaiming that one possessed the possibility of preventing this violation. The only possibility of escaping the tragedy would have been the neutrality of England. For no statesman may proclaim in advance the death sentence on his own country.

Of course it is reasonable if all those who are satisfied with reasonable judgements say: Agreements must be kept. My dear friends, if you were to see a list of all the agreements in public and private life which are not kept, and if you were then to be shown what the breaking of these agreements has brought about in the world, you would begin to realize just what forces in maya are the really effective ones.

But was there really such a good conscience on the side which failed to answer in the affirmative? The facts seem to speak against the possibility. For when, at a later date, the question of this discussion between the German ambassador and Sir Edward Grey was once again placed on the agenda, and when it was said that England could have saved the neutrality of Belgium, the English government defended itself. It did so not by invoking the argument of mere formal and legal correctness—for this there were too many excellent statesmen in the the English government at that time. Although I do not withdraw the judgement of Sir Edward Grey—formed not by me but by his English colleagues—he was, nevertheless, too good a statesman to fall back on the pose of maintaining that since an agreement had been formulated in 1839, Germany was obliged to abide by it even if England had given an evasive answer. Instead of doing this the English statesmen excused themselves in a different manner. Grey said that Lichnowsky had indeed asked this question but that he had done so in a private capacity and not on the instruction of the German government. Had he done so on the instruction of the German government, this would have been different. Though Lichnowsky had acted from the best intentions of maintaining peace in the West, he had not had the German government behind him!

Do you not think that in any private situation this would be called a lame excuse, a perfectly ordinary lame excuse! For the whole world knows that when the ambassador of a country speaks with a Foreign Minister he must do so with the full power of his country behind him, and that his country cannot but ratify what her ambassador says, unless she wants to appear quite impossible in the eyes of the world. So this was a perfectly ordinary lame excuse, grasped at because no one wanted to withdraw to a position which would have to be defended by saying, simply: What we did was correct. They certainly felt the weight of the fact that England could have prevented the violation of neutrality, quite apart from whether the violation was justified from the point of view of the other side. If an avalanche is threatening to fall and the one at the top of the mountain refrains from holding it back because, for some reason—which may or may not be justified and may certainly be unjustified—he is forced to let it go, and then if someone further down also fails to hold it back, with the justification that the one at the top should have done it—no, you cannot argue in this way! But to form judgements about these things always entails weighing them up. So the following would also have to be taken into consideration:

When did it happen? We have now arrived at 2 August. On 2 August the King of Belgium requested the intervention of England, that is, he requested England to intervene with Germany. The Belgian King saw it as a matter of course that England should negotiate with Germany about the neutrality of Belgium. Initially, England did nothing. She waited a whole day while Sir Edward Grey spoke to his Parliament in London. In doing so he concealed the conversation he had had with the German ambassador. Not a word did he breathe about it. If he had mentioned it, the whole session in Parliament would have taken a different course!

So after the discussion with the German ambassador had taken place, and after the King of Belgium had requested the intervention of England, everything paused in England, nothing was done. What was everybody waiting for? They were waiting for the violation of Belgium's neutrality to be accomplished! As long as it remained unaccomplished, matters could still have taken a course along which it would not happen. Powerful forces were working against it happening and it was hanging by a silken thread. If the request of the Belgian King had been fulfilled quickly enough, if England had intervened, it is questionable whether the violation of neutrality would have taken place. But when did Grey intervene? On the fourth, when the German armies had already set foot on Belgian soil! Why did he wait, even after the request of the King of Belgium? These are questions which have to be asked.

Much could be added to all this if the documents were to be studied both forwards and backwards. But this is not necessary, for I believe I have made it clear to you that these things were very well prepared years in advance. So there is no need to be surprised that events took the course they did in recent years. Of course, if you study the documents forwards only, you will only come up with formal answers.

It has been my intention not to take sides one way or the other, but only to show what is necessary to come to a judgement on these things. For in accordance with the nerve centre of spiritual science, where we strive for a lofty viewpoint, I would rather refrain from light-heartedly making derogatory judgements about what happens in world history when states collide head-on; for do not forget: Not nations, not peoples, wage war; states wage war!

In this field we tend to consider too little that, in addition to the forces of growth and becoming, world events also need the forces of destruction and decay. Is it any different with the individual human being? As we develop our capacities during the course of our lifetime, we cause our body to decay and be destroyed. Tomorrow I shall show you what profound connection exists between our soul life and belladonna, jimson weed, and other poisons found outside in the world. These are truths which delve deeply down into things. One must have the courage to give these truths a validity in world history. Therefore it is much better to understand, rather than to judge in accordance with some so-called norm or other. Any condemnation of states or nations usually stands on insecure foundations. If we are at last to ascend towards the spiritual world and be able to understand anything there, we must accustom ourselves to simply looking at facts, without any criticism—which belongs to quite another realm. Only then shall we understand what forces are at work in world evolution.

From this point of view let us now look at certain events—without anger, but by studying them carefully—certain events which I have hitherto observed have so far been considered solely from a moral point of view. Such a point of view must, of course, be applied to the actions of individuals, although it is absurd to apply it to the lives of states. One or other of you might even find it strange that I should look at these events without judging them morally; yet they can certainly be considered without any moral undertones.

One of the chief elements in the mighty British Empire is its dominion over India. This dominion over India has undergone a number of earlier stages. It took its departure from the East India Company, a trading organization which, to begin with, enjoyed the privilege of being the sole company permitted to trade with India on England's behalf. Then, as time went on, there developed, inexorably and appropriately, out of the various privileges enjoyed by the East India Company, the dominion of England over India—indeed, the English Empire of India. From this, indeed also through the East India Company, there also developed England's trade with China. From the end of the eighteenth century there was a lively trading relationship between India and China, and the English East India Company was already involved at that time. You know that England then gradually grew to be the foremost merchant of the world.

Then, as the element of trade became established in the Orient, something else was brought to bear on it; it came into contact with something else. From the seventeenth century onwards the habit of smoking opium had become widespread in China. Probably it was the Arabs who taught the Chinese how to smoke opium, since before the seventeenth century they had not done so. For those who do it, smoking opium provides a questionable but powerful pleasure. The opium smoker creates for himself the most varied fantasies out of the astral world. In these he lives. It is truly another world, but reached by a purely material path.

When the people who conducted England's trade with China, in the manner described, noticed that the habit, the passion of opium smoking was spreading rapidly among the Chinese, they established vast poppy plantations in Bengal for the production of opium. Those who are familiar with the laws of commerce know that not only does demand stimulate supply, but supply also stimulates demand. Any economist will tell you that if a large amount of some article is put on offer there will soon be a great demand for it. The East India Company was granted the monopoly by England for the export of opium from India to China. And the more opium arrived in China, the more the evil habit spread. From 1772 onwards several thousand chests were imported annually, each to the value of about 4,800 marks.

I have chosen this example for it has a very profound cultural and historical background, if all factors are taken into account. Only consider that, by introducing opium, which works on the soul, you are interfering with the spiritual life of a whole nation or, at least, of those to whom you are supplying it. I can use this example because I have no intention of condemning anyone who wants to trade. Trade is something that must move freely in the world. This is a perfectly justifiable principle. I have no intention of condemning anyone who might grow poppies in Bengal in order to manufacture opium for China and take gold in exchange.

But the Chinese saw their pathetically wasted opium smokers. Opium smokers gradually deteriorate, and after a while it was noticed that the habit was causing the degeneration of wide sections of the Chinese population. When the Chinese noticed this they outlawed the smoking of opium in 1794. They wanted to prevent any more opium from entering the country.

But as is the way with such things, prohibitions do not necessarily prevent trade with the forbidden article. Ways and means are found to carry on trading. So it turned out that despite the formal prohibition, despite the law which forbade the import of opium, the opium trade flourished. There are all sorts of ways, of which bribery is only one. In short, the opium trade flourished and increased from a few thousand chests in 1773 to thirty thousand chests in 1837: that is, over only a few decades. The profits, about thirty million francs a year, flowed into British India.

Once things had got out of hand to this extent, the Chinese could think of no other measure than the confiscation of the opium consignments as they arrived. To Canton, which was the usual destination of the consignments, they sent a capable Chinese—an energetic man, Lin by name, who confiscated the chests as they arrived. The English also had a capable man in their consulate, Captain Elliot, who was very energetic and even succeeded on one occasion in breaking through the Chinese blockade with a warship.

Now there arose the question of how to get out of this fix. Mountains of chests filled with opium were waiting to be dealt with, but the Chinese would not relent. The situation was most awkward. So Elliot, who was in a position to do this, had 20,283 chests signed over to himself personally and then handed them to the Chinese Government. This was the way out for the moment.

However, this did not remove the opium trade from the face of the earth, for in some quarters there was no desire to rid the world of the opium trade. So the Chinese found there was nothing for it but to make new laws once again, very strict laws indeed. Lin decreed that anyone caught trading with opium would be condemned to death by the Chinese courts and that from now on all ships were to be confiscated. Thus the Chinese were now faced with the prospect of the death penalty if they traded with opium.

But the British would not consider the abolition of the opium trade, just because a few people might lose their heads. Instead they said—and I quote—‘With this demand, the Chinese Government has finally destroyed any sense of security.’ Then they ordered all British nationals living in China to leave, while armed assistance was requested from India. They, so to say, occupied the whole area. The Chinese meanwhile stood quite bravely by their decision to behead anyone caught trading in opium. So it appeared that the opium trade had ceased. Since the Chinese intended to confiscate any British ships carrying opium, there appeared to be no more British ships. What happened was that the opium was loaded in India on to American ships instead! So, just as much—indeed more and more—opium continued to arrive in China on American ships.

Elliot, the civil servant, said: The question underlying our conflict is quite simple. Does China wish to conduct honest and increasing trade with us, or does she want to accept responsibility for allowing her coastal waters to fall victim to open piracy and freebooting? The harbour at Canton was blockaded with help from India. In the skirmishing this involved, a Chinese was killed by an English sailor. Of course the Chinese Government demanded the extradition of the sailor. Every so often the Chinese tired of the whole affair, sometimes wanting to prove they were in the right and yet not wanting to prove the English wrong either. It is quite possible to do this! One day an English sailor drowned by accident. So Elliot, a very clever man, agreed with Lin, the representative of the Chinese Government, that they would confirm the drowned sailor to be the one who had killed the Chinese. The drowned sailor was handed over and the matter thus settled for the moment. But all these things led in the end, in 1840, to the war between England and China.

So the whole course of events was inexorable and could not have gone any other way. An incisive influence was exercised in a material way on the soul life of a people. Something took place which is connected with the whole process of world evolution. In England people ‘knew’ what it was all about! What did they know? In England people ‘knew’ that England had been ‘surprised’ by China—that is how they put it—and the reason given was that China could not tolerate England's cultivation of opium in India because the Chinese wanted to build up their own cultivation. This is what was said. Everybody ‘knew’ all about this, and another thing they knew was that the Chinese were barbarians! That is what people in England knew at that time. Lord Palmerston said: The protection of poppy cultivation in India must gain ground; it is a matter of protecting poppy cultivation in India; furthermore, the economists in China do not want to allow out of their country the money which should by rights be paid to India. All these were things well ‘known’ and understood in Europe!

