The Origin and Development of Eurythmy 1920–1922

GA 277c — 16 October 1920, Dornach

7. Eurythmy Address

Program for the performance in Dornach, October 16 and 17, 1920

“Howards Ehrengedächtnis” by J. W. v. Goethe
“Dornröschen“ with music by Johannes Brahms (children's group)Saying from the Calendar of the Soul (28th) by Rudolf Steiner
“Die Freuden” by J. W. Goethe
Saying from the Calendar of the Soul (29th) by Rudolf Steiner
“Cheerfulness“ by F. Hiller
“Will-o'-the-wisp” by Theodora Wertsch
“Seasons“ by Hans Reinhart
“The Wonder of the World” by Hans Reinhart
“Reflection"
From the 6th picture of the ‘Guardian of the Threshold’ by Rudolf Steiner (lucid. a. lucid. beings)
“Fromme Wünsche“ (Pious Desires) by Gustav Graben-Hoffman (group of children)
“Kläffer” (Barker) by J. W. v. Goethe
Humoresques by Christian Morgenstern: “Die Zeit” (Time); “Der Salm” (The Salmon); “Nach Norden” (Northward); “West-östlich” (West-East)
Tropfenauftakt with music by Leopold van der Pals
Humoresques by Christian Morgenstern (Magpie series): “Magpie”; “Enquiry”; “Answer”; “Draft of a Tragedy”
Humorous prelude with music by Jan Stuten

I would like to say a few words to introduce the eurythmy performance we are presenting to you today. I would like to draw your attention to the sources from which the eurythmy art we are cultivating here has been developed and to the artistic means we work with. On the stage you will see movements performed by individuals through their limbs, through their whole bodies, or also movements of groups of people, mutual positions of the groups in relation to each other, of people in relation to each other, and so on.

What needs to be said is this: these are not arbitrary gestures or movements, as one might make in pantomime or mime, or as one might make in dance. None of this is meant here. Rather, eurythmy is based on a real silent, that is, visible language. The movements that are carried out here are a visible language through and through. In particular, these movements are such that – to use a Goethean expression – through sensual and supersensual observation, one can see which movements underlie the larynx and the other speech organs when a person speaks. I do not mean the movements that are then carried out in the air and that convey the sound, the speech, but I mean deep, internal movements in the speech organism itself, which of course cannot be observed externally. But they can be observed and then transferred to all other parts of the human body and also to movements of groups of people. In doing so, one is able to create an equally expressive visible language that the whole person performs, as otherwise only the sound language comes about in the individual person through partial organs, namely through the larynx and its neighboring organs. There is nothing arbitrary about this eurythmy, nor is there anything arbitrary about language itself. Everything is based entirely on intuition and on the transfer of this intuition to the whole person. This enables one to express the same thing that is recited or, let us say, is expressed in music, through this visible language.

Eurythmy itself only comes about through the fact that this visible language is expressed through various forms and the like, which are then not the individual sounds. Everything that is revealed in the formation and artistic design of language is such that it can also be expressed in eurythmy. On the stage you will see poetry or music expressed through visible speech. You will also hear the music itself, for that is only another expression of what is happening on the stage. You will also hear recitation and declamation of poetry, which are in turn expressed through eurythmy. I would like to say: in addition to the fact that eurythmy is an art in its own right, an art in the way that painting, architecture and sculpture should work, I would also like to note in particular that this eurythmy also has a great educational value, a pedagogical value. And since we can see a school here today, I would like to say a few words about this pedagogical value.

The fact is that human speech, as it is used by man, sounds out from an independent part of the human organism, the larynx. But actually, the whole human being is involved in the creation of speech, and speech sounds out of the whole human being. It is just that in the course of human development, that which comes out of the whole human being and through which he wants to reveal that which is felt, sensed and thought in his soul, has gradually been concentrated in his speech organs. You can also see that When less civilized people speak, they accompany their speech with all kinds of gestures; they feel that they have to move their bodies in some way. Among more civilized people, this gradually diminishes and is limited to a few. But basically, everything that is spoken comes from the whole person. Now, however, because language is concentrated in the speech organs – relatively, I might say; it always depends on habit, but on the whole it is true that the whole human being is involved in speech, he lives in every word, in every sentence, but we gradually get used to weakening the will that lives in every word, in every sentence, and to regarding speaking as something that flows indifferently. But we do have the feeling that, when we speak a sentence, when we express a poem, the whole person should live in it.

Now the following may be said here, which is of great importance for the pedagogical relationship. The fact that language is gradually becoming something automatic, conventional, mechanical, especially the further civilization advances, means that the human being's participation in and interest in his own speech is also coming to an end. One can almost say: the more civilized any part of humanity is, the more mechanical language becomes, the more conventional it becomes, the less man is tempted to invest himself in what he speaks with his will, with his whole mind.

And even if it seems strange today, to the extent that it is said, there would be less temptation in the world to speak untruthfully if people were more fully engaged in speech with their whole being. Precisely because language has emancipated itself, becoming only the expression, the manifestation of a part of the human organism, lies, untruthfulness, and especially empty phrases have found their way into it. This will be recognized more precisely later when these things are viewed more objectively. The more a person is present with his whole being in speech, the less he will tend towards lying, towards empty phrases; the less he will be inclined to speak just so that the speech flows. Or he will be less inclined to put only the conventional into speech. He will pay more and more attention to the fact that speech is truly a revelation of his inner being.

