II
THE
CHRISTMAS IMAGINATION
Yesterday
there stood before us the picture
of Michael battling with the Dragon, as shown to us through an inner
understanding of the course of the year. And art can really be
nothing else than a reflection of what human beings feel in relation
to the universe. Of course this is possible at various levels and
from various standpoints; but on the whole we can speak of a work of
art only when it expresses human feeling in such a way that through
it the soul is opened to the secrets of the universe.
To-day,
in the same spirit that led us to
the culminating picture of Michael and the Dragon, we will
carry further our study of the seasons of the year.
We
know from yesterday's lecture that when
autumn draws on, a kind of in-breathing by the Earth, a spiritual
in-breathing, occurs, and the elemental beings are drawn back into
the bosom of the Earth. Those who went out in the height of summer
and turned back at Michaelmas are drawn further and further in, until
in the depths of winter they are united most intimately with the Earth.
Now
we must realise that in winter the Earth
is above all self-contained, enclosed in itself. It has drawn back
everything of a spiritual nature which it had allowed to stream out
from itself during the summer. Hence in the depths of winter the
Earth is more earthly, more truly itself, than at any other time. And
while for our further studies we must keep firmly in view this winter
character of the Earth, we must of course not forget that when winter
prevails over half the Earth, the other half is experiencing summer.
This is a fact we must keep in the background of our minds. But just
now we are concerned with the coming of winter to one part of the
Earth. It is then that the Earth unfolds its own nature in the
deepest sense; the nature that makes it truly Earth.
| Plate I Click image for large view | |
Let
us now look at this Earth of ours. It
has a solid core, hidden below its visible outer surface, which in
turn is largely covered by water, the hydrosphere. The
continents are only floating, as it were, in this great watery
expanse. And we can picture the hydrosphere as extending up
into the atmosphere, for the atmosphere is always permeated by a
watery element. Certainly this is much thinner than the water of the
sea and the river, but there is no definite boundary in the
atmosphere where the watery element comes to an end. Hence if we are
to show schematically what the Earth is like in this respect we shall
have, first, a solid core in the centre
(see Plate I).
Around it we
have the watery regions (blue). I must of course indicate the jutting
up of the continents: they will have to be exaggerated, for they
should really be no more prominent than the irregularities on the
skin of an orange. Then I must put in the hydrosphere, this watery
part of the atmosphere all round the Earth. Let us look at this
picture (blue) and ask ourselves what it really represents? It is not
something made up out of itself: it is water shaped by the whole
cosmos. The reason why this body of air and water is spherical is
because the cosmos extends round it as a sphere on all sides. And
this means that strong forces play in on the Earth as a whole.
The
effect is that if we were to look at the
Earth from some other planet, it would appear to us as a great
water-drop in the cosmos. There would be all sorts of
prominences on it — the continents, which would be rather
differently coloured — but as a whole it would appear to
us as a great water-drop in the midst of the universe.
Let
us now consider this from a cosmic standpoint. What is this great
water-drop? It is something which takes its shape from its whole
cosmic environment.
If
one approaches the matter from a spiritual-scientific point of view,
bringing Imagination and Inspiration to bear on it, one comes to
know what this water-drop really is. It is nothing other than a
gigantic drop of quicksilver; but the quicksilver is present in
an extraordinarily rarefied condition.
The
possibility of these high attenuations
has been shown by the work of Frau Dr. Kolisko. At our Biological
Institute in Stuttgart the attempt has been made to put this on an
exact footing. It has been possible to make dilutions of substances
up to one part in a trillion, and in fact to establish precisely the
effects which such high dilutions of particular substances can have.
Hitherto, in homoeopathy, this has been merely a matter of belief;
now it has been raised to the level of exact science. The graphs
which have been drawn leave no doubt to-day that the effects of the
smallest particles follow a rhythmical course. I will not go
into details; the work has been published and these findings can now
be verified. Here I wish to point out only that even in the earthly
realm the effects of enormous dilutions must be reckoned with.
Here
we are concerned with something of
which we can say, when we use it on a small scale — this is
water. We can draw water from a river or a well and use it as water.