War raged; and in war, inevitably, atrocities occur. Atrocities were committed, both by the Chinese and by the English. Whole villages were found in which the women lay in pools of blood in their houses; the Chinese men, having fought bravely, saw that they would have to kill themselves or surrender, so first they killed their wives and children. This war of 1840 was a sad war. Strange rumours began to circulate about Elliot, who had observed it throughout and who actually had it on his conscience. The rumours—perhaps they were true—said that he was inclined to initiate peace negotiations with the Chinese. So he was overthrown. Then—no, not Lloyd George!—a certain Pottinger was given the position of Elliot who had wanted to initiate peace negotiations. The war was to be fought to its bitter end, that is, until the island of Chusan and the cities of Ningpo and Amoy had been taken, until the English had advanced as far as Nanking and until, in 1842, China had become totally demoralized. Hong Kong was made over to England, five ports in China were opened for unlimited opium trade, and British consuls established. In addition to the earlier twenty-five million extorted—I do not quite mean extorted, there is another word which I can't find for the moment—in addition to the earlier twenty-five million extorted from the Chinese, a further demand was now made for ninety-seven and a half million war damages.

As I have said before, I would not dream of interpreting this process as anything other than a historical necessity. I would not dream of accusing anybody. Those who understand necessities of this kind, those who understand how things take place on the physical plane, know that such things are perfectly possible in the normal physical way of world evolution. The profits made from opium are now absorbed into the English national economy, and the English national economy includes a good part of English culture. Just as it would be nonsense to underestimate English culture, so is it also nonsense to doubt the necessity of such events, though perhaps the trifling satirical epilogue to the whole affair might be excluded from that necessity:

When the first instalment of the ninety-seven and a half million war damages was received, certain people came forward claiming they had been the first to have chests of opium confiscated and that the compensation they had received had been minimal. Now, they said, we have seen that our country regards the opium trade with China as legitimate, so we demand full compensation, since we were merely doing something over which our country has since been waging war. The minister whose task it was to decide the matter drew from his pocket a note he had given Captain Elliot at the time, stating that so long as Chinese law forbade the opium trade, the English Government would never agree to pay compensation to anyone who might suffer losses as a result of carrying on this trade. Since this Chinese law was in force at the time, he said, your demand has no foundation because you were contravening this law which was only later nullified by the war.

We need not decide whether this epilogue was also one of the historical necessities. But what is a necessity is that we should look at the facts. When this Anglo-Chinese war started in 1840, mankind stood at the beginning of a time about which we have often spoken. I have mentioned this very year to you as that in which materialism attained its zenith. It is good to understand how such things develop. As I said, just as it would be nonsense to underestimate English culture or English life—English civilization—so would it be nonsense to believe that something of this nature could have been avoided in the overall context of English evolution. It belongs to it. So it is entirely wrong to form any kind of moral judgement about it. If we did, we would be making the mistake of judging whole nations, whole groups in the manner which is only appropriate when we judge individuals. This is the very thing which it is impossible to do.

Yet again and again it is maintained that such a thing is possible. I have just received another pamphlet—there are so many peacemaking pamphlets to be had at the moment—which says: States have their own thinking, feeling and willing, just as do human individuals. Of course this is utter nonsense because you cannot, by analogy, transfer something which has reality on a higher plane to the level of the human being who has his thinking, feeling and willing in the physical sphere. Of course the folk spirits, the folk souls, also have their characteristics, but these are as I have described them in the lecture cycle I mentioned the other day. But to speak of the thinking, feeling and willing of nations is simply nonsense.

My dear friends, today I have introduced you to certain matters, for the simple reason that it was necessary to add some striking examples to our basic material. Tomorrow we shall continue to link this to more far-reaching viewpoints.

Zwolfter Vortrag

Unsere Betrachtungen der letzten Zeit haben einerseits angeknüpft an die ganze Menschheitsentwickelung, insofern das Mysterium von Golgatha in diese eingegriffen hat. Wir haben uns also mit dem gewissermaßen Höchsten, dem Bedeutendsten der Welt- und Menschheitsentwickelung beschäftigt. Auf der andern Seite ist es wohl begreiflich, daß wir auf die Zeiterscheinungen eingegangen sind. Insbesondere mußte das geschehen, da von einem großen Teil unserer Freunde der Wunsch geäußert worden ist, eben über diese Zeiterscheinungen etwas zu hören. Und wir müssen es uns ja auch gestehen, daß der Ernst der Zeit schon dafür spricht, daß wir die unmittelbar konkreten Erlebnisse des Tages an dasjenige anknüpfen, was der Nerv, der innerste Impuls unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bestrebungen ist. Können wir uns doch nach mancherlei Betrachtungen, die wir angestellt haben, sagen, daß die Gründe, warum es in der Menschheitsentwickelung zu einer solchen Katastrophe gekommen ist, wie sie um uns herum sich zeigt, tief liegen, und daß es eigentlich eine Oberflächlichkeit ist, die Ursachen unserer heutigen Zeitereignisse nur in ihren alleräußersten Ranken, möchte ich sagen, ins Auge zu fassen.

Durch solche an der Oberfläche liegende Betrachtungen wird man niemals eine fruchtbare Anschauung über die Ereignisse der Gegenwart bekommen. Eine fruchtbare Anschauung ist die, welche dem Menschen die Möglichkeit gibt, Gedanken zu haben, wie herauszukommen ist aus der Katastrophe, in der sich die Welt befindet. Deshalb lassen Sie uns heute noch einige Detailbetrachtungen anstellen; morgen denke ich Ihnen dann gerade aus der Geisteswissenschaft einen wichtigen Zusammenhang aufzeigen zu können, der, ich möchte sagen, in der Lage ist, unsere Seele so anzufassen, daß wir uns mit ihr in einem tätigen, in einem aktiv-begreifenden Verstehen der Dinge befinden können. Lassen Sie uns dieses durch einige Details noch etwas vorbereiten.

Zunächst sei noch einmal betont, daß mir nichts ferner liegt, als politische Betrachtungen anzustellen; das kann unsere Aufgabe gewiß nicht sein. Unsere Aufgabe liegt in Erkenntnisbetrachtungen. Erkenntnis der Zusammenhänge, die natürlich notwendig machen, daß man den Blick auch auf einzelne Details hinlenkt. Deshalb sollen diese Betrachtungen auch weit, weit entfernt sein von jeglicher Parteinahme. Und gerade in dieser Beziehung bitte ich Sie, mich ja nicht mißzuverstehen. Denn welchen Standpunkt in bezug auf diese oder jene nationalen Aspirationen der eine oder der andere unter uns hat, das darf in die tieferen Grundlagen unserer geisteswissenschaftlichen Bestrebungen denn doch gar nicht eingreifen. Ich möchte sagen: Anregungen möchte ich nur geben zur Beurteilung, nicht aber irgend jemandes Urteil auch nur im geringsten beeinflussen.

Leicht kann gerade auf einem solchen Gebiete ein Mißverständnis sich geltend machen, und es scheint mir, als ob einiges von dem, was ich gesagt habe in den letzten Betrachtungen, auch wirklich einem Mißverständnisse ausgesetzt gewesen ist. Deshalb sei im allgemeinen, weil jedem ein solches Mißverständnis passieren kann, gleich bemerkt, daß es sich mir zum Beispiel an den Stellen, wo ich auf die mit der belgischen Neutralitätsfrage zusammenhängenden Vorgänge aufmerksam gemacht habe, wahrhaftig nicht darum gehandelt hat, etwas zu verteidigen oder anzugreifen, sondern lediglich darum, ein Faktum hinzustellen. Und als ich die Bemerkung zum ersten Mal machte, machte ich sie ja gar nicht von mir aus, sondern anknüpfend an die Ausführungen von Georg Brandes, der ein, wie mir schien, wahrhaft neutrales Urteil abgegeben hat.

Bei diesen Dingen hat es sich für mich nicht darum gehandelt, diese oder jene Maßnahme der einen oder der andern Seite in einem politischen Sinne zu taxieren, sondern darum, die Wichtigkeit des Wahrheitsprinzips in der Welt zu betonen, zu betonen, daß das Karma, das sich an der Menschheit erfüllt hat, vielfach damit zusammenhängt, daß die Aufmerksamkeit auf die Tatsachenwelt, die Aufmerksamkeit überhaupt auf die geschichtlichen und sonstigen Lebenszusammenhänge in unserem materialistischen Zeitalter nicht so ist, daß Wahrheit waltet. Und das Nichtwalten der Wahrheit, das eigentümliche Walten gerade des Gegenteiles der Wahrheit, die geringe Neigung, Wahrheit zu suchen, die geringe Sehnsucht nach Wahrheit, mit alledem hängt das Karma unserer Zeit zusammen. Und dieses muß man studieren.

Wenn man daher sieht, was gerade in den Jahren, in denen die Menschheit das durchlebt, was man heute einen Krieg nennt, behauptet wird, so darf man nicht einwenden, es werde dies nur von Zeitungen oder dergleichen gesagt. Es kommt auf die Wirkungen an. Die Dinge haben ihre starke Wirkung. Wenn man ins Auge faßt, was gesagt wird, wie die Dinge aufgefaßt und vorgebracht werden, dann sieht man in diesem Wie das Walten desjenigen, das wahrhaftig nicht in der Richtung der Wahrheit läuft. Und man glaube nicht, daß Gedanken, daß Behauptungen nicht objektive Mächte sind! Sie sind objektive, reale Mächte! Und es ist ganz unausbleiblich, daß sie ihre Wirkungen nach sich ziehen, auch wenn sie sich nicht umsetzen in äußere Taten. Für die Zukunft ist viel wichtiger, was die Menschen denken, als das, was sie tun. Denn Gedanken werden im Laufe der Zeiten Taten. Wir leben heute von den Gedanken vergangener Zeiten; die erfüllen sich in den Taten, die heute geschehen. Und unsere Gedanken, die die Welt durchfluten, werden sich in den Taten der Zukunft entladen.

Ich knüpfe jetzt an etwas an, was leicht zu Mißverständnissen hat führen können und will daher unseren Betrachtungen einige Bemerkungen vorausschicken. Ich führe das an, um Ihnen gewissermaßen an einem Modell zu zeigen, wie man Wahrheit sucht. - Man kann sagen, es sei anfechtbar, wenn ich gesagt habe, es hätte genügt, um den Frieden zu wahren, daß Sir Edward Grey auf die Frage des deutschen Botschafters in London, ob England, falls Deutschland die belgische Neutralität respektiere, neutral bleiben würde, daß Sir Edward Grey darauf mit Ja geantwortet hätte. Ich meine, das kann nicht geleugnet werden, daß die Dinge ganz anders verlaufen wären, wenn Sir Edward Grey mit Ja geantwortet hätte; denn dann wäre die Verletzung von Belgiens Neutralität weggefallen.

Wenn Sie sich erinnern an alles, was ich gesagt habe — und an das, was hier gesagt wird, muß man so denken, daß es auf die Nuance ankommt -, so werden Sie sehen, daß ich nirgends auch mit einem Worte etwa die Verletzung der belgischen Neutralität in Schutz genommen habe. Das habe ich gewiß nicht getan. Sie als eine Rechtsverletzung zu brandmarken, habe ich auch nicht nötig — das hieße Eulen nach Athen tragen, um die alte, abgebrauchte Formel zu verwenden -, denn daß die Verletzung der belgischen Neutralität eine Rechtsverletzung ist, hat ja der deutsche Reichskanzler selbst gleich im Ausgangspunkte des Krieges zugegeben, und dem noch irgend etwas hinzuzufügen, oder irgend etwas daran zu entschuldigen, kann nicht meine Aufgabe sein. Die Sache ist von maßgebender, äußerlich maßgebender Seite als eine Rechtsverletzung zugestanden worden.

Dabei bleibt aber die Tatsache bestehen — wollen wir uns heute doch gut verstehen, meine lieben Freunde -, daß am 1. August der englische Minister des Auswärtigen gefragt worden ist: Würde England neutral bleiben, wenn von deutscher Seite die Neutralität Belgiens nicht verletzt würde? — Und diese Frage ist ausweichend beantwortet worden! So wie die Frage gestellt wurde, darf kein Mensch daran zweifeln, daß, falls die Frage dazumal bejaht worden wäre, Belgiens Neutralität nicht verletzt worden wäre.

