LECTURE II.
10th
June, 1924.
In
these first lectures, we shall bring together, from the field
of knowledge of conditions which go to promote a healthy
Agriculture, those which are necessary in order to enable us to
reach certain practical conclusions which are to be
realised in immediate application and which can only have
significance when being so applied. To do so we have to
enquire at the very outset how the products of Agriculture come
into being and what is their connection with the Universe as a
whole. Now a farm or agricultural estate comes to full
expression as a ‘farm’ in the best sense of the word if it can
be regarded as being a kind of separate individuality, a
self-contained individuality. This is the condition to which
every agricultural estate or farm should approach as near as
possible, although it cannot be completely attained. In other
words, everything that is needed to bring forth agricultural
products should be supplied by the farm itself, which
includes, of course, the necessary cattle and live-stock.
Anything brought in from outside, such as manure and the like,
ought under ideal conditions of Agriculture, to be regarded
rather as medicine for use in the case of sickness. A sound
farm should be able to bring forth from itself everything that
it needs. We shall see later why this is quite the natural
thing. As long as we neglect the inner nature and essence
of things and regard them only from their outer material
aspect, so long will it be legitimate to ask: Does it really
matter whether cow-manure is taken from the neighbouring farm
or from one's own steading? Although it may be impossible to
carry it out strictly it is important to hold before one the
ideal of a self-contained farm. You will find some
justification for this statement if you consider first the
earth from which our farm arises and secondly the factors which
work in upon the earth from the Universe. It is usual to speak
of these factors in very abstract terms. People are aware, it
is true, that the light and warmth of the sun, and all the
meteorological phenomena connected with these, have a
particular bearing upon the type of vegetation produced in a
given area. But modern views can give no further details, nor
throw any further light on the matter because they do not
penetrate into the underlying facts. Let us therefore start
from the standpoint which embraces the fact that the basis of
all Agriculture is the soil of the earth.
Diagrams
for Lecture II
This soil — I will indicate it schematically by this
straight line
(see Drawing No. 2)
is generally looked upon as
being something purely mineral into which at the best organic
substance has entered either because humus has been formed or
manure has been introduced. The idea that the soil not only
contains added organic substance but also has itself a plant
— like nature — and even contains an astral
activity: such an idea has never been considered, still less
conceded. And if we go a step further and consider how
this inner life of the soil in the delicate balancing of
its distribution is quite different in Summer from what it is
in Winter, we come to subjects which are of enormous importance
in practical life but to which no attention is paid to-day. If
you start by considering the soil, then you must bear in mind
the fact that it is a kind of organ within that organism which
manifests itself wherever the growth of Nature appears. The
earth surface is really an organ, an organ which, if you care
to. you may compare with the human diaphragm. “We may put
the matter broadly in this way (it is not quite exact but
will give the right idea): Above the diaphragm there are in man
certain organs, the head in particular, and the processes
of breathing and circulation which work up into the head. Under
the diaphragm are other organs. Now if we compare the earth
surface with the human diaphragm we must say: The individuality
represented by our farm, having the earth surface for its
diaphragm has its head under the earth, while we and all the
animals live in its belly. Above the surface of the earth, is
really what may be regarded as the bowels of what I will
now call the “agricultural-individuality.” On
a farm, we are walking about inside the belly of the farm, and
the plants grow upwards within this belly. Thus, we are dealing
with an individuality which is standing on its head, and
which is only rightly looked at if so understood, especially as
regards its relation to Man. In relation to animals, the
situation, as we shall see later on, is slightly
different.
Now
why do I say that the “agricultural-individuality”
stands on its head?
