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Searching Rudolf Steiner Lectures by Location (Leipzig)
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    Query was: dragon
  

Here are the matching lines in their respective documents. Select one of the highlighted words in the matching lines below to jump to that point in the document.

  • Title: Christ and the Spiritual World: Lecture Three
    Matching lines:
    • have raged within them as a dragon and brought them into chaos.
    • of St. George vanquishing the Dragon which are found in the records
    • of human culture. St. George and the Dragon reflect that celestial
    • drive the Dragon out of the soul-nature of man. This was a
    • had actually to connect himself with the Dragon-nature; to take on as
    • it were the form of the Dragon in order to hold off the Dragon from
    • the soul of man. He had to work from within the Dragon, so that the
    • Dragon was ennobled and brought out of chaos into a kind of harmony.
    • The training, the taming of the Dragon — that is the
    • further task of this Being. And so it came about that the Dragon
    • Instead of the chaos of the Dragon manifesting in maddened or
    • forth. Christ Jesus used the Dragon's blood, as it were, so
    • dragon. And the Greeks imagined Apollo as shooting his arrows at the
    • dragon, as it rose from the cleft in the form of turbulent vapours.
    • George, shooting his arrows at the dragon. And when Apollo had
    • overcome the dragon, the Python, a temple was built, and instead of
    • the dragon we see how the vapours entered into the soul of the
    • swirling dragon-vapours and prophesied to them through the oracle,
    • Pythia, who was imbued with the dragon-vapours. It meant that Apollo
    • lived in the dragon's blood and filled men with wisdom from the
    • Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
  • Title: Christ and the Spiritual World: Lecture Four
    Matching lines:
    • hillsides like a dragon — the dragon killed by the Greek St.
  • Title: Egyptian Myths: Lecture 5
    Matching lines:
    • humanity, is described as the dragon, the human amphibian, the
    • nature; for example, as Michael, the dragon-slayer, or as Saint George
    • combating the dragon. Even in the figure of Siegfried with the dragon,
    • fiery dragon. But above that rose the ether body, in which the sun's
  • Title: Egyptian Myths: Lecture 7
    Matching lines:
    • the serpent, and what is elsewhere called the lindworm or dragon.
  • Title: Egyptian Myths: Lecture 8
    Matching lines:
    • to the hips, he was a sort of dragon. It was only later, when the
  • Title: Popular Occultism: Lecture 9: Lemurian Development
    Matching lines:
    • outward appearance of a very soft-bodied dragon (the designation of



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