Nun kann man sagen: Die Neutralität Belgiens sei seit 1839 garantiert, und die Sache hätte so gestanden, daß eigentlich nichts zu fragen war; denn Deutschland sei verpflichtet gewesen, die Neutralität Belgiens zu respektieren. Also hätte nicht auf Grund dieser Respektierung von England eine andere Respektierung verlangt werden können, ein Gegenversprechen für ein ohnedies schon vorhandenes Versprechen. Die Respektierung der belgischen Neutralität hätte nicht davon abhängig gemacht werden können, daß England neutral bleibe. Man könnte sagen, es sei ja von dem deutschen Botschafter nur gefragt worden: Bleibt England neutral, wenn Deutschland sein Versprechen erfüllt?

Wenn nun jemand sagt, es sei formal korrekt von Sir Edward Grey gewesen, darauf eine ausweichende Antwort zu geben, so hat er selbstverständlich Recht, so selbstverständlich, daß es eigentlich überflüssig ist, darauf auch nur einzugehen. Aber um juristisch-formale Urteile handelt es sich in der weltgeschichtlichen Entwickelung niemals. Mit solchen Urteilen trifft man niemals eine Realität! Die Weltgeschichte verläuft anders, als daß man ihre Wirklichkeit einfassen könnte in Formalurteile. Wer Formalurteile fällen will, fällt wirklichkeitsfremde Urteile; aber er wird, wenn er nur den Mund laut genug aufmachen kann, wenn er nur sich Geltung verschaffen kann, immer Recht haben, weil ja ein vernünftiger Mensch ohnedies nichts gegen die Richtigkeit von Formalurteilen einwenden wird. Formalurteile sind auch sehr leicht verständlich; nur fassen sie die Realitäten nicht.

Ich bitte Sie, sich daran zu erinnern, daß ich gerade in meinem letzten Buche «Vom Menschenrätsel» betont habe, daß es bei Urteilen nicht bloß auf die formale Richtigkeit ankommt, sondern auf das Wirklichkeitsgemäße. Es kommt darauf an, daß man mit Urteilen die Wirklichkeit faßt. Kein Mensch kann etwas gegen die formale Korrektheit der Antwort Sir Edward Greys einwenden; darüber wollen wir überhaupt nicht diskutieren, das ist ganz selbstverständlich. Aber die Tatsachen wollen wir ins Auge fassen, und zwar so, daß dieses Die-Tatsachen-ins-Auge-Fassen zugleich zeigt, wie man über äußere Dinge urteilen muß, wenn man sich vorbereiten will, auch über okkulte Dinge richtige Vorstellungen zu gewinnen. Okkulte Dinge muß man in ihrer Realität fassen; da kann man mit Formalurteilen nicht auskommen. Daher muß man sich gewöhnen, auch bei äußeren Dingen, so gut es geht, zu versuchen, die Tatsachen zusammenzuhalten.

Nun, ich könnte lange Auseinandersetzungen machen; über diese Frage allein könnte man tagelang reden. Erst müßte, wenn es sich darum handelte, eine juristische Grundlage zu schaffen - denn wenn die Neutralität verletzt sein soll, so muß sie vorhanden sein -, die Frage beantwortet werden, ob die Neutralität Belgiens vorhanden war in der Zeit, als sie angeblich verletzt worden ist. Da spiele ich nicht an auf Dokumente, die während des Krieges gefunden worden sind, darüber wollen wir nicht diskutieren, denn das ist etwas, was diskutabel ist, worüber man verschiedener Meinung sein kann. Aber wenn es sich um eine Diskussion handelte, so würde man, wenn man nun sachlich alles, was man über solche Fragen vorbringen kann, ins Auge faßte, wahrscheinlich doch mit demselben Gewichte, mit dem man sonst im Leben Dinge beurteilt, sagen müssen: Seit der Besitzergreifung des Kongos durch Belgien kann gar nicht die Rede davon sein, daß die alte Neutralitätsformel von 1839 noch gilt; denn wenn so neue Verhältnisse eintreten, wie, daß ein Staat in internationale Beziehungen eintritt mit der Möglichkeit, so weite Gebiete wie den Kongo frei zu verschenken oder zu verkaufen oder sonst irgendwie mit andern Staaten in Beziehung zu bringen, so ist der Begriff der Neutralität durchlöchert.

Ich weiß schon, daß 1885 auch der Kongo neutral erklärt worden ist; aber es würde die Frage zu entscheiden sein, ob das nicht anfechtbar ist. Ich will aber gar nichts entscheiden, sondern Sie nur aufmerksam machen auf die Schwierigkeiten, die vorliegen, und darauf, daß es nicht so leicht ist, sich über solche Dinge ein wirklich objektives Urteil zu bilden. Von diesem Kaliber könnte man noch manches anführen; hier beginnen also schon die Schwierigkeiten. Wir wollen auch darüber nicht diskutieren, inwieweit, da Deutschland erst 1871 begründet worden ist, das alte Abkommen von 1839 nun noch gültig war. Aber auf alles das will ich nur aufmerksam machen als auf etwas, was eben auch in Betracht kommt. Denn in den objektiven Gang der Ereignisse fließen nicht nur die phantastischen Begriffe ein, die man sich formal macht, sondern es fließen schon die tatsächlichen Dinge ein; ohne daß der Mensch etwas dazu tut, fließen die tatsächlichen Dinge ein.

Ist es nun aber wirklich wahr, daß der deutsche Botschafter etwas zu einer Frage gemacht hat, was eigentlich eine Selbstverständlichkeit hätte sein sollen, indem er gefragt hat, ob Großbritannien, wenn Deutschland sein Versprechen von 1839 hält -— wo es allerdings noch kein Deutschland gab! -, sich neutral verhalten würde? Die belgische Neutralität ist eben früher nicht als selbstverständlich angesehen worden. Das bezeugt folgendes: Als der Krieg 1870 zwischen Preußen, den verbündeten deutschen Ländern und Frankreich losbrach, kam ein Übereinkommen zustande zwischen Großbritannien unter dem Außenminister Gladstone und Deutschland auf der einen Seite und zwischen Großbritannien und Frankreich auf der andern Seite, indem mit jedem dieser Länder ein Vertrag abgeschlossen wurde, auf Grund dessen Großbritannien neutral bleiben würde, wenn die beiden andern Staaten die Neutralität Belgiens respektierten.

Großbritannien war also im Jahre 1870 in ganz genau dem gleichen Fall, hat sich dazumal aber nicht auf die Grundposition gestellt, daß ja das alte Abkommen von 1839 unbedingte Gültigkeit habe, sondern es hat für den konkreten Fall wirklich in die eine Waagschale geworfen die Neutralität Belgiens, in die andere die Neutralität Großbritanniens. Wenn ein Präjudiz da ist, so kann man nicht sagen, daß dann in einer späteren Zeit nicht in der gleichen Weise verfahren werden dürfe. Erinnern wir uns daher an das, was ich öfter betont habe: Im Leben, das sich durch die Geschichte hinzieht, ist Kontinuität; die Dinge hängen zusammen. So wenig wie man als einzelner Mensch später etwas tun kann, was dem Vorhergegangenen widerspricht, so wenig man etwas ungeschehen machen kann, ebenso ist es im Leben der Völker. Es kann nicht etwas als selbstverständlich hingestellt werden, was vorher nicht als selbstverständlich galt.

Auch das ist etwas, was bedacht werden muß. Aber selbst wenn die Sache so einfach läge, daß man nur sagen könnte: Es ist ja selbstverständlich, daß der Vertrag von 1839 gilt, deshalb brauchte von Großbritannien kein Gegenengagement gefordert zu werden - so ist darauf zu erwidern, daß damals die Initiative von Großbritannien selbst ausgegangen ist; Großbritannien frug bei Frankreich auf der einen, Deutschland auf der andern Seite an, ob sie die Neutralität respektieren würden. Damals wurden also Besprechungen über die Neutralität eingeleitet. Wenn man eine Besprechung einleitet, so kann man daran weitere Auseinandersetzungen knüpfen. |

Nun kann man noch das Folgende sagen. Wie gesagt, ich verteidige nicht die Neutralitätsverletzung, das ist nicht meines Amtes, aber ich kann sagen: Wenn die Neutralität Belgiens dadurch, daß Großbritannien mit Ja geantwortet hätte, nicht verletzt worden wäre, dann wäre die ganze Sache im Westen anders verlaufen. — Aber ich bin bei diesem Satze nicht stehengeblieben, sondern ich habe ausdrücklich hinzugesetzt: Außerdem wurde von deutscher Seite das Anerbieten gemacht, Frankreich und seinen Kolonien nichts anzutun, wenn England neutral bleiben würde. Und als auch darüber keine positive Antwort gegeben worden ist, wurde die weitere Frage gestellt, welches nun die Bedingungen seien, unter denen England neutral bleiben würde. Das heißt: England wurde zugestanden, selbst die Bedingungen zu stellen, unter denen es neutral bleiben würde. Das alles war fertig am 2. August, das alles war am 1. August geschehen. Das alles wurde aber ausgeschlagen. Großbritannien wollte überhaupt keine Antwort geben auf irgendwelche Anfragen nach dieser Seite. So daß man schon sagen kann: Hätte Großbritannien irgendeine Antwort gegeben, dann - das zeigt schon dieser äußere Verlauf der Geschichte - wäre die ganze Sache im Westen anders verlaufen.

Ich bin auch dabei nicht stehen geblieben, sondern habe Ihnen gesagt: Ich weiß auch aus andern Voraussetzungen heraus, daß sich sogar der ganze Krieg mit Frankreich hätte vermeiden lassen, wenn Großbritannien die entsprechende Antwort gegeben hätte. - Daß andere, tiefere Gründe dafür vorliegen, daß es nicht geschehen ist, das gehört wiederum auf eine andere Waagschale. Aber wenn man urteilen will über dasjenige, was als Urteil durch die Welt geschwirrt ist in den letzten zweieinhalb Jahren, dann muß man diese Dinge ganz sorgfältig in Erwägung ziehen. Denn es gibt heute noch zahlreiche Leute, welche glauben, daß England in den Krieg gezogen sei wegen der Verletzung der belgischen Neutralität. Es hätte aber diese gerade dadurch vermeiden können, daß es nicht in den Krieg gezogen wäre!

Nun könnte man sagen: Ja, aber es wäre der ganze Stand des Krieges im Westen auch anders geworden, wenn Deutschland die Neutralität Belgiens nicht verletzt hätte. Nun, dann unterscheidet man aber nicht zwischen dem, was korrekt, juristisch-formal ist, und demjenigen, was nun einmal zusammenhängt mit der Tragik der Weltgeschichte. Darauf kommt vieles an, daß man das Tragische von dem Formal-Richtigen zu unterscheiden vermag. Gewiß wäre manches anders geschehen. Was wäre anders geschehen? Ohne daß man irgendwie, bitte, Moralisches jetzt ins Urteil mischt, betrachten wir, was anders geschehen wäre.

Nehmen wir also an: Trotzdem Großbritannien sich in keiner Weise engagiert hatte, sondern auf die Gefahr hin, daß es in jedem Momente hätte in den Krieg eingreifen können, wäre die Neutralität Belgiens respektiert worden. So wie die Dinge lagen, war es bei dem Verhalten Großbritanniens — das muß jeder sehen, der die Dinge prüft; nicht bloß das Blaubuch, sondern alle Akten müssen dann geprüft werden -, es war nun einmal ganz ausgeschlossen, daß der Krieg im Westen nicht ausbrach. Ob er bei der Stimmung in Frankreich überhaupt zu vermeiden gewesen wäre, darüber läßt sich vielleicht diskutieren — aber kaum! Doch nehmen wir an, es wäre durch das Verhalten Großbritanniens der Krieg im Westen doch entbrannt, was wäre dann geschehen, wenn die Neutralität Belgiens respektiert worden wäre? Wie gesagt, kein moralisches Urteil soll gefällt werden, weder nach der einen, noch nach der andern Richtung.