I
do so because the air, vapours and warmth, which are in the
immediate neighbourhood of the soil and from which both man and
the plants derive air, moisture and warmth — all this
corresponds to the abdominal organs in the human body. On the
other hand, everything that takes place within the earth, under
the soil, affects the general growth of plants in the same way
as our head affects our organism — especially in
childhood, but also throughout the whole of our life. Thus,
there is a constant and very living interplay of
supra-terrestrial and sub-terrestrial activities. — The
forces at work above the earth are immediately dependent upon
what we will regard for the time being as localised on the
planets. Moon, Mercury and Venus. These planets in
strengthening and modifying the effects of the Sun exercise
their influence on all that is above the earth surface, while
the more distant planets lying outside the earth's path round
the Sun strengthen and modify the effects of the solar
influences which penetrate upwards through the earth. Thus, the
growth of plants is affected by the distant heavens in so far
as it takes place underground, and by the nearer heavens in so
far as it takes place above ground; and the influences upon
vegetable growth coming from the expanses of the Cosmos do not
shine directly down upon the earth, but are first
absorbed by the earth which then causes them to radiate
upwards. What come from beneath as good or bad vegetable
growth are really the cosmic influences which are
reflected from below; whereas in the air and water above
the earth the Cosmos exercises its power directly. The direct
cosmic in-streaming is stored up beneath the earth's surface,
and from there it works back. The inherent qualities of the
soil affecting the growth of plants are dependent upon these
stored up influences. (Later we shall consider the case of the
animals). The soil still retains in it the effects of
influences dependent upon the most remote parts of the Cosmos,
which need to be considered in connection with the Earth.
These effects are found in what we know generally as sand and
rock; the substances which do not absorb water, which are
ordinarily supposed to contain no nutritive elements whatsoever
and which nevertheless play a very important part in the
promotion of growth. These minerals are entirely
dependent upon the activities of forces coming from the
remotest parts of the Cosmos, and, improbable as it may
appear, it is primarily through the medium of siliceous sand
that it comes about that soil contains and radiates upwards
what may be called its elements of life-ether and chemical
activity (chemical ether). The inner life of the soil and the
formation of its particular chemical properties depend
entirely upon the constitution of its sandy parts, and what the
plant roots experience within the soil is determined by the
amount of Cosmic life and Cosmic Chemistry which the
Earth has absorbed through the mediation of its stony substance
(which of course, may lie at some depth below the earth
surface). Anyone, therefore, who has to concern himself with
the growth of plants should be quite clear as to the geological
structure of the ground from which the plants are to grow, and
further should bear in mind in all cases that those plants
whose roots are for us of primary importance cannot do without
silicon in the soil, even though thi3 may lie well below. We
should be thankful that silicon makes up 47% to 48% of the
Earth, either in the form of silicon (silicic acid) or in
other' compounds. Such supplies as we need are therefore always
present.
Now
the effects which have been brought about in the root through
silicon must be borne upwards through the plant. It must stream
upwards and there must be a constant interaction between
the cosmic forces that have entered into the plant through
silicon and those that are active above — forgive me
— m the “belly” and that supply the
“head” below with what it requires. True the
“head” must be provided for out of the Cosmos, but
this process must interact with that which takes place above
ground in the “belly.” The forces coming in from
the Cosmos and being caught up underground must be able to flow
upwards again, and the substance which brings this about is
clay. Clay is the mediator through which the cosmic activity in
the soil is enabled to work from below upwards. In actual
practice this will give us the key to the handling of both clay
soil and sandy soil according to the particular which we
may wish to cultivate. But we must first know what is actually
happening. How clay is to be described and how treated in order
to make it fertile are important but secondary considerations.
The first and foremost thing to know about clay is that it
promotes the cosmic upward flow.
However, this cosmic upward flow is not enough by itself.
There must also be present the opposite, which I would call the
earthly or terrestrial element streaming downwards. All that
undergoes a kind of external digestion in the
“belly” (the processes above the surface throughout
Summer and Winter are indeed a kind of digestion in relation in
the growth of plants I) has to be drawn down into the earth.