Yes, it is water, but there is no water that consists solely of
hydrogen and oxygen. It would be absurd for anyone to suppose that
water consists of hydrogen and oxygen only. In the case of mineral
waters and such-like, it is of course obvious that something else is
present. But there is no water composed solely of hydrogen and
oxygen: that is only a first approximation. All water, wherever
it appears, is permeated with something else. Essentially, the whole
water-mass of the Earth is quicksilver for the universe. Only
the small quantities we use are water for us. For the universe, this
water is not water, but quicksilver.
Hence
we can say, first of all, that in so
far as we are considering the hydrosphere in relation to water, we
have to do with a drop of quicksilver in the cosmos. Embedded as it
were in this drop of quicksilver, naturally, are metallic substances
— in brief, all the earthly substances. They represent the
solid mass of the Earth, and they tend to assume their own special
forms. Thus in the structure as a whole we observe [the general
spherical form of quick]silver. Ordinary
metallic quicksilver, one might say, is only the symbol produced by
nature for the general activity of quicksilver, leading quite
definitely to a spherical form. Embedded in the whole sphere are the
metallic crystals, with the manifold variety of their own distinctive
forms. Hence we have before us this formation of warmth, water, air:
its tendency, as I have said, is to assume a spherical form, with
individual crystal forms within it
(see Plate I).
Even
if we single out the air (dark red) which surrounds the Earth as its
atmosphere, we can never speak simply of air, for the air always has
a tendency to contain warmth in some degree: the air is permeated with
warmth (violet). Thus we must add this fourth element, warmth, which
enters into the air.
Now
this warmth, which comes into the air
from above, carries pre-eminently within it the sulphur-process,
imparted to it from the cosmos. And to the sulphur-process is
added the mercurial process, as I have described it in connection
with the hydrosphere. Thus we have air-warmth — the
sulphur-process; water-air — the mercurial process.
If
now we turn towards the inner part of the Earth, we come to the
acid-formation process, and especially to the salt-process, for
the salts derive from the acids; and this is what the Earth really
wants to be. Hence, when we look up into the cosmos, we are really
looking at the sulphur-process. When we consider the tendency of
the Earth to form itself into a cosmic water-drop, we are really
looking at the mercurial process. And if we turn our gaze to the
solid earth underfoot, which in spring gives rise to all that we
see as growing, sprouting life, we are looking at the salt-process.
This
salt-process is all-important for
springtime life and growth. For the roots of plants, in forming
themselves out of the seeds, depend for their whole growth on their
relation to the salt-formations in the soil. It is these
salt-formations — in the widest sense of the term — which
give substance to the roots and enable them to act as the earthly
foundation of plant-life.
Thus
in turning back to the Earth we
encounter the salt-process. This is what the Earth makes of itself in
the depths of winter, whereas in summer there is much more
intermingling. For in summer the air is shot through with
sulphurising processes, which indeed occur also in lightning
and thunder; they penetrate far down, so that the whole course of the
season is sulphurised. Then we come at Michaelmas to the time when
the sulphur-process is driven back by meteoric iron, as I told you
yesterday. During summer, too, the salt-process mingles with the
atmosphere, for the growing plants carry the salts up through their
leaves and blossoms right up into the seeds. Naturally, we find the
salts widely distributed in the plant; they etherealise themselves in
the etheric oils and so on; they approach the sulphurising process.
The salts are carried up through the plants; they stream out and
become part of the being of the atmosphere.
In
high summer, accordingly, we have a
mingling of the mercurial element, always present in the Earth, with
the sulphurising and salt-forming elements. If at this season we
stand here on Earth, our head actually projects into a mixture of
sulphur, mercury and salt; while the arrival of deep winter means
that each of these three principles reverts to its own inner
condition. The salts withdraw into the inwardness of the Earth, and
the tendency for the hydrosphere to assume a spherical shape
reasserts itself — imaged in winter by the snow-mantle that
covers parts of the Earth. The sulphur process withdraws, so that
there is no particular occasion to observe it. In place of it,
something else comes to the fore during the deep winter season.
The
plants have developed from spring until
autumn, finally concentrating themselves in their seeds. What is this
seeding process? When plants run to seed, they are doing what we are
constantly doing in a dull human way when we use plants for food. We
cook them. Now the development of a plant to blossom and then to
seed-production is nature's cookery; it approaches the sulphur-process.
The plants grow up into the sulphur-process. They are most strongly
sulphurised, so to speak, when summer is at its height. When autumn
draws on, this combustion process comes to an end.
