Correspondence with Edith Maryon 1912–1924
GA 263 — 1 March 1922, Hildesheim
Letter from Edith Maryon
Edith Maryon to Rudolf Steiner
Sculptor's studio, Goetheanum
March 1, 1922
Dear and esteemed teacher!
Olga has just brought me this letter from Mrs. Mackenzie. I have read the letter; unfortunately it is over with eurythmy this time, but since it could not have been done properly, it is perhaps better to wait for Oxford; then we will be able to achieve something decent. I am a little sorry. No other news has come.
Today we got the Ahriman out and started the preparatory work for transferring the Lucifer – Geck, of course, resisted and first appealed to Sonderegger and then to Aisenpreis, but in vain, because what I ordered was the only right thing to do. She then complied!
Yesterday I was in Basel and today I'm going to the post office at 5 a.m. to pick up my boots from “Father”!
The studio looks terrible, the greatest disorder everywhere, and 4 workers inside. It will take a while.
I hope you are not too tired? The last few weeks have been really quite terrible.
If only you took a lot of vacation time in Berlin! Then you might have time to write an essay for the Hibbert? But only if there are quite a few free hours. Otherwise it would be a shame and no fun.
I hope the lectures in Halle and Leipzig went well and were well attended. I would also like to know that there is plenty of quiet time in Berlin; the leaders from day to day probably won't reappear as soon as their own day is over! Maybe they'll
they will even be buried.
With best wishes
Edith Maryon