All forces produced by the action of water and air above the
Earth and also the substances in delicate homeopathic
distribution called from there are drawn down into the earth by
lime presented in it in greater or smaller proportions. The
lime content of the soil and the distribution of lime in
homeopathic dilution above the surface — these are the
factors which have the task of leading the terrestrial
(“belly” Ed.) forces down into the soil.
These things will take on a very different aspect in future
when we shall have a real science concerning them, and not only
the scientific guesswork of to-day: it will be possible then to
give exact information. We shall then know that there is a
great, an immense difference between the warmth that exists
above the surface of the Earth and which stands within the
sphere of the influence of the Sun, Venus. Mercury and Moon,
and the. warmth which makes itself felt within the earth and
which stands under the influence of Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
These two kinds of warmth which we may call the “blossom
and leaf warmth” and the “root-warmth”
respectively, are completely different from one another —
so much so, indeed, that we can describe the warmth above
the Earth as a “dead” warmth, the warmth below the
Earth's surface a “living” warmth. The warmth below
the surface, especially during Winter, contains an inner
vital principle. If we human beings had to experience in
ourselves this living warmth which works within the soil, we
should all become immensely stupid, because in order that we
may be intelligent beings, dead warmth has to be supplied to
our bodies. But at the moment when the limestone and other
substances enable warmth to be drawn into the soil and to
change from outer into inner warmth, it passes over into a
condition of gentle aliveness. It is recognised to-day that
there is a difference between the air which is above the Earth
and that which is below the surface, but the difference
between warmth above the Earth and that below the surface
has been overlooked. It is generally known that the air under
the Earth contains more carbonic acid, while that above the
Earth contains more oxygen; but the reason for this is not
known. It is that the air, as it is drawn into the earth,
is penetrated by a gentle aliveness. This is true both of
warmth and of air. They both receive a tiny spark of life as
they pass into the earth. It is different in the case of water
and of the solid earth element itself. Both of these have less
life inside the Earth than they have when above its surface.
They become “more dead,” they lose something of
their life they had outside. But it is precisely this
circumstance which exposes them to the influences of the
most distant cosmic forces. The mineral substances have to free
themselves from the forces which are working immediately above
the surface of the Earth if they wish to be accessible to these
far away cosmic forces. In our epoch, this emancipation
from the processes in the immediate neighbourhood takes place
in the period of the time between the 15th January and 15th
February, i.e. in Winter. The time will come when these
indications will be acknowledged as exact data. It is at this
period of the Winter that within the Earth the formative forces
of crystallisation reach their full development in the mineral
substances. In these days of mid-winter, it is a peculiar
feature of the interior or the Earth that it becomes less
dependent upon its mineral masses and falls under the influence
of the crystallising forces of the cosmic expanses.
Now
consider what happens. Towards the end of January, the mineral
substances of the Earth have a greater “longing”
than at any other time to reach crystal purity in the economy
of Nature; and the deeper one goes, the greater one finds this
“longing” to be. The plants, absorbed in
their own life in the Earth, are less open at this time than at
any other to the influence of the mineral substances. But for a
time before and for a time after this period, (but especially
before when the minerals are preparing to perfect their crystal
shape and purity) they are of utmost importance to the growth
of plants. It is then that they throw out forces which are of
extreme importance to plant growth. Thus, some time in November
and December there .is a point of time when the mineral forces
at work under the Earth are particularly propitious to the
growth of plants. The question therefore arises: How can this
best be utilised for the growth of plants? Someday it will
become evident that by utilising this knowledge we are able to
guide the growth of plants. I will say this now: That m the
case of a soil which does not of itself promote the required
upward movement of forces which ought to work upwards in the
Winter period, it is well to add clay in a proper proportion.
(I shall indicate this proportion later on). In this way, we
enable the soil to carry those forces, upwards to make it
effective in the realm of plant growth above the Earth; before
the forces of the minerals have reached their maximum effects
for themselves, which will not be until January or February
period. (These forces show themselves outwardly — for
those who can read their story — in snow crystals.) It
may be noted that the power of these forces becomes stronger
and stronger the deeper we go into the interior of the
Earth.