In
the organic realm, of course, everything
is different from the processes we observe in their coarse inorganic
form; but the outcome of every combustion process is ash. And in
addition to the salt-formation, which comes from quite another
quarter and is needed within the Earth, we must add all that falls
down on to the Earth from the blossoming and seeding of plants as a
result of the cooking or combustion process. This falling down of ash
— just as ash falls down in our stoves — plays a great
role which is usually overlooked. For in the course of seed-formation
— which is fundamentally a combustion process — the
seed-nature is continually showering down on the Earth, so that from
October onwards the Earth is quite impregnated with this form of ash.
If
therefore we observe the Earth in the depths of winter, we have first
the internal tendency to salt-formation; besides this we have the
mercurial shaping-process in its most strongly marked form; and while
in high summer we have to pay attention to the sulphurising process in
the cosmos outside the Earth, we now have in winter the ash-forming process.
So,
you see, the tendency which reaches its
culmination at Christmas is prepared in advance from Michaelmas
onwards. The Earth is gradually more and more consolidated, so
that in deep winter it becomes really a cosmic body, expressing
itself in mercurial formation, salt-formation, ash-formation. What
does this signify for the cosmos?
Now,
if we can suppose that a flea, let us
say, were to become an anatomist and were to study a bone, it would
have before it an exceptionally small piece of bone, because the flea
itself is so small and it would be examining the bone from a flea's
perspective. The flea would then discover that in the bone we have to
do with phosphoric lime in an amorphous condition, with carbonic
acid, lime and so forth. But our flea anatomist would never come to
the point of realising that the fragment of bone is a small part only
of a complete skeleton. Certainly, the flea jumps, but in studying
the tiny piece of bone he would never get beyond it. Similarly, it
would not help a human geologist or mineralogist to be able to jump
about like a gigantic earth-flea. In studying the mountain ranges of
the Earth, which in their totality represent a skeleton, he would
still be working on a miniature scale. The flea would never come to
describing the skeleton as a whole; he would hack out a tiny piece
with his little hammer. Suppose this were a tiny piece of
collar-bone; nothing in the constituents of the little piece,
carbonate of lime, phosphate of lime and so on, would reveal to
the flea that it belonged to a collar-bone, still less that it was
part of a complete skeleton. The flea would have hacked off a tiny
piece and would then describe it from his own flea-standpoint,
just as a man describes the Earth when somewhere — let us say
in the Dornach hills — he has hacked out a bit of Jura
limestone. Then he describes this bit, and works up his findings into
mineralogy, geology, and so on. It is still the same flea-standpoint,
though certainly somewhat enlarged.
This,
of course, is no way to arrive at the
truth. We need to recognise that the Earth is a single whole, most
firmly consolidated during winter through its salt-formation,
its mercurial formation and its ash-formation. Let us then ask what
the whole nature of the Earth signifies when we look at it not from
the flea's point of view, but in relation to the cosmos.
We
will first consider salt-formation,
taking this in the widest sense to connote a physical deposit,
exemplified in the way ordinary cooking-salt dissolved in a glass of
water will separate out as a deposit on the bottom of the glass. (I
will not now go into the chemical side of this, though the result
would be the same if I did). Now a salt-deposit of this kind has the
characteristic of being porous, as it were, to the spiritual. Where
there is a salt-deposit, the spiritual has a clear field of entry. In
mid-winter, accordingly, when the Earth consolidates itself on
the basis of salt-formation, the effect is, first of all, that the
elemental beings who are united with the Earth have, one might say,
an agreeable abode within it. But other spiritual elements, too, are
drawn in from the cosmos and are able to dwell in the salt-crust
which lies immediately below the Earth's surface. Here, in this
salt-crust, the Moon-forces are particularly active — I mean
the remains of those Moon-forces which were left behind, as I have
often mentioned, when the Moon separated from the Earth.
These
Moon-forces are active in the Earth
chiefly because of the salt present in it. So in winter —
beneath the snow cover which strives in one direction, one might say,
towards the quicksilver form and in the other passes down into the
salt deposits — we have the solid earth-substance, the salt,
permeated with spirituality. In winter the Earth does indeed become
spiritual in itself, through the consolidating influence,
especially, of its salt-content.