Nun, das wäre geschehen, daß die weitaus größte Hauptmasse des so vielfach angeklagten deutschen Heeres sich in den westlichen französischen Festungen verfangen hätte und verbraucht worden wäre. Und da trotz der Phrase vom preußischen Militarismus tatsächlich das französische Heer kaum weniger stark ist als das deutsche, auch vor dem Krieg kaum weniger stark war als das deutsche — die Zahlen sind fast ganz gleich -, so ist es ganz selbstverständlich, daß das deutsche Heer im Westen aufgebraucht worden wäre, und die Invasion vom Osten, die im August-September begann, im ausgiebigsten Maße eingetreten wäre. Denn eine Unmöglichkeit wäre es gewesen — so sagten sich die Sachverständigen -, im Westen den Krieg zu führen, ohne fast das ganze deutsche Heer dauernd zu engagieren. Das heißt, man hätte Deutschland preisgeben müssen, weil vom Osten die Invasion gekommen wäre.

So lagen die Dinge. Man kann sagen, das könnte ein falsches strategisches Urteil gewesen sein. Das kann man heute nicht mehr sagen; darüber konnte man in den ersten Monaten des Krieges diskutieren; jetzt nicht mehr. Denn nach dem mißglückten Versuch, der vor Verdun gemacht wurde, ist der Beweis dafür erbracht, daß diejenigen Recht hatten, die dazumal sagten: Das deutsche Heer braucht sich auf, wenn es ganz im Westen verwendet wird.

Man hatte also die Wahl, Deutschland das Todesurteil zu sprechen, oder eben das Tragische auf sich zu nehmen, durch Belgien einzubrechen, was der einzige Ausweg war für den Fall, daß der Krieg im Westen überhaupt nicht zu vermeiden war; denn im Osten war er sicher nicht zu vermeiden! Und wenn einer heute sagt, er wäre zu vermeiden gewesen, müßte er die Stirne haben, zu gleicher Zeit ja und nein zu sagen. Gäbe es Menschen, die in Anbetracht der geringen Begabung der heutigen Menschen, auch nur darüber nachzudenken, ob etwas wahr sein kann oder nicht, die Stirne haben, ja und nein zu gleicher Zeit zu sagen, so würde das zum Beispiel so lauten: Wir sind von den Mittelmächten überfallen worden, an uns liegt nicht die Schuld, den Krieg begonnen zu haben; aber wir werden diesen Krieg nicht früher beschließen, als bis wir unser Kriegsziel: die Eroberung von dem oder jenem - erreicht haben!

Da haben Sie ja und nein zugleich! Wir sind nicht diejenigen, die etwas wollen, die andern nur wollen etwas, die andern wollen erobern, deshalb haben sie uns überfallen; aber wir werden diesen Krieg nicht schließen, bis wir unser seit langem bestehendes Ziel — die und die Eroberung zu machen - erreicht haben! Man sollte es nicht glauben, daß es Menschen gibt, die die Stirne haben, ja und nein zu gleicher Zeit zu sagen. Vielleicht werden Sie in diesen Tagen entdecken, daß es einen Menschen gibt, der in dieser Zeit ja und nein zu gleicher Zeit sagt. Es ist dieses wohl das schlimmste Dokument, das überhaupt sich in der neueren Zeit an die Öffentlichkeit gewagt hat, weil es eine Zerklüftung alles logischen Sinnes darstellt. Und das hängt gerade zusammen mit dem Karma unserer Zeit.

So also handelt es sich darum, von dem Logisch-Formaljuristischen abzutrennen das Tragische, und nicht in den sonderbaren Wahn zu verfallen, daß es in der Maja, das heißt in der Welt des physischen Planes, möglich ist, daß Wirklichkeiten im Sinne des bloß Formal-Logischen sich vollziehen. Aber sehen wir weiter: Es kam ja nicht darauf an, dies oder jenes zu rechtfertigen oder zu bekämpfen, sondern es kam darauf an, zu zeigen, daß es unberechtigt ist, vor die Welt hinauszuposaunen währenddem diejenigen, über die es hinausposaunt wird, sich nicht verteidigen können -, es sei dieser Krieg von der einen Seite geführt worden wegen der Verletzung der Neutralität Belgiens, und nicht zu sagen, daß man diese Verletzung der belgischen Neutralität hätte verhindern können. Die einzige andere Möglichkeit, der Tragik zu entkommen, war, daß England neutral geblieben wäre. Denn niemand darf, wenn er ein Staatsmann ist, von vornherein das Todesurteil des eigenen Staates aussprechen.

Billig ist es natürlich, wenn alle diejenigen, welche eben billige Urteile haben wollen, sagen: Verträge müssen gehalten werden. Nun, meine lieben Freunde, wenn man Ihnen ein Verzeichnis aller nichtgehaltenen Verträge im öffentlichen und im privaten Leben geben und dann zeigen würde, was durch die nichtgehaltenen Verträge bewirkt worden ist in der Welt, dann würde man erst sehen, welche Kräfte in der Maja eigentlich die wirksamen sind.

Aber hat man denn auf jener Seite, wo man jenes Ja nicht gesagt hat, eigentlich so recht ein gutes Gewissen gehabt? Die Tatsachen sprechen eigentlich nicht dafür; denn als später die Frage wegen dieser Besprechung zwischen dem deutschen Botschafter und Sir Edward Grey wiederum auf die Tagesordnung gesetzt war und man sagte, daß es England ja in der Hand gehabt hätte, die Neutralität Belgiens zu retten, da verteidigte sich die englische Regierung; aber wohlweislich nicht damit — dazumal waren in der englischen Regierung doch zu gute Staatsmänner -, daß sie sich auf das bloß Formaljuristische zurück zog. Trotzdem ich nichts zurücknehme von dem Urteil, das nicht ich, sondern seine englischen Kollegen über Sir Edward Grey gefällt haben, und das ich Ihnen angeführt habe, war er doch ein zu guter Staatsmann, um sich einfach mit der Pose zu begnügen und zu sagen: 1839 war der Vertrag geschlossen worden, also war Deutschland verpflichtet, die Neutralität zu halten, auch wenn England eine ausweichende Antwort gibt. Das haben die englischen Staatsmänner nicht getan, sondern sie haben sich in anderer Weise herausgeredet. Grey hat gesagt: Lichnowsky hat das zwar dazumal gefragt, aber er hat es als Privarmann gefragt, nicht im Auftrage der deutschen Regierung; hätte er es im Auftrage der deutschen Regierung gesagt, so wäre es anders gewesen. Lichnowsky, der deutsche Botschafter, hat den besten Willen gehabt, den Frieden im Westen zu halten; aber hinter ihm stand nicht die deutsche Regierung!

Nun denken Sie sich: In jedem Privatfall nennt man dieses mit vollem Rechte eine faule Ausrede, in ganz gewöhnlichem Sinn eine faule Ausrede! Denn die ganze Welt weiß, daß wenn der Botschafter irgendeines Staates zu dem fremden Minister des Auswärtigen redet, er im Auftrag und mit der vollen Gewalt seines Staates redet, und sein Staat kann gar nicht anders, wenn er sich nicht bei der ganzen Welt unmöglich machen will, als dasjenige ratifizieren, was sein Botschafter sagt. Das ist also eine ganz faule Ausrede gewesen, zu der gegriffen wurde, weil man sich nicht auf die Position zurückziehen wollte, einfach zu sagen: es war korrekt. Man fühlte eben schon das Gewicht der Tatsache, daß England die Neutralitätsverletzung hätte verhindern können, ganz gleichgültig, ob sie von der andern Seite berechtigt war oder nicht. Wenn irgendwo eine Lawine stürzt und einer oben hält sie nicht zurück, weil er aus irgendeinem Grunde gezwungen ist, es nicht zu tun, den man berechtigt finden mag oder nicht, jedenfalls auch nicht berechtigt finden mag, und der, der etwas weiter unten ist, hält sie auch nicht zurück, und zwar mit der Begründung, der obere hätte sie zurückhalten müssen — nein, eine solche Argumentation geht nicht! Aber wenn man diese Dinge beurteilen will, handelt es sich immer auch darum, sie etwas zu wägen. Da muß man zum Beispiel wieder folgendes in Betracht ziehen:

Wann ist denn das geschehen? Wir sind jetzt am 2. August. Am 2. August bat der König von Belgien England um Intervention, das heißt, er bat, bei Deutschland zu intervenieren. Der belgische König betrachtete es also als eine Selbstverständlichkeit, daß England mit Deutschland über die Neutralität Belgiens verhandelt. Aber England tat es zunächst nicht, wartete einen vollen Tag, an dem Sir Edward Grey in London zu seinem Parlament sprach, wobei er die ganze Besprechung mit dem deutschen Botschafter verschwieg, kein Sterbenswort davon sagte. Hätte er etwas davon gesagt, dann wäre die Parlamentssitzung dazumal anders verlaufen!

Nachdem die Besprechung mit dem deutschen Botschafter stattgefunden hatte, nachdem der König von Belgien die Intervention Englands angerufen hatte, wurde also in England gewartet, es wurde nichts getan. Auf was wurde denn eigentlich gewartet? Gewartet wurde darauf, daß die Neutralitätsverlerzung Belgiens fertig war! Denn solange sie nicht fertig war, hätte die Geschichte noch immer so gehen können, daß sie nicht geschah; denn es waren mächtige Kräfte daran, sie nicht geschehen zu lassen, und sie hing an einem Faden. Und wäre die Bitte des Königs von Belgien zur rechten Zeit erfüllt worden, hätte England interveniert, dann ist es eine Frage, ob diese Neutralitätsverletzung geschehen wäre. Aber wann hat Grey interveniert? Am vierten, als die deutschen Heere bereits auf dem Boden Belgiens standen! Warum hat er gewartet, selbst nach der Bitte des Königs von Belgien? Das sind Fragen, die gestellt werden müssen.

Alles dieses könnte noch durch vieles vermehrt werden, wenn man die Dokumente wirklich, ich möchte sagen, kreuzweise studiert; es ist aber nicht nötig, denn ich glaube Ihnen klargemacht zu haben, daß die Dinge seit Jahren wohl vorbereitet waren. Man braucht sich daher gar nicht zu verwundern, daß sie in der letzten Zeit so verlaufen sind. Selbstverständlich, wenn man die Dokumente einseitig studiert, so kommt nur Formales dabei heraus.

Ich wollte also nicht nach der einen oder nach der andern Seite Partei ergreifen, sondern nur zeigen, was nötig ist, um ein Urteil zu bekommen über solche Dinge. Denn viel eher möchte ich, im Sinne des Nervs der Geisteswissenschaft, wo ja ein hoher Gesichtspunkt angestrebt wird, davon abhalten, leichten Herzens abfällige Urteile über das zu fällen, was in dem Aufeinanderprallen von Staaten in der Weltgeschichte geschieht, denn das ist es: nicht Völker führen Krieg, Staaten führen Krieg!