In
this way, what seems to most people recondite can give us
insight of the greatest positive value and practical
help, where we should otherwise be working at random. Indeed,
we must realise clearly that the cultivated ground together
with what lies under the surface of the Earth forms an
individuality living also within the element of time, (i.e.
living through the four seasons,) and that the life of the
Earth still is particularly strong during Winter, whereas in
Summer it undergoes a kind of death.
Now
with regard to the cultivation of the soil there is a point of
great importance which must be thoroughly understood. It is a
point I have often dealt with among Anthroposophists. It is
that we know the conditions under which the forces of the
cosmic spaces can work upon the earthly realm. Let us begin
with seed formation. The seed which gives rise to the embryo of
the plant is generally regarded as a molecular structure
of exceptional complexity, and science lays great stress
upon this interpretation. The molecules, it is said, have
a certain structure, in simple molecules it is simple, in
complicated molecules it becomes more and more complex, until
we come to the extreme complexity of the albuminous or protein
molecule. People stand in wonder and astonishment at the
enormous complexity of the structure supposed to exist in the
seed.
They do so because they reason as follows. The albumen
(or protein) molecule, they say, must be of enormous
complexity, for the organism in succeeding plants arises from
it. This organism is enormously complex, and since its
structure was determined by the embryonic conditions of the
seed, the latter's microscopic or ultra-microscopic content
must also have a structure of enormous complexity. Well, it is
complex indeed in the beginning. As the earthly albumen
is formed, its molecular structure is driven to the utmost
complexity; but this alone would never give rise to a new
organism. For the organism arising from the seed does not
proceed by a mere continuation in the offspring of what
was present in the parent plant or animal. What happens is that
when the embryonic structure has reached its highest stage of
complexity in the earth domain it falls to pieces and
becomes a “little chaos,” it breaks up and
dissolves, one might say, into “world-dust.” And
when this little chaos of world-dust is there, the whole
surrounding Cosmos begins to work upon it. to stamp it with its
own image and to build up in it a structure conditioned by the
forces of the Universe working in upon it from every side
(see Drawing No. 3).
Thus, the seed becomes an image of the Cosmos.
Every time this happens, and seed formation is carried through
to the point or chaos, the new organism is: built up
from the seed-chaos by the activity of the cosmos. The parent
organism has only the tendency to bring the seed into such
cosmic position that through its affinity with this cosmic
position the cosmic forces will act in the proper directions so
that, e.g., a dandelion will give rise to another dandelion and
not a berberis.
But
the new thing that is built up is always the image of some
cosmic constellation. It is built up out of the cosmos. And if
in the Earth we would make effective the forces of the cosmos,
we must drive the earthly elements into the state of
greatest possible chaos. This has to be the case whenever we
want the cosmos to act upon our Earth. In the case of
plant-growth this is in a certain sense provided for by Nature
herself. But just because every new organism is built up by the
Cosmos it is necessary that the cosmic principles must be
allowed freedom to work in the organisms until the
seed-formation is completed.