Now
water — that is, cosmic
quicksilver — has the inner tendency to shape itself
spherically. We can see this inner tendency everywhere. And because
of this the Earth in mid-winter is enabled not only to become rigid
through its salt-content and to permeate the salt with spirit, but
also to vivify the spiritualised substance and to lead it over into
the realm of life. In winter the whole surface of the Earth is
reinvigorated. The quicksilver principle, working into the
spiritualised salt, activates everywhere this tendency towards
new life. Below the Earth's surface, in winter, there is a tremendous
reinforcement of the Earth's capacity to produce life.
This life,
however, would become a
Moon-life, for it is chiefly the Moon-forces that are active in it.
But because ash falls down from the seeds of plants, so that
everything I have just described is impregnated with ash, something
is present which keeps the whole process in the domain of the Earth.
The
plants have striven upwards into the
sulphur-process, and out of this process the ash has fallen down.
This is what draws the plant back to Earth, after it has striven up
into the etheric-spiritual. So in the depths of winter we have on the
Earth's surface not only the tendency to absorb the spirit and
to reinvigorate itself, but the tendency also to transform the
Moon-like into the earthly. Through the remains of the fallen ash the
Moon is compelled to promote Earthly life, not Moon life.
Now
let us turn from the Earth's surface and look at the air-formation
that surrounds the Earth. For the air, it is of the utmost importance
always, but especially in midwinter, that the Sun radiates warmth and
light through it — though the light is less relevant to our
immediate considerations.
You see,
science treats things always in
isolation from one another, as in reality they never are. Air, we are
told, consists of oxygen and nitrogen and other elements. But in fact
this is not so: the air is not made up merely of oxygen and nitrogen,
for it is always rayed through by the Sun. That is the reality: air
is always permeated in the daytime by the activity of the Sun. And
what does this activity signify? It signifies that the air up above
is always seeking to tear itself away from the Earth. If
salt-formation, mercurial formation and ash-formation were alone
active, then nothing but the earthly would be there. But up above,
because the activities striving upwards from the Earth are taken up
into the activity of Sun and air, Earth-activity is transmuted into
cosmic activity. The power to work on its own accord in the
living-spiritual is taken away from the Earth. The Sun makes its
power felt in everything that grows and sprouts upwards from the
Earth. And so, in a certain region above the Earth, a quite special
tendency is apparent to spiritual vision
(see Plate I).
On the Earth
itself everything seeks to become spherical (dark red); in this upper
region the sphere is continually impelled to flatten out into a plane
(reddish). Naturally it will tend to resume its spherical shape, but
up there the spherical is always inclined to flatten itself out. The
upper influences would really like to break up the Earth, to
disintegrate it, so that everything might become a flat
surface, spread out there in the cosmos.
If
this were to come about, the Earth's
activities would disappear completely, and up above we should have a
kind of air in which the stars would be active. This is very plainly
expressed in man himself. What part do we as human beings have in the
sun-filled air above? We breathe it in, and because of this the
activity of the Sun extends right into us, downwards certainly in a
sense, but chiefly upwards. Through our head we are continually drawn
away from the influences of the Earth, and on this account our head
is enabled to participate in the whole cosmos. Our head would really
always like to go out into the region where the plane prevails. If
our head belonged only to the Earth, especially in winter-time, our
whole experience of thinking would be different. We should then have
the feeling that all our thoughts wished to take a rounded shape. In
fact they do not; they have a certain lightness, adaptability,
fluidity, and this we owe to the characteristic incursion of the
activity of the Sun.
Here
we have the second tendency; here the
Sun-like strikes into the Earthly. But this is at its weakest in
winter. If we were to go still further out, something else would come
into the picture. Then we should have to do no longer with the
activity of the Sun, but only with the activity of the stars, for the
stars in turn have a great influence on our head. Inasmuch as the Sun
gives us back to the cosmos, so to speak, the stars have their own
deeply penetrating influence on our head, and so on the whole
formation of the human organism.
But
now I must tell you that what I have
just been describing no longer holds good to-day, for in a certain
way man has emancipated himself, in his growth and his whole
evolution, from the Earth's activities. If were to go back to the old
Lemurian time, or especially to the Polarian time that preceded it,
we should find the whole thing quite different. We should observe
that everything that occurred on the Earth had a great influence on
the human organism. You will indeed have gathered this from the
account of the evolution of the Earth given in my
Occult Science.
In those early times we should find man placed in the
very midst of the activities I have been telling you about.