Man bedenkt auf diesem Gebiete viel zu wenig, daß die Kräfte des Werdens, aber auch die Kräfte des Zerstörens, des Abbaues da sein müssen im Weltengeschehen. Ist es denn beim einzelnen Menschen anders? Indem wir unsere Fähigkeiten im Laufe unseres Lebens entwikkeln, bauen wir unseren Leib ab, zerstören wir unseren Leib; und ich werde Ihnen morgen zeigen, was für ein tiefer Zusammenhang besteht zwischen unserem seelischen Leben und der Belladonna, dem Stechapfel, den Giften, die Sie draußen in der Welt finden. Das sind allerdings Wahrheiten, die in die Tiefen der Dinge hineingreifen. Aber man muß den Mut haben, diese Wahrheiten auch in der Weltgeschichte geltend zu machen. Daher ist es viel besser, zu verstehen, als zu urteilen nach irgendwelchen sogenannten Normen. Das Verurteilen von Staaten und Völkern, das steht in der Regel auf recht schwachen Füßen. Man muß sich schon deshalb, um endlich in die geistige Welt aufsteigen und dort etwas erkennen zu können, daran gewöhnen, ohne Kritik, die auf ein ganz anderes Feld gehört, einfach die Tatsachen zu betrachten; erst dann versteht man, welche Kräfte in die Weltenentwickelung eingreifen.

Betrachten wir von diesem Gesichtspunkte aus sine ira — aber ja nicht sine studio — gewisse Vorgänge, die ich bisher fast nur betrachtet gehört habe vom moralischen Standpunkte aus. Dieser muß gewiß auf die Handlungen des einzelnen Menschen angewendet werden, ist aber eine Absurdität, wenn man ihn auf das Leben der Staaten anwendet. Vielleicht wird es sogar der eine oder der andere sonderbar finden, wenn ich diese Vorgänge, wie Nietzsche gesagt hat, «moralinfrei» betrachten möchte; aber man kann sie schon moralinfrei betrachten.

Das mächtige Britische Reich enthält als einen seiner hauptsächlichsten Faktoren die Herrschaft über Indien. Diese Herrschaft über Indien hat mancherlei Stufen des Vorlebens. Sie ist ausgegangen von der Ostindischen Gesellschaft, einer Handelsgesellschaft, der zunächst die Privilegien gegeben worden sind, für England allein mit Indien Handel zu treiben. Und so entwickelte sich im Laufe der Zeit aus den verschiedenerlei Rechten der Ostindischen Gesellschaft kontinuierlich, sachgemäß, Englands Herrschaft über Indien, sogar das englische Kaisertum Indien. Es entwickelte sich daraus auch, und zwar schon in der Ostindischen Gesellschaft, Englands Handel mit China. Seit dem Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts war übrigens schon ein eifriger Handel zwischen Indien und China betrieben worden, und die englisch-ostindische Gesellschaft war damals schon beteiligt. Im weiteren Verlaufe aber wurde ja überhaupt England der Erste Kaufmann der Welt.

Nun kam mit diesem Einverleiben des Elementes des Handeltreibens im Orient ein anderes damit in Berührung, es durchkreuzte sich damit ein anderes. Seit dem 17. Jahrhundert verbreitete sich in China die Sitte des Opiumrauchens. Wahrscheinlich haben die Araber die Chinesen das Opiumrauchen gelehrt, denn vor dem 17. Jahrhundert waren die Chinesen keine Opiumraucher. Opiumrauchen bedeutet für die Menschen, die es tun, einen fragwürdigen, aber starken Genuß; denn der Opiumraucher verschafft sich die mannigfaltigsten, aus dem Astralischen herausgeborenen Phantasien, in denen er lebt; es ist wirklich eine andere Welt, die auf rein materiellem Wege erreicht wird.

Als nun die Leute, die in der angegebenen Weise von England aus mit China Handel trieben, bemerkten, daß unter den Chinesen immer mehr und mehr die Sitte, die Leidenschaft des Opiumrauchens überhandnahm, da richteten sie in Bengalen, in Indien, weite Mohnkulturen ein, um das Opium zu gewinnen; denn es weiß jeder, der die Gesetze einer solchen Sache kennt, daß nicht nur die Nachfrage das Angebot erzeugt,sondern daß umgekehrt das Angebot auch wiederum die Nachfrage hervorbringt. Wenn man recht viel anbietet, dann entsteht nach diesem oder jenem Artikel ein besonders starkes Bedürfnis, das weiß jeder Nationalökonom. Und auch dafür wurde nun der Ostindischen Gesellschaft von England aus das Monopol gegeben, in China das Opium einzuführen. Und je mehr man einführte, desto mehr verbreitete sich in China dieses Übel des Opiumrauchens. Seit 1772 wurden jährlich mehrere tausend Kisten eingeführt, jede Kiste zum Betrag von etwa viertausendachthundert Mark.

Nun, ich wähle gerade dieses Beispiel, weil so etwas wirklich einen tieferen kulturhistorischen Untergrund hat, wenn man alle Faktoren in Erwägung zieht. Denken Sie doch nur einmal, daß Sie mit dem Einimpfen des Opiums, da es auf die Seele wirkt, wirklich in das ganze geistige Leben eines Volkes oder derjenigen Menschen, denen Sie das Opium liefern, eingreifen. Ich kann dieses Beispiel wählen, denn es fällt mir gar nicht ein, zu behaupten, irgend jemand habe unrecht, der Handel treiben will; der Handel muß in der Welt frei sein. Das ist auch ein berechtigter Grundsatz. Und jemandem ohne weiteres unrecht zu geben, der in Bengalen Mohnkulturen macht, um daraus Opium für China zu gewinnen und Gold dafür einzunehmen, das fällt mir gar nicht ein.

Aber die Chinesen sahen die armen ausgemergelten Opiumraucher. Der Opiumraucher kommt allmählich ganz herunter und es war nach und nach zu bemerken, welchen Einfluß für das Dekadentwerden weiter Schichten der Bevölkerung in China dieses Opiumrauchen hat. Als die Chinesen das bemerkten, war die Folge davon, daß sie 1794 das Opium verboten. Sie wollten kein Opium mehr in ihr Land hereinlassen.

Nun, wie das so geht: Verbote hindern manchmal nicht den Handel mit dem, was verboten ist; man findet Mittel und Wege, die Sache doch zu verhandeln. Und damals stellte es sich heraus, daß — trotzdem formal das Verbot bestand, trotzdem die Chinesen ein Gesetz erlassen hatten, daß Opium nicht eingeführt werden darf - der Opiumhandel doch blühte. Es gibt ja allerlei Dinge; Bestechungen sind nur eine Seite der Sache, es gibt manches andere damit Verwandte. Nun, kurz, der Opiumhandel blühte, und war von einigen tausend Kisten im Jahre 1773 auf dreißigtausend Kisten im Jahre 1837 gestiegen - in wenigen Jahrzehnten. Das, was dafür erlöst wurde, etwa dreißig Millionen Franken im Jahre, floß nach Britisch-Indien.

Als die Sache so überhandgenommen hatte, wußten sich die Chinesen nicht mehr anders zu helfen, als dadurch, daß sie die Opiumladungen, die ankamen, mit Beschlag belegen ließen. Nach Kanton, wo die Opiumladungen vorzugsweise ankamen, schickten sie einen tüchtigen Chinesen, einen energischen Mann, Lin mit Namen, der die Opiumkisten, die ankamen, konfiszierte. Die Engländer hatten als Konsulatsbeamten in China auch einen sehr tüchtigen Mann, den Kapitän Elliot, der war energisch, es gelang ihm sogar einmal, mit einem Kriegsschiff die chinesische Blockade zu durchbrechen.

Nun galt es, sich aus der Affäre zu ziehen: Die Opiumkisten waren da, ganze Mengen. Aber die Chinesen gaben jetzt zunächst nicht nach es war eine fatale Situation. Da ließ sich Elliot, da er das konnte, 20283 Kisten auf den Besitz seiner eigenen Person übertragen, signieren, und übergab sie der chinesischen Regierung. So war zunächst einmal ein Ausweg geschaffen.

Aber das schuf den Opiumhandel nicht aus der Welt. Von der einen Seite war ja gar nicht der Wille dazu da, den Opiumhandel aus der Welt zu schaffen. Da wußten sich die Chinesen nicht anders zu helfen, als ein neues Gesetz zu machen, und dieses Gesetz war jetzt sehr strenge. Lin verfügte, daß alle beim Opiumhandel betroffenen Personen von chinesischen Gerichten mit dem Tod bestraft werden sollten, und daß die Schiffe fortan alle mit Beschlag belegt werden sollen. Die Chinesen hatten also nun in Aussicht gestellt: wenn einer mit Opium handelt, wird er vor ein chinesisches Gericht gestellt und mit dem Tod bestraft.

Man sagte nun nicht etwa auf britischer Seite: Da muß man doch, damit keiner um einen Kopf kürzer gemacht wird «ober der Krempe», den Opiumhandel unterlassen; o nein, so sagte man nicht, sondern man sagte — ich führe es Ihnen wörtlich an —: «Mit einer derartigen Forderung hat die chinesische Regierung jedes Gefühl der Sicherheit endgültig zerstört.» Zunächst wurden die in China befindlichen Engländer aufgefordert, China zu verlassen, und von Indien her wurde bewaffnete Hilfe gefordert. Man besetzte sozusagen das Gebiet. Und da die Chinesen ziemlich tapfer auf ihrem Standpunkt beharrten und doch jeden köpfen wollten, der Opiumhandel trieb, so trieb man scheinbar keinen Opiumhandel; und da die Chinesen die britischen Schiffe mit Opium mit Beschlag belegen wollten, schickte man scheinbar keine Schiffe hin. Man verlud nämlich in Indien das Opium auf amerikanische Schiffe! Und auf amerikanischen Schiffen kam jetzt ebensoviel, ja sogar — die Dinge steigerten sich — immer mehr Opium in China an.

Elliot, der Beamte, sagte: Man sieht nun deutlich die Frage, um die es sich bei unserem Streitfall handelt: ob China mit uns einen ehrlichen und wachsenden Handelsverkehr haben oder ob es die Schuld tragen will, daß seine Küsten der offenen Freibeuterei anheimfallen. — Der Hafen von Kanton wurde mit indischer Hilfe blockiert. Bei den Balgereien, Katzbalgereien könnte man sagen, die sich dabei entwickelten, wurde ein Chinese von einem englischen Matrosen erschlagen. Selbstverständlich forderte die chinesische Regierung die Auslieferung des englischen Matrosen. Aber die Sache war so, daß die Chinesen ab und zu immer wiederum bei dem Handel müde wurden, und so wollten sie eines Tages irgendwie Recht haben, aber doch den Engländern nicht unrecht geben. Das kann man nämlich auch machen! Nun ertrank dazumal zufällig ein englischer Matrose, und da kam Elliot, der ein sehr gescheiter Mann war, mit Lin, dem Vertreter der chinesischen Regierung, überein, den ertrunkenen Matrosen als denjenigen zu konstatieren, der den Chinesen erschlagen hatte. Und man lieferte den ertrunkenen Matrosen aus, und damit war dieSache zunächst beigelegt. Aber alle die Dinge führten 1840 endlich zum Krieg zwischen England und China.

So war der Hergang ein ganz notwendiger, der nicht anders hat kommen können. Man hat aber auf das Seelenleben von der materiellen Seite her einen großen Einfluß ausgeübt, und es spielte sich etwas ab, was mit dem ganzen Weltprozeßß zusammenhängt. In England «wußte» man, um was es sich handelte! Was wußte man denn? Ja, in England wußte man, daß man von China aus England «überfallen» habe — so sagte man nämlich dazumal -, und zwar aus dem Grunde, weil die Chinesen nicht leiden wollten, daß England in Indien seineOpiumkulturen, Mohnkulturen hat, und weil die Chinesen selber ihren Mohn pflanzen wollen. So sagte man. Das awußte» man ganz genau, und dann wußte man noch, daß die Chinesen Barbaren sind! Das war es, was man dazumal in England wußte. Lord Palmerston sagte: Schutz der Mohnkulturen in Indien müsse Platz greifen, und um den Schutz der Mohnkulturen in Indien handele es sich; und ferner handele es sich darum, daß die Nationalökonomen in China ihr Geld nicht aus dem Land heraus lassen wollten, das von Rechts wegen aber nach Indien gehörte. — Das alles waren Dinge, die man in Europa wohl einsah!