If,
for example, we plant the seed of a given plant in the earth,
the seed contains the impress of the whole Cosmos from a
particular cosmic direction, which means that it came under the
influence of a particular constellation and received its
particular form. At the moment when the seed is placed in the
soil it is strongly worked upon by the terrestrial
(“belly” Ed.) forces, and it is filled with the
longing to deny the cosmic forces, in order that it may spread
and grow in all directions. For the forces above the surface of
the Earth do not want the plant to retain this cosmic form. The
seed had to be driven to the point of chaos; but now that the
plant is sprouting it is necessary to oppose the terrestrial to
the cosmic forces which live as the form of the plant inside
the seed. For the cosmic forces must be opposed and balanced,
as it were, by the terrestrial forces. We must help the plant
to become more akin to the Earth in its growth. This can only
be done by introducing into the plant some form of living
earthly matter which has not yet reached the state of chaos and
seed formation, life which has been held up in a plant before
the seeds have been formed. For this purpose, a rich humus
formation comes to man's assistance m those districts that are
fortunate enough to possess it. Man can hardly find any
artificial substitute for the fertility given to the soil by
Nature through humus. What causes the formation of humus? It
arises from the absorption of remnants of living plants into
the whole process of Nature. These remnants have not yet
reached the state of chaos, and respect the cosmic
forces, as it were. If humus is used for the growth of plants
the terrestrial forces are held fast within them. The cosmic
forces then work only in the upward stream that terminates in
seed-formation. While the terrestrial forces work in the
development of flowers, leaf and so on, the cosmos only
radiates its influence into all this.
Let
us suppose that we have before us a plant growing up out of its
own root. At the top end of the stem comes the grain of seed,
while the leaves and blossoms spread out sideways. Now, in the
leaf and the blossom the terrestrial element is working
in giving shape and filling it with matter; the reason why a
leaf grows or a grain swells, and takes up the substance inside
it is to “be found in the terrestrial forces which we
lead to the plant and which have not yet reached the point of
chaos. The seed, however, whose forces work upwards through the
stem — vertically — not rotating around it (as in
the formation of leaves Ed.) radiates the cosmic forces into
leaves and blossoms. One can actually see this. We have only to
look at the green leaves of a plant. In their shape, in the
substances filling them and in their green colour, the leaves
bear the terrestrial element. But they would not be green if
they had not within them the cosmic force of the Sun. And now
look at the coloured blossoms. In these the cosmic force of the
Sun is not working alone but is supported by the distant
planets, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. If we regard the growth and
development of plants from this point of view, we shall see the
redness of the rose as the force of Mars, the yellow of the
sunflower- (so-called only because of its shape) as the force
of Jupiter. It should be called the Jupiter flower, for it is
the force of Jupiter that reinforces the solar force and
brings forth the white and yellow colours in the flowers. The
blue of the chickweed or chicory flower is the effect of Saturn
reinforcing the effect of the Sun. Thus, we can see Mars in the
red-coloured flower. Jupiter in the yellow, Saturn in the blue,
while in the green colour of the leaf we see the Sun itself.
But the same powers which appear as colour in the flower are
also at work especially strongly in the root. Here once more
the forces living in the distant planets are active within the
soil. If we pull a plant out of the ground we may see that in
the roots there is cosmic force, in the blossom mostly the
terrestrial element. and only in the finest shading by
the colour the cosmic element can be seen. The terrestrial
forces on the other hand if living actively in the root cause
the root to push out into form. For the form of the plant is
determined by factors arising in the realm of earth. It
is the terrestrial forces that causes the form to spread. When
the root develops and divides, it is due to the
terrestrial forces working downwards just as the cosmic
forces (in the case of the colour) work upwards. Single roots
are therefore cosmic roots, whereas forked roots are due to the
terrestrial forces working down into the soil, just as in
colour the cosmic forces work upwards into the flowers. And the
cosmic force of the Sun stands between the two. The Sun force
works principally in the green leaves, in the interaction
between blossom and root, and in all that is between the two.
Thus, the Sun element really belongs to what we have called the
diaphragm provided by the surface of the earth: whereas
the cosmic element belongs to the interior of the earth and
works its way up into the upper part of the plant. The
terrestrial element above the earth works downwards and
is drawn into the plant with the help of the limestone. Plants
which draw down the terrestrial element into their roots
through the lime are those whose roots divide in all directions
such as all herbs used for fodder, (but not turnips) and such
as the sainfoin. Thus, it should be possible, looking at the
form of a plant and the colour of the flowers, to tell how much
cosmic forces and how much terrestrial forces are at work in
it. Now let us assume that we find some means of holding back
the cosmic forces within the plant. These forces will then be
prevented from manifesting it by pushing up into flowers but
will live out their life in the region of the stem of the
plant. Now wherein do these cosmic forces reside in the plant?