To-morrow I will describe how man has emancipated himself from all
this; to-day I will speak as though we were still fully involved in
it. And here we come to something that to present-day understanding
will seem highly paradoxical.
We
can ask the question: What does a mother
become when she is beginning to develop a new human being? Originally
— after all that has first to happen in order that a new human
being may come into existence on Earth — it is the salt-forming
Moon-forces which chiefly influence the female organism at that time.
So we can say that while a woman is otherwise and in general a human
being, the salt-forming Moon-forces then have the strongest
influence on her. We can put this in spiritual-scientific terms by
saying: The woman becomes Moon, just as the Earth — especially
just below its surface — becomes Moon when Christmas
approaches.
So
it is not the Earth only which becomes
mostly Moon when deep winter prevails; this tendency of the Earth to
become Moon occurs again, in like manner, when a woman prepares
herself to receive a new human being. And precisely because of this,
the Sun-influence on her becomes different, just as it is different
in mid-winter, compared with high summer. And the formation in the
woman of the new human being stands wholly under the influence of the
Sun. Because the woman takes up the Moon-activities, the
salt-activities, so strongly into herself, she becomes able to take
up the Sun-activities on their own account. In ordinary life the
Sun-activities are taken up by the human organism through the heart
and from there spread out over the whole organism. But directly a
woman prepares herself to bring forth a new human being, the
Sun-activities are concentrated on the forming of this new life. Thus
we can say schematically: The woman becomes Moon so that she can take
up the Sun-activities into herself; and the new human being, existing
first as an embryo, is in this sense wholly Sun-activity. The embryo
is enabled to come into being through this concentration of
Sun-activities.
The
old instinctive clairvoyance knew this
in its own way. At one time in old Europe a remarkable idea
prevailed. It was thought that before a new-born child had
taken any earthly nourishment, it was a quite different being from
what it became after imbibing its first drop of milk. That was the
old Germanic belief. For these people had an instinctive feeling that
the new-born infant was a Sun-being, and that through the first
earthly nourishment it received it became a creature of Earth.
Hence the new-born infant did not at first belong to the Earth at
all. Again, according to occult laws which I might touch on at some
other time, old Germanic custom gave the father — at whose feet
the child was always laid directly it was born — the right
either to let it grow up or to destroy it; for it was not yet a
creature of Earth. If it had taken one single drop of milk, he no
longer had the right to destroy it. It would then have to remain an
Earth-creature, because it had been ordained by nature, by the world,
by the cosmos, to be one. In such old customs there lives
something of immensely profound significance.
Here
indeed is the basis of the saying: The
child is of the Sun. So it is possible now to look on the woman who
has borne the child as a being who is in the deepest sense related to
all earthly processes. For the Earth prepares itself in mid-winter
through the salt-tendency — that is, the Moon tendency —
so that it may be best able to receive the Sun-element. The Earth
then reaches out beyond the Sun-element to the heavens, to which also
the human head belongs.
Hence
we can say something like this. In
order to bring the essence of Christmas rightly before our souls, let
us transpose ourselves into the being of man. In the Christmas
spirit is expressed the coming to birth of the Jesus-child, who is
ordained to receive the Christ into himself. Let us look closely at
this. If we look at the figure of Mary, we are bound to see that her
head reflects something heavenly in its whole appearance, its
whole expression. We must then indicate that Mary is preparing
to take into herself the Sun, the child, the Sun as it rays through
the encircling air. And then we can see in the form of Mary the
Moon-Earthly element.
| Plate II Click image for large view | |
Now
imagine how this could be portrayed.
First we have the Moon-Earth element, spread out below the Earth's
surface. Then, going out into the great spaces, we find a raying
forth from man into the cosmos, and this could be shown as a heavenly
Earth-star radiance, sent out by the Earth into the cosmos. The head
of Mary is like a radiant star, which means that her whole
countenance and bearing must give expression to this
star-radiant quality
(see Plate II).
If
then we turn to the breast, we come to the breathing process;
to the Sun-element, the child, forming itself out of the clouds
in the atmosphere, shot through by the rays of the Sun.
Further
down we come to the Moon-like, salt-forming forces, given outward
expression by bringing the limbs into dynamic relation with the Earth
and letting them arise out of the salt and the Moon-elements in the
Earth. Here we have the Earth in so far as it is inwardly transfigured
by the Moon.