Nun wütete der Krieg. Im Kriege geschehen selbstverständlich Greuel. Greuel sind auf chinesischer, Greuel sind auch auf englischer Seite begangen worden. Man hat dazumal ganze Dörfer so gefunden, daß die weiblichen Einwohner der Häuser in ihrem Blute schwammen; die chinesischen Männer hatten tapfer gekämpft, und als sie sahen, daß sie sich selbst töten mußten, oder sich ergeben, da töteten sie zuerst ihre Frauen und Kinder. Es war ein trauriger Krieg, dieser Krieg 1840. Elliot, der diesen ganzen Krieg mitangesehen und eigentlich auf dem Gewissen hatte, kam eines Tages in einen merkwürdigen Ruf, der vielleicht begründet war: er kam in den Ruf, daß er Neigung habe, mit den Chinesen Friedensverhandlungen einzuleiten. Da wurde er gestürzt. Und es kam - nicht Lloyd George! Pottinger hieß er dazumal, es kam ein gewisser Pottinger an die Stelle des Elliot, der Friedensverhandlungen einleiten wollte. Der Krieg sollte bis zum bitteren Ende geführt werden, das heißt, bis die Insel Chusan, die Städte Ningpo und Amoy genommen waren, bis die Engländer bis Nanking vorgerückt waren, und bis 1842 China allen Mut verloren hatte. Hongkong kam auch an England, fünf Häfen in China wurden schrankenlos dem Opiumhandel geöffnet, britische Konsuln wurden eingesetzt, siebenundneunzigeinhalb Millionen Kriegsentschädigung, also außer den früheren von den Chinesen — wie soll man sagen? — erpreßten fünfundzwanzig Millionen will ich nicht sagen, aber ein anderes Wort möchte ich dafür haben, das ich im Augenblicke nicht finde -, außer den schon früher erpreßten fünfundzwanzig Millionen kamen jetzt noch siebenundneunzigeinhalb Millionen Kriegsentschädigungen dazu.

Wie gesagt, es fällt mir nicht im Traume ein, diesen Vorgang als etwas anderes denn eine historische Notwendigkeit aufzufassen. Es fällt mir nicht im Traume ein, jemanden anzuklagen. Denn wer Notwendigkeiten einsehen kann, wer einsehen kann, wie die Dinge geschehen auf dem physischen Plane, der weiß, daß es solche Dinge im normalen physischen Verlauf der Weltentwickelung eben durchaus gibt. Und das, was aus dem Opium gezogen worden ist, steckt im englischen Nationalvermögen, und im englischen Nationalvermögen steckt ein guter Teil englischer Kultur. Und ebenso, wie es Unsinn wäre, die englische Kultur zu unterschätzen, ebenso ist es Unsinn, die Notwendigkeit zu bezweifeln, mit der so etwas geschehen ist, wenn auch vielleicht das kleine satirische Nachspiel, das sich hinterher noch ergeben hat, nicht ganz zu den Notwendigkeiten gehört:

Als die erste Rate der siebenundneunzigeinhalb Millionen Kriegsentschädigung einlief, da fanden sich nämlich Leute, die sagten: Wir sind diejenigen, denen zuerst ihre Opiumkisten abgenommen worden sind, und das, was wir dazumal als Entschädigung erhielten, entspricht nur zum allergeringsten Teil dem, was wir verloren haben. Es handelte sich also um Leute, die dazumal das Opium nach China verkauft hatten, denen das Opium abgekauft worden war, und die eine kleine Entschädigung abbekommen hatten. Jetzt sagten sie: Es hat sich doch gezeigt, daß man es in unserem Vaterland als berechtigt anerkennt, Opium nach China zu verkaufen; da müssen wir entschieden den Anspruch erheben, daß uns die volle Entschädigung gegeben wird, denn wir haben ja nichts getan als das, wofür unser Vaterland jetzt den Krieg geführt hat.

Nachdem der Krieg gewonnen war, betrachteten die Herren es also als ihr gutes Recht, eine volle Entschädigung zu erhalten. Da zog der betreffende Minister, der die Sache zu entscheiden hatte, eine Note aus der Tasche, die er seinerzeit an den Kapitän Elliot gegeben hatte, und in dieser Note stand, daß es der englischen Regierung niemals beifallen wird, solange die chinesischen Gesetze den Opiumhandel verbieten, irgend jemanden dafür zu entschädigen, wenn er beim Opiumhandel Verluste erleide. - Da dazumal die chinesischen Gesetze in Geltung waren — so sagte man -, so habt ihr nichts zu verlangen, denn ihr habt die chinesischen Gesetze übertreten, die erst durch den Krieg aus der Welt geschafft worden sind.

Ob dieses Nachspiel auch zu den historischen Notwendigkeiten gehört, das soll nicht entschieden werden. Aber notwendig ist es doch, auf Tatsachen hinzublicken. Wir stehen beim Beginne des englisch-chinesischen Krieges 1840 am Ausgangspunkt gerade jener Zeit, von der wir oftmals gesprochen haben. Ich habe Ihnen gerade dieses Jahr angegeben als dasjenige, wo der Materialismus seine Hochflut erleidet. Es ist gut, solche Dinge in ihrer Entwickelung zu begreifen. Und wie gesagt: ebenso wie es ein Unsinn wäre, irgendwie englische Kultur oder englisches Leben, englische Zivilisation zu unterschätzen, so wäre es ein Unsinn, zu glauben, daß so etwas hätte ausbleiben können in dem ganzen Zusammenhang der englischen Entwickelung. Es gehört dazu. Und ein moralisches Urteil über die Sache zu fällen, ist vollständig unrichtig. Denn da würde man in den Fehler verfallen, Gesamtheiten, Gruppen, so zu beurteilen, wie man den Einzelnen beurteilt. Das ist aber gerade dasjenige, was unmöglich ist.

Heute wird dies zwar vielfach behauptet. Ich habe soeben wieder eine Broschüre bekommen - es sind ja jetzt so viele Broschüren, die Frieden machen -, in welcher steht: Die Staaten haben ebenso ihr eigentümliches Denken, Fühlen und Wollen wie das menschliche Individuum. — Das ist natürlich der größte Unsinn, den man sagen kann, weil das, was auf einem andern, einem höheren Plane Wirklichkeit hat, auf den Menschen, dessen Denken, Fühlen und Wollen in der physischen Sphäre liegt, nicht per Analogie einfach übertragen werden darf. Gewiß, sie haben ihre Eigenschaften, die Volksgeister, die Volksseelen; aber so, wie Sie das in dem schon neulich erwähnten Vortragszyklus über die Volksgeister finden. Aber bei Völkern so von Denken, Fühlen und Wollen zu sprechen wie beim einzelnen Menschen, ist einfach ein Unding.

Nun, meine lieben Freunde, ich habe Ihnen heute einige Beispiele anführen wollen aus dem einfachen Grunde, weil es schon notwendig war, durch eklatante Beispiele etwas Material zu gewinnen. Morgen werden wir wiederum an etwas weitergehende Gesichtspunkte anknüpfen.

Twelfth Lecture

Our recent reflections have, on the one hand, tied in with the entire development of humanity insofar as the Mystery of Golgotha has intervened in it. We have thus dealt with what is, so to speak, the highest and most significant aspect of world and human development. On the other hand, it is understandable that we have addressed contemporary phenomena. This was particularly necessary because many of our friends expressed a desire to hear something about these contemporary phenomena. And we must also admit that the seriousness of the times speaks in favor of linking the immediate concrete experiences of the day with what is the nerve, the innermost impulse of our spiritual scientific endeavors. After many considerations, we can say that the reasons why such a catastrophe has come about in human evolution, as it appears around us, lie deep, and that it is actually superficial to look at the causes of our present-day events only in their outermost ramifications, so to speak.

Such superficial observations will never lead to a fruitful understanding of present events. A fruitful understanding is one that enables people to think about how to escape from the catastrophe in which the world finds itself. Therefore, let us consider a few details today; tomorrow I think I will be able to show you an important connection from spiritual science which, I would say, is capable of touching our souls in such a way that we can find ourselves in an active, actively comprehending understanding of things. Let us prepare for this with a few details.

First of all, let me emphasize once again that nothing could be further from my mind than making political observations; that certainly cannot be our task. Our task lies in observing knowledge. Knowledge of the connections that naturally make it necessary to also direct our gaze to individual details. That is why these observations should also be far, far removed from any partisanship. And in this regard, I ask you not to misunderstand me. For whatever position any of us may take with regard to this or that national aspiration, it must not interfere with the deeper foundations of our spiritual endeavors. I would like to say that I only wish to provide food for thought, not to influence anyone's judgment in the slightest.

Misunderstandings can easily arise in such a field, and it seems to me that some of what I have said in my recent remarks has indeed been open to misunderstanding. Therefore, because such misunderstandings can happen to anyone, I would like to point out right away that, for example, when I drew attention to the events surrounding the Belgian neutrality question, I was certainly not trying to defend or attack anything, but merely to state a fact. And when I first made the remark, I did not do so on my own initiative, but in response to the remarks of Georg Brandes, who, in my opinion, had expressed a truly neutral opinion.

For me, these matters were not about assessing this or that measure taken by one side or the other in a political sense, but about emphasizing the importance of the principle of truth in the world, emphasizing that the karma that has been fulfilled in humanity is in many ways connected with the fact that attention to the world of facts attention to the historical and other contexts of life in our materialistic age is not such that truth prevails. And the non-prevalence of truth, the peculiar prevalence of precisely the opposite of truth, the low inclination to seek truth, the low longing for truth—all this is connected with the karma of our time. And this must be studied.

Therefore, when one sees what is being claimed in the very years in which humanity is going through what we now call war, one must not object that this is only being said by newspapers or the like. It is the effects that matter. Things have a powerful effect. If you consider what is being said, how things are understood and presented, then you see in this how that which is truly not in the direction of truth is at work. And do not believe that thoughts, that assertions, are not objective powers! They are objective, real powers! And it is quite inevitable that they will have their effects, even if they are not translated into outward actions. For the future, what people think is much more important than what they do. For thoughts become deeds in the course of time. We live today from the thoughts of past times; they are fulfilled in the deeds that happen today. And our thoughts, which flood the world, will be discharged in the deeds of the future.

I will now pick up on something that could easily have led to misunderstandings, and I would therefore like to preface our considerations with a few remarks. I mention this in order to show you, by way of a model, how to seek the truth. It could be argued that it would have been sufficient to maintain peace if Sir Edward Grey had answered “yes” to the question posed by the German ambassador in London as to whether England would remain neutral if Germany respected Belgian neutrality. I think it cannot be denied that things would have turned out very differently if Sir Edward Grey had answered yes, because then the violation of Belgium's neutrality would have been avoided.

If you remember everything I have said — and what is being said here must be understood in its nuance — you will see that I have not defended the violation of Belgian neutrality with a single word. I certainly have not done that. I do not need to brand it as a violation of the law, is not necessary — that would be carrying coals to Newcastle, to use the old, hackneyed expression — because the German Chancellor himself admitted at the outset of the war that the violation of Belgian neutrality was a violation of the law, and it cannot be my task to add anything to that or to excuse it in any way. The matter has been acknowledged as a violation of the law by the authoritative, outwardly authoritative side.

However, the fact remains – let us be clear about this today, my dear friends – that on August 1, the British Foreign Minister was asked: Would England remain neutral if Germany did not violate Belgium's neutrality? And this question was answered evasively! The way the question was phrased, no one can doubt that if the answer had been yes at that time, Belgium's neutrality would not have been violated.