They reside in the silicon. Take the Equisetum. It has this
very property of attracting silicon and permeating itself with
it. It is 90% silicon. Thus, in this plant the cosmic element
is present to a tremendous extent. It does not manifest itself
in flowers, but in the growth of the lower part of the
plant.
Now, let us take the opposite case. Let us suppose that we want
to hold back these forces which work upwards from the root
through the stem into the leaves and store them up in the
region of the root. This possibility is no longer fully open
to. us in the present epoch of our earth, since the genera and
species of plants have been so firmly established. Formerly, in
ancient epochs when men could easily transform one plant into
another, this possibility had to come greatly into
consideration. Today we consider it only from the point
of view of finding out the condition favourable to a given
plant. How can we then set about preventing these forces from
pushing upwards into blossom and fruit? How can we in
addition hold back the development of stem and leaf within the
formation of the root? We must place such a plant on sandy
soil. For silicon or flint holds back the cosmic forces and
even gathers them. Now the potato plant is one in which the
growth of leaf and stem is held back. The potato is a
root-stock. The forces that form leaf and stem are held fast in
the potato itself. The potato is not a root but a stem which
has been held back. Potatoes must therefore be planted on sandy
soil; this is the only way of holding back the cosmic forces in
them.
The
A B C of everything concerning the growth of the plant
consists, therefore, m knowing what in any particular
plant is of cosmic origin, and what is due to terrestrial
forces. How can we make a soil more inclined to condense, as it
were, the cosmic forces to retain them in root and leaf? How
can we thin them out so that they can be sucked upwards into
the blossoms and colour them and even into the fruit, and
permeate them with a delicate taste? For the delicate taste in
an apricot or plum is, like the colour of a flower, both being
due to the cosmic forces which have worked their way upward
through the plant. In the apple, you are literally eating
Jupiter, in the plum you are eating Saturn. If modern man were
faced with the necessity of producing the innumerable species
and varieties of fruit-bearing plants from the much
smaller number of original plants existing in primordial
times, he would not get very far. And we may be thankful that
the great majority of our existing fruit trees were brought
into existence when mankind still possessed an ancient
instinctive wisdom of how to produce new varieties out of
the primitive species which then existed. Nowadays these things
are done “by trial and error. People do not enter into
the process with knowledge. And yet a rational method is the
fundamental condition for any possible advance in
Agriculture. What our friend Stegemann said in this connection
was particularly apposite. He drew attention to the fact
that agricultural products are deteriorating in quality.
Now you may or may not agree with what I am going to say, but
this deterioration is, I claim, connected as is the
transformation of the human soul, with the declining of the
Cosmic Kali-Yuga during the last few decades and the decades
that are to come. For we are also in the presence of a complete
inner transformation of Nature. All that we have inherited and
been handed down in the way of natural talents, inherited
knowledge, nature and of traditional medical remedies is
beginning to lose its significance. We shall have to acquire
new knowledge if we want to penetrate the natural connection of
these things. Humanity has no other alternative before it
today than either to learn again about the whole web of
natural and cosmic connections, or to let both Nature and
humanity degenerate and die out. As in the past, it is
imperative that our knowledge should penetrate into the actual
structure of Nature.
For
example, man knows more or less what happens to air inside the
Earth? but he hardly knows anything of what happens
to light inside the Earth. He does not know that silicon, the
cosmic mineral» takes up light into the Earth and there
makes it active, whereas humus, the substance closely allied to
terrestrial life does not take up light and make it active in
the earth but produces a lightless activity there. But these
are things which will have to become understood and known.