For this reason, because it is so, we have introduced eurythmy as an obligatory subject in our Waldorf School in Stuttgart. And we have had the very best experiences with it during the first year of the Waldorf School's existence. Firstly, those who are taught eurythmy feel how eurythmy is truly inspired gymnastics - not in the way that gymnastics takes hold of the mere body, but in the way that soul enters into every movement, how the whole person lives in every movement. The human being is much less inclined to train in untruthfulness or in empty phrases if they have to perform such a silent language with their whole body.

Therefore, two things come into consideration, which then become abilities when eurythmy is introduced as a school subject. Firstly, what cannot come about through mere gymnastics develops in children: initiative of the soul, initiative of the will. The will becomes stronger because speech actually flows from the will. And this will is only suppressed when speech rolls along, relying only on the speech organs, without the person feeling as a whole in what he speaks. And the other thing, which is just as important as this development of the initiative of the will, is that the person actually develops a longing for truth precisely by using this visible speech. One does not like to lie with the gesture. One is much less willing to lie with what is done as a movement than with mere words. So it is in fact – and this is felt particularly strongly in Waldorf schools – eurythmy is a means of education against phrase-mongering, against the parroting of words without feeling the responsibility that everything one says is truly permeated with truth.

So eurythmy can be used as a means of educating the will and an education in truth in the pedagogical and didactic fields, among many others. During our college course, which was held in the last few weeks, the two lecturers who spoke about language emphasized how one only begins to understand the actual essence of language when one observes how speech emerges from human movements, which always underlie it invisibly and supersensibly. The artificiality is gradually improving. After all, human beings actually want to accompany speech with movements – so we also learn to understand languages better when we have this eurythmy.

And especially when reciting and declaiming has to be done at the same time as a eurythmic performance, one notices how one cannot recite and declaim as it is often done today, where one actually only speaks prose, when what is actually to be revealed in terms of rhythm, meter, and the poet's entire use of forms. Here, too, when eurythmy is accompanied by declamation, it must be done in such a way that much more attention is paid to the formal aspects of the language than to the prose content of the word. Everything that is already in the language in the form of eurythmy is particularly evident. Time and again, one has to say that a true poet feels how language is based either on imagery or on music.

Schiller always had an indefinite melody in his soul first, before he had the literal content of a poem. And Goethe himself studied his Iphigenia with his actors using a baton, because he placed the greatest value on the flow of iambic verse in the performance, on that which is not merely the prosaic, literal content. All this is felt by those who are truly brought to life in this eurythmics, where the whole human being becomes a speech organ, or where groups of people become speech organs.

This eurythmy is, however, only in its infancy. Recently, we have tried hard to work out the style of each poem, to find out distinctions, how to eurythmize seriousness - you will see samples of this - how to eurythmize humor in the second part of the program. We have tried to develop the subject, but nevertheless this eurythmy must go further and further if it is to achieve the goal that one sets for it. You will also see children's performances and see how the still youthful body can really put what lies within it out of its inner being through this visible language, so that one actually sees directly soulfulness in the movements that are performed.

Thus eurythmy is not only an art, but also an educational tool of the very highest order, and one that is a joy to practise. Gymnastics, on the other hand, is something that only involves the body. The movements performed in eurythmy are directed towards both the physical and the spiritual. But it is precisely this that enables the human being to feel like a whole human being by performing the eurythmic movements in the appropriate way. By weaving oneself into the artistic process, one does feel that one's own self is the noblest instrument one can possibly use in art.

Goethe said: When man reaches the summit of nature, he feels himself again as a whole nature, takes harmony, measure, order and meaning together to rise to the creation of the work of art. This is best felt when the human being is not just holding the violin or playing the piano or using the paintbrush, but when he uses himself as an instrument to express what is actually going on in his soul.

If this eurythmy, which is still in its infancy and must be treated with forbearance, if this eurythmy continues to develop through us - or probably through others - then it will be able to stand alongside the older, fully-fledged sister arts as an art in its own right. But it will also be recognized as one of the most significant educational tools of humanity - both in terms of the will and in terms of the inner sense of truth in the human being. What is still in its infancy in eurythmy today will be developed and then be able to stand fully entitled alongside the other older artistic and educational tools.

Address on the Song of Initiation

Before Rudolf Steiner delivered the farewell address at the first School of Spiritual Science course at the Goetheanum (in: Grenzen der Naturerkenntnis, GA 322, Basel, 6th ed. 2020, pp. 128-148), “The Song of Initiation” was performed in the domed room - ‘at Dr. Steiner's special request,’ as the stenographer Helene Finckh noted in her transcript: ‘Dr. Steiner had said it would be necessary to have this prelude.’ - Rudolf Steiner introduced the performance with the following words:

We can, my dear audience, just as we turn to a truly spiritual scientific culture, art and so on, we can just as strongly reject everything that turns to the so-called spiritual out of dishonest, untruthful, insincere feeling, what is called “mystical” and the like. And to show you what we can feel about false mysticism, flirtatious mysticism, insincere, dishonest mysticism, we would like to show you a short eurythmy piece.

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