Now one could say that Belgium's neutrality had been guaranteed since 1839, and that the situation was such that there was really no need to ask the question, because Germany was obliged to respect Belgium's neutrality. Therefore, on the basis of this respect shown by England, no other respect could have been demanded, no counter-promise for a promise that already existed. Respect for Belgian neutrality could not have been made dependent on England remaining neutral. One could say that the German ambassador only asked: Will England remain neutral if Germany fulfills its promise?

If someone now says that it was formally correct of Sir Edward Grey to give an evasive answer, they are of course right, so obviously right that it is actually superfluous to even comment on it. But the development of world history is never a matter of legal and formal judgments. Such judgments never reflect reality! World history does not proceed in such a way that its reality can be captured in formal judgments. Those who want to make formal judgments make judgments that are divorced from reality; but if they can speak loudly enough, if they can assert themselves, they will always be right, because a reasonable person will not object to the correctness of formal judgments anyway. Formal judgments are also very easy to understand; they just don't capture reality.

Please remember that I emphasized in my last book, “The Riddle of Man,” that judgments are not just about formal correctness, but about how they correspond to reality. What matters is that judgments grasp reality. No one can object to the formal correctness of Sir Edward Grey's answer; we do not want to discuss that at all, it is self-evident. But we want to look at the facts, and in such a way that this looking at the facts also shows how one must judge external things if one wants to prepare oneself to gain correct ideas about occult things. Occult things must be grasped in their reality; formal judgments are not sufficient here. Therefore, we must accustom ourselves to trying, as far as possible, to keep the facts together, even when dealing with external things.

Well, I could engage in lengthy discussions; one could talk for days about this question alone. First, if it were a matter of establishing a legal basis—for if neutrality is to have been violated, it must have existed—the question would have to be answered as to whether Belgium's neutrality existed at the time when it was allegedly violated. I am not referring to documents found during the war; we do not want to discuss that, because it is something that is debatable, something about which opinions may differ. But if this were a matter for discussion, then, taking into account all the facts that can be presented on such questions, one would probably have to say, with the same weight with which one judges things in life, that since Belgium took possession of the Congo, there can be no question of the old formula of neutrality of 1839 still being valid; for when new circumstances arise, such as when a state enters into international relations with the possibility of freely giving away or selling such vast territories as the Congo, or otherwise bringing them into relations with other states, the concept of neutrality is rendered meaningless.

I am aware that the Congo was also declared neutral in 1885, but the question of whether this is contestable would have to be decided. However, I do not wish to decide anything, but merely to draw your attention to the difficulties that exist and to the fact that it is not so easy to form a truly objective judgment on such matters. Many other examples of this caliber could be cited; so here already the difficulties begin. We do not want to discuss the extent to which the old agreement of 1839 was still valid, given that Germany was only founded in 1871. But I only want to draw attention to all this as something that must also be taken into consideration. For it is not only the fantastic ideas that one formally conceives that flow into the objective course of events, but also actual things; without human intervention, actual things flow into it.

But is it really true that the German ambassador made an issue of something that should have been a matter of course by asking whether Great Britain would remain neutral if Germany kept its promise of 1839—when there was no Germany yet, of course! Belgian neutrality was not considered a matter of course in the past. This is evidenced by the following: When war broke out in 1870 between Prussia, the allied German states, and France, an agreement was reached between Great Britain, represented by Foreign Minister Gladstone, and Germany on the one side, and between Great Britain and France on the other, whereby a treaty was concluded with each of these countries on the basis that Great Britain would remain neutral if the other two states respected the neutrality of Belgium.

Great Britain was therefore in exactly the same situation in 1870, but at that time it did not take the fundamental position that the old agreement of 1839 was unconditionally valid, but instead weighed up the neutrality of Belgium on the one hand and the neutrality of Great Britain on the other in the specific case. If there is a precedent, one cannot say that the same course of action cannot be taken at a later date. Let us therefore remember what I have often emphasized: there is continuity in life as it unfolds through history; things are interconnected. Just as little as an individual can later do something that contradicts what has gone before, just as little can one undo something, so it is in the life of nations. Something that was not previously taken for granted cannot be presented as self-evident.

That, too, is something that must be considered. But even if the matter were so simple that one could simply say: It goes without saying that the treaty of 1839 is valid, therefore there was no need to demand a counter-commitment from Great Britain – one would have to reply that at that time the initiative came from Great Britain itself; Great Britain asked France on the one hand and Germany on the other whether they would respect neutrality. At that time, discussions on neutrality were initiated. When you initiate a discussion, you can link further discussions to it.

Now the following can be said. As I have said, I am not defending the violation of neutrality; that is not my job, but I can say that if Belgium's neutrality had not been violated by Great Britain's affirmative answer, the whole situation in the West would have been different. — But I did not stop there; I expressly added: Furthermore, the German side offered not to harm France and its colonies if England remained neutral. And when no positive answer was given to this either, the further question was asked what conditions England would require in order to remain neutral. In other words, England was allowed to set the conditions under which it would remain neutral. All this was finalized on August 2, all this had happened on August 1. But all this was rejected. Great Britain did not want to give any answer whatsoever to any inquiries from this side. So that one can already say: If Great Britain had given any answer, then—as the external course of events already shows—the whole thing would have turned out differently in the West.

I did not stop there, but told you: I also know from other sources that the entire war with France could have been avoided if Great Britain had given the appropriate response. That there are other, deeper reasons why this did not happen is another matter entirely. But if one wants to judge what has been circulating as judgment throughout the world for the last two and a half years, then one must consider these things very carefully. For there are still numerous people today who believe that England went to war because of the violation of Belgian neutrality. But it could have avoided this very thing by not going to war!

Now one could say: Yes, but the whole situation of the war in the West would have been different if Germany had not violated Belgium's neutrality. Well, then one is not distinguishing between what is correct in a legal-formal sense and what is connected with the tragedy of world history. It is very important to be able to distinguish between what is tragic and what is formally correct. Certainly, some things would have happened differently. What would have happened differently? Without mixing morality into the judgment in any way, let us consider what would have happened differently.

Let us assume, then, that despite the fact that Great Britain had not committed itself in any way, but at the risk of having to intervene in the war at any moment, Belgium's neutrality had been respected. As things stood, given the behavior of Great Britain—and this must be recognized by anyone who examines the facts, not just the Blue Book, but all the documents—it was simply impossible for war not to break out in the West. Whether it could have been avoided at all, given the mood in France, is perhaps open to debate—but hardly! But let us assume that, despite Great Britain's behavior, war did break out in the West. What would have happened if Belgium's neutrality had been respected? As I said, no moral judgment is to be made, neither in one direction nor the other.

Well, what would have happened is that the vast majority of the much-maligned German army would have been trapped in the western French fortresses and wiped out. And since, despite the rhetoric about Prussian militarism, the French army is in fact hardly less powerful than the German army, and was hardly less powerful than the German army before the war—the numbers are almost identical—it is quite obvious that the German army in the west would have been exhausted and the invasion from the east, which began in August-September, would have been carried out to the fullest extent. For it would have been impossible, according to the experts, to wage war in the west without committing almost the entire German army on a permanent basis. That means Germany would have had to be abandoned, because the invasion would have come from the east.

That was how things stood. One could say that this may have been a wrong strategic decision. One cannot say that today; it was debatable in the first months of the war, but not now. For after the failed attempt made before Verdun, it has been proven that those who said at the time were right: the German army will be exhausted if it is deployed entirely in the west.

So the choice was between condemning Germany to death or accepting the tragedy of breaking through Belgium, which was the only way out if war in the west was absolutely unavoidable; for in the east it was certainly unavoidable! And if anyone says today that it could have been avoided, they would have to have the nerve to say yes and no at the same time. If there were people who, in view of the limited abilities of people today, even had the nerve to think about whether something could be true or not, and to say yes and no at the same time, they would say something like this: We have been attacked by the Central Powers; it is not our fault that the war began; but we will not end this war until we have achieved our war aim: the conquest of this or that!

There you have yes and no at the same time! We are not the ones who want something, the others only want something, the others want to conquer, that is why they attacked us; but we will not end this war until we have achieved our long-standing goal—the conquest of this and that! It is hard to believe that there are people who have the nerve to say yes and no at the same time. Perhaps you will discover in these days that there is a person who says yes and no at the same time in this day and age. This is probably the worst document that has ever been published in modern times, because it represents a fragmentation of all logical sense. And this is precisely connected with the karma of our time.

So it is a matter of separating the tragic from the logical-formal-legal, and not falling into the strange delusion that in Maya, that is, in the world of the physical plane, it is possible for realities to unfold in the sense of mere formal logic. But let us look further: it was not a matter of justify or fight this or that, but to show that it is unjustified to trumpet it to the world while those who are being trumpeted cannot defend themselves—whether this war was waged by one side because of the violation of Belgium's neutrality, and not to say that this violation of Belgian neutrality could have been prevented. The only other way to escape the tragedy was for England to remain neutral. For no statesman can, from the outset, pronounce the death sentence on his own state.

It is, of course, cheap for all those who want cheap judgments to say: Treaties must be kept. Well, my dear friends, if you were given a list of all the treaties that have not been kept in public and private life, and then shown what the effect of these broken treaties has been in the world, then you would see what forces are really at work in Maja.

But did those on the side that did not say yes actually have a clear conscience? The facts do not really support this, because when the question of this discussion between the German ambassador and Sir Edward Grey was put back on the agenda later and it was said that England could have saved Belgium's neutrality, the English government defended itself; but wisely not by retreating to mere legal formalities—there were, after all, too many good statesmen in the English government at that time. Nevertheless, I do not retract the judgment that was made not by me but by his English colleagues about Sir Edward Grey, and which I have quoted to you. He was too good a statesman to simply content himself with a pose and say: the treaty was concluded in 1839, so Germany was obliged to maintain neutrality, even if England gave an evasive answer. The English statesmen did not do that, but instead talked their way out of it in other ways. Grey said: Lichnowsky did ask that at the time, but he asked as a private individual, not on behalf of the German government; if he had said it on behalf of the German government, it would have been different. Lichnowsky, the German ambassador, had the best of intentions to maintain peace in the West, but he did not have the backing of the German government!

Now think about it: in any private case, this would rightly be called a lame excuse, a lame excuse in the ordinary sense of the word! For the whole world knows that when the ambassador of any state speaks to the foreign minister of another state, he speaks on behalf of and with the full authority of his state, and his state cannot do otherwise, if it does not want to make itself impossible in the eyes of the whole world, than to ratify what its ambassador says. So this was a completely lame excuse that was resorted to because one did not want to retreat to the position of simply saying: it was correct. One already felt the weight of the fact that England could have prevented the violation of neutrality, regardless of whether it was justified by the other side or not. If an avalanche comes down somewhere and someone at the top doesn't hold it back because he is forced not to do so for some reason, which one may or may not find justified, but in any case may not find justified, and the person a little further down doesn't hold it back either, on the grounds that the person at the top should have held it back — no, that kind of argument doesn't work! But if one wants to judge these things, it is always a matter of weighing them up. For example, one must again consider the following:

When did this happen? It is now August 2. On August 2, the King of Belgium asked England to intervene, that is, he asked it to intervene with Germany. The Belgian king therefore considered it a matter of course that England would negotiate with Germany about Belgium's neutrality. But England did not do so at first, waiting a full day while Sir Edward Grey addressed his parliament in London, concealing the entire meeting with the German ambassador and not saying a word about it. Had he said anything about it, the parliamentary session would have taken a different course!

After the meeting with the German ambassador had taken place, after the King of Belgium had called on England to intervene, England waited and did nothing. What were they waiting for? They were waiting for Belgium's neutrality to be violated! For as long as it was not complete, history could still have unfolded in such a way that it did not happen; for there were powerful forces at work to prevent it from happening, and it was hanging by a thread. And if the Belgian king's request had been granted at the right time, if England had intervened, then it is questionable whether this violation of neutrality would have happened. But when did Grey intervene? On the fourth, when the German armies were already on Belgian soil! Why did he wait, even after the request of the King of Belgium? These are questions that must be asked.