Now, to go further: In any given region of the Earth there is
not only a particular vegetation but also certain animals live
there. For reasons which will appear later on, we need not
consider human beings for the moment. It is one peculiar fact,
and I should be glad to see this put to experimental test as I
am quite sure that such a test would confirm it. This fact is
that the right quantity of cows, horses and other
live-stock on a farm will supply just the necessary amount of
manure for the farm to restore to it what has been discharged
into “chaos.” Moreover, the right proportion of
horses, cows and pigs will yield the right proportions in the
mixture of manures. This is because the animals eat the
right proportion of the plant substances yielded by the
soil, and because in the course of their organic
processes they produce as much manure as is needed to be
given back to the
3oil. And. though it cannot be strictly carried out. I would
say that manure of any kind introduced from outside can only be
regarded as a curative substance for a farm that has become
diseased. A farm is only healthy if it can supply itself from
the manure yielded by its own animals. This of course
entails the development of a real knowledge of how many animals
of a given sort are necessary for a given farm. But this
will be found out as soon as some knowledge returns to us of
the inner forces in Nature. To what I said about the
“belly” being above the Earth and the
“head” being under the Earth, belongs an
understanding of the animal organism. For the animal organism
is connected with the whole economy of Nature. With respect to
form and colour structure and consistency of its substance it
is under the influence of the planets. Working backwards from
the snout the influences are as follows. Saturn, Jupiter and
Mars affect the region extending from the snout to the
heart, the heart is worked upon by the Sun, while the region
extending from behind the heart to the tail comes under the
influences of Venus, Mercury and Moon.
(See Drawing No. 5).
Those who are interested in these things should try to examine
the forms of animals from this point of view. For a development
of knowledge along these lines would be of enormous importance.
Go to a museum, for example, and examine the skeleton of any
mammal. In doing so, bear in mind the principle that the
structure and build of the head is primarily the result of the
direct radiation of the Sun streaming into the mouth. Then you
will 3ee that the structure of the head and of the adjoining
parts depends upon the way in which the animal exposes
itself to the Sun. A lion exposes itself quite differently from
a horse: the reason for these differences will be examined
later on. Thus, the front part of an animal and the structure
of its head are directly connected with the Sun's radiation.
Now the light of the Sun also reaches the Earth indirectly, by
being reflected from the Moon. This too has to be taken into
account. The sunlight that is reflected from the Moon is quite
ineffectual when it falls on the head of an animal. (These
things apply especially to embryonic life). The light*
reflected from the Moon produces its greatest effect when
falling upon the hind parts of the animal. Look at the
formation of the skeleton of an animal's hind parts and the
peculiar polarity in which it stands to the formation of the
head. You should develop a feeling for this contrast in form
between the animal's hind quarters and its head, and especially
for the insertion of the hind limbs and the rear and the
intestinal tract. This contrast between the front and the
hindmost parts of the animal is the contrast between Sun and
Moon. If you go further you will find that the influence of.
the Sun stops just short of the heart; that Mars, Jupiter and
Saturn are acting in the formation of the blood and the head;'
and that, from the heart backwards the activity of the Moon is
reinforced by that of Mercury and Venus. Thus, if we imagine
ourselves to have picked up the animal, turned it round and set
it upside down with its head in the earth we shall have the
position invisibly taken by the
“Agricultural-individuality.” The consideration of
this formation of the animal enables us to see a relation
between the manure produced by the animal and the needs of the
earth in which the plants grow which serve as food for the
animal. For you will remember that the cosmic forces which act
in a plant are guided upwards through it from inside the earth.
If, therefore, a plant is particularly rich in these
cosmic forces, and an animal eats it, then the manure which
this animal excretes will be particularly well-suited to
the soil on which the plant grows. Thus, if we learn to grasp
the forms of things we shall see in what sense an agricultural
unit, or farm, is a “self-contained individuality”
(or as we have called it an
“agricultural-individuality”) only we have to
include within it the necessary live-stock.
| Diagram 2 Click image for large view | |
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