All
this would really have to be shown
through a kind of rainbow colouring. For if we were to look from the
cosmos towards the Earth, through the shining of the stars, it would
be as though the Earth were wishing to shine inwardly, beneath its
surface, in rainbow colours. On the Earth we have something related
to the Earth-forces, to gravity and to the formation of the limbs,
which can be expressed only through the garment which follows the
Earth-forces in its folds. So we should have the garment down
below, in relation to the Earth-forces. Then we should have to
portray, a little higher up, that which gives expression to the
Earth-Moon element. We could even picture the Moon, if we wished to
symbolise; but the Moon-element is clearly expressed in the
configuration of the Earth.
Higher
up still, we must bring in that which
comes forth from the Moon-element. We see how the clouds are
permeated with many human heads, pressing downwards; one of them is
condensed into the Sun resting on Mary's arm: the Jesus-child. And
all this must be completed, in an upward direction, through
the star-radiance expressed in the countenance of Mary.
If
we understand the depths of winter, how
it shows us the connection of the cosmos with man, with man who takes
up the birth-forces in the Earth, the only possible way of presenting
the woman is in this form: formed out of the clouds, endowed with the
forces of the Earth: with the Moon-forces below, with the Sun-forces
in the middle, and above, towards the head, with the forces of the
stars. The picture of Mary with the little Jesus-child arises out of
the cosmos itself.
If
we understand the cosmos in autumn, so as to represent all its
formative forces in a picture, we come by necessity to an artistic
portrayal of Michael and the Dragon, as I indicated yesterday. In
the same way, everything we feel at Christmas-time flows together
into the picture of Mary and the child — that picture which
hovered so often before painters in earlier times, especially in
the first Christian centuries, and of which the last echoes have
been preserved in Raphael's Sistine Madonna.
The
Sistine Madonna was born out of the
great instinctive knowledge of nature and the spirit which
prevailed in ancient times. For it is a picture of the
Imagination which must in fact come to a man who transposes his
inner vision into the secrets of Christmas in such a way that they
become for him a living picture.
Hence
we can say: The course of the seasons
must come to expression for inner vision in clear and glorious
Imaginations. If one goes out with one's whole being into the
world, the approach of autumn becomes the glorious Imagination of
Michael's fight with the Dragon. Just as the Dragon can be
represented only in a sulphurous form — born out of the
sulphur-clouds — and just as the sword of Michael emerges when
we think of the meteoric iron as concentrated in the sword and
blended with it, so out of all that we can feel at Christmas time,
arises the picture of Mary the mother, the folds of her robe
following the forces of the Earth, while in the region of the breast
— even these details are apparent in the painting — her
garment has to be inwardly rounded, taking on the quicksilver
form, so that here one has a feeling of inward enclosure. Here the
Sun-forces can find entry, and the innocent Jesus-child, who must be
thought of as having yet received no earthly nourishment, is the
Sun-activity resting on Mary's arm, with the radiance of the stars
above. That is how we have to represent the head and eyes of Mary, as
though a light were shining out from within them towards men. And the
Jesus-child in Mary's arm must appear as though emerging from the
rounded cloud-shapes, tender and lovable, inwardly sheltered; and
then the garment, subject to earthly gravity, expressing what the
force of earthly gravity can become
(see Plate II).
All
this is best rendered in colours. Then
we have the picture which comes to shine out for us as a cosmic
Imagination at Christmas-time — a picture we can live
with until Easter, when out of cosmic relationships once again an
Easter Imagination can arise; we will speak of it tomorrow.
You
will see from this that art is drawn
from the heavens and their interplay with the Earth. True art is an
expression of that which man experiences in the cosmos,
spiritual-psychical-physical, which reveals itself to him in
magnificent Imaginations. So, in order to represent all that is
involved in the inner struggle for the development of
self-consciousness out of nature-consciousness, nothing will do but
the grand picture of Michael's fight with the Dragon; and in order to
bring before us everything that can work from nature into our souls
during the deep winter season, we have an artistic, imaginative
expression of it in the picture of the Mother and child.
To
observe the course of the seasons is to follow the great cosmic
artist, so that the things which the heavens imprint on the Earth
are brought to life again in powerful pictures — pictures
which grow into realities for the mind of man.
Thus
the course of the year can reveal itself to us in four Imaginations:
the Michael Imagination, the Mary Imagination and — as we shall
see later on — the Easter Imagination and the St. John Imagination.
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