All this could be augmented by much more if one were to study the documents thoroughly, I would say cross-referenced; but that is not necessary, for I believe I have made it clear that these things had been well prepared for years. It is therefore not surprising that they have turned out this way in recent times. Of course, if one studies the documents one-sidedly, only formalities emerge.

So I did not want to take sides, but only to show what is necessary in order to form a judgment about such things. For I would much rather, in keeping with the spirit of spiritual science, which strives for a higher point of view, discourage people from making light-hearted, disparaging judgments about what happens in the clash of states in world history, because that is what it is: it is not peoples who wage war, it is states!

In this area, far too little consideration is given to the fact that the forces of becoming, but also the forces of destruction and decay, must be present in world events. Is it any different for individual human beings? As we develop our abilities in the course of our lives, we break down our bodies, we destroy our bodies; and tomorrow I will show you what a deep connection there is between our spiritual life and belladonna, the deadly nightshade, the poisons that you find out there in the world. These are truths that reach into the depths of things. But one must have the courage to assert these truths in world history as well. Therefore, it is much better to understand than to judge according to some so-called norms. Condemning states and peoples is usually based on very weak grounds. For this reason alone, in order to finally ascend to the spiritual world and be able to recognize something there, one must get used to simply looking at the facts without criticism that belongs in a completely different field; only then can one understand what forces are at work in the development of the world.

Let us consider from this point of view sine ira — but certainly not sine studio — certain events which I have hitherto almost exclusively considered from a moral standpoint. This must certainly be applied to the actions of individual human beings, but it is absurd to apply it to the life of states. Perhaps some will find it strange that I wish to view these events, as Nietzsche said, “without moralizing”; but it is indeed possible to view them without moralizing.

The powerful British Empire has as one of its main factors its rule over India. This rule over India has gone through various stages. It originated with the East India Company, a trading company that was initially granted the privilege of trading with India exclusively for England. And so, over time, England's rule over India, and even the English Empire in India, developed continuously and appropriately from the various rights of the East India Company. England's trade with China also developed from this, even within the East India Company. Incidentally, since the end of the 18th century, there had already been brisk trade between India and China, and the English East India Company was already involved at that time. In the further course of events, however, England became the world's leading merchant.

Now, with the incorporation of trade in the Orient, another element came into contact with it, and the two crossed paths. Since the 17th century, the custom of opium smoking had spread in China. The Arabs probably taught the Chinese to smoke opium, because before the 17th century, the Chinese were not opium smokers. Opium smoking is a questionable but powerful pleasure for those who do it, because the opium smoker indulges in the most varied fantasies born of the astral realm, in which he lives; it is truly another world, reached by purely material means.

When the people who traded with China from England in the manner described above noticed that the custom and passion for opium smoking was becoming increasingly prevalent among the Chinese, they established extensive poppy cultivation in Bengal, India, in order to obtain opium; for everyone who knows the laws governing such matters knows that it is not only demand that creates supply, but that, conversely, supply also creates demand. If you offer a large quantity of something, then a particularly strong demand arises for that particular item; every economist knows that. And so the East India Company of England was given a monopoly on importing opium into China. And the more that was imported, the more the evil of opium smoking spread in China. Since 1772, several thousand chests have been imported annually, each chest worth about four thousand eight hundred marks.

Now, I choose this example because it really has a deeper cultural and historical background when you consider all the factors. Just think that by introducing opium, which affects the soul, you are really interfering with the entire spiritual life of a people or of those to whom you supply opium. I can choose this example because it does not occur to me to claim that anyone who wants to trade is wrong; trade must be free in the world. That is also a legitimate principle. And it does not occur to me to readily condemn someone who grows poppies in Bengal in order to obtain opium for China and earn gold for it.

But the Chinese saw the poor, emaciated opium smokers. Opium smokers gradually deteriorate, and it became increasingly apparent what an influence opium smoking had on the decadence of broad sections of the Chinese population. When the Chinese noticed this, they banned opium in 1794. They didn't want any more opium in their country.

Well, as is often the case, prohibitions sometimes do not prevent trade in what is prohibited; people find ways and means to trade in it anyway. And at that time, it turned out that—despite the formal prohibition, despite the fact that the Chinese had passed a law prohibiting the importation of opium—the opium trade was still flourishing. There are all sorts of things; bribery is only one side of the coin, there are many other related factors. In short, the opium trade flourished, rising from a few thousand boxes in 1773 to thirty thousand boxes in 1837 – in just a few decades. The proceeds, about thirty million francs a year, flowed to British India.

When the matter had gotten so out of hand, the Chinese knew no other way out than to have the opium shipments that arrived confiscated. They sent a capable Chinese man named Lin to Canton, where the opium shipments mainly arrived, to confiscate the opium chests as they arrived. The English also had a very capable man as a consulate official in China, Captain Elliot, who was energetic and even managed once to break through the Chinese blockade with a warship.

Now it was time to extricate themselves from the affair: the opium chests were there, in huge quantities. But the Chinese were not giving in at first – it was a dire situation. Elliot, who was able to do so, had 20,283 chests transferred to his own ownership, signed them, and handed them over to the Chinese government. This provided a way out for the time being.

But that did not put an end to the opium trade. On the one hand, there was no will to do so. The Chinese saw no other option than to enact a new law, and this law was very strict. Lin decreed that all persons involved in the opium trade were to be punished with death by Chinese courts and that all ships were to be confiscated from then on. The Chinese had now made it clear that anyone who traded in opium would be brought before a Chinese court and punished with death.

The British did not say: “We must refrain from trading opium so that no one loses their head”; oh no, they did not say that, but rather — and I quote verbatim —: “With such a demand, the Chinese government has destroyed any sense of security once and for all.” First, the British in China were asked to leave, and armed assistance was requested from India. The territory was occupied, so to speak. And since the Chinese bravely stood their ground and still wanted to behead anyone who traded in opium, no opium trade was apparently conducted; and since the Chinese wanted to seize British ships carrying opium, no ships were apparently sent there. Instead, the opium was loaded onto American ships in India! And just as much opium, even more—things escalated—arrived in China on American ships.

Elliot, the official, said: “The question at issue in our dispute is now clear: whether China wants to have honest and growing trade with us or whether it wants to bear the blame for its coasts falling prey to open piracy. The port of Canton was blockaded with Indian help. In the scuffles and catfights that developed, a Chinese man was killed by an English sailor. Naturally, the Chinese government demanded the extradition of the English sailor. But the thing was that the Chinese occasionally grew tired of the trade, and so one day they wanted to be right in some way, but without wronging the English. That's something you can do! Now, at that time, an English sailor happened to drown, and Elliot, who was a very clever man, agreed with Lin, the representative of the Chinese government, to declare the drowned sailor to be the one who had killed the Chinese. And so the drowned sailor was handed over, and that settled the matter for the time being. But all these things finally led to war between England and China in 1840.

So the course of events was entirely necessary and could not have happened any other way. However, a great influence was exerted on the spiritual life from the material side, and something took place that was connected with the whole world process. In England, people “knew” what it was all about! What did they know? Well, in England, people knew that China had “invaded” England—that's what they said at the time—because the Chinese didn't want England to grow opium poppies in India, and because the Chinese wanted to grow their own poppies. That's what they said. They “knew” this for sure, and they also knew that the Chinese were barbarians! That was what they knew in England at the time. Lord Palmerston said that the protection of poppy cultivation in India must take effect, and that it was a matter of protecting poppy cultivation in India; and furthermore, it was a matter of the national economists in China not wanting to let their money leave the country, which by right belonged to India. All these were things that people in Europe understood very well!

Now the war was raging. In war, atrocities are committed, of course. Atrocities were committed on the Chinese side, and atrocities were also committed on the English side. At that time, entire villages were found where the female inhabitants of the houses were swimming in their own blood; the Chinese men had fought bravely, and when they saw that they had to kill themselves or surrender, they first killed their wives and children. It was a sad war, that war of 1840. Elliot, who had witnessed the whole war and actually had it on his conscience, one day acquired a strange reputation, which was perhaps justified: he gained a reputation for being inclined to enter into peace negotiations with the Chinese. That was when he was overthrown. And then came—not Lloyd George! His name was Pottinger at the time, a certain Pottinger who wanted to initiate peace negotiations. The war was to be fought to the bitter end, that is, until the island of Chusan, the cities of Ningpo and Amoy were taken, until the English had advanced to Nanking, and until 1842, when China had lost all courage. Hong Kong also went to England, five ports in China were opened without restriction to the opium trade, British consuls were appointed, and 97.5 million in war reparations were demanded, that is, in addition to the previous 25 million extorted from the Chinese—how shall I put it? — I will not say twenty-five million extorted, but I would like to find another word for it, which I cannot think of at the moment — in addition to the twenty-five million already extorted earlier, there were now seventy-nine and a half million in war reparations.

As I said, it would never occur to me to regard this process as anything other than a historical necessity. It would never occur to me to accuse anyone. For anyone who can understand necessities, anyone who can understand how things happen on the physical plane, knows that such things are an integral part of the normal physical course of world development. And what has been extracted from opium is part of the English national wealth, and a good part of English culture is part of the English national wealth. And just as it would be nonsense to underestimate English culture, it is equally nonsense to doubt the necessity with which such a thing happened, even if the little satirical epilogue that followed was perhaps not entirely necessary:

When the first installment of the nine and a half million in war reparations arrived, there were people who said: We are the ones who had our opium chests taken away first, and what we received as compensation at the time is only a tiny fraction of what we lost. These were people who had sold opium to China at the time, who had had their opium bought from them, and who had received a small amount of compensation. Now they said: “It has been proven that selling opium to China is recognized as legitimate in our homeland; we must therefore insist on receiving full compensation, for we have done nothing more than what our homeland has now gone to war for.”

After the war was won, these gentlemen considered it their right to receive full compensation. Then the minister responsible for deciding the matter took a note out of his pocket which he had given to Captain Elliot at the time, and in this note it was stated that the English government would never agree, as long as Chinese laws prohibited the opium trade, to compensate anyone who suffered losses in the opium trade. “Since Chinese laws were in force at the time,” they said, ”you have no claim, for you have broken Chinese laws, which have only been abolished by the war.”

Whether this aftermath was also a historical necessity is not to be decided here. But it is necessary to look at the facts. At the beginning of the Anglo-Chinese War in 1840, we stand at the starting point of the very period we have often spoken of. I have just indicated to you this year as the one in which materialism is reaching its peak. It is good to understand such things in their development. And as I have said, just as it would be nonsense to underestimate English culture or English life or English civilization in any way, so it would be nonsense to believe that something like this could have failed to happen in the whole context of English development. It is part of it. And it is completely wrong to pass moral judgment on the matter. For then one would fall into the error of judging wholes, groups, as one judges individuals. But that is precisely what is impossible.

Today, this is often claimed. I have just received another brochure—there are so many brochures promoting peace these days—which states: States have their own peculiar ways of thinking, feeling, and willing, just like human individuals. This is, of course, the greatest nonsense that can be said, because what is real on another, higher plane cannot simply be transferred by analogy to human beings, whose thinking, feeling, and willing are located in the physical sphere. Certainly, they have their characteristics, the national spirits, the national souls; but in the way you find them in the lecture cycle on national spirits that I mentioned recently. But to speak of thinking, feeling, and willing in relation to peoples in the same way as in relation to individual human beings is simply absurd.

Well, my dear friends, I wanted to give you a few examples today for the simple reason that it was necessary to gain some material through striking examples. Tomorrow we will take up some more advanced points of view.