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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 371 through 380 of 626

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223. The Cycle of the Year as Breathing-Process of the Earth: Lecture I 31 Mar 1923, Dornach
Tr. Barbara Betteridge, Frances E. Dawson

Rudolf Steiner
But today we want to place before our inner eye the yearly cycle, in the large, as a mighty breathing process of the Earth, in which of course it is not air that is breathed in and out, but rather those forces which are at work for example in vegetation, those forces which push the plants out of the Earth in spring, and which withdraw again into the Earth in fall, letting the green plants fade and finally paralyzing plant growth. To repeat, it is not a breathing of air of which we speak, but the in-and-out-breathing of forces, of which we can get a partial idea if we notice the plant-growth during the course of the year.
28. The Story of My Life: Chapter XXX
Tr. Harry Collison

Rudolf Steiner
[ 1 ] The decision to give public expression to the esoteric from my own inner experience impelled me to write for the Magazine for August 28, 1899, on the occasion of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of Goethe's birth, an article on Goethe's fairy-tale of The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, under the title Goethes Geheime Offenbarung.1 This article was, of course, only slightly esoteric.
68a. The Essence of Christianity: Germanic and Indian Secret Doctrine 22 Apr 1906, Munich

Rudolf Steiner
Secondly, the people do not create poetry in the way that the gentlemen at the green table of scholarship imagine it. The people do not personify natural phenomena. Thus, the saga of Indra, which tells of how he set out with seven priestly sages to reclaim a number of cows that had escaped him to culture, was interpreted as if the god Indra personified the dawn and the seven cows personified darkness.
172. The Karma of Vocation: Lecture I 04 Nov 1916, Dornach
Tr. Olin D. Wannamaker, Gilbert Church, Peter Mollenhauer

Rudolf Steiner
He had to attack it in a living way, and he resolved it comprehensively in his own way in the fairy tale of The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily. When Schiller undertook to show philosophically how man ascends from ordinary life to a higher life, Goethe undertook to show in his fairy tale, through the interplay of spiritual forces in the human soul, how man evolves spiritually from an everyday soul life to a higher one.
The innermost concern of the two was manifested through the way in which Schiller undertook to solve the riddle of man philosophically in his Aesthetic Letters, the way Goethe addressed himself to the realm of color in order to oppose Newton, and the ways he depicts the evolution of the human soul in the fairy tale of The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily. All this comprises comprehensive questions that were destined, it would seem, to be of vital concern to but a few people.
173b. The Karma of Untruthfulness II: LectureI XVII 08 Jan 1917, Dornach
Tr. Johanna Collis

Rudolf Steiner
The way streams flow in the world is such that one always forms a complement to the others. Let us say a green and a red stream are flowing along side by side. Nothing occult is meant by these colours—it is simply to illustrate that there are two streams flowing side by side.
You need only glance at Goethe's fairy tale The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, at Wilhelm Meister and other of Goethe's writings. This was material with which the step to emancipation could be taken and which still today makes emancipation possible.
73a. Scientific Disciplines and Anthroposophy: Anthroposophy and Contemporary Science 24 Mar 1920, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
And the other peculiar thing is that the Greeks had one word for green = chloros, and at the same time they used this word for what we call yellow, honey. And so I could cite many more examples that would prove to us that the Greeks' vision was similar to blue-blind vision.
And today we certainly have a very different perception of the red and warm side of the spectrum; we see it much more shifted towards the green than the Greeks, who were still sensitive to it beyond our outermost red. The Greek spectrum was shifted entirely towards the red side.
32. Collected Essays on Literature 1884-1902: Ludwig Jacobowski's Bright Days 19 May 1900,

Rudolf Steiner
Brown twigs protrude from a white vase And drag heavily on the densely filled lilac. Bright green leaves push through through the brown branches. The wind gently brushes the blossoms, A scent runs up and down in shivers.
346. Lectures to Priests The Apocalypse: Lecture V 09 Sep 1924, Dornach
Tr. Unknown

Rudolf Steiner
The power which the sun develops in its movement through a Platonic year lives in the colors of green emeralds, wine yellow topaz and red rubies. And so you see that if one begins to speak about the spiritual world people are no longer satisfied if one explains their questions about earthly things with the trivialities which come out of our laboratories and dissecting rooms.
327. The Agriculture Course (1938): Lecture VII 15 Jun 1924, Koberwitz
Tr. Günther Wachsmuth

Rudolf Steiner
If we look at a tree with understanding we shall find that the only parts of it which can really be reckoned as plant are the tender twigs, the green leaves and their stalks, the blossoms, the fruits. These grow out of the tree just as herbaceous plants grow out of the soil, the tree being in fact “earth” in relation to the parts that grow out of it.
97. The Christian Mystery (2000): The Yoga Path, Christian Gnostic Initiation and Esoteric Rosicrucianism 30 Nov 1906, Cologne
Tr. Anna R. Meuss

Rudolf Steiner
We actually kill as we breathe, for we exhale carbon dioxide. If the earth's green plant cover did not continually take up the carbon dioxide and give off oxygen, humans and animals would be unable to live.

Results 371 through 380 of 626

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